BOARD OF DIRECTORS
 
Arnold Amber
CBC Television Network News
President
 
Mori Abdolalian
CJFE Journalists in Exile
 
Alison Armstrong
Journalist/writer
 
Bob Carty
CBC-Radio "This Morning"
 
Barbara Falk
Writer/Lecturer
 
Mike Forzley
Accountant
 
Alice Klein
Editor & CEO, Now Magazine
 
Anita Mielewcyzk
Journalist
 
John Norris
Lawyer, Ruby, Edwardh
 
Jake Peters
Photojournalist
 
Kelly Toughill
King's College, Nova Scotia
 
Mary Deanne Shears
Journalist

Philip Tunley
Lawyer, McCarthy Tétrault LLP
  ADVISORY BOARD
 
Peter Desbarats
Maclean-Hunter Chair for Communications Ethics, Ryerson
 
Parker Barss Donham
freelance
 
John Honderich
The Toronto Star
 
John Macfarlane
Toronto Life
 
Joe Matyas
Southern Ontario Newspaper Guild
 
Ann Medina
freelance
 
Rick Moffat
Radio-TV News Directors Assn.
 
Lynda Powless
Native Journalists' Association
 
Lloyd Robertson
CTV News
 
Robert Scully
Télémision Information Inc.
 
Julian Sher
Canadian Association of Journalists
 
Keith Spicer
Institut du Monde anglophone Université de Paris III Sorbonne nouvelle
 
Norman Webster
Montreal

Media Release

CJFE Distressed by Court Approval of Seizure of Photographs

Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) is concerned at the court decision allowing police to use photographs belonging to The Hamilton Spectator. Officers executed a search warrant on May 6, 2008, in order to obtain photos of a highway blockade in Caledonia. Brian Rogers, representing The Hamilton Spectator, was in court on June 12 to fight the issuing of the warrant, but his objections were dismissed.

The blockade occurred on April 26, 2008, and was organized to protest the arrest of a native demonstrator near Napanee, who had been protesting a land claims dispute. Hamilton Spectator journalists covering the blockade took photographs of all those involved. Police are investigating the blockade as an act of mischief, and wish to examine the photos in order to identify the protestors.

OPP forensic identification officers are also looking to produce individual images of an unidentified native man that confronted police during the blockade. They seek to charge him with two counts of assault with a weapon and four counts of threatening bodily harm.

"It is not the job of journalists to collect information for the police," stated Arnold Amber, CJFE President. "Making them agents of the police blurs the line between the journalists' role to objectively observe and record, and that of the police." CJFE fears that this blurring of roles could lead to public apprehension and suspicion of journalists as being extensions of law enforcement.

Superior Court Justice James Ramsay rejected The Hamilton Spectator's bid to withhold the photographs. Brian Rogers argued against the issuing of the warrant and the use of journalists as a source of evidence. Ramsay rejected these claims, stating that there was no indication the paper would suffer as a result of the images being turned over to the OPP.

CJFE notes that this is certainly not the first time police have attempted to use Canadian journalists as a source of evidence in police investigations. In 2006, Hamilton Spectator reporter Bill Dunphy was successful in his bid to keep his notes from interviews with drug dealer Paul Gravelle out of the hands of police. A Criminal Code provision enacted on September 15, 2004, allows a judge to compel a person to produce documents or data relevant to the commission of an offence. Failure to comply is punishable by a fine of up to $250,000 and/or up to six months in jail. In Dunphy's case, Justice C.S. Glithero recognized "the potential harmful effects of the search of the media," as well as journalism's "vital role in the functioning of a democratic society."

Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) is an association of more than 300 journalists, editors, publishers, producers, students and others who work to promote and defend free expression and press freedom in Canada and around the world.

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For more information, contact CJFE Manager, Julie Payne at (416) 515-9622 x. 226