The New York Times sues the Pentagon over press restrictions
The New York Times challenges Pentagon policy that restricts press freedom by allowing arbitrary credential revocation and banning unauthorized reporting, citing First Amendment violations.
- On Thursday, The New York Times sued in U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C., naming the Department of Defense, Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth, Sean Parnell, and reporter Julian E. Barnes, seeking repeal, badge reinstatement, and an injunction.
- A policy introduced in October required Pentagon beat reporters to sign a pledge barring pursuit or disclosure of unauthorized material, prompting many to surrender their press credentials earlier this year.
- In its complaint, the newspaper contends the policy violates the First Amendment and Fifth Amendment by granting department officials `standardless discretion` and using `incurably vague language`, warning that interviewing government employees could be seen as a `solicitation` punishable by badge revocation.
- A key hearing is set for Thursday afternoon in Washington, D.C., and attorneys say other newsrooms are preparing supportive briefs as the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press and Pentagon Press Association back the challenge.
- Critics and media leaders say the policy shields the Trump administration, while Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth welcomed a new Pentagon press corps of pro-Trump influencers Earlier this week.
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139 Articles
After NYT Sues Over Pentagon Policy, Press Advocates ‘Urge Other News Outlets to Follow’
Ariel Shot of the Pentagon 2001 Air Force Tech. Sgt. Brittany A. Chase In one of the scariest moments in modern history, we're doing our best at ScheerPost to pierce the fog of lies that conceal it but we need some help to pay our writers and staff. Please consider a tax-deductible donation. By: Jessica Corbett For Common Dreams Press freedom advocates on Thursday welcomed the New York Times’ lawsuit over the US Department of Defense’s “flatly u…
The newspaper wants to have the regulations imposed by the US Secretary of Defense cancelled, which led to the expulsion of many media from the building.
The New York Times filed a lawsuit for new media guidelines from the U.S. Department of Defense.
The »NYT« accuses the U.S. Department of Defense of restricting freedom of the press with new guidelines. Media that did not want to sign the controversial rules had lost their accreditation.
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