Judge orders New York Times to return Project Veritas internal memos
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[December 27, 2021]
By Jan Wolfe
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - A New York state
judge on Friday ordered the New York Times to return internal documents
to the conservative activist group Project Veritas, a restriction the
newspaper said violates decades of First Amendment protections.
In an unusual written ruling, Justice Charles Wood of the Westchester
County Supreme Court directed the New York Times to return to Project
Veritas any physical copies of legal memos prepared by one of the
group's lawyers, and to destroy electronic versions.
Wood had entered a temporary order against the New York Times last
month, drawing criticism from freedom of the press advocates.
Project Veritas, led by James O'Keefe, has used what critics view as
misleading tactics like secret audio recording to expose what it
describes as liberal media bias. The group is the subject of a Justice
Department probe into its possible role in the theft of a diary from
President Joe Biden's daughter, Ashley, pages of which were published on
a right-wing website.
Project Veritas objected to a Nov. 11 Times article that drew from the
legal memos and purported to reveal how the group worked with its
lawyers to "gauge how far its deceptive reporting practices can go
before running afoul of federal laws."
Wood said in Friday's ruling that the Project Veritas legal memos were
not a matter of public concern and that the group has a right to keep
them private that outweighs concerns about freedom of the press.
"Steadfast fidelity to, and vigilance in protecting First Amendment
freedoms cannot be permitted to abrogate the fundamental protections of
attorney-client privilege or the basic right to privacy," Wood wrote.
A.G. Sulzberger, publisher of the New York Times, said the newspaper
would appeal the ruling.
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The New York Times building is seen in Manhattan, New York, U.S.,
August 3, 2020. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton/File Photo
Sulzberger said the decision barred
the Times from publishing newsworthy information that was obtained
legally in the ordinary course of reporting.
"In addition to imposing this unconstitutional prior restraint, the
judge has gone even further (and) ordered that we return this
material, a ruling with no apparent precedent and one that could
present obvious risks to exposing sources should it be allowed to
stand," Sulzberger said.
Libby Locke, a lawyer for Project Veritas, said in a statement that
the New York Times’ behavior was "irregular," and that the ruling
affirms that view.
"The New York Times has long forgotten the meaning of the journalism
it claims to espouse, and has instead become a vehicle for the
prosecution of a partisan political agenda," Locke said.
Project Veritas has been engaged in defamation litigation against
the New York Times since last year, when the newspaper published a
piece calling the group's work "deceptive."
The Times had not faced any prior restraint since 1971, when the
Nixon administration unsuccessfully sought to block the publication
of the Pentagon Papers detailing U.S. military involvement in
Vietnam.
(Reporting by Jan Wolfe; Editing by Mary Milliken and Leslie Adler)
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