美国法官裁定:五角大楼限制媒体采访权违宪


2026-03-20T21:12:23.832Z / 路透社

作者:杰克·奎因

2026年3月20日 美国东部时间晚上9:12 更新于26分钟前

图片(路透社/阿尔·德拉戈/档案图片 购买授权,新标签页打开)

  • 摘要
  • 公司
  • 纽约时报提起诉讼,称该政策侵犯言论自由权
  • 政府称该政策是国家安全必需的
  • 法官表示,鉴于当前局势,公众应能获取多视角的政府行动信息

纽约,3月20日(路透社) – 联邦法官周五裁定,特朗普政府限制五角大楼媒体采访权的政策违宪。该政策威胁记者:若寻求未经授权公开的信息,将被贴上”安全风险”标签。

《纽约时报》(纽约时报股票代码:NYT.N,新标签页打开)在华盛顿特区联邦法院提起诉讼,指控五角大楼去年的政策变更赋予其权力,可因报道部门不喜欢的内容冻结记者和新闻机构的采访权,这违反了宪法对言论自由和正当程序的保护。政府对此表示异议,称该政策合理且是国家安全必需的。

开始您的早晨,获取最新法律新闻
订阅《每日 docket》新闻通讯,直接发送至您的收件箱。立即订阅

广告 · 滚动继续阅读

美国地区法官保罗·弗里德曼在裁决中表示,他理解保护军队和战争计划的重要性,但鉴于总统唐纳德·特朗普近期对委内瑞拉的”入侵”和与伊朗的战争,”公众获取关于政府行动的多视角信息比以往任何时候都更为重要”。

五角大楼发言人肖恩·帕内尔在社交媒体上表示,政府不同意该裁决,并将立即寻求上诉。

《纽约时报》发言人查理·斯塔特兰德表示,该裁决维护了宪法保护的新闻自由权利,”重申了《纽约时报》和其他独立媒体继续代表公众提问的权利”。

“美国人有权了解政府如何运作,以及军队以他们的名义、用他们的税款采取的行动,”斯塔特兰德周五在声明中说。

大多数新闻机构未签署新政策

根据《纽约时报》的诉讼,2025年10月国防部长皮特·赫格塞斯批准的政策变更规定:记者若试图 Solicit(此处应为“ Solicit”,但中文语境中需处理为“寻求、获取”)未经授权的军事人员披露机密信息(某些情况下为未解密信息),将被视为安全风险并撤销其新闻记者证。

五角大楼记者协会的56家新闻机构中,仅有1家同意签署新政策的确认书,其余记者因未签署而交出了采访证。

报道称,在记者大量离职后,五角大楼组建了由亲特朗普媒体和人士组成的新记者团,《纽约时报》称这证明该政策旨在扼杀负面报道。

政策声明中提到,发布敏感信息”通常受第一修正案保护”,但官员在判断记者是否构成”安全或安全风险”时,可考虑其寻求该信息的行为。

《纽约时报》在诉讼中称,该政策非法限制了基本的新闻采集手段,并赋予五角大楼”不受约束”的撤销权限,允许其实施宪法禁止的”基于观点”的新闻限制。

司法部律师承认该政策部分具有主观性,但表示记者证审批仍由中立客观标准管辖。政府还称, Solicit(寻求)军事人员披露未经授权信息构成犯罪,不受法律保护。

弗里德曼法官在裁决中指出,该政策因模糊、过度宽泛而违反第一和第五修正案,”任何未经部门批准的新闻采集和报道都可能成为撤销记者证的理由”。

他还驳斥了政府的辩解,即该政策旨在防止记者”犯罪性地 Solicit(寻求)国防机密”,认为记者不可能知道他们寻求的信息是否获得授权。

这一政策变更受到新闻界倡导者的批评,他们称这是特朗普及其政府对新闻自由的又一次攻击。

新闻自由基金会倡导部门主管塞思·斯特恩在声明中称赞周五的裁决,称政府称”记者向政府提问是犯罪”令人”震惊”。

美联社(Associated Press)正在对特朗普政府官员提起诉讼,指控其在该通讯社决定继续使用墨西哥湾公认名称(尽管承认特朗普要求美国机构称其为”美洲湾”的行政命令)后,将其从白宫记者团中移除。

美联社称该决定是非法的基于观点的歧视,而政府反驳称,其对非公共空间的采访权限有广泛自由裁量权。

纽约报道,杰克·奎因;凯特·梅伯里和罗莎尔巴·奥布赖恩编辑

我们的标准:路透社信托原则(新标签页打开)

Pentagon’s limits on press access unconstitutional, US judge rules

2026-03-20T21:12:23.832Z / Reuters

By Jack Queen

March 20, 2026 9:12 PM UTC Updated 26 mins ago

The Pentagon logo is seen behind the podium in the briefing room at the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia, U.S., January 8, 2020. REUTERS/Al Drago/File Photo Purchase Licensing Rights, opens new tab

  • Summary
  • Companies
  • New York Times lawsuit alleged policy violated free speech rights
  • Government said policy necessary for national security
  • Judge says public should have access to information from different perspectives

NEW YORK, March 20 (Reuters) – A federal judge on Friday blocked the Trump administration’s restrictive Pentagon press access policy, which threatens journalists with being branded security risks ​if they seek information not authorized for public release.

The lawsuit by the New York Times (NYT.N), opens new tab in Washington, D.C., federal court alleged that policy changes ‌by the Defense Department last year gave it free rein to freeze out reporters and news outlets over coverage the department did not like, in violation of the Constitution’s protections for free speech and due process. The government disputed that characterization and said the policy is reasonable and necessary for national security.

Jumpstart your morning with the latest legal news delivered straight to your inbox from The Daily Docket newsletter. Sign up here.

Advertisement · Scroll to continue

Report Ad

U.S. District Judge Paul Friedman said in his ruling that he recognized the importance of protecting troops and ​war plans but that it was “more important than ever that the public have access to information from a variety of perspectives about what its government is ​doing” in light of President Donald Trump’s recent “incursion” into Venezuela and war with Iran.

Pentagon spokesman Sean Parnell said on social media that ⁠the government disagrees with the decision and will seek an immediate appeal.

New York Times spokesman Charlie Stadtlander said the ruling enforces constitutionally protected rights for the free press ​and “reaffirms the right of The Times and other independent media to continue to ask questions on the public’s behalf.”

Advertisement · Scroll to continue

“Americans deserve visibility into how their government is being run, and the ​actions the military is taking in their name and with their tax dollars,” Stadtlander said in a statement on Friday.

MOST NEWS OUTLETS DID NOT SIGN ON TO NEW POLICY

The changes approved under Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in October 2025 state that journalists can be deemed security risks and have their press badges revoked if they solicit unauthorized military personnel to disclose classified, and in some cases unclassified, ​information.

Of the 56 news outlets in the Pentagon Press Association, only one agreed to sign an acknowledgment of the new policy, according to the Times’ lawsuit. Reporters who did ​not sign surrendered their press passes.

The Pentagon assembled a new press corps consisting of pro-Trump outlets and media personalities after the exodus of reporters, which the Times said was evidence that the policy ‌was aimed ⁠at stifling unflattering coverage.

The policy states that publishing sensitive information “is generally protected by the First Amendment” but says soliciting that information could be considered by officials when determining whether a reporter poses a “security or safety risk.”

In its lawsuit, the Times said the policy unlawfully restricts essential newsgathering techniques and gives the Pentagon “unfettered” discretion to revoke passes, permitting it to impose the type of “viewpoint-based” press restrictions forbidden by the Constitution.

Justice Department lawyers acknowledged the policy was partly subjective but said press credentialing decisions were still governed by neutral, objective criteria. The ​government also said soliciting military personnel to ​commit a crime by disclosing unauthorized information ⁠was not legally protected speech.

In his ruling on Friday, Friedman said the policy violated the First and Fifth Amendments because it was vague, overly expansive and “makes any newsgathering and reporting not blessed by the Department” a possible basis for revocation of a journalist’s ​pass.

He also rejected the government’s argument that the policy is aimed at preventing criminal solicitation of defense secrets by journalists, saying ​it was impossible for ⁠reporters to know whether information they seek is authorized for release.

The policy change was criticized by journalism advocates, who called it another attack on the free press by Trump and his administration.

Freedom of the Press Foundation advocacy chief Seth Stern praised Friday’s ruling in a statement, saying it was “shocking” that the government had argued that “journalists asking questions of the government is criminal.”

The Associated ⁠Press has a ​pending lawsuit against Trump administration officials over its removal from the White House press corps after the ​news agency decided to continue using the Gulf of Mexico’s established name, while acknowledging Trump’s executive order calling on U.S. institutions to refer to it as the Gulf of America.

The AP said the decision was illegal viewpoint-based ​discrimination, while the government countered that it had wide discretion over press access decisions for non-public spaces.

Reporting by Jack Queen in New York; Editing by Kate Mayberry and Rosalba O’Brien

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles., opens new tab

评论

发表回复

您的邮箱地址不会被公开。 必填项已用 * 标注