Tuesday, October 30, 2007

15 Years of Work Stolen by the Government

If journalists in the U.S. think they have it bad they ought to be lucky they weren’t born in Croatia.

U.S. some believe the media is influenced by the government but one should consider how journalists in other countries are treated. It is a story of its own, how the Croatian government invaded one man’s home and seized 15 years of investigative journalism.

"They told my four-year-old daughter and my wife not to move and took everything from 15 years of investigative work - documents, cassettes and CDs," says Peratovic, who spent the night in prison before being released earlier this month.

The story reports that the men who entered Peratovic’s home were armed with guns. It had to have been like a hold up but instead of stealing money, jewelry and big screen TVs they took years of work that more than likely he will never get back.

As journalists we are protected by the first and fourth amendments which include freedom of speech, freedom of the press and the right to privacy. The most investigative journalists should fear in the U.S. are lawsuits. Then again everyone is being sued these days so maybe we should all watch out. But at least we can go home at night without the fear of the government banging down our doors for uncovering misdeeds.

2 comments:

armygirl2003 said...

That's pretty scary. I wonder what it would have been like if the government took all the notes from journalists such as Bob Woodward from Watergate?

I think this is one of those times you should really cherish that freedom of speech amendment.

LMadd said...

Once I had a professor tell me to throw away all my notes after I had written a story. Being a person who liked to keep important things "just in case" I wonderd why this would matter.

She proceeded to tell me that, in the case of a mistake, investigation, etc., it would be easier to not have the documents in hand than to hand them over.

I guess that is an ethical issue, but it seems that if my life and family were at stake, it would be an easy choice to make. I am glad to live in America where the laws do protect us journalists.