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Related: About this forumA reporter accused his bosses of burying a scandal. They say he's lying.
MEDIA
A reporter accused his bosses of burying a scandal. They say hes lying.
By Paul Farhi
Updated July 29, 2022 at 2:12 p.m. EDT | Published July 29, 2022 at 9:13 a.m. EDT
In reporter Paul Pringles vivid retelling, his blockbuster exposé of a campus scandal was thwarted at every turn by law enforcement and university officials. But the biggest obstacle, he contends, were the editors at his own newspaper, the Los Angeles Times.
Pringles new book, Bad City: Peril and Power in the City of Angels, recounts his pursuit of a story about Carmen Puliafito, a former dean of the University of Southern Californias medical school. The highly regarded eye surgeon had a secret life as a drug abuser who associated with addicts and criminals.
The book, which alleges that top editors at the Times tried to slow-roll and suppress the story for months to protect the university, has been greeted with enthusiastic write-ups. A reviewer at the New York Times lauded it as a master class in investigative journalism. Another in the Los Angeles Times, no less compared Pringles book to famous tales of journalistic heroism such as All the Presidents Men and Spotlight.
Pringles former editors have their own review: Its a pack of lies. ... The entire premise is false, said Marc Duvoisin, who oversaw Pringles original story in 2017 as the Timess managing editor, in an interview. ... The Timess former editor and publisher, Davan Maharaj, told The Washington Post the book is largely a work of fantasy. Much of it takes place in his own imagination. A third editor who worked on the story, Matthew Doig, published a 3,500-word rebuttal of the book online, complete with scans of his handwritten edit notes, to counter Pringles half-truths and bad-faith misrepresentations.
{snip}
This story has been updated to clarify Grads statement about the secret team of reporters.
By Paul Farhi
Paul Farhi is The Washington Post's media reporter. He started at The Post in 1988 and has been a financial reporter, a political reporter and a Style reporter. Twitter https://twitter.com/farhip
A reporter accused his bosses of burying a scandal. They say hes lying.
By Paul Farhi
Updated July 29, 2022 at 2:12 p.m. EDT | Published July 29, 2022 at 9:13 a.m. EDT
In reporter Paul Pringles vivid retelling, his blockbuster exposé of a campus scandal was thwarted at every turn by law enforcement and university officials. But the biggest obstacle, he contends, were the editors at his own newspaper, the Los Angeles Times.
Pringles new book, Bad City: Peril and Power in the City of Angels, recounts his pursuit of a story about Carmen Puliafito, a former dean of the University of Southern Californias medical school. The highly regarded eye surgeon had a secret life as a drug abuser who associated with addicts and criminals.
The book, which alleges that top editors at the Times tried to slow-roll and suppress the story for months to protect the university, has been greeted with enthusiastic write-ups. A reviewer at the New York Times lauded it as a master class in investigative journalism. Another in the Los Angeles Times, no less compared Pringles book to famous tales of journalistic heroism such as All the Presidents Men and Spotlight.
Pringles former editors have their own review: Its a pack of lies. ... The entire premise is false, said Marc Duvoisin, who oversaw Pringles original story in 2017 as the Timess managing editor, in an interview. ... The Timess former editor and publisher, Davan Maharaj, told The Washington Post the book is largely a work of fantasy. Much of it takes place in his own imagination. A third editor who worked on the story, Matthew Doig, published a 3,500-word rebuttal of the book online, complete with scans of his handwritten edit notes, to counter Pringles half-truths and bad-faith misrepresentations.
{snip}
This story has been updated to clarify Grads statement about the secret team of reporters.
By Paul Farhi
Paul Farhi is The Washington Post's media reporter. He started at The Post in 1988 and has been a financial reporter, a political reporter and a Style reporter. Twitter https://twitter.com/farhip
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A reporter accused his bosses of burying a scandal. They say he's lying. (Original Post)
mahatmakanejeeves
Jul 2022
OP
At least he got a book out of it, and one of the editors has posted what might be libel ...
marble falls
Jul 2022
#2
bucolic_frolic
(46,943 posts)1. Wouldn't be the first, I think it's quite common
marble falls
(62,041 posts)2. At least he got a book out of it, and one of the editors has posted what might be libel ...
... there's a good, complicated movie with parts for a Merel Streep/George Clooney in it.
Mr.Bill
(24,787 posts)3. If it's not true,
why hasn't he been sued?