Posted on 05/18/2005 8:41:28 AM PDT by blogblogginaway
Five years ago, Catherine Curran Katie OMalley, the wife of Baltimores mayor, was discussing rumors of an affair with a newspaper reporter.
On March 10, 2000, the Washington Post ran an article on the front page of its Style section, headlined Charm Citys Mr. Charming; Mayor OMalley Cheers Baltimore On
The Post reported the following exchange:
Katie O'Malley found it "demeaning" to see herself in print as "the pretty wife," but her husband can't seem to help himself from crowing over her. "I am the luckiest guy," says O'Malley, and his slate-blue eyes glint.
"Well, I'm glad he feels that way," says his wife, by telephone a few days later. "It helps offset the rumors."
Rumors? What rumors?
"That he's running around on me. That he's been running around on me for years," she says.
Who says this? "Oh, I don't know," says the mayor's wife. "Opponents, I guess, from when he was a councilman."
Pause. The reporter offers that the mayor seems like he wouldn't have the time. "That's exactly what Martin always says," says the mayor's wife, who is also a crack prosecutor who would never say something in open court if she didn't want it out there.
(Excerpt) Read more at wbal.com ...
lol!!!!!!!!!
One of his more interesting literary products reveals his sympathy for John Hinckley, who he casts in the role of victim ...
But there is a powerful counterargument to be made that Hinckley's release is long overdue.
You can peruse his other liberal delicacies on his web page here
WBAL-TV's Jane Miller the WBAL I-Team reporter is covering this story.
The journalist author (and her journalist spouse) seem very political to me.
Oh my goodness..This IS a hoot!
http://citypaper.com/news/printready.asp?id=9979
BALTIMORE CITY PAPER | 5/18/2005
Mobtown Beat | Media Triple Scoop
Whos Accusing WBAL-TV of Copying Other Media Outlets Reporting?
LIVE, LOCAL, ALREADY BROKEN?: WBAL-TV reporter David Collins faces accusations of iffy reporting--accusations which may stem from his pursuit of the Joseph Steffen scandal.
An anonymous letter delivered to City Paper last week accuses WBAL-TV reporter David Collins of plagiarizing The Sun and of misrepresenting information that had been published months earlier in The Washington Post and the Montgomery County Gazette as his own exclusive reporting.
Collins and the local NBC affiliate deny any wrongdoing and say that he is the victim of a politically motivated campaign designed to sabotage the veteran TV reporters reputation.
A member of the WBAL I-Team of investigative reporters, Collins has been aggressively pursuing the story of Joseph Steffen, a former Gov. Robert Ehrlich aide. Steffen appears to have been prodded by an anonymous internet user with the screen name MD4BUSH into posting intemperate messages about alleged marital infidelity of Mayor Martin OMalleythe Republican governors presumptive Democratic opponent in next years gubernatorial electionon a conservative online message board. Steffen resigned soon after the Post broke the story in February.
In recent weeks, Collins on-air reports have probed the identity of MD4BUSH, including speculation that the anonymous poster may be connected with the OMalley campaign or the state Democratic Party, and may have lured Steffen into discussing salacious rumors about the mayor with the intention of embarrassing the governor by making those online discussions public.
The anonymous letter to City Paper concludes with a comment suggesting that its author is displeased with the direction of Collins recent reporting: In their inexplicable zeal to do Governor Ehrlichs and Joe The Prince of Darkness Steffens dirty work by exposing the Deep Throat who uncovered Ehrlichs political hit man, it reads, WBALs I Team has plagiarized the work of other journalists.
Editors at both The Sun and the Post say they were already aware of the instances of alleged plagiarism and unethical reporting described in the letter to City Paper. Neither paper contests the basic facts as described in the letter.
The unsigned letter details three instances of alleged wrongdoing by Collins, the most serious of which is the claim of plagiarism:
On the morning of April 26, U.S. Rep. Ben Cardin, D-3rd, held a press conference announcing his candidacy for the U.S. Senate seat being vacated by Paul Sarbanes. That afternoon, Sun statehouse reporter David Nitkin filed his account of the announcement, which first appeared on the Suns web site at around 2 p.m., according to the papers online news editor, Matthew Baise.
The first sentence of Nitkins 18th paragraph is: Cardin begins the race with a reservoir of support among the Baltimore political establishment, as well as from environmentalists and womens groups.
That evening on the Channel 11 evening news, Collins introduced his own coverage of the Cardin announcement with this line to news anchor Stan Stovall: Well, Stan, Ben Cardin begins the race with a wealth of support from the Baltimore political establishment, as well as environmental and womens groups.
The similarity between the sentences is a coincidence, Collins says, who insists he didnt read Nitkins coverage before writing his own and didnt have access to the internet besides. I was out of the building that day, and my computer was down, he says.
WBAL-TV news director Michelle Butt says the likeness is an innocent by-product of journalistic style conventions.
Thats called writing in threes, she says. Thats good journalism.
Butt bristles at the suggestion that her reporter might have even inadvertently lifted a line from the daily paper. David doesnt spend his days reading the Baltimore Sun, she says.
The Sun and WBAL-TV are media partners, a relationship that includes cross-promotions as well as sharing the results of each organizations newsgathering. Sun multimedia editor Steve Sullivan says that the partnership does not permit TV reporters to read newspaper copy on air without attribution.
Nitkin declined to speculate about whether he believes Collins plagiarized his article. We were made aware of the similarity in that story, he says. We raised the issue with WBAL producers and we got their explanation, and it seemed reasonable.
The explanation The Sun received from Butt, Sullivan says, is that it was likely that both reporters were paraphrasing a generic line uttered by a third person present at Cardins press conference, perhaps the congressman himself. That would account, Butt explained to Sullivan, for the remarkable similarity.
[Butt] had a perfectly legitimate response, Sullivan says. What you saw in both reports was an indirect quotation that wound up as a paraphrase in both stories, that sounded almost identical.
But that explanation is not reasonable, Nitkin says when asked about it in a follow-up interview. Nitkin says he recalls composing the line, and that he is certain it appeared in his first draft and that its not an indirect quote from Cardin or anyone else. Thats my analysis, he says. I wrote that line.
With apologies to the Sun reporter, it doesnt sound to me like the most stunningly original piece of analysis, says Chip Scanlan, a journalism teacher at the St. Petersburg, Fla.-based Poynter Institute who has written about plagiarism in the news media. But if I had written that and then heard it on TV, I might think, Geez, what did they do, just rip and read?
The term rip and read originates from the days when news copy from wire services like Associated Press and United Press International was transmitted through paper printers. When pressed for time, broadcast anchors would literally tear sheets of breaking-news copy from the printer and read them verbatim over the air.
The letter to City Paper also accuses Collins and WBAL-TV of taking reporting credit for news previously published in the Post and the Montgomery Gazette.
On the evening news of April 20, WBAL-TV announced that it had for the first time, obtained both sides of a private e-mail correspondence between MD4BUSH and ncpac, Joseph Steffens online alter ego. It is in this story that Collins reports the theory that MD4BUSH may be a Democratic plant baiting Steffen. However, much of the content of the private e-mails obtained by the I-Team that shed new light (as anchor Marianne Banister put it) on the story had already been reported in a Feb. 11 Washington Post story by Matthew Mosk and David Snyder, more than two months earlier.
Butt defends her stations neglect to mention the Post as the original publisher of parts of the online exchange on the grounds that WBAL obtained the correspondence independently of the Post, and advanced the story beyond what the Post had done. They are under no obligation to credit the newspaper just because it reported part of the information first, Butt says.
On this point of professional courtesy the Washington Post respectfully disagrees, Maryland editor R.B. Brenner says, but decided not to press the issue with WBAL because of the Baltimore stations relatively small size. However, when the Post heard that the AP was planning its own report on the WBAL investigation, the Washington newspaper requested that the wire service acknowledge in its article that the private correspondence between MD4BUSH and ncpac was first reported by the Post. The subsequent April 21 AP story credits the Post with earlier reporting.
Such behind-the-scenes negotiations indicate the sensitivity in print journalism today about what might be overlooked in other industries. In the wake of high-profile scandals involving fabrication and plagiarism at The New York Times and other major papers, journalists have become both increasingly self-critical and ticklish about allegations of impropriety.
Nitkinwho declined to evaluate the criticisms made against Collinssays he likes and respects the WBAL reporter and considers him a valuable colleague. But he also says that if a Sun reporter were believed by his editors to lift even a line from wire copy, or fail to attribute information to the original source, it would be grounds for severe punishment. People get reprimanded, demoted, and sometimes fired for offenses like that, he says.
Indeed, two weeks ago a USA Today reporter resigned after he was discovered to have used quotes from The Indianapolis Star without attributing them to that newspaper.
Journalistic practices differ between print and broadcast media, Sun multimedia editor Steve Sullivan says. Historically, the broadcast media has been a little bit looser with the rules. Im not saying they rip and read at will, although there are stations in this town that do. We monitor radio broadcasts and TV broadcasts, Sullivan adds. And it really ruffles our feathers when we hear enterprise stories that we have in the paper reported using the same unique language, or citing quotes from people we talked to in our stories, and we dont get credit for the reporting.
The third accusation in the anonymous letter criticizing Collins involves a February column by the Gazettes Barry Rascovar. Again, the letter writer criticizes Collins for failing to acknowledge that Rascovar was the first journalist to publish one excerpt of the online exchange between MD4BUSH and Joseph Steffen.
My nose is not out of joint on this, Rascovar says in response to the allegation, which he hadnt heard before being contacted by City Paper. I think Collins reporting overall has advanced the [Steffen] story way beyond what I reported. If along the way he didnt give the Gazette credit for one aspect of the story, its probably an oversight. Im more interested in pursuit of a story like this, until you get some answers. And I think WBAL at least has been very dogged to get to the bottom of this, and it hasnt been easy.
Rascovar believes the accusations against Collins are being made by someone who doesnt want WBAL to get to the bottom of the story. If I had to speculate, Id say its a female whos involved up to her neck in the [Steffen] story, Rascovar says, referring to Michelle Lane, a former Ehrlich administration appointee who believes she was fired on Steffens recommendation. Of all the people who have been mentioned in this story [Michelle Lane] is the only one who seems to have taken the role of avenging angel. Of course, thats sheer speculation, all of it.
Lane did not return phone calls, but her attorney Daniel Clements says he has no reason to believe she was the author of the letter to City Paper. Clements does acknowledge, however, that Lane was deeply angered at Collins when he reported in March rumors that she had once been romantically involved with Steffenrumors Clements says his client denies.
Given the upcoming gubernatorial elections in Maryland and increasing scrutiny of journalistic ethics, Nitkin says he wouldnt be surprised to see more politically motivated charges leveled against local reporters. I havent noticed a trend here yet, he says. But Ive got my antennae up.
Ehrlich should. If she's a state prosecutor, he should also say her job is under review for it.
Given this development, I think it's time to reveal MD4Bush's ID.
Anyone interested in this story can tune in now and listen live to Ron Smith cover this issue.
http://www.wbal.com
http://www.baltimoresun2.com/talk/showthread.php?t=20718 The rumor was started years ago way before Ehrlich and MOM was a possible run off scenario.
The rumor has had the same people( more then 2), the same places, and the same timeline.
The first I and a lot of people have said they have heard it is from the Dems and the Reps. were staying away from it because they smelled a trap. It had picked up so bad that everyone into political gossip was talking about it on either side.
This rumor picked up pace around the time of Ed Norris and got lost for a while right after the City primary in September 2003 when the school fiasco hit.
Michelle Lane was fired in July 2004 I think and was ticked off. The circumstances of why are not clear and is a case of he said she said in which it is reported that she talked with the MOM camp shortly there after.
MD4BUSH started posting to Free Republic in August.
MD4BUSH and NCPAC a.k.a. Steffen engaged in conversation as in here where it was quite apparent that MD4BUSH was totally going off on the rumors about MOM. Steffen did engage into the conversation not avoiding the issue but however not adding anything to them and advised against doing it. This I believe happened sometime in Oct. - Nov..
Right before the story went to the wires with the WP, MD4BUSH posts the most damaging parts of the conversation between he/she/they and NCPAC and MOM had an e-mail going out to his supporters as to what to say about this as well as calling radio stations.
Papers trash Steffen and try to tie it to Ehrlich with no proof whatsoever and MOM has his press conference with wife and kids.
Next day or so MOM states he is tired of talking about it and will not do so again and blames Ehrlich for the pain it has brought his family.
Note that MD4Bush has disappeared since posting excerpts of their conversation on several threads on February 8. MD4Bush, what are you afraid of?
The Sun chat board was just mentioned on WBAL radio.
Hey, now, hey. It's breaking news in Baltimore, and I know because I'm here. Also, it's news because FR was so prominent in the story.
Other than that, I don't know why anyone would have any interest at all in that nasty little weasel of a mayor. This town's been going downhill ever since Willie Don left city hall. It was a better place when Italian mobsters ran it.
BTW, Mrs. O"malley's father is the state Attorney General, Joe Curran.
It sounds as though Mrs. O"Malley's gave an interview and for whatever reason she broached this subject and the rumors. When the story broke about MD4BUSH, she and her husband came out and gave an interview. In that interview they both play dumb and in shock at the smear against them as if it had never been discussed. This woman is lying and it is clear to me the O'Malley's know exactly who MD4BUSH is.
MD4Bush PING!
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