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Ethics
While campaigning
for the presidency of Mexico, Vicente Fox went to a political rally
in Washington in 2000. Since he was campaigning in the United States,
Fox decided to conduct the event in English. Those questions that
were submitted by Mexicans in attendance, in Spanish, were translated
into English and answered in English.
Near the end
of the session, a television crew from a Mexican station arrived.
The producer was surprised that the event was being held in English,
rather than in Spanish.
What would
you have done in this case?
Results of
the Previous Problems
When
does a journalist become a participant in the story?
By John Virtue
Results
Journalists
record the news and are not supposed to become participants in news
events;.yet, they are often confronted with life and death situations.
One classic
example: during the war in Vietnam, a monk doused himself with gasoline
and set himself on fire to protest hostilities. Peter Arnett, then
a reporter for the Associated Press, said he could have saved the
monks life by removing the can of gasoline, but didnt
because that was not what a journalist did. He also said that such
an action would not have saved the monks life because the
man would have returned later to protest the war by committing suicide.
Of those who
responded to the case involving another man determined to protest
by dousing himself in gasoline and lighting a match, 42 percent
said they would have left their camera in their vehicles and tried
to convince the man to abandon his plans. Another 26 percent said
they would have tried to convince the man while filming. Twenty-three
percent would have called the police and not filmed. Just 9 percent
would have filmed and not tried to dissuade the man.
Was there a
proper ethical response? This is one of those rare cases where the
reporter acts instinctively at the last moment. All four responses
can be justified.
However, filming
while trying to dissuade the man fulfils both a journalistic and
a humanitarian goal.
I dont
know what happened in the actual case.
The case
A man calls
the TV station where you work to announce he is going to set himself
on fire to protest the high unemployment rate. You pay no attention
until the man calls for the third time, and then you call the police.
The man, a 37-year-old
unemployed construction laborer, is obviously drunk, and asks you
to send a reporter with a cameraman to the Central Plaza. None of
your reporters is available, so you send two cameramen, a veteran
and a rookie.
The rookie
is a university student and part-time employee who, you hope, will
act as reporter while trying to get some shots.
When the two
cameramen arrive at the scene, the man approaches them, douses himself
in gasoline and lights a match, yelling at them to keep their distance.
The more experienced cameraman manages to get some footage before
his partner rushes the man, trying to extinguish the fire with his
notebook. The fire burns until the man runs across the Plaza and
a fireman puts it out with a fire extinguisher.
What would
you have done?
1. Nothing,
except call the police, because the very presence of the cameras
would prompt the man to set himself on fire.
2. Get the footage
and then try to help the man.
3. Leave the
cameras in the car and try to talk the man out of his purpose.
4. Try to dissuade
the man from setting himself on fire while getting the footage.
Can
you break the law to get the story?
By John Virtue
Results
By a margin
of better than four-to-one, 82% to 18%, respondents opted to disclose
to the audience that the film crew had violated state law in filming
the corrupt officials gambling at the casino.
This is the
first ethics case used in Pulso that reflects an actual case that
originated in the United States, although a parallel case occurred
in Mexico recently when a public official was also caught gambling.
This case came
to light last September in Las Vegas at an investigative reporters'
convention, which coincidentally was held in the MGM Grand, probably
the largest casino in Las Vegas. And indeed, there are prominent
warning signs posted warning that filming at the casino is against
the law in the state of Nevada.
A television
reporter presented the case as an example of good investigative
reporting. Another reporter in the audience asked the presenter
if she had disclosed to the audience that the station had broken
the law to obtain the video.
She said it
had not, but added that she would probably advise the audience were
she to find herself in a similar situation in the future.
I have certain
reservations about this case, the prime one being that such laws
are likely pushed through state legislatures by casino operators
seeking to protect their customers, or more to the point, their
financial interests.
The case
You are assigned
to film with a hidden camera the activities of three municipal employees
attending a convention at a hotel casino. Your television station
had been alerted by a disgruntled employee that these three have
been to previous conventions and spent all of their time in the
casino and not in the conference rooms. Sure enough, as you follow
the three men about, you find they spend almost all of their time
gambling, which you videotape. There are posted signs saying that
the taking of photographs or videotaping in the casino is a crime
under state law.
What should
your producer do with your report since you broke the law to obtain
it?
1. Tell the
viewers that you ignored prohibitions on videotaping because the
story was of sufficient importance to justify it.
2. Show the
footage without any mention of the prohibition.
Compromised
journalist?
By John Virtue
Results
No one likes
to be used by someone else. But that is what happened to the reporter
in this case, who discovered that the sugar company that was the
object of his investigation had coordinated the interviews he was
to make with the help of a media consultant.
Heres
what Pulso readers would have done:
1. Ignore the
document and continue with his story. 8%
2. Ignore the
document and not do the story. 0%
3. Continue
with his story, but before publishing it, tell his editor what he
found out and let him decide. 33%
4. Publish
the story of the document he found, including the list of media
and journalists involved, as well as the name of the journalist
who developed the plan. 21%
5. Publish
the story along with interviews of all involved. 2%
6. Talk to
company administrators. Tell them he is a professional working for
an ethical medium which does not allow practices such as those in
the plan and not publish the story. 36%
I agree with
the plurality who elected option 6: confront the administration.
This was a case
presented at recent a workshop in Nicaragua. I dont know what
decision the reporter finally took, but I hope he consulted first
with his editor, No. 3. He could then advise him what to do: confront
the administration or continue with the report.
The case
A journalist
working on a story about the increase in sugar production visits
a sugar mill, he interviews several people, and in an idle moment,
finds himself alone in an office. While there, he finds some documents
that outline a plan to improve the image of the company that owns
the sugar mill, drafted by a self-proclaimed independent
journalist.
The document
includes a list of media and journalists to be paid for publishing
articles burnishing the companys image. Among the names, the
journalist finds his own. What should he do?
1. Ignore the
document and continue with his story.
2. Ignore the
document and not do the story.
3. Continue
with his story, but before publishing it, tell his editor what he
found out and let him decide.
4. Publish the
story of the document he found, including the list of media and
journalists involved, as well as the name of the journalist who
developed the plan.
5. Publish the
story along with interviews of all involved.
6. Talk to company
administrators. Tell them he is a professional working for an ethical
medium which does not allow practices such as those in the plan
and not publish the story.
Can
you use an old interview as if it were current?
By John Virtue
Results
Those of you
who responded overwhelmingly chose to publish an interview the following
day, even though the competition would have had the story first,
rather than use an old interview as if it were new: 92 percent.
If any of the
other options were used, probably only the president of the university
would have known. But he would have known that the newspaper was
not being honest with its readers. He would no longer consider the
newspaper credible.
The source
of this case study was a newspaper that published an old interview
as if it were new.
The case
You are the
editor of a newspaper and you send a reporter to interview the president
of one of the universities in the country to find out what he thinks
about a bill being debated in Congress and how it would affect the
finances of the university. Later you decide to spike the story.
Two weeks later,
the debate increases in intensity and the president of another university,
whom we shall call president B, releases a strong statement about
the proposed legislation. His point of view is diametrally opposed
to those of president A, that were never published.
Taking into
account that president A may have modified his opinion since the
initial interview, you send another reporter to talk to him so that
he can get his reaction to president B's statement. Yet, this time
president A is not able to grant the interview. With deadline looming,
your reporter calls you to say he saw a rival walk out of the president's
office.
What would
you do?
1. Tell your
reporter to hang around and interview the president even if it
may be after your deadline for the day's paper.
2. Publish
the two-week-old interview as if it were new, and omit the reporter's
byline.
3. Publish
the two-week-old interview as if it were new with the reporter's
byline.
4. Combine
the old interview with the new material by the second reporter,
pointing out the difference between presidents A's and B's opinions,
and publish the story under a common byline, without mentioning
that some of the material is two weeks old.
5. The same
as the previous example, except you would include an explanation
that president A's opinions are from two weeks before.
How
do you stop a reporter who distorts remarks?
By John Virtue
Results
Those who responded
to the case involving a reporter who distorted the remarks of someone
whom he interviewed were almost equally divided between talking
to the editor in charge (45%) and talking to the reporter (43%).
The rest would have done nothing.
This case reflects
what happened at an important American newspaper. The person who
discovered that the reporter had distorted an interview asked for
my opinion on what he should do. I agree with either approach: talk
to the editor or talk to the reporter. The important thing is to
put an end to such a practice because it will inevitably affect
the credibility of the media.
The case
You are recently
out of journalism school and are on probation for 60 days at an
important newspaper. You are assigned to do research for the newspapers
star reporter. Towards the end of your probation, you become aware
that they possibly wont keep you because you heard the reporter
tell the editor that you are not up to the newspapers standards.
On a certain
occasion, you happened to see the reporters notes of an interview
with a confidential source. When the story appears in the front
page, you realize the reporter has spiced up the sources information.
What do you
do?
Tell the editor.
Tell the reporter
that you have noticed the discrepancies.
Do nothing,
even though it makes you feel guilty.
Do
you keep using the reporter?
By John Virtue
Results
Of those that
responded, 75% would have fired the reporter and published a story
telling the public about the incident. A further 20% would have
just fired the reporter, and the remaining 5% would have done nothing.
Firing the
reporter and informing the public is, of course, the most ethical
and complete solution to the problem. Thats what El Universo,
in Guayaquil, did in this real-life case.
The case
Your newspaper
employs as a stringer a reporter who works for a radio station in
the interior of the country. The reporter files a flattering interview
with the legislator who represents the province where the radio
station is located.
Months later,
the newspapers editor receives a letter from the legislator
with a photocopy of a check made out to the reporter. The legislator
says that the check was in payment for the interview but that the
reporter has since started to criticize him on the radio station
where he works. The legislator says he is writing because he fears
the reporter will continue to criticize him unless he makes another
payment.
What should
the editor do?
Do
you hold a story?
By John Virtue
Results
True story.
The president was the late Omar Torrijos of Panama, who charmed
the two female reporters accompanying him.
Unfortunately,
the reporter who had to fly to her home base was shocked to learn
that the other reporter had immediately filed her story, despite
having agreed to wait until the next day. So, the reporter who had
arranged for the interview was beaten.
When a reporter
gives his word to a source that he will maintain the sources
confidentiality, the source knows he will keep his word. The same
should apply when one reporter makes a promise to another.
Of those who
replied to the case, 81 per cent would have filed the story without
waiting.
The case
A reporter from
news agency A has been trying for many months to get
an interview with the president of a neighboring country. The president
is about to make a weekend helicopter trip to the interior and invites
her along. At the last minute, his press secretary says that the
local reporter for news agency B should also be invited.
The reporter
from agency A was not very happy to meet her competitor
at the airport when she boarded the presidential helicopter.
During the trip,
the president anticipated several important announcements he planned
to make over the next several days.
At the end of
the trip, the reporter from agency A had to catch a
flight back to the neighboring capital where she was based, since
she had made a reservation unaware that her competitor would be
along. She asked the reporter from agency B not to file
her story until the next day since she would not have an opportunity
to file her own story until then.
How should reporter
B respond to the request?
Do
you use the photographs?
By John Virtue
Results
The results
were almost evenly split between those who would publish photos
of beer bottles found in a commercial truck involved in an accident
with a car, whose driver took the photos. Forty-eight percent would
have published the photos, 52% would have rejected them.
The fact that
there were beer bottles in the truck did not mean that the driver
had been drinking. He said he was returning them for a deposit.
When I was
a teenager, I was the passenger in a car, driven by a friend, that
was involved in an accident. When my friends father was told
of the accident, he remembered that there were beer bottles in the
trunk and sent someone to the scene to retrieve them before the
police arrived. The beer bottles had nothing to do with the accident
but might have raised suspicions.
The photos
should not have been used.
The case
A commercial
truck and a private car are involved in a spectacular traffic accident,
although no one is killed or injured. There are no witnesses.
The driver
of the car sees some empty beer bottles on the floor of the cab
of the truck. He goes back to his car, gets a camera and takes pictures
of the bottles and of the vehicles.
When a representative
of the company that owns the truck arrives, the car driver demands
that the company pay for the repairs to his car, because the truck
driver had been drinking. The representative refuses, saying this
is an issue for the police and the insurance company. He adds that
the beer bottles came from a party held a few days earlier and that
the driver was returning them for their deposit.
The driver of
the car then goes to the local news media with the photos.
Do you publish
the photos of the beer bottles?
Does
the source stipulate publication date?
By John Virtue
Results
By a margin
of 76% to 24% respondents would not agree to a source deciding on
which day an article would be published.
I agree with
the majority, but with some reservations. For instance, the news
might have more impact if published or broadcast on the day the
source wanted. But if the source wants the release timed to the
beginning of an advertising campaign, for instance, the media should
refuse, because the interest of the public would not be paramount.
The case
A news source
has an interesting story to tell but, as a condition of talking
to the reporter from a local newspaper, he wants to specify the
day in which the article will be published.
If you were
the editor of the newspaper, would you:
1. Agree to
the request to publish the article on the day requested by the source?
2. Tell the
source you cannot accept any pre-conditions to the interview?
Made-up
name for a source?
By John Virtue
Results
Most of you,
49 percent, would suspend the reporter and publish an explanation
of what had transpired.
Another 34 percent
would just warn the reporter. Eleven percent would suspend the reporter
and just six percent would fire her.
Those were
the results of the case study on the Spanish page of Pulso. The
results for those participating in the English section ran along
the same lines.
Suspend and
publish an explanation - 28%
Warn - 36%
Suspend - 27%
Fire - 9%
The similarity
of the results shows that journalism ethics are universal.
The case in
question occurred in Chihuahua, Mexico, and the reporter was fired.
No explanation was published.
As a former
newspaper editor, I would probably have suspended the reporter and,
of course, published an explanation.
The case illustrates
the danger of using friends as sources or of becoming friends with
sources. The friendship can affect or influence the reporters
judgment.
The case
A newspaper
reporter was good friends with the director of the public relations
department of one of the citys largest employers.
One day one
of the directors subordinates inadvertently commented that
the company planned mass firings involving hundreds of employees.
The reporter
knew that if she wrote about the planned firings her friendship
with the director would be affected. Yet, this was a major story
for her newspaper.
The reporter
wrote the story and attributed news of the planned firing to an
employee whose name she invented. The company soon determined that
no such employee existed, so it demanded of the editor an explanation
of the origin of the story.
The reporter
admitted what she had done.
If you were
the editor of the newspaper, what would you do:
1. Just warn
the reporter not to do such a thing again.
2. Suspend the
reporter.
3. Fire the
reporter.
4. Suspend or
fire the reporter and carry an editor's note advising readers.
Bow
to threats?
By John Virtue
Results
Almost half
of those who responded - 48% - voted for the third option: Dont
tell anyone about the threat.
Thirty-four
per cent would have told their wives of the threat and promised
to ask for a transfer to a less dangerous assignment once the investigation
was completed.
The remaining
18% would have bowed to the threat and stopped the investigation.
This case was
prompted by a question asked of me by an investigative reporter
in Asunción, Paraguay, following a speech I had delivered
to a group of journalists and students.
I told him
of interviewing the top investigative reporter of La República
in Lima a few years earlier. The man was ecstatic that day: El
Vaticano, at the time Perus leading drug trafficker,
had just been arrested in Bogota. Many of his investigations had
dealt with El Vaticano.
The Peruvian
journalist told me that he had received so many death threats that
he constantly altered the route he took between his home and the
newspaper. His wife finally tired of the threats and left him, taking
their young children.
There is no
right or wrong answer, but I believe that those who responded had
their priorities in order, placing the publics right to know
above their own personal safety.
The case
Over a period
of several years as an investigative reporter you have received
several threats of death if you continued your investigations. You
continued them and nothing happened. Now you have two small children
and its your wife who says that you should seek a safer beat
or she will consider leaving you and taking the children. Youre
involved in an investigation of drug trafficking. You receive a
warning to stop the investigation or you run the risk of being killed.
What do you
do?
1 Bow to the
threats and abandon the investigation.
2 Tell your
wife of the threat and promise to ask for a transfer after you finish
the investigation.
3 Dont
tell anyone about the threat.
To
print or not to print?
By John Virtue
Results
Most of the
respondents 52% said they would return the check given
to them by the football teams publicist and publish a story
denouncing the attempted bribe. Thats exactly what the newspaper
El Diario de Hoy of San Salvador once did. It not only published
a story but reproduced the check with the following caption:
The manifold ways in which persons or organizations interested
in publicizing their activities will pressure a journalist range
from gifts to offerings of money. The managers and owners of news
media and the journalists should help erradicate this practice.
Another sizeable
portion 31% said they would return the check and advise
the editor of what had happened.
Another 10%
would return the check and not advise the editor. Just 4% would
keep the check and not say anything.
The case
During a meeting
with a soccer teams executives, a PR man distributes envelopes
to all the sports writers present.
Afterwards,
one of the journalists finds the envelope contains 100 dollars.
Back in the newsroom, he tells his editor, who proposes to publish
the incident.
The journalist
considers the possibility that his colleagues in other media, who
may have kept the money, will ostracize him, and that his sources
with the team may dry up if he denounces the attempted bribery.
What would you
have done?
1 Not tell the
editor and return the envelope, without publishing the incident.
2 Tell the editor
and return the envelope, without publishing the incident.
3 Return the
envelope and publish the incident.
4 Keep the envelope
and not say a word.
Professional
courtesy?
By John Virtue
Results
If the son of
the owner of a competing television station tried to commit suicide
and you taped his remarks before knowing who he was, most of you
would transmit the item on the grounds it was news: 55%.
Exactly one-third
would have asked the competing station to see what treatment it
was going to give and would have followed suit.
When the competing
station called, 5% would have not taken the call and used the item.
Just 4% would
not have used the item and 2% would have told the station the item
would not be used and would have put it on the air anyways.
A good question
to ask yourself is: would I use the item if I didnt know the
relationship of the would-be suicide to the competing television
station? If the answer is yes, then you should use the item. If
youre using the item to embarrass the owner of the other station,
then youre not motivated by the news content.
We have noted
a tendency in some countries to protect colleagues, on the grounds
they would protect us is were involved in an embarrassing
situation, such as being arrested for drunk driving. If we do that,
then were giving our loyalty to our colleagues and not to
the public.
The case
You are the
news director of a local TV station and your reporter just came
in with a story about a young man who tried to kill himself by driving
off the road into a river bed.
The reporter
has taped the statement made by the man after he was rescued, in
which he says he wanted to kill himself because his family doesn't
love him. It's all on tape.
The next minute
you get a call from one of the higher-ups at another TV station
across town. It turns out your would-be suicide is the youngest
son of that station's owner, and they are asking for your discretion
in handling the news. Not too subtly, they are asking you not to
air the piece.
Take into account
that they, the competition, also covered the accident, but they
didn't get the man's statement on tape. Only your reporter got that.
What would
you do?
1 Tell the man
who called not to worry, that you won't air it, and then put it
on anyway.
2 You tell him
this is news and you can't make distinctions for anyone's relative,
and that you will broadcast it.
3 You ask him
how they are going to treat the story, and you treat it the same
way.
4 You tell the
man not to worry, and shelve the tape.
5 You tell your
secretary to say you are not in the office, and you broadcast the
story.
Professionalism
or compassion?
By John Virtue
Results
This case study
was originally published by the Toronto Star, in Canada. The newspaper
invited its readers and 21 editors to reply.
65% of the
editors and 23% of the readers said they would publish the story.
35% of the editors and 46% of the readers said they would wait for
the wife's condition to improve. Finally, 31% of the readers and
none of the editors would have spiked the story, giving the man
the opportunity to make good on his promise to make restitution.
Why is there
a marked difference between the opinions of the editors and those
of the readers? The editors are guided by their professional judgement
of what constitutes legitimate news, whereas the readers may invoke
a number of other considerations which, in this case, makes them
appear to be more compassionate. That difference is something that
we journalists should always keep in mind.
What did Pulso
readers say?
46% would have
published the story, 34% would have waited for the wife's condition
to improve, and 20% would have withheld publication, giving the
man an opportunity to make restitution.
What would
I have done? Id have published the story.
The case
The newspaper
of which you are the editor has exclusive proof that a man considered
a pillar of society has embezzled 50 thousand dollars from a charity
fund. He has not been charged. When confronted by a reporter, the
man promised to return the money. He begged the newspaper not to
publish the story because his wife is in the hospital in serious
condition and he fears that the scandal would kill her.
What would you
do?
1. Publish the
story.
2. Speak to
the doctors and wait for the wife to get better to publish the story.
3. Give the
man an opportunity to return the money and, if he does so, spike
the story.
Let
the editor decide?
By John Virtue
Results
The respondents
were equally divided between two possibilities, numbers 2 and 4,
that is, telling the editor and returning the 50 dollars. They both
received 42% of the replies. Fifteen percent would have called the
diplomats assistant while only one per cent would have kept
the money.
Probably the
question I ask most often at ethics workshops is, Did you
discuss this with your editor? The answer is usually, No.
I then tell
the journalist that one of the reasons his boss makes more money
than he does is because he has the responsibility to make difficult
decisions and set an example of high ethical standards for the newsroom.
Let him earn his money.
Im always
surprised at the number of reporters who make key decisions themselves
without consulting their editors. Why? I ask them. The
usual answer is they know more than the editor.
Ive asked
a lot of journalists about this and have come to the conclusion
this belief has much to do with a generational change in the newsroom.
Young reporters who have university degrees in journalism have editors
who are self-educated. Some of the worlds great journalists
have been self-taught, so thats not an excuse for not consulting.
Maybe the ideal
solution was one not included in the options: return the money and
tell the editor why you did it.
The case
The foreign
editor sent one of his reporters to interview the ambassador of
a friendly power passing through the country on official business.
After the journalist
finished the interview, one of the diplomat's aides walked him to
the door. "I hope it was a good interview," he said, and
asked him to publish it the next day, before the ambassador left
the country. The journalist said he would try. When they shook hands,
the diplomat's aide slipped him a 50 dollar bill.
The journalist
felt offended, and asked why he was given the money. The aide told
him not to take it the wrong way, that it was a "diplomatic
gesture" commonly given to journalists in the countries they
visited.
On the way
back to the newsroom, the journalist thought about the situation.
On the one hand, he was upset because it seemed like a bribe. On
the other, this was an official of a friendly country who maybe
didn't have ulterior motives. Besides, if he chose to, no one needed
to find out about the incident.
What would
you do?
1. Keep quiet,
write the story and try to get it in the next day's paper.
2. Tell the
editor what happened and let him decide what to do with the money
and the interview.
3. Phone the
aide and let him know how indignant you were.
4. Write the
story and later return the 50 dollars.
A
misunderstanding with a source?
By John Virtue
Results
Public officials
and members of Congress should realize that a journalist is a journalist
24 hours a day, and act and talk accordingly. If they
don't want something to end up in the media, they shouldn't divulge
it, even at a social event. When the official learned that the journalist
had written an article which had not yet been published, he said
he had been talking as a friend and not as an official. I am reminded
of a comment by Maureen Dowd, columnist for The New York Times:
"A friendship between a reporter and a source lasts only until
it's convenient for one to betray the other".
Was this story
of such importance that the journalist would risk his friendship
with the official? Should a journalist be friends with a source
in the first place or should he keep the relationship on a professional
basis? Should a journalist routinely seek confirmation of a story
from a second - and even a third - source?
If the story
was so important that the journalist was prepared to rupture his
relationship with the official by publishing it, then it was a story
that needed confirmation by other sources.
The majority
of respondents 65% chose, in my opinion, the correct
option, No. 4: "Find more information and additional sources".
However, 21%
would have canceled the article and apologized. I fear such a course
would mean the journalist was putting the friendship ahead of the
public's right to know.
Another 13%
would have published the article without quoting the official, and
1% would have published the article as written.
Should a journalist
become friends with a source? Each person in such a relationship
wants something from the other: the journalist wants a story and
the source usually wants that story to be positive. That's hardly
the basis of a solid friendship.
The case
A journalist
has a conversation with a government official during a social function.
The official mentions some item of interest, but apparently innocuous,
about a government plan. The journalist decides that the information,
which does not seem to be scandalous or damaging, is of public interest
and writes an article quoting the official as his source. The journalist
thinks the article is so harmless that he does not think it necessary
to notify the official.
The official,
however, finds out about the article and calls the journalist to
ask him not to publish it. He accuses the journalist of using something
said in confidence, told him as a friend, not as a journalist. The
journalist then realizes that the information may not be as innocuous
as it originally appeared.
What would you
do?
1. Spike the
article and apologize to the official.
2. Publish
the article as written.
3. Find more
information and additional sources.
4. Publish
the article without the official's name.
Loyalty
to colleagues or to the audience?
By John Virtue
Results
We believe there
is only one correct option in the case involving the National Electoral
Board and payments made to journalists: publish an article giving
the names of the journalists involved. That was the recommendation
of 38% of those who replied.
An equal percentage
of participants voted to turn the matter over to the newspaper guild
for resolution.
Another 18%
would have written a letter to the National Electoral Board denouncing
the payments, but they would not have published an article.
Eleven percent
would have published the photocopy, which would have indicated the
National Electoral Board had committed an irregularity, but they
would have crossed out the names of the journalists who accepted
the payments.
Finally, 3%
would not have done anything.
Why do we say
that the only correct answer is publishing all the details? That's
the answer we get when we ask ourselves to whom we'd be giving our
loyalty in the five options mentioned. The answer in the other four
options, in varying degrees, is the guild. We'd be protecting our
colleagues. But if we published all the details, we'd be giving
our loyalty to the public, our readers, listeners and viewers.
That was what
the editor in this case did, earning the enmity of many of her colleagues,
one of whom made a death threat against her. The editor explained
her position: "The fact that we are in charge of the media does
not mean that we should keep silent to hide or protect colleagues
who mislead the public with false or manipulated information, whether
because they get paid or because they are themselves compromised."
The case
You are the
editor of a newspaper. One day, a reporter comes into your office.
He is furious, because the National Electoral Board has included
his name on a list of journalists who will receive a check for "professional
services." The reporter has a copy of the list that someone
left on a copier. He says he has never worked for any government
institution and that he considers it offensive to be included in
the list. He thinks the newspaper should denounce the payments,
but warns that he's heard that some of the journalists on the list
could react violently if their names are published.
What would you
do?
1. Thank the
reporter for his honesty and do nothing, because you don't want
to bring disrepute on the profession.
2. Use the photocopy
in an article denouncing the payments, but omit the names of the
journalists.
3. Write a letter
to the National Electoral Board stating the newspaper has a policy
forbidding journalists to accept payments from the government, but
not publish an article.
4. Publish an
article with the names of the journalists on the list.
5. Turn the
matter over to the Newspaper Guild for resolution.
A
photocopy before deadline
By John Virtue
Results
The majority
who responded to the case of the reporter unable to get a copy of
a document can be considered ethical journalists. Fifty-one percent
said they would take notes, while 11 per cent said they would seek
more time to complete the assignment.
However, 29
per cent said they would put the document in their briefcase and
presumably return it the following week, while 9 per cent would
have bribed someone to make a copy.
The reporter
involved in this incident came up to me after an ethics workshop
and asked me if she had acted ethically. She had bribed someone
to make a copy and was so pleased with herself that she told her
editor about it as soon as she entered the newsroom. To her great
surprise, the editor scolded her and said he was not going to reimburse
her for the bribe. We do not permit our reporters to accept
bribes, so we certainly dont offer bribes ourselves,
he said.
So what did
I tell the reporter? I said she used ingenuity in getting a copy
of the document, but dont do it again.
I agree with
the decision of the 51 per cent who would have taken notes.
The case
You are a reporter
for a magazine and have been given two weeks to produce an article
on how two young men turned a $5,000 investment into an electrical
power company worth millions of dollars, all in the space of a few
months.
You have all
the facts you need to write the article except one: the way the
pair legally constituted the company. One day before deadline a
government official gives you the file number of the document.
Armed with
this information, you go the appropriate government archive and
find the document minutes before closing time on a Friday afternoon.
There's a copying machine, but the person in charge says he cannot
make copies without the authorization of the director, who has already
left for the day.
You're left
with several options. Which one do you choose?
1. Slip the
document into your briefcase, make a photocopy elsewhere and return
Monday to replace it.
2. Tell your
editor you can't make the deadline and run the risk of losing the
exclusive because you can't get the photocopy made.
3. Take all
the notes you can before the office closes, even though this means
you won't be able to illustrate the article with a copy of the document.
4. Bribe the
person in charge of the copying machine to make a copy.
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