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Puerto Rican
journalists win appeal in brutality case
SAN JUAN, PR, June 19, 2008: A federal appeals court ruled on
June 19, 2008 that an unprovoked attack on journalists by FBI
agents would clearly violate the Fourth Amendment.
The U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit reversed an
earlier decision to dismiss a lawsuit brought by the American
Civil Liberties Union on behalf of journalists who were kicked,
punched, and pepper sprayed by FBI agents as they attempted to
report on the search of a San Juan apartment.
“This decision makes clear the FBI cannot exert excessive force
and intimidation every time it wants to avoid public scrutiny,”
said Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU First
Amendment Working Group. “By reinstating our lawsuit, the
appeals court will let us continue fighting for the principle
that reporters should be able to approach law enforcement
officers without fear of harassment.”
In February 2006, several journalists approached FBI agents
leaving a San Juan apartment that was being searched to ask for
their comments. The FBI agents responded by, among other things,
spraying pepper spray in the journalists’ faces, covering the
lens of a camera and pointing an automatic rifle at one of the
journalists.
In September 2006, the ACLU filed a lawsuit on behalf of the
journalists, asserting that the FBI agents had violated their
First
Amendment right to gather news and their
Fourth
Amendment right to be free from excessive force.
An earlier ruling by the U.S. District Court for the District of
Puerto Rico sided with the FBI agents, ignoring important
constitutional issues raised by the journalists and throwing out
the case.
The appellate court reversed that decision, reinstating the case
and noting that if the journalists can prove they were “without
provocation, pushed, punched, hit by metal batons, and pepper
sprayed in the face by federal agents,” it would be a clear
violation of their Fourth Amendment rights.
“Unprovoked violence against journalists to keep them from doing
their jobs is a blatant violation of their constitutional
rights,” said William Ramírez, Executive Director and
attorney with the ACLU of Puerto Rico. “These reporters deserve
their day in court, and now they will have it.”
In addition to Crump and Ramírez, attorneys in the lawsuit are
Aden Fine of the ACLU
First Amendment Working
Group, Josué González of the ACLU of Puerto Rico and
Nora Vargas-Agosta. The Reporters’ Committee for Freedom of
the Press has filed an
amicus brief in the
case. See Puerto Rico Journalists’ Association v. Mueller,
07-2196
The ACLU’s brief and other related documents are available
online at:
www.aclu.org/freespeech/censorship/34007res20071105.html |