In an August 19 post at PajamasMedia, journalist and bestselling author Richard Miniter delved into the question of "How the New Republic Got Suckered" in the case of the fabricated stories of military blogger Scott Thomas Beauchamp. Among the questions Miniter raised was if TNR's fact-checking operation is "structurally flawed":
Let’s go into the fact-checking department. Elspeth Reeve was one of three fact-checkers at the magazine.
Did she fact-check her husband’s articles? While it is hard to believe that an established magazine would make such an elementary error, so far no one at the magazine has bothered to address the question. That’s an interesting omission.
Even if Reeve did not double-check her husband’s reporting, she worked alongside the other two fact-checkers and often shared a take-out lunch with them in the magazine’s conference room. They liked her. Would they really treat Beauchamp’s pieces like an article that floated in from a stranger?
At any publication, staff writing is less closely scrutinized than freelance material. Not coincidentally, virtually all of the journalistic fabrication scandals of the past 30 years—from The Washington Post’s Janet Cooke to The New York Times’ Jayson Blair—involved staff writers. Insiders. Trusted people.
More pointedly, the last two sets of New Republic journalistic scandals—Ruth Shalit and Stephen Glass—were perpetrated by staffers.
Scott Thomas Beauchamp was not a staffer; he may not have ever stepped foot in The New Republic’s two-floor rabbit warren of offices. But he was an insider, through his wife.
Perhaps the fact-checkers believed that they didn’t have to check his work thoroughly because they knew and trusted his wife, who they affectionately called “Ellie.”
—Ken Shepherd is Managing Editor of NewsBusters
















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I believe the real reason
August 20, 2007 - 13:38 ET by BDI believe the real reason is that the story was TOOL SEXY to check. Checking might make it go away....
On his blog he claims to
August 20, 2007 - 14:10 ET by Mean Gene Dr. LoveOn his blog he claims to have made a "slight error".
Other comments don't really add up either:
"Well, it was cold, damned cold, the kind of cold you only get in a Desert during the middle of Winter. With temperatures plunging well below -50° at noon, we couldn’t stand another frozen day, much less the weeks of only having one or two hours of daylight. We’d just finished changing the oil on General Betrayus’ Hummer and we were trying to find a “rattle in the dash”, no doubt from where he’d thrown his change up there, again."
I don't think the temperature ever gets close to -50 anywhere in Iraq. Iraq also isn't far enough North to experience days with only one or two hours of daylight. Although he could be referring to 1 or 2 hours of daylight before or after his shift/duty time. While not entirely impossible, I find it difficult to believe a Bradley crew would be changing the oil on the General's Hummer.
He also talks about going to a strip club in Baghdad. I assume that he means they drove the Bradley right up to the club and everyone went inside for a good time. Unlikely.
I won't trust a single thing he writes. It just doesn't pass the smeel test with me.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! There's still plenty of meat on that bone. Now you take this home, throw it in a pot, add some broth, a potato, baby you've got a stew goin'!" -- Carl Weathers
As someone who has been in
August 20, 2007 - 15:02 ET by BDAs someone who has been in the Iraqi Desert in winter, I KNOW it does not get to -50 degrees. The coldest it got for me, I only had to put on my body armor and I was plenty warm. Even if he were to go into the mountains in the north, near Mosul, it will STILL not get to -50 degrees.
Regarding daylight? I recall FAR more than two hours per day. The days he describes would be more indicative of Churchill Manitoba than Mosul iraq.
Stip club in Bagdhad? I hope he tells me where it was.
BD... Good to hear from
August 20, 2007 - 15:15 ET by Clear thinkerBD...
Good to hear from you again!
This whole thing makes me wonder if anyone read this stuff before picking up on it. I mean, c'mon, minus 50 and 2 hours of daylight? Surely somebody would have seen the flags popping up.
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Yeah, he is simply writing
August 20, 2007 - 16:48 ET by BDYeah, he is simply writing fiction. It is more likely that he was basing this nonsense on dim memories of Alaska than anything remotely approximating Iraq.
The beginning of the quote
August 20, 2007 - 16:58 ET by Mean Gene Dr. LoveThe beginning of the quote I posted in my first comment sounds like a cliché from a Private Eye novel/movie. His whole narrative just has a very plastic feel to it.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! There's still plenty of meat on that bone. Now you take this home, throw it in a pot, add some broth, a potato, baby you've got a stew goin'!" -- Carl Weathers
Are you sure that is
August 20, 2007 - 17:34 ET by BDAre you sure that is Beauchamps posting? NOBODY could write anything like that and claimit as real.
1.) Germainian Chicks? Huh, what drugs was he on to think there is such a thing in Iraq.
2.) The temperature quote is obviously false.
3.) A machine gunner shooting 100 rounds will take significantly longer time than he seems to think. This guys REALLY is not an 11B, is he?
4.) 100 BFV on a single road? The only time we have had 100 BFV on a single road is during the initial invasion. We no longer take that many armored vehicles into an area at once BECAUSE IT IS WASTEFUL AND DESTROYS ROADS.
If somebody believed that load, I have a story involving a crock of gold and the little people that needs to be sold.
uh, you do know the difference between...
August 20, 2007 - 23:58 ET by Bob Owens... a clever parody blog and Beauchamp's real blog, don't you?
This came from the former, not the latter.
Bob Owens
http://confederateyankee.mu.nu/
I guess I got suckered by a
August 21, 2007 - 00:24 ET by Mean Gene Dr. LoveI guess I got suckered by a phony blog then.
"Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa! There's still plenty of meat on that bone. Now you take this home, throw it in a pot, add some broth, a potato, baby you've got a stew goin'!" -- Carl Weathers
Beauchamp Nepotism
August 20, 2007 - 13:59 ET by Lame CherryI read your post three times now and was astounded that the New Republic was practicing nepotism. Should not after Val Plame in her coup attempt on George Bush sending her husband on a Niger cover up mission over French refined uranium for Saddam, the New Republic learned that spouses are the worst liars in causing fiascos?
Sorry for this, but the pillow talk must have been, "Oh Scottie your story is not going to make it. Can you sex it up a bit baby?"
Scottie replies, "How can I do that babe as the soldiers were just standing around in the sand."
Ellie says, "Baby sand is like dirt I think and people get buried in dirt. Make it a mass dirt grave.......oh and baby be like MacBeth or McBeth or that Shakespeare guy holding that skull and talking to it. Have him say, "Ah I knew thee well and George Bush hates black people".
Scottie says, "Oh baby that is too over the top.....how about I just have him put the skull on his head like a crown for imperial America".
Ellie exclaims, "Oh darling that is Pulitzer....maybe we will even get Nobel and a movie with an article in Playboy".
Turn out the lights New Republic as you do not need a fact checker.........you need honest non related people writing stories.
*HIC IACET ARTORIVS REX QVONDAM REXQVE FVTVRVS
One commenter to
August 20, 2007 - 14:13 ET by daveinbocaOne commenter to Confederate Yankee came up with this solecism:
"Yes, Beauchamp's articles may contain some untruths. They might be total fiction. But it doesn't matter, does it?"
Is it just me or doesn't that sound like Evan Thomas' lame excuse for Newsweak when the Duke Lacrosse stripper-lies surfaced?
"The narrative was right, but the facts were wrong."
Sounds like the commenter was just the average CSJ graduate---cheating on his/her ethics exam.
Foer should be fired.
New Republic
August 20, 2007 - 20:48 ET by Felicity RandI shudder to remember how I once subscribed to this rag (long story).
Maybe I should subscribe again and go over each article, looking for questionable "facts". Then again--I don't have the stomach.
Beauchamp and Flat Fatima w/ unspent bullets
August 21, 2007 - 14:22 ET by drillanwrAugust 21, 2007
AFP Takes Lessons from TNR
By Jack Kelly
http://www.realclearpolitics.com/articles/2007/08/web_holds_journalists_feet_to.html