[Code of Federal Regulations]
[Title 32, Volume 2]
[Revised as of July 1, 2008]
From the U.S. Government Printing Office via GPO Access
[CITE: 32CFR246 App D]

[Page 558-560]

                       TITLE 32--NATIONAL DEFENSE

        CHAPTER I--OFFICE OF THE SECRETARY OF DEFENSE (CONTINUED)

PART 246_STARS AND STRIPES (S&S) NEWSPAPER AND BUSINESS OPERATIONS--Table of

            Sec. Appendix D to Part 246--Editorial Operations

    A. General. 1. The Stars and Stripes shall serve the interests of
their overseas DoD readership, as commercial daily newspapers serve
their readers throughout the United States. However, as a Government
organization, the Stars and Stripes news staff may not take an
independent editorial position. The Stars and Stripes editorial
practices and policies shall be in accordance with the highest standards
of American journalism.
    2. The Stars and Stripes editor, with the concurrence of the S&S
commander/publisher, and the Unified Command Commander-in-Chief (CINC),
as the owner of the newspaper, may establish a standard code of personal
and professional ethics and general editorial principles similar to
those developed at major metropolitan newspapers or by professional
journalists in organizations such as the Society of Professional
Journalists. Those codes usually stress the following:
    a. Responsibility of the newspaper to fully inform its readership.
    b. Freedom of the press.
    c. Commitment to personal and professional ethics.
    d. Emphasis on content accuracy, objectivity, and fair
representation of all sides of an issue.
    When developed, copies of the code and style guides shall be
provided to the Unified Command CINC and the Director of the American
Forces Information Service (AFIS).
    3. The Stars and Stripes editor shall be responsible for developing
editorial procedures and, if required, a style guide that mirrors daily
U.S. commercial newspapers.
    4. The editorial content of the Stars and Stripes shall be governed
by the general principles applicable to quality commercial press as
follows:
    a. Presentation of News. A major purpose of the Stars and Stripes is
to provide news and information from varied sources. This aids DoD
members and their families stationed overseas to exercise their
democratic citizenship responsibilities.
    b. Commercially-Contracted News, Features, and Opinion Columns. The
Stars and Stripes purchase (or contract for) and carry news stories,
features, syndicated columns, comic strips, and editorial cartoons from
commercial services or sources. Wire-service news, information, and
feature material may be edited in accordance with source contracts and
for space requirements. The Stars and Stripes reflect the news of the
day being carried in comparable U.S. commercial daily newspapers. They
should reflect different sides of issues over a reasonable amount of
time.
    c. Staff-Generated Copy. In keeping with the standards established
for major daily commercial newspapers in the United States, staff-
generated news and features in the Stars and Stripes shall be accurate,
factual, impartial, and objective. News stories and feature material
shall distinguish between fact and opinion. Every effort should be made
to attribute quotations and facts to

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identified sources. In the case of controversial or sensitive stories,
the Stars and Stripes editor, or his or her designee, shall ascertain
the identity of confidential sources, as required by normal journalistic
practices that ensure that sources are credible. The Stars and Stripes
may use the normal range of journalistic techniques including ``people-
on-the-street'' interviews if that technique does not constitute a
political poll.
    d. Political Campaign News. (1) The Stars and Stripes shall publish
coverage of the U.S. political campaigns from commercial news sources.
Presentation of such political campaign news shall be made on an
impartial, unbiased, and nonpartisan basis reflecting DoD policies of
non-endorsement of any specific candidate for an elected office. Every
effort should be made to ensure that the Stars and Stripes reflect the
full spectrum of campaign news being published in the United States on
national candidates and issues.
    (2) The Stars and Stripes shall support the Federal Voting
Assistance Program by carrying factual information about registration
and voting laws.
    e. The Stars and Stripes shall provide balance in commercial
syndicated columns. Since the Stars and Stripes may not take an
independent editorial position, a balanced selection of syndicated
opinion columns shall be published over a reasonable time period. The
presentation of syndicated editorial cartoons should reflect the full
spectrum of topical editorial cartoons being published throughout the
United States. The S&S commander/publisher shall provide the Unified
Commands annual assurance that the required balance for syndicated
opinion columns has been met.
    B. Administrative. 1. The Stars and Stripes shall comply with DoD
Instruction 1100.13 \1\ on polls, surveys, and straw votes. The Stars
and Stripes may not conduct a poll, a survey, exit polls, or a straw
vote on any political campaign. The Stars and Stripes may publish polls,
surveys, and/or straw votes furnished to the newspaper through its
contracted wire services. The Stars and Stripes may not conduct lottery
games.
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    \1\ Copies may be obtained, at cost, from the National Technical
Information Service, 5285 Port Royal Road, Springfield, VA 22161.
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    2. The Stars and Stripes shall have the following disclaimer placed
in the masthead or at the extreme bottom of one of the prominent pages,
segregated from copy in a box:
    This newspaper is authorized for publication by the Department of
Defense for members of the Military Services overseas. However, the
contents of the Stars and Stripes are unofficial, and are not to be
considered as the official views of, or endorsed by, the U.S.
Government, including the Department of Defense or the (name of the
appropriate Unified Command). As a DoD newspaper, the Stars and Stripes
may be distributed through official channels and use appropriated funds
for distribution to remote and isolated locations where overseas DoD
personnel are located.
    The appearance of advertising in this publication, including inserts
or supplements, does not constitute endorsement by the Department of
Defense or the Stars and Stripes of the products or services advertised.
    Products or services advertised in this publication shall be made
available for purchase, use, or patronage without regard to race, color,
religion, sex, national origin, age, marital status, physical handicap,
political affiliation or any other nonmerit factor of the purchaser,
user, or patron.
    C. Editorial. 1. The Stars and Stripes news staffs are authorized to
gather and report news, good and bad, on the Department of Defense and
its subordinate commands. All reporting necessarily requires some
investigation and, as with journalists on commercial newspapers, the
Stars and Stripes news staff members have the right and need to ask
questions and expect response to fulfill the S&S mission. However, the
Stars and Stripes is not an authorized investigative agency, such as
military law enforcement agencies, investigative bodies, or an Inspector
General, and shall not function in that capacity. As DoD employees, the
Stars and Stripes news staff members must adhere to the DoD personnel
policies that may not usually apply to journalists employed by
commercial newspapers and must comply with 32 CFR part 40 and, as
applicable, the Manual for Courts Martial, 1984.\2\
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    \2\ See footnote 1 to B.1. of this appendix.
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    a. Since most journalistic reporting is investigative by nature,
``investigative reporting,'' as such, is not banned. The Stars and
Stripes reporters have the same need to ask questions of sources, and
expect responses, as do commercial newspaper journalists. While the
Stars and Stripes staff cannot conduct independent investigations that
fall under the jurisdiction of various military law enforcement or
designated investigative agencies, the Stars and Stripes may report on
open or completed investigations by agencies authorized to perform
investigative functions. If the Stars and Stripes employees note
unlawful or criminal actions in their performance of duty, they must
report such incidents immediately to the S&S commander/publisher or to
their immediate supervisor, in accordance with 32 CFR part 40, who shall
also comply with 32 CFR part 40 and, as applicable, DoD Directive 7050.1
\3\ and

[[Page 560]]

DoD Instruction 5240.4.\4\ If there is an authorized investigation, a
Stars and Stripes reporter or editor cannot protect a source as
confidential when the information may be required to complete the
investigation. Coverage of an investigation, from a news perspective,
should be based on case progress or the resolution provided by the
investigative agency if considered newsworthy by the Stars and Stripes.
The Stars and Stripes editorial procedures shall not prohibit publishing
news of independent investigations furnished by commercial media and,
therefore, in the public domain.
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    \3\ See footnote 1 to B.1. of this appendix.
    \4\ See footnote 1 to B.1. of this appendix.
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    b. The Stars and Stripes staff may not knowingly place classified
information in Stars and Stripes staff-generated material. That does not
apply to public domain information attributed to commercially contracted
news, features, or opinion columns.
    2. The Stars and Stripes editorial staffs shall receive the same
treatment as commercial media.
    a. The Stars and Stripes reporters shall have the same right to ask
questions, to gain help, to have access, and to attend gatherings
available to reporters from the commercial media. Commanders or public
affairs staffs may not use the U.S. Government status of Stars and
Stripes reporters to block the release of, or access to, otherwise
releasable news, information, or events. Under the same circumstances,
the Stars and Stripes reporters may not use their U.S. Government status
or credentials to gain special treatment, access to restricted areas or
gatherings, or other advantages that are not given equally to civilian
media.
    b. In keeping with the ``Principles of Information'' in 32 CFR part
375 governing release of information to commercial media, the DoD
Components are expected to make available timely and accurate
information so that the Stars and Stripes news staffs and readers may
assess and understand the facts about their military organizations, the
national defense, and defense strategy. Consistent with statutory
requirements, information shall be made fully and readily available
under the principles for the release of information to the media issued
by the Secretary of Defense. A Government organization may not file a
request for information against another Government organization under 32
CFR part 285, which implements the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) in
the Department of Defense, but it is the responsibility of all commands
to honor the DoD Principles of Information, particularly regarding the
intent of open access as described in 32 CFR part 285 when responding to
queries from Stars and Stripes reporters.
    3. To meet organizational responsibilities, the Stars and Stripes
editor, the S&S commander/publisher, and the Stars and Stripes staff
members they select, should meet frequently with area commanders and
public affairs officers and staffs to confer, as their counterparts in
U.S. commercial daily newspapers do with local government and community
interest representatives.
    4. When matters of interest to the Stars and Stripes readership cut
across the Unified Command component command responsibilities, the Stars
and Stripes editor may use ``special project reporting teams'' to
examine such concerns. Whether the areas of Stars and Stripes interest
are military exercises, fast-breaking news affecting the entire Unified
Command community, or policies that require a greater-than-individual-
reporter effort, the Stars and Stripes editor, through the S&S
commander/publisher, can gain help by keeping the Unified Command and
its component command public affairs offices informed of the need for
theater-wide assistance. Such aid could help dispel morale-damaging
rumors.
    5. The Stars and Stripes shall conduct readership surveys at least
once every 3 years in the Unified Commands where the Stars and Stripes
are distributed. Such formal surveys shall be conducted in accordance
with DoD Instruction 1100.13. The S&S may make shorter market surveys
through its bookstore operations to determine changing readership
interests. The Stars and Stripes is also encouraged to make frequent use
of readership focus groups throughout the Unified Command.
    6. The Stars and Stripes may review commercial entertainment where
relevant and where it supports readership interest.
    7. All bureau personnel and field reporters shall have Stars and
Stripes newsroom experience before being given independent assignments.
The Stars and Stripes military reporters may wear military or civilian
clothes at the discretion of the S&S commander/publisher. If authorized
by the S&S commander/publisher, Stars and Stripes military members may
be authorized a clothing allowance in accordance with individual Service
directives.
    8. The Stars and Stripes are both authorized to maintain a
Washington, DC, bureau located with other correspondent bureaus in the
OASD (PA) Correspondents' Corridor. A desk will be provided for each
Stars and Stripes. The S&S shall select the most qualified reporters
possible for assignment to the bureau. A joint memorandum of
understanding on personnel support shall be established between the two
newspapers and approved by the Unified Commands, with a copy provided to
the Director of the AFIS.

[[Page 561]]