Salon Magazine











A L S O+T O D A Y

Special Report
By Murray Waas
Clinton administration failed to monitor China's use of missile-technology exports


T A B L E+T A L K

Why do people loathe Clinton so much? Discuss issues of character, personality, effectiveness and policy in the Politics area of Table Talk


D A I L Y+Q U O T E

No LSD for "Fear and Loathing" director


R E C E N T L Y

Vincent Foster is still with us
By Lori Leibovich
Vincent Foster's suicide is the Rosetta Stone of the right-wing conspiracy industry
(05/28/98)

First, we kill all the 11-year-olds
By Robin Templeton
After Springfield: Don't punish all kids for the mad acts of a few killers
(05/27/98)

The "conservative Ralph Nader"
By Joshua Micah Marshall
A star of the political chat-show circuit, the head of Judicial Watch has some pretty unorthodox views
(05/26/98)

The man who would be king
By Jonathan Broder
Indonesia's new leader says he's been given divine gifts and that his name vibrates in the hearts of children. How is that likely to play with the IMF?
(05/22/98)

Dickering with the devil
By Peter Dale Scott
The U.S. says it wants democratic reform in Indonesia. But what if a new military dictatorship takes over?
(05/21/98)

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -

Browse the
Newsreal Archives

- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -



Salon Newsreal[ Newsreal: The trials and tribulations of Bill Clinton ]
spacer

New Yorker magazine subpoena quashed

FEDERAL JUDGE HALTS CONSERVATIVE LAWYER'S
EFFORT TO DEPOSE JOURNALIST JANE MAYER.

News image



- - - - - - - - - -

A U.S. District Court judge Thursday firmly quashed a wide-ranging subpoena that sought to depose New Yorker writer Jane Mayer in a civil suit against the Clinton White House and the FBI stemming from the Filegate scandal.

The subpoena, issued earlier this month by attorney and conservative gadfly Larry Klayman on behalf of several former Reagan and Bush administration officials whose FBI files ended up at the White House in 1993, ordered Mayer to appear for questioning at Klayman's office next week and sought all of her notes, documents and other materials going back to 1992.

The subpoena, one of many filed by Klayman in his 18 suits against the Clinton administration, has attracted the attention of First Amendment experts because of its potential chilling effect on reporters. Klayman also has issued similar subpoenas to Salon, Salon's Washington bureau chief, Jonathan Broder, and contributing writer Murray Waas.

Mayer was subpoenaed because of an article she wrote in March that revealed that Linda Tripp, the Pentagon employee who secretly taped Monica Lewinsky's account of a sexual affair with President Clinton, had been arrested for theft as a teenager and lied about it on her Pentagon security form. According to Floyd Abrams, Mayer's lawyer, Klayman, a fierce critic of the Clinton administration, wanted to demonstrate a pattern of mishandling personnel files within the administration. Klayman claims a Pentagon official leaked the information about Tripp to Mayer.

In granting Mayer's motion to quash the subpoena, U.S. Judge Royce Lamberth ruled that "the documents, records and other materials sought by plaintiffs, including the deposition testimony which would be given by Mayer, are largely irrelevant to the matters at issue in this case." He ruled that the subpoena was overly broad and that many of the documents Klayman sought were covered by Mayer's claims of journalistic privilege.

To overcome Mayer's journalistic protections, Klayman had to demonstrate that the information he sought goes to the heart of his clients' claim of violation of privacy. "Without question," Lamberth wrote in his three-page opinion, "there has been no demonstration that the information sought from Mayer goes to the 'heart' of plaintiffs' case."

The subpoenas of Salon and its writers were also issued in connection with the Filegate civil suit. Neither Broder nor Waas has ever written about the case. Salon's only coverage of the matter was an interview with Ronald Kessler, the author of a book about the FBI, in which Kessler criticized the White House's handling of the Filegate matter.

Broder, Waas and Salon had been scheduled to appear in the coming days for their depositions, but last week Klayman informed Salon's lawyers that he was placing their subpoenas in abeyance after the court informed him that he had exceeded his 20-deposition limit.
SALON | May 29, 1998

 



Salon | Search | Archives | Contact Us | Table Talk | Ad Info

Arts & Entertainment | Books | Comics | Life | News | People
Politics | Sex | Tech & Business | Audio
The Free Software Project | The Movie Page
Letters | Columnists | Salon Plus

Copyright © 2000 Salon.com All rights reserved.

[Newsreal: Newsreal: The trials and tribulations of Bill Clinton] [Off your chest: Behind every one of these trigger-happy children is a parent ...]