ALBANY, N.Y. - In a
narrow ruling, the New York Court of Appeals says Fox
News reporter Jana Winter does not have to identify the law enforcement sourceswho told her that Aurora, Colo. movie theater shooting suspect James Holmes had mailed a notebook depicting violence to a psychiatrist before the massacre.
News reporter Jana Winter does not have to identify the law enforcement sourceswho told her that Aurora, Colo. movie theater shooting suspect James Holmes had mailed a notebook depicting violence to a psychiatrist before the massacre.
The New
York state shield law supports refusing to recognize a Colorado court’s
petition to subpoena Winter, the court ruled, 4 to 3.
Lawyers
for the suspect, Holmes, wanted Winter, a New York-based reporter, to have to
name two law officers who told her Holmes had mailed a notebook containing
scribbling of stick figures being shot and a written description of the
upcoming attack. They argued that the sources violated a judge's gag order, may
have lied under oath about that and won't be credible as trial witnesses.
The
mass shooting left 12 people dead in a suburban Denver movie theater last year.
"There
is a substantial likelihood that a New York reporter will be compelled to
divulge the identity of a confidential source (or face a contempt sanction) if
required to appear in the other jurisdiction (Colorado) - a result that would
offend the core protections of the shield law, a New York public policy of the
highest order," the court said in overturning a mid-level appeals court's
decision that supported the subpoena.
One
dissenting judge said New York's law does not protect Winter because the
privileged communications with her sources took place in another state.
Winter's
attorney welcomed the ruling.
"We
are absolutely thrilled and delighted that New York state's highest court has
once again reaffirmed how important the protection of confidential sources is
to the proper functioning of our society," said the attorney, Dori
Hanswirth.
Hanswirth
said she did not know whether Holmes' attorneys would appeal to federal court
but said a federal judge would have no jurisdiction.
"This
case is over as far as Jana Winter," Hanswirth said. "She does not
have to appear in Colorado again and she will not appear."
The
defense wanted Winter to identify the sources so Arapahoe County District Judge
Carlos A. Samour Jr. in Colorado could somehow punish them.
Daniel
King, one of Holmes' attorneys, did not initially return a call seeking
comment. Defense lawyers and prosecutors routinely decline to comment, citing
the gag order.
The
impact of Winter's victory on the overall case against Holmes will likely be
minimal, however.
Holmes
is accused of opening fire on a packed audience in a movie theater in the
Denver suburb of Aurora during a midnight showing of "The Dark Knight
Rises" in July 2012. Prosecutors are seeking the death penalty.
He
pleaded not guilty by reason of insanity to multiple counts of murder and
attempted murder. Defense lawyers have acknowledged Holmes was the shooter, and
the central question is whether he was legally insane at the time.
Holmes' trial has been postponed indefinitely while attorneys
argue a prosecution motion seeking further psychiatric evaluation

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