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Vanessa Leggett

Vanessa Leggett (née Levrier; born May 18, 1968) is an American freelance journalist and lecturer who was jailed by the U.S. Justice Department for 168 days for protecting sources and research notes for an independent book about a federal murder-for-hire case. At the time, it was the longest contempt-of-court imprisonment of a journalist in United States history for protecting sources.[1] Leggett holds the record for serving the most time for protecting source material and without providing that material to negotiate a release from prison.[2][3]

Vanessa Leggett
BornVanessa Levrier
(1968-05-18) May 18, 1968 (age 55)
Houston, Texas
Occupation
LanguageEnglish
NationalityAmerican
CitizenshipUS
EducationBachelor's degree
Master's degree
Alma materUniversity of St. Thomas
GenreNarrative nonfiction
True crime
Literary movementJailed for not revealing sources
Notable awardsPresident's Award
Ancil Payne Award
PEN/Newman's Own
SPJ 1st Amendment
Zenger Award
Herb Block Freedom Award
SpouseDoak Leggett

Early life and education edit

Leggett, the daughter of a Houston oil trader, earned her bachelor's degree in English and a master's degree in liberal arts from the University of St. Thomas (Texas).[4]

Case history edit

In April 1997, the body of Houston, Texas, socialite Doris Angleton was discovered in her home. She died from 13 gunshot wounds to her face and chest. At the time of the death, her twin daughters and husband, Robert Angleton, a millionaire and former bookie,[5] were at a softball game.[6]

Leggett researched the case for five years. In 1998, during a series of jailhouse interviews of Roger Angleton, a suspect in a murder-for-hire plot, Leggett compiled notes and hours of audio tape that reportedly detailed how Roger's brother Robert hired him to murder his brother's wife Doris. The interviews occurred just before Roger's suicide in his Harris County jail cell and before Robert's trial.[7]

On June 19, 2001, U.S. District Judge Melinda Harmon ordered Leggett to appear in court the next day with her notes and tapes for a book she was researching about the murder. The order was in response to a grand jury that had convened to investigate the possibility of filing federal murder charges against the victim's husband, Robert Angleton.[8] Leggett, appearing in court on June 20, 2001, refused to turn over her notes, citing freedom of the press. She was then held in civil contempt of court and jailed by the U.S. Justice Department for refusing to turn over her notes.[1] Numerous news organizations and others championed Leggett's case, advocating that the public interest requires protecting journalists in Leggett's position.[9] The New York Times called Leggett's incarceration "a brazen assault on 1st Amendment values and the public interest in a free press."[10]

Leggett appealed her case in 2001 to the United States Supreme Court. The Center for Individual Freedom filed an amicus brief in support of Leggett's petition asking the U.S. Supreme Court to hear her case. The center also contributed to her legal defense fund.[11] In addition, the Society of Professional Journalists, through its Legal Defense Fund, paid half of Leggett's legal expenses.[12] The Supreme Court declined to hear the case.[13][14]

Leggett gave a prison interview for the Fall 2001 issue of The News Media & The Law and told the magazine she did not know at that point how long she would remain incarcerated.[15]

A couple of months later she was released from federal custody, on January 4, 2002, after serving the maximum sentence,[16] from the Houston Federal Detention Center after 168 days of incarceration on the civil contempt charge when the federal grand jury completed its term.[15] Leggett said to reporters as she walked out of jail, "This is not so much about me. It's about the public's right to a free and independent press."[17]

After her release, Leggett, appearing on the Charlie Rose show in April 2004, said, "(My sources) had taken a chance by cooperating with me and giving me information and trusting me with that information. And I felt obligated to honor that. When I realized that underlying this was an assault on the 1st Amendment, it became something much larger than just my sources or just my book. It was about protecting the free flow of information to the public."[10]

Career edit

From 1995 to 2016 Leggett taught criminology, as well literature and writing courses, at the University of Houston-Downtown, as a faculty member for the Department of English as well as for the university's Criminal Justice Training Center, where she taught Texas police recruits and lectured veteran homicide investigators.[18][19]

Leggett signed a book contract in 2002 with Crown Publishing, a division of Random House, about the Angleton murder for a reported $600,000 advance.[20]

Criminal justice lecturer edit

In 2002, she headlined with journalist Bob Woodward at the 23rd Annual Washington Writers Conference held at the National Press Club. At the same event, Leggett was given the Washington Independent Writers' President's Award. In addition, the Washington Independent Writers' Legal and Educational Fund presented Leggett with a $1,000 check for her stand in support of the First Amendment.[21]

She also lectured at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police; the Swedish National Board of Forensic Medicine; and the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement.[22]

She gave the keynote address at the Institute for Ethics and Journalism's 2007 conference, which was sponsored by the Knight Foundation's Program in Journalism Ethics and Washington and Lee University's department of journalism and mass communications.[23] In 2015, she sat on the First Amendment Advocacy panel at the National Press Club and discussed the need for stronger legal protections for journalists.[24] And in 2016, she gave a presentation at the International Academy of Investigative Psychology's annual conference at John Jay College of Criminal Justice.[22]

She has also given talks to the New York City Bar Association and the FBI Academy's Behavioral Science Unit.[23]

Awards edit

  • The University of Oregon in 2002 awarded Leggett the Ancil Payne Award.[25]
  • Washington Independent Writers gave her the President's Award in 2002.[26]
  • The PEN American Center awarded her the 2002 PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award, with one judge stating that her case was "especially inspiring" because she "fought her battle without the backing of a newspaper or media organization."[27] Leggett, in her acceptance remarks, said, "Having been confined to a place where civil rights are contemptuously regarded as 'legal loopholes' or antiquated nuisances, I can't tell you how good it feels to be in the company of those who not only respect the First Amendment, but actively work to defend free expression and give it life in their art."[28]
  • The Society of Professional Journalists awarded Leggett its 2002 First Amendment Award for refusing to turn over her notes to authorities.[29]
  • Leggett received the Newspaper Guild's first Herblock Freedom Award in 2002.[26]
  • The University of Arizona School of Journalism gave her the 2003 John Peter and Anna Catherine Zenger Award for Press Freedom.[30]
  • The Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas presented Leggett with its 2002 James Madison Award.[31]

Published works edit

Books edit

The FBI Academy, U.S. Department of Justice, released two books by Leggett, The Varieties of Homicide and its Research, published in 1999,[32] and The Diversity of Homicide, co-authored by Leggett with Paul Blackman and John Jarvis, published in 2000.

Articles edit

While in custody, Leggett continued her career as a freelance writer with an article for Newsweek, headlined "My Principles Have Landed Me in Jail," which was published in the magazine's September 2001 edition.[33]

She wrote a Texas Monthly article for its July 2002 issue titled "Doing Time" about her five-and-a-half months spent behind bars at the Federal Detention Center in Houston.[34] The article appeared in Texas Monthly's crime issue, which received the 2003 general excellence award from National Magazine Awards.[35]

She wrote two editorial pieces for the Houston Chronicle, titled "Down the Slippery Slope to Newspeak" published in 2004,[36] and "Rosenthal Deserved Jail Time" published in 2008.[37]

In 2015, Leggett had an exclusive interview with then-accused serial killer Robert Durst, after Durst contacted her via social media and invited her to lunch,[38] which culminated in a feature story for Esquire magazine titled "My Lunch with Robert Durst."[39]

Personal life edit

She is married to Doak Leggett.[40]

References edit

  1. ^ a b "True Crime and Punishment". The Austin Chronicle.
  2. ^ "Journalists jailed or fined for refusing to identify confidential sources, as of 2019". RCFP.org.
  3. ^ "Who Counts As A Journalist, For First Amendment Purposes?". findlaw.com.
  4. ^ "When a Writer Is Punished for Not Being an Author". The New York Times. August 11, 2001.
  5. ^ "Newseum Institute" (PDF). newseuminstitute.org.
  6. ^ "Texas Confidential". cbsnews.com. August 28, 2011.
  7. ^ "Oh, Brother". texasmonthly.com. May 31, 1998.
  8. ^ "Vanessa Leggett Serves Maximum Jail Time, First Amendment-Based Reporter's Privilege Under Seige". FindLaw.com.
  9. ^ "Protecting Journalist" (PDF).
  10. ^ a b "Vanessa Leggett - Charlie Rose". charlierose.com.
  11. ^ "Center Files Brief on Behalf of Vanessa Legget". cfif.org.
  12. ^ "Quill - From the Editor: Leggett case is part of a larger battle - Society of Professional Journalists". spj.org.
  13. ^ "Supreme Court Rejects Leggett Appeal". PBS NewsHour. April 16, 2002.
  14. ^ "Leggett v. United States - Opposition". www.justice.gov. October 21, 2014.
  15. ^ a b "Vanessa Leggett released from jail after 168 days - Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press". rcfp.org. October 26, 2011.
  16. ^ "Vanessa Leggett Serves Maximum Jail Time, First Amendment-Based Reporter's Privilege Under Seige". findlaw.com.
  17. ^ "Who Counts As A Journalist, For First Amendment Purposes? - FindLaw". Findlaw.com.
  18. ^ "In Lockup, Crime Writer Ponders Strange Plot Twist". Los Angeles Times. October 29, 2001.
  19. ^ "Jailed Writer on UHD Faculty" (PDF). New Horizons magazine. Spring 2002.
  20. ^ "Q&A: Vanessa Leggett's Book Deal". newsweek.com. May 1, 2002.
  21. ^ "H-Net Discussion Networks - Vanessa Leggett, Bob Woodward, WIW Conference, May 17–18". h-net.msu.edu.
  22. ^ a b UHD (May 31, 2016). "Criminal Justice Lecturer Presents at International Conference". uhd.edu.
  23. ^ a b "Jailed Reporter Vanessa Leggett to Give Keynote for W&L's Ethics Institute". wlu.edu. October 24, 2007.
  24. ^ "True crime novelist, jailed for protecting sources, to discuss experience, June 1". National Press Club. May 8, 2015.
  25. ^ "Past Ancil Payne Award Winners | Journalism and Communication". journalism.uoregon.edu.
  26. ^ a b "The Reliable Source". Washington Post.
  27. ^ "Vanessa Leggett to receive 2002 PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award - PEN America". April 11, 2002.
  28. ^ "Summer Mystery: Why Jail Vanessa Leggett?". www.cfif.org.
  29. ^ "Quill: Awards from the Society - Society of Professional Journalists - Improving and protecting journalism since 1909". www.spj.org.
  30. ^ "Zenger Award for Press Freedom". School of Journalism. March 25, 2020.
  31. ^ "Writer jailed for refusing to turn over notes to get award". Plainview Herald. July 8, 2002.
  32. ^ "Redefining Justice". davekopel.com.
  33. ^ Newsweek Staff (September 2, 2001). "My Principles Have Landed Me In Jail". Newsweek.
  34. ^ "Doing Time". texasmonthly.com. June 30, 2002.
  35. ^ "National Magazine Awards". Texas Monthly.
  36. ^ Leggett, Vanessa (August 22, 2004). "Down the slippery slope to 'newspeak'". Houston Chronicle.
  37. ^ Leggett, Vanessa (April 6, 2008). "Rosenthal deserved jail time". Houston Chronicle.
  38. ^ "Q&A with 4 Journalists Who Covered Killer Robert Durst | Psychology Today". www.psychologytoday.com.
  39. ^ "My Lunch With Robert Durst". Esquire. June 25, 2015.
  40. ^ Duggan, Paul (December 15, 2001). "For Jailed Writer, Prison Times is Study in Ethics, Experience". washingtonpost.com.

External links edit

  • Vanessa Leggett at IMDb
  • Vanessa Leggett speaker profile

vanessa, leggett, née, levrier, born, 1968, american, freelance, journalist, lecturer, jailed, justice, department, days, protecting, sources, research, notes, independent, book, about, federal, murder, hire, case, time, longest, contempt, court, imprisonment,. Vanessa Leggett nee Levrier born May 18 1968 is an American freelance journalist and lecturer who was jailed by the U S Justice Department for 168 days for protecting sources and research notes for an independent book about a federal murder for hire case At the time it was the longest contempt of court imprisonment of a journalist in United States history for protecting sources 1 Leggett holds the record for serving the most time for protecting source material and without providing that material to negotiate a release from prison 2 3 Vanessa LeggettBornVanessa Levrier 1968 05 18 May 18 1968 age 55 Houston TexasOccupationauthor journalist lecturer 1st Amendment advocateLanguageEnglishNationalityAmericanCitizenshipUSEducationBachelor s degree Master s degreeAlma materUniversity of St ThomasGenreNarrative nonfiction True crimeLiterary movementJailed for not revealing sourcesNotable awardsPresident s AwardAncil Payne Award PEN Newman s Own SPJ 1st Amendment Zenger Award Herb Block Freedom AwardSpouseDoak Leggett Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Case history 3 Career 3 1 Criminal justice lecturer 3 2 Awards 3 3 Published works 3 3 1 Books 3 3 2 Articles 4 Personal life 5 References 6 External linksEarly life and education editLeggett the daughter of a Houston oil trader earned her bachelor s degree in English and a master s degree in liberal arts from the University of St Thomas Texas 4 Case history editIn April 1997 the body of Houston Texas socialite Doris Angleton was discovered in her home She died from 13 gunshot wounds to her face and chest At the time of the death her twin daughters and husband Robert Angleton a millionaire and former bookie 5 were at a softball game 6 Leggett researched the case for five years In 1998 during a series of jailhouse interviews of Roger Angleton a suspect in a murder for hire plot Leggett compiled notes and hours of audio tape that reportedly detailed how Roger s brother Robert hired him to murder his brother s wife Doris The interviews occurred just before Roger s suicide in his Harris County jail cell and before Robert s trial 7 On June 19 2001 U S District Judge Melinda Harmon ordered Leggett to appear in court the next day with her notes and tapes for a book she was researching about the murder The order was in response to a grand jury that had convened to investigate the possibility of filing federal murder charges against the victim s husband Robert Angleton 8 Leggett appearing in court on June 20 2001 refused to turn over her notes citing freedom of the press She was then held in civil contempt of court and jailed by the U S Justice Department for refusing to turn over her notes 1 Numerous news organizations and others championed Leggett s case advocating that the public interest requires protecting journalists in Leggett s position 9 The New York Times called Leggett s incarceration a brazen assault on 1st Amendment values and the public interest in a free press 10 Leggett appealed her case in 2001 to the United States Supreme Court The Center for Individual Freedom filed an amicus brief in support of Leggett s petition asking the U S Supreme Court to hear her case The center also contributed to her legal defense fund 11 In addition the Society of Professional Journalists through its Legal Defense Fund paid half of Leggett s legal expenses 12 The Supreme Court declined to hear the case 13 14 Leggett gave a prison interview for the Fall 2001 issue of The News Media amp The Law and told the magazine she did not know at that point how long she would remain incarcerated 15 A couple of months later she was released from federal custody on January 4 2002 after serving the maximum sentence 16 from the Houston Federal Detention Center after 168 days of incarceration on the civil contempt charge when the federal grand jury completed its term 15 Leggett said to reporters as she walked out of jail This is not so much about me It s about the public s right to a free and independent press 17 After her release Leggett appearing on the Charlie Rose show in April 2004 said My sources had taken a chance by cooperating with me and giving me information and trusting me with that information And I felt obligated to honor that When I realized that underlying this was an assault on the 1st Amendment it became something much larger than just my sources or just my book It was about protecting the free flow of information to the public 10 Career editFrom 1995 to 2016 Leggett taught criminology as well literature and writing courses at the University of Houston Downtown as a faculty member for the Department of English as well as for the university s Criminal Justice Training Center where she taught Texas police recruits and lectured veteran homicide investigators 18 19 Leggett signed a book contract in 2002 with Crown Publishing a division of Random House about the Angleton murder for a reported 600 000 advance 20 Criminal justice lecturer edit In 2002 she headlined with journalist Bob Woodward at the 23rd Annual Washington Writers Conference held at the National Press Club At the same event Leggett was given the Washington Independent Writers President s Award In addition the Washington Independent Writers Legal and Educational Fund presented Leggett with a 1 000 check for her stand in support of the First Amendment 21 She also lectured at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police the Swedish National Board of Forensic Medicine and the Netherlands Institute for the Study of Crime and Law Enforcement 22 She gave the keynote address at the Institute for Ethics and Journalism s 2007 conference which was sponsored by the Knight Foundation s Program in Journalism Ethics and Washington and Lee University s department of journalism and mass communications 23 In 2015 she sat on the First Amendment Advocacy panel at the National Press Club and discussed the need for stronger legal protections for journalists 24 And in 2016 she gave a presentation at the International Academy of Investigative Psychology s annual conference at John Jay College of Criminal Justice 22 She has also given talks to the New York City Bar Association and the FBI Academy s Behavioral Science Unit 23 Awards edit The University of Oregon in 2002 awarded Leggett the Ancil Payne Award 25 Washington Independent Writers gave her the President s Award in 2002 26 The PEN American Center awarded her the 2002 PEN Newman s Own First Amendment Award with one judge stating that her case was especially inspiring because she fought her battle without the backing of a newspaper or media organization 27 Leggett in her acceptance remarks said Having been confined to a place where civil rights are contemptuously regarded as legal loopholes or antiquated nuisances I can t tell you how good it feels to be in the company of those who not only respect the First Amendment but actively work to defend free expression and give it life in their art 28 The Society of Professional Journalists awarded Leggett its 2002 First Amendment Award for refusing to turn over her notes to authorities 29 Leggett received the Newspaper Guild s first Herblock Freedom Award in 2002 26 The University of Arizona School of Journalism gave her the 2003 John Peter and Anna Catherine Zenger Award for Press Freedom 30 The Freedom of Information Foundation of Texas presented Leggett with its 2002 James Madison Award 31 Published works edit Books edit The FBI Academy U S Department of Justice released two books by Leggett The Varieties of Homicide and its Research published in 1999 32 and The Diversity of Homicide co authored by Leggett with Paul Blackman and John Jarvis published in 2000 Articles edit While in custody Leggett continued her career as a freelance writer with an article for Newsweek headlined My Principles Have Landed Me in Jail which was published in the magazine s September 2001 edition 33 She wrote a Texas Monthly article for its July 2002 issue titled Doing Time about her five and a half months spent behind bars at the Federal Detention Center in Houston 34 The article appeared in Texas Monthly s crime issue which received the 2003 general excellence award from National Magazine Awards 35 She wrote two editorial pieces for the Houston Chronicle titled Down the Slippery Slope to Newspeak published in 2004 36 and Rosenthal Deserved Jail Time published in 2008 37 In 2015 Leggett had an exclusive interview with then accused serial killer Robert Durst after Durst contacted her via social media and invited her to lunch 38 which culminated in a feature story for Esquire magazine titled My Lunch with Robert Durst 39 Personal life editShe is married to Doak Leggett 40 References edit a b True Crime and Punishment The Austin Chronicle Journalists jailed or fined for refusing to identify confidential sources as of 2019 RCFP org Who Counts As A Journalist For First Amendment Purposes findlaw com When a Writer Is Punished for Not Being an Author The New York Times August 11 2001 Newseum Institute PDF newseuminstitute org Texas Confidential cbsnews com August 28 2011 Oh Brother texasmonthly com May 31 1998 Vanessa Leggett Serves Maximum Jail Time First Amendment Based Reporter s Privilege Under Seige FindLaw com Protecting Journalist PDF a b Vanessa Leggett Charlie Rose charlierose com Center Files Brief on Behalf of Vanessa Legget cfif org Quill From the Editor Leggett case is part of a larger battle Society of Professional Journalists spj org Supreme Court Rejects Leggett Appeal PBS NewsHour April 16 2002 Leggett v United States Opposition www justice gov October 21 2014 a b Vanessa Leggett released from jail after 168 days Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press rcfp org October 26 2011 Vanessa Leggett Serves Maximum Jail Time First Amendment Based Reporter s Privilege Under Seige findlaw com Who Counts As A Journalist For First Amendment Purposes FindLaw Findlaw com In Lockup Crime Writer Ponders Strange Plot Twist Los Angeles Times October 29 2001 Jailed Writer on UHD Faculty PDF New Horizons magazine Spring 2002 Q amp A Vanessa Leggett s Book Deal newsweek com May 1 2002 H Net Discussion Networks Vanessa Leggett Bob Woodward WIW Conference May 17 18 h net msu edu a b UHD May 31 2016 Criminal Justice Lecturer Presents at International Conference uhd edu a b Jailed Reporter Vanessa Leggett to Give Keynote for W amp L s Ethics Institute wlu edu October 24 2007 True crime novelist jailed for protecting sources to discuss experience June 1 National Press Club May 8 2015 Past Ancil Payne Award Winners Journalism and Communication journalism uoregon edu a b The Reliable Source Washington Post Vanessa Leggett to receive 2002 PEN Newman s Own First Amendment Award PEN America April 11 2002 Summer Mystery Why Jail Vanessa Leggett www cfif org Quill Awards from the Society Society of Professional Journalists Improving and protecting journalism since 1909 www spj org Zenger Award for Press Freedom School of Journalism March 25 2020 Writer jailed for refusing to turn over notes to get award Plainview Herald July 8 2002 Redefining Justice davekopel com Newsweek Staff September 2 2001 My Principles Have Landed Me In Jail Newsweek Doing Time texasmonthly com June 30 2002 National Magazine Awards Texas Monthly Leggett Vanessa August 22 2004 Down the slippery slope to newspeak Houston Chronicle Leggett Vanessa April 6 2008 Rosenthal deserved jail time Houston Chronicle Q amp A with 4 Journalists Who Covered Killer Robert Durst Psychology Today www psychologytoday com My Lunch With Robert Durst Esquire June 25 2015 Duggan Paul December 15 2001 For Jailed Writer Prison Times is Study in Ethics Experience washingtonpost com External links editVanessa Leggett at IMDb Vanessa Leggett speaker profile Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Vanessa Leggett amp oldid 1173513628, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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