Sunday, October 19, 2014

Joplin Globe editor still doesn't get it about Baxter Springs sex story

It must not have been an easy week for Joplin Globe Editor Carol Stark.

I imagine her phone has been ringing off the hook and the e-mails and letters to the editor have been pouring in ever since she allowed reporter Jeff Lehr to open his article on a former Baxter Springs teacher/coach  charged with 15 felonies in connection with his sexual relationship with a 15-year-old girl by talking about how "innocently" it started.

Carol Stark addressed the concerns in a column on the editorial page of today's Globe- and she still has completely missed the point.

Many of her readers complained about the details  Lehr used in writing his story. It was those readers Stark lectured in her column, not the ones who were concerned about the slant in the article. If you are going to write that a sexual relationship between a 45-year-old man and a 15-year-old girl began "innocently," and about how he "demurred" when they made a bet on a football game and she asked what she owed him, then it needs to be made clear that the innocent beginning was a part of the crime.

And Lehr's article did not contain a mention of Scott Madden's age.

Despite all of that, it was the amount of details that Stark dwelled on in her column:

A front page story we ran on October 14 provided details from a probable cause affidavit that was the basis of seven counts of aggravated indecent liberties with a child, and a single count of criminal sodomy and indecent solicitation of a child. The charges were filed against a 45-year-old former high school coach in connection with the sexual assault of a 15-year-old girl. Using the probable cause statements, our crime reporter, Jeff Lehr, in a narrative writing style, reported how the two met in 2013 and gave readers details that ultimately led to the man's arrest.

This was Stark's response to a concerned reader:

Did it (this story) make me (and our readers) uncomfortable? Of course it did, and it should have. It should be a warning to every parent of a teenage boy or girl. This young girl was manipulated by an adult."

And she ends with this:

There's a lot of really ugly stuff out there. Information, however offensive, is sometimes necessary to start much-needed conversation.

Any time you write a story that provides details of a crime, especially a sex crime, you are going to have readers who are upset. There was a time when newspapers did not provide any of those details. It made it a lot easier for people in trusted positions to get away with crimes of this nature.

When a teacher, or in the case of Scott Madden, a former teacher, is charged with a crime, there will always be people who jump up immediately and blame the victim because that is not the person they know. In many of these stories, it is the details that make it clear the approach the perpetrator took and often uncover evidence that there have been other victims that he or she violated by using the same approach.

Another thing, though not mentioned as often, is how it often uncovers gaping holes in the mechanisms that should be in place to protect young people. Often, there are those who looked the other way, or complaints from other teachers that were ignored.

Sometimes, we uncover instances of school districts that have done what is called "passing the trash" when they allow someone to quietly resign and move on to another district to spread his or her particular brand of poison, or to leave the profession without the district having to go through the hassle of being involved in legal proceedings.

Stark is completely right when she makes the case that the details are important, no matter how uncomfortable they make us.

That was the easy route for her to take. No one is arguing against that, except for a few people who want to be protected from anything that makes them uncomfortable.

Nowhere does she address the people who complained, rightly, that in his efforts to write an engaging story, one that would capture the readers' attention, Lehr immediately offended people by describing how the relationship between a 45-year-old and a 15-year-old started "innocently."

I find it hard to believe that Lehr was trying to slant the story. He is a veteran reporter and a good one.

The Globe's editors let him down on this one. Apparently, at no point did anyone realize how angry people would be when they read about that allegedly innocent start to something that was anything but innocent.

Slanted writing has been a problem for the Joplin Globe for a long time and has been exacerbated ever since Carol Stark rose through the ranks to become editor.

That was the column that Stark should have written.

The devil was never in the details.

Probable cause affidavit for Baxter Springs Sex Case

10 comments:

Anonymous said...

On last nights episode of 48 hours there was story of a teachers having sex with a student and the family won a very large judgment from the school district I hope the Baxter girls parents sue the pants off of USD 508 for turning a blind eye the this predator a lawyer needs to subpoena the school records when he was coaching in the school system

Anonymous said...

I hate to play the tornado card but i live on south edge of the tornado zone had a lot of damage when i walked out my door after the tornado and all my trees were laying across my driveway and i looked and i could see st.johns hospital staring me in the face from 2 miles away. After the shock wore off I went to check on my eldery friends who are over 80 and they ok. walking back to my house I was thinking to my self this is a billion dollar deal I was wrong 2.5 billion. The last thing we need is school district that builds a goddy school and newspaper that will not report the facts and city council that hires a scam artist

Anonymous said...

"Ugly stuff." Really? From a "professional" journalist? That there is some profound writin', Ms.Stark. Pulitzer in the making. We take you as seriously as you take your readers. You are a sham.

Anonymous said...

Minimalizing school stories seems to be the norm with the Globe, as in the case of a teacher whose Facebook page contained hate language toward gay students and the current superintendent declared that page "hacked." What a joke. No investigation was really done about that by the Globe. That same teacher worked at my school in another district. They let him "resign" after it was discovered that he was in a relationship with one of his female athletes resulting in his divorce. Then he moved to another district and did the same thing but was again allowed to resign rather than have a public scandal. He's preyed on many teens over the years, but no district has stopped him. His current district certainly won't. They cater to him, from what I hear. I wonder what he has on them? The Globe will never investigate that, for sure. He's gross and dangerous, but no one has ever tried to stop him. He hurt a lot of people here. I'm sure he has continued to do so everywhere he's been. Because administrators, and now the local paper, care far more about image than anything else.

Anonymous said...

Funny thing about Joplin...the last thing we need is always the first thing we get.

Anonymous said...

Rogue cop: I am the law.
Rogue Superintendent: I am education.
Rogue City Manager: I am Joplin.
Rogue Editor: I am the news!

Anonymous said...

Don't despair coach. You can always work at R8 admin, Just suck up to the right people and you will be untouchable. In case you did'nt realize, the Globe article was your engraved invitation.

Anonymous said...

If you believe people get the Globe for the stories, then you believe thirteen year old boys get Playboy for its articles as well.

Anonymous said...

Dear Carol and Anson:

Before you roll out your obligatory attack on Mr. Turner, please be advised of a simple truth. "Yellow Journalism" is defined as using sensationalism, attention grabbing headlines, and unresearched/undocumented claims in an effort to get readers. Yes, The Turner Report sometmes uses attention grabbing headlines. The difference is, the writer of this blog does not pretend to be a newspaper. You do. He immediately clarifies his story. You do not. You maintan your pretense of being a legitimate unbiased source of fact, while simultaneously perpetuating your own brand of porpoganda and thinly veiled agenda.

It is ironic that the "real" newspaper is anything but; and, the blogger is dangerously close to being a bonafide news source. He never made this claim. His readers, however, recognize substance over form.

So you keep pretending you add value to this community, while actual reporting takes place in other venues, despite your Yellow Journalism.

Anonymous said...

Dime novel reporting Joplin Globe. Just another nail in your coffin...