The Times responded with a statement by publisher A.G .Sulzberger: “In defiance of law settled in the Pentagon Papers case, this judge has barred The Times from publishing information about a prominent and influential organization that was obtained legally in the ordinary course of reporting.”
His statement referenced a landmark 1971 case, in which the Nixon administration sought to prevent the publication of reporting based on a mammoth classified report on the nation’s involvement in the Vietnam War; the U.S. Supreme Court sided with the Times and the Washington Post in that case.
Sulzberger added: “We are appealing immediately.”
Wood’s ruling instructed the Times “not to use the legal memoranda provided by Project Veritas’ counsel, Benjamin Barr, or information obtained from those documents in this action for any purposes whatsoever.”
Project Veritas contended the documents were improperly obtained and that doing so was a violation of attorney-client privilege. “Project Veritas claims that the Times’ intrusion upon its protected attorney-client relationship is an affront to the sanctity of the attorney-client privilege and the integrity of the judicial process that demands the court’s intervention,” Wood said.
The idea of a publication being blocked from publishing material is referred to as prior restraint, and courts have been largely sympathetic over the years to the press on the issue, basing it on the First Amendment of the Constitution. The Times has been supported in the Veritas litigation by the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press.
“This ruling should raise alarms not just for advocates of press freedoms but for anyone concerned about the dangers of government overreach into what the public can and cannot know,” Sulzberger said in his statement.
Washington Post media critic Erik Wemple tweeted: “Today’s ruling in the Project Veritas v. NYT case is a monster lump of First Amendment coal.“
Josh Gerstein contributed to this report.