Jayson Blair (born March 23,
1976, Columbia,
Maryland
) is a life coach and was an American
journalist until he
resigned from the New York
Times in May 2003, after he was caught plagiarizing and fabricating elements of his
stories.
Background
Jayson Blair is the son of a federal executive and a school
administrator.
He attended the University of
Maryland, College Park
as a journalism major.
Blair was the editor-in-chief of the student newspaper,
The Diamondback, for the
1996-97 school year. According to a letter later signed by 30
staffers, Blair made four serious errors as a reporter and editor
that brought his integrity into question. The letter-signers
alleged that questions about those errors were ignored by the board
that owned the paper. Among the mistakes, they cited an
award-winning story about a student who died of a
cocaine overdose, who was subsequently found to have
actually died of a heart ailment.
After a summer internship at
The
New York Times in 1998, Blair was offered an extended
internship. He indicated that he had to complete some coursework in
order to graduate, and
The New York Times agreed to defer
it. He returned to
The New York Times in January 1999,
when "everyone assumed he had graduated. He had not; college
officials say he has more than a year of course work to complete.".
That November, he became an "intermediate reporter."
Blair's rise at The New York Times
By 2000, his editors were castigating Blair for the high error rate
in his articles and his sloppy work habits. In January 2001,
despite making more mistakes than any other writer in the paper's
Metro section, Blair, who also wrote one-third more stories than
any reporter in that section, was made a full-time staff
reporter.
Continued mistakes caused Blair's editor,
Jonathan Landman, to send a memo to the New
York Times' management asking them "to stop Jayson from writing for
the Times. Right now." Instead, in 2002, Blair was promoted to the
national desk.
Despite recurring criticism of his performance, he was assigned to
the
Beltway sniper attacks,
in particular because he knew the area and seemed "hungry." Blair
wrote 52 stories during the sniper attacks. His reporting errors
were so serious that one led a prosecutor to hold a press
conference to denounce the claim that "all the
evidence" pointed to
Lee
Boyd Malvo being the shooter. The error rate of Blair's
material again became an issue internally.
In another instance,
Fairfax County,
Virginia
prosecutor Bob Horan claimed that 60 percent of a
story written by Blair, in which he was quoted, was
inaccurate.
Despite such accusations and many corrections the paper was forced
to make in the wake of his reporting, Blair continued to cover
critical stories for
The New York Times, moving from the
sniper attacks to national coverage of the
War in Iraq. In his four years at
The
Times, Blair wrote more than 600 articles.
Plagiarism and fabrication scandal
On April 28, 2003, Blair received a call from
Times
national editor
Jim Roberts, asking him
about similarities between a story he had written two days earlier
and one written by
San
Antonio Express-News reporter Macarena Hernandez on April
18. Hernandez had a summer internship at
The Times years
earlier, and had worked alongside Blair. She contacted
The
Times after details and quotes in Blair's story appeared
exactly the same as in hers.
Blair's plagiarism of Hernandez’s article was so flagrant that it
led to further pressing by
Times editors, who asked him to
prove that he had, in fact, traveled to Texas and interviewed the
woman in his article. After being unable to provide proof, Blair
resigned from
The Times on May 2, 2003. Following the
resignation, a full investigation of all of Blair’s articles
began.
An internal report was commissioned by
Times editors, with
a committee consisting of 25 staffers and three outside
journalists, led by assistant managing editor Allan Siegal. The
Siegal committee discovered that 36 of the 73 national news stories
Blair had written since October 2002 were suspect, ranging from
fabrications to copying stories from other sources.
A small sample of the suspect articles:
- In the April 19, 2003 piece "In Military Wards, Questions and
Fears From the Wounded", Blair described interviewing four injured
soldiers in a naval hospital. He never went to the hospital and
only spoke to one soldier on the phone, to whom he later attributed
made-up quotes. Blair wrote that the soldier "will most likely limp
the rest of his life and need to use a cane," which was untrue. He
said another soldier had lost his right leg when it had only been
amputated below the knee. He described two soldiers as being in the
hospital at the same time, when in fact they were admitted five
days apart.
- In the
April 7, 2003 piece "For One Pastor, the War Hits Home", Blair
wrote of a church service in Cleveland
and an interview with the minister. Blair
never went to Cleveland; he only spoke to the minister on the
phone, then copied most of the article from an earlier Washington Post article. He also stole
quotes from The Cleveland
Plain Dealer and the New York Daily News. He made up a
detail about the minister keeping a picture of his son inside his
Bible, and got the name of the church
wrong.
- In the
April 3, 2003 piece "Rescue in Iraq and a ‘Big Stir' in West
Virginia", Blair claimed to have covered the Jessica Lynch story from her home town of
Palestine, West Virginia
. Blair never traveled to Palestine, and his
entire contribution to the story consisted of rearranged details
from Associated Press stories.
- In the March 27, 2003 piece "Relatives of Missing Soldiers
Dread Hearing Worse News", Blair again pretended to be in West
Virginia, and stole quotes from an Associated Press article. He
claimed to have spoken to one relative who had no recollection of
meeting Blair; said "tobacco fields and cattle pastures" were
visible from Lynch's parents' house when they were not; erroneously
stated that Lynch's brother was in the National Guard;
misspelled Lynch's mother's name; and made up a dream that he
claimed she had.
- In the
March 3, 2003 piece "Making Sniper Suspect Talk Puts Detective in
Spotlight", Blair claimed to be in Fairfax, Virginia
. He described a videotape of Lee Malvo, the
younger defendant in the case, being questioned by police and
quoted officials' review of the tape. No such tape existed. Blair
also claimed a detective noticed blood on a man's jeans leading to
a confession, which did not occur.
- In the February 10, 2003 piece "Peace and Answers Eluding
Victims of the Sniper Attacks", Blair claimed to be in Washington,
stole quotes from a Washington
Post story and made up quotes from someone he had not
interviewed. Blair ascribed a wide range of facts to a man featured
in the article, almost all of which the man in question denied.
Blair also published information that he had promised to the man
was off the record.
- In the
January 2, 2003 piece "Execution Opponent Joins Sniper Case", Blair
claimed to be in Lexington, Virginia
interviewing the subject of the piece, Roger Groot because Groot, a professor at
Washington and
Lee University
School of Law, joined the Lee Boyd Malvo defense team.
However,
it was later discovered that Blair interviewed Groot by phone and
did not travel to Virginia
to conduct the interview. Groot stated that
Blair accurately quoted him, but misrepresented his
appearance.
- In the October 30, 2002 piece "US Sniper Case Seen as a Barrier
to a Confession", Blair wrote that a dispute between police
authorities had ruined the interrogation of suspect John Muhammad, and that Muhammad was about to
confess, quoting unnamed officials. This was swiftly denied by
everyone involved. Blair also named certain lawyers as having
witnessed the interrogation who were not present.
The Times reported on Blair's journalistic misdeeds in an
unprecedented 7,239-word front-page story that ran on May 11, 2003,
headlined "Times Reporter Who Resigned Leaves Long Trail of
Deception." The story called the Blair scandal "a low point in the
152-year history of the newspaper."
The fallout
Following the revelations of Blair's deceit,
The Times
moved to uncover how management had allowed a young reporter with
what appeared to be obvious problems to rise so quickly through the
paper's ranks. The Siegal committee's months-long investigation
found "a series of management and operation breakdowns" and "a
stunning lack of communication within the newsroom." It found that
Blair’s quick advancement may have become favored as part of a
"star system" that advanced some reporters close to then-executive
editor
Howell Raines. "He was given a
regular tenured reporting job despite the misgivings of his
immediate boss," the report said of Blair. "He was put on
high-profile national assignments with his new supervising editors
receiving no notice of the serious problems that had marked periods
in his previous four years at the newspaper."
Both Raines and managing editor
Gerald
M. Boyd, considered partially
culpable for Blair's indiscretions, resigned a month after Blair's
departure. Several other Times staff members were investigated but
ultimately were not asked to resign.
The Siegal committee made several recommendations, many of which
have since been instituted at the paper, including the appointment
of a
public editor to encourage access
to the paper and to monitor readers' complaints about the paper's
performance.
The Blair scandal also stoked much controversy and debate over
affirmative action hiring.
Landman told the Siegal committee he felt the fact that Blair was
African-American played a large
part in his initial promotion to full-time staffer. "I think
race was the
decisive factor in his promotion," he said. "I thought then and I
think now that it was the wrong decision."
Newsweek reporter
Seth
Mnookin similarly said that Blair was fast-tracked because of
the
Times's desire for a more racially
diverse workforce.
On May 14, 2003, while he was still
Times executive
editor, Raines (who is white) acknowledged at a massive meeting of
Times news staffers, managers, and its publisher,
Arthur Sulzberger Jr., that
Blair had gotten the breaks he had enjoyed because of his race.
Five days later, however, black
Times op-ed columnist
Bob Herbert asserted in his column that
race had nothing to do with the Blair case: "Listen up: the race
issue in this case is as bogus as some of Jayson Blair's
reporting."
Blair wrote the memoir
Burning Down My Masters' House: My Life
at the New York Times (ISBN 1-932407-26-X), published on March
6, 2004. In the book, he accused
The Times of
racism, and described his ethical lapses as the
result of previous drug problems and
bipolar disorder.
After resigning from
The Times, Blair returned to college
and said he planned to go into
human
resources. He is now a
life coach in
northern Virginia.
See also
Bibliography
Cultural references
Season 5 of the HBO series
The
Wire, which is set in Baltimore, dealt with this subject
and others relating to journalism and the print media business and
mentions Blair in the last episode.
A 2003
series of Pearls Before
Swine comic strips portray
Rat
writing fraudulent New York times stories on former
Iraqi
dictator Saddam Hussein.
A scene in
Gilmore Girls
episode "The Reigning Lorelai" (4.16) shows Rory's editor, Doyle,
becoming frustrated with the way Yale Daily News staffers act in
the newsroom calling it "the breeding ground for the next Jayson
Blair."
The plot of
Law
& Order: Criminal Intent episode "
Pravda"
(3.5) resembles the Jayson Blair scandal.
References
-
http://www.peak.sfu.ca/the-peak/2003-2/issue7/ne-jayblair.html
-
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/05/11/national/11PAPE.html?ex=1367985600&en=d6f511319c259463&ei=5007&partner=USERLAND
- AFTEREFFECTS: THE MISSING; Family Waits, Now Alone,
for a Missing Soldier - New York Times
- A NATION AT WAR: VETERANS; In Military Wards,
Questions and Fears From the Wounded - New York Times
- A NATION AT WAR: THE FAMILIES; For One Pastor, the
War Hits Home - New York Times
- A NATION AT WAR: THE HOMETOWN; Rescue in Iraq and a
'Big Stir' in West Virginia - New York Times
- A NATION AT WAR: MILITARY FAMILIES; Relatives of
Missing Soldiers Dread Hearing Worse News - New York Times
- Making Sniper Suspect Talk Puts Detective in
Spotlight - New York Times
- Peace and Answers Eluding Victims of the Sniper
Attacks - New York Times
- Execution Opponent Joins Sniper Case - New York
Times
- Retracing A Trail: The Investigation; U.S. Sniper
Case Seen As A Barrier To A Confession - New York Times
- "N.Y. Times Uncovers Dozens Of Faked Stories by Reporter."
The Washington Post. May 11, 2003.
- "New York Times executives Howell Raines, Gerald Boyd resign."
Associated Press. June 5, 2003.
- Making a Turnaround. BP. Spring 2005.
- "Jayson Blair searches for new life, reflects on legacy."
Times Community Newspapers. June 9, 2005.
- Blair: Why NYT should keep employee in-house. Romenesko
Media News. June 15, 2005.
External links