How Fake News Turned a Small Town Upside Down
Source: New York Times
How Fake News Turned a Small Town Upside Down
At the height of the 2016 election, exaggerated reports of a juvenile sex crime brought a media maelstrom to Twin Falls one the Idaho city still hasnt recovered from.
By CAITLIN DICKERSONSEPT. 26, 2017
On a Tuesday morning in June 2016, Nathan Brown, a reporter for The Times-News, the local paper in Twin Falls, Idaho, strolled into the office and cleared off a spot for his coffee cup amid the documents and notebooks piled on his desk. Brown, 32, started his career at a paper in upstate New York, where he grew up, and looks the part of a local reporter, clad in a fresh oxford and khakis that tend to become disheveled over the course of his long days. His first order of business was an article about a City Council meeting from the night before, which he hadnt attended. Brown pulled up a recording of the proceedings and began punching out notes for his weekly article. Because most governing in Twin Falls is done by a city manager, these meetings tend to deal with trivial subjects like lawn-watering and potholes, but Brown could tell immediately that this one was different.
We have been made aware of a situation, said the first speaker, an older man with a scraggly white beard who had hobbled up to the lectern. An alleged assault of a minor child and we cant get any information on it. Apparently, its been indicated that the perpetrators were foreign Muslim youth that conducted this I guess it was a rape. Brown recognized the man as Terry Edwards. About a year earlier, after The Times-News reported that Syrian refugees would very likely be resettled in Twin Falls, Edwards joined a movement to shut the resettlement program down. The group circulated a petition to put the proposal before voters. They failed to get enough signatures to force a referendum, but Brown was struck by how much support around town the movement attracted. In bars after work, he began to overhear conversations about the dangers of Islam. One night, he heard a man joke about dousing the entrance to the local mosque with pigs blood.
After he finished watching the video, Brown called the police chief, Craig Kingsbury, to get more information about the case. Kingsbury said that he couldnt discuss it and that the police reports were sealed because minors were involved. Brown made a couple phone calls: to the mayor and to his colleague at the paper who covers crime. He pieced together that 12 days earlier, three children had been discovered partly clothed inside a shared laundry room at the apartment complex where they lived. There were two boys, a 7-year-old and a 10-year-old, and a 5-year-old girl. The 7-year-old boy was accused of attempting some kind of sex act with the 5-year-old, and the 10-year-old had used a cellphone borrowed from his older brother to record it. The girl was American and, like most people in Twin Falls, white. The boys were refugees; Brown wasnt sure from where. In his article about the meeting, Brown seems to anticipate that the police chiefs inability to elaborate was not going to sit well with the people whose testimony he had just watched.
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Read more: https://www.nytimes.com/2017/09/26/magazine/how-fake-news-turned-a-small-town-upside-down.html
Blue_Tires
(55,445 posts)murielm99
(30,733 posts)The whole town was exploited by bigots and people looking to make a buck as "journalists."
This article is worth reading. Thank you for posting.
murielm99
(30,733 posts)state run Russian news outlet. Interesting.
I had my husband sit down and read the article. We both remembered a few vague things about Chobani being smeared and a lawsuit. Given all the other crap going on, this was still one of the more absorbing stories of the day.