3 Journalists Leave CNN for Publishing Unverified Trump/Russia Hit Piece

 

The DC press corps, desperate to sink Trump, post a new story about Russian election meddling daily. Most of these stories share the common threads of unnamed sources, assumption of bad faith, and wild conjecture. A particularly odious example was a CNN piece published late last week claiming that Senate investigators were looking into Trump backer Anthony Scaramucci’s connections to a Russian investment fund. The allegation was made on the word of a single unnamed source.

Friday night the story vanished from CNN’s website, and some hours later, was replaced with a formal retraction notice and an apology to Scaramucci. After a busy weekend, all three journalists involved with the piece have resigned from the network: Thomas Frank, who wrote the story; Eric Lichtblau, an editor in the unit; and Lex Haris, who oversaw the unit.

The departures of Haris, Lichtblau and Frank are likely to come as a surprise to colleagues, particularly given the reputations of the three men.

Frank worked for USA Today and Newsday for three decades, pursuing investigations and covering the Iraq war as an embedded reporter, before coming to work at CNN.

He was part of an ambitious new investigative unit that was created last winter, bringing together existing teams from within the company and new hires like Lichtblau.

A veteran of The New York Times who won a Pulitzer Prize for national reporting in 2006, Lichtblau joined CNN just three months ago.

Haris, who was named the executive editor of CNN Investigates in January, was previously the executive editor of CNNMoney.

Although CNN didn’t admit that the story necessarily wrong, they determined their editorial processes were not followed. In a tweet over the weekend, Scaramucci said, “CNN did the right thing. Classy move. Apology accepted. Everyone makes mistakes. Moving on.”

Though this discipline won’t end the DC press corps’ mania for Kremlin conspiracies, it’s good to see one of the most egregious examples retracted and the journalists punished. The mainstream media has gotten way over its skis on the Trump/Russia allegations and perhaps this incident will give them pause before clicking “publish.”

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  1. Instugator Thatcher
    Instugator
    @Instugator

    Well, well, well – lookie here.

    Project Veritas has a CNN producer on film admitting the Russian narrative is clickbait and that it comes from the top.

    The moneyline:

    “My boss, I shouldn’t say this, my boss yesterday we were having a discussion about this dental shoot and he goes and he was just like I want you to know what we are up against here,” Bonifield is seen saying. “And he goes, just to give you some context, President Trump pulled out of the climate accords and for a day and a half we covered the climate accords. And the CEO of CNN said in our internal meeting, he said good job everybody covering the climate accords, but we’re done with it let’s get back to Russia.” — John Bonifield, supervising producer for CNN Health.

    Here is the video

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jdP8TiKY8dE

    • #31
  2. Fritz Coolidge
    Fritz
    @Fritz

    Scaramucci’s acceptance of the CNN apology is nice, but he still could have a legal case for defamation, based on CNN’s reckless disregard for whether the story was true or not. I imagine right now, legal beagles are assessing whether the effort is worth it, given that such as case could provide a mallet with which to bash CNN repeatedly over the coming months.  I am not advocating it, but simply stating that turnabout is, after all, fair play.

    • #32
  3. profdlp Inactive
    profdlp
    @profdlp

    This whole topic is based on the false premise that CNN employs “journalists”.

    • #33
  4. JosePluma Coolidge
    JosePluma
    @JosePluma

    EJHill (View Comment):When one of these guys ends up changing tires in Wal-Mart in Des Moines I’ll feel sorry for them.

    Oh, who am I kidding? No, I won’t.

    That’s an honest profession requiring effort, so it’s beyond their abilities. I’ll be satisfied when the only writing they do is “will work for food” on a piece of cardboard. Being expert fiction writers, I think they can handle that.

    • #34
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