Monthly Archives: December 2012

Voices from Director Sarah Burns and one victim Raymond Santana

Sarah Burns, David McMahon (directors) and Raymond Santana (one of the characters) are invited to The Leonard Lopate Show. They bring more story behind The Central Park Five, a documentary movie about five teenagers were wrongfully convicted of a rape crime in Central Park in 1989. It shows the wrongful convictions from the jury and the innocence of the five people.

It is interesting that back to 1989 in New York City, when 6 crimes a day happened—why the Central Park five drew the attention? Sarah Burns explained it as existed but invisible “racial codes”. I agree with Burns that it was an inter-racial issue, more than a simple rape crime. The majority showed great exaggeration in social problems and the aggressive policemen in this case represented the public fear.

Media also was part of this “century of crime”. They made sensational headlines as the tabloid journalism’s development at that time. The media somehow made people believe that the poorly educated Latino teenagers would do the thing, thinking “they deserve for what they did”. This is an outrageous mindset. Mayor at that time as well as the public didn’t show much opinion, as a result of fear.

Why there were 30 teenagers were brought to the police that night and why these five got singled down? It’s again racial issues. Those dark-skin kids were playing in the field, while the jogger, who was later found jogging at totally different schedule and location. The five were detained because they were vulnerable. On one side, their family didn’t have experience dealing with policemen, and didn’t know how to handle the interrogation when policemen kept their children in darkness. On the other side, policemen didn’t clearly and necessarily notify the kids and their parents about the legal process, confession and aftereffects, etc. They mentioned the legal representation, but they didn’t give kids chances to defend themselves with lawyers.

The juveniles were naïve about the system and scared to get processed with the law enforcement. Santana said that he was kept more than 15 hours for oral confession, during which he was under huge pressure by the smoke and yelling from the policemen. I believed his innocence and also his words that a 14-year-old child is afraid of seeing those things, not to say doing it.  Santana said he was scared due to no experience talking to policemen, meanwhile he hoped his parents could tell him what to do but he was being interrogated alone by aggressive policemen.  So he simply “co-operated” by doing whatever policemen said, for just “be ok” and “go home”.

The truths are: the 5 confessions were not consistent, the investigation didn’t do DNA test, the policemen faked the confession and fingerprints as the evidences, which could prove the innocence of five teenagers. Worse of all, the policemen did not explain the serious responsibility to the suspects in a patient, or at least a professional way.

So the directors and the victims stood out, made this movie and wanted to involve people going back history, facing the mistakes and together working for fairness. What they did in movie could only factually show the incorrect part.

I was impressed by Santana’s words and his painful experience in the movie and also in this interview. He was horrified by the crude interrogation, which was so hard for a child to digest; he was wrongfully convicted and put in jail for 8 years, which brought him permanent criminal record in this life; when he became free, he couldn’t find a job, hardly transit to normal life, instead he started to sell drugs.

This is more than a sensational story or a provoking beat. It’s a great movie and it shows great effort and courage from both directors and four characters (one only showed sounds due to his personal privacy need). In this interview, Burns mentioned that she did try to approach the policemen, council and individuals but all of them found it was hard to comment. There is always different voice –people with deep-seated assumptions thinking, “we’re wrong but they are still guilty.” However, the most important thing is to reveal the truth and people did wrong should admit they made mistakes, as the direct hoped.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Posted in Central Park 5 | 1 Comment

WNYC-Central Park Five-WGY

After reviewing the segment once again, my thoughts were reinforced by what I heard from the producers. They cited several things regarding the case and they touched upon some key facts why the case played out the way it did.  The Fives’ vulnerability, their race, their inexperience with crimes (they had never been in trouble before), no attorneys being present, and a huge amount of pressure were contributing factors to their downfall. Hearing Raymond Santana’s side of things also was important because it highlighted the transition problem that released prisoners face when returning to society.

I was happy that the professor used radio to help us learn.  Specifically, the AM dial and the talk radio sub-genre has been important in the history of our country.  With the rise of the Internet, radio has taken a backseat.  From a very young age, I was taught the importance of AM radio and how it spread news/information so quickly.  Most people don’t know that when the atmospheric conditions are just right, we can hear AM radio stations from all over the world.  Just turn on the radio and explore it for yourself.  Here upstate, there is an historic, highly-powered AM station that has been at the forefront of news distribution since the beginning of radio.  The station is 810 WGY and it gave me my first lesson because I learned that if I listened to the facts, listened to news reports, then I would be well-informed.  I knew this when I was 5 years old.  I shared this story because I see talk radio/AM radio as an important cog in our social fabric.

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

From Bernard Goetz to Central Park Five

From Bernard Goetz to Central Park Five

I guess one can easily understand through these 2 cases (Bernard Goetz and Central Park Five) the racial tensions that existed during the 1980s in New York City. Are there any lessons to learn? How much of a progress did we make as a society? Can the mighty progress of technology help us in anyway? These questions will be answered on part 2 of my blog. In the meantime, let me recount the stories.  On December 22, 1984, a “subway vigilante” known as Bernard Goetz shot 4 young Black men in a Manhattan subway car. The motive was that he was intimidated and thought he was about to get rob.  At that time the opinions were divided: one group concerned for their safety riding the subway system thought he did the right thing. Another group thought this was racism because the victims were 4 young African-Americans. Goetz was arrested and acquitted 3 years later. Yes, he was convicted for possession of unlicensed weapon and was sent to jail for 250 days. By the way, one of the victims, Darryl Cabey, is still paralyzed from the shooting. How did the media behave? Can someone refresh me on that?

            In 1989 a Central Park jogger was raped, beaten and nearly killed. She was a 28 year-old investment banker. Of course, it was without questions a terrifying story. However, this time 5 young men were selected by the NYPD because, according to police, there was a group of 30 or more youngsters causing trouble that night in Central Park. The 5 young men( Kevin Richardson, Raymond Santana, Korey Wise, Yusef Salaam and Antron Mccray} were wrongfully convicted, although there was no physical evidence, but only confessions made under intense police pressure. 13 years later a serial rapist, Mathias Reyes, confessed to the crime with DNA matching evidence. How can anybody recuperate from the physical and emotional harms that where inflicted on them?

Lionel

 

From Bernard Goetz to Central Park Five

I guess one can easily understand through these 2 cases (Bernard Goetz and Central Park Five) the racial tensions that existed during the 1980s in New York City. Are there any lessons to learn? How much of a progress did we make as a society? Can the mighty progress of technology help us in anyway? These questions will be answered on part 2 of my blog. In the meantime, let me recount the stories.  On December 22, 1984, a “subway vigilante” known as Bernard Goetz shot 4 young Black men in a Manhattan subway car. The motive was that he was intimidated and thought he was about to get rob.  At that time the opinions were divided: one group concerned for their safety riding the subway system thought he did the right thing. Another group thought this was racism because the victims were 4 young African-Americans. Goetz was arrested and acquitted 3 years later. Yes, he was convicted for possession of unlicensed weapon and was sent to jail for 250 days. By the way, one of the victims, Darryl Cabey, is still paralyzed from the shooting. How did the media behave? Can someone refresh me on that?

            In 1989 a Central Park jogger was raped, beaten and nearly killed. She was a 28 year-old investment banker. Of course, it was without questions a terrifying story. However, this time 5 young men were selected by the NYPD because, according to police, there was a group of 30 or more youngsters causing trouble that night in Central Park. The 5 young men( Kevin Richardson, Raymond Santana, Korey Wise, Yusef Salaam and Antron Mccray} were wrongfully convicted, although there was no physical evidence, but only confessions made under intense police pressure. 13 years later a serial rapist, Mathias Reyes, confessed to the crime with DNA matching evidence. How can anybody recuperate from the physical and emotional harms that where inflicted on them?

Lionel

 

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on From Bernard Goetz to Central Park Five

compare Absence of Malica with two other movies we have watched

In the film All the President’s Men, journalists are presented as heroes who save the country from a corrupt politician. In the film Absence of Malice, a journalist is shown to be more complex. Megan Carter is not a hero. She is almost a villain because of the negative effects she has on the lives of an innocent man, Michael Gallagher, and his friend, Teresa. In the film’s final scene, Megan defends the profession of journalism but she admits she didn’t do her job very well. I think that’s one of the main points of the film, that journalists are human beings who try to do good by revealing the truth but sometimes make mistakes which can hurt people very badly. Megan’s editor, Mac, also said that he “knows how to be a good reporter” and he “knows how not to hurt people” but he doesn’t know how to do both things at the same time.
 
Besides Megan, another character who doesn’t do his job well is Elliot Rosen, the investigator for the Justice Department. After six months of a frustrating search for the killer of a union leader, Rosen decides to use a method of investigation which eventually  backfires on him and causes him to be fired in the end. Rosen reminded me a little bit of J.J. Hunsecker from The Sweet Smell of Success, because he is someone who wants to get something difficult done but uses someone else to do his dirty work. Hunsecker used the press agent Falco to try to break up his sister’s relationship with a musician. In Absence of Malice, Rosen gets Megan to write a story about Gallagher to try to get Gallagher to provide information on the murder. Megan becomes Rosen’s tool. That is another big point that the film tries to make — that the media can become tools of the government if journalists are not careful in how they do their jobs.
 
Mari
Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on compare Absence of Malica with two other movies we have watched

Central Park Five–WNYC

I listened to the radio show on WNYC with the producers and one of the central park five. Ms. Burns brings home the point that the conviction of the Five were racially motivated. Central Park was sacred ground in the minds of many. So the feeling was that, even though crime was rampant in NYC in the 80s; central park and its neighboring communities felt that it could not reach them and when it did they whom ever did it had to pay.

/Luc

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Central Park Five

The Central Park Five documents the wrongful conviction of five Black and Latino young men in New York City. In my opinion, the movie highlights the institutional failure of the NYPD and the Press.

The NYPD in its haste to calm people down and respond to the Mayor’s call to punish those responsible failed to investigate the crime in the right way. NYPD quickly selected these young men not because it believe that they had committed the crime but because these young men happened to be in the wrong place at the wrong time; though there were nothing linking them to the crime. To them it was a slam dunk: a crime plus five vulnerable young men without the proper representation equals convictions.

All the while NYC mainstream press stood by without asking a single questions of the NYPD. No one was assigned to find out about these young men. The information from the press all came from what the NYPD had released about these young men. No investigation took place.

While watching the movie, all I could think about is how come no one person decided to speak to these young men. Also I felt that the failure of the press though not racial had a lot to do with access. maybe no one wanted to offend the Mayor’s office by printing something that the Mayor, in the movie, had publicly declared a test of the city.

I felt sad watching the movie with my two boys. I felt even sadder when when they could not comprehend why “cops would send innocent people to jail.”

/Luc

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Central Park Five

Radio Segment–Central Park Five

I found the radio segment on the  Central Park Five extremely interesting.  When asked why these 5 were singled out, the producers stated that they were the most vulnerable as they were not involved in any interactions before with the law and were unaware of the workings of the system.  They did not know how to handle the interrogators, and were eager to please the police in order to go home.  They believed that, if anything, they would merely just be witnesses to a crime.  Each had implicated the other in the crime, and the boys never imagined their own words would be used against them.  It was also sad to hear Raymond Santana describe how after he was released from jail, he fell on hard times as there was no transitional programs for him to get acclimated to living life outside of prison.

Christina

 

Posted in Uncategorized | Comments Off on Radio Segment–Central Park Five

What a journalist should NOT do? Watch Movie “Absence of Malice”

This is a very entertaining movie but also delivers great moral values in terms of justice and journalism standards. It’s a romantic story between a naïve but well-meaning journalist Megan Carter (Sally Field) and a son of the wholesale merchant Michael Gallagher (Paul Newman). It’s an enlighten lesson to learn the responsibility in the press and public administration.  I like all characters in the movie and also the story. They are “not true but accurate,” just as the story portrays the idea of “truth” in the movie.

Certainly the prime responsibility of a journalist is to report the truth but something more important is: how to get the facts and deliver the story in the right way?

What major two journalistic sins does she commit in this film? Firstly, she allows the facts of a secret investigation to be leaked to her. She prints an unattributed story about the investigation. Secondly, she becomes “personally involved with the subject of the investigation.” Then she prints another story she should never have printed, and as a result an innocent bystander commits suicide.

Absence of Malice does not invalidate All the President’s Men,” commented by Time magazine’s Richard Schickel. However, many interesting and unforgettable conversations reveal the conflict of the journalist Carter about her unaware wrong-doings leaks.

James A. Wells, Assistant U.S. Attorney General tells Megan in the last scene before Megan tries to prove her innocence.

You know and I know that we can’t tell you what to print or what not to. We hope the press will act responsibly, but when you don’t, there ain’t a lot we can do about it. We can’t have people go around leaking stuff for their own reasons. It ain’t legal. And worse than that, by God it ain’t right.”

Lawyer Davidek talks to Megan that she should confirm her source before she publishes the story.

That as a matter of law, the truth is irrelevant. We have no knowledge the story is false, therefore we’re absent malice. We’ve been both reasonable and prudent, therefore we’re not negligent. We can say what we like about him; he can’t do us harm. Democracy is served.”

She is a good reporter and she loves her work, but she doesn’t have a mindset being a responsible one, who does things professionally and legally. “It’s really very simple. I can hurt someone or not hurt someone. No rules.” I go through her conflicts and confuse as the movie moves forward and I end up with a clear idea of being a good and professional journalist.

 

Update: Though we’re not journalist students, but I found the guidelines to write a report is  quite helpful. Here is the NYU Journalism Handbook for Students Ethics, Law and Good Practice, which covers “off-the-record”, fact-checking information that we discussed in this class.

Link: http://journalism.nyu.edu/assets/PageSpecificFiles/Ethics/NYU-Journalism-Handbook-for-Students.pdf

Sidi

Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged , , | 4 Comments

Absence of Malice

Absence of Malice is a film about a Miami liquor wholesaler, the son of a deceased criminal, who is at the center of the disappearance and assumed murder of a longshoreman union official, Joseph Diaz. The title of the movie refers to defamation of character. This is centered on a news reporter, Megan Carter, who is fighting to advance her career. In doing so, she severely hurts people around her through unethical decision-making and journalistic sins.

One key error Carter made was not contacting Gallagher before she released the story about him. She was supposed to call him and see what he had to say about the allegations she was going to make in her article. However, she did not; and she released highly speculative information about Gallagher that created much unwanted attention for him. She should have repeatedly called Gallagher and left multiple messages; or perhaps, left a copy of the story at his place of business. A reporter must be persistent in attempting to contact the private individual that he or she is releasing a report about. This allows the target of the story to defend him or herself, correct any blaring errors, and make any appropriate comments. Gallagher, like any private individual, can sue the reporter and the newspaper service for defamation of character.

The former error pales in comparison to the one including Teresa Perrone’s name and the details of her story in an article in the paper. Under much emotional stress and being badgered by Carter, Perrone told Carter intimate details about, what could be, Gallagher’s potential alibi. At time the Diaz went missing, Gallagher was with Carter in Atlanta, where she had had an abortion. Megan Carter was so focused on proving Gallagher’s innocence, or lack of involvement, with Diaz, that she went against Perrone’s wishes to not be mentioned in the paper. Carter went against her own morals, ethical boundaries, as well as those expected from a journalist of a major newspaper.  After Perrone’s wishes were ignored and the story was published, she committed suicide.

I am still uncertain if Megan’s relationship with Michael Gallagher was genuine. Was it mere infatuation? Love? Or was it simply using him to benefit from more intimate details surrounding the story. There is, perhaps, some interplay between all of the abovementioned questions.

-Shaun

 

Posted in Uncategorized | 1 Comment

Absence of Malice

The movie gives insights about the aftermaths of unlimited freedom of press. If reporters are not accountable for what they write or nobody can sue them about the allegations in the story, more people can get harm with the false stories.

The reporters should have freedom about absolute information. But if a reporter will print something that can be false, “the absence of malice” will make the reporter to think about the consequences of the story.

In the movie, Megan Carter makes some major faults as a reporter. First, she does not give Michael Gallagher a chance to talk about the story before the publication. If Gallagher had knowledge about the story, he could defend himself or tell his side of the story.

The other fault is that she does not consider the consequences of the stories she writes. She is irrelevant to her sources’ concerns. Even Carter has an opportunity not to reveal the names of the resources; she publishes the name of the woman, who tries to prove that Gallagher was not involved in the crime. The woman commits suicide after the publication of the story about her abortion. Gallagher loses his workers and shuts down his business due to the story.

She also does not confirm the information she gets with other sources. She never questioned the reason of the leakage about a hidden investigation before publication. She always publishes the information she gets with a rush.

Posted in Uncategorized | 6 Comments