Tuesday, July 15, 2014

The News & Record: safe haven for mediocre journalists

GREENSBORO, NC -- It's one thing if a reporter might not have had an opportunity to get up to speed on a community's history or has yet to develop his own professional standards. It is quite another thing when a news organization coddles those inadequacies. That's an environment for professional decay.

Robert Lopez writes a piece at the News & Record today that is so sub par, it should not have been published -- if the News & Record itself had any standards.

The story, about the City of Greensboro settling a police officer's discrimination suit for $25,000, suffers from two grave deficiencies, both, unfortunately, not uncommon at the News & Record.

The first is the despicable, deplorable, lazy and amateurish deployment of he said,she said reporting in place of the facts. Renowned journalism professor Jay Rosen has referred to this technique of pitting the claims of one person against another without aligning their claims to available facts as a wholly inadequate vestige of the pre-internet age of journalism. It's too easy for such reports to be revealed as deficient on the web—"lame," Rosen calls them—as is happening here.

When Lopez reports that police officers who sued the city said a lineup book containing their pictures was used to "frame" them and that the former chief of police said otherwise, leaving it at that, Lopez is positioning his reporting as nothing more than stenography, a regurgitation of competing claims and not a source for fact-finding despite widespread public knowledge that such facts exist. Lame.

In fact, the use of the line-up book was thoroughly investigated by the FBI, the SBI and the Department of Justice. None found any wrongful use of the lineup book. The City of Greensboro swore in an affidavit it had no evidence of misuse of the lineup book and, indeed, none has ever been produced. Lopez fails to report these salient facts. Lame.

Lopez also lacks a knowledge of local history and, here, his editors should have helped him out. When Lopez writes that the officer who sued the city claimed that a tracking device was put on his car and claims that his picture appeared in the line-up book, without reporting how those claims align with the facts, Lopez reveals himself to be ignorant of the facts found in the history of this matter. It was widely acknowledged and reported that a tracking device was placed on the officer's car. That's a fact, not just an individual's assertion, as Lopez would have it. Lame.

Additionally, city council members, some still on council (Zack Matheny and Yvonne Johnson), saw the line-up book in question. There are two credible sources with first-hand knowledge who are in a position to say whether or not the officer's picture was in the book. Lopez ignores those sources, leaving the officer's assertion unchecked. Lame.

Lopez reports as if there is no truth, no facts; only assertions. The worst part is that his efforts pass muster with his editors. That is not only lame, it's common practice at the News & Record. It's bad business too and it's bad for the professional development of the reporters who work there. A reporter who wants to be a mediocre journalist and stay a mediocre journalist will find accommodation at the News & Record.

4 comments:

  1. Good post. Straight to the point, not to mention it also backs the News & Record's position on their version of the facts.

    ReplyDelete
  2. That's a good point. None of the missing facts are a mystery to the News & Record, as they have been previously reported there to various degrees. Even if years ago and, even if the reporter fails to research his beat, editors should have remembered.

    Even without prior knowledge though, any professional who has the wherewithal to avoid the pitfalls of he said, she said reporting would have stopped to ask, "What do we know about these competing assertions," instead of just regurgitating them.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Roch,
    Here is an email exchange I had with Jeff Gauger in January:

    Jerry Bledsoe

    Jan 17

    to Jeff
    I recognize that this is a futile effort, but nonetheless I feel obligated to point out a falsehood in Robert Lopez's article about Cherry & Pryor today. David Wray did not resign after any revelation about a "black book." That revelation was made public by the city manager after Wray was locked out of his office and forced to resign. The book that the city manager was maintaining to be the "black book" was in fact a casebook for a legitimate and justified investigation. The city manager later had to acknowledge that in a court document.The city's own lawyers after many months of investigation and the taking of scores of depositions determined that no such book supposedly used to frame black officers ever existed. All of that information is available to you and your reporters yet you refuse to acknowledge it and continue feeding lies to your readers. Not surprising, I guess, considering that this whole, immensely costly and destructive debacle began with false reporting by the News & Record. Greensboro deserves better, and when you became editor, you should have at least made an effort to find out what actually happened in this case.
    Gauger, Jeff

    Jan 17

    to me

    Jerry,



    We'll have to agree to disagree on what happened, when and how. I've reviewed Robert Lopez's story and don't see that it was wrong.



    Jeff



    Jeff Gauger

    Editor and Publisher

    News & Record | News-Record.com

    Greensboro, N.C.

    The News & Record just chooses to lie to its readers and will continue to do so.

    ReplyDelete
  4. Ask Jeff how much we have to pay his crappy paper to report the truth. $15k seems the going rate.

    ReplyDelete

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