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Sun Sentinel wins 12th Annual Joseph L. Brechner Center
for Freedom of Information Award
September 17, 1997
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contact: Sandra F. Chance, Director
Brechner Center for Freedom of Information
(352) 392-2273
GAINESVILLE, FL--
The Sun- Sentinel won this year's Joseph L. Brechner Center
for Freedom of Information Award for its series, "Quick Cash
with Few Questions." The series focused on Fort Lauderdale
pawnshops that operate as fronts for criminals to convert stolen
goods to quick cash.
The articles shed light on Florida's new pawnbroking act and the
little known provision that exempted pawn slips from Florida's
public records law. The new
law required crime victims to sue pawnbrokers to recover their
property and name the person who pawned their property. The public
records exemption made it impossible for crime victims to discover
that name. Without the name of the person who pawned their property,
victims could not recover their valuables.
The law written by the Florida Pawnbrokers Association, was sponsored
by a state senator who enjoyed a "close personal relationship"
with a lobbyist for the pawnbrokers, according to the newspaper
reports.
"The revelations surrounding legislator/lobbyist efforts to close
access to the records and the ensuing legislation to re-open access
provides good insight into how government record decisions are
made when the public is in the dark, "according to Katherine White,
A North Carolina media lawyer and one of the judges.
Last year's winner, Metro Editor of the Times-Picayune Peter Kovacs,
and Dr. Charles Davis, a journalism professor at Southern Methodist
University, were also judges.
Following the Sun-Sentinel series, new legislation was introduced
and passed that allows crime victims access to the pawn slips.
The judges also applauded the newspaper's skillful use of local
public records laws with an ambitious feat of computer-assisted
journalism. The series, using a computer analysis of 70,000 pawn
slips, revealed that 75 percent of the city's most frequent pawners
had criminal arrest records, most of them for burglary, theft or
drug offenses.
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin and the Daytona Beach News Journal
received special commendations for their series on freedom-of-information
issues.
The Honolulu Star-Bulletin provided an in-depth look at the state's
public access laws from a citizen's perspective and real-life examples.
"Showing why access to public information is important to the public
is difficult and this was terrific work," one of the judges said.
The Daytona Beach News Journal was honored for its coverage of
secret hospital merger discussions. "This was a well-reported,
detailed, tireless and relentless coverage of a crucial community
health decision that was being made with absolutely no public input,"
according to a judge.
The $3,000 cash award recognizes excellence in reporting about
freedom-of-information and First Amendment issues and will be presented
at the Florida Sunshine Summit honoring the Brechner Center's 20th
anniversary.
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