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Journal-isms May 27

N.Y. Times Stakeout Pays Off in FIFA Arrests

Sun-Times Runs Photo That Police “Didn’t Want Anyone to See”

Waco Columnist Calls Shootout a Brawl Without “Legs”

Charleston Paper Finds Faulty Oversight of Police Shootings

Why Sale of The Root to Univision Matters to Advertisers

Eric Newton to Become Innovation Chief at Cronkite School

Radio Journalist Sunni Khalid Acquitted, a Nightmare Ends

Short Takes

N.Y. Times Stakeout Pays Off in FIFA Arrests

Around 4 a.m. Wednesday, New York Times reporters Michael Schmidt and Sam Borden arrived at a five-star hotel in Zurich and tried to get breakfast,” Michael Calderone reported Wednesday for the Huffington Post.

“It was an unusual place for the pair to be, and not simply because breakfast wouldn’t be served for a couple more hours. Schmidt covers the FBI from Washington D.C., and Borden, a European sports correspondent based in Paris, should have been at the French Open. But the reporters were staking out the Baur au Lac hotel to witness the anticipated arrests of top officials with FIFA, soccer’s international governing body.

“Just before midnight at Times headquarters, or dawn in Zurich, the paper reported that Swiss authorities had arrested seven top FIFA officials on corruption charges stemming from an FBI investigation. The Department of Justice had indicted them and seven others on charges that included racketeering, wire fraud and money laundering. Matt Apuzzo and William Rashbaum, who cover the Justice Department and New York federal law enforcement, respectively, co-wrote the bombshell story with Schmidt and Borden. . . .”

Calderone also wrote, “The reporters had prime vantage points to give the play-by-play on Twitter, and thousands of users retweeted the descriptions and images they posted.

“Schmidt, who recently broke the news that Democratic presidential frontrunner Hillary Clinton exclusively used a private email account while serving as secretary of state, said tweeting the arrests ‘was a different type of journalistic experience than a lot of things I’ve done before.’ Schmidt said he doesn’t typically tweet photos of a story playing out in real time.

“Borden tweeted a short video clip from the scene, though neither reporter used live-streaming apps like Periscope or Meerkat to broadcast what was happening. The Times also had a photographer posted outside the hotel to capture the proceedings.

“Clearly the Times suspected that arrests could be taking place in Zurich, as top FIFA executives met in the city, when it sent Schmidt and Borden there on Monday. But the editors and reporters who worked on the story pushed back against any suggestion they were fed the scoop.’ . . .”

 

Sun-Times Runs Photo That Police “Didn’t Want Anyone to See”

Photographs can do a number of things. They can help frame a news story or put it into better context. They can convey details and nuances of a story that might otherwise be lost,” Jim Kirk, publisher and editor in chief of the Chicago Sun-Times,” wrote Wednesday.

“But if we don’t know all the facts surrounding a photograph, some things are left open to interpretation. It is why news organizations are careful in considering the images they run and try as hard as possible to detail what is being displayed.

“Today on Page 18 and in digital editions, we ran a picture and a story about a shocking photograph that the Chicago Police Department didn’t want anyone to see. It depicts two white police officers posing with rifles standing over a black man on his stomach who has deer antlers on his head. The police have said that the unidentified man lying on the floor was a suspect in a crime.

“It’s an offensive image, so much so that this newspaper had to think long and hard before publishing it today. When two Chicago Police officers pose like hunters with rifles over a black man with deer antlers on his head, a responsible newspaper cannot withhold the image from its readers, especially when you consider that one of the officers, Timothy McDermott, was fired because of the image and is fighting to get his job back. (Jerome Finnigan, the other officer, was sentenced to prison 3½ years ago for leading a robbery ring and other crimes). . . .”

Waco Columnist Calls Shootout a Brawl Without “Legs”

For several days, big-city pundits have tried to channel the deadly Twin Peaks motorcycle-gang shootout through ideological prisms of police brutality, racism and journalistic shortcomings,” columnist Bill Whitaker wrote Sunday for the Waco (Texas) Tribune-Herald. Most of the results have been a stretch, oddly compelling but not very convincing.

“A synthesis of some of these dubious interpretations holds that Waco police handled the arrests of bikers (the ones not shot, that is) without incident because police and bikers are mostly white. A piece in Salon, for instance, faults some of the news media (Texas media primarily) for only employing the word ‘riot’ when communities of color are involved.

“All this overlooks inconvenient facts, including that last Sunday’s unrest was, whatever else, a biker brawl — bigger perhaps, certainly bloodier, and stupidly conducted at a modern shopping center along busy Interstate 35 rather than at some dusty outpost in rural stretches, but still a brawl. To call it a riot almost dignifies what unfolded when, according to one report, someone ran over someone else’s foot in the parking lot. . . .”

Whitaker also wrote, “Enjoy this while it lasts. The truth is the Twin Peaks story isn’t going to have ‘legs’ and command national attention for long — at least, not of the scope that we saw with the 1993 Branch Davidian fiasco, which erupted 10 miles east of Waco, settled into a 51-day standoff and since has sparked debates on religious liberty, gun control, federal overreach, law enforcement competency and the danger of apocalyptic cults.

 

Charleston Paper Finds Faulty Oversight of Police Shootings

“An officer in Summerville pumps four bullets through the side and back windows of a fleeing car, killing a young man.” the Post and Courier in Charleston, S.C., reported on Wednesday.

“An officer in Duncan sees a woman climb into his cruiser, yells, ‘Get out or I’ll shoot you!’ and then does just that.

“An officer in North Charleston shoots eight bullets at Walter Scott’s back, killing him on the spot.

“Every 10 days on average, South Carolina law enforcement officers point their guns at someone and pull the triggers — 235 shootings since 2009. Eighty-nine people died, and 96 were wounded.

“Each shooting also triggered an investigation into whether officers were justified in using deadly force. With just a few notable exceptions, these officers were cleared of any wrongdoing. To be sure, many cases were open and shut: Armed robbers shooting their way out of convenience stores after holdups; rage-filled drunks bent on destruction; suicidal people daring cops to cut them down.

“But a Post and Courier investigation uncovered case after case where agents with the State Law Enforcement Division failed to answer key questions about what happened, failed to document the troubled backgrounds of the officers who drew their guns, and failed to pinpoint missteps and tactical mistakes that could be used to prevent future bloodshed.

“Never-before released dashboard videos also reveal a disturbing pattern of officers shooting at and into vehicles. . . .”

The series runs through Sunday.

Eric Newton to Become Innovation Chief at Cronkite School

Eric Newton is leaving the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, where he has long championed — and funded — journalism innovation, to become innovation chief at Arizona State University’s Walter Cronkite School of Journalism and Mass Communication, Rem Reider reported Tuesday for USA Today.

“The idea, says the school, which has a wide array of professional programs including digital news bureaus in Phoenix, Washington and Los Angeles and an entrepreneurial innovation lab, is to ‘serve as a test bed for news industry innovations and experimentation.’

Newton, senior adviser to the president of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation, was an associate of Robert L. Maynard, co-founder of the Maynard Institute for Journalism Education, and considered Maynard a mentor. He spoke May 4 at the memorial service for Dori L. Maynard, CEO of the Maynard Institute and Bob Maynard’s daughter.

“Newton, who will continue to consult for Knight, sees Arizona State as a perfect fit,” Reider continued. “For 30 years, he says, he has been interested in the idea of journalism schools as teaching hospitals, where students learn by doing. In recent years, as traditional news outlets have cut back, more and more J-school have established news bureaus, and more and more of their work is showing up in professional venues.

“But, quoting Callahan, Newton says many of these J-school forays are more like clinics than hospitals. What is too often missing is the laboratory component from which creative solutions can emerge. . . .”

Radio Journalist Sunni Khalid Acquitted, a Nightmare Ends

Nineteen months after he was arrested and charged with assaulting his son, radio journalist Sunni Khalid has been acquitted by a jury in Harford County, Md., according to Baltimore news reports.

But the price of his ordeal has been the end of a 31-year marriage, five days in jail, loss of access to his children, a difficult time finding work as a journalist and first-hand experience with a criminal justice system he once covered. “He says the deputies never interviewed him or other potential witnesses,” Edward Ericson Jr. reported Thursday for the Baltimore City Paper. Two officers of the court in the Maryland county recused themselves because they knew Khalid from his days as a Baltimore Sun reporter there, he said.

Still, Khalid told Journal-isms by telephone on Wednesday, the nightmare is over. Khalid is now working for KGO-AM in San Francisco and freelancing for public radio station KQED there, and in December plans to marry a woman he met in the Bay Area, where he relocated. The Baltimore City Paper’s Ericson and Alison Knezevich of the Baltimore Sun reported details of his ordeal last week.

Short Takes

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