The competiton's editor is going to court. Do you write the story?

ShareThisQuestion: I have been covering court for my weekly newspaper for just over four years. Recently the editor of the competing newspaper was charged with impaired driving and failure/refusing to provide a breath sample and a trial date has been set. There has been some debate in the newsroom about whether there is an obligation to cover this or if doing so is more 'gotcha' than it is newsworthy. As a court reporter in a small town I have written about people I know, their family members and even someone connected to my own family (the father of my nieces). Now I am faced with the question of covering a colleague's trial that could end their job in the community (the publisher btw operates outside the community and the competition does not cover court so they are unaware) Is there a clear cut answer on this: do I write the story?

Tanya Foubert
Reporter
Rocky Mountain Outlook

Answer by Don Sellar:

If I were the editor, I´d try to handle the story the same as any other impaired driving case. No more, no less because a competing media outlet is involved.

Evidently, there was no accident, injury or death in the case. That fact might help dictate the length of story, or determine where and how it ought to be played.

Had the suspect been an employee of my newspaper, however, my coverage would, if anything, be given bigger and more extensive play. Your own paper must hold itself to even higher standards, if it is to retain respect in the community.

When I was a reporter at The Calgary Herald in the 1960s, I remember a short news story in The Edmonton Journal. Played on an inside page, it was headlined ¨Publisher fined $10 for speeding¨. With no input from the newsroom, the story had been written and filed by Basil Dean, then the Journal´s publisher. I doubt the paper routinely covered minor speeding cases in those days.

Cases involving staff members can serve as helpful reminders of a newspaper´s obligation to handle all court cases carefully and with fairness.

Who knows, the person charged may have a credible and successful defence to the charge.  The presumption of innocence is paramount.

Don Sellar was the Toronto Star's ombud for 11 years until his retirement in 2005.

Comments

It should be handled as you would any other DUI court report. That he works for a competing paper is not relevant. You either cover court or you don't and you either print names or you don't. Any veer away from that consistency risks your credibility.
Joe is right: stick to your policy. I well remember those days in the 60s when small town journalism demanded that all cases be covered. When my brother appeared in court on impaired charges, we ran the story -- despite mother's anguish. The paper's credibility suffered a bit the day I discovered as editor that one of the photographers was selling favours to friends, promising to pull the story for a mickey of whiskey. Then he would come in at the end of night assignments, rifle through the type-written pages of newsprint in the IN basket on the city editor's desk, and pull the appropriate stories. He was discovered the day I was offered a mickey of my own.
This is an easy one. Would you write and publish the story if he was a complete stranger? If yes, you publish. And let the chumps fall where they may. If no, spike it.

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