Via THE RUTHERFORD INSTITUTE
In coming to Santilli’s defense, Institute attorneys warned that Santilli’s case followed a pattern by the government of intimidating journalists whose reporting portrays the government in a negative light or encourages citizens to challenge government injustice and wrongdoing.
The Rutherford Institute’s memorandum on the First Amendment rights of journalists and the government’s complaint regarding Santilli are available at www.rutherford.org.
PORTLAND, Oregon — Citing a
lack of evidence, federal prosecutors have dismissed the government’s
conspiracy charge against radio shock jock Pete Santilli, a new media
journalist who was arrested and charged in connection with his reporting
on the 41-day occupation of the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in
Burns, Oregon. The dismissal came on the eve of Santilli’s trial.
Attorneys for The Rutherford Institute advised Santilli’s
court-appointed attorney, Thomas Coan, on the First Amendment
protections for Santilli’s activities as a journalist. Santilli is the
only journalist among those who were charged with conspiracy to impede
federal officers from discharging their duties by use of force,
intimidation, or threats. However, Santilli was charged solely as a
reporter of information and not as an accomplice to any criminal
activity.In coming to Santilli’s defense, Institute attorneys warned that Santilli’s case followed a pattern by the government of intimidating journalists whose reporting portrays the government in a negative light or encourages citizens to challenge government injustice and wrongdoing.
The Rutherford Institute’s memorandum on the First Amendment rights of journalists and the government’s complaint regarding Santilli are available at www.rutherford.org.
“The FBI’s prosecution of
this radio shock jock has been consistent with the government’s ongoing
attempts to intimidate members of the press who portray the government
in a less than favorable light,” said constitutional attorney John W.
Whitehead, president of The Rutherford Institute and author of Battlefield America: The War on the American People.
“This is not a new tactic. During the protests in Ferguson, Missouri,
and Baltimore, Maryland, numerous journalists were arrested while
covering the regions’ civil unrest and the conditions that spawned that
unrest. These attempts to muzzle the press were clearly concerted,
top-down efforts to restrict the fundamental First Amendment rights of
the public and the press. Not only does this tactic silence individual
journalists, but it has a chilling effect on the press as a whole,
signaling that they will become the target of the government if they
report on these events with a perspective that casts the government in a
bad light.”
In early January 2016, a
group of armed activists, reportedly protesting the federal government’s
management of federal lands and its prosecution of two local ranchers
convicted of arson, staged an act of civil disobedience by occupying the
Malheur National Wildlife Refuge in Burns, Oregon. Broadcaster Pete
Santilli, who has covered such protests in the past, including the April
2014 standoff in Nevada between the Bundy ranching family and the
federal government over grazing rights, described himself as an embedded
journalist reporting on the occupation in Burns. Santilli did not
participate in the takeover of the refuge, nor did he reside on the
grounds of the refuge.
However, as a self-described “shock jock” who uses “colorful
language,” Santilli was vocal about his commitment to exercising his
First Amendment rights in a nonviolent, peaceful fashion and the need
for others to do so as well. When asked to clarify his role in relation
to the occupation, Santilli declared, “My role is the same here that it
was at the Bundy ranch. To talk about the constitutional implications of
what is going on here. The Constitution cannot be negotiated.” Santilli
also took pains to emphasize during his broadcasts that the only weapon
he is using is the First Amendment: “I’m not armed. I am armed with my
mouth. I’m armed with my live stream. I’m armed with a coalition of
like-minded individuals who sit at home and on YouTube watch this.” In
the wake of a roadblock that resulted in the arrests of several key
leaders of the occupation and the killing of another, Santilli was
arrested and eventually indicted with conspiracy to impede federal
officers.