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Watch: Right-to-be-Forgotten Panel

Author

  • Susan Greene

    Susan Greene is a reporter, editor and coach for the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab). She was editor and executive director of The Colorado Independent before it merged with COLab and a longtime reporter and metro columnist at The Denver Post. She was selected as a 2020-2021 Rosalynn Carter Mental Health Journalism Fellow, and is the inaugural recipient of the Benjamin von Sternenfels Rosenthal Grant for Mental Health Investigative Journalism.

Join us for a discussion about the movement to minimize longterm harm in crime reporting

Newsrooms in Colorado and nationally are starting to adopt policies seeking to reduce harm to criminal suspects and make it easier for them to move on after their time in the news spotlight has passed.

The Associated Press recently announced it will no longer release suspects’ names or mug shots in stories about minor crimes in which it is unlikely the news agency “will provide coverage beyond the initial arrest.” The Denver Post and affiliated newspapers owned by Prairie Mountain Publishing, as well as outlets owned by Swift Communications recently have adopted similar policies.

The “right-to-be-forgotten” movement is driven largely by increasing requests from people wishing to erase negative media coverage that can permanently hinder their job and housing prospects. It also comes as Americans increasingly embrace second chances as a civil right.

Critics argue that the public has a right to know who has been arrested and that removing their names by amending stories on internet archives is a form of censorship that effectively rewrites history.

Given the major shifts this issue is making in our industry and questions many outlets have about whether and how to implement right-to-be-forgotten policies, the Colorado News Collaborative (COLab) is hosting a virtual panel from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesday July 28 for discussion. Veteran journalist Susan Greene will moderate the conversation with Denver Post Editor Lee Ann Colacioppo and Aspen Times Editor David Krause, who both have adapted new policies in their newsrooms. We’ll talk about the nuances of these policies and ways they can help boost trust in local news coverage. We’ll discuss how newsrooms may want to factor in Colorado’s recently passed House Bill 21-1214 when deciding whether to amend old stories. And we’ll examine the extent to which journalists should rely on police accounts in their reporting. See this recent column by Corey Hutchins on the topic. 

COLab is pleased to partner with the Colorado Freedom of Information Coalition, the Colorado Press AssociationColorado Media Project and the Denver Press Club in promoting this important conversation.