NAB Amplify
The question is not whether the Federal Bureau of
Investigation is impersonating investigative reporters — but how many.
For more than a decade the FBI has impersonated documentary
filmmakers but the extent of the Bureau’s abuse of the First Amendment is still
unknown.
Despite legal attempts to prevent law enforcement from
posing as investigative journalists, the revelations keep on coming.
The cumulative impact is a break down in trust between bone
fide doc crews and those willing to speak truth to power on camera — and even a
threat to life.
One of the first FBI surveillance operations to be uncovered
was that of Ernest Withers, a press photographer and chronicler of the civil
rights movement who had spent nearly two decades as a paid FBI informant.
That a journalist would be acting for the FBI proved a shock
to many but was just the tip of the iceberg.
No less insidious a practice is the FBI’s tactic of
impersonating documentary filmmakers in criminal investigations.
The most egregious of these occurred in 2007 but were only
revealed in 2014 when an FBI agent pretending to be an editor for The
Associated Press encouraged a suspect of a bomb threat to click on links
to fake news article and related photographs. When the suspect clicked the
link, he activated a computer program embedded within them that revealed his
location to the FBI.
Then in 2014, in an incident that came to light in 2017, FBI
agents posed as a documentary film crew in order to gather information and
conduct on-camera interviews of individuals present at an armed standoff
between the federal Bureau of Land Management and supporters of cattle rancher
Cliven Bundy.
According to the International Documentary Association,
to make the ruse as believable as possible, the FBI created professional
credentials, websites and business cards for a fake documentary film company —
“Longbow Productions” — deployed professional cameras, lights and sound
equipment, and even gave their fake documentary film a working title: America
Reloaded.
The Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press has been at
the forefront of legal efforts to obtain more information about the FBI’s
practice of impersonating members of the media — a practice the Reporters
Committee has vocally criticized as an affront to the First Amendment.
It has used a series of federal Freedom of Information Act
(FOIA) requests to uncover more FBI fake media activity — but the full extent
is alarmingly still secret.
In defending its position, the FBI argues that publicly
disclosing how frequently FBI agents impersonate documentary filmmakers “would
allow criminals to judge whether they should completely avoid any contacts with
documentary film crews, rendering the investigative technique ineffective.”
Yet the knowledge that the FBI is posing as journalists,
however rare these incidents may be, is already having an impact on how
would-be whistle blowers view legitimate reporters. It is undermining their
credibility.
“The specter of FBI agents pretending to be documentary
filmmakers has a chilling effect on speech to real documentary filmmakers,
hampering their ability to gather information and tell important stories,” says
the IDA. “As the FBI itself acknowledged, sources and subjects will undoubtedly
be less willing to speak candidly to documentary filmmakers, both on- and
off-camera, if they think those filmmakers are secretly working for the
government.”
Especially troubling is the risk to safety of documentary
film teams that FBI impersonation poses. As the IDA points out, independent documentary
filmmakers often work alone, or on small teams, meeting interview subjects in
remote or unfamiliar locations. Given the environments in which many
documentarians work, a subject’s false belief that a filmmaker is an undercover
FBI agent could put that filmmaker in danger.
To learn more about the Reporters Committee’s ongoing FOIA
litigation efforts to obtain records related to the FBI’s practice of
impersonating members of the media, including documentary filmmakers, visit the
Reporters Committee’s website at www.rcfp.org.
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