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News (Media Awareness Project) - Wire: Reporter Claims CIA Harassment
Title:Wire: Reporter Claims CIA Harassment
Published On:1997-06-12
Source:Associated Press 6/11/97
Fetched On:2008-09-08 15:23:36
Reporter Claims CIA Harassment

SACRAMENTO, Calif. (AP) The San Jose Mercury News investigative reporter
who linked the CIA to crack cocaine sales in the United States said Wednesday
he has been pulled off the story and is being transferred to a small suburban
bureau.

Gary Webb said newspaper management told him to stop reporting on the ``Dark
Alliance'' series, published last summer, or he would lose his job. He also
said the newspaper is transferring him from the state capital to Cupertino,
150 miles away.

``This is just harassment,'' Webb said. `` This isn't the first time that a
reporter went after the CIA and lost his job over it.''

Executive editor Jerry Ceppos declined to comment, describing the issue as a
personnel matter.

Representatives from the San Jose Newspaper Guild met with management to
protest Webb's transfer, but Webb said he was pessimistic about persuading
the Mercury News to continue to support the series.

``I wouldn't happily go with this plan to back away from this story, and I
insisted that my story was right,'' Webb said. But he added that with a wife
and three children, he can't afford to quit.

Webb's series charged a San Francisco Bay area drug ring sold cocaine in
South Central Los Angeles in the 1980s, then funneled profits to CIAbacked
Nicaraguan Contra rebels for the better part of a decade.

When the series was published, Webb was widely praised. But he was quickly
put on the defensive after The Washington Post, the Los Angeles Times and The
New York Times disputed his findings. In addition, federal investigations
spurred by the series found no links between the CIA and drug dealing.

In a column last month, Ceppos called the series ``oversimplified'' and
criticized it for falling ``short of my standards.''

``I believe that we fell short at every step of our process in the writing,
editing and production of our work. Several people here share that burden,''
he wrote. ``We have learned from the experience and even are changing the way
we handle major investigations.''

The newspaper's parent company, KnightRidder Inc., has sided with Ceppos and
supports his criticism of the series.
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