What the Bellweather Ruling Actually Means for Press Freedom
The Supreme Court's 6-3 decision rewrote the calculus on source protection. Three legal scholars explain what survives — and what doesn't.

The temptation, in the hours after a major Supreme Court ruling, is to read the headline and reach for the obituary. Bellweather v. Department of Justice, decided 6-3 last Thursday, has already been called the end of the reporter's privilege as Americans have understood it for two generations. The reality, as always, is more textured.
The ruling does narrow the privilege. It does not, contrary to several early reports, eliminate it. The majority opinion, authored by Justice Hartman, leaves intact the federal common-law privilege articulated in the Branzburg dissent — but holds that it does not extend to communications obtained after a grand jury subpoena has been served.
We convened three scholars to walk through the decision: what the majority actually held, what the concurrences signal about the next case, and what working journalists need to understand about the shield laws still on the books in 49 states.
The short answer: source protection is not dead. It has, however, been moved to a different room in the house. The reporters who understand the new floorplan will keep working. The ones who don't will learn the hard way.
Get Weekly Book Picks & Legal Insights
Free books, curated articles, and exclusive giveaways. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
Join 1,000+ subscribers. Free book downloads for new members.
Priya Anand
Priya Anand is a senior writer at FedKite covering the federal courts and First Amendment law.
Keep Reading

The Quiet Wife: A Psychological Thriller That Demands to Be Read in One Sitting
Helen Marlow's debut is a slow knife — domestic, claustrophobic, and impossible to look away from.

Crown of Ember Vows Review: Romantasy at Its Most Addictive
Sera Andolin builds a world worth burning down — and a love story worth burning for.

The Verdict: How Amelia Hartwell Won a Landmark Misclassification Case
Inside the four-year trial strategy that produced a $48.2M settlement for 2,400 drivers — and what it means for the next generation of gig-economy litigation.