| Suit
against Treasury Department aims to protect First Amendment
Freedom of the press is at risk, scholarly
journal publisher says
College Park, MD (September 28, 2004) - A group of publishers and authors filed suit against a U.S. Treasury office in a New York federal court yesterday.
The group, which includes the American Institute
of Physics, is opposing the
attempts of the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC) to control publishing
activities involving information and literature from countries under trade embargo
such as Iran, Cuba, and the Sudan.
"The freedom of the press is at risk," said Dr. Marc H. Brodsky,
chair of the American Association of Publishers Professional and Scholarly Publishing
Division (AAP/PSP). Brodsky is also executive director of the American Institute
of Physics, based in College Park, Maryland. "Our readers have the right
to information regardless of the country of origin. Publishers should not have
to seek the government's permission to do business as usual."
Along with other publishing groups, AAP/PSP is asking the court to strike
down OFAC regulations that require U.S. publishers working with materials from
embargoed countries to seek a license from the government to perform routine
editorial activities, such as reordering paragraphs and correcting syntax or
grammar. The groups also seek a preliminary injunction against enforcement of
these regulations and a hearing for a permanent injunction. The groups challenge
the regulations on the grounds that they violate the First Amendment and legislation
enacted by Congress to exempt information and informational materials from economic
embargoes.
For violating OFAC's regulations, publishers face the risk of incurring prison
sentences of up to ten years or a fine of up to a million dollars per violation.
"Our most basic liberties are violated when we, as publishers, have to
either ask the government for permission to publish or risk serious civil and
criminal penalties if we do not obtain permission," said Brodsky. "Because
of these rules, there are publishers who are censoring themselves."
For example, the rulings prevented Iranian geologists from publishing a paper
in the journal Mathematical Geology; the work presented a new methodology relating
to earthquake prediction.
"This research contains information that could assist seismologists right
here in the US to help their communities better prepare for earthquakes," said
Brodsky. "Yet the current regulations impede the publication of this helpful
material."
"Information and informational materials" are exempt from trade
embargoes by the 1994 Free Trade in Ideas Amendment and the 1988 Berman Amendment
to the Trading with the Enemy and the International Emergency Economic Powers
Acts. However, the lawsuit contends that OFAC regulations directly contradict
these exemptions and endanger publishers, authors and the public's constitutional
rights.
"This is not a partisan issue—the regulations have been enforced by more
than one administration," Brodsky said. "Publishers shouldn't have
to be fearful of either party's bureaucratic regulations when they receive a
manuscript from abroad. We, as publishers, have a responsibility to vet the material
we publish for accuracy, reliability, and its contribution to scholarship, regardless
of the country of origin, without the government's approval."
Deciding that it is not violating any law, the American Institute of Physics
has continued to consider manuscripts for publication regardless of the author's
location.
The suit was filed by the Association of American University Presses (AAUP),
a trade association of 124 non-profit scholarly publishers; AAP/PSP, a trade
association of the leading publishers in science, medicine, technology, business,
law, and the humanities ; PEN American Center, an organization of over 2,500
prominent novelists, poets, essayists, translators, playwrights, and editors;
and Arcade Publishing Inc., an independent book publisher.
The American Institute of Physics (AIP) is a not-for-profit membership corporation
chartered in New York State in 1931 for the purpose of promoting the advancement
and diffusion of the knowledge of physics and its application to human welfare.
It is the mission of the Institute to serve physics, astronomy, and related fields
of science and technology by serving its Member Societies and their associates,
individual scientists, educators, R&D leaders, and the general public with
programs, services and publications.
Contact:
Marc H. Brodsky (AIP)
301-209-3131 (office)
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