Freelance Journalist Who Spent Record Time In Jail For Refusing To Testify In Case Freed
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ A freelance videographer walked out of federal prison Tuesday after spending more time behind bars than any other journalist for refusing to testify to a grand jury. <br/><br/>Joshua
Tuesday, April 3rd 2007, 6:00 pm
By: News On 6
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _ A freelance videographer walked out of federal prison Tuesday after spending more time behind bars than any other journalist for refusing to testify to a grand jury.
Joshua Wolf, 24, in a deal with prosecutors, posted online the unaired videotape that he had refused to give federal authorities, defense lawyer David Greene said. U.S. District Judge William Alsup, who had jailed Wolf for 226 days, had approved his release earlier in the day.
``Joshua Wolf has complied with the grand jury subpoena,'' prosecutor Jeffrey Finigan said in court papers filed Tuesday.
Wolf spent more than seven months in a federal prison in Dublin, Calif. after refusing to obey a subpoena to turn over his videotape of a chaotic 2005 San Francisco street protest during the G-8 summit.
The government is investigating how a San Francisco police officer's skull was fractured during the melee and who set a police car on fire.
The footage Wolf posted Tuesday does not show those events, Greene said.
Prosecutors said they were not inclined to seek his grand jury testimony, though they left open the possibility that he could be subpoenaed again later.
``I will not under any circumstances testify before a grand jury,'' Wolf said as he left the prison.
Wolf's lawyers had argued that the First Amendment gave him the right to refuse the subpoena for unaired video.
The judge, however, cited a 1972 U.S. Supreme Court ruling that the U.S. Constitution does not entitle reporters, or anybody else, to withhold confidential sources or unpublished material from a grand jury investigation or criminal trial.
No federal shield law protects reporters, unlike California's shield law, which allows reporters to keep sources and unpublished material secret.
Wolf's incarceration time surpassed that of Vanessa Leggett, a Houston freelancer who served 168 days in 2001 and 2002 for refusing to reveal unpublished material about a murder case.
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