On April 3rd a handful of supporters greeted Josh Wolf as he came out of prison in Dublin, California. He had spent more than seven months in jail for refusing to testify and turn over to federal prosecutors a videotape of a 2005 street demonstration in San Francisco. The prosecutors were investigating injury to a policeman and minor damage to a police car. It is apparently the longest an American journalist has served for protecting his sources and materials.
What makes the case odder is that Mr Wolf, who is 24, is a video-blogger as much as a freelance journalist. Moreover, the material was from a public setting and the sources have scant claim to confidentiality. He could have been protected by California's generous “shield law” for journalists, but the federal government became involved on the thinnest of pretexts: namely, that it partly finances the San Francisco Police Department. This made Mr Wolf feel that though the evidential value of his videotape was low, the federal prosecutors meant to force him to identify the masked protesters before a grand jury. This, he said, would have transformed him into an investigator for the government. So he chose jail instead.
The case raises hard issues. What are the rights of bloggers in an era when almost anyone may claim to qualify for a journalist's protection? What legal privilege do reporters enjoy to keep source material from government's prying eyes? And did federal prosecutors abuse their authority by bringing charges for small municipal offences, thereby deliberately bypassing the state's law shielding journalists?
Mr Wolf's case underscores the reality that journalists—or simply those who behave as if they were journalists, when formally they are not—have few rights to shield themselves from revealing their sources or reportorial material. Although 49 states offer certain rights (Wyomin is the exception), only the barest protection exists at national level. Potential federal legislation, which has bipartisan support, would require prosecutors to show that the information is necessary and cannot be otherwise obtained. The debate is over how broad the shield should be. Apply it too widely and the protection will inevitably be diluted; too narrowly and many eligible people will not be covered, explains Floyd Abrams, a first-amendment lawyer. In 1972 the Supreme Court, in the Branzburg case, said that reporters had no shield. But a concurring opinion contained the remark that the government should show the “necessity” of forcing reporters to testify. Prosecutors have largely accepted this legal gloss, until the recent cases when they have attacked on the press—or on “citizen journalists” like Mr Wolf.
“The whole issue of whether or not I am a journalist is irrelevant: the first amendment was written to protect pamphleteers,” says Mr Wolf. He did not have time to get a card-carrying reporter's job, since he was imprisoned two months after graduating from university. “This was my entry into the world of journalism,” he says, “and a hell of an entry it was.”
注(1):本文选自Economist, 04/12/2007
注(2):本文习题命题模仿对象为2003年真题Text 4。
1. What is implied in the first two paragraphs?
[A] The case was not supposed to have lasted for such a long time.
[B] “Shield law” is meant to protect journlist’s privileges.
[C] It is a case about jounalist’s right of protection.
[D] Journalists usually refuse to become government’s investigator.
2. The author quotes Floyd Abrams’s explanation to show that _______.
[A] it is difficult to define a proper “shield” that journalists should be entitled to
[B] the protection should enable journalists to safeguard most resources
[C] the federal legislation is still undergoing the debate on journalists’ right
[D] the protection should be strictly limited to a certain degree
3. Josh Wolf’s attitude towards his case is _______.
[A] indifferent
[B] outrageous
[C] sad
[D] considerate
4. Journalists’ protection rights exist _______.
[A] only at the national level
[B] only at the sate level
[C] clearly at both the national and state level
[D] clearly at the national level and vaguely at the state level
5. The text intends to express the idea that _______.
[A] people should be more concerned about whether they can enjoy jounlists’ protection
[B] the first amendment should be given a clearer explanation on journalists’ rights
[C] the legislation for journalists’ privilege of protecting resources has a long way to go
[D] more campaigns should be launched to protest federal prosecutors’ abusing authority
篇章剖析
本文讨论的是在美国,记者是否应该具有合法保护特权这个问题。第一、二段简要介绍了约什·沃尔夫一案;第三段提出了与话题有关的几个主要问题;第四段从法律上讨论了记者是否享受保护、以及如何享受保护等;第五段是沃尔夫先生对整个事件的评论。
词汇注释
testify [`testifai] v. 证明, 作证 pry [prai] v. 探查
prosecutor [`prCsikju:tE] n. 起诉人;检举人 bypass [`baipB:s] vt. 设旁路, 迂回
freelance n. 自由作家;自由记者 underscore [9QndE5skC:] vt. 划线于...下, 强调
scant [skAnt] adj. 缺乏的,不足的 bipartisan [bai9pB:ti`zAn] adj. 两党连立的
confidentiality [kCnfi9denFE`Aliti]n. 机密性 dilute [dai`lju:t] v. 冲淡, 变淡, 变弱
shield [Fi:ld] n. 防护物, 护罩 eligible [`elidVEbl] adj. 符合条件的, 合格的
pretext [`pri:tekst] n. 借口, 托辞 amendment [E`mendmEnt] n. 修正案
transform [trAns`fC:m] vt. 转换, 改变, 改造 pamphleteer [9pAmfli`tiE] n. 小册子作者
难句突破
Apply it too widely and the protection will inevitably be diluted; too narrowly and many eligible people will not be covered, explains Floyd Abrams, a first-amendment lawyer.
主体句式 … explains Floyd Abrams, a first-amendment lawyer.
结构分析 这是一个倒装的句子结构,其正常的结构应该为Floyd Abrams, a first-amendment lawyer explains that,前面的内容都是explain的宾语,是间接引语。宾语由两个并列结构组成,中间以分号分隔。其中第二个分句是一个省略句,完整的句子应该为apply it too narrowly and …。
句子译文 第一修正案律师弗洛伊德·艾布拉姆斯,如果法案适用范围太广,其效力会不可避免地降低;如果太狭窄则又会使得应受到保护的人得不到保护。
题目分析
1.C. 推理题。选项A、B、D都属于细节问题,在文中都可以找到对应的信息。选项C归纳了前两段的内容。
2.A. 推理题。弗洛伊德·艾布拉姆斯的话的意思是,如果法案适用范围太广,其效力会不可避免地降低;如果太狭窄则又会使得应受到保护的人得不到保护。可见要确定记者保护权的范围还是非常困难的。
3.B. 态度题。文章对应信息为最后一句“This was my entry into the world of journalism,” he says, “and a hell of an entry it was.”,从“hell”这个词看出来沃尔夫是非常生气的。
4.D. 推理题。原文对应信息为“Although 49 states offer certain rights (Wyomin is the exception), only the barest protection exists at national level”,最明确的立法只是停留在美国整个联邦的程度,但是还没有明确地具体到各个州。
5.C. 主旨题。要纵观全文,不要受到一些细节方面的干扰。
参考译文
4月3日,一群支持者向刚刚从加州的都柏林监狱被释放约什·沃尔夫表示祝贺。他已经被关了七个多月,原因是他拒绝作证以及拒绝向联邦检察官交出关于2005年发生在旧金山一场示威游行的录象带。当时,那些检察官们正在调查一起伤害警察及破坏警车案。在所有因为保护消息来源和资料而被关押的记者中,显然沃尔夫是关押时间最长的一个。
这件案子的特别之处在于,24岁的沃尔夫既是一个播客作者也是一个自由撰稿人。此外,他所掌握的资料是从公共设施上拍下来,其消息来源也没有声明其保密性。他本可得到加州慷慨的“新闻保障法”对于记者的保护,但是联邦政府却找出了一个非常牵强的借口:从名义上来说,洛衫机警署的资金部分来自政府。这就使得沃尔夫先生觉得,尽管他的录象带没有很高的证据价值,但是联邦检察官故意强迫他在大培审团面前确认那些带面具的反对者。他认为这会使得他变成政府的探子。所以他宁愿选择进监狱。
这个案子引起了人们对一些棘手问题的关注。在一个几乎所有人都可以声称自己具备得到记者保护的条件的时代,博客作者们到底都有哪些权利呢?为了保护消息来源不被政府的眼线查到,记者们享有什么样的合法特权呢?当联邦检察官们为了故意避开州级记者保护法律而对小型市级违法行为提起诉讼时,他们是否滥用了自己的权力呢?
沃尔夫案突显了一个现实,那就是记者——或者只是那些以记者自居但严格说不是记者的人——在保护消息来源和报道材料方面几乎没有任何的权利。尽管有49个州提供一些权利(除了怀俄明州),但最明确的相关规定只是停留在全国的层面上。一项得到两党支持的可能即将生效的法律中规定,检察官要证明需要得到信息是必需的且不能从其它途径获得。争议的内容主要在于对记者权利保护的范围大小。第一修正案律师弗洛伊德·艾布拉姆斯,如果法案适用范围太广,其效力会不可避免地降低;如果太狭窄则又会使得应受到保护的人得不到保护。1972年,最高法院在布兰斯堡诉海斯案件中声称,记者无权享受保护。但同时还出现了一些其他观点,如政府在强迫记者作证时需证明“必要性”。检察官普遍都已经接受了这一法律解释,直到最近他们又重新开始攻击媒体——或者是像沃尔夫这样的“民间记者”的案子。
“整件事情跟我是不是记者没有关系:第一修证案本来意在保护所有的作者,甚至包括小册子撰写人,” 沃尔夫说。他还没来得及得到得到一份携带记者证的工作,因为他刚从大学毕业就被关进监狱两个月。“这是我进入记者世界的开始,”他说,“一个极度糟糕的开始。”
责任编辑:虫虫