United States

4 January 2006

Tragically wrong, The Post stumbles

It is sad to watch from Washington as The Washington Post stumbles through another embarrassing error, one aggravated by clumsy editing and internal confusion between print and online operations. Like many newspapers and broadcasters, The Post carried the tragically wrong news late last night and early today that 12 of 13 trapped coal miners in West Virginia had been found safe and alive...

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4 January 2006

Shocking turnabout: Sago Mine families told just 1 alive

TALLMANSVILLE, W.Va. -- In a bizarre chain of events, initial reports that 12 of 13 miners had survived an explosion turned out to be false as company officials reported that only one miner had been found alive. The news shocked and angered family members, who had been informed around midnight that 12 miners had been found alive. That joy lasted for only three hours. Ben Hatfield, president and...

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4 January 2006

Truth about survivors came too late for Express-News, and many other newspapers

Readers of most editions of the San Antonio Express-News were heartened by the front-page news Wednesday morning that 12 of 13 miners trapped for a day and a half in a coal mine near Tallmansville, W.Va., had been rescued. The Express-News -- and many newspapers throughout the nation -- carried wire reports quoting West Virginia Gov. Joe Manchin, who told The Associated Press: "They told us they...

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4 January 2006

AP Says It Had 'Credible Sources' for False Mine Rescue Stories--Blames 'Mine Company Offiicials'

NEW YORK The Associated Press, which carried to newspapers around the world false reports on trapped miners being rescued in West Virginia late Tuesday night, said in a statement this afternoon that it had reported "accurately" based on information "provided by credible sources--family members and the governor." The statement by Mike Silverman, the news agency's managing editor, read: "AP was...

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4 January 2006

Miners' families, friends want answers

TALLMANSVILLE, W.Va. (AP) – High on a tree-shaded hill beside the Sago Baptist Church, the moss-covered inscription on a weathered tombstone reads: "Sometime we will understand." There is so much the people of this central Appalachian coal community are waiting to understand: How an explosion two miles into a mountain had trapped 13 of their men and how someone could tell them that 12 of the...

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4 January 2006

False Report of 12 Survivors Was Result of Miscommunications

SAGO, W. Va., Jan. 4 - The mistaken information last night that 12 of 13 miners trapped in a West Virginia coal mine had been saved, when in fact 12 were dead and only one was alive, came through a series of miscommunications among rescue workers and others exhausted from more than 30 hours of searching, and desperate for a good ending to a tragic situation, the president of the mining company...

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4 January 2006

Media forced to explain inaccurate reports on tragedy

Newspapers, wire services and cable news networks all failed in one degree or another to do their jobs properly when they reported that 12 men had survived the coal mine disaster in West Virginia, media critics and chastened editors say. The collective failure was most apparent Wednesday morning on front pages across the nation. Headlines, including in about 45% of USA TODAY's 2.2 million copies...

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3 January 2006

The Lobbyist in the Mineshaft

It's painful to watch television news producers try to figure out the relative importance of the unfolding stories of the 13 trapped miners in West Virginia, and the more than 13 trapped Congressmen in Washington. Sending Rita Cosby and Anderson Cooper to the site of the mineshaft tragedy, where cameras can record family members' every painful reaction, is in the great ghoulish tradition of...

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2 January 2006

NYT reporter's new book reveals secret war operations

WASHINGTON (AP) A new book on the government's secret anti-terrorism operations describes how the CIA recruited an Iraqi-American anesthesiologist in 2002 to obtain information from her brother, who was a figure in Saddam Hussein's nuclear program. Dr. Sawsan Alhaddad of Cleveland made the dangerous trip to Iraq on the CIA's behalf. The book said her brother was stunned by her questions about the...

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26 December 2005

Dangerous fluff: Authors say media has spun itself out

As with lots of pressing issues people grapple with, complaints about the media invite a partisan clash: liberal vs. conservative; Democrat vs. Republican. Or some other "us" against a readily targeted "them." But maybe there’s a more useful, even unifying mind-set: to see the media delivery system for news, entertainment and other programming as being skewed in a cross-the-board, nondoctrinaire...

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