Fox News joined several other major media outlets Thursday
in refusing to send a representative to a meeting with Attorney General Eric
Holder on the department's surveillance of reporters if Holder continues to
insist that the session be off the record.
Michael Clemente, Fox News' executive vice president,
decided that Fox News will not attend the off-record talks. Fox News had been
invited to a Friday session at the Department of Justice headquarters in Washington .
With the decision, the two news outlets known to have been
targeted by the Justice Department for surveillance -- the other being the
Associated Press -- are now declining to participate in the first phase of
Holder's internal review over the controversy. Several other outlets are also
refusing to attend.
Both the Associated Press and Fox News had their phone
records pulled by the Justice Department, in the course of two separate leak
investigations. The department went a step further in the Fox News case,
seizing the personal emails of correspondent James Rosen, while accusing him of
being a criminal "co-conspirator" in the application for the search
warrant.
Holder, who agreed to conduct a review of DOJ guidelines
over investigations that involve journalists, had set up meetings with members
of the media for Thursday and Friday. He ran into immediate resistance, though,
after calling for the meetings to be off the record, meaning the discussions
would not be reportable.
AP media relations manager Erin Madigan White said that if
the session is not on the record, the news cooperative will offer its views in
an open letter on how Justice Department regulations should be updated.
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