PRESS RELEASE   · August 15, 2008 ·

Reporters Committee finds barriers to accessing military court dockets and proceedings

The public has a slim chance of discovering the existence of criminal hearings and trials conducted by U.S. armed forces around the world, according to a yearlong study of military justice practices by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.

Share:
· Facebook
· LinkedIn
· Email
Print
Link

The Reporters Committee investigated access granted to the public and the press for military criminal proceedings and accompanying records. Interviews with reporters, lawyers, military personnel and experts on the armed services yielded examples of important criminal cases that went unreported because the government refused to provide the public with a comprehensive record of Article 32 pre-trial hearings and courts-martial.

“The right to a fair and public trial is a bedrock principle of democracy,” said Reporters Committee Executive Director Lucy A. Dalglish. “Unfortunately, in this regard, members of the armed services have fewer rights than those granted to criminal defendants in civilian courts.

“We believe that, at a minimum, the armed services should create an easily accessible ‘docket’ of information listing those charged, details regarding the charges against them and the date and time of their trials and pre-trials,” Dalglish said.

The Reporters Committee analysis also used survey data from researchers at the Tully Center for Free Speech at Syracuse University’s S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications.

The study showed:

  • 45 percent (34 bases) refused to provide any information for upcoming Article 32 hearings

  • 37 percent (28 bases) declined to disclose courts-martial schedules.

  • Just 27 percent (20 bases) provided a complete docket for upcoming Article 32 hearings

  • Just 36 percent (27 bases) provided a complete docket for upcoming courts-martial schedules.

  • Just more than 20 percent of the base officials who agreed to provide docketing information for Article 32 hearings and courts-martial nevertheless withheld basic details such as the defendant’s name or the criminal charge at issue.

The Reporters Committee’s investigation of the problems encountered by military reporters and its legal analysis of how the Pentagon is falling short on protecting the rights of those in uniform to a public trial can be found at: www.rcfp.org/militarydockets.

Supplementary information, including “Off Base,” a guide to this issue intended for reporters, and the Tully Center report are also available.

— Posted at 12:09 pm


Comments: (2)

Comment by IraqVet, Fri, Aug 15, 2008, 7:17pm

Thank you for carrying on the struggle...I was brought before a Court Martial in Baghdad and was railroaded into a Plea Agreement - my witnesses were not allowed air transport to attend the trial and testify on my behalf. Because of that I filed a Freedom of Information Act Request to see who in the Army chain-of-command had authorized the Government Witnesses to fly on Military Transport while simultaneously refusing the same transport to my Witnesses. As you may have suspected, I have not he

 

Comment by Warren Bonesteel, Fri, Aug 15, 2008, 9:35pm

Good! Welcome to the fight! Push this issue just as hard as ya can.

If you dig hard enough and long enough, you'll find that there is effectively no end to the depths of corruption and cronyism involved.

Be fully aware, however, that it involves both your favorite and least favorite politicians.

Whether you know it or not, you've got a tiger by the tail.

 


Submit a comment

Name (what you want displayed):

Comment:

Please note: comments with hyperlinks will be rejected.

Email (only if you want to be notified of new comments):



Reporters Committee home

Send comments & tips

Subscribe by email

RSS feed

Follow us on Twitter

Find us on Facebook


News categories:

Broadcasting

Freedom of information

Intellectual property

Internet regulation

Libel

Newsgathering

Prior restraints

Privacy

Reporter's privilege

Secret courts

State open government


News keywords:

[list alphabetically]

Public Records

Shield Law

Open Records

Subpoenas

Confidential source issues

Defamation

E-mail

FOIA

Sealed records

Legislation

Internet

Secrecy

Sealed cases

Lawsuits

White House

Police

Privacy

Libel

FOIA reform

Photography & videotaping

List all keywords




Search:

Limit by date:

Fr:

To:

Category

Sort by
relevance
date