ACLU Asks Judge To Review Lawsuit Challenging FBI Brutality (3/5/2008)
FOR IMMEDIATE
RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org; (212) 549-2666 Working
Journalists Attacked By Federal Agents
SAN
JUAN, PUERTO RICO - The American Civil Liberties
Union today will ask a federal appeals court to allow a case brought by
journalists who were kicked, punched and pepper sprayed by FBI agents to move
forward. The ACLU will ask the U.S. Court of Appeals for the First Circuit to
reverse an earlier decision by the district court that sided with the FBI agents
and ignored important constitutional issues raised by the
journalists.
“This case raises the question of
how far government agents can go to impede the ability of journalists to gather
the news,” said Catherine Crump, staff attorney with the ACLU First Amendment
Working Group. “It’s time for the courts to exercise some much needed judicial
oversight. These journalists deserve their day in court.” In February 2006, several
journalists attempting to report on the search of a
San
Juan apartment by FBI agents approached
agents leaving the apartment to ask for their comments. The FBI agents responded
by using physical force to intimidate the journalists to stop them from
reporting on the apartment search.
On November
5, 2007,
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. The ACLU’s lawsuit asserts that
the FBI agents prevented the journalists from gathering the news by, among other
things, punching, shoving, and kicking them, spraying pepper spray in their
faces, covering the lens of their camera, and pointing an automatic rifle at a
one of the journalists.
“In keeping several journalists
from doing their jobs, the FBI agents violated the First Amendment right to
freedom of the press,” said William Ramirez, Executive Director and attorney
with the ACLU of Puerto Rico. “The FBI should not be able to exert excessive
physical force every time it wants to escape public scrutiny.”
At the time of the apartment
search, the FBI was the subject of intense criticism as a result of an earlier
raid in which a leader of the Puerto Rican independence movement was
killed.
In addition to Crump and Ramirez,
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.
The ACLU’s brief and other related
documents are available online here: www.aclu.org/freespeech/censorship/34007res20071105.html
|