September 27, 2005
Katrina Takes a Toll on Truth, News Accuracy
# Rumors supplanted accurate information and media magnified the
problem. Rapes, violence and estimates of the dead were wrong.
By Susannah Rosenblatt and James Rainey, Times Staff Writers
BATON ROUGE, La. — Maj. Ed Bush recalled how he stood in the bed
of a pickup truck in the days after Hurricane Katrina,
struggling to help the crowd outside the Louisiana Superdome
separate fact from fiction. Armed only with a megaphone and
scant information, he might have been shouting into, well, a
hurricane.
The National Guard spokesman's accounts about rescue efforts,
water supplies and first aid all but disappeared amid the roar
of a 24-hour rumor mill at New Orleans' main evacuation shelter.
Then a frenzied media recycled and amplified many of the
unverified reports.
"It just morphed into this mythical place where the most
unthinkable deeds were being done," Bush said Monday of the
Superdome.
His assessment is one of several in recent days to conclude that
newspapers and television exaggerated criminal behavior in the
wake of Hurricane Katrina, particularly at the overcrowded
Superdome and Convention Center.
The New Orleans Times-Picayune on Monday described inflated body
counts, unverified "rapes," and unconfirmed sniper attacks as
among examples of "scores of myths about the dome and Convention
Center treated as fact by evacuees, the media and even some of
New Orleans' top officials."
Indeed, Mayor C. Ray Nagin told a national television audience
on "Oprah" three weeks ago of people "in that frickin' Superdome
for five days watching dead bodies, watching hooligans killing
people, raping people."
Journalists and officials who have reviewed the Katrina disaster
blamed the inaccurate reporting in large measure on the
breakdown of telephone service, which prevented dissemination of
accurate reports to those most in need of the information. Race
may have also played a factor.
The wild rumors filled the vacuum and seemed to gain credence
with each retelling — that an infant's body had been found in a
trash can, that sharks from Lake Pontchartrain were swimming
through the business district, that hundreds of bodies had been
stacked in the Superdome basement.
"It doesn't take anything to start a rumor around here,"
Louisiana National Guard 2nd Lt. Lance Cagnolatti said at the
height of the Superdome relief effort. "There's 20,000 people in
here. Think when you were in high school. You whisper something
in someone's ear. By the end of the day, everyone in school
knows the rumor — and the rumor isn't the same thing it was when
you started it."
Follow-up reporting has discredited reports of a 7-year-old
being raped and murdered at the Superdome, roving bands of armed
gang members attacking the helpless, and dozens of bodies being
shoved into a freezer at the Convention Center.
Hyperbolic reporting spread through much of the media.
Fox News, a day before the major evacuation of the Superdome
began, issued an "alert" as talk show host Alan Colmes
reiterated reports of "robberies, rapes, carjackings, riots and
murder. Violent gangs are roaming the streets at night, hidden
by the cover of darkness."
The Los Angeles Times adopted a breathless tone the next day in
its lead news story, reporting that National Guard troops "took
positions on rooftops, scanning for snipers and armed mobs as
seething crowds of refugees milled below, desperate to flee.
Gunfire crackled in the distance."
The New York Times repeated some of the reports of violence and
unrest, but the newspaper usually was more careful to note that
the information could not be verified.
The tabloid Ottawa Sun reported unverified accounts of "a man
seeking help gunned down by a National Guard soldier" and "a
young man run down and then shot by a New Orleans police
officer."
London's Evening Standard invoked the future-world fantasy film
"Mad Max" to describe the scene and threw in a "Lord of the
Flies" allusion for good measure.
Televised images and photographs affirmed the widespread
devastation in one of America's most celebrated cities.
"I don't think you can overstate how big of a disaster New
Orleans is," said Kelly McBride, ethics group leader at the
Poynter Institute, a Florida school for professional
journalists. "But you can imprecisely state the nature of the
disaster. … Then you draw attention away from the real story,
the magnitude of the destruction, and you kind of undermine the
media's credibility."
Times-Picayune Editor Jim Amoss cited telephone breakdowns as a
primary cause of reporting errors, but said the fact that most
evacuees were poor African Americans also played a part.
"If the dome and Convention Center had harbored large numbers of
middle class white people," Amoss said, "it would not have been
a fertile ground for this kind of rumor-mongering."
Some of the hesitation that journalists might have had about
using the more sordid reports from the evacuation centers
probably fell away when New Orleans' top officials seemed to
confirm the accounts.
Nagin and Police Chief Eddie Compass appeared on "Oprah" a few
days after trouble at the Superdome had peaked.
Compass told of "the little babies getting raped" at the
Superdome. And Nagin made his claim about hooligans raping and
killing.
State officials this week said their counts of the dead at the
city's two largest evacuation points fell far short of early
rumors and news reports. Ten bodies were recovered from the
Superdome and four from the Convention Center, said Bob
Johannessen, spokesman for the Louisiana Department of Health
and Hospitals.
(National Guard officials put the body count at the Superdome at
six, saying the other four bodies came from the area around the
stadium.)
Of the 841 recorded hurricane-related deaths in Louisiana, four
are identified as gunshot victims, Johannessen said. One victim
was found in the Superdome but was believed to have been brought
there, and one was found at the Convention Center, he added.
Relief workers said that while the media hyped criminal
activity, plenty of real suffering did occur at the Katrina
relief centers.
"The hurricane had just passed, you had massive trauma to the
city," said Lt. Col. Pete Schneider of the Louisiana National
Guard.
"No air conditioning, no sewage … it was not a nice place to be.
All those people just in there, they were frustrated, they were
hot. Out of all that chaos, all of these rumors start flying."
Louisiana National Guard Col. Thomas Beron, who headed security
at the Superdome, said that for every complaint, "49 other
people said, 'Thank you, God bless you.' "
The media inaccuracies had consequences in the disaster zone.
Bush, of the National Guard, said that reports of corpses at the
Superdome filtered back to the facility via AM radio,
undermining his struggle to keep morale up and maintain order.
"We had to convince people this was still the best place to be,"
Bush said. "What I saw in the Superdome was just tremendous
amounts of people helping people."
But, Bush said, those stories received scant attention in
newspapers or on television.
Times staff writer Scott Gold contributed to this report.
==============================
G8 scientists tell Bush: Act now - or else...
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By Steve Connor, Science Editor
Published: 08 June 2005
http://www.apfn.org/apfn/katrina.htm