The Court considers Plaintiff Wen Ho Lee’s request to hold Walter Pincus, a Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter for The Washington Post and a non-party to this lawsuit, in civil contempt. In the underlying action, Dr. Lee accuses various federal agencies of violating his rights under the Privacy Act of 1974, 5 U.S.C. § 552a (2000), by “leaking” information about him to the news media in order to cover up their own security failures at Los Alamos National Laboratory. Mr. Pincus is one of six reporters to whom Dr. Lee issued deposition subpoenas. On June 29, 2004, this Court granted Dr. Lee’s motion to compel further deposition testimony from Mr. Pincus after Mr. Pincus refused to answer questions concerning the identity of his sources. Although Mr. Pincus appeared for a second deposition, he continued to refuse to answer questions about the identity of his confidential sources, asserting that such information was protected by a “reporter’s privilege.” Dr. Lee subsequently filed an Application for an Order to Show Cause Why Non-Party Journalist Walter Pincus Should Not Be Held in Civil Contempt (“Pl.’s App.”), which this Court granted on January 4, 2005.
After careful consideration of the parties’ briefs, oral arguments, and the entire record, this Court finds that the information that Mr. Pincus refuses to disclose is not protected by a reporter’s privilege under thе First Amendment or the common law. As there is clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Pincus refused to provide answers to deposition questions concerning the identity of his sources despite this Court’s June 29, 2004, Order to do so, Mr. Pincus will be held in civil contempt.
I. BACKGROUND
A. The Investigation
Dr. Wen Ho Lee, a scientist who was employed by the Department of Energy (“DOE”), was investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation (“FBI”) and the DOE on suspicion of espionage on behalf of the People’s Republic of China from 1996 to 1999.
Lee v. Dep’t of Justice,
The Lee investigation was first reported in
The Wall Street Journal
on January 7, 1999, and then by Mr. Pincus in
The Washington Post
on February 17, 1999.
Id.
On March 6, 1999,
The New York Times
published an article concerning the investigation of a Chinese-American computer scientist at Los Alamos, but the
B. The Privacy Act Lawsuit
On December 20, 1999, Dr. Lee brought suit against the United States Department of Justice (“DOJ”), the DOE, and the FBI, alleging that each defendant had improperly disclosed personal information about him and the investigation in violation of the Privacy Act.
2
Id.
at 4. The heart of Dr. Lee’s complaint is that “in connection with their investigations of suspected espionage at Los Alamos National Laboratory and a simultaneous public relations campaign to ameliorate damaging publicity about security lapses, the defendant agencies disclosed information pertaining to [him] by name, without obtaining his consent or assuring its accuracy, to persons not authorized to receive it, namely the news media.”
Lee v. Dep’t of Justice,
C. Dr. Lee’s Discovery Efforts
Dr. Lee’s Privacy Act lawsuit was stayed during his criminal case. On July 31, 2001, this' Court entered an order permitting unrestricted discovery. Dr. Lee made at least 420 written discovery requests to the Government defendants — 295 requests for production, 74 special interrogatories, and 51 requests for admission. PL’s App. at 9. However, Dr. Lee “was largely rebuffed by assertions of law enforcement privilege and learned nothing identifying the source of the leaks.”
Lee,
In August of 2002, Dr. Lee issued subpoenas to journalists James Risen and Jeff Gerth of
The New York Times,
Robert Drogin of
The Los Angeles Times,
H. Josef Hebert of ..the Associated Press, and Pierre Thomas of CNN seeking testimony and documents concerning the identity of the leakers.
Id.
Each of these journalists filed motions to quash their subpoenas on the grounds of a reporter’s privilege to refuse to reveal confidential news sources. Discovery Order,
In rejecting the journalists’ assertions of privilege, the Court relied on the D.C. Circuit’s decision in
Zerilli v. Smith,
Despite Judge Jackson’s order, the journalists continued to assert a reporter’s privilege and refused to answer any questions concerning the identities of their sources when they appeared for their second depositions in December 2003 and January 2004. Accordingly, on February 13, 2004, Dr. Lee filed an application for an order to show cause why the journalists should not be held in civil contеmpt of the Discovery Order. Judge Jackson issued an order granting Dr. Lee’s application on June 29, 2004, and a show cause hearing was held on August 18, 2004. That same day, Judge Jackson issued a twelve-page memorandum opinion and order holding each of the journalists in civil contempt for their failures to comply with the Discovery Order.
See Lee v. Dep’t of Justice,
D. Dr. Lee’s Efforts to Seek Testimony from Mr. Pincus
Mr. Pincus authored at least four articles concerning the Government’s investigation of Dr. Lee. 8 Response of Walter Pincus to the Order to Show Cause (“Pincus Response”) at 8-10. In late 2002, Dr. Lee served a deposition subpoena on Mr. Pincus, that, like the subpoenas issued to the other journalists, requested testimony and documents concerning the source or sources of the Government defendants’ leaks. Unlike the other journalists, Mr. Pincus did not move to quash his deposition subpoena. Accordingly, he was not among the journalists covered by Judge Jackson’s October 9, 2003, Discovery Order. 9
Mr. Pincus’s second deposition was subsequently scheduled for August 30, 2004. For that reason, he was not included in the contempt hearing concerning the other journalists on August 18, 2005, and Judge Jackson’s Contempt Order did not apply to him.
See
Contempt Order,
When Mr. Pincus appeared for his second deposition on August 30, 2004, he again refused to answer questions concerning the identity of the sources who directly provided information to him about Dr. Lee and the Lee investigation. Again, he invoked the “reporter’s privilege” apprоximately 100 times. See PL’s App. at Exh. 24 (Depo. Tr. of W. Pincus).
On December 17, 2004, Dr. Lee filed an Application for an Order to Show Cause why Mr. Pincus should not be held in civil contempt. 11
II. LEGAL STANDARDS
This Court has both an “inherent and a statutory power to enforce compliance with its orders through the remedy of civil contempt.”
SEC v. Bilzerian,
III. ANALYSIS
The question before the Court is whether, in the circumstances of this ease, Mr. Pincus can rely on a reporter’s privilege under the First Amendment or common law to refuse to answer deposition questions concerning his sources for stories he authored or co-authored about Dr. Lee. Mr. Pincus argues that there is no cause for holding him in contempt of court for protеcting the identities of his confidential sources “because the underlying Order directing him to reveal them is unsustainable.” Pincus Response at 1. Mr. Pincus contends that he is protected by a qualified First Amendment privilege and that Dr. Lee has not met his burden under Zerilli v. Smith to overcome that privilege. Mr. Pincus also argues that this Court should recognize a federal common law privilege that protects reporters from disclosing their sources when the public interest in newsgathering outweighs the public interest in compelling disclosure. For the reasons stated below, the Court rejects Mr. Pincus’s assertion of both privileges and finds that there is clear and convincing evidence that he failed to comply with the Court’s June 29, 2004, Order by refusing to answer questions concerning the identities of the Government sources who provided him with information about Dr. Lee and the Lee investigation.
A. The Qualified First Amendment Privilege 12
The Supreme Court first considered the possibility of a reporter’s privilege rooted in the First Amendment in
Branzburg v. Hayes,
However, several courts, including the D.C. Circuit, have limited the applicability of
Branzburg
to criminal proceedings.
Zerilli,
Like Dr. Lee, the plaintiffs in Zerilli sued several federal agencies under the Privacy Act, alleging that transcripts of their recorded conversations had been leaked to the press. See id. at 706. In an effort to ascertain the source of the leaks, the plaintiffs sought to depose news reporters and the reporters refused to reveal their sources, relying on a reporter’s privilege under the First Amendment. Id. at 706-07. The Court of Appeals sustained invocation of the privilege and articulated a two-part test to determine whether, a court may compel a reporter to disclose confidential sources: The information sought must be “of central importance” to the plaintiffs case, id. at 713, and the plaintiff must demonstrate that “he has exhausted every reasonable alternative source of information.” Id. If both of these requirements are met, the plaintiffs need for the testimony overcomes the reporter’s qualified privilege. Id. at 713-714.
Zerilli
and
Lee
set the standard in this Circuit for determining when a reporter’s First Amendment privilege must yield to a plaintiffs need for information: The reporter must answer questions for information (1) that is “central” to a plaintiffs case and (2) as to which the plaintiff has exercised all reasonable alternatives to obtain elsewhere. Use of this two-part analysis defines whether “extraordinary circumstances” exist.
14
Mr. Pincus contends that this First Amendment privilege is “designed to prevail in all but the most extraordinary circumstances,” Pincus Response at 17, and that Dr. Lеe has not met his heavy burden under
Zerilli
to overcome it. More specifically, he argues that the identities of his confidential sources are not central to Dr. Lee’s lawsuit and that Dr. Lee has failed to exhaust all reasonable alternative sources of the information that he claims to need.
Id.
at 1; Opposition of Walter Pincus to Plaintiff Wen Ho Lee’s Proposed Opinion (“Pincus
1. Centrality
According to Mr. Pincus, the information sought from him by Dr. Lee is not crucial to Dr. Lee’s Privacy Act case because (1) Dr. Lee failed to mention two of Mr. Pincus’s relevant articles in his Second Amended Complaint; (2) Dr. Lee’s name and other details of the Lee investigation were broadcast to the public prior to the publication of Mr. Pincus’s March 9, 1999, article identifying Dr. Lee by name; and (3) the information in Mr. Pincus’s February 4, 2001, article was disclosed to him by governmental and non-governmental sources so Dr. Lee cannot demonstrate that the disclosure that allegedly caused him harm was from a governmental source (as required by the Privacy Act). Pincus Response at 24-28. These arguments do not prevail.
First, the fact that Dr. Lee did not specifically mention Mr. Pincus’s February 1999 and November 1999 articles in his Second Amended Complaint is of no moment. Dr. Leе has continually asserted that Mr. Pincus is one of the reporters who likely has information concerning the identities of the Government officials who allegedly leaked information to the press. Furthermore, the two Pincus articles that Dr. Lee does reference in the Second Amended Complaint demonstrate that Mr. Pincus can testify to the identity of one or more Government leakers. See Walter Pincus, Spy Suspect Fired at Los Alamos Lab, Wash. Post, Mar. 9, 1999, at A1 (identifying Dr. Lee as the Los Alamos weapons designer who was under suspicion for handing nuclear secrets to China); Walter Pincus, Interrogation of Lee Raises New Questions, Sources Say, Wash. Post, Feb. 4, 2001, at A2 (reporting that during the Government’s investigation of Dr. Lee, his answers raised questions about his relationships with scientists from China and Taiwan).
Second, Mr. Pincus’s argument that “there is no evidence of actual injury stemming from
The Post’s
mere repetition of [Dr. Lee’s] name” is wholly without merit. The fact that other journalists may have published Dr. Lee’s name prior to Mr. Pincus’s publication of his name does not shield Mr. Pincus from his obligation to give truthful deposition testimony. There is no basis to assume that each journalist who published an article relating to the Lee investigation received information from the same source(s) and Dr. Lee must know who all of those source(s) were in order to effectively pursue his Privacy Act lawsuit.
See Lee,
To date, none of the defendants has admitted to being the source of the leaked information. “To prevail at trial ... plaintiff must perforce prove that they were, and that the third parties unconnected with defendants (but coincidentally in possession of the same information) were not the informants.” Discovery Order,
2. Exhaustion
According to Mr. Pincus, Dr. Lee has not exhausted “every reasonable alternative source of information” because he has failed “to make any serious and substantial effort” to depose possible witnesses. Pincus Response at 29. The Court of Appeals rejected this argument as it related to the other reporters, noting that “[wjhile Lee did not depose every individual who conceivably could have leaked the information,” he clearly met his burden as to exhaustion.
Lee,
Dr. Lee deposed twenty Government officials in this case, asking each official whether he or she knew the identities of
Mr. Pincus’s argument that Dr. Lee should have deposed every individual suspected of providing information to Mr. Pincus or possessing any information that was allegedly leaked to the press is far beyond the scope of Dr. Lee’s burden under Zeril-li. The Court agrees with Judge Jackson, who noted:
A plaintiff is not obligated to carry out a “wide-ranging and onerous discovery burden [ ] where the path is ... ill-lighted.” ... [T]he Zerilli exhaustion-of-alternative-sources factor requires only that all “reasonable” sources of evidence be tapped. It does not require proof positive that the knowledge exists noivhere else on earth but in the minds of the journalists and their anonymous confidants.
Id.
at 14 (quoting
Carey,
B. A Federal Common Law Privilege
Mr. Pincus contends that his claim of privilege is also supported by a “line of cases that authorizes the recognition of privileges under Rule 501 of the Federal Rules of Evidence.” Pincus Response at 36. He urges the Court to formally recognize a reporter’s privilege under federal common law. Although this argument was raised by the other journalists in
Lee,
thе Court of Appeals limited its analysis to the First Amendment.
See
1. Branzburg and Federal Rule of Evidence 501
Dr. Lee contends that the Supreme Court’s decision in
Branzburg
has already rejected the creation of a federal common law privilege to protect reporters from revealing their confidential sources.
See
Pl.’s Reply at 11-12;
see also In re Miller,
To date, the D.C. Circuit has limited the applicability of
Branzburg
to criminal proceedings. .
Zerilli,
Congress has intentionally given the federal courts the authority to continue to develop and recognize new common law privileges.
See
Fed.R.Evid. 501. It is worth noting that Congress enacted Rule 501 in 1975, three years after the Supreme Court’s decision in
Branzburg.
Rule 501 authorizes federal courts to define new evidentiary privileges by interpreting “the principles of the common law ... in light of reason and experience.”
Id.
In
Jaffee v. Redmond,
2. Analysis of a Reporter’s Privilege at Common Law
Mr. Pincus argues that the drafters of Rule 501 explicitly contemplаted the recognition of a reporter’s privilege and that this Court has a duty to recognize the privilege.
See Riley v. City of Chester,
Mr. Pincus now argues that this Court should adopt the three-part test for analyzing a reporter’s privilege at common law that was proposed by Judge Tatel in
In re Miller. See
In leak cases, then, courts' applying the privilege must consider not only the [1] government’s need for the information and [2] exhaustion of altеrnative sources, but also the two competing public interests lying at the heart of the balancing test. Specifically, the court must [3] weigh the public interest in compelling disclosure, measured by the harm the leak caused, against the public interest in newsgathering, measured by the leaked information’s- value. That framework allows authorities seeking to punish a leak to access key evidence when the leaked information' does more harm than good, such as in the nuclear weapon and military strike examples, while preventing discovéry when no public interest supports it....
Id.
at 997-98. The third prong of this test — that is, the “weighting of] the public interest in compelling disclosure ... against the public interest in newsgathering” — finds its roots in the D.C. Circuit’s First Amendment cases in the civil context, which Judge Tatel read to require a “balanc[ing of] ‘the public interest in protecting the reporter’s sources against the private interest in compelling disclosure.” ’
Id.
at 997 (quoting
Zerilli,
In re Miller,
of course, concerned a grand jury’s investigation into possible criminal conduct, and the Court reads the quoted language as applying specifically to that context — that is, when the Government seeks access to a reporter’s confidential sources to support a criminal prosecution.
19
Although Judge Tatel did not explicitly discuss the interests to be weighed in evaluating a common law reporter’s privilege in the civil context, the Court infers that he would likewise “balance ‘the public interest in protecting the reporter’s sources against the private interest in compelling disclosure.’ ”
See id.
at 997 (quoting
Zerilli,
However, if the Court has interpreted Judge Tatel’s decisions correctly, he proposes, essentially the same test for evaluating a reporter’s privilege under the common law as he proposes under the First Amendment. His concurrence in
In re Miller
seems to suggest a three-part test (need, exhaustion, and balancing of public and private interests) to evaluate a reporter’s privilege at common law in civil cases.
See
There are several reasons that the Court finds this test inherently unworkable and ultimately rejects the creation of a federal common law reporter’s privilege. To begin with, the law of this Circuit is clear.
Zerilli
and
Lee
explicate a
two-part
test of centrality and exhaustion to overcome a reporter’s privilege to conceal his sources under the First Amendment. Judges Tatel and Garland are of the minority opinion that a balancing test should be added in First Amendment cases arising under the Privacy Act,
22
to weigh the “newsworthiness” of the reporter’s story on one scale and-the private litigant’s interest on the other. Judge Tatel would also recognize a reporter’s privilege at common law and apply the same test, a view that was not accepted by Judges Sentelle or Henderson.
See In re Miller,
Submission of a reporter’s privilege to a judge’s determination of the newsworthiness of his or her story is also very troubling. Such a practice would create a subjective and elastic standard whose outcome could not be predicted.
Cf. Jaffee,
The proliferation of communications media in the modern world makes it impossible to construct a reasonable or useful definition of who would be a “reporter” eligible to claim protection from a newly minted common law privilege.
See In re Miller,
Mr. Pincus argues that a reporter’s privilege, like the psychotherapist-patient privilege recognized in
Jaffee,
is “rooted in the imperative need for confidence and trust,” unquestionably “serves public ends,” and has been overwhelmingly embraced by the States and the District of Columbia.
See Jaffee,
When Mr. Pincus first argued for a common law privilege to protect a reporter’s confidential sources, he explained to the Court that privileges at common law are absolute and would provide better protection than a qualified First Amendment privilege. That distinction made pursuit of a common law privilege worthwhile. In the meantime, however, the D.C. Circuit decided that if there were a common law privilege tо protect reporters’ sources, it would also be qualified.
See In re Miller,
Mr. Pincus argues that this result undermines his function as a reporter because confidential sources for news stories about Dr. Lee and the investigation would not have spoken to him without an assurance of anonymity. He argues that the violation of his commitments to his confidential sources will “destroy his ability to report effectively on intelligence and national security issues in the future.” Pincus Response at 10. However, “the First Amendment does not invalidate every incidental burdening of the press that may result from the enforcement of civil or criminal statutes of general applicability.”
Branzburg,
Furthermore, the fact that this Court has refused to recognize the common law privilege articulated by Mr. Pincus does not lеave reporters unprotected. The
Zer-illi
court struck a careful balance between providing a means for civil litigants to obtain crucial information and protecting journalists’ confidences.
See Lee,
To accept Mr. Pincus’s argument that he is' protected by privilege from revealing whether Government officials illegally leaked information about Dr. Lee would undermine the fundamental purpose of the
Finding no basis in reason and experience to expand the law as requested, the Court declines to recognize such a privilege. 24
C. Mr. Pincus is in Contempt of Court
At his first deposition, Mr. Pincus continuously refused to answer any questions concerning the identity of his confidential sources that provided him with information concerning Dr. Lee and the Lee investigation. Accordingly, on June 29, 2004, Judge Jackson granted Dr. Lee’s motion to compel further testimony from Mr. Pincus, rejecting his assertions of privilege. Despite this Order, Mr. Pincus again attempted to invoke a “reporter’s privilege” at his second deposition, refusing to answer any questions concerning the identity of his confidential sources. The Court concludes that because Mr. Pincus is not protected by a “reporter’s privilege” under the First Amendment or pursuant to federal common law, his refusal to answer such questions at his second deposition places him in contempt of the June 29, 2004, Order.
A person is in contempt of court when he “violates a definite and specific court order requiring him to perform or refrain from performing a particular act or аcts with knowledge of that order.”
Bankers Alliance Corp.,
First, there is no doubt that the Court’s June 29, 2004, Order was clear and specific. After Mr. Pincus refused to disclose his confidential sources at his first deposition, the parties fully briefed the issues relating to whether Mr. Pincus should be compelled to answer the same kinds of questions that the other journalists were compelled to answer by way of the Court’s October 9, 2003 Discovery Order. Judge Jackson’s June 29, 2004, Order expressly stated that Dr. Lee’s motion to compel further testimony from Mr. Pincus would be granted “[u]pon consideration of the entire record, and essentially for the reasons stated in the Court’s October 9, 2003, Memorandum & Order.” Given the procedural history of this side-litigation and Mr. Pincus’s substantial familiarity with the Court’s Discovery Order, the June 29, 2004, Order can hardly be deemed ambiguous.
Mr. Pincus challenges the validity of the June 29, 2004, Order on the ground that the order made no “specific findings” as to him. Pincus Response at 15 (citation omitted). He argues that Judge Jackson’s statement that Dr. Lee’s motion to compel
Furthermore, it is disingenuous for Mr. Pincus to try now to distance himself from the other journalists and argue that his situation is markedly different. Again, the only reason that Mr. Pincus was not technically subject to Judge Jackson’s Discovery Order in the first place was because of a procedural anomaly. See supra n. 9. In any event, after refusing to answer questions concerning the identities of his confidential sources at his first deposition, it is crystal clear that Mr. Pincus understood that the purpose of the Court’s June 29, 2004, Order was to compel him to reveal those sources (to the extent that they were agents or officers of the Government defendants and provided him with information concerning Dr. Lee or the investigation) at a second deposition:
I understand that [the Court] has entered an order compelling further testimony from me in response to questions that seek the identity of confidential sources from my reporting on Wen Ho Lee.... It’s my intention today respectfully to decline to identify my confidential sources so that I may preserve my ability to seek appellate review of the order that compels me to do so.
Pl.’s App. at Exh. 24, p. 8, 11.13-25 (Depo. Tr. of W. Pincus). In light of this statement, and the other factors discussed above, it is difficult to follow, and even more difficult to accept, Mr. Pincus’s argument that the Court’s June 29, 2004, Order was not clear and specific.
Finally, the second prong of the contempt standard, which requires Dr. Lee to proffer clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Pincus violated the Court’s June 29, 2004, Order, is easily satisfied. At his second deposition, which was scheduled subsequent to the Court’s June 29, 2004, Order, Mr. Pincus stated that although he was aware of the Court’s order requiring that he answer questions concerning the identity of his confidential sources, he would decline to do so.
See id.
He kept his promise, and when asked questions concerning the identity of Government sources who provided him with information about Dr. Lee and the investigation, he continued to assert a “reporter’s privilege.”
See
Pl.’s App. at 21-22. Mr. Pincus’s refusal to answer these questions was a clear violation of “a definite and specific court order requiring him to perform ... a particular act.”
Bankers Alliance Corp.,
On June 29, 2004, this Court issued an Order compelling Mr. Pincus to provide further deposition testimony to Dr. Lee concerning the identity of Government sources who directly provided him with information concerning Dr. Lee and the Lee investigation. Dr. Lee has demonstrated by clear and convincing evidence that Mr. Pincus violated the Court’s order that he identify his sources. For the reasons stated above, the Court finds that the qualified First Amendment reporter’s privilege does not protect Mr. Pincus from revealing his sources and that the reporter’s privilege urged by Mr. Pincus in federal common law is not tenable. Accordingly, Mr. Pincus will be held in civil contempt and a fine of $500 per day will be levied until he complies.
In order to avоid a repetition of the Judith Miller imbroglio, the Court will also order Mr. Pincus to contact each and every one of his Government sources to inform them of the Court’s order so that, should they release him from his pledge of confidentiality, Mr. Pincus can reconsider whether he needs to further resist the order of the Court and, perhaps, this matter can become moot without further litigation. Mr. Pincus will be required to file a sworn statement with the Court within 48 hours attesting to his fulfillment of this part of the Court’s order and informing the Court whether he is ready to answer questions identifying his sources.
The fine will be stayed for thirty (30) days or until completion of proceedings on a timely, appeal to the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, whichever is later. Plaintiffs application for a compensatory award of sanctions will be denied without prejudice. A separate Order accompanies this memorandum opinion.
ORDER
For the reasons stated in the Memorandum Opinion separately and contemporaneously issued this 16th day of November, 2005, it is hereby
ORDERED that Mr. Pincus is in CIVIL CONTEMPT of the June 29, 2004, Order of this Court; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Mr. Pincus is fined in the sum of $.500.00 per day, payable to the United States, until he complies therewith; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Mr. Pincus is to contact each of his Government sources and inform them of this Court’s Order to determine whether in light of such Order, his sources will release him from his pledge of confidentiality; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that within 48 hours, Mr. Pincus must file a sworn statement with the Court stating that, in accordance with this Court’s Order, he has contacted his sources and informing the Court whether he is ready to answer questions identifying those sources; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that the aforementioned fines will be stayed for a period of thirty (30) days, or until completion of proceedings on a timely appeal, whichever is later; and it is
FURTHER ORDERED that Plaintiffs application for a compensatory award of sanctions will be DENIED without prejudice.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. It cannot go unnoted that the manner in which Dr. Lee was treated by the Government appears to have been particularly egregious. In open court, Judge James A. Parker of the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico apologized to Dr. Lee, noting that "the top decision makers in the executive branch, especially the Department of Justice and the Department of Energy ... [ ] have caused embarrassment by the way this case began and was handled” and "have embarrassed our entire nation and each of us who is a citizen of it.” Pl.'s App. at 4 (quoting Statement by Judge in Los Alamos Cаse, With Apology for Abuse of Power, N.Y. Times, Sept. 14, 2000, at A25).
. The Privacy Act provides, in relevant part, that ''[n]o agency shall disclose any record which is contained in a system of records by any means of communication to any person ... except pursuant to a written request by, or with the prior written consent of, the individual to whom the record pertains,” and that “prior to disseminating any record about an individual!,] ... [the agency must] make reasonable efforts to assure that such records are accurate, complete, timely, and relevant for agency purposes.” Id. § 552a(b), (e)(6).
. The DOE employees deposed were (1) Bill Richardson, former Secretary of Energy; (2) Nora Trulock, Acting Director of DOE Intelli
. From the DOJ, Dr. Lee deposed (1) Myron Marlin, lead press official at the DOJ during the relevant time period; (2) John Dion, Acting Chief of the Internal Security Division; (3) Michael Liebman, part of the prosecution team and author of a memo that asserted that Secretary Richardson disclosed Dr. Lee’s name to the press; (4) Craig Iscoe, employee in the Deputy Attorney General’s office; (5) Robert Gorence, Dr. Lee’s chief prosecutor; and (6) John J. Kelly, the United States Attorney for the District of New Mexico and the attorney in charge of the criminal case against Dr. Lee. Pl.’s App. at 11.
. From the FBI, Dr. Lee deposed (1) Louis Freeh, former Director of the FBI; (2) Neil Gallagher, former Assistance Director, National Security Division; (3) John Colling-wood, former Assistant Director, Office of Public and Congressional Affairs; (4) Michael DeFeo, chief internal investigator for the FBI; (5) Robert Bucknam, Mr. Freeh's chief of staff; (6) David Kitchen, Special Agent in charge of the Albuquerque office of the FBI; (7) William Lueckenhoff, Assistant Special Agent in charge of the Albuquerque office; and (8) Carol Colvert, lead FBI Special Agent on Dr. Lee's case. Pl.’s App. at 11-12.
. Having found all of the journalists in contempt, the court imposed a fine of $500 per day per journalist, and stayed the fine pending a timely appeal.
. The Court affirmed Judgе Jackson's Contempt Order as to four of the five journalists, finding that there was "too much ambiguity in the record to uphold a finding of contempt” as to the fifth journalist.
Lee,
. An article dated February 17, 1999, titled U.S. Cracking Down on Chinese Nuclear Designs on Nuclear Data, disclosed that the FBI investigation had "c[o]me to focus on an Asian American scientist at Los Alamos who had contacts with the Chinese and has since been transferred to a job outside the national security area,” but did not identify Dr. Lee by name. Pincus Response at 8 (quoting article). On March 9, 1999, Mr. Pincus authored an article, titled Spy Suspect Fired at Los Alamos Lab, which identified Dr. Lee as the "weapons designer ... who was under suspicion of handing nuclear secrets to China.” Id. at 9 (quoting article). On November 20, 1999, an article titled Fired Lab Scientist Can’t Account for Some Disks, was published in The Washington Post under the joint byline of Mr. Pincus and another journalist, Vernon Loeb. Finally, Mr. Pincus authored an article on February 4, 2001, titled Interrogation of Lee Raises New Questions, Sources Say. Id. at 10.
. Dr. Lee asserts that "Mr. Pincus was not included in the October 2003 Order because, pursuant to an agreement between counsel, he did not move to quash his deposition subpoena but agreed to be bound by the Court's ruling as to the other journalists.” Pl.’s App.
. After the Court granted Dr. Lee's motion to compel, Mr. Pincus agreed to. stipulate to the Court that he would not reduce or change his assertions of privilege if he were to sit for a second deposition. Pl.'s Reply at 2. Judge Jackson rejected the proposed stipulation on August 5, 2004, and ordered Mr. Pincus to testify at a second deposition as soon as possible. Id.
. Judge Jackson retired on August 30, 2004, the day of Mr. Pincus’s second deposition. This case was reassigned to the undersigned on Oсtober 7, 2004. On November 18, 2004, this Court held a status conference and directed Dr. Lee to file his Application for an Order to Show Cause.
. The Court of Appeals in
Lee,
.
See also In re Grand Jury Proceedings,
. The law in this Circuit requires no more. When the first group of reporters sought rehearing en banc before the Court of Appeals to reconsider its application of Zerilli in Lee, the Circuit split its vote with no majority voting to rehear the case. Two of the four dissenting judges wrote detailed opinions, suggesting that Zerilli properly requires a third prong to the First Amendment analysis in Privacy Act cases to balance the public benefits and private harms of forced disclosure. That position failed to gamer majority support (and perhaps not the support of all four dissenters).
. Mr. Pincus relies on
Wright v. FBI,
. Judge Sentelle determined that a federal common law privilege protecting reporters should not be recognized, Judge Tatеl concluded that such a privilege should be recognized, and Judge Henderson said that the issue did not need to be resolved on the facts of that particular case.
In re Miller,
. The Court excepted instances of grand jury investigations conducted other than in good faith. Id. at 707.
.
See also In re Grand Jury Subpoena, Judith Miller,
. See also id. at 999 (Tatel, J., concurring) ("The qualified privilege I would recognize ... rests on Rule 501, not the Constitution. If Congress believes that this approach overrides its judgment about what conduct should be criminal, it may simply overturn the privilege and authorized use of the evidence.”)
. The different language is not without import. Under a three-prong test for civil litigation, the private interests of the private civil plaintiff would be clearly in the balance. This is a very different posture from requiring a private plaintiff to prove that a public interest in disclosure during the plaintiff’s civil suit outweighs the public interest in protection for a newsman's sources.
.
See Lee,
. Normally, whеn a litigant seeks to discover the fruits of a journalist’s work, a privilege analysis limited to need and exhaustion protects both the private interest in disclosure and the public interest in newsgathering. By utilizing the traditional tools of discovery to exhaust 'every reasonable alternative source of information,’ the civil litigant seeking information that goes 'to the heart of the matter' can usually discover the same facts that the journalist unearthed.
The situation is very different where the identity of, a leaker is itself “the heart of the matter” — as it is here; as it will be in any Privacy Act case.... A test focused only on need and exhaustion will therefore almost always be satisfied, leaving the reporter's source unprotected regardless of the information's importance to the public.
Lee
(Denial of Rehearing),
. Perhaps the Court puts the horse behind the cart when it worries about the scope of a common law reporter’s privilege as part of addressing its existence
vel non.
After all, the States appear to be in agreement that
some
"reporter's privilege" should exist, even though the nature and applicability of that privilege varies considerably from State to State.
See Jaffee,
. At oral argument, Mr. Pincus argued that Dr. Lee cannot ultimately prevail on the merits of his Privacy Act case and that Mr. Pincus should not be compelled to reveal his confidential sources to support a case that has no merit. This argument must be rejected. Mr. Pincus is a non-party and this case is in discovery. Not only does Mr. Pincus lack standing to raise arguments concerning the merits of Dr. Lee's lawsuit, but at this early stage'in the litigation, the resolution of such issues is wholly premature.
. The discussion herein emphasizes that very point.
