Pubdate: Sun, 05 Nov 2006 Source: Chicago Sun-Times (IL) Copyright: 2006 The Sun-Times Co. Contact: http://www.suntimes.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/81 Author: Cheryl L. Reed Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/coke.htm (Cocaine) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/Gary+Webb CRACK REPORTING In 1996, Webb's "Dark Alliance" series in the San Jose Mercury News connected the CIA to crack dealing in Los Angeles during the 1980s and ignited a firestorm of protests throughout the country. Conspiracy theorists and prominent African Americans demanded the government explain why it had dumped crack into South Central L.A., sparking a drug epidemic that ravaged families and communities nationwide. Within weeks, the New York Times, the Los Angeles Times and the Washington Post launched their own investigations repudiating Webb's reporting. Webb, the papers insisted, had shown a link to a few drug dealers and CIA operatives, but he had failed to prove that the CIA started the crack scourge or that it had dumped "tons" of drugs in California in order to fund it's guerrilla armies in Latin America. The Mercury-News admitted it had overreached and Webb lost his job. It was the beginning of a long fall from grace for the Pulitzer Prize winner who ended his agony two years ago by putting a gun to his head. Nonfiction Kill The Messenger: How The CIA's Crack-Cocaine Controversy Destroyed Journalist Gary Webb By Nick Schou Avalon, 233 pages, $14.95 The story of Gary Webb, like most real-life sagas, is complicated. Even in the hands of someone as sympathetic as journalist Nick Schou, Webb appears a fatally flawed man. In his new book Kill The Messenger: How The CIA's Crack-Cocaine Controversy Destroyed Journalist Gary Webb, Schou vacillates from defending Webb to portraying him as a cavalier reporter. The author reserves his strongest criticism for the three national newspapers that ignored the CIA-drug connection for years and instead invested their efforts in discrediting a fellow journalist. An OC (Orange County) Weekly reporter, Schou has covered the drug world for several years. He is convinced that much of Webb's articles were true. In his introduction, Schou writes that Webb "was the best investigative reporter I've ever known" and claims "Gary Webb got it right and that was the worst possible thing he could have done." Perhaps you don't care about Webb or what happened to him. He's a coward, you might say, for taking his own life and leaving his two sons and a daughter without a dad. Maybe, like me, you don't care for journalists who swagger around the newsroom and act like they're starring in some black-and-white movie -- wearing trench coats, screwing around on their wives and drinking heavily. But Gary Webb's blunt dismissal affects us all. It certainly soured journalists on tackling the government's involvement in the drug market. And it left a bad taste in the mouths of many investigative reporters who risk much by exposing the misdeeds of the powerful. The fear of being wrong, of being disparaged by armies of officials and being censured by one's own colleagues is enough to keep journalists from asking tough questions, like: How do we really know there are weapons of mass destruction in Iraq? Kill The Messenger underscores many aspects about the CIA drug connection that Webb got right -- that the CIA was involved with crack dealers in L.A. But it also highlights, in a much more readable account than previous newspaper stories, the facets Webb scrimped on. He cherrypicked facts, he wasn't interested in fairness and ignored anything that didn't support his thesis. He gave in to aggrandizement. He gave into his ego. "Dark Alliance" was the biggest story of Webb's career, and it was his undoing but not for the reasons Schou alleges. I started reading the book wanting to be convinced that Webb was right, that he had been unfairly judged. I met Webb briefly in the fall of 1996 while his series was under attack. He explained the nightmare conditions under which he'd rewritten the series -- he was in the middle of moving and on vacation when the series was edited and finally went to press; he was coerced into writing a lead paragraph that was overreaching; he wasn't in the newsroom to see the inaccurate headlines before they were printed. Schou's exhaustive reporting seems to prove more than the author realizes or intended. Instead of viewing Webb as a victim, readers are likely to view Webb as a philanderer, slacker, druggie, hypocrite and risk-taker. Besides his many affairs, I couldn't get over that the man who was investigating the CIA's involvement in the illicit drug trade was himself a daily pot smoker. Then, after he left the paper and went to work for a California government agency, Webb was the epitome of a lazy bureaucrat -- often the targets of journalistic exposes. The lesson in the Gary Webb affair seems to be that the personal is the professional. Dishonesty can't be overlooked in a private life or a public career. Schou is wrong. In the end, it wasn't the government that destroyed Webb but Webb's own duplicity that did him in. There are no shortcuts to the truth. - --- MAP posted-by: Richard Lake