JayFarrar
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Mar 30, 2005
- Messages
- 9,931
In some of the coverage of the JonBenet case, this line struck me and I was wondering what other people thought.
"Was the principle of finding a killer more important than the privacy of a journalist's notes and communications?"
By the way, the writer didn't say what he would do.
So let's say you are put in a similar situation. In the process of an interview, the subject admits guilt to a murder.
Would you tell the cops or not tell the cops?
If it went to court, would you give up your notes or not give up your notes?
If faced with the contempt of court charges, would you go to jail to protect someone who admitted to a murder?
"Was the principle of finding a killer more important than the privacy of a journalist's notes and communications?"
By the way, the writer didn't say what he would do.
So let's say you are put in a similar situation. In the process of an interview, the subject admits guilt to a murder.
Would you tell the cops or not tell the cops?
If it went to court, would you give up your notes or not give up your notes?
If faced with the contempt of court charges, would you go to jail to protect someone who admitted to a murder?