FEATURE ARTICLE The Law and Confidential Sources: A Cautionary Tale
Jesse Ferreras June 9, 2008
Confidential sources have
been of enormous value to journalists and the public at large.
The information they have brought to light has helped expose
truths such as the corruption of a U.S. president, unethical
business practices by a Canadian prime minister and health
violations in restaurants and other public facilities. At
the forefront of these stories have been hard-nosed investigative
reporters eager to reveal truths that would otherwise remain
hidden. At the heart of them, however, are people whose fear
of reprisal forces them to hide their identities.
The courts and the press can often be seen to share the pursuit
of truth and justice, but they meet head-on where anonymous
sources are involved – the former wishes to uphold the
authority of the justice system, while the latter is eager
to bring truth to light. The use of an anonymous source to
make that happen, however, often forces these purposes into
conflict.
This article examines Canadian laws as they
affect the use of confidential sources in news stories. It
aims to provide a cautionary framework for journalists looking
to use confidential sources in their stories and examine the
ethical responsibility that a journalist should have to a
source under Canadian regulations.
Breach of Trust
Breach of trust is a law often encountered
in situations where a public servant discloses secret information
to a journalist. The law is outlined in section 122 of the
Criminal Code, which says that any public official who commits
fraud or breach of trust in connection with the duties of
his office can be subject to a prison term of up to five years.
A recent case helps illuminate the risks
inherent in coming forward with such information. Dennis Bueckert,
a now-deceased reporter with TheCanadian Press,
broke a story in April 2007 about a secret government document
that outlined a spending plan for numerous environmental initiatives,
including $230 million to develop clean energy technologies.
Bueckert’s story noted that the plan would fall short
of the government’s emissions targets under the Kyoto
Protocol, a topic of vigorous discussion at the time the story
was printed.
Three weeks after the story was published,
an Environment Canada employee was arrested for breach of
trust in connection with the leak, however reports from that
day said he was released and not charged. Two days later,
the leak revealed himself as Jeffrey Monaghan, a temporary
employee with the ministry.
Describing himself as an anarchist, he said
the proposed breach of trust charges were “a profound
threat to the public interest” and that his arrest was
“an extension of a government-wide communications strategy
pinned on secrecy, intimidation and centralization.”
It was later revealed that Monaghan was the drummer for the
Suicide Pilots, a punk band whose songs drew parallels between
Stephen Harper and Adolf Hitler.
As of May 2007, no charges have been laid
against Mr. Monaghan, but his antics drew fire from a Carleton
University business professor, who said that the episode displays
the risks of laying government work on temporary employees.
Contempt of Court
Contempt of court is the law that many reporters
fear where confidential sources are concerned. It is the only
remaining common law offence in Canada and is defined as a
“breach of a court order or other interference with
the proper administration of justice.” In this context,
it can affect reporters who refuse to disclose the identities
of confidential sources to the courts.
Ken Peters, a municipal affairs reporter for the Hamilton
Spectator, encountered this very situation in 1995 when
an anonymous source provided him with documents that detailed
municipal investigations into health and safety concerns at
St. Elizabeth’s Villa in Hamilton, Ontario. Peters wrote
three stories about the investigations, articles that prompted
the St. Elizabeth’s Home Society to sue the City of
Hamilton and various other parties for “defamation,
negligence and abuse of public office for releasing documents
to the media.”
Peters was subpoenaed to testify at the
trial and bring all documents related to the stories. He said
that he received the documents from a confidential source
while another individual was present. Justice David S. Crane,
the presiding judge, ordered Peters to reveal the identity
of that individual, but he refused, saying that doing so could
lead to identifying his source. Justice Crane nevertheless
asked Peters to reveal the identity anyway, but he protested,
telling the judge, “With all due respect, your Honour,
I can’t do that.”
Justice Crane then scheduled a show cause
hearing after citing Peters for contempt of court. To him,
refusing to reveal the identity of the second individual was
contemptuous, saying that his refusal to identify the individual
presented “defiance to the authority of the Supreme
Court and an obstruction to the administration of justice.”
As a result, Peters was fined $31,600 after his refusal to
identify the individual.
The case was appealed, however, and Justice
Robert Sharpe of the Ontario Court of Appeal overturned this
decision after considering a series of legal precedents. The
first was the “Wigmore Criteria,” a four-part
test to determine whether a journalist-source relationship
can enjoy protection. The test must determine the following:
The communications must originate in
a confidence that they will not be disclosed
This element of confidentiality must
be essential to the full and satisfactory maintenance of
the relation between parties
The relation must be one which in the
opinion of the community ought to be sedulously fostered
The injury that would inure to the relation
by the disclosure of the communications must be greater
than the benefit thereby gained for the correct disposal
of litigation
Justice Sharpe went on to cite numerous
precedents establishing the importance of source confidentiality.
Among them was the decision of the Supreme Court of Canada
in Canadian Broadcasting Corporation v. Lessard,
a case in which police obtained a warrant to seize videotapes
at the CBC’s head office in Montreal. Justice Sharpe
quoted Justice Beverley McLachlin of the Supreme Court in
his decision: “[C]onfidential sources of information
may be fearful of speaking to the press and the press may
lose opportunities to cover various events because of fears
on the part of participants that press files will be readily
available to the authorities.”
That Court decided in favour of the press,
ruling that the search of CBC offices impinged on Charter
s. 2(b) (freedom of the press) because the justice of the
peace that issued the warrant did not provide evidence that
the sought-after information could have been obtained elsewhere.
Justice Sharpe also cited the “Dagenais/Mentuck
test,” a series of criteria that arose out of cases
involving publication bans. The test asks courts to approach
cases in a way that avoids prioritizing one Charter right
over another and minimizes the impact on the affected rights
and values. This test was also used in Vancouver Sun (Re),
a Supreme Court decision in which the newspaper sought access
to an in camera hearing related to the Air India
trial. The judges argued in that case that the Dagenais/Mentuck
test should apply to all judicial decisions that could limit
the press’ freedom of expression.
Sharpe thus argued that the Dagenais/Mentuck
test should likewise apply to journalist-source confidentiality
and ruled that the charge of contempt against Ken Peters did
not comply with the criteria under either test. He argued
that Peters should have received an opportunity to seek other
avenues to produce the information and thereafter set aside
the finding of contempt and its associated penalty. The Canadian
Association of Journalists (CAJ) hailed the decision but argued
that Canada needs a shield law to protect journalists from
charges of contempt.
Bill C-36
September 11, 2001 brought a chill to the
hearts of westerners when two planes collided with the World
Trade Centre. The fear reached Canadian legislators when they
introduced Bill C-36 - the Anti-Terrorism Act - a sweeping
legislation that would amend the Criminal Code, the Canada
Evidence Act and several other Acts in order to provide government
and security agencies with expanded capacities to combat terrorism.
Those capacities included regulations that can affect the
media’s use of confidential sources.
Bill C-36 accorded new powers to Communications
Security Establishment Canada (CSEC), an agency that gathers
foreign signals intelligence and protects electronic information.
The agency, which reports to the Minister of National Defence,
drew criticism in the past for allegedly monitoring two ministers
in Margaret Thatcher’s cabinet on behalf of the British
Secret Service, but despite this controversy it was given
enhanced powers to gather foreign intelligence through intercepted
communications.
Section 273.65 of the deemed that the Minister
could, for the purpose of gathering foreign intelligence,
give authorization to CSEC to “intercept private communications
in relation to an activity or class of activities specified
in the authorization,” meaning that the agency could
tap any communication signal interacting with a foreign entity
when authorized by the Minister of National Defence. The Minister
could provide this authority to the agency if it met the following
criteria: the interceptions targeted individuals and associations
outside Canada; the desired information could not be obtained
any other way; the interception justified the intelligence
to be gathered; sufficient measures were taken to protect
Canadians’ privacy and ensure private communications
are retained only if essential to international affairs, defence
or security.
This section could affect journalists who
communicate electronically with confidential sources from
foreign countries. Those sources, if deemed salient to foreign
intelligence, thus cannot be given credible assurances that
they will remain anonymous. There is likewise nothing in the
Act to suggest that Canadians should be notified if their
phones are being monitored, which means that journalists can
give sources whatever assurances they want, but the authority
accorded to CSEC by Bill C-36 has rendered such assurances
moot.
The Canadian Bar Association filed a submission
to the government about Bill C-36 shortly after it was tabled
in the House of Commons. It argued that section 273.65 “removes
any ability for journalists to keep their sources confidential.”
The CBA said the section was problematic because it “relies
on the Minister’s discretion to weigh the government’s
interests and privacy rights.” The submission ultimately
argued that the reference to the Minister in section 273.65
should be amended to read “a judge” instead of
conferring that level of authority on the Minister.
In the end, however, the CBA’s efforts were not fruitful.
The Act received Royal Assent on December 18, 2001, and the
provision allowing CSEC to monitor calls as the Minister pleases
remains in effect.
No Protection
Wherever a journalist opts to use a confidential
source, they must first recognize that they are putting that
person at risk in an environment that affords them no legal
protections. Kim Bolan, an investigative reporter at the Vancouver
Sun, said in an interview that journalists must seriously
consider whether they can really guarantee anonymity to a
source.
“I have to make absolutely sure that
I can make the promise and commitment that I have made to
the person,” she said. “If they do have concerns
about the information eventually being linked to them, I try
and figure out other ways to get the same information, and
I think that is kind of the best way to protect somebody.”
At a time when no protections are offered
for journalist-source relationships, a primary ethical test
should weigh potential consequences to themselves against
those that could befall their sources. In general, the risks
to the source should outweigh those to the journalist, as
revealing a source because of the risks involved in keeping
someone confidential could ultimately lead to various ulterior
consequences: sources could dry up; a reporter could lose
his ability to be trusted; his media outlet could lose the
ability to breakk exclusive stories about malfeasance by public
officials. When considering the consequences to themselves,
journalists should also remember that Canadian press agencies
have a history of successfully fighting back against infringements
on freedom of the press, as in the cases of CBC v. Lessard
and Vancouver Sun (Re).
Where Bill C-36 is concerned, however, this
test cannot apply. In cases where a journalist deals with
a confidential source who is also a foreign entity, the reporter
must inform the source that they will not personally disclose
their identity, though the source should be warned that there
is nothing the reporter can do to guard against the government
intercepting their phone call and thus identifying the source.
The onus on a journalist to protect sources’
identities could soon be lifted in the legislative and judicial
branches of government. In the case of the latter, the National
Post is appealing an Ontario Court of Appeal decision
to turn over to police a document that allegedly contains
details of a loan application for the Auberge Grand-Mère,
a hotel in former prime minister Jean Chretien’s riding.
The document was obtained by investigative reporter Andrew
MacIntosh while he worked for the Post in 2001.
When news of the document first surfaced,
it appeared to implicate Chretien in a conflict of interest.
Now the RCMP is hoping to obtain the document in order to
do forensic tests to determine who leaked it. The Post
is challenging the ruling, saying in an editorial that the
effect of the judgment is that officers can “waltz right
on in” on journalists and obtain their materials.
Even if the SCC does not rule on behalf
of the National Post, a landmark piece of legislation
currently circulating in the House of Commons could go a long
way to cementing protection for confidential sources in Canadian
law. Bill C-426, an “Act to amend the Canada Evidence
Act (protection of journalistic sources)” has been put
forward by Bloc Quebecois MP Serge Ménard and is now
being studied by the Standing Committee on Justice and Legal
Affairs.
It proposes an amendment to Section 39.1
that reads, “No journalist shall be compelled to disclose
the source of any information that the journalist has gathered,
written, produced or disseminated for the public through any
media or to disclose any information or record that could
identify the source.” It also contains a provision that
judges cannot issue search warrants or compel the disclosure
of any information relating to an anonymous source unless
it is in the public interest.
“[The amendments] will be very useful
in practice for police that want to know what they can do,”
Ménard said in an interview. “It will be good,
I think, for justices and judges… because then they
will have in two pages what the must check before issuing
a warrant.”
Despite an endorsement from the Fédération
professionelle des journalistes du Québec (FPJQ), Ménard’s
bill has not won the support of the Canadian Association of
Journalists, which feels it does not go far enough to protect
sources, according to CAJ president Mary Agnes Welch.
“There’s still a way for courts
to say, ‘This is one of those very important times where
a journalist has to hand over a document,’” she
said. “We think that, for us, that would compromise
a fundamental belief of the CAJ, that journalists ought to
have pretty blanket protection.”
Welch added that she is not confident the
bill will pass into law.
Ménard, however, is optimistic about its future. He
believes that the Liberals and the NDP will support it when
it goes to a vote which, combined with the support of his
own party, would give it enough votes to pass.
“This kind of bill, we love it when
we’re in opposition, we hate it when we’re in
power,” he said.
Whether the bill passes or not, it comes
at a time when people are asking serious questions about whether
anonymous sources should have legal protections. In the past
reporters have run the risk of being found in contempt when
using a source, and the sources themselves have faced legal
reprisal if found out. R v. National Post and Bill
C-426 are two situations that could enshrine source protection
in Canadian law.
For now, however, journalists must
continue to weigh carefully the prospect of committing a common
law crime against revealing a source’s name –
either of these trials could alleviate, if not remove entirely,
the weight of that choice.