We got a request a few days ago from a law-enforcement agency to use some photos from our archive. They wanted to post them as part of an investigation. We declined.
This wasn’t out of spite or a desire not to help. We just don’t think that is the best way we can help. A newspaper functions best as an independent organization, a watchdog, rather than as an agent of the state. Once, we start turning over our files to public agencies, we’ve given up that independence and the freedom that comes with just having a note pad and a penchant for asking questions.
This ties back to some extent to the
Judith Miller case of last year and a more recent one involving the SEC and a reporter’s notes. The Miller case was to a large extent about confidential sources, but it’s also about government agencies trying to get the media to help them do their jobs.
The way we help is simple. We write stories. Then public officials can read them and decide what to do.
One more thing: Wake Forest may not be
winning a lot of games, but you gotta love their understanding of world events. Only Skip Prosser would use the phrase causi belli in a quote. Not to be outdone, Eric Williams gives a nice summation of European history with this quip: “Coach always talks about me being selfish, but at the same time I’m not going to be stupid. I’m not going to try to fight my way through the Russian Army.”


Your host is Ken Otterbourg, the managing editor at the Winston-Salem Journal. It's a forum to discuss the media, from