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The Daily Business
Review wins FOI Award
Gainesville, FL- A groundbreaking series by the Daily
Business Review was named the winner of the Joseph L. Brechner
Center for Freedom of Information Award, according to Sandra F.
Chance, executive Director of the Brechner Center. The articles,
written by federal court reporter Dan Christensen, exposed how
federal judges were suppressing civil and criminal cases by wiping
them off the public record. Typically, even sealed cases appear
on the public docket, but in these instances, judges tried to conceal
their existence from the public.
The articles were recognized at the 19th Annual Brechner
Center for Freedom of Information award celebration on Jan 31,
2005 at the Thomas Center in Gainesville Florida.
"Christensen and the Review attacked
one of the most serious yet under-reported problems affecting First
Amendment rights
since Sept. 11 -secrecy in the courts,"according to Brechner Center
Executive Director, Sandra Chance. "His series documents how government
corruption, when unchecked, can wreak havoc on citizens," Chance
said. "This story is a bone-chilling reminder of what happens when
we sacrifice civil liberties in the name of security."
Christensen exposed the practice of super-sealing,
which hides cases completely from the public by veiling even the
case numers that would normally allow them to be tracked on the
court's docket. He discovered the practice when he happened upon
the case of Mohamed Kamel Bellahouel, a young Arab man detained
by authorities following the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorists' attacks.
Bellahouel was a waiter at a South Florida restarurant
frequented by several Sept. 11 highjackers. He was imprisoned for
five months on an immigration charge until authorities decided
he was not a threat and released him. Bellahouel's habeas complaint,
filed while he was in custody and sealed by a judge, was kept completely
secret.
Christensen's reporting fueled an intense, nationwide
public discussion of this previously unknown brand of secrecy.
The Review's coverage led to the formation of a public-interest
coalition of 23 media, legal and labor organizations that sought
to intervene in the Bellahouel case in order to protect public
access to court proceedings.
"This series is a masterpiece of investigative reporting,"
Chance said, "and vividly illustrates the importance of monitoring
our government's activities as we struggle with balancing the need
to protect national security with the need for information about
our government and the decisions coming out of our judicial system."
The annual award was established by the late Joseph
L. Brechner, an Orlando broadcaster.
Located at the University of Florida (UF) in Gainesville, Fla.,
the Brechner Center exists to educate and promote freedom of information
laws and policies. It serves the students of UF, Florida citizens,
media lawyers and journalists around the country by providing training
sessions, answering queries and conducting scholarly research on
First Amendment issues.
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