Quote from: amber roskamp on November 16, 2014, 06:49:41 PM
my friend was homeless, she came in and live with me for a week and now she has her own apartment. She doesn't have a job and she has been escorting to get by.
I am worried about her right now because I got interviewed by an lgbtq news paper and we were talkin about trans people and facing discrimination in the work place or living arrangements. Any ways he was asking if I knew any trans people that were having a hard time. so I am like i know a previously homeless 18 year old girl. and i told him that i let her stay with me.
The first question he asked was "is that the blond girl that is selling herself on craigslist?" i answered yes...
I am worried that if this reporter knew about her there is a chance that the police might as well.
I used to work as a photographer for a major newspaper here in Melbourne, so know what I'm talking about here.
Reporters will never say who their source is unless the source wants to be named.
The reason is quite simple, if a reporter/journalist has a source for a great story, then down the track that sources name got out against the sources wishes, word will get out that you cannot trust that reporter/journalist, and for them they're only as good as their word.
I've seen it kill careers, I've also seen cases where the journalists bosses are not told.
Theres one very famous case here that went through the courts where Australia's richest woman bought shares into a FairFax to try to find out the source that one Journo had on her family battle (I think she left the kids out of the will), Fair Work took FairFax & Gina Rineheart to court over it for the journalist and won.