When Reporters Break the Rules

Many journalists realize they have stepped over the line only after they fall on their face

  • Share
  • Read Later

When the Gallup organization polled the public in May 1991, less than a third of Americans described journalists as having high ethical standards. If the same poll were conducted now, the results would probably be worse. Ever since NBC last month admitted to significant distortions in a report about safety problems in some General Motors trucks, the media have been awash in shame and penitence.

USA Today disciplined its Western editor and apologized in print last week for a "misleading" picture that showed armed Los Angeles youth-gang members ready to retaliate if police officers were again acquitted of beating Rodney King. A former TV reporter and camera operator in Alexandria, Minnesota, admitted to furnishing alcohol to a minor to illustrate a story on teen drinking. NBC itself went back on air with another admission of error, this time for using footage of fish supposedly killed during clear-cutting of timber on government land. In reality, one shot depicted a different forest while another showed fish that were not dead, only stunned by researchers for testing. In the most dramatic act of contrition, NBC News president Michael Gartner acknowledged that the GM controversy would not die and abruptly resigned last week, saying he hoped to "take the spotlight off of all of us."

To reporters, this spate of confessions is proof that the system of self- regulation works -- proof that a combination of conscience and competition keeps the press honest. Gartner's acting successor, Don Browne, even argues that NBC's pain is resulting in moral renewal in newsrooms around the country. Says Browne: "Journalism will not be diminished but strengthened. Because we made one mistake on Dateline NBC, hundreds of mistakes will not be made elsewhere." News consumers may be somewhat more skeptical and wonder if journalism has any rules at all. The honest answer: not really.

Individual journalists may have highly developed ethical sensibilities. But journalism as a whole, unlike law or medicine, has no licensing procedure, no disciplinary panels, no agreed-upon code of behavior. Practices that are perfectly acceptable to some major news-gathering institutions -- such as going undercover to expose wrongdoing -- are forbidden at others. At most places, no sin is automatically a firing offense. Editors insist on treating each case individually, which usually translates into permissively. Says USA Today editor Peter Prichard: "It depends on the circumstances, the individual case, the history, all sorts of things."

Even at news outlets with an internal code of conduct -- such as NBC, where the document runs to 50 pages, or ABC, where it is about 75 -- the rules are commonly described by managers as mere guidelines. Says Richard Wald, who has held senior news posts at both networks: "That's why we don't have a list of firing offenses. Ethics is not laid down in tablets -- it is judgments made over years, and some points are susceptible to change."

  1. Previous Page
  2. 1
  3. 2