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Subject: AEJ 05 SmithN VC Images of the Casualties of War: Is There a Media Right of Access?
From: Elliott Parker <[log in to unmask]>
Reply-To:AEJMC Conference Papers <[log in to unmask]>
Date:Fri, 10 Feb 2006 08:43:21 -0500
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This paper was presented at the Association for Education in Journalism and
Mass Communication in San Antonio, Texas August 2005.
         If you have questions about this paper, please contact the author
directly. If you have questions about the archives, email
rakyat [ at ] eparker.org. For an explanation of the subject line, 
send email to
[log in to unmask] with just the four words, "get help info aejmc," in the
body (drop the "").

(Feb 2006)
Thank you.
Elliott Parker
====================================================================


Images of the Casualties of War:
Is There a Media Right of Access?

by
Nicole Elise Smith,
Park Fellow Doctoral Student

School of Journalism and Mass Communication
University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Campus Box #3365
Chapel Hill, North Carolina
27599-3365
[log in to unmask]
A research paper submitted to
Visual Communication Division of AEJMC

March 25, 2005

Images of the Casualties of War: Is There a Media Right of Access?									

Abstract
At the onset of the 1991 Gulf War, the U.S. Pentagon issued a policy 
prohibiting media coverage, including photography, of the caskets of 
slain American soldiers arriving at Dover Air Force Base. This 
research asks, based on the unique attributes of images to convey 
information, is the ban an unconstitutional prior restraint? 
Additionally, as some families want photographic coverage of the 
return of their loved ones, does the restriction violate these 
families First Amendment rights?

Images of the Casualties of War: Is There a Media Right of Access?									

At the onset of the Gulf War in 1991, the United States Pentagon 
issued a policy prohibiting media coverage, including photography, of 
the caskets of slain American soldiers arriving at Dover Air Force 
Base in Delaware.[1] The policy was later challenged by JB Pictures, 
Inc. along with several other media entities and upheld by the U.S. 
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in 1996.[2] The stated 
intention of the Pentagon policy is to protect the privacy of fallen 
soldiers and their families; however, the implications to the 
fundamental right of freedom of the press cannot be ignored.[3] 
Although this policy has been in place for more than 13 years, it has 
not been strictly adhered to.[4]
In March of 2003, when it was becoming clear that war in Iraq was 
inevitable, the Pentagon issued a directive reaffirming the policy. 
Many Americans, however, were not aware that such a policy existed 
until a controversy surfaced in April 2004 when The Seattle Times 
printed a cover photograph of the flag-draped coffins of 21 slain 
American soldiers onboard a cargo plane en route to the United 
States. [5] The photographer, Tami Silicio, a cargo worker for the 
Maytag Aircraft Corporation, was promptly fired for releasing the 
photograph. Silicio stated that she allowed the Times to publish the 
photograph because she believes family members "want to see how our 
loved ones, how our heroes are being taken care of and how they got home."[6]
In the same week, Russ Kirk, a First Amendment activist, published 
more than 350 similar photographs that he had obtained through a 
Freedom of Information Act request on his Web site, 
www.thememoryhole.org. Subsequently, the Defense Department 
prohibited the release of additional photos. John Molino, a deputy 
undersecretary of defense, defended the decision saying, "We don't 
want the remains of our service members who have made the ultimate 
sacrifice to be the subject of any kind of attention that is 
unwarranted or undignified."[7] In June of 2004, the U.S. Senate 
voted 54-39 against an amendment that would have required the 
Department of Defense to remove the restriction banning media access 
to Dover Air Force Base.[8] According to Sen. Frank R. Lautenberg, 
the amendment's sponsor, "A majority of the Senate are now working on 
behalf of the president to conceal from the American people the true 
costs of this war."[9]
The matter, however, is far from resolved. On October 4, 2004, Ralph 
Begleiter, a journalism professor at the University of Delaware and 
former CNN correspondent, filed suit based on the Freedom of 
Information Act in the U.S. District Court in Washington, requesting 
the Pentagon release photographs and videotapes of the coffins of 
slain American soldiers returning to Dover Air Force Base.[10] 
Meredith Fuchs, general counsel of the National Security Archives and 
one of Begleiter's attorneys said, "These are the kinds of documents 
that directly serve the core purpose of FOIA… Everyone says a picture 
is worth a thousand words. Well, the pictures have an impact and help 
people understand what war is really about in a way that nothing else 
does."[11] Although the Pentagon has acknowledged the lawsuit, as of 
this writing, it has not responded further.[12]
Critics see restricting media coverage as a political move by the 
Defense Department to withhold information, in this case images of 
war dead, from the American public in an effort to maintain public 
support for President Bush and the war in Iraq.[13] The government 
maintains that the issue is about privacy and protecting the rights 
of the victims' families. And although the policy is meant to protect 
the families of American soldiers, not all families support the 
policy. Jane Bright, whose 24-year-old son, Evan Ashcraft, was killed 
in Iraqi War combat said, "We need to stop hiding the deaths of our 
young; we need to be open about their deaths."[14] The sentiment 
expressed by this grieving mother and the intentions of Silicio and 
Kick seem to reflect the understanding that "pictures of war matter, 
to societies and to individuals."[15]
	The purpose of this research is to examine the constitutionality of 
the Pentagon policy restricting photographic coverage of the coffins 
of slain American soldiers at Dover Air Force Base. This is a crucial 
issue to examine for several fundamental reasons. First, freedom of 
the press is one of the key constitutional guarantees for maintaining 
a democratic society. Any time the press's First Amendment rights are 
limited, research needs to ask why. Second, as our nation is in a 
time a war—a war that was contested by countless Americans—research 
must examine why the government is refusing to allow media access to 
aspects of this war. Third, it is known that during World War I, our 
government used images of war as tools of propaganda. And as the 
Vietnam War showed, images of war have a powerful decision-making 
impact on the American people. Therefore, this research will examine 
the government's refusal to allow images of flag-draped coffins as a 
means of protecting the privacy of victims' families weighed against 
freedom of the press.
Literature Review
	The JB Pictures case developed as a reaction to the Pentagon policy 
of restricted coverage at Dover Air Force Base during the first Gulf 
War in 1991. Scholars who analyzed JB Pictures, as well as other 
forms of press restriction and editorial censorship during the Gulf 
War, advised that issues of press access and censorship during a time 
of military conflict be resolved before we encounter another military 
conflict.[16] Yet today, in 2004, as we are engaged in another 
military and political conflict in the Gulf, the Pentagon restriction 
is still in place and there is still controversy surrounding its 
application. The literature review will discuss images of war, press 
censorship during a time of war, and the analysis of JB Pictures.
	Images of War
	There are many photographs that have become iconic symbols within 
our collective conscious—and many of these are images of war.[17] The 
image of a naked girl running through the streets of Vietnam after 
being burned by Napalm is ingrained on our minds just as is the image 
of American soldiers raising the flag at Iwo Jima. As Perlmutter 
notes, "Images of war reflect and refract the way we think about war; 
their study is a means to understand the place of the institution of 
war in human history and the human mind."[18]
As with the above examples, there are both negative and positive 
images of war. Newhagen and Reeves found that in television news 
coverage of war, the more memorable images are the negative ones, 
such as images of human suffering.[19] Given this understanding, it 
is central that the news media be able to present all images of 
war—not just the ones deemed appropriate by the government.
Scholars have examined images of war from both quantitative and 
qualitative perspectives. In a content analysis of the 1991 Persian 
Gulf War and the current war in Iraq, researchers studied images from 
both conflicts in detail, including the type of scene, the injury 
level of soldiers presented, and the impression of the enemy.[20] 
Researchers found that the 2003 coverage of the war in Iraq included 
substantially more photos and a greater amount of photos documenting 
the actual conflict as compared to the 1991 coverage.[21] The 
conclusion is that the embedded system of journalism present in 2003 
provided greater access for photojournalists than did the press pool 
system present in 1991.[22] In regard to the implications, the 
researchers conclude, "The American public and the rest of the world 
have a much better understanding of the benefits, rigors, and horrors 
of war when journalists are allowed to cover conflicts as closely and 
completely as possible."[23]
 From a qualitative perspective, researchers have provided critical 
and cultural studies of images of war. In an argumentative essay, 
Dauber provides rhetorical analysis of a series of photographs, 
including combat and casualties during the Persian Gulf War, U.S. 
troop participation in Mogadishu during a United Nations relief 
mission, and images of the NATO air war in Serbia.[24] The researcher 
concludes that visual images have had a "profound effect on senior 
leadership's perceptions of what level of casualties the American 
public will and will not support during humanitarian 
interventions."[25] In a study of one of the most memorable and 
horrifying images to emerge during the Vietnam War—that of a Buddhist 
monk setting himself on fire in protest of the war—Skow and 
Dionisopoulos studied the image as a frame through which many 
Americans began to perceive the war.[26] They conclude that although 
this image engaged the American audience, the frame provided by the 
print media (either one of religious oppression or one of freedom 
against communism) determined the reaction by the American public.[27]
In another analysis of a Vietnam War image, that of a naked girl 
running through the streets of Vietnam after being burned by Napalm, 
scholars have studied the image as a symbol of the "collective 
haunting" of the Vietnam War.[28] Despite editorial debate about 
printing an image of nudity, the image was printed around the world, 
and its photographer, Nick Ut, received the Pulitzer Prize. According 
to Goldberg, this photo "became one of the most memorable images of a 
war that counted its history in images."[29] Additionally, it has 
been widely shown to have influenced public attitudes toward the war 
"by confronting U.S. citizens with the immortality of their 
actions."[30] Goldberg concludes that the picture "became a vivid 
symbol of the war and temporarily renewed the antiwar fervor."[31]
Press Censorship During a Time of War
	Although the media have always reported on war, the degree of access 
to war and levels of government restriction have not been the same in 
all military conflicts. For example, the military began a system of 
prepublication review (a form of prior restraint) in World War I, and 
while reports of World War II were still subject to prepublication 
review, reporters had greater battlefield access.[32] Technology has 
also impacted war coverage. Vietnam is often referred to "the first 
TV war," and by the Gulf War in 1991 satellite technology allowed for 
unprecedented, 24-hour television coverage of war.[33] Although there 
was massive press coverage of the Persian Gulf War, given the 
advanced communication technologies, reporters were subject to 
prepublication review, and a press pool system restricted access to 
only designated reporters.[34] Some have argued that due to the 
strict government control over the coverage, the press was being used 
as tools of propaganda.[35] And the restrictions on the media during 
the Persian Gulf War have been referred to as "the most strict in 
American journalistic history."[36] In a study of these restrictions, 
Burch refers to the Pentagon Papers case stating that the U.S. 
Supreme Court ruled that the government cannot restrict publication 
of material it merely finds to be embarrassing and that "negative 
public reaction is not just cause for prior restraint."[37] 
Additionally, in regard to press censorship, O'Neil states, "Since 
media coverage of military engagements has been permitted throughout 
most of American history, and at times facilitated, it could be 
argued that limiting access of the media to a particular engagement 
is the power to ensure readers and viewers known only about 'good 
wars' and not about what the Pentagon may deem 'bad wars.'"[38]
JB Pictures Analysis
The opinion of the court in JB Pictures v. Department of Defense 
hinged on two central issues: a qualified right of access and a 
question of viewpoint discrimination within the notion of the press 
as "speakers" rather than information gatherers.
A key issue addressed in JB Pictures was whether the First Amendment 
granted the media access to Dover Air Force Base to photograph the 
return of the caskets of slain American soldiers.[39] Previously, the 
Supreme Court had ruled on the media's right to gather information in 
prisons and in criminal proceedings.[40] In regard to media access to 
prisons, the court relied on a balancing test to weigh the interest 
of the public in obtaining information against the government 
interest to deny access.[41] In both Pell v. Procunier and Saxbe v. 
Washington Post, Co., the Supreme Court ruled that government 
interest in maintaining prison security outweighed the right of the 
press to gather information.[42] Four years later, the Supreme Court 
addressed media access to prisons again and concluded by quoting Pell 
that the media have no greater access to prisons or to inmates beyond 
that afforded to the general public.[43] Concerning media access to 
criminal proceedings, the Court used a two-pronged test based on a 
tradition of openness and whether media access contributed to the 
functioning of the process.[44] In Globe Newspaper Co. v. Superior 
Court, the Court concluded that criminal trials were generally open 
to the public and that access to criminal trials contributes to the 
justice system.[45] However, a narrowly tailored restriction 
supporting a compelling government interest can be held 
constitutional as there is no absolute right of access to criminal 
trials.[46] As the Supreme Court has only ruled on media access to 
prisons and criminal proceedings and has not set a clear precedent as 
to which tests should apply in other right of access cases, generally 
lower courts have applied both tests.[47]
In analysis of JB Pictures, scholars have reached different 
conclusions. Stear argues that based on the precedents set in the 
prison access cases and Nation Magazine,[48] "the court's refusal to 
find a right of access to Dover Air Force Base is not 
surprising."[49] According to MacNair, however, in JB Pictures, the 
Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia "inaccurately resolved 
the balancing test in favor of the government."[50] MacNair states 
that the interest of the media was more significant than in previous 
right of access cases and that the government interests "lacked both 
strength and legitimacy."[51] Specifically, if the media were allowed 
to photograph the return of caskets at Dover Air Force Base, it would 
result in an increased dissemination of information, and coverage 
would result in "a realistic, emotional aspect of the events that a 
newspapers article cannot match."[52] In regard to the government 
interest, MacNair concludes that while the stated intention of 
protecting the privacy and economic interests of the deceased's 
families is significant, it is "trivial" when compared to the 
interest of maintaining prison security as in the case of Pell and Saxbe.[53]
JB Pictures also addressed the appellants' claim that the Department 
of Defense restriction resulted in viewpoint discrimination by 
failing to recognize photographic coverage as speech. Additionally, 
the claim of viewpoint discrimination arises in that the policy only 
restricts coverage of deceased soldiers returning from war; it does 
not restrict coverage of healthy soldiers departing for war. The 
opinion of the court in JB Pictures states that the restriction was 
viewpoint neutral in that the policy "applies in a uniform fashion to 
all members of the press and public, regardless of their views on war 
or the United States."[54] In his review, MacNair states that 
restrictions on speech require an analysis of forum type, and that 
while Dover Air Force Base in not a traditional public forum, it was 
a designated public forum because "the government opened Dover for 
the express purpose of allowing the public and media to view supplies 
and personnel being shipped off to the Persian Gulf."[55] As such, in 
the court analysis, the Dover Air Force Base restriction should have 
been subject to strict scrutiny, and likely, it would not have been 
found to serve a compelling government interest.[56]
In summary, while Stear argues that the court "took a moderate means 
to reach a conservative end," she still concludes that "the American 
public's open window into the activities of the United States 
military has been partially closed."[57] MacNair takes an even bolder 
position in concluding, "Suppressing the realities of war allows the 
government to maintain unobstructed decision making power. Unless the 
courts or legislature review, and when appropriate, nullify 
Department of Defense restrictions on the media, the democratic 
nature of the United States will suffer."[58]
The intention of this literature review was to show that images of 
war are powerful both in their impression and in their impact. And in 
the case of JB Pictures, as the courts have denied the right of 
photographers to an essential reality of war—the coffins of slain 
American soldiers—this research will seek to understand why. Central 
to this understanding will be the unique nature of images as speech 
and the role of the news media in the dissemination of information.

Research Questions and Methodology
The purpose of this research is to examine the constitutionality of 
the Pentagon policy restricting photographic coverage of the coffins 
of slain American soldiers at Dover Air Force Base. The research 
questions under investigation are:
1.	Based on the unique attributes of images to convey information 
about war that words alone cannot, is the ban on photographic 
coverage of the coffins of slain American soldiers at Dover Air Force 
Base an unconstitutional prior restraint?
2.	Additionally, based on the fact that some of the families of slain 
American soldiers want photographic coverage of the return of their 
loved ones, does the restriction violate these families' First 
Amendment rights?

This paper will use the traditional legal research method to analyze 
existing court opinions. The analysis will include cases decided by 
the United States Supreme Court involving issues of media rights of 
access. Specifically, the cases relating to media access to prisons 
and courtrooms will be analyzed. Additionally, a case relating to 
broadcast and photographic coverage of criminal proceedings will be 
analyzed. The analysis of relevant cases will examine the language of 
the court opinion as well as relevant dissents to determine how the 
courts have ruled on restrictions of media access prior to the JB 
Pictures v. Department of Defense case in 1996.

Media Rights of Access to Prisons
	This section will address three key U.S. Supreme Court cases that 
ruled on media access to prisons. These three cases are Pell v. 
Procunier (1974),[59] Saxbe v. Washington Post Co. (1974),[60] and 
Houchins v. KQED (1978).[61]
	Based on the similarities of Pell[62] and Saxbe,[63] the Court ruled 
on the cases in conjunction with one another. In both cases, the 
media were questioning the constitutionality of regulations which 
banned the news media from having face-to-face interviews with 
designated inmates. Writing for the majority in Pell, Justice Stewart 
stated: "The First and Fourteenth Amendments bar government from 
interfering in any way with a free press. The Constitution does not, 
however, require government to accord the press special access to 
information not shared by members of the public generally."[64] The 
Pell holding concluded, "Newsmen have no constitutional right of 
access to prisons or their inmates beyond that afforded to the 
general public."[65] Again writing for the majority in Saxbe, Stewart 
concluded, that this case was "indistinguishable" from Pell, and thus 
the Pell holding stands.[66]
In Pell, Justices Powell and Douglas both wrote dissents. Powell 
concluded that the "absolute ban against prisoner-press interviews 
impermissibly restrains the ability of the press to perform its 
constitutionality established function of informing the people on the 
conduct of their government."[67] Douglas dissented[68] on the ground 
that the absolute ban was far broader than necessary.[69] Douglas and 
Powell also both wrote dissents in Saxbe.[70] Douglas dissented on 
the ground that the absolute ban was far broader than necessary and 
that it infringed on the right of the public to information as 
guaranteed by the First Amendment.[71] Powell also dissented on the 
ground that the absolute ban violated the public's First Amendment 
rights to information and added that the ban did not protect 
legitimate government interests.[72] Specifically, Powell concluded:
An informed public depends on accurate and effective reporting by the 
news media. No individual can obtain for himself the information 
needed for the intelligent discharge of his political 
responsibilities. For most citizens the prospect of personal 
familiarity with newsworthy events is hopelessly unrealistic. In 
seeking out the news the press therefore acts as an agent of the 
public at large. It is the means by which the people receive that 
free flow of information and ideas essential to intelligent 
self-government. By enabling the public to assert meaningful control 
over the political process, the press performs a crucial function in 
effecting the societal purpose of the First Amendment.[73]

In 1978, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled o\in Houchins v. KQED, Inc., a 
case heard on appeal from the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth 
Circuit. Houchins, the sheriff of Alameda County, had refused to 
allow media access to a portion of the county jail that had been the 
site of a prisoner suicide and which was also the site of alleged 
adverse physical conditions, rapes, and beatings. The plaintiffs 
argued that the denial of access compromised the news media's First 
Amendment rights. Additionally, by not allowing photographic and 
broadcast coverage of the scene, the news media did not have an 
effective means by which to inform the public of the prisoners' 
grievances or of the prisoner suicide. The district court enjoined 
the sheriff from denying news media access or from prohibiting 
photographic and broadcast coverage of the site. Although, the U.S. 
Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit affirmed the decision, the 
U.S. Supreme Court reversed and remanded the ruling. Four of the 
seven members of the U.S. Supreme Court who ruled on the case agreed 
that the media do not have a First Amendment right of access greater 
than that of the general public; however, they were unable to agree 
on an opinion. Additionally, a dissent was filed by three members of 
the U.S. Supreme Court. The opinions of the concurring justice as 
well as the dissent will be examined in greater detail.
	In a 4-3 decision to reverse and remand the appellate court 
decision, Chief Justice Burger wrote, "Beyond question, the role of 
the media is important; acting as the 'eyes and ears' of the public, 
they can be a powerful and constructive force, contributing to 
remedial action in the conduct of public business."[74] He added, 
"They have served that function since the beginning of the Republic, 
but like all other components of our society media representatives 
are subject to limits."[75] Based on the holdings of Pell and Saxbe, 
Burger concluded, "Neither the First Amendment not the Fourteenth 
Amendment mandates a right of access to government information or 
sources of information with the government's control."[76]
	In an opinion concurring on the judgment, Justice Stewart 
substantially agreed with Chief Justice Burger's final conclusion and 
the notion that "the Constitution does no more than assure the public 
and the press with equal access once government has opened its 
doors."[77] In a notable change from his previous opinions in both 
Pell and Sabe, Stewart took a slightly differing opinion in the 
application of the precedent to this particular case. He disagreed 
with Burger in the application of rights of media access to the facts 
of the current case. Stewart wrote, "I believe the concept of equal 
access must be accorded more flexibility in order to accommodate the 
practical distinctions between the press and the general public."[78] 
To explain this role of the press as information disseminators and 
the protection of that role by the Constitution, Stewart cited the 
dissenting opinion in Branzburg v. Hayes stating, "Enlightened choice 
by an informed citizenry is the basic ideal upon which an open 
society is premised."[79] In KQED, Stewart wrote that a person 
visiting a jail "can grasp its reality with his own eyes and ears. 
But if a reporter is to convey the jail's sights and sounds to those 
who cannot personally visit the place, he must use cameras and sound 
equipment. "[80] He concluded, "Terms of access that are reasonably 
imposed on individual members of the public may, if they impede 
effective reporting without sufficient justification, be unreasonable 
as applied to journalists who are there to convey to the general 
public what he visitors see."[81]
	What is most notable about this case as related to the research 
questions under investigation is the dissent in KQED. In the dissent, 
written by Justice Stevens and joined by Justices Brennan and Powell, 
Stevens stated that he "respectfully disagrees" that the news media 
have no greater access to prisons than that of the general 
public.[82] In his view, KQED had legitimate news events worth 
reporting and its coverage had not previously caused any 
disturbances.[83] And although Pell held that the media do not have 
access rights to prisons beyond that of the general public, "the 
Court has never intimated that a nondiscriminatory policy of 
excluding entirely both the public and the press from access to 
information about prison conditions would avoid constitutional 
scrutiny. Indeed, Pell itself strongly suggests the contrary."[84]
	Like Stewart, Stevens also referred to "the preservation of a full 
and free flow of information to the general public" as a "core 
objective of the First Amendment."[85] He added, "It is for this 
reason that the First Amendment protects not only the dissemination 
but also the receipt of information and ideas."[86] Based on the 
facts of the current case citing shocking and debasing conditions at 
the Alameda county jail, the fact that it was a government funded 
facility, and the fact that the information had no way of reaching 
the public other than through the media, Justice Stewart's argument 
for allowing press access and photographic and broadcast coverage is 
reasonable.
Additionally, although limited tours were available,[87] the tours 
did not cover all areas of the prison nor were photographs allowed to 
be taken on these tours.[88] And although some photographs were 
available for sale to tour visitors, they omitted key details.[89] 
Final evidence revealed that these tours did not provide a "realistic 
picture of the conditions of confinement within the jail."[90]
	In conclusion, Stevens wrote:
It is not sufficient, therefore, that the channels of communication 
be free of governmental restraints. Without some protection for the 
acquisition of information about the operation of public institutions 
such as prisons by the public at large, the process of 
self-governance contemplated by the Framers would be stripped of its 
substance. For that reason information gathering is entitled to some 
measure of constitutional protection… to ensure that the citizens are 
fully informed regarding matters of public interest and importance.[91]

Media Rights of Access to Courtrooms and Broadcast and Photographic 
Coverage of Court Proceedings
	In this section relevant U.S. Supreme Court cases examining media 
access to court proceedings and broadcast and photographic coverage 
of court proceedings will be addressed. The relevant cases are 
Richmond Newspapers, Inc. v. Virginia, Globe Newspaper Co. v. 
Superior Court and Chandler v. Florida.[92]
	In Globe, the U.S. Supreme Court considered a Massachusetts statute 
that required, under all circumstances, that the press be excluded 
from criminal trials that involved minor victims of a sex 
offense.[93] In deciding the case, the Court relied on the Richmond 
Newspapers decision, which established that based on the First 
Amendment, the press and general public have a constitutional right 
of access to criminal trials.[94] In reaching this decision, the 
Court relied on two aspects of the justice system. First, 
historically, criminal trials have always been open to the press and 
the general public.[95] And, second, press and public assess to 
criminal trials plays a crucial role in the functioning of the 
judicial system.[96] The Richmond Newspapers decision, however, did 
not establish an absolute right of access to criminal trials.[97] The 
case established that a state may deny access, but the restriction 
must meet a compelling governmental interest and be narrowly tailored 
to achieve that interest.[98] In Globe, the Court considered the 
Massachusetts statute as based on its intention of protecting the 
minor victims of sex crimes from further trauma and embarrassment and 
the encouragement of these victims to come forward with truthful and 
credible testimony. In writing for the majority, Justice Brennan 
stated that the Court agreed that the first interest was compelling, 
but that it did not "justify a mandatory closure rule" and that each 
case should be examined for particular circumstances.[99] In 
examining the second interest, the Court concluded that it did not 
justify the statue as the state did not offer any empirical 
support.[100] The Court concluded that the statute was a violation of 
the First Amendment. Globe Newspaper held that a restriction closing 
a criminal court case to the press and the public may be 
constitutional if there is a narrowly tailored restriction supporting 
a compelling government interest, as there is no absolute right of 
access to criminal trials.[101]
In Chandler, the U.S. Supreme Court affirmed a Florida District Court 
of Appeal decision regarding broadcast and photographic coverage of 
criminal proceedings.[102] In the original case, criminal defendants 
moved to declare unconstitutional a Florida law that allows for 
broadcast and photographic coverage of public judicial 
proceedings.[103] The defendants claimed that their right to a fair 
trial would be compromised by the presence of cameras in the 
courtroom.[104] The view of the Florida courts was such that "because 
of the significant effect of the courts on the day-to-day lives of 
the citizenry, it was essential that the people have confidence in 
the process. It felt that broadcast coverage of trials would 
contribute to a wider public acceptance and understanding of decisions."[105]
	In writing the majority opinion, Chief Justice Burger referenced an 
earlier decision in Estes v. Texas.[106] Based on the court 
deliberation, Burger wrote that Estes "did not announce a 
constitutional rule that all photographic or broadcast coverage of 
criminal trials is inherently a denial of due process."[107] He did, 
however, acknowledge that a criminal trial that receives "a great 
deal of publicity" does present "some risks that the publicity may 
compromise the right of the defendant to a fair trial."[108] The 
Court concluded, however, that "an absolute constitutional ban on 
broadcast coverage of trials cannot be justified simply because there 
is a danger that, in some cases, prejudicial broadcast accounts of 
pretrial and trial events may impair the ability of jurors to decide 
the issue of guilt or innocence uninfluenced by extraneous matter."[109]

Discussion
The purpose of this research was to examine the constitutionally of 
the Pentagon policy restricting photographic coverage of the coffins 
of slain American soldiers at Dover Air Force Base. The central issue 
surrounding the restriction is that of media access rights. 
Previously, the U.S. Supreme Court has only ruled on media access 
rights to prisons and courtrooms. In regard to media access to 
prisons, the holdings in Pell and Saxbe found that the news media do 
not have access to prisons any greater than that afforded to the 
general public.[110] These decisions by the Court, however, were far 
from unanimous. In the dissents by both Powell and Douglas in both 
cases, these justices argued that an absolute ban on media access to 
prisons was far broader than necessary and that there were serious 
implications to the First Amendment guarantees of the public's right 
to receive information.[111]
KQED was also decided by the Court by a narrow margin. Although 
Justice Stewart substantially agreed with the majority opinion, he 
made a strong argument for the necessity of cameras and sound 
equipment in conveying accurate information by the news media to the 
public.[112] In his dissent, which was also joined by Justices 
Brennan and Powell, Justice Stevens provided a strong argument for 
allowing press access to prisons that are federally funded to cover 
newsworthy events of public interest and importance.[113] Stevens 
further argued, "Without some protection for the acquisition of 
information about the operation of public institutions… the process 
of self-governance contemplated by the Framers would be stripped of 
its substance."[114] He concluded that "information gathering is 
entitled to some measure of constitutional protection."[115]
In the media access to courtrooms cases, Richmond Newspapers 
established that based on the First Amendment, the press and general 
public have a constitutional right of access to criminal trials.[116] 
This access, however, is not absolute and a state may deny access, 
but the restriction must meet a compelling governmental interest and 
be narrowly tailored to achieve that interest.[117] Globe Newspaper 
also supported this holding.[118]
In JB Pictures, the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia 
applied a balancing test that was established as based on previous 
access cases. In his research, MacNair concluded that in JB Pictures, 
the court "inaccurately resolved the balancing test in favor of the 
government."[119] In comparing the government interests in Pell and 
Saxbe against that of JB Pictures, it is also the opinion of this 
researcher that while the stated intention of the Pentagon 
restriction to protect the privacy and economic interests of the 
deceased's families is certainly worthwhile, is less compelling than 
that of maintaining prison security. It must also be noted that these 
images in question are of flag-draped coffins. In no way do these 
photos identify any soldier by name, nor based on the content of the 
photos is there any chance for visual recognition of a particular soldier.
This brings up the unique nature of images as speech and their 
ability to convey information in a way that words alone cannot do. 
When the Court denied the news media access to prisoner interviews, 
that decision did not exclude all access to information since the 
news media still had other opportunities to obtain the same verbal 
information, such as through telephone calls and letters. In KQED, 
however, it was noted that verbal information alone could not convey 
the same information that could be shown through photographs.[120] 
The same could be said for information collected at Dover Air Force 
Base. The news media can certainly verbally report on how many slain 
American soldiers were brought back to the United States in a given 
day, but the effect is not nearly as powerful as that of visually 
seeing the coffins. Again, it must be reiterated that these images do 
not identify soldiers. Instead they visually present the care that is 
taken in returning these fallen soldiers to their loved ones. 
Further, by seeing these images, the American public is able to 
understand another aspect of war—that of the loss of human life and 
the ultimate sacrifice that these soldiers have made. If the 
government denies access to photographers at Dover Air Force Base, it 
has the effect of totally shutting this information out of the 
marketplace of ideas because there is no alternative means to 
communicate these images. The argument presented here is that based 
on the unique attributes of images to convey information about war to 
the public that words also cannot convey, a government denial of 
access to obtain images constitutes an unconstitutional prior restraint.
The rights of the victims' families must also be considered. In 
considering Globe, the Court said that even though protecting the 
victims from further trauma and embarrassment was a compelling 
government interest, a complete closure of courtrooms without giving 
consideration to the individual cases violated the First 
Amendment.[121] Although the stated intention of the Pentagon policy 
in question is to protect the privacy and economic interests of the 
families, not all families agree with the complete media access ban. 
There are certainly those families who want to see the photos of the 
coffins of their slain family members to convey a message. And, again 
in the photos in question, individual soldiers cannot even be 
identified. Given these facts and based on a less compelling 
government interest as compared to that in Globe,[122] the Pentagon 
restriction is a violation of the First Amendment rights of those 
families who want to see the photographs published.
In conclusion, it is certainly arguable that the return of slain 
American soldiers is a newsworthy event of public interest and 
importance worthy of being conveyed to the American people. 
Additionally, the Pentagon ban is not narrowly tailored and has a 
questionable compelling governmental interest. Given these facts and 
in consideration of Justice Stevens' dissent in KQED, it can be seen 
that he had a legitimate concern in wanting to establish 
constitutional protection for the right to gather information. As 
time passes, the government is continuing to place increased 
restrictions on the access of our news media to collect information. 
In turn, this then limits the First Amendment rights of the American 
public to receive complete information.

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