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Stop the ACLU (Free subscription) | 09/17/2008
... of journalists at a National Press Club event in Denver this week. Denver television reporter Brian Maass said that the government in the past understood the media would go to court if their requests were denied, according to a Press Club article. Now officials know media budgets are stretched thin, and a reporter’s leverage in an open records dispute isn’t what it was. “There’s less...
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MND/BlogWonks: Your Alternate Daily (Free subscription) | 09/17/2008
... of journalists at a National Press Club event in Denver this week. Denver television reporter Brian Maass said that the government in the past understood the media would go to court if their requests were denied, according to a Press Club article. Now officials know media budgets are stretched thin, and a reporter’s leverage in an open records dispute isn’t what it was. “There’s less...
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Everyday Ethics (Free subscription) | 09/11/2008
PR Newswire That's what Denver journalists said at a National Press Club forum. In the past, the government knew that the media would take legal action every time information was restricted, said TV investigative journalist Brian Maass . But now the government has gotten "pretty canny in knowing" that with financial pressures "there's less fight in the media to battle for information."...
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Pop + Politics (Free subscription) | 09/09/2008
... happened here? Was it underplayed by America, or over-played everywhere else? CBS Denver reporter Brian Maass broke the story. One of his sources in the Denver police department told him Sunday that they had been briefed about a possible plot to assassinate Obama. “From there, I spoke to another contact of mine in law enforcement who was in a separate briefing and had been told the...
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Isak (Free subscription) | 09/12/2008
Journalists at a National Press Club forum in Denver put it bluntly: "Squeezed for profits, news media companies no longer are pushing for access to information as they once did ..." The Marketwatch report goes on: "The media seems less and less willing to fight back and to challenge government authority in a legal sense," said Brian Maass, who leads the investigative team at Denver's...
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E - Editors Weblog (Free subscription) | 09/12/2008
According to a panel of journalists at a National Press Conference , news agencies now in financial turmoil are no longer pushing for access to information like they used to. "The media seems less and less willing to fight back and to challenge government authority in a legal sense," said Brian Maass , who leads the investigative team at Denver's CBS 4 . The (US) government is putting...
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PR News Wire (Free subscription) | 09/11/2008
DENVER, Sept. 11 /PRNewswire-USNewswire/ -- Squeezed for profits, news
media companies no longer are pushing for access to information as they
once did, a panel of Denver journalists said at a National Press Club forum
here Tuesday.
"The media seems less and less willing to fight back and to challenge
government authority in a legal sense," said Brian Maass, who leads the
investigative...
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PR News Wire (Free subscription) | 09/05/2008
... WHO:
Mark Cardwell, Denver Post managing editor for digital media and
strategic development
Brian Maass, CBS 4 (KCNC-TV) investigative reporter,
Patty Calhoun, editor and co-founder of Westword,
Deb Hurley, The Metropolitan State College of Denver journalism
professor
Gil Klein, veteran Washington correspondent and director of the NPC
Centennial project, moderator
WHEN:
...
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First Draft (Free subscription) | 09/01/2008
... Obama: Shoot From High Vantage Point CBS4 Denver ^ | Aug 26, 2008 5:55 am US/Mountain | Written by Brian Maass and cbs4denver.com staff Posted on Tuesday, August 26, 2008 7:37:14 AM by GT Vander Denver's U.S. attorney is expected to speak on Tuesday afternoon about the arrests of four people suspected in a possible plot to shoot Barack Obama at his Thursday night acceptance speech...
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CBS 4 - South Florida's Source for (Free subscription) | 08/28/2008
Thursday the Democrats' party shifts over to Invesco Field at Mile High and those who are planning on attending can count on extremely tight security. CBS station KCNC-TV Investigator Brian Maass got a behind-the-scenes look at the security in place and now has a good idea of what to expect.
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Chicago news (Free subscription) | 08/28/2008
Thursday the Democrats' party shifts over to Invesco Field at Mile High and those who are planning on attending can count on extremely tight security. CBS station KCNC-TV Investigator Brian Maass got a behind-the-scenes look at the security in place and now has a good idea of what to expect.
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WCBSTV.com: Your Source For New Yor (Free subscription) | 08/28/2008
Thursday the Democrats' party shifts over to Invesco Field at Mile High and those who are planning on attending can count on extremely tight security. CBS station KCNC-TV Investigator Brian Maass got a behind-the-scenes look at the security in place and now has a good idea of what to expect.