The New York Times has taken legal action to challenge unusual subpoenas issued to several of its reporters last week. The subpoenas, which attempt to compel the reporters to testify before a grand jury about their anonymous sources, were described as “abusive and improper” by the Times’ top newsroom lawyer, David McCraw.
Constitutional Rights Violations
McCraw stated that the subpoenas “violate the constitutional rights of The Times and its journalists.” The demands for testimony were delivered just two days after The Times published a story contradicting President Donald Trump’s claims about the new Qatari-gifted Air Force One.
Todd Blanche, Trump’s pick for attorney general, defended the investigative process, likening the reporters to “material witnesses, just like a reporter would be a material witness to a car crash. They are witnesses.” The Times has asserted that US law protects journalists from retaliation, which it believes this case represents.
The newsroom’s executive editor, Joe Kahn, said that “we see this… as an attempt to intimidate the journalists and The Times itself, and we’re going to continue to report — both about Air Force One, and on the circumstances around the government use of prosecutorial power to intimidate the independent news media.”
Original reporting: KRDO (Colorado Springs metro) — read the source article.