March 13, 2007
All the News That's Fit to Pay For?
By
Michelle Malkin
The New
York Times prides itself on ethical journalism. The
company boasts a 57-page "handbook of values and
practices" for its newsroom. "Our greatest
strength," the paper intones,
"is the
authority and reputation
of the Times."
Last year,
former Times reporter
Kurt Eichenwald
received one of countless honors showered on The
Ethical, Authoritative Paper's staffers: a University of
Oregon award for ethics in journalism. Eichenwald was
cited "for preserving the editorial
integrity of an important story while reaching out to
assist his source, Justin Berry, in reporting on Berry's
involvement in child pornography." The judges
praised Eichenwald for
going beyond reporting
and helping Berry escape the pornography trade
and facilitating Berry's participation in prosecuting
the adults in the porn ring.
Eichenwald
and Berry appeared together at a
congressional hearing,
on the Today show with Katie Couric, and on Oprah
Winfrey's couch, where the crusading Eichenwald was
credited with
"Saving Justin."
The University of Oregon judges were "impressed"
by the ethical decisions Eichenwald and The
Ethical, Authoritative
Times
made—as well as by their "transparency."
But now, the
rest of the story: Turns out Eichenwald forked out
$2,000 to Berry, who was the primary source and subject
of Eichenwald's massive Times investigative cover
story on webcam child porn in 2005. [
Through
His Webcam, a Boy Joins a Sordid Online World,
December 19, 2005]
Eichenwald
failed to disclose the payment. The Times
admitted the payment only after it "emerged" in a
criminal trial last week related to Eichenwald's story.
The payment was made in June 2005. The story was
published in December 2005. The Times didn't
acknowledge the lack of disclosure until March 6, 2007,
when it revealed in an
Editor's Note:
"Mr. Eichenwald did not disclose to
his editors or readers that he had sent Mr. Berry a
$2,000 check. . . . The check should have been disclosed
to editors and readers, like the other actions on the
youth's behalf that Mr. Eichenwald, who left The
Times last fall, described in his article and
essay."
Eichenwald
and The
Ethical, Authoritative
Times
have offered explanations for the payment that don't
pass the sniff test. These rationales certainly wouldn't
get past the Times' own editorial olfactory
nerves if any of its competitors had committed the very
same sin.
Eichenwald
now says he and his wife hatched a plan as "private
citizens" to give the money in order to learn the
teenager's real name and address. "If I can prove,
based on that information, that this is a minor, we will
contact law enforcement. Otherwise, we will invest the
money in hopes of drumming up more information and
luring out more information that might prove the point,"
he
explained on media blogger Jim
Romenesko's website.
The paper
also says Eichenwald was just trying to maintain contact
with the boy out of concern for his safety and wasn't
acting as a journalist when he sent the money. But in a
sidebar published with his December 2005 story,
Eichenwald struck a far different tone. Less
humanitarian, more investigative and journalistic:
"The only way to know if Justin was
real, I decided, was to meet him in person. And to do
that, I had to win the confidence of whoever was
answering to his screen name. At The Times, it is
standard practice for a reporter to identify himself at
the outset, but doing that too soon would mean I might
never know the truth. I decided to try to engage this
person in conversation and persuade him to meet with me.
At that time, I would disclose my identity and only then
would I begin the real reporting that could be used in
an article. . . .
"Soon thereafter, I proposed meeting
in Los Angeles, and Justin agreed. My wife, Theresa,
whom I had kept abreast of what was happening, worried
that this could be a setup, and made me promise to take
precautions. I did, but when I saw Justin at the
airport, I was reassured. Although he was 18, he looked
much younger and did not seem physically capable of
harming me.
"I immediately identified myself as a
Times reporter, and Justin, though taken aback,
continued to speak to me; for more than an hour, we
discussed my background, until he was willing to
proceed. Over the next two days, I interviewed the
person I now knew was Justin Berry." [
Making
a Connection With Justin
December
19, 2005]
The boy's
family has now repaid what has morphed from rescue money
to a loan to a not-loan. Claims Eichenwald:
" ..
. . [T]he money was not provided for information, and
was not provided to a source. The money was not a 'loan'
(loans are given with the expectation of repayment.
There was no such expectation when the money was given.)
The money was not paid in exchange for Justin meeting
with me."
Eichenwald
says Berry bought toys with the money. But he also says
Berry "had taken good money and turned it into bad."
Huh?
Eichenwald
is also incensed that anyone would challenge his
excuses. He claims he was "
overwhelmed"
and forgot—until his memory was apparently restored
during a criminal trial. He told Marketwatch's Jon
Friedman it just "slipped my mind in the flood"
of events. "Paying for news is the quick, simple line
that people are using," Eichenwald said.
"But it's not what happened."[
Eichenwald
says he didn't act unethically
Mar 12, 2007]
Can you
imagine how loudly the media ethics mavens would moan
and snicker if anyone other than The New York Times
provided such convoluted justifications for checkbook
journalism?
"[I]t is
essential that we preserve a professional detachment,
free of any whiff of bias,"
the Times'
code of ethics
lectures. Do as I say, not as I do, eh, Gray Lady?
Michelle Malkin [email
her] is author of
Invasion: How America Still Welcomes Terrorists,
Criminals, and Other Foreign Menaces to Our Shores.
Click
here for Peter Brimelow’s review. Click
here for Michelle Malkin's website.
Michelle Malkin's latest book is "Unhinged:
Exposing Liberals Gone Wild."
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