Journalist’s union condemns AFP trawling Guardian journalist’s metadata without warrant
The union representing journalists has condemned the revelation that the Australian Federal Police secretly sought to identify a Guardian journalist’s sources by trawling through his metadata.
Guardian Australia today revealed that national security reporter Paul Farrell’s metadata was accessed without a warrant in order to identify his sources.
The reveal came after the Australian Federal Police confirmed to the Privacy Commissioner that it had sought “subscriber checks” – access to telecommunications account details – and email records relating to Farrell, which were subsequently revealed through the Freedom of Information Act.
Media, Entertainment & Arts Alliance (MEAA) CEO, Paul Murphy, said: “It comes down to this: Journalists writing legitimate news stories in the public interest now have police trawling through their private metadata all because a government agency is embarrassed about a leak. In the process, the rights of journalists are trampled on.
This is some dark, dark stuff.
But Australia is the land of apathy, so no fucks will be given.
Journo union, except those that work at News Corp. For some reason News don’t want to know about it.
The bill will give police similar powers to those they have to seek and impose control orders on terrorism suspects – but they could be applied to all citizens in NSW who are alleged to have some proximity or involvement to a serious crime, without a person ever being found guilty of an offence.They would allow orders to be made on any citizen restricting their movement, who they associate with, who they work for and whether they can access the internet. Even when a person is acquitted of a criminal offence police could still seek such an order. The penalty for breaching an order is five years’ imprisonment or a $33,000 fine for an individual, or $165,000 for a corporation.