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- <text id=92TT0565>
- <title>
- Mar. 16, 1992: "Don't Quote Me, But . . ."
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Mar. 16, 1992 Jay Leno
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- PRESS, Page 48
- "Don't Quote Me, But..."
- </hdr><body>
- <p>A U.S. Senator cries foul to sexual-misconduct charges, but the
- accusers are not the usual anonymous sources
- </p>
- <p>By William A. Henry III--Reported by David S. Jackson/Seattle
- </p>
- <p> When Senator Brock Adams of Washington quit his bid for
- re-election last week, hours after the Seattle Times charged him
- with sexual misconduct toward eight unnamed female employees or
- political associates, the liberal Democrat said he had been
- destroyed by "hypothetical comments by hypothetical people." For
- most Americans, who read only excerpts or summaries in their
- local dailies, the implication was strong that Adams had been
- victimized by flimsy reporting of unsubstantiated--even
- fabricated--claims from political enemies. The enduring image
- was of a haggard Adams, flanked by his supportive wife and
- daughter, denouncing his accusers as too cowardly to be named
- and the allegations against him as too vague to refute.
- </p>
- <p> In decrying the use of anonymous sources, Adams appealed
- to fair play and to a growing opinion, even among journalists,
- that reporters place far too much faith in people unwilling to
- back up what they say. Often, unnamed sources seek to advance
- some personal agenda. Sometimes they tell lies and lend extra
- credence to falsehood by peddling it as top-secret truth. While
- Adams' abrupt withdrawal, at the end of a weekend during which
- he had raised $130,000 for his campaign, seemed like a tacit
- admission of guilt, he insisted that in his case the
- allegations--which range from uninvited fondling of women to
- drugging their drinks, undressing them and purportedly raping
- one--had been "created out of whole cloth." His reaction on
- reading the stories: "That's not me." He said he quit the race
- because he could not fight back without confronting his
- accusers.
- </p>
- <p> For anyone who actually read them, however, the Seattle
- Times stories stood out as textbook examples of meticulous,
- convincing journalism--and of sourcing that is not really
- anonymous. The paper found not just one or two accusers but many
- more. While none were ready to be named, eight among them
- pledged willingness to back up their claims in court if Adams
- sued the paper. Moreover, despite his insistence that he could
- not recognize the women, their published vignettes abound in
- evocative detail.
- </p>
- <p> Nearly all the accusers are active Democrats; none had an
- obvious political motive to hurt Adams. Nor does the Times,
- which has abandoned its former Republican identity, and endorsed
- Michael Dukakis for President in 1988. Most compelling, the
- accusers had to be sought and coaxed. In one case, when a
- reporter reached a reluctant victim, her first words were, ``For
- three years, I've told myself that when this phone call came,
- I would hang up." (She didn't.) Far from being used by Adams'
- enemies, the paper itself initiated the probe. Says executive
- editor Michael Fancher: "Obviously, we would have preferred to
- run a story naming names. But the choice we faced was either
- silence or this story. And we decided that it was too important,
- and we were too sure of the truth, to be silent."
- </p>
- <p> The genesis of the crusade was, ironically, a misconduct
- investigation that had exonerated Adams. In 1987 a House
- committee aide named Kari Tupper, a daughter of longtime friends
- of Adams', told police he had drugged and molested her at his
- Washington, D.C., home. A year and a half later, after the U.S.
- Attorney's office found insufficient supporting evidence and
- declined to prosecute, she went public. The Times then received
- anonymous calls from two women asserting that Adams had done
- similar things to them.
- </p>
- <p> In many newsrooms, the matter would have ended there. But
- a few Times staff members, notably city editor David Boardman,
- were haunted by the idea that a U.S. Senator renowned for his
- liberal posture on women's issues might be abusive in his
- personal life. Several times, the editors revived the story,
- only to set it aside because no accuser was willing to be named.
- </p>
- <p> In November of last year, a chance conversation between
- Fancher and reporters about the moral leadership role of a
- newspaper prompted him to authorize one last try. Three veteran
- reporters--Pulitzer prizewinner Eric Nalder, 46, and Susan
- Gilmore and Eric Pryne, both 41--were told to reexamine their
- leads. To break the logjam, editors decided that signed
- statements from the accusers would serve as a compromise between
- the identification the paper wanted and the anonymity the
- accusers sought. A week before the story went to press, Fancher
- says, "we looked at what we had and said, `We've got it.'"
- </p>
- <p> While Adams could not face his accusers, he was repeatedly
- offered the chance to answer their accusations. Three requests
- for interviews were deflected. "I'm not going to grant any
- interviews on that," Adams said. Meanwhile, despite his
- assertion that he did not know who his accusers were, some of
- Adams' staff members apparently had a good idea. In the final
- days before publication, they contacted several of the women who
- were sources, belatedly urging their silence.
- </p>
- <p> On the evening before the story appeared, the reporting
- team and their spouses met for a wrap-up dinner. It suddenly
- struck them that each couple included the parent of a daughter.
- Says reporter Pryne: "That was a factor for every one of us."
- It was another reason that, to them, the victims of alleged
- sexual harassment were not "hypothetical" at all.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-