About 60 people became sick after our annual awards banquet at the Bali Hai Wednesday night, July 29. When word of the outbreak began to spread two days later, our board contacted county health officials and the venue and started emailing attendees and members daily updates. They are listed below, in reverse chronological order. The latest update contains the county’s Sept. 28 report on the outbreak. The board is digesting it and welcomes any feedback at matthew.hall@sduniontribune.com. We’ll update this post as warranted.
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SPJ San Diego: Law enforcement went too far on student home visit
The Society of Professional Journalists San Diego Pro Chapter believes that law enforcement went too far when an FBI agent and a San Diego Police Department detective on the San Diego Joint Terrorism Task Force visited a San Diego City College student journalist’s home to inquire about a news crew filming outside the FBI San Diego office for a story about sex trafficking.
City Times, a student publication of City College, first reported the visit on May 8; an FBI spokesman and the college’s communications department chair later confirmed the details to us.
We urge law enforcement officials to exercise restraint when questioning journalists about their reporting, particularly when student journalists are involved. This line of questioning is especially troubling as it was conducted at a journalist’s house instead of by contacting the college or student newspaper itself.
The college’s communications department chair, Laura Castañeda, says it’s understandable that the FBI would follow up on concerns, but agents chose to “send a San Diego Detective from the Terrorism Task Force to a student’s home” and “never checked with the College to verify whether these individuals were student journalists.”
The incident underscores the importance of journalism teachers instructing students about their rights and responsibilities to protect source material and how to interact with law enforcement agencies. To use a police tape metaphor, journalists need to know where the line is to avoid crossing it. But they can get close as they need to get the story.
You Have to Watch These Videos of our Rowdy #CA52 Discussion
On Tuesday night, journalists and campaign communication directors had a rowdy discussion of the 52nd Congressional District race between Scott Peters and Carl DeMaio. Arguments were had, accusations were made and there was a lot of shouting from members of the audience.
If you missed San Diego SPJ’s discussion, we have video thanks to Bradley Fikes at U-T San Diego. You can watch the videos, divided into sections, here or below.
DEADLINE EXTENDED TO MONDAY: for 2014 SPJ-SD Awards Contest and Scholarship Competition
The 2014 SPJ San Diego-Area Journalism Competition and our new SPJ Scholarship Competition remains open, and the deadline is Monday, April 21 at 5 p.m
Click on our Journalism Contest page and read the contest Guidelines, How to Enter, Categories, and Frequently Asked Questions, then enter the contest and scholarship competition. (The information is posted on the Journalism Contest page, with a separate link). It will be helpful to keep the SPJ San Diego website open in a second browser while you submit your entries, so you can easily check the list of categories and find answers to your questions.The How to Enter link gives you easy, step-by-step instructions for entering the contest and scholarship competition.
