Media ignores its Ferguson failures.
Freivogel, William H.
The Justice Departments twin reports on Ferguson this March raised
two disturbing questions about the media:
* How did so many news organizations fail for so long to realize
that "Hands Up, Don't Shoot" was a myth?
* How did so many news organizations fail for so many years to
uncover deeply unconstitutional police and court practices?
One would hope those questions would prompt soul-searching. For the
most part, they haven't.
The national media are on to the next police shooting with no sign
of introspection. False or misleading stories from last summer remain
online uncorrected.
Social media also barrel ahead, clinging to preconceived ideologies
in a cyber-world that is often fact free.
Here are egregious media failures:
* National and local media fell for "eyewitnesses" who
claimed to have seen Officer Darren Wilson shoot a surrendering Michael
Brown. Many "witnesses" lied or fabricated stories.
* CNN irresponsibly broadcast "exclusive" video taken
during "the final moments of the shooting" showing two white
construction workers, one gesturing how Brown had his hands up. Legal
analyst Jeffrey Toobin called it evidence of a "a cold-blooded
murder." But the video wasn't from the time of the shooting
and the construction workers' stories were full of holes.
* Local media--KTVI and the Post-Dispatch--gave the construction
workers story big play. But they didn't make clear that the workers
falsely claimed three officers were at the scene, a reason the FBI
discounted them
* MSNBC's Chris Hayes and Lawrence O'Donnell threw fuel
on the fire day after day with biased reporting. O'Donnell ranted
about St. Louis County Prosecuting Attorney Robert McCulloch changing
the legal instructions during the grand jury, but his reports were full
of errors.
* The New York Times committed journalistic malpractice by naming
the street that Wilson lived on and then refusing to admit its mistake.
KSDK did it too but apologized.
* Fox misreported that Brown had broken Wilsons eye socket.
* Anonymous, the scary and inept anarchists, misidentified the
police shooter and the shooter's police department.
* The New York Times portrayed Ferguson as part of a segregated
"Circle of Rage" around St. Louis, when Ferguson is actually
one of the most residentially integrated places in St. Louis.
* ProPublica sliced and diced statistics in a misleading way that
exaggerated how much more likely it was for a young African-American to
be killed by police.
Ferguson was America's Arab Spring for social media. For that
reason, its failures are as important as the mainstream media's.
A story in the May 10 New York Times magazine uncritically
romanticized the tweeters and live-streamers who made a name for
themselves.
It called Bassem Masri, "perhaps Ferguson's most famous
live-streamer." Masri is the person whose live-streaming videos
include loud streams of invective and hate directed at police. Masri
isn't a citizen journalist but a polemicist linking Ferguson and
anti-Israeli protesters.
The Times' piece also told how DeRay Mckesson and Johnetta
Elzie, two active bloggers, joined forces with Justin Hansford, a law
professor at Saint Louis University, to critique the mainstream press in
its "This Is the Movement" newsletter."
But the newsletter isn't really media criticism. It's a
movement newsletter with headlines like: "This Is NOT St. Louis
County, Missouri Prosecutor Robert McCulloch First 'Racist
Rodeo.'"
Not only have the media failed to critique themselves, they have
gone right ahead making the same mistakes. During the police unrest in
Baltimore May 4, Fox's Mike Tobin reported seeing an officer shoot
a black man in the back. McClatchy war correspondent Hannah Allam
tweeted, 'We'll be back under martial law tonight!' EMTs
take body away on stretcher." Livestream's "citizen
journalist" barked out a tweet on the shooting. The reports were
false.
Why did the press miss deeper stories?
Sometimes the biggest stories are right in front of a
reporter's face but involve conditions that are taken for granted.
That's the case with the municipal court system in North St.
Louis County. It took the ArchCity Defenders and allied law professors
to show that procedures fair in form devastated the lives of poor,
blacks who ended up in modern debtors' prison.
The media did a good job of publicizing municipal court abuses. The
one "Ferguson" reform emerging from the legislature limits how
much traffic money each town can collect.
But the press often forces reforms into a right-or-wrong framework,
and it did with this story.
The new caps on municipal revenue hit the small predominantly black
communities the hardest, with little impact in Ferguson
This take did not fit conveniently into the established media
narrative and was mostly ignored in stories trumpeting the legislation.
A personal note on former colleagues: The Post-Dispatch photo staff
richly deserved the Pulitzer Prize it won for its brave, insightful,
moving Ferguson photography.
Tony Messenger and Kevin Horrigan, the P-D's editorial editor
and deputy, also deserved to be finalists for editorials that
"brought insight and context to the national tragedy of Ferguson,
MO, without losing sight of the community's needs."
St. Louisans don't appreciate what a treasure they have had in
the P-D editorial page as its Pulitzer commended work warned over the
decades of Hitler, Vietnam, concealed weapons, civil liberties abuses
and the Missouri's war on the Medicaid poor. It's an editorial
record with few peers.