MONDAY, APRIL 24, 2006
Los Angeles Times
"It's completely baffling," says a Post staffer. "It's like putting their head in the sand." CJR executive editor
Mike Hoyt notes that these days, newspapers typically rush to analyze ethical crises within their own staffs, as the New York Times did in the case of
Jayson Blair. "I guess [the Post] has calculated that it's better to be quiet and not make any noise about it and it'll go away. It suggests they don't think they owe their readers any evidence of self-examination."
Posted at 9:22:24 AM
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