November 18, 2009
Two cases -- one involving ACORN tapes, another of recordings by a former aide -- put the attorney general in a tight spot.
California's attorney general and prospective Democratic gubernatorial
candidate, Jerry Brown, is trapped in a political cage from which there
will be no easy escape. When it comes to secretly recorded
conversations, and a national scandal involving the housing advocacy
group ACORN, Brown is going to find himself in trouble no matter what
he does.
Brown's office is investigating two conservative filmmakers, James
O'Keefe III and Hannah Giles, who last summer posed as a pimp and a
prostitute and secretly videotaped
employees at ACORN offices giving tax advice that was highly unethical
if not illegal. Some of those offices were in California, which forbids
secret electronic recordings of "confidential communication." Liberal
activists are expecting Brown to throw the book at the filmmakers --
and conservatives are simultaneously pillorying him
for a separate incident in which he gave his own spokesman a pass after
he appeared to be breaking the same law. Although the controversy might
well haunt Brown during his campaign for governor, the two cases are
actually very different from a legal standpoint.
Scott Gerber, Brown's former communications director, resigned this
month after admitting that he secretly recorded phone conversations
with newspaper reporters, including from The Times. The attorney
general's office closed its investigation into Gerber last week without
filing charges. Its rationale was that no one should expect an
on-the-record conversation between a news reporter and a source to be
confidential, including the reporter. We strongly agree that that's the
way the law should be interpreted, but opinions differ because the
phrase "confidential communication" in the law is poorly defined. Brown
has rightly called for an independent investigation into Gerber's
activities.
Then there's the ACORN case. O'Keefe and Giles did not disclose that
they were journalists -- in fact, they disguised themselves as
underworld figures -- and entered private offices for consultations on
tax matters, while secretly videotaping the proceedings. This couldn't
possibly be interpreted as an on-the-record conversation with a
reporter. Though we admire the filmmakers' chutzpah and think they
performed a worthwhile public service, they certainly appear to have violated state law as it currently stands.
Into this minefield steps Brown, who will infuriate his liberal base if
he declines to prosecute O'Keefe and Giles, and will open himself to
charges of hypocrisy if he does. Yet the problem isn't of his making --
it stems from a vague and overly restrictive statute, one that the
Legislature should revisit next year.
Submitted by: Kathleen Rogan
Tuesday, November 24, 2009
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5 comments:
Doesn't ACORN trying to registering coloreds to vote? Glenn Beck told me that's unamerican.
Ooh oh, KooKoo Kathleen's evil imposter is at it again. Trying to impersonate me and doing a very poor job.
May the perpetuators who took their pimp and prostutation act to several Acorn organization offices go to jail for where they belong.
John Curtis is a major part of the 30 year problem in Pacifica-- now that's worth some research.
I do not understand the logic where we would not want to know that a government funded agency had employees giving "tax advice" regarding getting a loan. Besides, we do not have any money to put people in jail any more.
Interesting point Lois. I have a small business named Acorn Financial and Insurance Services, and for a while in phone company referral error I was getting a ton of phone calls from seemingly disparate people attempting to contact Acorn organization to save their homes. And, with the artificial scandals which also occurred, one person called to stop her contribution to Acorn-- I advised her to contact the bank. Looks like Acorn organization provide a variety of services www.acorn.org.
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