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---------- Forwarded message ----------
Date: Wed, 21 Apr 2004 09:08:51 -0700
From: Media Research Center <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Reply-To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: MRC Alert: ABC Skips Own Poll With Bush Beating Kerry,
     But When Kerry Led...

             ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
    12:05pm EDT, Wednesday April 21, 2004 (Vol. Nine; No. 64)
 The 1,701st CyberAlert. Tracking Liberal Media Bias Since 1996

> Jennings Considers Plight of Guantanamo Detainees the Top Story
> ABC Highlights Claims of UN Corruption in "Food for Oil" Program
> ABC Skips Own Poll With Bush Beating Kerry, But When Kerry Led...
> NPR Ties the Right & Limbaugh to Death Threats Against Gorelick
> New York Post Features Op-Ed on Woodward Adapted from CyberAlert

    #### Distributed to more than 14,000 subscribers by the Media
Research Center, bringing political balance to the news media
since 1987. The MRC is the leader in documenting, exposing and
neutralizing liberal media bias. Visit the MRC on the Web:
http://www.mediaresearch.org. CyberAlerts from this year are at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/welcome.asp
For 2003: http://www.mediaresearch.org/archive/cyber/archive03.asp
    Subscribe/unsubscribe information, as well as a link to the
MRC's PayPal donation page, are at the end of this message.
    When posted, this CyberAlert will be readable at:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040421.asp ####

1) All the networks on Tuesday ran full stories about the Supreme
Court hearing a case asking them to rule that the detainees at
Guantanamo Bay should have access to U.S. federal courts, but only
ABC's Peter Jennings considered it the most important news of the
day as he traveled to Washington, DC to cover the hearing, framed
his lead story around how "the lawyers for more than a dozen
prisoners say the President is violating the American commitment
to the rule of law" and followed up, with a story he narrated
himself, about the anti-Bush protesters outside the court, which
prompted him to raise the mistreatment of Japanese-Americans
during World War II. Jennings gave three soundbites to the
protesters, with none on the other side, as he relayed how "these
petitioners believe that holding nearly 600 men from 42 countries
without even charging them violates the International Geneva
Conventions for prisoners."

2) On the up side, after opening with a story from the left (see
item #1 above), Tuesday's World News Tonight explored an issue
largely ignored by the broadcast media and barely touched in
print, though FNC has devoted some attention to it: UN corruption
in its "Food for Oil" program with Iraq in which Saddam Hussein
allegedly kept much of the money for himself instead of using it
to buy food for his people. With congressional hearings upcoming,
this may soon get some widespread attention, but ABC's Brian Ross
was first out of the box on it on a broadcast network as he
reported how "U.S. and European intelligence sources tell ABC News
that at least three senior UN officials are suspected of taking
multi-million dollar bribes from the Saddam Hussein regime to
overlook the theft."

3) Kerry leading is news, but not when Bush moves ahead? In early
March, when an ABC News/Washington Post poll put Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry ahead of President George W.
Bush by 48 to 44 percent amongst registered voters, ABC's Good
Morning America highlighted the finding in two morning news
updates. Six weeks later, however, when a new ABC News/Washington
Post poll put Bush ahead of Kerry by five points amongst
registered voters, 48 to 43 percent, with Ralph Nader at 6
percent, GMA cited some findings in the poll, but not the Bush
versus Kerry number.

4) Conservatives in general, and conservative radio talk show
hosts in particular, are responsible for causing death threats
against 9-11 Commission member Jamie Gorelick? NPR's Nina
Totenberg sure seemed to imply so in a Monday Morning Edition
story in which she lamented how the threats came after John
Ashcroft revealed how Gorelick wrote a memo barring the CIA from
sharing information with the FBI, Republicans in Congress "were
calling for Gorelick's resignation. And conservative talk shows
were taking up the battle cry." Following a clip of Limbaugh
criticizing Gorelick, without mentioning how Gorelick herself
conceded in the 1995 memo that the guidelines she was imposing "go
beyond what is legally required," Totenberg launched into a
lengthy defense of Gorelick and the policy she outlined.

5) "Network Naifs Buy Bogus Buzz," reads the headline over an op-
ed in today's (Wednesday) New York Post by the MRC's Brent Baker,
adapted from an item in Tuesday's CyberAlert about network
coverage on Monday of Bob Woodward's book.


    > 1) All the networks on Tuesday ran full stories about the
Supreme Court hearing a case asking them to rule that the
detainees at Guantanamo Bay should have access to U.S. federal
courts, but only ABC's Peter Jennings considered it the most
important news of the day as he traveled to Washington, DC to
cover the hearing, framed his lead story around how "the lawyers
for more than a dozen prisoners say the President is violating the
American commitment to the rule of law" and followed up, with a
story he narrated himself, about the anti-Bush protesters outside
the court, which prompted him to raise the mistreatment of
Japanese-Americans during World War II. Jennings gave three
soundbites to the protesters, with none on the other side, as he
relayed how "these petitioners believe that holding nearly 600 men
from 42 countries without even charging them violates the
International Geneva Conventions for prisoners."

    Jennings teased at the top of the April 20 show: "On World
News Tonight, the Supreme Court hears a challenge to the Bush
administration's policy for prisoners taken in the war against
terrorism."

    With the White House behind him (probably placing Jennings at
the Hay Adams hotel), he led the broadcast, as taken down by the
MRC's Brad Wilmouth:
    "Good evening, everyone. We are here in Washington today to
hear the arguments in the Supreme Court about a very central
question for the country: How much authority does the President
have when the country is at war? And how much power do American
courts have to review what the President decides? And what is the
balance between national security and individual freedom? The
cases today were about whether prisoners captured in the war
against terrorism and held at Guantanamo Bay in Cuba should have
the right to be heard in U.S. courts. Are the courts even relevant
in a time of war? The lawyers for more than a dozen prisoners say
the President is violating the American commitment to the rule of
law. Here's ABC's Manuel Medrano."

    Medrano began: "The government claims that foreign nationals
being held at Guantanamo Bay are on foreign soil and outside the
jurisdiction of American courts. President Bush authorized the
detentions. At the Court today, the lawyer for the prisoners
claimed that the President was creating a 'lawless enclave.'" ...

    Viewers then heard audio clips released by the Supreme Court,
with pictures of the person talking on screen along with the text,
from plaintiff's lawyer John Gibbons, Justice Ginsburg, U.S.
Solicitor General Ted Olson, Justice Scalia and Justice Breyer
before Medrano concluded: "The government claims that the war on
terrorism is a new kind of war, and this is the first opportunity
the Supreme Court has had to weigh in on whether the Bush
administration has gone too far in combating that war."

    Jennings then added: "Next week, the Court hears two cases
about American citizens labeled enemy combatants who are being
held without any access to the courts. All these cases constitute
an historic argument between presidential and judicial authority
at a time of war."
    Protesters in front of Supreme Court: "Nor shall any state
deprive any person-"
    Jennings claimed: "Outside the Court today, you could see a
reflection of the widespread public interest in civil liberties
and security. Some people make their point as dramatically as
possible."
    Male protester, speaking through cardboard cut out to look
like prison bars: "They do this without authority. They do this
illegally."
    Jennings: "These petitioners believe that holding nearly 600
men from 42 countries without even charging them violates the
International Geneva Conventions for prisoners. Other briefs
support the administration's argument that when the country is at
war, there should be no second-guessing by the courts."
    But instead of a supporting soundbite from anyone backing the
government position, ABC played a clip from a second male
protester: "That once an injustice has been committed, it may be
repeated with impunity."
    Jennings recalled: "Public opinion, of course, is all about
second-guessing. One of those petitions on behalf of the prisoners
is from 84-year-old Fred Koramatzu. In 1944, as a young man, he
challenged the government's right to intern Japanese-Americans for
the duration of World War II. His case went to the Supreme Court,
and to the country's ultimate regret and eventually a formal
apology from Congress, Koramatzu lost. Mr. Koramatzu says in his
brief today, 'Our history merits attention. Only by understanding
the errors of the past can we do better in the present.'"

    Jennings has had a long interest in the plight of those at
Guantanamo, at least when he could portray them as victims. The
March 10 CyberAlert reported:
    Jennings devoted a full story to how "the international
organization, Human Rights Watch, accused U.S. forces in
Afghanistan of mistreating prisoners and violating international
law."

    ABC's Mike Lee related the allegations of how "the U.S.
military has used 'cowboy-like' excessive force when arresting
Afghans." He focused on one Afghan man who claimed he was sent to
Guantanamo Bay and forced to sign a confession though he was
really innocent. Lee ominously concluded: "The Human Rights Watch
report warns that many other Afghans out there are angry over how
they've been treated and may be less willing to help in the war
against terrorism."

    Lee ignored a 12 to 13-year-old Afghan boy, who upon his
release from Guantanamo Bay, told London's left-wing Guardian
newspaper, a paper you'd think Peter Jennings would find
authoritative: "I am lucky I went there, and now I miss it. Cuba
was great." The boy cited the delicious food, how he liked
snorkeling in the ocean and proclaimed that "Americans are great
people, better than anyone else," so, "if I could be anywhere, I
would be in America. I would like to be a doctor, an engineer --
or an American soldier."

    A month ago, a 15-year-old released from Guantanamo informed
London's Sunday Telegraph that "they gave me a good time in Cuba.
They were very nice to me, giving me English lessons." An elderly
Afghan man let go last fall praised his treatment: "They treated
us well. We had enough food. I didn't mind [being detained]
because they took my old clothes and gave me new clothes."

    "Cuba? It was great, say boys freed from US prison camp,"
declared the headline over the March 6 Guardian story which the
FNC's Brit Hume highlighted in his "Grapevine" segment.

    For details:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040310.asp#3

    That wasn't the first time Jennings has used ABC air time to
complain about detainee treatment at Guantanamo Bay:

    -- February 21, 2003 CyberAlert: ABC's Peter Jennings treated
an accused terrorist arrested on Thursday as the victim of an
over-aggressive Justice Department as ABC failed to report how the
man once wished "death" upon America. Jennings referred to "the
government's aggressive campaign in the U.S. against people it
accuses of supporting terrorism" and to what the "government calls
a terrorist group overseas." Jennings also fretted about how "we
learned today that three more prisoners being held by the U.S. at
Guantanamo Bay in Cuba have attempted suicide." Jennings proceeded
to assert that "at least two human rights organizations are
seeking information about the interrogation techniques." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030221.asp#1

    -- September 12, 2003 CyberAlert: ABC News decided to
commemorate the September 11th anniversary of the terrorist
attacks of two years ago by sending Claire Shipman to Guantanamo
Bay -- not to look at how the detainment of dozens of potential
terrorists has successfully prevented additional murderous
attacks, but to fret over the lack of U.S. constitutional rights
and international law protections afforded to the enemy
operatives. Surveying the barbed wire-topped fence surrounding
Camp Delta to keep the prisoners inside, Shipman lamented how "the
wire is perhaps more significant for what it's keeping out --
lawyers, family members and the protections of U.S. and
international law."
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20030912.asp#1

    At least he's consistent.



    > 2) On the up side, after opening with a story from the left
(see item #1 above), Tuesday's World News Tonight explored an
issue largely ignored by the broadcast media and barely touched in
print, though FNC has devoted some attention to it: UN corruption
in its "Food for Oil" program with Iraq in which Saddam Hussein
allegedly kept much of the money for himself instead of using it
to buy food for his people. With congressional hearings upcoming,
this may soon get some widespread attention, but ABC's Brian Ross
was first out of the box on it on a broadcast network as he
reported how "U.S. and European intelligence sources tell ABC News
that at least three senior UN officials are suspected of taking
multi-million dollar bribes from the Saddam Hussein regime to
overlook the theft."

    Jennings set up the April 20 segment on World News Tonight:
    "This week the Congress is going to begin hearings about an
alleged scandal involving the United Nations oil-for-food program
to Iraq. It began in 1996 to help Iraqis suffering under sanctions
led by the U.S. imposed after the Gulf War. The program, which
ended last year, allowed Iraq to sell some oil in order to buy
humanitarian supplies. Billions of dollars were involved. And
there are now allegations of widespread corruption among senior
officials at the United Nations. Here's ABC's Brian Ross."

    Ross began: "To help feed his people, Saddam Hussein was
allowed to sell limited amounts of oil under supposedly tight UN
supervision. Now, one year after his fall, there's hard evidence,
including the cash, that Hussein diverted some $5 billion from the
UN food program to his personal bank accounts."
    Claude Hanks-Drielsma, Iraqi Governing Council Adviser:
"Certainly on the evidence that I've seen so far, I believe it to
be one of the world's worst scams that we've ever seen."
    Ross: "And now the scandal has spread to the United Nations
itself. U.S. and European intelligence sources tell ABC News that
at least three senior UN officials are suspected of taking multi-
million dollar bribes from the Saddam Hussein regime to overlook
the theft. Most prominent is Benon Sevan, the UN Undersecretary-
General who ran the oil-for-food program for six years. In an
interview last year, Sevan denied any wrongdoing."
    Benon Sevan, UN Undersecretary-General: "All I can tell you
has been no allegations about me. Maybe you can try to dig it
out."
    Ross: "Since then, documents have surfaced in Baghdad in the
files of the Iraqi oil ministry allegedly linking a Mr. Savon to a
payoff scheme in which some 270 prominent foreign officials
received the right to trade in Iraqi oil at cut-rate prices."
    Claude Hanks-Drielsma, Roland Berger Strategy Consultants:
"It's almost like having coupons or bonds or shares. You can sell
those coupons to other people who are normal oil traders."
    Ross: "Investigators say the smoking gun is this letter to the
Iraqi oil minister, obtained by ABC News and not yet in the hands
of the UN. Savon is mentioned specifically as the director of the
UN program, giving directions as to which company should handle
his personal oil deal, estimated to be worth as much as $3.5
million."
    Hanks-Drielsma: "Somebody who is running the oil-for-food
program for the United Nations should not be receiving any benefit
of any kind from a rogue dictator."
    Ross: "The UN at first dismissed the allegations about Sevan.
But this week, Secretary-General Kofi Annan said there would be a
full investigation."
    Kofi Annan, UN Secretary-General: "We are going to investigate
these allegations very seriously."
    Ross: "As for Sevan, he took a long vacation to Australia when
the news first broke. ABC News found him last week at a luxury
casino resort where he declined to answer any questions....A
spokesman for the UN says Sevan, who makes $186,000 a year, has
submitted his retirement papers but will remain on full salary
during the course of the UN's investigation, expected, Peter, to
take at least three months."

    ABCNews.com has posted a longer version of the Ross story:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/WNT/Investigation/oil_for_food_ripoff_040420-1.html

    Ross produced an earlier story on World News Tonight back in
January about how Hussein paid off foreign leaders. As recounted
in the January 30 CyberAlert, picking up on a document discovery
in Iraq, Ross outlined how Saddam Hussein bought off many
politicians around the world: "Some 270 prominent individuals,
political parties or corporations in 47 countries were given Iraqi
oil contracts instantly worth millions of dollars." Ross pointed
out how "individuals in France were the second-largest
beneficiary, with tens of millions of dollars worth of oil
contracts awarded to a close associate of French President Jacques
Chirac, a harsh critic of U.S. policy in Iraq." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040130.asp#2



    > 3) Kerry leading is news, but not when Bush moves ahead? In
early March, when an ABC News/Washington Post poll put Democratic
presidential candidate John Kerry ahead of President George W.
Bush by 48 to 44 percent amongst registered voters, ABC's Good
Morning America highlighted the finding in two morning news
updates. Six weeks later, however, when a new ABC News/Washington
Post poll put Bush ahead of Kerry by five points amongst
registered voters, 48 to 43 percent, with Ralph Nader at 6
percent, GMA cited some findings in the poll, but not the Bush
versus Kerry number.

    News reader Robin Roberts read this poll finding during the
8am news update on Tuesday's GMA: "Most Americans think the U.S.
is mired in Iraq, but appear determined to see it through.
According to the new ABC News/Washington Post poll, 59 percent
think the U.S. is bogged down in Iraq, while 41 percent think we
are making good progress. But 52 percent believe the U.S. was
right to go to war with Iraq; 46 percent think it was a mistake."

    Back on Tuesday, March 9, the MRC's Jessica Anderson
discovered, GMA twice highlighted Kerry's lead. During the 7am
news update, Bob Woodruff announced: "Voters will cast primary
ballots in four southern states today. This morning a new ABC
News/Washington Post poll shows that John Kerry would beat George
Bush if the national election were held today. The margin is
narrow, 48 percent to 44 percent. It is a tight race, which means
a bit of tough rhetoric on the campaign trail."

    An hour later he intoned: "If the presidential election were
held today, John Kerry would beat President Bush by a 48 to 44
percent margin, according to latest ABC News/Washington Post poll.
Today voters go to polls in four southern states holding primary
elections; a total of 465 Democratic delegates are up for grabs."

    World News Tonight, by the way, remained consistent, skipping
over the Kerry versus Bush numbers in both polls. On Monday night
of this week, Jennings buried the big news, that Bush is favored
over Kerry in ten of eleven issue areas: "An ABC News-Washington
Post poll today finds today that nearly six in ten Americans [59
percent] believe the U.S. is bogged down in Iraq. But two-thirds
[66 percent] say the troops should remain there until order is
restored, even if it means more casualties. President Bush's
approval rating has remained fairly steady since February. It's at
51 percent despite the increased violence in Iraq and the quite
controversial hearings about 9-11 in Washington. The President is
trusted more than the Democratic challenger John Kerry on ten of
eleven separate issues, including terrorism and the economy."

    Back on Monday, March 8, Jennings opened World News Tonight:
"Good evening, everyone. We begin with the presidential campaign
tonight. As our political director put it a while ago, the
President and Senator Kerry were going after each other today like
it was early season basketball game that had taken on the
intensity of a play-off game. As of now, it's a very close race in
a very divided country. And an ABC News/Washington Post poll today
confirms it. As of now, Mr. Bush is vulnerable on the economy.
Only 41 percent of Americans say they trust him to do a better job
handling the economy than Mr. Kerry. 57 percent of Americans,
however, say they do trust Mr. Bush to do a better job on
terrorism. The challenger, Mr. Kerry, was in Florida today, rich
with memories for Democrats. The President was in Texas. And the
two were beating on each other."

    Online, in a posting headlined "Despite Troubles in Iraq, Poll
Finds Presidential Ratings Steady or Rising," ABC polling expert
Gary Langer summarized the highlights of the poll conducted late
last week. An excerpt:

Significantly in terms of election politics, economic concerns --
a threat to incumbents -- have eased somewhat, and preference for
Kerry across a range of issues -- Iraq, the economy, taxes, health
insurance, the deficit, education and others -- has cooled since
its peak during the primaries. Last month Kerry led Bush in eight
of 11 issues; today he leads in just one of them, health care, and
by a narrower margin.

Kerry's lost ground on personal attributes as well, and just 41
percent of Americans believe he "takes a position and sticks with
it," a concerted line of attack by the Bush campaign. Bush,
meanwhile, retains a large advantage on fighting terrorism, long
the wellspring of his support. Overall, with Ralph Nader out of
the equation, the race is a dead heat; with him in, it's slightly
better for Bush....

More broadly -- among all Americans, not just among those who pick
one of these issues as most important to them -- Bush has battled
back to parity or better. As noted, in early March, riding high
off his primary victories, Kerry led in public trust to handle
eight issues out of 11. Today Kerry leads only in trust to handle
health care, and by just six points -- compared with a 20-point
advantage last month.

In other examples, last month Kerry led Bush by 15 points among
all Americans in trust to handle the deficit; today there's just a
single point between them. Kerry led by 12 points in trust to
handle the economy; today they're even. They were about even on
Iraq (Kerry +1); now it's Bush +11. Even on same-sex marriage, a
much lower-tier issue, trust has gone from an even split to a
16-point Bush advantage. And Bush's 21-point lead in trust to
handle the campaign against terrorism is unchanged....

There are still miles to go before Election Day, but given these
changes, it follows that overall vote preferences have shifted
slightly. In a three-way match-up, including Ralph Nader, 48
percent of registered voters prefer Bush, 43 percent Kerry, and 6
percent Nader. That's a slight four-point gain for Bush and a
five-point loss for Kerry since March.

With Nader removed from the equation, it's 49 percent for Bush, 48
percent for Kerry -- a 50-50 nation.

    END of Excerpt

    For Langer's report in full:
http://abcnews.go.com/sections/world/US/iraq_election_poll_040419.html



    > 4) Conservatives in general, and conservative radio talk
show hosts in particular, are responsible for causing death
threats against 9-11 Commission member Jamie Gorelick? NPR's Nina
Totenberg sure seemed to imply so in a Monday Morning Edition
story, which Rush Limbaugh highlighted on his radio show on
Tuesday. In it, she simplistically summarized how John Ashcroft
"blamed a policy of the Clinton administration for 9/11," a
reference to his revelation that Gorelick wrote a memo which
codified the bar of the CIA sharing with the FBI information about
terrorists, and then the threats came as she noted how "within 48
hours, House GOP leader Tom DeLay and House Judiciary Chairman
James Sensenbrenner were calling for Gorelick's resignation. And
conservative talk shows were taking up the battle cry."

    Following a clip of Limbaugh on his radio show criticizing
Gorelick, without mentioning how Gorelick herself conceded in the
1995 memo that the guidelines she was imposing "go beyond what is
legally required," Totenberg launched into a lengthy defense of
Gorelick and the policy she outlined. To counter Limbaugh,
Totenberg intoned: "In fact, however, by all independent accounts,
the wall was not created during the Clinton administration but by
the Reagan and first Bush Administrations in the 1980s in response
to court rulings."

    Totenberg's Monday story followed a Saturday ABC story
recounted in the April 20 CyberAlert: Only when 9-11 Commissioner
Jamie Gorelick supposedly became the victim of right-wing hate did
ABC's World News Tonight bother to get around to informing its
viewers of her 1995 memo mandating that the CIA not share with the
FBI information about terrorists. At last Tuesday's 9-11 hearing,
John Ashcroft declassified Gorelick's memo in which she herself
conceded the guidelines she was imposing "go beyond what is
legally required," a point ABC ignored. Also, Al Hunt denounced
Ashcroft for "Joe McCarthy-type" tactics in revealing the memo,
and while Condoleezza Rice appeared on three Sunday shows, only
Fox News Sunday raised with her Gorelick's chutzpah in quizzing
her about the "wall of separation." For details on all of that,
along with links to Ashcroft's statement and the Gorelick memo:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2004/cyb20040420.asp#3

    Back to the April 19 Morning Edition on NPR, the MRC's Ken
Shepherd accessed the audio file on the NPR Web site and
painstakingly transcribed the entire story. To listen to the story
via either RealPlayer or Windows Media Player, go to:
http://www.npr.org/rundowns/segment.php?wfId=1842206

    Anchor Bob Edwards introduced the story by tying the death
threats to Ashcroft's revelation: "The FBI is investigating death
threats against a member of the independent commission
investigating the terror attacks of September 11, 2001. The member
is former Deputy Attorney General Jamie Gorelick. She was the
target of pointed criticism last week from Attorney General John
Ashcroft during his testimony, and that prompted demands for her
resignation. NPR Legal Affairs correspondent Nina Totenberg
reports."

    Totenberg began: "Jamie Gorelick served for three years as
Deputy Attorney General in the first term of the Clinton
administration. In Washington, she has a reputation as a smart
administrator with a cool head. But she admits she lost some of
that cool last Friday."
    Jamie Gorelick, 9/11 Commission member: "Someone called the
house and threatened to blow it up, and blow me up."
    Totenberg: "FBI agents were soon swarming over Gorelick's
house and office. She had received hate mail at the office, she
says, as have other commissioners, but it had suddenly
intensified."
    Gorelick: "After John Ashcroft testified, there was an
escalation."
    Totenberg: "Ashcroft, himself under fire from the 9/11
Commission, in prepared testimony blamed a policy of the Clinton
administration for 9/11."
    Attorney General John Ashcroft at hearing: "The single
greatest structural cause for the September 11th problem was the
wall that segregated, or separated, criminal investigators and
intelligence agents."
    Totenberg: "The wall, he said, had been created in a Clinton
Era-memorandum."
    Ashcroft: "Full disclosure compels me to inform you that the
author of this memorandum is a member of the Commission."
    Totenberg: "The member, of course, was Jamie Gorelick. Within
48 hours, House GOP leader Tom DeLay and House Judiciary Chairman
James Sensenbrenner were calling for Gorelick's resignation. And
conservative talk shows were taking up the battle cry."
    Rush Limbaugh on his radio show: "Who are the Clinton people,
who were they, Jamie Gorelick, Clinton, Gore, all these people?
They are '60s relics. These are people who grew up hating the FBI.
These are the people who gave law enforcement the name pigs. And
they now are in charge of it when Clinton assumes office. Now
what's the first thing they do? Handcuff the FBI."
    Totenberg: "In fact, however, by all independent accounts, the
wall was not created during the Clinton administration but by the
Reagan and first Bush administrations in the 1980s in response to
court rulings. Those court rulings sought to ensure that wiretaps
justified as necessary to gather intelligence were not used to
circumvent the Constitution's demand for a tougher standard in
prosecuting a criminal case. David Kris, a career Justice
Department prosecutor who served as Associate Deputy Attorney
General for three years under John Ashcroft says the Department
struggled with the wall for decades, and indeed the Bush
Administration, when it came to office, reexamined and reaffirmed
Gorelick's memo."
    David Kris: "You have to live with the law as you find it,
unless you are able to change it."
    Totenberg: "Ironically, says Kris, Gorelick's memo sought in
some respects, to bridge the wall."
    Kris: "You have somebody at least straddling the wall."
    Totenberg: "The Gorelick memo came in response to a particular
problem. The prosecutors in the first World Trade Center bombing
case thought they could not pass on information to the
intelligence investigators looking for more plots. Jamie
Gorelick."
    Gorelick: "And so the, the goal was to preserve the
conviction, to make sure the terrorists didn't go free, and at the
same time make sure that the intelligence information got from the
criminal side of the house to the intelligence side of the house.
I told the intel side of the house, you can wiretap criminal
defendants."
    Totenberg: "Even after 9/11 and the passage of the Patriot
Act, the Bush administration was unable to tear down the wall
until it appealed to a special appeals court that had been
authorized by law in 1978, but never before convened. In 2002,
that court said that the Justice Department and the lower courts
had been wrong since the early 1980s in erecting the law. As for
Jamie Gorelick, she says she has no more conflict of interest on
the 9/11 Commission than any other member, most of whom, she
notes, were chosen precisely because of their experience in the
intelligence field."
    Gorelick: "I'm recused from anything that occurred during my
tenure."
    Totenberg: "On the question of the wall, she says, she has in
fact been a witness and been interviewed. Her fellow
commissioners, including the Republican Chairman Tom Kean, have
forcefully defended her. And privately some believe she's been
targeted because she's the work horse of the commission. Indeed,
when the White House told the commissioners only one of them could
review the President's Daily Briefings, the commissioners,
Republicans and Democrats alike, chose Gorelick. Gorelick admits
the last few days have been rough."
    Gorelick: "The notion that someone would blow me up, blow up
my children, blow up my house, that's scary to any human being."
    Totenberg: "But she says she will not quit."
    Gorelick: "I don't think the Commission should be intimidated.
Then it would be a mistake for any one of us to be forced off the
Commission. I think it would be terrible."
    Totenberg: "Nina Totenberg, NPR News, Washington."

    For a picture and bio of Totenberg, who you may see as a
regular on the Inside Washington weekend public affairs TV show:
http://www.npr.org/about/people/bios/ntotenberg.html

    Of course, faithful CyberAlert readers will recall that
Totenberg issued a death threat of her own a few years ago against
Senator Jesse Helms.

    Back on the July 8, 1995 Inside Washington, Totenberg had this
reaction to Senator Jesse Helms' complaint that AIDS research was
getting a disproportionate share of federal research money. Inside
Washington host Tina Gulland asked: "I don't think I have any
Jesse Helms defenders here. Nina?"
    Totenberg replied: "Not me, I think he ought to be worried
about what's going on in the Good Lord's mind, because if there is
retributive justice, he'll get AIDS from a transfusion, or one of
his grandchildren will get it."

    That comment was a runner-up in the "I'm a Compassionate
Liberal But I Wish You Were All Dead Award (for media hatred of
conservatives)" category in MRC's 1999 "DisHonors Awards" for the
most outrageous quotes of the decade. To view a RealPlayer clip of
Totenberg in action:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/dishonor1999/welcomeaward6.asp

    Then last October she seemingly desired to hasten the death of
Army General Jerry Boykin for having supposedly expressed the view
that the war on terrorism "is a Christian crusade against
Muslims." Totenberg hatefully advocated: "I hope he's not long for
this world."

    When the other panelists on Inside Washington were taken aback
by her wish ("You putting a hit out on this guy or what?" and,
"What is this, the Sopranos?"), she quickly backtracked: "In his
job, in his job, in his job, please, please, in his job." See:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/cyberalerts/2003/cyb20031020.asp#1

    For RealPlayer video of that exchange:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/bestof/2003/best1-3.asp

    That quote was a runner-up in the MRC's "Best Notable
Quotables of 2003: The Sixteenth Annual Awards for the Year's
Worst Reporting."

    And for examples of media figures blaming conservatives and
talk radio hosts for the Oklahoma City bombing, see our 1995
"Special Purveyors of Hate & Division" issue of Notable Quotables:
http://www.mediaresearch.org/notablequotables/1995/nq19950508.asp



    > 5) "Network Naifs Buy Bogus Buzz," reads the headline over
an op-ed in today's (Wednesday) New York Post by Brent Baker,
that's me, adapted from an item I wrote for Tuesday's CyberAlert
about network coverage on Monday of Bob Woodward's book.

    For the piece in the April 21 New York Post:
http://www.nypost.com/postopinion/opedcolumnists/19164.htm


    # Scheduled to appear tonight (Wednesday) on NBC's Tonight
Show with Jay Leno: Bill Maher. Scheduled to appear on Thursday
night: Janeane Garofalo.


-- Brent Baker


    >>> Support the MRC, an educational foundation dependent upon
contributions which make CyberAlert possible, by providing a tax-
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    Or, if you can't get the lengthy link into your browser's
address line, go to the MRC's home page
( http://www.mediaresearch.org ) and click on the gold "Support
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