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From the People Who Brought Us Judith Miller and George Bush

MichaelCollins's picture


From the People Who Brought Us
Judith Miller & George Bush

Former New York New York Times reporter, Judith Miller, who wrongly
claimed Iraq had weapons of mass destruction (WMD) and her president.
(Images left, right)

The New York Times "Covers" the Susan Lindauer Hearing

Michael Collins
"Scoop" Independent News
Washington, DC

The New York Times disgraced itself and betrayed the citizens of the United States when it repeatedly headlined misleading stories by reporter Judith Miller that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction (WMD). The paper issued a meandering apology well after the 2003 invasion prompted by the inaccurate reporting of Miller, the self-styled "Miss Run Amok" reporter, and others. But it was too little and too late to correct the damage. And it seems the Times is still running amok at the expense of what's in the public interest.

One has to wonder if the New York Times and the White House coordinated efforts on the WMD matter. They certainly worked very well together, propping up in tandem the fear-based prophecy of a menacing Saddam who would deliver his nuclear filled hate to our shores. This was total nonsense, to put it kindly.

We know that the Bush administration and the New York Times editor, William Keller, communicated about a very sensitive matter before the 2004 election. New York Times reporters James Risen and Eric Lichtblau had discovered that the Bush administration had been illegally wiretapping citizens since Sept. 11, 2001. "Internal discussions about drafts of the article had been 'dragging on for weeks' before the Nov. 2 election, Mr. Keller acknowledged," according to an article by Times public editor Byron Calme Instead of publishing the story, Times editor Keller killed and barred the story from public release until December 16, 2006, 13 months after the 2004 election.

Was this a coincidence? Not at all. Bush requested the story be killed for "national security" reasons. Forgetting the paper's shining moment when it released the Pentagon Papers, Keller willingly complied.

This was the election that would determine if Mr. Bush would have another four years to work the magic that's brought the nation to its current state of peril. When the story finally broke, it created a wave of negative reaction across the political spectrum.

Thanks to the New York Times' deliberate delay, we'll never know how the public would have responded just weeks before the 2004 vote. Based on the public response when the story was released, it may well have created enough of a shift to render the dirty tricks of Ohio and elsewhere meaningless.

The false WMD reports represented propaganda of the most frightening type. It came from reporter Miller who had relied largely on one source, Ahmad Chalabi. He was on the Defense Department payroll at the time that reporter Miller gained the WMD information from him. Without any doubt, the New York Times was a major enabler of the Iraq invasion and occupation.

By withholding a most devastating indictment of the lawless regime in power, namely illegal wiretapping of U.S. citizens, the New York Times denied citizens the option of a fully informed choice in 2004 and it played a major role in returning Bush-Cheney to power.

Four thousand U.S. deaths, tens of thousands of life long injuries to U.S. troops, 1.2 million dead Iraqis due to civil strife triggered by the war, 5 million Iraqi orphans, and the loss of United States' prestige on a massive scale: this is the shared legacy of the New York Times coverage leading up to the Iraq invasion. A nation on the verge of bankruptcy, foreclosures at epidemic rates, national debt so out of control it is difficult to even measure and a deep recession with possibly worse down the road: this is just a part of the legacy of the New York Times' coverage of the 2004 election.

How low will they sink?

Even on a smaller scale, their depths are without limits, it would seem.

The most recent example is the New York Times' coverage of the competency hearing on June 17, 2008 in the Susan Lindauer versus the United States in the Federal District Court, Southern District of New York, in lower Manhattan. Antiwar Activist Returns to Court for Iraq Spy Case, Alan Feuer, New York Times, June 18, 2008.

The headline betrays the first major problem with the New York Times coverage. Susan Lindauer has claimed all along that she was an anti-war and anti-sanctions activist as well as a U.S. asset. However, no one who has read the indictment or the informed coverage would refer to Lindauer as an accused "spy." She is charged with being an "unregistered foreign agent." The "high water mark" of the indictment, as Judge Mukasey called it, is the charge that Lindauer attempted to influence U.S. policy on behalf of pre-war Iraq through the delivery of this January 2003 letter to Andrew Card, then chief of staff for President Bush, and Colin Powell, then secretary of state.

The New York Times story opens with this curious statement:

"She rolled her eyes. She stuck her tongue out at the prosecutor. It was decidedly not the usual courtroom demeanor. Then again, it was not the usual federal case." New York Times, June 18, 2008 (NYT)

I attended the hearing and sat in the front row of the courtroom. Of all the spectators, I had one of the best views of defendant Susan Lindauer and the witnesses. With regard to "rolling her eyes," that was simply not visible from the public seating since Lindauer faced the judge showing spectators only her back except when she turned and was visible in profile. As for "sticking out her tongue," I saw no such behavior and Lindauer denies the reporter's claim vigorously. The alleged gesture was not reported by the New York Daily News, Associated Press, and New York Metro. Nor did I report it in this article on the hearing.

Why would the reporter begin a news story with such an inflammatory unverified charge?

If we skip to the end of the article, we might find an answer. The reporter closed the story with this statement by Lindauer from her post hearing press conference in the hall just outside Judge Loretta Preska's courtroom.

"She angrily contested an accusation in her indictment that she had illegally lunched with Iraqi intelligence operatives.

"You want to send me to prison because I had a cheeseburger," she said, "even though I'm not the person who actually ate the cheeseburger." NYT

The reporter plucked out of context a random remark about cheeseburgers to characterize Lindauer's denial of serious charges as weak and less than serious.

Lindauer was arguing that the indictment was both flawed and incorrect. She denied these charges, pointed out that she had not been in the city on the dates alleged, and asserted that she can prove it. Then she illustrated what she clearly believed to be the absurdity of the charges with the cheeseburger remark. By lifting this quotation out of context, an entirely different meaning is implied.

The New York Times reporting on the facts of the case is also notably wanting. The reporter echoed the prosecutors claim that "a half-dozen doctors claimed Lindauer suffered from paranoia and delusions of grandeur." Lindauer, the subject of these professionals, questioned the accuracy of the prosecutor's statement.

The story leaves out the psychiatrist who examined Lindauer just after her arrest and found no such thing. It fails to mention the two psychotherapists who saw Lindauer over a period of months and failed to report any of this. Observation and interaction over an extended period are powerful tools for diagnosis.

The reporter also failed to note the completed report submitted to the court by a distinguished Washington, D.C. area psychiatrist and academic which reportedly says that Lindauer is competent to stand trial. The psychiatrist is scheduled to appear on Lindauer's behalf at the next hearing before Judge Preska on July 7, 2008. But discovering this would require that the reporter actually talk to the defendant.

This was, after all, a competency hearing on the mental capacity of Lindauer to stand trial. Wouldn't you expect the New York Times to cover both sides of the story?

The New York Times described the last hearing of former judge, now U.S. Attorney General Mukasey, on the prosecution's request to have Lindauer forcibly drugged. He said that "Judge Mukasey declined to rule on the request, saying that the case would be assigned to a new judge -- which turned out to be Loretta A. Preska -- and that she would eventually have to decide." NYT

That's entirely incorrect. In his "Opinion and Order" of Sept. 6, 2006, Mukasey wrote: "Based on the evidence presented at a Sell hearing on May 4 and May 9, 2006, for the reasons explained below, the government has failed to carry this burden --- Accordingly, the motion is denied." (Author's emphasis)

The New York Times article referred to the defense witnesses' testimony as "suggestively odd." Why would the Times make that inference?

The first witness, Kelly O'Meara, was a former reporter for the Washington Times and Insight Magazine and a senior congressional staffer for over two decades. She established a strong connection between Lindauer and an individual reported to be a part of U.S. intelligence, a relationship that endured over time.

The second witness, Dr. Parke Godfrey, was deliberate and thoughtful. He is a long time associate of Lindauer's and a PhD level associate professor of computer science with a solid academic record. He told of Lindauer's anti-war activism and also of her warnings about 911.

"Appearing for the defense, Dr. Godfrey testified under oath that Lindauer told him of her specific concerns about an attack on the United States. She told him that a "massive" attack would occur in the southern part of Manhattan, involving airplanes and possibly a nuclear weapon. The witness said that she mentioned this in the year 2000, which coincided with the Lockerbie trial. And then in 2001, Lindauer also mentioned the anticipated attack in the spring, 2001 and then August 2001. Godfrey said, at that time, Lindauer thought an attack was "imminent" and that it would complete what was started in the 1993 bombing (the original World Trade Center bombing)." "Scoop" Independent News, Michael Collins, June 18, 2008

The Associated Press covered the 9/11 portion of the testimony but not the New York Times.

The New York Times coverage of this story opens with an inflammatory personal attack verified only by the reporter - the claim that Lindauer stuck her tongue out. It ends with a quotation clearly out of context leading to a negative view of Lindauer's coherence. Combined, the two inflammatory aspersions have the effect of presenting an unstable individual. Is the reporter qualified to make this assessment from the gallery? Is this some new form of remote diagnosis?

The story erred by ignoring Mukasey's highly significant "opinion and order" that denied the government the ability to physically force drugs on the defendant. The reporter jettisoned the facts by claiming that Mukasey simply passed that issue along to Lindauer's current judge, a factually incorrect statement.

The story ignored mental health reports that are the crux of the competency issue and favorable to Lindauer's claim, instead relying solely on the prosecutor's characterization of the government's evidence.

The New York Times blithely extended the personal attack on Lindauer to her witnesses by calling their testimony "suggestively odd." Both witnesses presented calm, considered demeanors, described relevant information, and gave every appearance, in my opinion, of being open and cooperative with the hearing process.

What is the New York Times up to? Was this just the product of a bad day by a reporter who preferred to be somewhere else? Is the New York Times entering a new realm of coverage that includes highly subjective personal attacks? Are we seeing the birth of a new deductive journalism in which the facts are tailored to create a story that the paper prefers?

These are the people who brought us Judith Miller's fatal distortions and covered up George Bush's illegal surveillance activities from consideration in the 2004 election.

They continued that tradition in the article on the Lindauer competency hearing by inflammatory claims that would lead uninformed readers to a significant bias against the defendant and factual errors about the history of the case that are less than helpful.

The reporter from the New York Times characterized Lindauer in a derisive and mocking tone. If he truly believed the prosecutor's experts with regard to Lindauer's mental state, he would be guilty of behavior that is simply not acceptable in almost any circle. Let's give him the benefit of the doubt and presume that he had another motive for his characterizations.

Stories like this are not only unbalanced and biased. They promote injustice to citizens who deserve an opportunity to achieve justice through a fair trial.

END

Previous "Scoop" coverage of the Susan Lindauer case:

American Cassandra: Susan Lindauer's Story by Michael Collins 17 October 2007
Bush Political Prisoner Gets her Day in Court by Michael Collins June 11, 2008

An Exclusive Interview with Bush Political Prisoner Susan Lindauer by Michael Collins June 2008

911 Prediction Revealed at Susan Lindauer Competency Hearing by Michael Collins June 17, 2004

Acknowledgments to Susannah Pitt and K. Stone for their very helpful assistance

This material may be reproduced in whole or part with attribution of authorship, a link to this article, and acknowledgment of image use information.

tags:

Set Up Buzz!

This Is Absolutely Chilling

The NY Crimes up to its usual, and the U.S. government adopting Soviet-style "justice.

I wonder if you have thought of turning your stories into a Journal article?

MichaelCollins's picture

Chilling indeed and ?

I was at the hearing and can attest to the fact that the AP report is reasonable, the NY Daily News is their catchy style, but the NYT was simply at a hearing in their own heads. The reporter took pains to paint Lindauer as having a problem through that introductory remark and then bought into the prosecutions "six psychiatrists" (wrong number) who say she's delusional. If that's the case, and a read of the article indicates he's definately leaning in that direction, then WHY THE MOCKING PROSE STYLE. Lindauer can take care of herself quite well, but this smear piece was below any belt imaginable.

My question is - and I'll look too - what's a Journal article?

"Furthest from him is best, whom reason hath equaled, force hath made supreme above his equals." Milton

Well you're in for a treat

If you hit the journal button at the top of the page it will take you to the Journal. There you will see Spinelli's articles and book reviews, and investigative articles.

The difference between the community site and the Journal is that the Journal is edited and fact checked by the staff and it is published as an ePluribus Media article written by ..... So you are not free to cross-post it without permission from the editors.

The really good thing is that it is a more permanent location for serious articles.

MichaelCollins's picture

Thanks!

That's very helpful.

"Furthest from him is best, whom reason hath equaled, force hath made supreme above his equals." Milton

Alan Feuer....does he have his own

agenda? Maybe it's time to look a little closer at this reporter.

MichaelCollins's picture

I wondered that. If you click on his name, articles appear

How can they let something like that go to print?

It's such a nasty attack. They won't read it. But if they do, I truly hope that they read the second to last paragraph and digest it thoroughly.

As for the reporters agenda, let him be knowns by his works;)

"Furthest from him is best, whom reason hath equaled, force hath made supreme above his equals." Milton

Bought and Sold

I would also be interested in the names of the psychiatrists the government used who found her delusional--to do a little digging into their biases, political and monetary. You can pay an "expert" witness to say any damn thing you please these days. To ask for what I assume is an order to allow sodium pentathol to be administered is bogus too-- this so-called "truth serum" is highly unreliable. I would think that these delusional and paranoid ideations would be evident from any taped or videotaped evidence for independent observers to diagnose. The 'he said,she said' nature of their argument is suspect--if they have evidence , make them produce it. Delusions of grandeur and paranoid ideation is usually pretty consistent over time--unless, of course ,it was induced by psychoactive intervention at the time of her interrogation.

A brief look at the history in this country of forced intramuscular medication of psychotropic medications and other psychoactive substances on prisoners provides plenty of evidence that her "mental status" should be viewed with great suspicion.

I hear from my friends in the newspaper biz that experienced reporters are being fired right and left, and replaced with ones right out of journalism school who are cheaper by the dozen. News suffers but costs are cut. What do you know about this reporter?

Terrific article, Michael.

First Hit From Mr. Google

Refers to this article in the New York Observer from August 2005 which calls him
"ersatz danger slut and metafabricator Alan Feuer"
http://www.observer.com/term/28384

Others refer to his book on the Iraq war in which he creates a character (himself) "T.R." (meaning this reporter) as dishonest journalism at its most craven. By his own admission (after the criticism started rolling in), he characterizes his book as"...recollected memory, not recorded fact." From Pressthink June 10 2005:
"Skies darken for the author when New York Times spokeswoman Catherine Mathis, in response to questions from a New York Observer reporter, says that “T.R.” is an unreliable narrator. She also says he was a reliable narrator back when he was reporting as Alan Feuer for the New York Times."

http://journalism.nyu.edu/pubzone/weblogs/pressthink/2005/06/10/frkn_nro...

“In the book itself, Feuer acknowledges that he has taken liberties with his reminiscences,” Mathis wrote in an e-mail response to the Observer. “We very much believe that is the case.”

Mr. Feuer, it appears according to the many web hits on his name and reputation, leaves a trail of "facts" much like a psychotic, delusional, and paranoid Hansel and Gretel trail about the woods to save their sorry butts when they get lost. There are many, many complaints about his flexible, creative use of facts and non-facts. Gee--one wonders why he hasn't been sent out to pasture except that he can be counted on to reliably get the facts wrong,and take a few liberties with his reminiscences perhaps in a very convenient, useful way.

Good work as usual, DEFuning

Reminds me about how you enlightened us all about the paid for shrink -- Sally PTSD is a pre-existing condition Satel. A whole different kind of prostitute.

MichaelCollins's picture

While I'd never want to belong to a club that would have me as

a member, I do like being on target on the minor point of this guy's attitude. That's a nice intro. When I lived there, that was one of my favorite topics;)

Thanks for the lead. I sent them the article and said they should feel free to use part of all of it if they so chose.

------------------------

"Furthest from him is best, whom reason hath equaled, force hath made supreme above his equals." Milton

MichaelCollins's picture

You bring up a good point

The drug mentioned at Carswell was Haldol but sodium pentathol might have been the objective. Who would have ever known?

Of interest, for those not in need (and even for some in need), Haldol can produce the type of contortions seen in the torture pics - painful positions that are relentless.

My bias here is to see Lindauer get her wish, a trial or a government disposition that indicates none is needed/warranted. That's her right, rather than being labeled "delusional" because of her defense, i.e., that she was a U.S. asset.

Mukasey called the letter to Card the "high water mark" of the indictment. Well, what's the problem with the letter? It s an accurate prediction of what happened. And if she were guilty as charged, WHY would Lindauer spell out her contacts & activities in 9 previous letters while she was supposedly committing the offenses that are charged? If you're the government, one good answer to that questions is to say that she's incompetent to stand trial. The question never gets asked.

Who knows how this will come out but the process has been one that chills the mind and willingness to speak of some, I'm sure (present company excluded).

Thanks for the kind words.

"Furthest from him is best, whom reason hath equaled, force hath made supreme above his equals." Milton

Andy Card..........

somehow I am remembering that he was somehow related to Susan.
It makes sense to me that the urgency she felt...she'd want to get as close to the top as possible to be heard.

MichaelCollins's picture

That's on target., imho

She's never said that they were close but he was certainly close to the people who needed to know what she had to say:

1) that the exiles had no credibility with the Iraqi people - demonstrated;
2) that there was great bitterness about the deaths and damage from bombing and sanctions - demonstrated; and
3) that the attack on an Arab state would create a boon for the bin Laden operation which was on the ropes plus create opportunities for charismatic anti U.S. clerics.

We know that there were U.S. government folks saying the same thing. So, by the government's logic with Lindauer, those prescient patriots were echoing an "unregistered foreign agent." Or, in the alternative, Lindauer argues that this was her very best advice on what she felt would be a calamitous invasion and occupation.

The letter to Card was the "high water" mark of the indictment, according to our current A.G., who was her judge when he made the statement. In legalese, that means that it was the meat of the indictment. Good grief!

"Furthest from him is best, whom reason hath equaled, force hath made supreme above his equals." Milton

Chemical Restraints

Haldol and other antipsychotics are also known as "chemical restraints," substituting for the four point restraints to tie down a "difficult" patient etc and have been administered to demanding and combative inmates, the elderly and others' who are difficult to control. While Haldol is effective in clearing up psychotic ideation, it also has a tremendously sedating action in both cognitions and motor skills--leading to the infamous Haldol Shuffle. The painful contortions you describe are tardive dyskinesia and are indeed awful. By claiming that she is "delusional," they can ostensibly "clear" up her cognitions but they also serve to sedate her so that she is more controllable and unlikely to make charges against anybody.

MichaelCollins's picture

duplicate msg

ooPs

Funny

Alan Feuer - 38 corrections and counting

I just wish they'd kept going with the corrections and published all of them though.

And there's a photo at Media Bistro. Next time see if he even shows up in the courtroom or if he just writes from a coffee shop up the street.

Alan Feuer - poser du jour.

Following your link Susie...

I particularily liked the comment about how Feuer is scrupulously honest without sticking to the facts...

WTF?

I do believe

that that the tongue was meeting the cheek.

Like I said I think this is a very important story

on the two counts: The Times has a consistent record of dishonest journalism in reporting Administration disinformation; Lindauer is being treated abusively, not only denied justice but being threatened with forcible administration of psychotropic drugs.

BUT ARE WE CONSIDERING that everything she says may be true. Look at how Carter was treated after he tried to broker peace during his last Middle East trip he was pilloried and ridiculed by the Administration and its press whores. Look at the treatment of Valerie Plane Wilson. Perhaps she did have information that she tried to pass on to prevent the Iraq war. As someone less influential than Plane or Carter she is that much more vulnerable.

Just a thought. I know it can be that she exaggerates, embellishes, lies or is deluded. But just maybe she is telling the truth.

MichaelCollins's picture

There you go

Thanks. I'm sure "some say" that it should replace fluoride in the water system - zombie nation accomplished.

My main interest in this case is the outrageous process violations plus the excessive "restraint" of Lindauer through the incarceration - 7 months at Carswell (in the middle of an Air Force base in Ft. Worth) and then at NYC Metro awaiting trial. I'm told Carswell makes NYC Metro lock up look good.

Why?

One point not made yet regarding the "expert" testimony from the prosecution is this. Even if they could demonstrate that their reports are totally accurate, points vigorously contested by the defense, they could have simply been measuring the reaction to an overwhelming trauma inflicted by the government. That's why the reports from the DC area -over time- are so significant.

btw, You links lead me to this on Feuer - Gawker.Com -

http://gawker.com/search/feuer/

"New York is a Fun City" (and a great one too!)

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