June 20, 2008

No More Sources For You!

Seeking a scoop, rookie reporter Jennifer Latson from the Houston Chronicle went and tried to interview to a person accused of a serious felony without the person's lawyer's permission.

If the accused had said something incriminatory, it would have been front-page news in the Chronicle the next morning: the reporter would have been able to do something (question the accused without his lawyer present) that the prosecutor and the police could not do.

The lawyer wrote to the reporter requesting that she not talk to his client without first asking him.

Her response was "I'd refer you to the United States Constitution, Amendment I. I can attempt to interview your client until I'm blue in the face; he doesn't have to agree to see me."

That is certainly true: a reporter can try to interview an accused person until she's blue in the face (or until the jailers stop letting her in to the jail).

It seems like an excellent way to make sure the criminal defense bar is reluctant to talk to you about anything else, though.


© Mark Bennett for Houston Criminal Defense Lawyer, 2008. | Permalink | 5 comments | Add to del.icio.us digg
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Filed under Criminal Law by Tracy Robinson

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