Updated

The National Press Club, which includes 3,500 members, including journalists from every major news organization, released a statement in support of FoxNews.com’s Jana Winter. Winter has been called to appear in a Colorado courtroom April 10 to face a judge who is considering putting her on the stand and compelling her to reveal the sources who told her about a notebook Aurora, Colo., shooter James Holmes sent his former psychiatrist.

Here is the statement in full:

The National Press Club on Friday respectfully urged a Colorado judge to drop his push to force a reporter to reveal her confidential sources for a story about the alleged shooter in the last July’s shooting spree in an Aurora, Colo., theater.

Jana Winter of Fox News reported days after the deadly shooting that the defendant in the case, James Holmes, had sent his psychiatrist before the shootings occurred detailed drawings of people being killed. All information in the investigation of Holmes was under seal. Winter had cited law-enforcement officials as her source.

Colorado has a shield law that protects reporters from being forced to disclose confidential sources, but it allows judges to compel disclosure in certain circumstances after other options for finding the source have been exhausted. The judge is reportedly taking these initial steps to find out who told Winter about the letters, but he has nonetheless subpoenaed Winter to testify.

"Courts have the right to enforce the confidentiality of investigations, and that may in some cases require punishing leakers," National Press Club President Angela Greiling Keane said. "But attempting to get that information by subpoenaing reporters in order to learn their anonymous sources goes too far. It jeopardizes a value of greater significance. If anonymous sources believe their identities can be dredged up in court, they will be less likely to disclose to the press information of vital public importance. That’s not a risk worth increasing."