‘Freedom of information,’ except…

By Joel Thurtell

Blogger Joel Thurtell at the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center. Wayne County Circuit Court files should be here, but have been taken to some secret place. Joel Thurtell photo.

Blogger Joel Thurtell at the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center. Wayne County Circuit Court files should be here, but have been taken to some secret place. Joel Thurtell photo.

After all the hoopla about the Detroit Free Press and Detroit News’ battle to open more of the Kwamegate text messages to public view, I wanted to learn what the legal issues were.

So I headed for Detroit and the Wayne County Circuit Court where this well-publicized lawsuit was heard.

My quest was not purely intellectual. I was hoping I’d learn some tricks from the masters of Freedom of Information Act requests at the two Detroit dailies. Who knows, maybe I’d learn something that would help me when I file my own FOIA requests for documents about Rouge River pollution.

Now, I am not totally naive. I’d made this trip about three weeks ago when I was looking for another file that could have helped me understand a story I plan to write. But I was told then quite emphatically that Wayne County Circuit Court files have been removed from the courthouse and are in some undisclosed spot where the public is not allowed to see them. It seems the court was totally unprepared, despite warnings from the state about the need for post-Katrina measures to protect public records, for a June 27 lightning strike that started a fire and caused water damage, so I understand, to some of the files. I was told then by a court clerk that the files are not open to the public, even though court proceedings continue.

It occurred to me that some miracle might have occurred. Maybe thwacking the court in my columns had caused some re-thinking. Maybe the deep thinkers on the Wayne circuit bench realized it’s hard to run an open, democratically-based judicial system when nobody can read the record of your proceedings. Maybe, I hoped, the files had been miraculously brought back to their proper home in the basement of the Coleman A. Young Municipal Center.

That’s right, the records were stored in a basement room. Guess nobody in Wayne County government heard of gravity and what happens to water when it gets loose.

Hey, Wayne County, wake up! Water runs downhill, don’t you know?

Can't be bothered to make a proper sign? Wayne County clerks taped this crude sign to the door of the Wayne Circuit Court file room with the message that files are not to be had. Joel Thurtell photo.

Can't be bothered to make a proper sign? Wayne County clerks taped this crude sign to the door of the Wayne Circuit Court file room with the message that files are not to be had. Joel Thurtell photo.

In my earlier stories I made a point of mocking the crude, hand-lettered sign someone had taped to the file room door after locking it to the public. I figured maybe someone would have made a neat printout to replace that slovenly screed.

I thought sure after the last public spanking I gave the court in joelonthertoad.com, officials would have seen the light and returned the files so the public and presumably people with an interest in lawsuits might read the cases.

This time, I planned to record my foray with my new shirt-pocket digital camera. But I wondered whether the security guards are letting people take cameras into the building. I’d better look professional, I decided. That meant taking off my shorts, sandals and t-shirt, the blogger’s uniform, and ironing a dress shirt and a good pair of pants. It meant finding a sport coat that wasn’t too badly wrinkled for a quick excursion in the City-County Building, aka Young Center.

I don’t know if the coat and tie helped, but I had no problem getting through security with my camera. I headed for the basement by way of the stairs. I passed the elevators, the barber shop, and rounded the corner headed for the file room.

The door was locked. The same crude sign was taped to the door: “This Office is Closed Until further Notice! Thank you Mgt.”

I took a few photos, wondering what made me think Wayne County could get its act together and create a halfway decent sign when the file room door opened. A man walked out. Through the door, I saw the counter with a man and woman standing behind it. Glory be! They’re back in business! The door clacked shut. I twisted the knob. Locked.

A man wearing a black t-shirt walked by me. “They’re looking at September first,” he said.

“You mean the file room will be open September first?” I said.

“Right,” he said.

The sign also said, “Go to Rm 201 201.” So I headed for an elevator and went to Room 201. That’s where people line up to file lawsuits. As I stood in line, I overheard a clerk telling a man the files were taken to Virginia for cleaning. When my turn came, another clerk turned to me. I mentioned I’d heard the files had been taken to Virginia for cleaning. “That’s not true,” the woman said. “You hear all kinds of things. It’s true that they’re off the premises. They won’t be available until the first of the month.”

“I can’t see any files?”

Not till September, she said. “No one can go down there and look at a file,” she said, meaning the basement file room.

So much for reading that Freedom of Information Act lawsuit.

“Freedom of information” — guess it’s kind of a relative term in Wayne County Circuit Court.

Drop me a line at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

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No files? It’s circus court

By Joel Thurtell

Detroit's Coleman A. Young Municipal Center, where Wayne County Circuit Court is operating with a locked file room and no case records. Joel Thurtell photo.

Detroit's Coleman A. Young Municipal Center, where Wayne County Circuit Court is operating with a locked file room and no case records. Joel Thurtell photo.

Who ever heard of a court that works without files?

Sounds like something Franz Kafka would make up.

You know, that insane novel of his, “The Trial,” where a guy spends his life trying to make contact with the outer layers of a court system that is completely hidden from the view of all but the people who run it.

That would be something a totalitarian regime would devise — trials and hearings without records.

Stealth justice is no justice.

Well, readers of joelontheroad.com know it’s happening right now in Detroit.

The busiest court in Michigan — Wayne County Circuit Court — has taken its records to an undisclosed place following a June 27 lightning strike and fire in the Coleman A. Young Building where they were housed.

If you need to see a file, too bad.

Sixty-six judges.

Holding court, taking testimony and then putting the records in a black hole.

Weird thing is that nobody else seems upset about it. Those articles in Detroit newspapers about hizzoner’s court troubles? Well, true, the main criminal case is on the docket at the Frank Murphy Hall of Justice where criminal cases are heard, so its file is safe and presumably open. The Coleman A. Young Building is the building that was struck by lightning. It houses the civil case files, and they’re the ones that are in hiding.

Still, the newspapers’ Freedom of Information Act lawsuits against Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick are being heard in civil court. And you don’t hear reporters squawking about not getting access. But if I asked to see the records of the Kwamegate civil cases, I’d be out of luck.

Think about that: You want to see the records of a Freedom of Information case? Sorry, files are hidden away. The very Freedom of Information law becomes a sham.

Unless you’re the judge in a Kafka novel, this is nuts.

Am I the only one who cares? I called Len Niehoff, an adjunct professor at the University of Michigan Law

Locked till futher notice: Wayne County Circuit Court file room in Detroit's Coleman A. Young Municipal Center. Joel Thurtell photo.

Locked: Wayne County Circuit Court file room in Detroit's Coleman A. Young Municipal Center. Joel Thurtell photo.

School and a practicing attorney with the Butzel Long law firm.

“Michigan law is very clear on this,” Niehoff told me. “Can the court operate without access to files? The starting point is that files must be accessible to the public, unless some extraordinary circumstance dictates otherwise.”

Access to court files is mandated, Niehoff told me, by common law, statutes and the Michigan Constitution.

“We operate with a presumptively open judicial system,” Niehoff said. “Sometimes files are sealed, but there is a strong presumption under constitutional law that courts are open.”

“Everybody understands if lightning strikes your building and you have a flood or computer problem that there may be a temporary lapse in your ability to provide access, but the proper approach is to treat it as a critical situation. You would hope that the court would treat it as a situation of great urgency and not just an issue do be dealt with when you can get to it.”

“This impacts the openness of the judicial system — it is critical that this be fixed and access be restored as soon as possible.”

Questiion is, has anything been done to restore public access to Wayne County Circuit Court files?

Stay tuned — I plan to trek down to Detroit to see if my reports have influenced official behavior.

Drop me a line at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

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Blame it on the geese!

By Joel Thurtell

Don’t you hate it when politicians blame their wives for things they should take responsibility for?

Geese no match for these big combined sewer outlets. Trees partly obcure the six concrete gates that dump sewage into the Rouge River south of Six Mile Rd, and east of Telegraph Rd. in Detroit. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of sewage-laced rainwater are dumped into the river at times of high rainfall. Joel Thurtell photo.

Geese no match for these big combined sewer outlets. Trees partly obcure the six concrete gates that dump sewage into the Rouge River south of Six Mile Rd, and east of Telegraph Rd. in Detroit. Hundreds of thousands of gallons of sewage-laced rainwater are dumped into the river at times of high rainfall. Joel Thurtell photo.

Once I had to listen to a certain bigwig Wayne County politician telling me he didn’t dare accept President Bill Clinton’s offer to place him on the St. Lawrence Seaway Commission because his wife had paid their maid off the books. If the media got wind of that, woowee! — there’d be a huge scandal.

First thought — why is he telling me, a reporter?

Second thought: Wait a minute, Ed, your WIFE did that all by herself?

I get bent out of shape the same when people blame animals for things that are clearly human in origin. That’s worse than blaming your wife for your own screwups.

So I wasn’t laughing when I read in the July 29, 2008 Detroit Free Press that a state official found waterfowl and fish guilty of polluting Michigan beaches.

The article discussed why 11 beaches, including two on Lake St. Clair, have been closed this summer due to E. coli contamination.

E. coli bacteria are an indicator for the presence of fecal waste.

Crap, in plain English.

Public health officials routinely sample water from public beaches, and if the bacteria count is too high, the beaches are closed.

Why? Because you can get sick, real sick, from ingesting water laced with feces.

It’s not that long ago that people were getting typhoid from drinking water from the Detroit River.

Cholera? Yes, there used to be cholera epidemics, too.

So, when the E. coli count goes up, beaches are posted “no swimming.”

This summer has been pretty wet, and wet weather is often a harbinger of beach closings.

No, storm water doesn’t make ducks and geese poop more. I doubt it gives pike or bluegills the runs, either.

Remember what W.C. Fields said about water? He never drank water — fish poop in it.

But not as much as people.

It follows that an increase in E. coli won’t be caused by ducks and geese. Or fish. Hey, it’s the human waste that does it — our crap — that gets dumped into streams by overflowing municipal and private sewer systems.

That’s why I was surprised to read remarks by the chief spokesman for the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality in the Free Press suggesting the beach closings might be blamed on animals like ducks and geese or fish.

Here’s what the Free Press said: “E. coli contamination also can come from human feces washing into lakes through aging, overloaded sewer lines. Often, however, it’s a result of droppings from waterfowl like geese or fish, said Bob McCann, spokesman for the state Department of Environmental Quality.

” ‘The fact is, some of this is nature,’ he said. ‘Certain parts of the state are naturally going to have higher bacteria levels and frankly, there isn’t much we can do about it.’ ”

First, the dumping of sewage has nothing to do with aging sewer lines. It has everything to do with intent. Which is to say, Metro Detroit’s sewers were designed — and still are — to use the rivers as a spare pipe when it rains.

But this thing about the fish and geese bugs me. So I drove over to Detroit and took photos of the six huge concrete gates that dump sewage into the Rouge River just south of Six Mile east of Telegraph. Jim Murray, the former director of Wayne County’s Department of Environment, told me that single sewer outlet gushes hundreds of thousands of rainwater mixed with human waste when it rains hard. It all comes thundering into the narrow Rouge River. In a year, we spill 2 billion gallons of sewage and storm water into the Rouge.

Two billion gallons!

I saw this nastiness first-hand three years ago when I canoed up the Rouge. It was a Detroit Free Press project I undertook with Patricia Beck, a Free Press photographer. (Pat and I paddled a canoe 27 miles up the Rouge. Our book about he project, UP THE ROUGE! PADDLING DETROIT’S HIDDEN RIVER, is to be published in March by Wayne State University Press).

Not only do these sewer outlets stink, but they dump soggy toilet paper, sanitary napkins and condoms into the river. Time your canoe trip wrong and you could be swamped with sewage.

Now, having looked at the photo of that one combined sewer outlet, keep in mind that there are 27 outlets on the Rouge River. Imagine how many ducks and geese it would take to match the combined output of shit those concrete buttocks dump into our waterways.

Ducks and geese indeed.

“Frankly, there isn’t much we can do about it,” or so the DEQ guy said. How much easier it would be for government officialdom if they could blame all that pollution on animals. Sure nuff, not much they can do about it.

I recalled back in 2005 hearing Wayne County environmentalists saying the state was going to pay for a DNA study of E. coli to find out how much river crap is from animals of the non-human species.

Without that study, there’s no way of beginning to blame animals for our river and lake pollution, because you can’t scientifically differentiate between animal and human poop.

I called McCann. Did MDEQ ever fund that DNA study?

No, said McCann. He added that we really can’t blame animals when there’s so much pollution created by humans.

He said the prime source is us.

Glad to hear it. Because those concrete sewer gates at Six Mile and the Rouge tell the story.

The Rouge is still part of the regional sewer.

And it ain’t the fault of geese.

Drop me a line at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

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Figuring it all out

Control.

That’s what I wanted.

Before we left for vacation on August 1, I wrote enough columns to post a new one each day that I was gone.

Well, almost.

True, I recycled one.

Hey, Bob Talbert did that.

Remember Bob Talbert, the late Free Press columnist?

As it turned out, I was short by one column on the day we returned.

Darn.

That return happened to be at 1 a.m. on Sunday, August 10.

What a long, tiring trip back from Canada.

But already, I knew my sense of control was limited exclusively to my web column.

Saturday afternoon, while we’d stopped in Sault Ste. Marie on our way home from McGregor Bay in Ontario, my cell phone rang.

This by itself was a startling experience. There was no Verizon service in the Bay, nor was there Internet. At least not for us.

No phone calls. No email.

Peace and quiet.

For me, the week was a complete news blackout.

The call in the Soo was from Abe, my younger son. Somewhere around Alma, he’d seen a Lansing newspaper.

Kwame was in jail! he said.

Kwame in jail?

Wait a minute! When we left the States, he was facing a preliminary exam in September. Trial sometime next year on perjury and other charges. He hasn’t been convicted of anything. So far.

Kwame in jail?

How’d that happen?

Next day, I traipsed out to the mailbox and brought back The Detroit Free Press and The New York Times. You wouldn’t know it from the Free Press front page, but according to the Times, Russia was — is — making war on Georgia.

What’s going on?

I leave home for a week and all hell breaks loose.

I’m not sure what to make of the latest Kwame doings. Is he being hectored by prosecutorial sharks smelling Detroit Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick’s blood in the pool?

Or is he numbly sleepwalking his last days in office, bumbling from one stupid confrontation to another?

One thing is clear: The pressure for Kwame to abdicate is really intense. Amazing what a night in jail will do for his image.

Pressure. Yes, it’s really on. Don’t believe me? Check the August 9 Free Press: “PRESSURE’S ON,” the almost 2-inch capital letters scream. “NEW CHARGES, OUTCRY TURN UP HEAT.”

Much of that heat is being stoked by the Free Press itself, hot on the trail of its first reportorial Pulitzer since 1967.

That much hasn’t changed.

Well, let me read some more papers, do some errands and mull over all the new news.

Something tells me it’s not so new, just part of an old pattern playing out.

I’ll be back when I’ve figured it out.

No, just kidding. If I waited too figure it all out, I’d never post again.

Drop me a line at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

.

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Step aside, JC

By Joel Thurtell

Remember back in 2002 when the FBI raided Ed McNamara’s offices in Detroit?

How could that highly publicized piece of law enforcement be connected to Sludgegate?

Well, there is a thread — In 2002, Detroit’s longtime U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr. defended McNamara. Conyers then was ranking minority member of the House Judiciary Committee, with tremendous power over the Department of Justice and FBI.

The late Ed McNamara was Wayne County Executive then, and the feds made it known that they suspected the powerful Democrat of shaking down county vendors for campaign contributions. The heat was on for many months, a couple of officials were tried on related charges and convicted.

Haven’t heard from the FBI on that one in a long time. McNamara died, true, but the investigation seemed to expire long before McNamara did.

I heard there was a meeting between Conyers and the U.S. attorney about the FBI probe of Mac. True?

Did the ranking member of the House Judiciary Committee pressure the Justice Department to scrap its investigation?

I don’t know.

What I do know is that there’s now an investigation of someone closer to Conyers than Ed McNamara.

His wife, Monica Conyers, is said to be a target of the FBI’s investigation of bribery involved with Houston-based Synagro’s sludge-processing contract with the City of Detroit.

I haven’t heard anyone say Conyers has meddled in that probe.

Still, he’s no longer ranking minority member of the House Judiciary Committee. He’s chairman, since the Democrats took control of Congress in 2006.

Now he’s the king of Judiciary. He wields huge power in Congress over law enforcement and judicial matters.

To avoid the appearance of a conflict, John Conyers should step aside as Judiciary chairman until his wife’s legal problems are resolved.

That way, if Monica winds up being indicted, nobody can suspect him of using his chairman’s influence to sway the prosecution.

And if the investigation of Monica fades away as did the one into McNamara, nobody can say Conyers used his considerable powers as head Judiciary honcho to make it vanish.

Contact me at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

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A TRUE ethics policy revisited

By Joel Thurtell

Still on vacation. Hope you don’t mind another retread. I think this essay on ethics is important and I plan to follow with more thoughts on what’s important and what’s not important to credibility for journalists. With a few retouches, here’s the piece I wrote back in March:

“Ride hard, shoot straight and speak the shining truth.”

Why would I post a one-line, nine-word bromide that is open to a wide range of interpretation and claim it as my blog’s ethics policy?

Because it contains three elements missing in the long-winded, self-serving, so-called ethics policies put out by many major and minor American newspapers to impose “ethical” standards on their editorial employees.

First, my policy is short.

Second, it is actually possible to parse sense from it.

And third, it contains a word missing from its supposedly more sophisticated brethren. More about that word later.But now, time for a warning: I have a pony in this race. Six months before I took a buyout from the Detroit Free Press, I was disciplined for behavior that managers, long after the fact, decided was “unethical”. In fact, they agreed that what I did was not unethical at the time I did it, but after they found out about the horrible act I had committed three years previous, they tinkered with the language of their “ethics” policy to make it, ex post facto, a breach of their new re-jiggered and ever plastic guidelines. In other words, don’t do it again. If that seems convoluted, don’t blame me. Having amended the meaning of “ethics,” managers then asked me if I would ever do what I had done three years before — again. What they failed to tell me was that they had already decided that if I answered “Yes,” they planned to punish me, possibly even fire me. Ain’t they sweet?In the next days, weeks and months, I’ll be exploring “ethics” issues on joelontheroad.com, and I’ll be discussing the ramifications of newspaper “ethics” and what this little adventure in pseudo-philosophy has meant to me. Example: Anyone who thinks this episode towards the end of my 30-career in journalism didn’t play a significant part in my decision to retire from the Free Press should read a book about the business practices of Gannett, the corporation that owns the Free Press. It’s called “The Chain Gang,” by Richard McCord.My supposed sin? As a citizen of the United States of America, I participated in the political process in fall 2004 by contributing $500 to the Michigan Democratic party.Horrible, horrible me. But as I say, at the time I did it, donations didn’t violate either the Knight-Ridder or Gannett ethics policies. And, while I continued at the Free Press, I didn’t donate money to political parties. Not so our bosses. At least one of our managers, AFTER he’d re-tooled the ethics policy and his minions had played their little head games with me, actually donated money to a political organization — $175 to the Detroit Regional Chamber of Commerce Political Action Committee. Yesiree, right there on the Michigan Secretary of State website for anyone with a computer to take a gander at. The Eliot Spitzer Moment for Shameless Hypocrisy.But back to my ethics policy which, following industry standards, is subject to change at my whim. I really think my ethics policy du jour has it all over those fatuous policies put out by the big name newspapers.Take a look at the creme de la creme, which is to say the ethics policy of our nation’s elite newspaper, The New York Times. The Times was so proud of its 54-page tome on newsroom social control that it saw fit to attach an index.An index! This thing must be really important. Hmmm. Gosh, I don’t see any index entries for “Newspaper Guild,” or “union,” or “collective bargaining agreement” or “contract.” Guess this hyped-up, obese document isn’t part of the New York Times contract with the New York local of The Newspaper Guild. Wonder how meaningful it really is.I haven’t seen another American newspaper ethics policy that reached quite the Times’ height of fatuous self-importance and pomposity, but they all have these elements in common: Florid, grandiose but murky verbiage in describing goals or standards impossible to meet. At least Eliot Spitzer was a one-trick — or should I say, SAME trick — horse. The Times sows hypocrisy far and wide.

Okay, I’ll stop kicking the Times around. For a minute or two. Here’s one of my favorite examples of a double standard, found in the Dec. 13, 1984 edition of the Detroit Free Press’ “Ethics Guidelines.” It says: “No staff member should write about, report on, photograph or make a news judgment about any individual related to him or her by blood or marriage or with whom the staff member has a close personal relationship.”

That ban existed for years in the Free Press’ Ethical Guidelines, then disappeared without explanation. Here’s what I bet happened: Someone in management with the power to re-assemble these elastic ethics policies belatedly figured out that the prohibition on writing about family members was being violated with impunity every day of the week by then columnists Jim Fitzgerald, Susan Watson, Bob Talbert and others. Of course, lowly reporters like me had to abide by it or face recrimination, humiliation and even termination from editors. But the columnists were and are the paper’s stars, paid far better than other writers to ruminate on anything that bestirred them, which often was a spouse, a kid or a grandchild. In direct violation of the paper’s behavioral edicts.That’s the problem with so-called “ethical guidelines” or “ethical policies” — their lofty, pompous proscriptions too often collide with workplace reality. Everyone in the newsroom knew that those columnists were highly prized for their ability to spin homey yarns about pals or hubbies into down to earth essays that persuaded people to trade their spare change for the newspaper. Why, people would even swap good money to buy books that collected these family-oriented columns. Meanwhile, a rule that insiders know is being broken, if they think about it, is unknown to readers. How often do you see a newspaper’s ethics policy in print where its readers can easily find it and compare what they’re reading to the paper’s ethical cant du jour? The hypocrisy goes unrecognized by the public and therefore it has no importance to newsroom managers who write the regs.

Here’s another “ethic” I find entertaining, because it has survived and lives on in current iterations of many newsroom ethics policies. I quote from the 1984 Free Press document: “A staff member may not enter into a business relationship with a news source.”There was a time at the Detroit Free Press when a certain columnist had a book deal as co-author with a certain famous but now-dead football coach whom he continued to use as a news source. It was okay by management, despite the seemingly emphatic prohibition, that Mitch had this deal with Bo.

Really, the language is pretty vague. What does it mean to say “business relationship”? If I buy a book from a bookstore, then write a story about the store manager, was the purchase a “business relationship” that violated the policy? If I pay for lunch at a restaurant, then write a review of that eatery, am I in trouble?

Don’t ask me. I don’t write the rules.We know who writes them. Newspaper owners, or their managers.

I’m told (by a lawyeer from Gannett, wouldn’t you know) that the New York Times’ ethics book is the “gold standard” of ethics policies. Wow. That is really impressive. It stands to reason. They are the classiest newspaper in the country. They must have the smartest writers, deepest thinkers, so it’s natural to turn to them as the wisest of the wise.

On page 19 of their hefty book, I find the Times’ rules for staffers regarding “Voting, Campaigns and Public Issues.”

I’ll be writing in depth about this section later, but right now I’m interested in the opening line: “Journalists have no place on the playing fields of politics.”

What a mouthful that is.

At risk of being branded a smart-ass, I’d like to know — can somebody explain to me? — what the phrase “playing fields of politics” means?

I picture an immense soccer field with goal posts all along the sides. Lots of soccer fields. No, wait a minute. They’re football fields. No, baseball fields. See what I mean? What the hell DOES it mean?

It is my understanding — correct me if I’m wrong — that Times reporters travel with political candidates and government officials either on campaigns or as part of the officials’ governmental duties. It is my understanding that reporters attend press conferences called by officials and candidates for political office. Am I wrong to believe that reporters sometimes hold private conversations with politicians and government officials, say over lunch, and that they sometimes shoot the bull about politics in off-the-record contacts and may even discuss the ins and outs of political maneuvering with people who have a political leaning of one kind or another? And that these unpublicized conversations between journalists and politicos from time to time affect the course of political history?

Hmmm: Could these scenes be construed as “the playing fields of politics”?I’m sitting in the dining room of my home writing this, having perused the front page of today’s (Jan. 20, 2008) New York Times. Oh my, here’s a headline, “VOTE OF WOMEN PROPELS CLINTON IN NEVADA CAUCUS, followed by a deck, “OBAMA IS STRONG 2ND” and a sub-deck, “G.O.P.’s Primary Goes Down to the Wire in South Carolina.” The article was co-written, we are told through a by-line, by JEFF ZELENY and JENNIFER STEINHAUER.Where did Mr. Zeleny and Ms. Steinhauer learn about these elections if it was not on the “playing fields of politics”?

Gosh. I wonder if these two reporters will be cited for ethical lapses if it turns out that they in fact conducted some or all of their reporting on “the playing fields of politics”?

Don’t ask me. I don’t make the rules.Isn’t it just possible that these very articles might have some impact on the behavior of the very politicians they cover? Might not politicians choose to do one thing and not another based on conversations with reporters or based on their reading of the reporters’ articles? How about the Times’ articles about National Security Agency wiretapping? Didn’t those articles affect government behavior? It seems like the very publication of articles takes place on one or more of those “playing fields,” doesn’t it?

I’m not even going to get into the question of why the Times’ ethics gurus chose that term, “playing fields of politics.” Were they perhaps sports writers or sports editors? It’s a pretty lame metaphor, made more so by its choice of athletic lingo. It’s a cinch they aren’t philosophers.I’d like to know this: Why do newspapers write these hyperbolic policies if they can be construed and re-construed to the point they’re meaningless?In my opinion, the people who run newspapers see these rules as clubs they can use to beat on reporters when no other weapon is handy and whenever it suits them. Control. Keep those lackies in hand. That’s not what the managers say, of course. I recently heard a top newspaper editor explain what these policies are meant to do: Preserve the paper’s credibility. You see, in this manager’s view, readers lose confidence in the paper as a believable source of news if they find out their favorite writers have conflicts of interest.

Problem: All those exceptions. The sports writer with the book deal, columnists writing about family members. Another problem: Those “conflicts” were obvious to readers, who never knew they were “ethics” conflicts because they were never told about the policy. If they had known, would they have cared? Who knows? Who cares? Columnists provide entertainment. The whole paper can’t be murder and mayhem or politics and courtroom folderol. Managers know it. They give those writers great latitude, freedom to break the rules because it sells papers.

Did readers give a rip, really?

According to the editor, though, if the public realizes there’s a conflict, they will stop buying the paper. That would hurt the paper’s bottom line.

Did it hurt the paper’s bottom line to let writers wax on about their families or write about sources they had deals with? Not if readers didn’t know. They wouldn’t have cared, anyway. They continued to buy papers, maybe bought even more papers, thanks to the wit and homeyness of the columns.

But we then hear it’s not even reality that matters. It is perception. If people PERCEIVE a conflict, they may stop buying. That would be bad. But all those years when columnists wrote about family members and didn’t get caught, that was okay. There was no PERCEPTION of a conflict. So people kept buying papers and there was no economic harm to the publishers.So what ethics really are about is not credibility at all. What “ethics” are about is selling newspapers. Ethics equals money.

Why is this important to me? I love newspapers. I see them dying. No, I see them killing themselves. I see them doing dumb things they got away with when they were the only show in town. But now, with competition from the Internet, they are like deer in a forest of klieg lights. Either they’re paralyzed with fear or simply lack the basic intelligence they need to survive. This is about the future of newspapers.

It’s worth looking again at those highly-paid columnists who write to a different standard from other staffers. Managers assume that readers buy more papers because they want to read those columnists. If the issue is economics, as the editor said, then if what they write sells papers, then everything should be okay — even though they may violate ethical standards. No credibility problem as long as the cash flows in. And as long as nobody blows the whistle.

I keep reading these ethics policies, and there’s one word that I don’t find in any of them. “Credibility” is all over the place. But that word which readers REALLY prize more than credibility, well, I can’t find that word in the index to the Times’ “Ethical Journalism: A Handbook of Values and Practices for the News and Editorial Departments September 2004.” I don’t find it in the Free Press policies, of which there have been so many it’s difficult to catalog them.

Okay, I made fun of the Times’ pompous index, but maybe it can help. Oops.

No sign of that other word that comes between “trustees” and “University of Missouri.”

My little policy is not 54 pages long. It has no index, only nine words.

But yes, my policy has that most important of words.

Ride hard, shoot straight and speak the shining TRUTH.

Contact me at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

Posted in future of newspapers, Joel's J School | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Joel on the road — but the roadmap has changed

By Joel Thurtell

I’m on vacation, folks. Pecking away at my laptop in a Sault Ste. Marie, Ontario motel. It’s August 2, and I have fresh columns through August 6.

Oh-oh.

I promised I’d post something new every day. Many bloggers abandon weekends. I want to be a seven-day-a-week newspaper. What to do?

Remember Bob Talbert? He was the legendary Detroit Free Press columnist who used to recycle his favorite columns when he went on vacation. I decided to try that. I went all the back to one of my first columns, written when I was fresh into the buyout thing, what I call the “Gannett Grant,” and had lots of big ideas for what I would do with this online column

Such as write once a week.

That’s right, I had no plan for seven days a week columns!

I was also going to sell ads to local businesses in western Wayne County, Michigan.

Well, I soon will be doing the Google AdSense thing.

But I thought it might be fun to re-run that early column. It shows me how far I’ve roamed from my original idea. Yet, funny thing, I am getting back to the idea of podcasting and posting audio and video pieces.

Just for fun, here is that early column. I’ll be back with new stuff August 11.

By the way, my computer guru younger son (not my computer guru older son), tells me I should simply link to the old column rather than running it again here. I’m sure he’s right. But I’m an oldtimer. Some things don’t take, you know, just don’t sink in. So here’s the column, no link, right in front of you:

Joel on the road — for starters

MuskratI’m looking for a muskrat cook.

No, wait – that’s not how I wanted to start.

Actually, what I want to do is explain – to myself first, then to my loyal readers – what this thing is supposed to be.
I thought all I wanted was a website where I could post the kind of columns, more or less, that I’ve been writing the past several years for the Community Free Press.

I told webmaster Kelly Rinne I wanted to, maybe, expand on what I did for the Free Press. Instead of limiting my essays to 210 lines, due to the physical limits imposed by paper and press, in the digital world I would have unlimited web territory. And maybe I’d post some audio recordings of interviews, maybe even some video – things I couldn’t easily do at the Free Press.
They tell me what I’m talking about is a “blog.” My college son, Abe, told me that audio-video stuff is called “podcasting.”
Whatever. Looks like I’m doing it, since I’m shopping for a camcorder.

I always wanted a newspaper. My own newspaper. I wanted to call the shots, control the content, write the stories I want to write and forget the rest. Now, thanks to what I call the “Gannett Grant,” aka a buyout, I can have a newspaper that I can call my own.
Okay, so it’s not a REAL newspaper. No PAPER. No PRINTING PRESS. So much the better. No presses, no trucks, no cumbersome delivery system. Low overhead. A blog.

It’s brand new, so I can call it anything I want. That’s been a problem, believe it or not – too many good ideas. What a shame to have your paper (there I go, using old age language: paper? No – blog!) stumble because you couldn’t decide what to call it. In my early days of newspapering, when I was editor of the Berrien Springs Journal Era, John Gillette, the co-publisher, called me a “loose cannon.”

Why? Some day I’ll regale you with my take on how having a loose cannon as an editor (and reporter, writer, photographer, darkroom tech, columnist, editorial writer, layout person and occasional ad salesman) helped boost that paper’s circulation, and about how I would have changed that paper’s name instantly if it were mine so I could quit hearing “Journal Era – Urinal Era,” but right now let’s talk about how this blog got its name. I called my buddy David Crumm, who took the Free Press buyout also and is running a religion blog called www.readthespirit.com. David didn’t think much of “loose cannon.” Your domain name needs to be personal, he said, something about you. It needs to tell readers what you’re doing, namely an extension of your column writing by other means.

Think about “joelontheroad.com,” he said.
Hmmm. Joelontheroad. I like loose cannon. I even paid for loosecannonnews.com. But I asked my wife, my kids, others, and they all voted for joelontheroad.com. So that’s what you get. It makes sense. What road? Hey, I’ll write from anywhere, about anything I choose. And maybe about what you choose, too. Hey, this is a user-friendly blog.

After signing up with SoundQue.com in Trenton for web services, I had another thought. David and his wife Amy sent us a card last Christmas in which they wrote about my columns as “Joel unleashed.”

Hey! I like that! But in the Sunday, Dec. 9 Community Free Press, I tell readers about joelontheroad. So it’s a done deal. Set in print on PAPER by a REAL newspaper. Too late for “unleashed.” But a friend observed, “You’re already unleashed. You may be free of the Free Press, but you weren’t really leashed.”
Well, yes, except most of the unleashed stuff went into a drawer.

Here’s what you can look for in joelontheroad:
Each week, I will try to write what I still refer to in Old Talk as a “cover story.” It will be a long feature story with photos, similar to the ones I wrote for the Community Free Press.

The operative word is “try.” Remember, folks, I’m retired. Supposedly. And I’m working on two, no THREE books. I may keep writing Five Questions features, as I did for the Free Press. And maybe not. What do you think? Do you like that feature?
What really frustrated me at the Free Press was the fact that my readers in Downriver communities didn’t get to see what I was writing for my readers in Plymouth, Canton and Northville, nor could my PCN people read what I was telling them Downstream. Unless they went looking for it on the web, of course. Now, friends, I’m afraid you’ll have to go looking for me on the web, but with this advantage: Downriver people will see the same stories I dish out to the Upstream folks.
That’s bad news for Gibraltar. It means I’ll have to repeat my jokes about those three roads, all named “Gibraltar,” that converge on a post with three signs that say Gibraltar Rd. Hilarious. I mean, if you’re having a bad day, drive down to Gib and have a look at those signs. I meant to break that habit, but blame it on Gannett and the buyout. I can’t help it. By the way, while you’re in Gib, stop in for a great lunch at a restaurant called Mirage. I like Gibraltar, so you’ll be seeing more stories about that town.

Here’s something else really neat about this blog thing. With the Old Paper, I was banned from writing about communities that didn’t receive the Sunday Community Free Press. So “Downriver” didn’t really mean Downriver. I couldn’t write about River Rouge or Ecorse or Melvindale, for instance, though they are about as Downriver as you can get. The CFP didn’t go there, so neither did I. But now, hey! I AM unleashed!

In general, you can expect to read stories about the Rouge River, about flying, about how things are done or made. Remember when I blew a vase from molten glass, played the Our lady of Good Counsel pipe organ, welded a pencil holder, rowed in a Wyandotte Boat Club shell, carved a dolphin out of ice, played dodge-ball with a bunch of kids? That sort of thing. If you have an idea for some crazy lark you prefer not to do, but might wish onto to me, please email me at joelthurtell(a)gmail.com

I will write about anything that interests me in Wayne County or anywhere I please. When I visit my son Adam in Los Angeles, I’ll post to joelontheroad.com. I won’t have the benefit of those fine Free Press photographers, editors and copy editors I got used to. In fact, I’ll be doing that work myself. Get used to typos and semantic bloopers. But I’ll be free of the newspaper bureaucracy and of a 44-mile-a-day commute. That is what it means, partly, to be unleashed.

Oh yes, I almost forgot. I will be selling ads. First it will be through online ad services, but I hope soon to sell ads to local businesses, governments, churches, schools, nonprofits and individuals. Remember this, all you advertising directors: joelthurtell(a)gmail.com.

My office manager will be Peppermint Patti, our little white fuzzball of a dog. Upstream readers may recall our $1,500 Patti from a column last year. By now, she’s the $2,000 dog. Emergency Veterinary Service will be hearing from me about advertising, believe me.

What I really want to do is have fun. If I’m curious about something, I’ll check it out. If you’re curious about something, email me. If it piques my interest, I may write it up.

Oh yes, it’s true. I am looking for a muskrat cook. No, smarty, not a muskrat who cooks. I need someone – a human! — who actively, enthusiastically, creatively and delectably prepares muskrat to eat.

What for? I have a story in mind.

Contact me at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

Posted in Beginnings, Bloggery, future of newspapers | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Ethics ‘paralysis’ charade: II

By Joel Thurtell

[donation]

Okay, here’s the essay I wrote about in yesterday’s column — the one the Free Press refused to publish and forbade me to publish anywhere else:

The Ethics “Paralysis’ Charade

By Joel Thurtell

The new Democratic Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, has promised us “the most honest, most open and most ethical Congress in history.”

But Democrats are not serious about that promise now any more than they have been for the last several years. If they really took ethics reform seriously, Democrats would long ago have moved decisively for an investigation of one of their most senior and prominent members.

John Conyers, I believe, is the simple reason why Democrats are pulling their ethics punch. They could have done something about ethics long before now. No new rules or laws are needed to deal with members like Conyers. Even as the minority party, Democrats had parity with Republicans on only one committee in all Congress. That’s on the so-called Ethics Committee, officially the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct. Yet Democrats allowed Republicans for the past two years to paralyze the Ethics Committee.

Or so it would seem.

All along, there has been Democratic complicity in the committee’s lethargy. An article in The Nation on Feb. 6, 2006 suggested that Democrats are reluctant to file complaints against Republican members for fear of reprisal complaints aimed at Democrats. Hence a “truce” that in effect has stymied, the magazine argued, the committee from investigating new cases. In fact, there may be far more complicity on the part of Democrats than commentators acknowledge.

More than two years ago, on Nov. 21, 2003, the Detroit Free Press published a pair of articles exposing longstanding abuses by U.S. Rep. John Conyers of Detroit. The Free Press stories revealed that Conyers had routinely assigned not one, not two, not three, but ALL of his congressional staffers to do campaign work on government-paid time. The work was done not only for Conyers’ own re-election campaigns, but for others, including his wife and various local, state and national Democratic candidates whose elections Conyers thought crucial. I’m one of the reporters who worked on these stories. At one point in November 2003 I reached a Conyers staffer by telephone where he sat working in the Chicago presidential campaign office of Carol Moseley Braun. He was being paid to be in Detroit, organizing a universal health insurance symposium for constituents, except that Conyers had assigned him to work for Braun. The staffer was collecting pay for congressional work others were obliged to do for him, I confirmed through congressional payroll records. Not only office time was squandered, but office phones, fax machines, photo copiers and computers were used for political campaigns, notwithstanding that misuse is contrary to House ethics guidelines and in some cases illegal.

Soon after our articles were published, I was told the Ethics Committee had opened an investigation into the abuses we outlined regarding Conyers. I reported that. But the committee has not acted. It has been paralyzed, seemingly by obstruction from Republicans.

John Conyers has been a member of Congress for 42 (now 44) years. Among black people in Detroit, he is an icon. He espouses liberal causes that make him the darling of the left and of labor unions. He is the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee. He has called for the impeachment of President Bush, and if there were to be an impeachment case, Conyers, as ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, would have a powerful say in how it’s run.

Those are potent reasons why Democrats might not want a probe of the dean of black congressmen.

But it could be worse than that. Some years ago, another Democratic congressman from Detroit, Charles Diggs, was convicted of fraud and served prison time for ordering House legislative aides to work at his family funeral home on government time. Recently, the indictment of U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay and the convictions of members like Randy Cunningham and Bob Ney are proof that congressmen who play fast and loose with House rules and with the law often are a short step from indictment.

A proper investigation of John Conyers in the Ethics Committee would have no trouble finding plenty of witnesses who would testify that as congressional employees hired by Conyers to work for constituents they instead were ordered by the congressman to do personal work for him resembling those funeral parlor assignments of Charles Diggs: They worked as chauffeurs for Conyers and his wife and kids, they were fulltime babysitters in the Conyers home or staffers’ own homes. Conyers’ former general counsel Sydney Rooks says Conyers assigned her to tutor Conyers’ oldest son- a daily chore that took place in the office during regular business hours with the use of the congressman’s fax machine to receive the boy’s daily homework assignments. Despite the supposed Ethics Committee inquiry, Conyers continued to assign his staffers to do personal chores like driving him in their own cars, babysitting his kids and picking up his meal tabs, according to Deanna Maher, who retired May 31, 2005 as chief of staff of Conyers’ Southgate, Mich. Office.

It may beat messing with dead bodies in a funeral home, but assigning staffers to work in a Chicago politician’s office and assigning aides to baby sit your kids and then representing to the congressional payroll office that these people were doing bona fide constituent work so they can cash government paychecks seems on a par with Charles Diggs’ duping the government into covering the payroll for his funeral parlor.

Could John Conyers be the reason the Ethics Committee — not to mention any move to strengthen ethics laws — is in limbo?

Contact me at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

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Ethics “Paralysis” Charade: I

By Joel Thurtell

All of a sudden, journalists are dissing John Conyers. Time was when no reporter in his or her right mind would criticize the congressman from Detroit, the second-most-senior member of the U.S. House of Representatives. Time was when editors wouldn’t let reporters pursue investigations of Conyers.

Someone just sent me a column by Ray McGovern published in antiwar.com: “John Conyers Is No Martin Luther King.”

Right on. As unlike as John Conyers is to King, he is similar to another Detroit congressman. Excuse me, a late and former congressman. One who went to prison after being convicted of fraud for, among other things, assigning congressional staffers to work in his family’s Detroit funeral home.

I’m thinking of Charles Diggs.

I looked into Diggs’ career back in 2003 when I investigated Conyers’ abuse of his congressional staffers. I was looking for parallels between Diggs and Conyers, and I found them. My reporting, followed by a set of Detroit Free Press stories on Nov. 21, 2003, prompted the House Ethics Committee to probe Conyers. That investigation lingered until 2006, when the committee quietly made a deal and Conyers skated clear of the allegations of his staffers that he forced them to do personal work for him on the federal dime.

Long before the Ethics Committee dropped the ball, my Free Press investigation was derailed. I simply couldn’t get editors interested, somehow. One top editor told me all congressmen do what Conyers did. If everyone stinks, nobody stinks.

Early in 2006, I wrote an op-ed column comparing Conyers and Diggs. I submitted it to the Free Press editorial page, and never got a reply. Eventually, a top metro editor sent me this note:

Joel:

I’m afraid you’re going to hear an answer that you’d rather not hear. I don’t think we can publish this. Here’s why.

Even though you don’t cover Conyers as a daily part of your responsibilities at the Free Press, the fact remains that you have written extensively about him. We want readers to be assured that our reporters are covering stories without bias. Publishing an opinion piece by you would conflict with that mission and would taint our earlier reporting. Beyond that, there’s a possibility that you could end up writing about Conyers again someday. You couldn’t very well do that if you had openly criticized him.

For these reasons, I would not give my OK for you to freelance this, either. You’re welcome to run the question up the line to Caesar or Paul, but I’d be willing to bet that you’ll hear the same answer.

This missive was signed by another of the Free Press high honchos.

I appealed up the line, but got the same answer. Not only would the Free Press not publish my viewpoint piece, but I was forbidden to send it to another publication.

So what did I do?

I sent it to the New York Times op-ed page.

Never heard back. No surprise. To date, the Times has published zero, zilch on Conyers’ ethics problems. It’s not that they don’t know about it. Conyers was notorious for making staffers do campaign work as well as chauffeur his kids, babysit and tutor his kids, coach his wife in her law school studies, do his laundry and housekeeping and more. Our story made waves, big waves, on the Hill.

Somehow, from the press, he got a free ride.

Well, I dug up that 2006 op-ed piece. Things have changed since Free Press editors suppressed my Conyers reports. I took a buyout from the Free Press last November. The editor who wrote that memo censoring my work is no longer my boss. My new boss has encouraged me to publish that essay. Who is my new boss? Me!

For a deeper understanding of who John Conyers is, you may read my Free Press stories about the man in the “Conyers stories” category of this blog. General articles about John and Monica Conyers are to be found under the “JC & Me” heading.

What do you think? Would this essay have “tainted,” ex post facto, my earlier reporting on Conyers? And of course, as to the editor’s carrot, holding out the possibility I might write more Free Press stories about Conyers, well, it never happened.

It’s happening now, only because I cut loose from the Free Press.

Tomorrow, I’ll publish the essay the Free Press editors didn’t want to see the light of day — anywhere. It’s called “The Ethics ‘Paralysis’ Charade.”

Stay tuned.

Here’s the piece the Free Press stifled:

The Ethics “Paralysis’ Charade

By Joel Thurtell

The new Democratic Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Nancy Pelosi, has promised us “the most honest, most open and most ethical Congress in history.”

But Democrats are not serious about that promise now any more than they have been for the last several years. If they really took ethics reform seriously, Democrats would long ago have moved decisively for an investigation of one of their most senior and prominent members.

John Conyers, I believe, is the simple reason why Democrats are pulling their ethics punch. They could have done something about ethics long before now. No new rules or laws are needed to deal with members like Conyers. Even as the minority party, Democrats had parity with Republicans on only one committee in all Congress. That’s on the so-called Ethics Committee, officially the Committee on Standards of Official Conduct. Yet Democrats allowed Republicans for the past two years to paralyze the Ethics Committee.

Or so it would seem.

All along, there has been Democratic complicity in the committee’s lethargy. An article in The Nation on Feb. 6, 2006 suggested that Democrats are reluctant to file complaints against Republican members for fear of reprisal complaints aimed at Democrats. Hence a “truce” that in effect has stymied, the magazine argued, the committee from investigating new cases. In fact, there may be far more complicity on the part of Democrats than commentators acknowledge.

More than two years ago, on Nov. 21, 2003, the Detroit Free Press published a pair of articles exposing longstanding abuses by U.S. Rep. John Conyers of Detroit. The Free Press stories revealed that Conyers had routinely assigned not one, not two, not three, but ALL of his congressional staffers to do campaign work on government-paid time. The work was done not only for Conyers’ own re-election campaigns, but for others, including his wife and various local, state and national Democratic candidates whose elections Conyers thought crucial. I’m one of the reporters who worked on these stories. At one point in November 2003 I reached a Conyers staffer by telephone where he sat working in the Chicago presidential campaign office of Carol Moseley Braun. He was being paid to be in Detroit, organizing a universal health insurance symposium for constituents, except that Conyers had assigned him to work for Braun. The staffer was collecting pay for congressional work others were obliged to do for him, I confirmed through congressional payroll records. Not only office time was squandered, but office phones, fax machines, photo copiers and computers were used for political campaigns, notwithstanding that misuse is contrary to House ethics guidelines and in some cases illegal.

Soon after our articles were published, I was told the Ethics Committee had opened an investigation into the abuses we outlined regarding Conyers. I reported that. But the committee has not acted. It has been paralyzed, seemingly by obstruction from Republicans.

John Conyers has been a member of Congress for 42 (now 44) years. Among black people in Detroit, he is an icon. He espouses liberal causes that make him the darling of the left and of labor unions. He is the ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee. He has called for the impeachment of President Bush, and if there were to be an impeachment case, Conyers, as ranking Democrat on the House Judiciary Committee, would have a powerful say in how it’s run.

Those are potent reasons why Democrats might not want a probe of the dean of black congressmen.

But it could be worse than that. Some years ago, another Democratic congressman from Detroit, Charles Diggs, was convicted of fraud and served prison time for ordering House legislative aides to work at his family funeral home on government time. Recently, the indictment of U.S. Rep. Tom DeLay and the convictions of members like Randy Cunningham and Bob Ney are proof that congressmen who play fast and loose with House rules and with the law often are a short step from indictment.

A proper investigation of John Conyers in the Ethics Committee would have no trouble finding plenty of witnesses who would testify that as congressional employees hired by Conyers to work for constituents they instead were ordered by the congressman to do personal work for him resembling those funeral parlor assignments of Charles Diggs: They worked as chauffeurs for Conyers and his wife and kids, they were full time babysitters in the Conyers home or staffers’ own homes. Conyers’ former general counsel Sydney Rooks says Conyers assigned her to tutor Conyers’ oldest son — a daily chore that took place in the office during regular business hours with the use of the congressman’s fax machine to receive the boy’s daily homework assignments. Despite the supposed Ethics Committee inquiry, Conyers continued to assign his staffers to do personal chores like driving him in their own cars, babysitting his kids and picking up his meal tabs, according to Deanna Maher, who retired May 31, 2005 as chief of staff of Conyers’ Southgate, Mich. Office.

It may beat messing with dead bodies in a funeral home, but assigning staffers to work in a Chicago politician’s office and assigning aides to baby sit your kids and then representing to the congressional payroll office that these people were doing bona fide constituent work so they can cash government paychecks seems on a par with Charles Diggs’ duping the government into covering the payroll for his funeral parlor.

Could John Conyers be the reason the Ethics Committee — not to mention any move to strengthen ethics laws — is in limbo?

Contact me at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

Posted in Bad government, censorship, JC & Me, Joel's J School, People | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Double standard at the good ol’ Freep

By Joel Thurtell

Back in 2003 when I was investigating U.S. Rep. John Conyers Jr.’s abuse of staffers, I had anonymous sources for the first stories, and that was very okay with editors.

Something changed, though, and I was prohibited from pursuing the story by using unnamed sources.

What a contrast with today’s Detroit Free Press, where unnamed sources seem to populate every scoop.

I was shut down on Conyers after breaking the story. Why? Well, I don’t know. We’d had an impact. The House Ethics Committee was investigating Conyers as a result of our reporting. Was that, maybe, why I was stopped? You wouldn’t have known there was an ethics probe going on from reading the Free Press. That story was broken months after I learned of it by other media. When we were beaten by the Detroit News, I was allowed to use my source without giving her name. But the bar was immediately raised and thereafter the story was mute at the Freep. Until, once again, we were beaten by other media on a part of the story I had written literally years earlier but was barred from putting in the paper.

Why? Were we too close to getting Conyers in the same mess his late colleague Charles Diggs got into when he assigned federally-paid staffers to work in his family mortuary? The feds called that fraud and they made it stick. Diggs did stir time.

Maybe there was another reason. Who knows? I was told by management that my chief source — a member of Conyers’ staff — should agree to be identified as my source although in early stories, she was an unnamed source.

Why the pressure to put her on the record? I never understood it. I was told to persuade her to let us use her name. I was pressured by bosses at the Free Press to out my source, or at least to bulldoze her into outing herself. Nasty business, how we treat our sources. Sometimes.

When I refused to push, the response was simple: End of Conyers investigation.

Now I look at Kwamegate. Free Press reporters got 14,000 supposedly off-limits text messages and really made hay with them. Next, anonymous sources leak all kinds of nasty stuff about Detroit City Council members supposedly taking bribes. Who are these leakers, anyway? Is it in the public interest to publish possibly one-sided, untested allegations before a grand jury indicts someone?

Now we’ve got the Free Press quoting “sources said” that the governor maybe made an indiscreet phone call that may not have happened and maybe, if it did, wasn’t indiscreet.

I can’t help harking back to the way I was pushed to con my main Conyers source into letting us use her name, even though it likely would have got her fired.

Not a nice thing in and of itself, getting a source fired. Besides which it ends the source’s usefulness as a source. Hmmm. I wonder…

Nothing wrong with using an anonymous source if the story is REALLY important. But “sources said” has reached epidemic levels at the Free Press. It’s undermining whatever credibility the paper had.

Now here at joelontheroad.com, we use anonymous sources, but very sparingly. We make noe deals. For instance, we don’t promise anyone we’ll go to jail rather than identify them.

We feel it’s necessary to give some cover to sources, especially those who work for the Free Press and pass information to us. There is indeed a fear of retaliation by the bosses. Having sat beside a colleague when he was fired by Free Press management, only to be reinstated by decree of an arbitrator nine months later, and having fought with The Newspaper Guild’s help the Free Press’ attempt to stifle my political activity, I do believe retaliation is more than a minor possibility.

But as I read the ongoing use of anonymous sources by Freepsters, I’m beginning to think the paper needs to go cold turkey.

It’s time the Conyers standard were applied generally to the Free Press staff.

If your sources won’t come out, at least give us a valid reason for hiding them.

Otherwise, stop using them.

If that kills stories, so be it.

Contact me at joelthurtell(at)gmail.com

Posted in Bad government, censorship, JC & Me, Joel's J School | Tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment