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Pay for Say
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In journalism, few things
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are considered worse than paying sources. Media institutions that pay for
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information--the paper and TV tabloids--are branded sleazy and unprofessional.
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The sources and their information are regarded as being highly unreliable. In
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the Flytrap scandal, those who have sold their stories or tried to include
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Kathleen Willey, Gennifer Flowers, the Arkansas state troopers, Cristy Zercher
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(a flight attendant on Clinton's 1992 campaign plane), and Mike McGrath (a
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former White House steward). All have been denigrated--and their credibility
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challenged--as a result.
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But that
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is not the whole list of people who've cashed in on private knowledge of
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Clinton and his doings. There's George Stephanopoulos, who has been paid $2.8
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million from Little, Brown and Co. for his forthcoming White House memoir.
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Stephanopoulos advised Bill Clinton in Newsweek to hold a "come-clean"
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press conference and "tell us everything about [his] relationship with Monica
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Lewinsky." But Stephanopoulos can't come clean himself on everything he knows
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about Clinton. As he's explained to reporters, he's under a gag order from
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Little, Brown, which wants to protect its $2.8 million investment in anything
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juicy he may have to reveal.
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That's different, of course. When Stephanopoulos' book
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comes out, nobody will impugn his motives or question his reliability simply
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because he sold his story to the highest bidder. Nobody will call him a
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liar--at least, not just because of the money. And the difference is ... what,
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exactly? Well, one difference is a matter of class--a journalistic attitude
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toward people who talk to the Star that parallels the "trailer trash"
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dismissal of Paula Jones.
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This is
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not to suggest that Stephanopoulos shouldn't be trusted. It is meant to suggest
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that the respectable media covering Flytrap have not been serving their readers
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or the truth by dismissing paid-for information out of hand.
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The current spate of say and pay began back in
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1992, when Flowers made a big splash with her account of a 12 year affair with
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Clinton. The story was too big to ignore but was easy to dismiss as fiction,
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because the Star had paid her $150,000. Clinton denied the affair, and
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it wasn't until this year that we learned his denial was a lie: During his
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Jones deposition, Clinton acknowledged that he had had sex with Flowers--though
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he says it happened only once.
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More
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recently, Zercher earned $50,000 from the Star for her story about how
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Clinton talked dirty and squeezed her breast during the '92 campaign.
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(
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Slate
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's monthly tabloid roundup gives you the
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skinny on that story.) Zercher's story supports Jones' and Willey's
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accounts of unwanted touching by Clinton, yet the mainstream media have largely
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snubbed it. Newsweek knocked Zercher's credibility in a short piece,
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"Still More Tawdry Tales," because she didn't tell this version of the story to
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a reporter in 1994 after she was counseled to say "all positive things" by a
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White House lawyer.
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Willey's lip-quivering confession on 60 Minutes was
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unpaid, but the press raised doubts about her by reporting that she had
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approached a book publisher in the hope of turning the breast grab into a money
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grab. The New York Times and Time magazine reported this and
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other damaging information provided by her former friend, Julie Steele. (Steele
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has changed her story of what Willey told her more times than Hillary has
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changed her hairstyle.) Oddly, neither the Times nor Time
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identified Steele as the recipient of tabloid cash, even though the National
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Enquirer paid her $7,000 for a photo of Willey and Clinton. Was this an
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oversight, or was it a recognition that applying the say and pay standards
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uniformly would render Steele useless as a source to discredit Willey?
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You've
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probably never heard of Mike McGrath. He's the former Navy steward who told his
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stories to the Star (for $50,000 again)--and to Kenneth Starr's grand
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jury--of what he had seen and heard about Monica and others at the White House.
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More tainted meat, disdained by the respectable media.
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Last month, the New York Observer broke
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a money story about the Arkansas troopers. Having served as Clinton's
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bodyguards when he was governor, the troopers later told the Los Angeles
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Times and the American Spectator about his sexual exploits.
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According to the Observer , conservative Chicago financier Peter Smith
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helped bring the troopers to the attention of the Spectator 's David
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Brock. Smith also gave the two troopers money when they lost their part-time
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jobs after their story appeared in 1993 in the Los Angeles Times and the
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Spectator . (The troopers split $21,000, according to the
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Observer . Smith told the Chicago Sun-Times he'd paid them $6,700
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each.) Smith also paid Brock $5,000 for an abandoned book project.
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These revelations were
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"embarrassing" to Clinton's opponents, wrote the Washington Post . The
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Sun-Times quoted Rahm Emanuel, Stephanopoulos' successor, on the
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revelation: "From Day One I always thought this was politically motivated and
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had politics written all over it; after five years, it is nice to have the
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truth catch up with the president's political opponents." The "truth"? What on
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earth is Emanuel talking about? The troopers have yet to recant their charges
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that they had arranged and concealed Clinton's sexual adventures on public
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time.
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Now don't get me wrong. I
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don't endorse the practice of paying sources. And I certainly don't endorse the
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practice of giving money to witnesses in a criminal investigation (rich
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right-winger Richard Mellon Scaife is accused of having provided the money that
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allegedly went to former Clinton associate David Hale). Above all, I don't
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condemn the practice of paying journalists to tell their sources'
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stories. In fact, as long as sources can be persuaded to supply the information
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for free, there's more money for those of us who repackage it for public
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consumption.
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