The Gray Lady and Miss Run Amok
Howard Kurtz’s piece for today’s Washington Post on Judith Miller and Pflamegate is a must-read, as the left’s latest bogus scandal expires with a whimper: Reporter, Times Are Criticized for Missteps. (Hat tip: zombie.)
Media analysts assailed New York Times reporter Judith Miller and her editors yesterday for what they called a series of missteps and questionable decisions revealed in two lengthy articles about the problems of covering the CIA leak investigation while defending the embattled journalist.
Alex Jones, a former Times reporter who heads the Shorenstein Center on the Press, Politics and Public Policy at Harvard University, noted the paper’s disclosure that Executive Editor Bill Keller had told Miller in 2003 she could no longer cover Iraq and weapons of mass destruction after some of her stories turned out to be wrong.
“If the New York Times does not trust Judy Miller to do stories in her area of expertise, what do they trust her to do, and why should we trust what she does?” Jones asked. “She’s a great, energetic talent, but investigative reporters need to be managed very closely, and her characterization of herself as Miss Run Amok is something an institution like the New York Times can’t afford.”
Critics inside and outside the paper said they were amazed that Miller would not answer questions about her dealings with editors or show her notes to colleagues investigating the matter. They were equally surprised that Keller and Publisher Arthur O. Sulzberger Jr. left most legal decisions to Miller without pressing her about her conversations with I. Lewis “Scooter” Libby, Vice President Cheney’s top aide, or asking to see her notes during the battle that landed her in jail for nearly three months.