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Title: Memo to ESPN -- It's Not About A Scoop, It's About Protecting Children
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://www.foxnews.com/opinion/2011 ... its-about-protecting-children/
Published: Nov 29, 2011
Author: Dan Gainor
Post Date: 2011-11-29 21:18:25 by Jethro Tull
Keywords: None
Views: 138
Comments: 12

Memo to ESPN -- It's Not About A Scoop, It's About Protecting Children

By

Published November 29, 2011

| FoxNews.com

As if the Penn State child rape scandal wasn’t enough to disgust, allegations about alleged molestation by Syracuse associate head coach Bernie Fine now dominate the sports news. Only those aren’t new allegations. Eight years ago, ESPN had a complaint from Bobby Davis, who claims Fine molested him for many years. Coupled with that complaint was horribly disturbing audio reportedly of Fine’s wife Laurie, exhibiting detailed knowledge of the abuse.

Only now, that the charges have become public, has that audio and story been published. ESPN, which bills itself as “The Worldwide Leader in Sports,” waited eight years to be a follower on a real life story of possible sexual abuse.

What took them so long?

According to ESPN and the Syracuse Post-Standard, they couldn’t find other evidence or witnesses. “ESPN did not report Davis' accusations, or report the contents of the tape, because no one else would corroborate his story,” ESPN reported Sunday.

Certainly, caution is warranted. There is no allegation more destructive to a coach, a teacher or anyone who works with young people, than claiming a sex crime occurred. But listening to the tape is a horrifying experience. Davis and the voice that is reportedly Laurie Fine discuss the abuse in excruciating detail.

According to ESPN, Laurie Fine was not only aware of the abuse, she even had her own sexual relationship with Davis when he turned 18 and was a senior in high school. “At another point in the call, Fine says of her husband: ‘You know, he needs ... that male companionship that I can't give him, nor is he interested in me, and vice versa.’”

Both outlets are correct that sometimes journalists can’t prove a story, even if it looks like they should. When you are talking about many crimes – like theft or corruption – those are the breaks. Journalists are not agents of the police, after all.
Child molestation is not most ordinary crimes. How a society protects its most vulnerable is a measure of its civilization. Sports reporters – any reporters – don’t get to ignore their obligation to the rest of us simply because they can claim 1st Amendment freedoms.

Traditionally, sports reporting has been a closed society. When all reporters and editors worried about were touchdowns, homeruns and free-throw percentage, that was fine. But sports reporters in 2011 can spend more time in court than watching on court. Both the NBA and NFL have had protracted legal battles, baseball has battled steroid scandals and players from every sport run up rap sheets like they were auditioning for “America’s Most Wanted.”

That calls for a different skill set and a different sensitivity than maybe many sports reporters are expected to have. It’s not easy to switch from asking a winning coach about the big game to asking detailed questions about sexual abuse. Had ESPN been a true worldwide leader in sports, editors and executives would have gotten involved in this story and it wouldn’t have taken eight years for something to happen.

These days, there is great discussion in the news business about the impact of citizen journalists and what that will mean to the industry if ordinary Americans become reporters. But there’s another side to that. What happened to the idea that journalists are also citizens? It’s the same question photographers are often asked when they photograph crime rather than try to stop it. At some point, every one of us stops being our job and becomes a human being, a neighbor, a citizen.

Maybe “Outside the Lines” couldn’t prove the allegations. Running with a thinly-sourced story would have been irresponsible and caused possibly lasting harm to someone who might be an innocent man. But ESPN had a victim’s statement and a conversation between that victim and a woman who appeared to be a witness. If there wasn’t enough to write about it, there certainly was enough for ESPN to approach the attorney general or a police agency other than the one that ignored Davis’s initial complaint.

Sure, the journalists involved couldn’t be neutral anymore. But they weren’t bystanders the moment a man told them he’d been molested as a child. They chose to wait on a story involving alleged sexual abuse that, according to their own reporting, began as early as age 12. How many other children could be harmed in eight years?

You can’t turn your back on such a potentially awful crime.


Poster Comment:

ESPN/ABC/Disney is a big fish in the media world, and exactly how far any journalists is will to go with this cuts to the heart of the Whore media. Who will be willing to cut off any potential future affiliation with that company? Surly not the sports shows that need future player access. I'm still stunned ESPN is actively defending their actions, but then again we all know how easy it is for the media to lead sheeple. (1 image)

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#1. To: Jethro Tull (#0)

i hope the pedo-demic is ended world wide and soon.


"If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen.”—Samuel Adams

Rotara  posted on  2011-11-29   21:32:45 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: Rotara (#1)

Amen.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-11-29   21:40:17 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: Jethro Tull (#2)

i'm going to go baptize an ice cold bottle of Stoly just because you said that, Brother.


"If you love wealth more than liberty, the tranquility of servitude better than the animating contest of freedom, depart from us in peace. We ask not your counsel nor your arms. Crouch down and lick the hand that feeds you. May your chains rest lightly upon you and may posterity forget that you were our countrymen.”—Samuel Adams

Rotara  posted on  2011-11-29   21:45:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: Rotara (#3)

Here's to a long life and a merry one.
A quick death and an easy one.
A pretty girl and an honest one.
A cold pint-- and another one!

Peace, Bro.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-11-29   22:00:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Jethro Tull, All (#0)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1749-1832

Eric Stratton  posted on  2011-11-29   22:01:34 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: Eric Stratton, 4 (#5)

It is indeed. I'm not sure Murdock isn't about to stir the pot on his competition. If you've been following his exploits regarding the "reporting" his British tabloids do, a media food fight is in line with his MO.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-11-29   22:09:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: Jethro Tull (#6)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1749-1832

Eric Stratton  posted on  2011-11-29   23:14:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: Eric Stratton (#7)

Much more than a red herring.

40,000 kids up here have seen the underbelly of the Mid Streamers, and will from this day forward, be "on" to their power of mass manipulation.

That is an education no University can offer.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-11-29   23:29:54 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: Jethro Tull (#8)

deleted

The relationship between morality and liberty is a directly proportional one.

None are more hopelessly enslaved than those who falsely believe they are free.
- Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, 1749-1832

Eric Stratton  posted on  2011-11-30   9:09:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: Eric Stratton (#9)

OK, gotcha. Yes, we know it's a squabble among swine. That said, anytime rank hypocrisy can be exposed in their ranks, and understood by a new, young, audience, a potential for further irrelevance exists. Disillusionment is a baby step toward understanding and rejecting propaganda.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-11-30   9:42:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: All (#10)

http://rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/bas...m_scandal_missteps_112911

Boeheim out of touch with severity of scandal

SYRACUSE, N.Y. – It didn’t take long for the first sign that Jim Boeheim still doesn’t get it.

It came as soon as he walked into a packed postgame news conference after his Syracuse team beat Eastern Michigan on Tuesday night.

“This is the first time I’ve been in the press room where there’s more people here than at the game,” he quipped. “Is there something special going on tonight?”

That was classic Boeheim – a wisenheimer of the highest order. Much of the time, that act is entertaining. This time, it was completely the wrong tone to take in the current context.

As a matter of fact, Jim, there is something special going on at Syracuse University right now. Something especially disturbing. Something that demands a more serious manner from a guy that a good portion of the nation would love to see fired right now.

Your right-hand assistant, Bernie Fine, was fired two days ago amid allegations of child molestation. This was your first chance to stand behind a microphone and defend/explain yourself with live words after a jarring turn of events Sunday.

A third accuser came forward and a surreal audio tape was released indicating that Fine’s wife, Laurie, knew or at least suspected her husband was abusing former Syracuse ball boy Bobby Davis. Those revelations and the termination of Fine suddenly put your vigorous attack of Fine’s accusers – calling them liars in search of a payday – in a new light.

You apologized in a statement Sunday, saying, “I deeply regret any statements I made that might have … been insensitive to victims of abuse.” But Tuesday night, here and now, you needed to turn that stated regret into a living, breathing, believable emotion at the podium.

It didn’t happen.

Boeheim was not combative, but neither was he contrite. The words “I’m sorry” were not uttered once in a long and interesting news conference. He said a lot more than many anticipated he would say, but he never said those two words.

On this night, he sounded like another icon coach caught in a moment he can’t quite decipher, facing criticism he can’t quite fathom, failing to understand that a lifetime of having all the answers in a sporting context doesn’t mean you have all the answers in the greater realm. He sounded like a guy who doesn’t get it.

This issue is far bigger than sports. And as Joe Paterno found out earlier this month, there is a big, unforgiving world outside the cocoon of college sports that doesn’t care how many games you won or how long you’ve worked at a university if you have an accused pedophile on your staff or in your building. Even a hero coach can be abruptly and unceremoniously cut off at the knees in the court of public opinion.

Paterno lost his job, as swift and precipitous a fall from grace as we’ve ever seen in college sports. As of Tuesday afternoon, Boeheim had the support of his chancellor, Nancy Cantor, and that seems appropriate. The only thing we know he’s done wrong is to make some very inappropriate statements; he has not, to anyone’s knowledge, covered up or failed to report any allegations of criminal behavior by Fine.

But Boeheim’s mouth hasn’t done him many favors as the Fine saga plays out.

[Wetzel: Twist in abuse scandal puts Boeheim on hot seat]

The crowd that watches CNN and Fox News and MSNBC? A lot of them are interested in this story, but a lot of them don’t know the flippant Boeheim persona. When they see the video clips of an occasionally smirking, joking coach in the midst of a pedophilia investigation involving his trusted assistant, I don’t anticipate it playing well in mainstream America.

Repeatedly Tuesday night, he said “we have to wait” until the investigation plays out. Problem is, Boeheim refused to wait before firing shots at Bobby Davis and his stepbrother, Mark Lang.

I asked him if he wished now that he would have waited before speaking out then. Without saying no, he said no.

“I supported a friend,” he said. “That’s what I did. I’m proud I did. You know them 48 years, you went to school with them, I think you owe an allegiance and debt to him …”

That drew applause in the interview room from Boeheim’s family members and others. It probably won’t draw a lot of applause from outside the 315 area code because it’s only half an explanation. Boeheim did far more than support a friend; he went on the offensive – to the outrage of some advocates of sex-abuse victims.

Among those is Fr. Robert Hoatson, a Catholic priest who runs a non-profit organization called Road to Recovery based in New Jersey. The New York Daily News reported that Hoatson was in Syracuse on Tuesday to meet with a potential fourth victim of sexual abuse at the hands of Bernie Fine.

While Boeheim was giving the media an indication that he believes Fine and Syracuse will be exonerated – “I do my job; what happened on my watch, we will see,” he said – more allegations could be forthcoming.

Give Boeheim credit for this: He stood in there and answered a lot of questions, probably more than the Syracuse media relations department wished he would have and more than his wife, Juli, wished he would have. (At one point, off to the side of the room, she was signaling for Syracuse officials to cut off the questioning.)

He clearly believes there has been a lot of unfair criticism aimed his way, and he’s right to a degree. In the world of hanging judges on Twitter, plenty of people seem inconvenienced by waiting for the legal proceedings to play out; they just know they want Jim Boeheim fired and Bernie Fine imprisoned and Laurie Fine sent to jail or therapy or both. (If Twitter were around during the Duke lacrosse fiasco, the entire university might have been shut down before the involved players were cleared of charges.)

But Boeheim’s repeated assertion that after 36 years at Syracuse he’s little more than a glorified blue-collar employee rings false.

“I have zero say in who’s hired, fired, assigned,” he said. “Period. I have a say in who starts and what plays we run.”

He does not wield the power of Joe Paterno at Penn State – nobody does – but neither does he have zero say around here. Just ask his point guard, Scoop Jardine.

“Why wouldn’t he [have a say in major decisions at Syracuse]? ” Jardine said. “He’s been here, what, 36 years?”

The 36 years of service and 863 victories are helping him now with the home base. In the Carrier Dome on Tuesday night, there was a lot of support for the coach.

He got a standing ovation from the crowd when he stepped on the court that bears his name, and another one when the public-address announcer introduced him. Eastern Michigan coach Rob Murphy, a former Boeheim assistant, had an emotional embrace with him before the game.

“I look at Coach Boeheim as a mentor,” Murphy said. “A father figure.”

[Recap: rivals.yahoo.com/ncaa/bask etball/recap? gid=201111290553">Syracuse 84, Eastern Michigan 48]

Murphy’s director of basketball operations, Victoria Sun, was a Syracuse student manager from 1993-95. She never saw anything amiss with Fine, and she maintains a good relationship with Boeheim. She sent him a “happy birthday” text Nov. 17 – which turned out to be the day the Fine allegations first surfaced.

“I grew up watching Syracuse, loving Jim Boeheim and Syracuse basketball,” Sun said. “When something happens to what I consider my family, it kind of hurts.”

In a troubling and unsure situation, one thing seems certain: It’s no time for the embattled basketball coach to be cracking jokes. It only deepens the belief that Jim Boeheim doesn’t get it.

Jethro Tull  posted on  2011-11-30   10:37:26 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Jethro Tull (#11)

In the world of hanging judges on Twitter, plenty of people seem inconvenienced by waiting for the legal proceedings to play out; they just know they want Jim Boeheim fired and Bernie Fine imprisoned and Laurie Fine sent to jail or therapy or both. (If Twitter were around during the Duke lacrosse fiasco, the entire university might have been shut down before the involved players were cleared of charges.)

good point! and on the way, a lot of lives were ruined before it all played out.

christine  posted on  2011-11-30   11:32:20 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


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