News Media & the Law 2001 Catherine J. Cameron - Abstracts

News Media & the Law 2001 Catherine J. Cameron
TitleSubjectAuthors
All eyes free to count under Florida law: access-friendly open records law aids examination of historical election.(Cover Story)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
Attorney destroys madam's 'black book' despite request: some courts have taken action against parties that destroy records before review of the denial is complete.(Maryland)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
Earnhardt law reverses access to open records.(Florida's Earnhardt Family Relief Act, includes related articles on sportswriter Ed Hinton's coverage of Dale Earnhardt's death prompting photo access request and uses of autopsy photos by the press)(Cover Story)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
Elected prosecutor not a 'public body' under records law.(Virginia)Literature/writingAshley Gauthier, Catherine J. Cameron
Justices will decide depth of exemption: feds argue tribal comments are confidential under act.(Freedom of Information Act)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
Katharine Graham: a lifetime of achievements.(Editorial)Literature/writingRebecca Daugherty, Lucy Dalglish, Ashley Gauthier, Catherine J. Cameron
Klamath confluence: laws mix when tribes involved.(tribal comments to federal agencies are public records)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
Newspaper's quest for juvenile records changes state access law.(World Publishing Co. v. White)(Oklahoma)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
One opinion spoils spirit of federal access law: since '89, agencies have relied on the Supreme Court in Reporters Committee to curtail press access with the approval of courts.Literature/writingRebecca Daugherty, Catherine J. Cameron
Open record request wins unanimous approval: the first Freedom of Information Act victory at the Supreme Court in eight years reins in a government attempt to broaden the scope of the agency deliberations exemption.Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
Police misconduct files held off limits to civil litigant; release would violate officer's privacy.(West Virginia)Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
The technological divide: a move by many police departments across the country to communicate over digital radio has left cop reporters to tune in nothing by static.Literature/writingCatherine J. Cameron
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