USA Today Says Reporter Faked Stories
NewsMax.com Wires
Friday, March 19, 2004
ARLINGTON, Va. USA Today said Friday that an examination
of the work of journalist Jack Kelley found strong evidence that
the newspaper's former star foreign correspondent had fabricated
substantial portions of at least eight major stories.
"As an institution, we failed our readers by not recognizing
Jack Kelley's problems. For that I apologize," publisher Craig
Moon said.
After spending seven weeks examining Kelley's work, a
team of journalists also found that Kelley had lifted quotes or
other material from competing publications, lied in speeches he
delivered for USA Today and conspired to mislead the investigation
into his work.
An examination of his computer unearthed scripts Kelley had
written to help at least three people mislead reporters attempting
to verify his work, the newspaper said.
For a story in 2000, the newspaper said, Kelley used a snapshot
he took of a Cuban hotel worker to authenticate a tale he made up
about a woman who died fleeing Cuba by boat. The woman in the
published photo never fled by boat, and a USA Today reporter
located her alive this month, the newspaper said.
Kelley, 43, quit the newspaper in January after admitting he
conspired with a translator to mislead editors looking into the
veracity of his reporting.
Kelly said he'd never fabricated or plagiarized.
"I feel like I'm being set up," he told editors at the
newspaper on Thursday.
Kelley spent his entire 21-year career at USA Today and was five
times nominated for a Pulitzer Prize, the most prestigious award in
journalism.
For one of the stories that helped make him a Pulitzer Prize
finalist in 2001, Kelley wrote that he was an eyewitness to a
suicide bombing in Jerusalem and described the carnage in graphic
detail. But the investigation showed that the man Kelley described
as the bomber could not have been the culprit, and his description
of three decapitated victims was contradicted by police.
The newspaper also said "the evidence strongly contradicted"
other published accounts by Kelley: that he spent the night with
Egyptian terrorists in 1997; met a vigilante Jewish settler named
Avi Shapiro in 2001; watched a Pakistani student unfold a picture
of the Sears Tower and say, "This one is mine," in 2001;
interviewed the daughter of an Iraqi general in 2003; or went on a
high-speed hunt for Osama bin Laden in 2003.
Hotel, phone or other records contradicted Kelley's explanations
of how he reported stories from Egypt, Russia, Chechnya, Kosovo,
Yugoslavia, Cuba and Pakistan, the newspaper said.
The three former newspaper editors brought in to conduct the
investigation - Bill Hilliard, Bill Kovach and John Seigenthaler -
called Kelley's conduct "a sad and shameful betrayal of public
trust."
© 2004 Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
Editor's note:
Bernard Goldberg’s best seller "Arrogance" exposes the media – get it FREE – click here now
Read more on this subject in related Hot Topics:
Media Bias