By Joe Strupp
Editor & Publisher
Sept. 22, 2006
Excerpt:
The contempt of court
ruling against San Francisco Chronicle reporters Mark Fainaru-Wada and
Lance Williams has a better chance of getting a U.S. Supreme Court
review than last year's Valerie Wilson case, the Chronicle's lead
attorney said Friday.
But don't expect the Chronicle's sources to reveal themselves, as some
sources have in the Wilson case, says Eve Burton, corporate counsel for
Hearst Newspapers, the Chronicle's owner. "That will not happen in this
case," she declared, declining to elaborate.
Burton commented a day after a federal judge sentenced Fainaru-Wada and
Williams to as many as 18 months in jail for failing to disclose their
sources in the BALCO investigation. The pair were held in contempt for
declining to give up the identity of their sources, who leaked grand
jury testimony in 2004 to the reporters that revealed baseball stars
Barry Bonds and Jason Giambi had admitted using steroids.
The jail sentence has been stayed pending an appeal before the Federal
Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which Burton predicts will not be
completed until early 2007. If the case is not overturned by the
appeals court, Chronicle officials have said they would seek a review
by the Supreme Court.
The high court declined to take the case of reporters Judith Miller and
Matt Cooper last year after they were charged with a similar contempt
action related to the Wilson case. Miller eventually served more than
80 days in jail before an agreement was reached for her source, I.
Lewis Libby, to reveal himself.
Investigators subpoenaed Miller and Cooper as part of an investigation
into who leaked the identity of Wilson, a CIA agent, to columnist
Robert Novak. Novak revealed her identity in a 2003 column. Although
Miller never wrote a story about the matter, and Cooper wrote one only
after Novak's column appeared, investigators sought to find their
sources for the identity. In recent months, former deputy secretary of
state Richard Armitage has come forth as Novak's source.