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	<title>Starkman &#38; Associates &#187; Dick Grasso</title>
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		<title>The U.S Media Doesn&#8217;t Deserve a Shield Law</title>
		<link>http://www.starkmanassociates.com/blogs/eric/no-federal-shield-law/</link>
		<comments>http://www.starkmanassociates.com/blogs/eric/no-federal-shield-law/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Mon, 04 Aug 2008 21:45:40 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Eric Starkman</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Media]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Dick Grasso]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Shield Law]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Steven Hatfill]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Toni Locy]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Reporters in the U.S. benefit from unparalleled power and constitutional protection, particularly in comparison to journalists working in other countries.&#160; <a href=http://www.starkmanassociates.com/blogs/eric/no-federal-shield-law/ rel="bookmark" title="Link to The U.S Media Doesn't Deserve a Shield Law">more</a>&#8230;]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p title="Shield Law">Reporters in the U.S. benefit from unparalleled power and constitutional protection, particularly in comparison to journalists working in other countries. The Founding Fathers understood the critical importance of a strong independent press to serve as a watchdog against potential government tyranny. It was this fundamental principle that gave rise to the notion of journalists&#8217; collective role as the Fourth Estate.</p>
<p title="Dirty Tricks Scandal, Troopergate">But there is a discernible trend suggesting that reporters, perhaps inadvertently, are helping to promulgate government wrongdoing rather than expose it. The latest egregious example is a page-one &#8220;expos&eacute;&#8221; in the (Albany, NY) <cite title="Dirty Tricks Scandal, Troopergate">Times Union</cite> last summer alleging that former New York Senate Majority Leader Joseph Bruno misused state aircraft. According to <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2008/07/25/nyregion/25ethics.html" title="Link to NYTimes: Dirty Tricks Scandal, Troopergate" target="_blank">a report released last week by the Commission on Public Integrity</a>, the story closely tracked &ndash; verbatim at points &ndash; a memo written by Darren Dopp, who had led former governor Eliot Spitzer&#8217;s communications function. Mr. Dopp and four other Spitzer administration officials have been rebuked for orchestrating their &#8220;Dirty Tricks&#8221; plot to discredit Mr. Bruno.</p>
<p title="Dick Grasso vindication">The <cite title="Dirty Tricks Scandal, Troopergate">Times Union</cite> was not, however, the only media outlet to serve as the Spitzer administration&#8217;s errant pipeline for pumping dirty water to its constituents. During his days as Attorney General, Mr. Spitzer instigated a malicious campaign to disparage former New York Stock Exchange chairman and CEO Richard Grasso. As Mr. Grasso&#8217;s PR advisor following his disgraceful firing from the NYSE, I had a front row seat to what was unquestionably one of the most irresponsible periods in modern business journalism. The biased reporting of <cite title="Dick Grasso vindication">The New York Times</cite> and <cite title="Dick Grasso vindication">The Wall Street Journal</cite> (news side, not editorial) come most clearly to mind.</p>
<p title="Dick Grasso vindication">Journalists from the <cite title="Dick Grasso vindication">Times</cite> and the <cite title="Dick Grasso vindication">Journal</cite> zealously reported a steady stream of misinformation and innuendoes spoon-fed to them by Messrs. Spitzer and Dopp to pressure Mr. Grasso into settling. Much of this misinformation received prominent page-one placement and virtually all of the stories have since been discredited. All the charges Mr. Spitzer filed against Mr. Grasso have been dismissed, which wasn&#8217;t a surprise to anyone who understood the facts of the case.</p>
<p title="Steven Hatfill">Also of note is <cite>USA Today</cite>&#8217;s reporting concerning what turned out to be a government smear campaign against former Army bioterrorism researcher <strong title="Steven Hatfill">Steven J. Hatfill</strong>. Back in 2002, the newspaper prominently and repeatedly reported that Dr. Hatfill was a suspect in the 2001 anthrax attacks that killed five people. Judge Reggie B. Walton has since ruled &#8220;there is <em>not a scintilla of evidence</em>&#8221; (emphasis mine) implicating Dr. Hatfill to the anthrax attacks. The Justice department recently agreed to pay $4.6 million to settle Dr. Hatfill&#8217;s defamation lawsuit.</p>
<p title="Toni Locy">Dr. Steven Hatfill was first publicly accused by then-Attorney General John Ashcroft, which should have raised eyebrows among responsible reporters since an investigation was still underway and no charges were even close to being filed. Some of the most accusatory stories were written by former <cite title="Toni Locy">USA Today</cite> reporter <strong title="Toni Locy">Toni Locy</strong>. As she herself reported, there were other government officials who doubted the evidence against Dr. Hatfill yet she wrote the damning stories anyway, seemingly placing a higher value on getting the proverbial scoop than on safeguarding a potentially innocent man&#8217;s reputation and career from irreversible damage.</p>
<p title="Richard Jewell">Shockingly, the mainstream media is neither embarrassed nor chastened by the Bruno, Grasso, and Hatfill reporting debacles, just as it wasn&#8217;t particularly contrite following the shameful pack-mentality reporting on <strong title="Richard Jewell">Richard Jewell</strong>, <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2007/08/30/us/30jewell.html" title="Link to NYTimes: Richard Jewell" target="_blank">the security guard in Atlanta</a> who years ago was erroneously fingered and subsequently vilified as the Olympic park bomber.</p>
<p title="Federal Shield Law">The truth is that reporters today are driven by their editors to deliver tersely written &#8220;scoops&#8221; usually whispered to them by individuals with political or self-serving agendas who refuse to be identified. Reporters defend this malignant journalism by arguing the leaks are in themselves &#8220;news&#8221;. Compounding the problem is most newspapers no longer value experience and have forced their older and most knowledgeable reporters to take buyouts. As a result, most newspapers lack editors who can readily identify a bogus story. To wit: <a href="http://www.latimes.com/entertainment/news/la-me-tupac27mar27,0,2043351.story" title="Link to LATimes: Apoligizes, Shield Law?" target="_blank">a story earlier this year in the <cite title="Shield Law">Los Angeles Times</cite></a>, a newspaper that has undergone massive layoffs, about associates of Sean Combs attacking rap artist Tupac Shakur with the former&#8217;s knowledge was almost instantly debunked by three experienced journalists at The Smoking Gun. Similarly, it took <a href="http://www.nypost.com/seven/07062007/news/regionalnews/opening_gates_of_el_regionalnews_fredric_u__dicker__state_editor.htm" title="Link NYPost: Dirty Tricks Scandal" target="_blank">a seasoned reporter at the <cite title="Dirty Tricks Scandal, Troopergate">New York Post</cite></a> to ultimately expose the Spitzer administration&#8217;s Bruno smear campaign for what it was.</p>
<p title="Shield Law">Those in favor of a <strong title="Shield Law">Shield Law</strong> for reporters argue that protecting the media from revealing their sources is in keeping with the notion of the press as the Fourth Estate, a part of the checks and balances built into our system of government to prevent abuse of power. But the harsh reality is that such a shield will mostly serve to protect political hatchetmen like Darren Dopp and some of the still-unidentified dubious characters who leaked erroneous information about Dr. Hatfill to Ms. Locy. Reporters are rarely sued or pressured to reveal their sources when they get their facts correct.</p>
<p title="Shield Law">Today&#8217;s media environment is nothing like it was in the late 1700s when the Fourth Estate concept took root. People do not have to rely on pamphleteers and underground newspapers to get an uncensored perspective on notable events in their homeland. This legacy of transparency and a free press is, without question, to America&#8217;s great credit and benefit.</p>
<p title="Shield Law">But accountability is the price that the media should be required to pay for press freedom. It is the best protection we have against reporters who abandon their professional obligations and ethical responsibilities. Passing a <em title="Shield Law">Shield Law</em> will only serve to cripple that defense.</p>
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