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Office of Crime Victim Services
Dealing with the Media
Back to For Victims
During a stressful time, dealing with the media may be overwhelming.
Remember, as a crime victim, you have rights in dealing with the news media,
including the right:
- ♦ To decline to give interviews, if you choose.
- Even if you have given other interviews.
- ♦ To grieve in private.
- Grief is a very personal matter. You have a right to ask reporters,
photographers or others to leave during times of grief.
- ♦ To choose the time and place for interviews.
- You may protect the privacy of you home by giving interviews elsewhere ...
- ♦ To choose your own spokesperson.
- ... or expressing your point of view through a written statement or a
spokesperson.
- ♦ To request that offensive visuals be omitted from a story.
- If you feel graphic photographs or visuals are not fair to you or your loved
ones, you have a right to ask that they not be used.
- ♦ To exclude children from interviews.
- Exposure to the media may re-traumatize children already traumatized by
crime.
- ♦ To request a retraction of inaccurate reports.
- If you feel reports are unbalanced or otherwise flawed, you have a right to
offer your point of view or ask for a correction.
- ♦ To refuse to answer any inappropriate questions.
- ♦ To tell your story completely.
- ♦ To be treated with dignity and respect at all times.
PROFESSIONAL JOURNALISTS SOCIETY ETHICS CODE:
Journalists at all times will
show respect for the dignity, privacy, rights and well-being of people
encountered in the course of gathering and presenting the news. The news media
must guard against invading a person's right to privacy. The media should not
pander to morbid curiosity about details of vice and crime.
RADIO-TV NEWS DIRECTORS' ETHICS CODE:
Reject sensationalism or misleading
emphasis in any form. Respect the dignity, privacy and well-being of people with
whom they deal.
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