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COME APRIL
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Come April, a national event will hold its annual markation in DC. It is
as seasonal as the Cherry Blossom Festival, Memorial Day Parade and
Safeway's Barbecue Bake off. Few visitors will be present. Media will be
almost non-existent. That is, sadly, just the way it seems to go when it
comes to the etching names of fallen LEO's into the bended concrete arms
cradling National Law Enforcement's Memorial at Judiciary Square. LEO
stands for Law Enforcement Officer, typically the first called in time of
distress. That is why they are called First Responders. Too often, they
are the last to be remembered, as was outside Louisiana's astrodome when
"cavalry is coming" cheers for the military went round. Their loved ones
mourn them a lifetime along with regulars on their beat who knew them as
men and women with families, too.
News reporting on New Orleans is a reminder of the frequent insult heaped
by media on officers committed to community and town. For some odd reason,
that is the way media is today, searching for a story they will flame a
falsehood or semi-truth into a statement that lives forever on the
internet long after its blogger, newsman or anonymous poster has
disappeared. Once said, the words are damaging, never to be taken back,
usually first to be found when the next reporter rushing to file a piece,
picks the statement off a googled internet page accepting the words as
gospel when they may be artistic license or, as in the case of Jonathan
Glass, myth.
CNN, during its 25th anniversary celebration, a short while ago, promoted
itself as being the place people turn to when they want "the news." One
idiosyncratic politican declared CNN her place for news, above all else.
That is scary. You see, CNN is not just a local news desk, or a national
bureau. With the network broadcasting worldwide, CNN International's
defamation of the image of Louisiana's and Mississippi's sworn who died in
the line of Katrina duty is worldwide.
CNN, a pioneer in round-the-clock-news, reported patriotically one week
into Katrina's devastation on the 10,000's of thousand military arriving
to provide aid to casualties. That was after, CNN reported and repeated
stories on officers abandoning posts in areas Hurricane Katrina hit. CNN's
newsmen failed to report officers, while providing safety for strangers,
abandoned their families during this time of distress, working until dog
tired, not knowing whether their loved ones survived or became causalties
in a death count possibly surpassing worse than 911. CNN's coverage of
Hurricane Katrina has yet to report DC, NYPD are two of the many regions
sending supplies and a variety of trained volunteers down to help restore
order. There has been virtually no media mention on the coordinated
efforts by National Fraternal Order of Police, individual lodges and
officers.
Positive stories CNN could have broadcast, globally, can be found, easily,
quickly, if one is responsible and cares to take their time researching
then vetting information. These days, photos and story files are FTP'd
within seconds with vetting rarely taking place. Journalists blame
deadlines. Editors. More correctly blame ego, on-screen camera dramatics
and a push for annual news banquet awards bolstering viewership. Once the
media insult to character happens, its stain is always there. Recall the
guiltless housing officer in NY's Twana Brawley's fraudulent claim of
rape.
CNN might have identified officers families crying for their loved ones.
Or shown LEO's drowned on the job. Or the officer shot in the head. No,
CNN and newswire's story was they left their jobs. Less than 20% had, more
did when sworn brethren's out-of-state relief came to their aid, a
camaraderie Anderson Cooper may not understand. His highly paid
"don't-do-this" on camera antics while CNN camera men have been crudely
pink slipped from their much needed jobs. As much as media's call from
"Citizen Journalists" who witnessed news reporters battling high winds to
"illustrate" storm dangers, may have contributed to people staying the
storm hoping their video or picture may be the one mentioned during
hurricane coverage.
There should have been great stories of officer heroism coming out of New
Orleans. The cheers served upon the military should have been profferred
to those on duty, followed by moments of silence for the fallen. Officers
drowned. Officers were murdered.
Good stories are there if one looks within officer forums, on websites of
sworn police departments and sworn bloggers. Officers are being innovative
in getting out the real ground story Anderson and CNN don't tell. Days
before the New York Times Sunday Edition reported on allegations of
officers abandoning posts, turning in badges and two reported cases of
suicide in a piece that focused on officer behaviour rather than
emphasizing the less than human conditions the LEO's were struggling under
alongside their civilians, Canada's DART team, in "N'Oleans" since August
31st, reported, to call in stories, http://vancouver.ca/usar/ , they are
feeding off energy from an MCI truck, while it lasts. Headquarters
transcribes and posts records of events provided by their men deep in
America's mess, "N'Oleans" mayor failed to mitigate.
The second week in May, after names of the dead are carved into law
enforcement's memorial wall, their survivors are gathered in DC to be held
close by brethren. And yes, it is predictable, mainstream media most
likely wont be there in 2006 as they weren't in 2005. Saturday, media were
outnumbering attendees at a Muslims Against Terrorism march, a few blocks
away. Truth be told, no one really wants a good time charley or Anderson
seeking an industry award. The people that count are there from around the
word, true blue friends, throughout good times and hurricanes.
What failed New Orleans was not the officers as being implied in newspaper
reports. Politicians and federal representatives were aware of the
potential devastation from a level 4 or 5 hurricane. New Orleans buses are
submerged in their parking lot. A NY contractor recalls in detail a
documentary he watched one year ago detailing the destruction that
occurred. His company began talks adressing expansion to Louisiana
anticipating the financial coup they would make on clean up and rebuild.
What failed Mississippi and Louisiana are those same political, diplomatic
and private individuals not thanking the sworn for serving their cities at
time of need overlooking the only difference between one disaster to the
next is the zipcode.
The Boston Globe's reported words of one officer, ''I'm going to stay here
till everything's done. I love this city," describing the officer
momentarily looking at the ground then saying, ''I made a commitment to my
district, and I made a commitment to these people out here and to my
fellow officers. That's why I'm here." Rescued Yolanda Camese says it
best, not that she can erase media's blemish on the memory of the fallen
with, ''You made us feel safer. I watched you every night." ''Y'all did a
wonderful job." Yes, LEO's you do- daily, nightly, everywhere you work.
God Bless you all, now, and come April, for eternity.
BIO: Carrie Devorah is an investigative editorial photojournalist based in
Washington DC. Devorah has covered enforcement events since moving to DC
late 2003. Devorah is a CCIA and profiler, "with a heart of blue, not
gold" she says.
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