The city’s new $15 million emergency response systems overhaul will encrypt the frequencies of nine city departments, making it no longer possible for the public to monitor police and fire scanners.
The Justice Department said Saturday that it no longer will secretly obtain reporters records during leak investigations, a policy shift that abandons a practice decried by news organizations and press freedom groups.
The Justice Department has said it will no longer seek access to journalists records. In January, the DOJ tried to obtain four NY Times reporters email logs following an April 2017 story on James Comey.
Amid controversy, Justice Dept. says it won’t seek to compel journalists to give up source information Matt Zapotosky The Justice Department on Saturday announced that it will no longer use subpoenas or other legal methods to obtain information from journalists about their sources a major policy shift that came just a day after the New York Times revealed that the department had prohibited the newspaper’s lawyers and executives from disclosing an effort to seize email records of four reporters. “Going forward, consistent with the President’s direction, this Department of Justice in a change to its long-standing practice will not seek compulsory legal process in leak investigations to obtain source information from members of the news media doing their jobs,” Anthony Coley, the department’s top spokesman, said in a statement.