Thursday Reads: Did Nepotism at The Washington Post Contribute to Irresponsible Reporting on the UVA Rape Story?

Matisse-Woman-Reading-with-Tea1

Good Morning!!

Have you ever wondered how extremely young men are able to get jobs at elite newspapers like The Washington Post right out of college?

Take for example T. Rees Shapiro, who has led the charge to not only discredit the Rolling Stone story on the problem of rape on the University of Virginia campus but also efforts to dismiss and humiliate Jackie, one of the women interviewed by Rolling Stone writer Sabrina Rubin Erdley .

However flawed the Rolling Stone article may have been, it was about much more than Jackie’s story. It illustrated a culture of minimization of rape that had existed had UVA for at least 30 years, in which women who reported being sexually assaulted were discouraged from going to the police, their complaints were not treated seriously, and accused perpetrators were not seriously investigated or punished.

Shapiro’s career has been greatly enhanced by his dismantling of Jackie’s story about a violent rape that allegedly took place in 2012. As a consequence of his efforts to dismantle Jackie’s story, T. Rees Shapiro has appeared on numerous television programs and received praise from many quarters. Most likely his youth enabled Shapiro to con Jackie into trusting him enough to talk to him “several times.”

Last night, I decided to take a quick look at young Mr. Shapiro and his career development path. How did he get such an elite journalism job at the young age of 27?

T. Rees Shapiro

In 2009, Shapiro graduated from Virginia Tech, where he wrote for the student newspaper. In 2010, he was hired by the Washington Post as a copy boy. He soon graduated to writing obituaries, and in 2010 became an education reporter for the Post.

Clearly T. Rees (Nicknamed “Trees,” get it?) is a real go-getter, but he also has connections. His father Leonard Shapiro was a sportswriter for The Washington Post for 38 years, and his mother Vicky Moon is a writer and photographer who is apparently a fixture in Virginia society. Would Shapiro have gotten the Washington Post job without those connections? Maybe, but I doubt it.

When he wrote about Jackie, Shapiro emphasized several times that she was using her “real nickname,” thus enabling trolls like Chuck C. Johnson to find her and try to publicly out her. Shapiro was also able to locate Jackie’s so-called “friends” and get their after-the-fact critiques of Jackie’s story. Shapiro doesn’t say whether Jackie told him she still considers these people to be her friends.

In his critiques of the Rolling Stone article and specifically of Jackie’s story, Shapiro chose not to write about the other women who were interviewed by author Sabrina Rubin Erdley or to get input from experts on rape and traumatic memory. Would a more mature reporter have done so, rather than simply picking apart Jackie’s story? Would a female education reporter have thought to do that?

Leonard Shapiro, former WaPo sportswriter and father of T. Rees Shapiro

Leonard Shapiro, former WaPo sportswriter and father of T. Rees Shapiro

Despite the Post’s attacks on Jackie, the University of Virginia does in fact have a rape problem. UVA is one of 86 schools being investigated by the Department of Education for mishandling rape complaints. Four Virginia schools are on the DEA list.

From Huffington Post in July: For Years, Students Have Accused Virginia Universities Of Botching Sexual Assault Cases.

Four universities in Virginia are currently being  investigated by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights for possible Title IX violations specifically related to sexual violence — JMU, the University of Virginia, the College of William & Mary and the University of Richmond. Two other schools in the state, the Virginia Military Institute and Virginia Commonwealth University, faced Title IX reviews that concluded this spring….

Each of the investigations at the Virginia schools, like that at JMU, was sparked by federal complaints.

UVA’s investigation is unusual in that it started in 2011, but remains open. The Education Department declined to say why the investigation was so long-running, and noted “that some cases take longer than others due to the nature and complexity of the issues involved.”

(Emphasis added).

In fact, UVA is one of only 12 schools that that the Department of Education has “flagged for a total compliance review.”

Another Washington Post reporter, Nick Anderson, writes that the inconsistencies in Jackie’s story will not end the federal investigation of UVA.

The University of Virginia was under the microscope for its handling of sexual assault cases long before Rolling Stone magazine weighed in with the account of a student who said she was gang-raped at a fraternity house.

The emergence of fresh questions about that account — including the fraternity issuing a rebuttal, doubts voiced by some who know the woman, and a statement from Rolling Stone’s managing editor on Friday acknowledging “discrepancies” in her version of events — will not suddenly cancel that scrutiny.

A federal investigation of U-Va.’s response to sexual violence, begun in June 2011, continues. It is one of the longest-running active probes of its kind in the nation. U-Va. remains one of the most prominent of about 90 colleges and universities facing such investigations by the U.S. Department of Education’s Office for Civil Rights.

Student and faculty activists for sexual assault prevention, given a national platform in recent days, are unlikely to let the issue fade away. Skeptics will still wonder why the university has not expelled anyone for sexual misconduct in the past decade. Parents of prospective applicants, also mindful of the slaying of sophomore Hannah Graham after she disappeared in September, still want assurances that the Charlottesville campus is safe.

Perhaps most important, University President Teresa A. Sullivan laid out a detailed road map this week for a comprehensive review of the campus culture, touching on sexual assault, alcohol, Greek life and university oversight.

Francesca Bessey

Francesca Bessey

Since rape on campus is such a huge issue, shouldn’t education reporters like T. Rees Shapiro be more knowledgeable about sexual assault and its traumatic effects? One journalist, Francesca Bessey thinks so.

From Huffington Post: Thought the Rolling Stone Article Was Bad? Try Other Rape Journalism. Here’s her assessment of the Washington Post coverage:

The actual discrepancies introduced by the Washington Post are few: one, the individual whom Jackie claimed brought her to the fraternity was apparently a member of a different fraternity; and, two, a student who allegedly came to Jackie’s aid claimed she initially gave a different account of what happened that night. The fraternity also released a statement denying knowledge of the assault, or that there was a social function the night Jackie believes she was assaulted.

For someone who knows little to nothing about rape, fraternities, or the contemporary college party scene — which unfortunately seems to characterize a lot of the coverage thus far — these discrepancies might initially seem like gaping holes in Jackie’s story.

However, as any medical professional or victim advocate will tell you, trauma-related memory inconsistencies are extraordinarily common in cases of sexual assault, often manifesting in the survivor describing the incident to first responders as less severe than it actually was. Such plasticity of memory is not unique to rape cases; the FBI, for example, notes that “there can be a wide range of after effects to a trauma,” which can impact on a victim of a violent crime or the victim’s family members. A list of these effects includes confusion, disorientation, memory loss and slowed thinking. Psychological research has long demonstrated that humans reconstruct, rather than recall, memory, which is why eyewitness testimony is considered one of the most dubious forms of evidence in a court of law.

Why have journalists covering this story given more credence to statements by the fraternity and friends who were portrayed very negatively in the Rolling Stone article than to Jackie’s version of events?

…it is important to note that the so-called “inconsistencies” in Jackie’s story don’t necessarily invalidate her version of events. The fraternity’s statement is in no way more credible than Jackie’s own word — in fact, I would argue less so, given the sheer prevalence of fraternity rape. It would be foolish to assume that a fraternity’s formal denial of “knowledge of these alleged acts” means that they did not occur (with or without current leadership’s knowledge), as it would be foolish to rule out that the “date function” Jackie thought she was invited to wasn’t pure pretense in the first place. It is also within the realm of possibility that Jackie was brought to the party by a man who didn’t necessarily belong to the fraternity, even that he misled her about his membership in the frat. It is also possible that the student who gave a different version of how he found Jackie that night, lacks credibility or is himself having trouble recalling events.

Ultimately, these are all details significant to a police or journalistic investigation, upon which the responsibility is on law enforcement and journalists to figure out. For Jackie, however, it doesn’t change much. It doesn’t change her experience of violent assault, or those of countless students like her, many of whose stories are also featured in the article in question. It does not change the majority of the material in the original article: not the debasing lyrics of the UVA fight song; not the person who hurled a bottle at Jackie’s face the first time she tried to speak out; not the 38 students who appeared in Dean Nicole Eramo’s office in just one academic year to discuss incidents of sexual assault, despite the fact that not one student has ever been expelled from UVA for a sexual offense.

In light of these facts, in light of my own rape and the rapes of too many of my friends at the hands of their peers, I do wonder: Whose credibility is really to be doubted here? Jackie’s or the public peanut gallery that has diluted sexual assault down to a number and a date?

Again, I don’t want to personally denigrate T. Rees Shapiro. He writes well, and he has done a fine job of locating sources at the University of Virginia–both in this case and in his previous reporting on  in writing on the Hannah Graham murder case–probably because his youth helps him connect with college students only a few years younger than he is. But his analysis of a survivor’s story has suffered from his lack of knowledge and experience about campus sexual assault and rape in general.

I want to share two more articles that offer a more sophisticated take on these subjects–written by women with long journalistic experience.

Sally Kohn

Sally Kohn

From CNN, Rape culture? It’s too real, by Sally Kohn.

We don’t yet know all the facts behind the now-infamous, poorly fact-checked story in Rolling Stone about an alleged gang rape at the University of Virginia. What we do know: Rolling Stone at first blamed the alleged victim, “Jackie” — rather than its own journalistic sloppiness — for so-called “discrepancies” (before changing its callous statement).

And new reporting by the Washington Post does reveal that Jackie’s friends, cited in the story, say they are skeptical about some of the details. Still, they all believe that Jackie experienced something “horrific” that night, in the words of one, and we do know that Jackie stands by her story. Most of the doubts about it were apparently raised by those she’s accusing, including the fraternity and main alleged assailant — whom, I guess, we’re supposed to believe instead. But one other thing we do know is that gang rapes just like what Jackie is alleging do happen — too often, and all over America.

While Rolling Stone’s reporting was clearly shoddy, some writers who initially poked holes in Jackie’s story did so for ideological motives. For instance, even before the reporting lapses were revealed, conservative commentator Jonah Goldberg called Jackie’s story unbelievable. “It is not credible,” Goldberg wrote in the Los Angeles Times. “I don’t believe it.”

Instead, Goldberg insisted, Jackie’s account was “a convenient conversation for an exposé of rape culture,” something, incidentally, Goldberg also doubts to be real. “‘Rape culture’ suggests that there is a large and obvious belief system that condones and enables rape as an end in itself in America,” Goldberg later wrote in National Review. It’s all hogwash, says Goldberg, alleging that the very idea of “rape culture” is just “an elaborate political lie intended to strengthen the hand of activists.”

In other words, whatever the reality of what happened to Jackie, Goldberg and others were skeptical because they simply don’t believe rapes like that happen with the participation of groups of assailants, let alone the complicity of bystanders. This is where they’re mistaken.

Kohn then lists several extreme examples of gang rapes that resemble Jackie’s description–most of which we have covered here.

burleigh

Also from CNN, In 2014, rape rage drove feminism’s ‘third wave’, by Nina Burleigh.

Historians could look back on this year as the beginning of feminism’s third wave.

The year was momentous for feminism. For the first time, rape victims and their supporters emerged from the shadows in significant numbers and started naming names — to significant effect. Women, their voices amplified by social media and with the support of a small but growing cohort of men, have been exposing and shaming venerable American institutions such as the NFL, Ivy League and non-Ivy League colleges, and the entertainment icon Bill Cosby.

First wave feminists won the right to vote. The second wave got us the right to work. But even with those advances, women have remained fundamentally restricted by the threat and terrible secret of sexual assault.

This year, emboldened and connected by social media, college women formed a powerful grassroots movement that led to universities such as Harvard being publicly named and shamed for not addressing women’s rape reports. They brought the issue of campus sexual assault into the White House, where Barack Obama became the first President to use the words “sexual violence.” The Department of Education released a list of universities under investigation for mishandling sexual violence cases, often letting even repeat predators off with barely a slap on the wrist.

These young women had been silent until social media enabled them to come together, even though thousands of miles apart, share debilitating secrets and then act with the confidence that safety in numbers provided.

I hope you’ll read the rest at the link.

I only hope that irresponsible journalism perpetrated by Rolling Stone and the even more irresponsible reaction to it have not set back the cause of protecting young women on college campuses from sexual violence.


40 Comments on “Thursday Reads: Did Nepotism at The Washington Post Contribute to Irresponsible Reporting on the UVA Rape Story?”

  1. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Have a great day, Sky Dancers!

  2. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Powerful post!

    Enough of coddling rapists and rape sympathizers. I’m disgusted at all the many stories now which tell us to be sorry for all the stress the accused are feeling, and the heartlessness! of impugning a fraternity! the poor (actually rich) boys’ lives could be ruined! Well, cry me a river.

  3. RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

    The latest WaPo story seems to strongly intimate that Jackie made the whole thing up as a ploy to make :”Randall” jealous, with phony texts and photos of another guy. In order to do that she would have had to acquire a 2nd phone and false identity, in order to have the text conversations with her “friends” etc.

    Mind you she would have done this because of a crush on a guy she had known for only a couple of weeks. That’s a pretty darned elaborate hoax for an 18 yr old with little chance of any payoff. You tell me if that isn’t more “out there” unbelievable than the fact she was raped?

  4. NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

    Now for something fun:

    Who said it: Hobbit characters or real political leaders? – quiz

    I got 9/10. Note — some of the quotes are from the movie version of the characters’ lines, and are not what they say in the book, which threw me off.

  5. janicen's avatar janicen says:

    Speaking of nepotism, I’m so tired of Jonah Goldberg being considered a “pundit”. Jonah Goldberg’s claim to fame is that he is the son of Lucianne Goldberg, a marginal player who became famous when she was contacted by Linda Tripp back in the nineties. Lucianne found herself at the center of the Clinton scandal and managed to cash in as a Clinton hater at the time. That’s all Jonah Goldberg has ever accomplished is that he is Lucianne’s son and therefore his career has thrived in conservative circles. Other than that, he’s a nobody.

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lucianne_Goldberg

  6. janicen's avatar janicen says:

    I know it shouldn’t, but it does kind of shock me how swiftly and shamelessly the patriarchy responds to discredit anyone who dares to challenge it. Thank goodness for blogs like this one keeping the truth at the forefront.

  7. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    Another Cosby accuser, and this is a big one.

    Vanity Fair: Bill Cosby Drugged Me. This Is My Story, by Beverly Johnson.

  8. Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

    You know this reporting just makes me mad. As a survivor of gang rape that happened many, many years ago, I’ve had to scan my brain for memory of how it all happened, and why the hell I couldn’t tell anyone, but my closest friends. I use to know one name of the boys, and I remembered he had a girlfriend, her name was Barbara. I do remember confronting her, and let her know what he did, and she didn’t believe me. I would give anything to find that woman today. Did she stay with him, did she marry him? Whatever happened to the rapist, what the fuck was his name, it really grips me that I can’t remember. I had no warning, I didn’t see it coming, and it involved me drinking, and drugs. I was warned not to scream, and that I had better not talk about it. A rope was used, and a chair, they took turns, and put me in the shower and their was blood. I was left helpless on the bed in a hotel room.

    • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

      Oh Fannie,

      I’m so sorry. Obviously you are not alone. The reporting on rape by the corporate media is absolutely dreadful and unfeeling.

      • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

        I am glad that women are coming out and talking. I mean, like me they were left helpless, on the floor, the bed, in a car, or on the street. They weren’t treated for shock, or injuries. I have been comparing rape to torture, and seems to me that when you are terrorized by rape, by torture, you go blank. Expecting Jackie’s answers to match up to the boys is far fetched. Then they turned this to say she something horrific happened, and treat it like she wasn’t seriously injured. Not to mention, he said they should have talked to the rapist, wtf, do you see the rapist named Crosby talking? That young man ought to know that college students will party on the spur of the moment, and rape on the spur of a moment too. He’s convinced them to believe Jack and Joe, but not Jackie.

        When I say I can’t remember, I’m also talking about before and after I married. It like I have two different lives. One seemed as though I was barely conscious. Which brings me to another thought. Last night Rachel Maddow did a segment on torture called “That was then, this is then.” Wow, did that hit home. I am glad that rape and the extreme violence going on is finally hitting the air waves, and with young women, and young men, and old women refusing to be silent.

        • Rikke's avatar Sima says:

          “When I say I can’t remember, I’m also talking about before and after I married. It like I have two different lives.” I can’t remember much of my young childhood due to the rapes I experienced. Whole years are gone. I don’t have memory until I denounced him and managed to make him stop when I was around 10. I’m sorry this happened to you too 😦

        • ANonOMouse's avatar ANonOMouse says:

          You’re an amazing woman Fannie. Love ya Girl

    • Rikke's avatar Sima says:

      I’m very sorry this happened to you. I was raped, repeatedly over a long span of time, by an uncle. Even with that length of time, I can’t remember things. Just snippets like stark photos of horror. I think it’s natural to forget. We have to forget, or never remember in the first place, or we’ll go insane. Hopefully karma has gotten to your attacker and yes, that’s mean, and yes, I’m serious. Mine died of a heart attack in his 40’s. Good fucking riddance, I say.

      • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

        I understand Sima. He’s gone, and good fucking riddance. We have all got to move on, with or without our memories intact. You don’t want to get trapped in time, cause it will slip up on you. Then all hell fire breaks loose. Luv you Sima.

      • bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

        My uncle-abuser died a few years ago. I felt a little shaky for a week or so when he died.

      • NW Luna's avatar NW Luna says:

        Gentle hugs ((( Fannie, Sima, BB)))

  9. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    NYT: Bob Jones University Faulted Over Treatment of Sex Abuse Victims.

    The full report

    Click to access Final-Report.pdf

  10. bostonboomer's avatar bostonboomer says:

    This post by Kaili Joy Gray at Wonkette is awesome. I only wish I had written it.

    Jackie Is Lying, So We Can All Stop Talking About Rape Now

    • RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

      Excellent article!

    • Fannie's avatar Fannie says:

      It’s like me going to a fire, seeing the firemen, and calling the fire department. Thet are hell bent on saying that Jackie’s has fabricated it all, now go on and walk home, we don’t want to talk about it.

      It’s not fine, and we aren’t done, and we will say what we will about Jackie’s case!

  11. RalphB's avatar RalphB says:

    New data from the Bureau of Justice Statistics

    BOJS: Rape and Sexual Assault Among College-age Females, 1995-2013

  12. ANonOMouse's avatar ANonOMouse says:

    Is there any more glaring example of nepotism in the news media than Luke Russert? And is there any doubt that NBC/MSNBC couldn’t have found someone much more capable than Luke? I’ve seen this sort of hiring at every job I’ve ever worked and more often than not it proves the old adage “it’s not what you know, it’s who you know”.

  13. Rikke's avatar Sima says:

    I am struck, just amongst the limited number of commentors on this blog, how many people have been raped or molested. How damned sad; what an awful marker of our society.

  14. Beata's avatar Beata says:

    Sending you love, BB. Thank you.