Author Topic: CNN's Stelter: News Anchors Secretly Talking to Ferguson Officer  (Read 662 times)

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Offline mystery-ak

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CNN's Stelter: News Anchors Secretly Talking to Ferguson Officer
Sunday, November 23, 2014 04:43 PM

 

CNN's Brian Stelter reported Sunday that major news anchors have been meeting secretly with Darren Wilson, the Ferguson police officer who fatally shot Michael Brown, in hopes of landing an exclusive.

"I'm going to let you in on a secret. Some high-profile news anchors have met Wilson. They've talked with him one-on-one in secret locations entirely off the record – all in the hopes of landing his very first television interview," Stelter told his audience Sunday on "Reliable Sources."

Stelter said his sources have told him NBC's Matt Lauer, ABC's George Stephanopoulos, CBS' Scott Pelley and CNN's Anderson Cooper and Don Lemon have met with Wilson, and he assumes others have as well. Likely, a Fox News anchor is in the mix, Stelter said, though he admitted he doesn't know who.

"My sense from my sources is that it's mostly the anchors doing the talking in these off-the-record meetings, it's mostly Darren Wilson listening and getting to know the person," Stelter said.

Stelter said the other networks did not respond to requests for comment, but his colleagues at CNN, Cooper and Lemon, did take to Twitter to address the report.

Anderson Cooper tweeted:

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Anderson Cooper        ✔ @andersoncooper
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For the record, I met briefly with Darren Wilson a few days ago to see if he wanted to do an interview with me. That's standard procedure
11:03 AM - 23 Nov 2014

Cooper continued that he has met and interviewed Brown's family and has spoken numerous times on the record and off the record with Brown family attorneys.

"Prior to interviewing Donald Sterling, for example, I also met with him to ask him to do an interview. That's how you ask for an interview," Cooper tweeted. The former LA Clippers owner first spoke to Cooper after reports surfaced he had made racist comments in secretly recorded private conversations.

Cooper also tweeted that Wilson chose not to do an interview with him, but added he would want to interview anyone with information about the case, including members of the grand jury currently considering whether to indict Wilson.

"There is no conspiracy here. Reporters want to intv people and sometimes you have to meet them first," Cooper tweeted.

Stelter wrote on CNN.com http://money.cnn.com/2014/11/23/media/ferguson-officer-wilson-interview/index.html that Cooper was responding to others on Twitter who criticized him after the report.

Lemon, too, took to Twitter:

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Don Lemon        ✔ @donlemon
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For those asking, yes I met with Darren Wilson regarding an interview. Not out of the ordinary. @CNNTonight @brianstelter
11:08 AM - 23 Nov 2014

Lemon noted that he had interviewed the Brown family, Dorian Johnson and various witnesses.

"Of course we'd want to interview Wilson," Lemon tweeted, adding, " FYI #CNN does not pay for interviews."

Stelter wrote online that his network sources told him that the CBS news magazine "60 Minutes" had been in especially hot pursuit of a Wilson interview. Pelley, who anchors the "CBS Evening News" also is a correspondent for "60 Minutes."

Wilson has not spoken publicly ever since the August 9 shooting death of Brown which sparked protests and calls by some for him to be criminally charged in the shooting.

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Offline mystery-ak

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Re: CNN's Stelter: News Anchors Secretly Talking to Ferguson Officer
« Reply #1 on: November 24, 2014, 02:38:46 pm »
http://money.cnn.com/2014/11/23/media/ferguson-officer-wilson-interview/index.html?hpt=hp_c2

Exclusive: Why TV anchors met secretly with Ferguson officer who shot Michael Brown
By Brian Stelter   @brianstelter November 23, 2014: 1:13 PM ET

 NEW YORK (CNNMoney)
Practically every journalist covering the death of Michael Brown would like to interview Darren Wilson, the police officer who shot and killed Brown.

In the pursuit of that interview, several high-profile television anchors have secretly met with Wilson, according to sources at several TV networks. All of the meetings were off the record, meaning the anchors could not describe what was said.

These meetings are a normal part of the TV guest booking process, but they're significant in this case because Wilson has not been seen in public since Brown's death in Ferguson, Missouri on August 9.

Among the anchors who have met with Wilson are Matt Lauer of NBC, George Stephanopoulos of ABC, Scott Pelley of CBS, and Anderson Cooper and Don Lemon of CNN.

It is unclear if Wilson, through his representatives, has agreed to be interviewed by any of the journalists.

Shortly after I named the anchors on my CNN media program "Reliable Sources" on Sunday morning, something happened that I was not expecting: Cooper and Lemon confirmed on Twitter that the meetings had taken place.

"For the record, I met briefly with Darren Wilson a few days ago to see if he wanted to do an interview with me. That's standard procedure," Cooper wrote on Twitter.

Cooper apparently decided to tweet about it because some viewers who saw my "Reliable Sources" segment thought the meetings were inappropriate and said so on Twitter. Some commenters even suggested -- conspiratorially -- that the meetings revealed bias on the part of the anchors.

Cooper pointed out that he'd repeatedly interviewed Brown's family members and their attorneys.

"I'd also like to interview the grand jury," Cooper wrote. "There is no conspiracy here. Reporters want to interview people and sometimes you have to meet them first."

He added that Wilson had chosen "not to do an interview with me."

Separately, Lemon wrote on Twitter that his meeting with Wilson was "not out of the ordinary," and that "We've interviewed the Brown family, Dorian Johnson and all witnesses. Of course we'd want to interview Wilson."

None of the other anchors have commented. Representatives for NBC, ABC and CBS declined to comment.

Two of my network sources -- who spoke on condition of anonymity -- said that the CBS newsmagazine "60 Minutes" has been in especially hot pursuit of an interview with Wilson.

The police officer's representatives decided to arrange meetings with people from "60 Minutes" and people from several other networks.

None of the sources would say where or when the meetings took place.

In the meetings, according to the sources, the anchors did most of the talking. The purpose was the same with Wilson as with any high-profile interview subject: to establish trust and comfort.

Cooper, on Twitter, drew a comparison to another man in the news that many journalists wanted to interview earlier this year: disgraced Los Angeles Clippers team owner Donald Sterling.

"Prior to interviewing Donald Sterling, for example, I also met with him to ask him to do an interview. That's how you ask for an interview," Cooper wrote.

It's worth keeping in mind that Wilson could choose not to be interviewed by anyone.

"Inside Edition" chief correspondent Jim Moret, my guest on "Reliable Sources," said "the perception of the network, the perception of the venue and the perception of the interviewer all come into play" when subjects are thinking about breaking their silence.
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