 You don't want to be, ever, consider yourself an arm of the police or part of the police investigation. And you don't, so you want to remain independent. There are, you know, journalists might occasionally find rare instances where they have information that the police would feel could compromise in investigation and that then is a judgment call about whether or not publishing that information that you obtained independently would compromise that investigation. I have, when I was writing about national security issues, there were instances where the State Department or the White House said if I published this information it might put American lives in danger or something like that. So you have to make a judgment call. But the best situation is, for a reporter's perspective, is you are independent, you are investigating facts that are new, that are fresh, and that you force the police to do a better investigation because you have found information that they had either failed to find or were not being aggressive about.