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Encouraging Words of Regret From Dean Baquet
Key Excerpts from Article on Website of The Intercept


The Intercept, June 6, 2014
Posted: June 16th, 2014
https://firstlook.org/theintercept/2014/06/06/encouraging-wo...

NPRs David Folkenflik has a revealing new look at ... one of the most important journalistic stories of the last decade: The New York Times 2004 decision ... to suppress for 15 months (through Bushs re-election) its reporters discovery that the NSA was illegally eavesdropping on Americans without warrants. This episode was one significant reason Edward Snowden purposely excluded the Times from his massive trove of documents. In an interview with Folkenflik, the papers new executive editor, Dean Baquet, describes the papers exclusion from the Snowden story as really painful. But ... Baquet has his own checkered history in suppressing plainly newsworthy stories at the governments request, including a particularly inexcusable 2007 decision, when he was the managing editor of The Los Angeles Times, to kill a story based on AT&T whistleblower Mark Kleins revelations that the NSA had built secret rooms at AT&T to siphon massive amounts of domestic telephone traffic. In his NPR interview, Baquet insists that he has had a serious change of heart on such questions as a result of the last year of NSA revelations: "[Baquet] says the experience has proved that news executives are often unduly deferential to seemingly authoritative warnings unaccompanied by hard evidence." Dean Baquets epiphany about the U.S. government and the American media ... is long overdue, but better late than never. Let us hope that it signals an actual change in behavior.

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