First-Person Story Has Toronto Poised to Change Policy
Media Scramble to Cover Fatal Shooting of 9 in Charleston
States in U.S. Said to Violate Standards on Deadly Force
N.Y. Times Adds Details on Chokehold Death of Eric Garner
Reports Have Holt as Permanent “Nightly News” Anchor
Montel Williams Says “Today” Pitched Softballs to Dolezal
Puerto Ricans Say “Rear View” Photo Wasn’t From Parade
Local News Still “Root” of Operation at Washington Post
N.Y. Times Fashion Cover Girl is 16, From Angola
Anchor Loses Case Challenging His Firing Over “N” Word
First-Person Story Has Toronto Poised to Change Policy
Desmond Cole‘s cover story in the May issue of Toronto Life magazine, headlined, “The Skin I’m in — I’ve been interrogated by police more than 50 times — all because I’m black” received a “huge” reaction, Editor Sarah Fulford told Journal-isms Wednesday by telephone.
Mayor John Tory reversed his position supporting the practice.
The piece “became a major part of the public conversation,” Fulford said.
Cole told Journal-isms that “carding” — in which police stop people on the street and in their vehicles and record and store information about them in a secret database — had occurred for years. But until the Toronto Star exposed the practice in 2012, he said, white journalists generally were oblivious to it or paid it no attention.
The Star reported then that its “analysis of Toronto police stop data from 2008 to mid-2011 shows that the number of young black and brown males aged 15 to 24 documented in each of the city’s 72 patrol zones is greater than the actual number of young men of colour living in those areas,” Jim Rankin and Patty Winsa wrote in the series, “Known to Police.”
“Young white males and those designated as ‘other’ do attract police attention, but nothing as pronounced as black and brown youth. . . .”
Even after the Star’s series, however, the issue gained little traction in other media until Toronto Life published Cole’s first-person story.
“Here in Canada, where we don’t often talk about race, I have a responsibility as a black journalist to talk and explain race in an honest way,” Cole, 33, told Journal-isms by telephone. “We really don’t do that very well in this country.
“We tend to treat them as strictly emotional issues — meaning we don’t see the kind of fact-based and statistical side of race issues,” Cole continued. “We tend to reduce them to how people feel. For example, how do the black communities feel about the police?” This, despite “all kinds of statistics on how police treat black people,” and how people of color fare “in the criminal justice system, in the schools, in the child aid system.
“I have a license that a lot of my white colleagues and my non-African colleagues don’t. A lot of white journalists feel it’s not their place to write about race. I think that’s too bad.”
In his Toronto Life piece, Cole wrote that his experience of being repeatedly stopped by police was met with incredulity when he informed whites he knew.
“When I told my white friends about these encounters with police, they’d often respond with skepticism and dismissal, or with a barrage of questions that made me doubt my own sanity. ‘But what were you doing?’ they’d badger, as if I’d withheld some key part of the story that would justify the cops’ behaviour. . . “
Cole said he encountered the same attitude among journalists.
“The questions in a lot of my white counterparts’ minds had to do with the behavior of black people,” Cole said. “Let’s be blunt about it. That is a function of white supremacy. You’re treated in a discriminatory way, but [they] make the conversation about the victims’ behavior, and the propriety and the worthiness of justice. This is very similar to the way that the media respond to all kinds of issues of systematic oppression,” he continued, with “women, people who don’t fit the gender binary that we have or the sexual orientation that we have — with skepticism and a lack of curiosity.”
When the Star series appeared, Cole was writing for Torontoist, which calls itself a magazine of “news, politics, events, culture and everything in between.”
The son of immigrants from Sierra Leone who was born in Red Deer, Alberta, Cole said the Star’s reporting shocked him. “I was in my early days of being a journalist. It was one of the biggest stories I have ever encountered in our city.” With the support of his editors, Cole began writing about how the “carding” policy was affecting those who were stopped.
“But it wasn’t as startling to people as I expected, not enough to my satisfaction,” Cole said, especially when, in April, authorities decided to continue the carding practice.
“I decided I could no longer be just a reporter on this issue.”
After three years of telling other people’s stories, the freelancer decided to include his own in a piece for Toronto Life.
Associate Editor Emily Landau encouraged him to expand the sections about his experiences. Readers found the “carding” abuse more credible because they were happening to and being described by a journalist, Cole said. “They said, ‘oh, my God, this is shocking, and it is important.’ “
Since the piece appeared, Cole has been in “huge demand. I’ve spoken on every major news network, television, radio, in every [major] part of the country and many minor ones.”
Media outlets that failed to report on the practice were now writing opinion pieces about it.
The mayor “said the system has ‘eroded the public trust,’ and he plans to go before Toronto’s police board on June 18 and call for the practice to be eliminated,” the Canadian Broadcasting Co. reported on June 11.
Police Chief Mark Saunders, who is black, said he would follow the dictates of his superiors. But he defended the practice, telling the CBC, “When we do it right, it’s lawful. When we do it right, it enhances public safety.”
“I’ve said from day one, I will not support random stopping of anybody,” Saunders said, reiterating that he has been opposed to random stops since he started his term as police chief in recent weeks. “I will not do that and I do not tolerate that,” the CBC quoted Saunders as saying.
Cole said the details in expected changes in policy will be key. He also said there isn’t time to wait for lawsuits to be resolved.
“We need a remedy now.” Not only does the practice violate the guarantees of Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, the nation’s constitution, but it is also eroding trust between police and communities.
“The mayor and the police board absolutely have the power” to change that, Cole said.
- Andy Borkowski, 640toronto.com: John Tory Will Attempt to Get Rid of ‘Carding’ Tomorrow
- CBC News: Ontario to standardize carding policy across province, minister says
- Carol Off, “As It Happens,” CBC: Desmond Cole asks why it took so long for Toronto Mayor to oppose police “carding” (June 8)
- Patty Winsa and Betsy Powell, Toronto Star: Toronto carding reform put on hold for provincial review
White gunman killed nine people inside historic black church in South Carolina: http://t.co/t5d4LZaNzv pic.twitter.com/rGnCBhefy7
— New York Daily News (@NYDailyNews) June 18, 2015
Media Scramble to Cover Fatal Shooting of 9 in Charleston
“A white gunman killed nine people during a prayer meeting at one of Charleston’s oldest and best-known black churches Wednesday night in one of the worst mass shootings in South Carolina history,” Glenn Smith, Melissa Boughton and Robert Behre reported shortly after midnight Thursday for the Post and Courier in Charleston.
“Heavily armed law enforcement officers scoured the area into the morning for the man responsible for the carnage inside Emanuel AME Church at 110 Calhoun St. At least one person was said to have survived the rampage.
“Police revealed no motive for the 9 p.m. attack, which was reportedly carried out by a young white man. Charleston Police Chief Greg Mullen said, ‘I do believe this was a hate crime.’ . . .”
Media were scrambling to cover the crime and offering historical perspective, though some complained that the morning television shows did not stay with the story long enough.
“When a gunman opened fire on Charleston’s Emanuel A.M.E. Church Wednesday, spraying bullets into a group of worshipers gathered for a mid-week prayer meeting, it was as though history repeated itself,” Sarah Kaplan wrote for the Washington Post.
“This historic congregation, the oldest of its kind in the South, had already seen more than its fair share of tumult and hate. It was founded by worshipers fleeing racism and burned to the ground for its connection with a thwarted slave revolt.
“For years its meetings were conducted in secret to evade laws that banned all-black services. It was jolted by an earthquake in 1886. Civil rights luminaries spoke from its pulpit and led marches from its steps. For nearly two hundred years it had been the site of struggle, resistance and change. . . .”
On TVOne’s “News One Now” with Roland Martin, commentator Armstrong Williams said slain State Sen. Clementa Pinckney, the church’s pastor, was a cousin.
Chris Ariens reported Thursday for TVNewser, “Scott Pelley, David Muir and Savannah Guthrie are en route to South Carolina to anchor their newscasts from Charleston tonight . . . For the morning shows, Atlanta-based Steve Osunsami reported for Good Morning America, DC-based Jeff Pegues reported for CBS This Morning and Chris Jansing was on the ground for the Today show. . . .”
- Dan Bilefsky, New York Times: Pastor Was an Influential Figure From the Start
- F. Brinley Bruton, NBC News: Charleston Church Shooting: ‘Mother Emanuel’ at Center of Rights Struggle
- Megan Keneally, “Good Morning America,” ABC News: Charleston Shooting at Church That’s Steeped in History
States in U.S. Said to Violate Standards on Deadly Force
“Amnesty International reviewed US state laws — where they exist — governing the use of lethal force by law enforcement officials and found that they all fail to comply with international law and standards,” the human rights group said in “Deadly Force: Police Use of Lethal Force in the United States,” according to a report released early Thursday.
“Many of them do not even meet the less stringent standard set by US constitutional law. Some state laws currently allow for use of lethal force to ‘suppress opposition to an arrest’; to arrest someone for a ‘suspected felony’; to ‘suppress a riot or mutiny’; or for certain crimes such as burglary. A number of statutes allow officers to use lethal force to prevent an escape from a prison or jail. Others allow private citizens to use lethal force if they are carrying out law enforcement activities.
“Amnesty International found that:
- “All 50 states and Washington DC fail to comply with international law and standards on the use of lethal force by law enforcement officers;
- “Nine states and Washington DC currently have no laws on use of lethal force by law enforcement officers; and
- “Thirteen states have laws that do not even comply with the lower standards set by US constitutional law on use of lethal force by law enforcement officers.
The group recommended that “All state legislatures should introduce or amend statutes that authorize the use of lethal force to ensure that they are in line with international standards by limiting the use of lethal force by law enforcement to those instances in which it is necessary to protect against the threat of death or serious injury” and that “Congress should take legislative action to ensure that all federal, state and local law enforcement officials restrict their use of lethal force in compliance with international law and standards.”
In addition, Amnesty urged that the U.S. Justice Department ensure the collection and publication of nationwide statistics on police shootings and that the president and Justice Department “support the creation of a national commission (National Crime and Justice Task Force) to examine and produce recommendations on policing issues . . . .”
N.Y. Times Adds Details on Chokehold Death of Eric Garner
The first official police report on the death of Eric Garner, the Staten Island, N.Y., man who was choked to death last year while in police custody, “failed to note the key detail that vaulted the fatal arrest into the national consciousness: that a police officer had wrapped his arm around Mr. Garner’s neck,” Al Baker, J. David Goodman and Benjamin Mueller wrote for the New York Times’ Sunday print edition.
“Interviews and previously undisclosed documents obtained by The New York Times provide new details and a fresh understanding of how the seemingly routine police encounter began, how it hurtled toward its deadly conclusion and how the police and emergency medical workers responded,” they wrote.
The reporters noted that a cellphone camera held by a friend of Garner recorded the struggle. ” ‘We didn’t know anything about a chokehold or hands to the neck until the video came out,’ said a former senior police official with direct knowledge of the investigation, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to protect his access to confidential department information. ‘We found out when everyone else did.’ . . . “
The story also focused attention on emergency medical workers.
“For minutes as Mr. Garner lay on the ground, he was not given oxygen by the responding emergency medical personnel, who were from Richmond University Medical Center.
” ‘If someone was choked out, probably they need oxygen right away,’ said Israel Miranda, president of the Uniformed E.M.T.s, Paramedics and Fire Inspectors F.D.N.Y. Local 2507, which does not represent the Richmond University medical personnel. . . .”
- Nicole Collins Bronzan, ProPublica: ProPublica, New York Times to Host Talk on Role of Data in Reporting on Race
- Tom Hays, Associated Press: Prosecutors Fight for Eric Garner Grand Jury Record Secrecy
- Corey Hutchins, Columbia Journalism Review: The first statewide police body-cam law comes with a major caveat
- Ruben Navarrette Jr., Washington Post Writers Group: Deeper questions about McKinney
- Kevin Rector, Baltimore Sun: Prosecutors ask court to limit release of Freddie Gray evidence — or post it all online [Accessible via search engine]
Reports Have Holt as Permanent “Nightly News” Anchor
NBC and Brian Williams have come to a tentative agreement that keeps Williams at the network and makes Lester Holt, who has been filling in for the past four months, permanent anchor of “NBC Nightly News,” Brian Stelter reported Wednesday for CNNMoney.com. Other news outlets quickly followed.
“The decision, described by people with knowledge of the plan, ends months of speculation that Williams could leave NBC altogether,” Stelter wrote in an early version of his story.
“Williams will not be returning to the ‘NBC Nightly News’ anchor chair, the people said. Instead he will have a new role; the details of it are unknown to all but a very small number of executives.
” ‘No one knows anything,’ one anchor at the network complained Wednesday.
“But that may change very soon: NBC is likely to make an announcement about Williams’ future on Thursday, the people with knowledge of the plan said.
“In addition, Lester Holt, Williams’ fill-in for the past 4 months, will become the permanent anchor of ‘Nightly News.’
“The appointment makes Holt the first black solo anchor of a weekday network nightly newscast.
“Holt is on vacation this week — his first extended period of time off since Williams was suspended in February.
“As for Williams’ future at the network, the options are numerous, given that NBC News is an arm of NBCUniversal, which is owned by Comcast. . . .”
Emily Steel, John Koblin and Ravi Somaiya reported for the New York Times Wednesday night, “Mr. Williams is expected to move to a new role primarily at the cable news network MSNBC, probably in a breaking-news capacity in the beginning. . . .”
Montel Williams Says “Today” Pitched Softballs to Dolezal
“I did a lot of interviews in my show’s 17 year run,” Montel Williams wrote Tuesday for TVNewswer, “so I know full well the pressure to grab that juicy exclusive — and Rachel Dolezal’s story certainly is that.
“It’s sensational, timely, controversial, and — holiest of all — trending on Twitter. There’s nothing wrong with chasing an exclusive, but landing it often comes with a price. Producers are often pressured to avoid certain topics and focus narrowly on those most favorable to the interviewee.
“Watching the Dolezal interview, I suspect that was the case. Clearly, my show had an entertainment component and it was hardly ‘news.’ Nor was the Dolezal story — it’s a lifestyle story. Sure it’s easy for me to cast stones no longer being a prisoner of my overnight ratings. My point is bigger and goes to the heart of the TV business today.
“The gist of Today’s interview was, ‘Set the record straight: are you white or black?’ Sure that’s fun, gossipy, built-for-Twitter question, but it ignores the fundamental issue here: ‘Why should we trust anything you say if you’ve been lying for a decade?!’
“The other foundational issue goes to self-identification, and it’s one that, as a father of four bi-racial children, I’ve done a lot of thinking about. My kids could identify as white, black or bi-racial and be honest in doing so. I think people should have some freedom of self-identification provided that identification is built on a platform of honesty.
“While she was living as white, Dolezal sued Howard University for discrimination based on the fact she was a white pregnant woman. Then while she was living as black, she reported numerous hate crimes which law enforcement believes may have been fabricated. She’s been flip-flopping her race and fabricating bias in every identity she chooses.
“And yet instead of asking ‘Have you been dishonest?’ Today preferred to focus on, ‘What race are you today?’ That’s like Wells Fargo asking a bank-robber, ‘Are you withdrawing or depositing?’ . . .”
- Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, Time: Let Rachel Dolezal Be as Black as She Wants to Be
- Hilary Beard, The Root: Dear Rachel: Here’s What I Wrote After I Got Mad Watching Your Interview
- Rebecca Carroll, DAME: I am black, and Rachel Dolezal is not
- Kinsey Clarke, NPR “Code Switch”: Round-Up: A Few More Worthwhile Thoughts On Rachel Dolezal
- Sara Díaz, HuffPost LatinoVoices: Rachel Dolezal and the Trouble With Asking For ‘Proof’
- Randy Dotinga, Christian Science Monitor: Before Rachel Dolezal, there was Walter White
- Colleen Flaherty, Inside Higher Ed: Passing in the Classroom
- Samuel G. Freedman, the Forward: How Rachel Dolezal Crossed Line From Solidarity to Slumming
- Sam Fulwood III, Center for American Progress: Race and Beyond: The Curious Case of Rachel Dolezal
- Doug George-Kanentiio, indianz.com: Imposters bring harm to Native people
- Tia Ghose, livescience.com: The Science of Race: Why Rachel Dolezal Can’t Choose to Be Black
- Jesse J. Holland, Associated Press: Choosing Your Own: Definition of Race Becoming Fluid
- Kirk Johnson, Richard Pérez-Peña and John Eligon, New York Times: Rachel Dolezal, in Center of Storm, Is Defiant: ‘I Identify as Black’
- Don Lemon, BlackAmericaWeb.com: If Rachel Dolezal Didn’t Know What It’s Like To Be Black Before, She Does Now
- Jon Levine, mic.com: Jon Stewart Nailed the Truth About Rachel Dolezal That Nobody Is Talking About
- Melissa Luck, KXLY-TV, Spokane, Wash.: Rachel Dolezal: The story behind the story
- Ali Michael, HuffPost BlackVoices: I Sometimes Don’t Want to Be White Either
- Hannah Miet, Washington Post: I’m a white woman who dated a Black Panther. I could have been Rachel Dolezal.
- Stacey Patton, Chronicle of Higher Education: Rachel Dolezal Case Leaves a Campus Bewildered and Some Scholars Disgusted
- Amber Payne, NBCBLK: Would Rachel Dolezal’s Sons Ever Call Themselves White? Her Response (video)
- Adolph Reed Jr., Common Dreams: From Jenner to Dolezal: One Trans Good, the Other Not So Much
- Gyasi Ross, Indian Country Today Media Network: Fake Black Folks, Fake Indians, and Allies: The Native Roots of the Rachel Dolezal Saga
- Spokesman-Review, Spokane, Wash.: Questions about Rachel Dolezal linger as NAACP members react
- Errin Whack, Politico: Choosing to Be Black Is the Epitome of White Privilege
- Jeff Winbush blog: Rachel Dolezal: Double Agent or Race Traitor?
- Lilly Workneh, HuffPost BlackVoices: 16 Key Takeaways From Rachel Dolezal’s Interview With Melissa Harris-Perry
Local News Still “Root” of Operation at Washington Post
Owner Jeff Bezos might want to take the Washington Post to a more global audience, but Executive Editor Marty Baron maintained Tuesday that the root of the news operation is local news.
“It’s absolutely central that we have strong roots,” Baron said at the Engage Local conference sponsored in Newark, N.J., by the American Society of News Editors, the American Press Institute, the McCormick Foundation, the News Literacy Project and Montclair State University.
The aim of the two-day event was to promote better ways for news organizations to further engagement with their local communities. It began Monday night with a town-hall session with Newark residents.
Baron was interviewed by Merrill Brown, director of the Montclair State School of Communication and Media and a former Post reporter in a lunchtime “fireside chat.” The discussion covered the Post’s ever-expanding web and mobile presence, topics that interest millennials, the imprisonment and trial of Post reporter Jason Rezaian in Iran, and more.
Brown noted that the Graham family, the Post’s previous owners, said often that the Post was first and foremost a local paper. However, as Michael Meyer said of Bezos in the July/August 2014 issue of the Columbia Journalism Review, “As it has been with Amazon, his obsession at the Post is finding a way to integrate a product into millions of people’s lives in a way they haven’t yet experienced.”
Baron said that the Post’s Metro staff numbers 80 and that the Post publishes an All-Met sports section on high schools. But he said the local staff, too, is involved in the effort for a wider reach. “How do we take our local stories, if they are emblematic of something going on on a national level — can we turn them into something larger?” Baron asked.
Examples of issues with such “crossover” potential are “free range” parenting, in which children receive less supervision, which originated as Maryland story, and police stories.
As to local outreach, a “Coffee@WaPo” discussion series with community members, launched Wednesday with a moderated discussion about sexual assault on college campuses, based on Post reporting conducted with the Kaiser Family Foundation.
Baron said the Post doesn’t really have a hyperlocal presence. Such an attempt in Loudoun County, Va., in 2008 failed. “It’s very expensive to do, but it’s an issue we really have to confront.” Overall, Baron said, “We try to engage with the local community in every way that we can.”
Other topics at the conference included revenue-building measures for community newspapers, such as redbankgreen, a directory of restaurants in the Red Bank, N.J., area; innovative ways to interact with readers and listeners, such as New York Public Radio’s “Bored and Brilliant” project and the Bay Area’s StoryWorks, a collaboration between a local theater and the Bay Area-based Center for Investigative Reporting; and research from the Pew Research Center on community engagement with media in Denver, Macon, Ga., and Sioux City, Iowa.
Portions of the conference can be watched at http://engagelocal.org/livestream/ and on the NJ News Commons channel on YouTube.com.
- Bob Papper, Radio Television Digital News Association: Research: Tracking local news: Amount of local news stabilizing
N.Y. Times Fashion Cover Girl is 16, From Angola
The issue published with Sunday’s newspaper featured Amilna Estevão, a 16-year-old from Luanda, Angola, on its cover.
She “was discovered in 2013 after participating in the Elite Model Look competition in Angola. From there, she went on to the Elite International competition in China and won third place,” according to Erika Ostroff, writing in Yahoo Style.
Needleman told readers, “As for our exquisite cover model, Amilna Estevao, when we saw her at Alexander Wang’s fall show, we were gobsmacked. At only 16, she possesses a classic beauty and natural poise that will only deepen as she matures. This is her first major magazine cover, but my guess is that she will have a long career if she chooses to. . . .”
- Margaret Sullivan, New York Times: Newsroom Diversity: Why We Should Care
Anchor Loses Case Challenging His Firing Over “N” Word
“After less than three hours of deliberation yesterday, an all-white jury decided that former Fox 29 anchor Tom Burlington had not been fired for racial reasons,” Dan Spinelli reported Monday for the Philadelphia Daily News.
“Burlington was terminated on July 12, 2007, after using the N-word during a June 23, 2007, staff meeting about the Philadelphia Council of the NAACP’s symbolic burial of the infamous epithet.
” ‘Does this mean we can finally say, “N—–?” ‘ Burlington testified he’d said in the meeting. However, Anne Malone, to whom Fox 29 referred Burlington for sensitivity training, wrote that he had said the word three times in rapid succession during the June 23 meeting.
“Jerome Hoffman, attorney for Fox 29, said in his closing argument that Malone’s notes predate Burlington’s lawsuit, and may best reflect his honest recollection of the meeting.
” ‘Just stop and think: Who in the world would ever say that?’ Hoffman said yesterday about Burlington’s comments. . . .”
- Casey Tolan, Fusion: Jury: No, a white TV anchor getting fired for using the N-word is not racial discrimination
Short Takes
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“Not enough grit?! What NBA Finals were the Cleveland Plain Dealer front-page editors watching?” Richard Horgan wrote Wednesday for FishbowlNY. “King James left every ounce of grit imaginable on the Q Arena floor Tuesday night, with the Cavaliers almost making a tie-game of it in the final few minutes. So close, yet so injured. . . .” ‘Plain Dealer editor George Rodrigue told readers he regretted the headline. “I wish we had said, “Grit was not enough,’” he wrote. LeBron James and the Cleveland Cavaliers lost the series to the Golden State Warriors, who claimed their first NBA title since 1975. The series was a ratings success. - “On both the eastern and western sides of the island of Hispaniola, many have feared this day, when an estimated two hundred and ten thousand Dominicans of Haitian descent will become stateless,” Edwidge Danticat wrote Wednesday for the New Yorker. “Even though they were born and raised in the Dominican Republic and often speak no language other than Spanish, starting today, they can be expelled from their country and deported to Haiti, along with hundreds of thousands of Haitian immigrants. . . .”
- “Haitian journalists grilled an American Red Cross official Wednesday about the group’s Haiti program, but the official declined to provide any new details of how it spent nearly $500 million donated after the 2010 earthquake,” Justin Elliott reported Friday for ProPublica. “The Red Cross called a press conference, held at the Le Plaza Hotel in downtown Port-Au-Prince, in response to ProPublica and NPR’s story published last week revealing a string of Red Cross failures in Haiti. . . .”
- “Hillary Rodham Clinton’s presidential campaign Monday banned a representative from the national print pool from attending any of her events in New Hampshire, a development that will make coverage for her trip to New Hampshire spotty for some of the country’s largest print outlets,” Annie Linskey reported Monday for the Boston Globe. “The campaign team for Clinton, who is a former US secretary of state, is not allowing a reporter from the Daily Mail, a London news outlet, to have access to her events. Nick Merrill, a Clinton campaign spokesman, said that the campaign is getting “blowback” from foreign outlets. Foreign outlets have not been granted access to some Clinton events because the campaign wants to give preference to US publications. . . .”
- “Call & Post Publisher Don King held an emergency staff meeting Saturday, June 6, to make the major announcement of appointing veteran journalist Kenneth D. Miller to oversee the 99-year-old Call & Post Newspaper, the Cleveland newspaper, part of the black press, reported on June 10. The story also said, “Miller brings with him a wealth of experience, particularly with the Black press, having held every editorial position during the past 35 years with the Los Angeles Sentinel Newspaper. . . .”
- Vice News is opening a Miami bureau to produce more articles and videos aimed at the growing number of young Hispanic people in the United States, Tim Peterson reported Monday for adage.com. “We noticed that we have something like 23% of our audience in the U.S. that already is a U.S. Hispanic audience,” said Vice’s president Andrew Creighton.
- “KPMR Entravision, local Spanish-language station and Univision affiliate, was vandalized on Monday just before 3:30 a.m.,” Oscar Flores reported Tuesday for KEYT-TV in Santa Barbara, Calif. “Employees of the Santa Maria-based television station arriving to work in the morning were shocked to see windows blown out and smashed vehicles. Santa Maria police identified Pablo Quiroz Jr., 34, of Santa Maria, as a suspect in connection with the vandalism and commercial burglary. Quiroz was a former employee of KPMR Entravision. . . .”
- Clarence Page, syndicated columnist for the Chicago Tribune, and Cheryl W. Thompson, investigative reporter for the Washington Post and associate professor of journalism at George Washington University, were elected to the board of the Fund for Investigative Journalism, the fund announced on Wednesday.
- “CNN’s Fredricka Whitfield appeared on-air again today to officially apologize for referring to the actions of the Dallas gunman as ‘courageous and brave,’ Josh Feldman reported Monday for Mediaite. Texas Lt. Gov. Dan Patrick sent a letter to CNN Worldwide President Jeff Zucker calling “for CNN to remove Fredricka Whitfield as news host immediately and permanently.”
- Haider Khan, an “Indian journalist who wrote about dubious land deals is in hospital in a critical condition after being tied to a motorcycle and dragged for some 100 metres, reported the Hindustan Times” and NDTV, Roy Greenslade reported Tuesday for Britain’s Guardian newspaper.
- “Myanmar’s government is using threats, harassment and imprisonment to intimidate the media ahead of national elections later this year, Amnesty International said Wednesday,” Aye Aye Win reported for the Associated Press.
- In the Democratic Republic of Congo, journalists in Bukavu, the capital of the eastern province of Sud-Kivu, staged a march through Bukavu on Tuesday to press authorities to take threats against them more seriously and give them better protection. Reporters Without Borders said those convicted of the murders of two journalists in 2007 and 2009 managed to escape from prison and have never been re-arrested. “Those who masterminded these murders have never been identified or sought by the police. . . .”
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