Victory In "Media Shield" Case (9/3/2009)
Kauai Judge Rules that Hawaii's Media Shield Law Protects Documentary
Filmmaker's Work
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
HONOLULU – The ACLU of Hawaii today announced a victory for all journalists
in Hawaii in the wake of Kauai Circuit Court Judge Kathleen Watanabe's ruling
yesterday that Hawaii's new "media shield" law applies to independent filmmaker
Keoni Alvarez and that he cannot be forced to reveal his unpublished work or his
confidential sources. After a court hearing, Judge Watanabe
granted Alvarez's request for a protective order, meaning that Alvarez will not
be subjected to an invasive deposition and is not required to respond to
subpoenas demanding his work product.
The American Civil Liberties Union of Hawaii ("ACLU") and Honolulu attorney
James J. Bickerton (of Bickerton Lee Dang & Sullivan) represented Alvarez,
an independent filmmaker who has spent the last four years preparing a
documentary about Native Hawaiian burial practices and who was unwittingly drawn
into a legal battle over the construction of Joseph A. Brescia's home on Naue
Point on Kauai. Brescia's attorneys, in a search for evidence in
support of his case, issued several sweeping subpoenas demanding nearly all of
Alvarez's unpublished interviews and raw video footage and insisting that he
answer questions about his observations and his activities in a deposition under
oath.
Bickerton and the ACLU filed a motion for a protective order, asking Judge
Watanabe to block the deposition and to prohibit Brescia from issuing more
subpoenas to Alvarez. Judge Watanabe granted both requests.
Bickerton said, "With this decision, the media shield law can now be
confidently asserted by journalists seeking to protect their work. The
Judge ruled that the media shield law means what it says – journalists can
protect their confidential sources and can't be forced to reveal their
unpublished information."
Alvarez expressed relief, "I can continue to work on my projects with
integrity – without fear that I may have to betray the trust of my interview
subjects. Without this ruling, people wouldn't trust me and I wouldn't be
able to work on really sensitive projects like this one."
Daniel Gluck, ACLU senior staff attorney, stated, The court has enforced the
Legislature's intent. This is a big win for the community because journalists
now have the tools needed to distribute information and ideas – crucial for a
strong, independent, and free press."
The mission of the ACLU of Hawaii is to protect the fundamental freedoms
enshrined in the U.S. and State Constitutions. The ACLU of Hawaii fulfills this
through legislative, litigation, and public education programs statewide. The
ACLU of Hawaii is a non-partisan and private nonprofit organization that
provides its services at no cost to the public and does not accept government
funds. The ACLU of Hawaii has been serving Hawaii since 1965.
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