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Just the Facts, Ma'am
Town Hall ^ | 10/10/05 | John Leo

Posted on 10/10/2005 9:45:04 PM PDT by AZ_Cowboy

Thanks to a long report in the new Orleans Times-Picayune, we now know that most of the incredible tales of savagery in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina were simply made up by panicky residents and passed along by the media.

On September 2, a CNN report cited an unidentified police officer who said he saw bodies riddled with bullet holes and one man with the top of his head completely shot off. Another unnamed officer, a sergeant, said he had to pass by the bodies of other police officers who had drowned doing their job. So far as we know, none of this was true.

One of two Times-Picayune staffers who wrote the article was guilty of some dubious reporting himself. His September 5 article began, “Arkansas National Guardsman Mikel Brooks stepped through the food service entrance of the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center on Monday, flipped on the light at the end of his machine gun, and started pointing out bodies.” Unlike the CNN report, this piece named an actual person as the source, but it was written as if the reporter was authenticating all that Brooks claimed. Brooks says, “Don’t step in that blood-it’s contaminated.” Pointing out bodies, Brooks says, “That’s a kid. There’s another one in the freezer, a 7-year-old with her throat cut.” Under great pressure, reporters sometimes forget to ask pertinent questions, such as how did Brooks know the blood was contaminated, or that the dead girl-one of the most mentioned phantom figures in all the Katrina reporting-was exactly 7 years old? In fact, the reporter saw four bodies, not the 30 to 40 that was reported, and no dead girl.

A lot more of this circulated though the media. The Ottawa Sun reported that “a man seeking help was gunned down by a National Guard soldier” and a man was “run down and then shot by a New Orleans police officer.” Editor & Publisher interviewed a reporter, back from Iraq, who said New Orleans was almost as dangerous as the Middle East. The New York Times reported: “Like passengers on a doomed ship, they [Superdome evacuees] were desperate to get out of the noxious, violence-ridden stadium.” Noxious it was, but the “violence-ridden” condition is harder to pin down. The Superdome “just morphed into this mythical place where the most unthinkable deeds were being done,” Maj. Ed Bush of the Louisiana National Guard told the Los Angeles Times. “What I saw in the Superdome was just tremendous amounts of people helping people.” Lt. Gen. Russel Honoré told the Washington Post that reporters got bogged down trying to tell people how bad things were rather than “gathering facts and corroborating that information.”

Post-hysteria reporting has not been kind to the general media coverage of the crisis. The state Department of Health and Hospitals counted 10 dead at the Superdome and four at the convention center. Only two of those are believed to have been murdered. (The city averages five or six homicides a week even without hurricanes.) Police Superintendent Eddie Compass, who did so much to inflame the panic, said on September 28 that there is “not one official report of rape or sexual assault.” Though rape is notoriously underreported, his sex-crimes unit investigated every rumor of rape or atrocity in the Superdome, made two arrests for attempted sexual assault, and concluded that the other attacks had not happened.

Heart and soul. So why was so much of the reporting so wrong? Obviously, reporters were working under terrible conditions, with telephones out and much of the city underwater. New Orleans’s only important reachable authorities, Mayor Ray Nagin and Superintendent Compass, issued hysterical statements that reinforced some of the worst rumors. Nagin decried “animalistic” behavior with “drug-starving crazy people . . . degraded into these devils.” Compass went on Oprah, saying, “Little babies [are] getting raped.”

Another factor is the debate within the news media about whether reporters should stick to dry facts or report with heart and emotion. New Orleans was a grand opportunity for emotional reporting. The nation was indeed outraged, though we now know that much of that outrage was the result of wild rumors and bad reporting. The New York Times did at least two pieces praising emotionalism. One hailed CNN's Anderson Cooper under the headline “An Anchor Who Reports Disaster News With a Heart on His Sleeve.” Another praised the crisis reportage for being “buoyed by a rare sense of righteous indignation by a news media that is usually on the defensive.” Personally, I don’t need reporters to supply righteous indignation. I can handle that on my own. What I need is reporters who separate rumor from fact and just tell me what they know for sure actually happened


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; US: Louisiana
KEYWORDS: anarchy; johnleo; katrina; mediabias; superdome
The real question now appears to be who distorted the stories more, Nagin and crew or the press itself?
1 posted on 10/10/2005 9:45:05 PM PDT by AZ_Cowboy
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To: AZ_Cowboy

I vote for "all of the above."


2 posted on 10/10/2005 9:48:38 PM PDT by JRios1968 ("Sharpie Diem": seize the marker.)
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To: AZ_Cowboy
The stories were not completely false. There were several pictures of a body, a young black man, outside the convention center, that was definitely not a victim of winds or flood. Large puddle and stream of dried or drying blood around the body. Various "baggy pants worn below the hips types shown in different photos lifting the cover over the body, presumably to see if he had been someone they knew. At least one other photo of a family walking past the body.

And there were others as well that looked to have died an unnatural violent death.

3 posted on 10/10/2005 9:53:19 PM PDT by El Gato
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To: JRios1968

Me too. "All of the above" is the correct answer.


5 posted on 10/10/2005 9:59:45 PM PDT by clee1 (We use 43 muscles to frown, 17 to smile, and 2 to pull a trigger. I'm lazy and I'm tired of smiling.)
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To: AZ_Cowboy

Really Shep and Geraldo should be put on the weeper list too..


7 posted on 10/10/2005 10:01:48 PM PDT by Deetes (God Bless the Troops and their Families)
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To: AZ_Cowboy
Your WRONG!

The real question is, "If this wildly flawed & exaggerated reporting can happen in the US, what do you think is really going on in Iraq?"


8 posted on 10/10/2005 10:07:45 PM PDT by dila813
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To: AZ_Cowboy
The media wasn't caught up in any hysteria. They knew exactly what they were doing. It was deliberate. The worse they could make things appear, the worse they could make Bush look. That's all there is to it.

Oprah stood outside the Superdome and looked us right in the eye and demanded that America apologize. It is YOU who should apologize to America, Oprah, for staging an entire show around liars and lies. For giving Nagin and Compass a forum to spout pure BS. But I won't expect that apology to be forthcoming. You don't have the class, and you are a fraud.

What's the difference between Rather forging false documents and Oprah televising a false show? Nagin's and Compass's hysterical claims were fake but accurate, I suppose. That's the way it is in the Twilight Zone the liberals inhabit. Whatever you wish to be real is real, even if it isn't.

9 posted on 10/10/2005 10:26:05 PM PDT by laz (They can bus 'em to the polls, but they can't bus 'em out of the path of a Cat 5 hurricane.)
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To: AZ_Cowboy

Nagin decried “animalistic” behavior with “drug-starving crazy people . . . degraded into these devils.”
Post-hysteria reporting has not been kind to the general media coverage of the crisis.


----Post-hysteria reporting ? We call it "lying" here in Virginia.


10 posted on 10/11/2005 1:26:38 AM PDT by WasDougsLamb (Just my opinion.Go easy on me........)
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To: AZ_Cowboy

The debacle in La and NO was just another example of why Big Media cannot be trusted. I'm willing to bet that virtually every journalistic hack (liberal) writing about the situation desperately tried to work in some anti-Bush invective into their "reports" regardless of the facts involved. I've never read or seen so much misinformation concerning a tragedy of this magnitude. But with our current crop of "journalists" this is what we can expect.


11 posted on 10/11/2005 2:19:58 AM PDT by driftless ( For life-long happiness, learn how to play the accordion.)
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To: El Gato

Hard to tell if the death was unnatural...probably a bloated body of someone who had drowned. So far only 4 bodies and the convention center and 10 at the superdome. Those numbers include the people outside those facilities as well. I remember the reporters kept pointing to a body of a man sitting in a wheel chair that had been draped over. A Times Picayune story mentioned that man had died while being transported there. Thank goodness most of these stories have turned out to be tall stories.


12 posted on 10/11/2005 9:36:16 PM PDT by Katya (Homo Nosce Te Ipsum)
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