It's out there.
It's a phrase that's become shorthand for one of the most
interesting and important ethical dilemmas facing journalists in the Internet
era.
Someone with access to the World Wide Web has posted something about somebody that may or may or may not be true -- but is almost
certainly interesting, significant or otherwise worthy of discussion.
But how and where should that discussion take place?
News organizations in Idaho
and Washington
faced those questions last month when an activist blogger posted an item
claiming that Sen. Larry Craig, R-Idaho, had had sex with four men.
In the accompanying story, Poynter's Pat Walters explores
the difficult decision-making that the blog post touched off in several
newsrooms. How to resolve the tension between providing information that at
least some readers regard as important without doing undue harm to various
stakeholders -- especially Sen. Craig?
The dilemma gets more complicated when the information has
not been verified. Craig dismisses the claims as "ridiculous," and the blogger, Mike Rogers, refuses to name his sources.
The Craig case prompted some tough calls at Poynter, too.
The Spokesman
Review, which is published near the eastern border of Washington and also circulates in Idaho, reported Rogers' claims on two of its blogs Oct. 17 and in an article in its
print edition the next day. Poynter's Jim Romenesko
posted an item to his section of Poynter Online headlined: "Spokane paper says it
can’t ignore rumors about senator."
As the author of a site devoted to tracking news about news,
Romenesko found himself in a similar situation: How could he ignore what The Spokesman Review was doing and
saying about such a critical and interesting journalistic dilemma?
Romenesko, who is based outside Chicago but works full-time for Poynter,
posts live to the site. I read his items as he posts throughout the day, along with other Poynter colleagues, and call or e-mail Romenesko if we spot anything that raises a question or concern. In this case, Romenesko posted the item summarizing what The Spokesman Review was reporting just
after 2:30 p.m. Oct. 18. The item prompted a call from me, not because I
disagreed with the decision to post but because I wanted to know more.
It wasn't until later that afternoon that I began having
second thoughts about going with the item. I spoke with Poynter's Bob Steele,
who had heard from a couple of other editors -- Vicki Gowler at the Idaho Statesman in Boise and Dean Miller at the
Post Register in Idaho Falls -- who were making
quite different decisions than The Spokesman
Review had reached.
As Walters reports in the accompanying story, these and other editors told their staffs to keep digging but to hold off
publishing until they knew more. In the end, Romenesko and I decided Poynter
should do the same. Romenesko removed
the item at about 5:30 p.m.
We're publishing details of the case now, including the
claims about Craig, after extensive reporting by Walters and discussions by
staff and faculty at Poynter. We also used the ASNE/Poynter Ethics Tool to help zero in on the key issues and alternatives. The main question before us: How do we help our
constituency of journalists, who are facing more and more problems just like
this, without doing undue harm to Craig and others in similar circumstances?
Our answer: Reporting the story enables us to put the
situation in the kind of context and perspective that we believe will help
journalists wrestle with similar dilemmas. We recognize that reporting the
claims does harm to Craig, but we have sought to minimize that by reporting his
denials and by inviting him to comment further. Through his press secretary, he
declined.
We recognize we're a long way from a perfect resolution to
the It's out there dilemma. We're continuing to work on it, and we invite
your scrutiny and your ideas along the way.