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New York Times says Pentagon not complying with judge’s order on press access policy

The New York Times claims the Pentagon's interim policy restricts press freedom despite a court injunction, limiting access and imposing new rules on reporter anonymity, a Times lawyer said.

  • On Monday, a New York Times attorney urged District Judge Paul Friedman to compel the Pentagon to comply with his 10-day-old order, asserting the government has flouted the directive blocking restrictive press credential policies.
  • Earlier this month, Friedman ruled that the credential policy violated constitutional rights to free speech and due process, following a lawsuit The Times filed against the Pentagon and Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth in December.
  • The Interim Policy bars reporters from entering the building without an escort and relocates workspaces to an outside annex, which an association attorney wrote is "further limiting their ability to actually do journalism."
  • Government attorney Sarah Welch told the judge the department has "fully complied in good faith," though reporter Julian Barnes noted in a Sunday court filing that Pentagon staff promised library access reporters cannot physically reach without prohibited transit.
  • Pentagon spokesperson Sean Parnell indicated the administration would appeal the March 20 ruling, while the broader press corps remains split between conservative outlets that agreed to the policy and others continuing to report independently.
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Washington, 30 Mar (EFE).- The New York Times accused the Pentagon this Monday of disobeying a court order that requires it to guarantee journalists access to its headquarters, by implementing a revised policy that, according to the newspaper, evades the ruling that it considers unconstitutional the military authorities' action on reporters. The newspaper's lawyers assured that the new rules impose additional obstacles to journalistic work, whil…

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Reuters broke the news in United Kingdom on Monday, March 30, 2026.
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