
This article originally appeared in the ABA’s
First Amendment & Media Litigation Newsletter. Reproduced by
permission.
THE SUPREME COURT CLAMPS DOWN ON MEDIA
RIDE-ALONGS
By John M. Touhy and Jeffrey W. Sarles 1
Live footage of law enforcement activity taken by
media "ride-alongs" has become so common place that it has even become a staple
of TV shows like "Cops" and "Rescue 911." A ruling by the U.S. Supreme Court
last month has sharply cut back the permissible scope of coverage provided by
media "ride-alongs" and may well affect other on-the-spot coverage of law
enforcement operations. In the consolidated cases of Wilson v. Layne, ___
U.S. ___, 1999 WL 320817 (May 24, 1999), and Hanlon v. Berger, ___ U.S.
___, 1999 WL 320818 (May 24, 1999), the Court held that law enforcement
officials violate the Fourth Amendment when they permit media representatives to
accompany them during the execution of a warrant in a private home. But
precisely where the line now falls between legitimate news coverage and invasion
of privacy remains an open question.
Media "ride-alongs" of the type at issue in
Wilson and Hanlon have posed difficult issues for the courts,
resulting in divergent and inconsistent decisions. These conflicting decisions
reflect competing values — on the one hand, the interest of the public in
obtaining newsworthy information and of the media in providing it, and, on the
other hand, the interest of property owners in reasonable expectations of
privacy.
Until recently, courts rarely found a constitutional
problem when news media "rode along" with police officials and photographed or
filmed warrant executions on private property. For example, in a widely cited
case the Florida Supreme Court held that plaintiffs "impliedly consented" to the
entry of news media accompanying fire and police officials into their home after
their daughter died in a fire. Florida Publishing Co. v. Fletcher, 340
So.2d 914 (Fla. 1977). See also Henderson v. Colorado, 879 P.2d
383 (Colo. 1994) (en banc); Magenis v. Fisher Broadcasting, Inc., 798
P.2d 1106 (Or. App. 1990).
In 1994, however, the Second Circuit dramatically
pronounced in Ayeni v. Mottola, 35 F.3d 680 (2d Cir. 1994), that "[a]
private home is not a soundstage for law enforcement theatricals." A Secret
Service agent had obtained a warrant to enter the home of a credit card fraud
suspect and invited members of a CBS-TV crew from the "Street Stories" show to
accompany him. The court affirmed denial of the agent’s qualified immunity
defense on the ground that the crew’s videotaping of private effects served no
law enforcement purposes. Similarly, in Hagler v. Philadelphia Newspapers,
Inc., 1996 WL 408605 (E.D. Pa. July 12, 1996), the court supported its
denial of qualified immunity by reiterating that "[a] search warrant is simply
not a press pass."
Other courts, however, upheld the propriety of media
participation in police raids. In one such opinion, for example, the Eighth
Circuit observed that "most courts have rejected the argument that the United
States Constitution forbids the media to encroach on a person’s property while
the police search it." Parker v. Boyer, 93 F.3d 445 (8th Cir. 1996).
See also Stack v. Killian, 96 F.3d 159 (6th Cir. 1996); Reeves
v. Fox Television Network, 983 F. Supp. 703 (N.D. Ohio
1997).
To resolve this debate, the Supreme Court announced
last November that it would review conflicting decisions from the Ninth Circuit
(Hanlon) and the Fourth Circuit (Wilson) that addressed the
propriety of media ride-alongs.
In Hanlon, the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS)
and CNN executed an agreement permitting CNN to film the execution of a search
warrant on a rancher suspected of killing eagles, an endangered species. CNN
wanted footage for TV shows on environmental topics, and the agency wanted
publicity for its efforts to combat environmental crime. FWS obtained the search
warrant but did not inform the issuing judge of the planned media
participation.
One of the FWS agents entering the ranch was wired
with a hidden CNN microphone that continuously transmitted live audio to the CNN
technical crew. CNN also videotaped the episode and later broadcast substantial
portions of it. Although the rancher had agreed to the agents’ entry, he was not
told that his conversations were being recorded or that the cameras belonged to
media.
The rancher was charged with the taking of endangered
species and acquitted on all counts except one misdemeanor. He sued CNN and FWS
agents for violation of his Fourth Amendment rights. The Ninth Circuit reversed
the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the defendants, holding that
their conduct violated the Fourth Amendment and that the FWS agents were not
entitled to qualified immunity.
In Wilson, Washington Post reporters, one with
a camera, accompanied U.S. Marshals and local police officers in the execution
of an arrest warrant at what they thought was a fugitive’s home. Actually, it
turned out to be his parents’ home, and the fugitive wasn’t there but his
parents were — with little clothes on. They objected to the intrusion, resulting
in the suspect’s father being subdued on the floor. The reporters observed and
photographed these events, but their photographs were never
published.
The Wilsons sued the officers for violating the
Fourth Amendment by permitting reporters to enter their home and observe and
photograph the confrontation. The district court denied the officers’ qualified
immunity defense and motion for summary judgment, and the Fourth Circuit
reversed. The court of appeals did not decide whether the media accompaniment
violated the Fourth Amendment, but granted the officers qualified immunity on
the ground that at the time of the intrusion there was no clearly established
Fourth Amendment right against entry by news media covering the lawful execution
of a warrant.
The Supreme Court, in an opinion by Chief Justice
Rehnquist, unanimously held that media ride-alongs of the type at issue in
Hanlon and Wilson violate the Fourth Amendment rights of
homeowners. At the same time, the Court granted qualified immunity from
liability to the law enforcement officers on the ground that the
unconstitutional character of media ride-alongs was not clearly established at
the time of the incidents in question.
The Court’s Fourth Amendment holding rested in large
part on the "centuries-old principle of respect for the privacy of the home"
that is embodied in the Fourth Amendment. It reasoned that, although the
warrants authorized the law enforcement officers to intrude upon that privacy,
the presence of the reporters was not authorized by the warrants or related to
their execution.
The Court rejected contentions that the media
presence served law enforcement objectives by helping to publicize the
government’s efforts to combat crime and facilitate accurate information about
law enforcement activities. The Court stressed that such benefits cannot
overcome the fundamental right to privacy in one’s home conferred by the Fourth
Amendment. The Court also noted that the media was present primarily to enhance
its own private commercial interests, and any furtherance of law enforcement
objectives was but incidental and obtainable by the agencies
themselves.
Supporters of aggressive newsgathering and the
public’s right to on-the-spot coverage of law enforcement activity may be
chagrined at the short shrift given by the Supreme Court to their concerns. But
the Supreme Court has spoken and answered any doubts about the applicability of
the Fourth Amendment. Media accompaniment of law enforcement officers entering
private homes to execute a warrant now is plainly unconstitutional. Thus, law
enforcement officers who permit such accompaniment no longer can hope for
qualified immunity from liability, and media representatives riding along risk
tort liability for invasion of privacy and similar claims. In Berger, the
Ninth Circuit rejected CNN’s argument that it was immune from liability under
the civil rights laws because it is not a state actor, and the Supreme Court now
has denied CNN’s petition for certiorari. No. 97-1914 (U.S. June 1,
1999).
However, the Supreme Court has not barred media
ride-alongs altogether. There appears to be no constitutional problem with
having the media accompany law enforcement officials on regular patrols and even
on the execution of warrants up to the private property line of the target. A
public sidewalk in front of the targeted house remains public, allowing the
media to obtain a front-row seat for the events in question without crossing the
privacy threshold. Similarly, if a suspect is arrested, the journey back to the
station should be fair game for media coverage.
The Hanlon and Wilson cases have
brought into plain focus the fact that Fourth Amendment privacy rights can clash
with First Amendment newsgathering rights. Certainly, the media has a critical
role to play in keeping the public informed about law enforcement activity, a
task it cannot perform if journalists are restricted to collecting facts from
standard police reports. Reporters and photographers need to be on the spot,
asking questions and reporting what they see as it happens. Going too far in
muzzling the media by threats of liability deviates from the longstanding
principle that government may not limit "the stock of information from which
members of the public may draw." Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia,
448 U.S. 555, 576 (1980).
A decline in public awareness and oversight of law
enforcement activity reduces the ability of the public to participate
meaningfully in what has become an increasingly vital societal function.
Limiting media coverage of law enforcement activity beyond what is necessary to
protect privacy rights may widen the gulf between governed and government,
thereby jeopardizing the very rights that privacy advocates seek to protect.
Indeed, shining the bright light of media coverage on law enforcement often
serves to expand, not diminish, constitutional rights. As the Supreme Court
repeatedly has explained, "the opportunity for free political discussion" best
ensures a government that is "responsive to the will of the people." New York
Times v. Sullivan, 376 U.S. 254, 269 (1964).
The Court’s resolution of the issues in Hanlon
and Wilson does not in itself conflict with these fundamental "free
press" principles. The extent of the media intrusions in those cases provided
enough of an opportunity for the Supreme Court to enact some limiting principle
against overzealous coverage. The task now is to ensure that media outlets, law
enforcement agencies, and the courts develop rational standards to balance the
increasingly complex relationship between law enforcement, newsgathering, an
informed public, and privacy.
Mr. Touhy is a litigation partner and Mr. Sarles a
litigation associate at Chicago’s Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw. Back to Article
[Copyright © 2000 Mayer, Brown & Platt. This
Mayer, Brown & Platt article provides information and comments on legal
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