ABC News President Torches Staff Over Botched Flynn-Russia Story, Says Brian Ross Will Not Cover Trump
ABC News’ Brian Ross stepped on a rake with that botched Flynn-Russia
story—and there are whisperings that his future might not be bright at
the network. It all began when Ross reported that Donald Trump had
ordered Michael Flynn, the ex-national security adviser, to make contact
with the Russians during the 2016 election. Well, as it turns out, the
timeline was off. It was after Trump had won the election, so President-elect
Trump ordered Flynn to make contact with the Russians per the usual
actions of any transition team laying the groundwork for an incoming
administration. After several hours, ABC issued a correction:
Correction:
During a live Special Report, ABC News reported that a confidant of Lt.
Gen. Michael Flynn said Flynn was prepared to testify that
then-candidate Donald Trump instructed him to contact Russian officials
during the campaign. That source later clarified that during the
campaign, Trump assigned Flynn and a small circle of other senior
advisers to find ways to repair relations with Russia and other hot
spots. It was shortly after the election, that President-elect Trump
directed Flynn to contact Russian officials on topics that included
working jointly against ISIS.
Now, there’s audio of
ABC News’ President James Goldston torching the news staff for allowing
this shoddy story to get through and being reported on live television;
Ross used a single, anonymous source for his report. Goldston noted how
the whole news division, especially those in D.C., have to bear the
brunt of this, how it makes everyone’ s job harder, and how it’s more
important to be right than first. Yet, how this information was able to
slip through the cracks is another issue altogether (via CNN):
During ABC News' morning editorial call Monday, audio of which was obtained by CNN, Goldston excoriated his staff for the error.
"I
don't think ever in my career have I felt more rage and disappointment
and frustration that I felt through this weekend and through the last
half of Friday," Goldston said.
"I don't even know how many times
we've talked about this, how many times we have talked about the need to
get it right," he added. "That how we have to be right and not first.
About how in this particular moment, with the stakes as high as these
stakes are right now, we cannot afford to get it wrong."
[…]
Goldston
also said, "If it isn't obvious to everyone in this news division, we
have taken a huge hit and we have made the job of every single person in
this news division harder as a result. It's much, much harder. We have
people in Washington who are going to bear the brunt of this today and
in the days forward. Very, very, very, very unfortunate. Really, really
angry about it."
The ABC News chief said that Ross reported
information that was "just plain wrong," and did so without anyone
"having ever made a decision that we were going to go to air with that
information."
[…]
Goldston expressed additional frustration
at the fact that it took more than seven hours for ABC News to clarify
the story on ABC's "World News Tonight." Later, Friday evening, the
network issued a full blown correction in a written statement.
"The
thing that compounded our mistake is that not only did we make a
mistake, if we had then corrected ourselves right away, again -- we
wouldn't be in this position. It would have been a very different
story," he said. "But we ended up in the impossible situation where we
had actually conflicting information that we said on air, which
conflicted with the information that was online. And then it took us
seven hours, eight hours to get our story straight. This is not
acceptable. It's not acceptable. And we will all pay the price for a
long time."
[…]
"No one wants to work with him [Ross]," said one ABC News employee.
"The future doesn't seem bright for him," added another.
Goldston added that Ross would no longer be covering Trump either. He was recently given a four-week, no-pay suspension
for this trip up. This isn’t the first time Ross has got a face full of
buckshot for reporting shoddy leads. In 2012, after the tragic Aurora
shooting, Ross reported that the shooter, James Holmes, might be a
member of the Tea Party Movement. ABC News was forced to apologize for that story as well.
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