A WP Journalist Suspended For Breaking The Unwritten Law: "Thou Shall Not Speak Ill of the Dead"
This is a wonderful thing we can all look forward to when we die. People will be saying good things about us that never said while we were alive. Humans are a funny species. Most humans don't understand other humans at all and this little quirk is one of the millions of things that make no sense but we make sure we adhere to them. I could start on religion which I love to talk about (now I do). Most people don't know where their religion comes from or who wrote their holy book. If they knew that the bible was not written by who they think it was, would it change something?
Adam Gonzalez
I always liked Kobe Bryant. A wonderful sportsman and dad now that he is dead I like him even more. As far as Reuters which is a nonprofit for some and I am always happy to print their articles decided the below picture will be along with the rule of the dead. The story below is not from Reuters.
Photo by Reuters. |
Washington Post employees have condemned the paper after it suspended a journalist for tweets about the late US basketball legend Kobe Bryant.
Felicia Sonmez posted a link to a 2016 article about historical sexual assault allegations against Bryant in the wake of his death in a helicopter crash.
She received death threats and has since deleted the post.
But the paper then placed her on administrative leave - prompting a condemnatory letter from colleagues.
"Instead of protecting and supporting a reporter in the face of abuse, The Post placed her on administrative leave," the Washington Post Guild letter to the editors reads.
It describes the paper's social media guidelines as "vague and inconsistently enforced", and says the newspaper has not clearly explained why she was suspended.
More than 300 Washington Post employees have signed the letter in support of Ms Sonmez. The growing list includes Pulitzer Prize winners David Fahrenthold and Beth Reinhard, and White House Bureau Chief Philip Rucker.
The newspaper's media critic Erik Wemple described Ms Somnez's suspension as "misguided" in a Monday column.
Kobe Bryant and his 13-year-old daughter Gianna were among the nine people who died in a helicopter crash on Sunday, sparking an outpouring of grief around the world.
The player was considered one of the greatest in the history of basketball, winning five NBA championships and two Olympic Gold medals during his 20-year career.
In 2003, Bryant was accused of sexual assault by a 19-year-old woman. The case was dropped after she refused to testify in court. She had received death threats after a clerical error saw her name published online.
Bryant repeatedly denied the allegations but later apologized and settled a civil case out of court.
Why was the journalist suspended?
In the wake of Bryant's death, Sonmez tweeted a 2016 Daily Beast story about the rape allegations against the basketball player. The article includes police interviews with the accuser and with Bryant from 2003.
Sonmez did not write the piece and posted it on her Twitter feed without comment.
She was swiftly criticized for the timing and content of her tweet. In her response, Sonmez called the attacks "eye-opening" but defended her decision to post the link saying the way her post was received "speaks volumes about the pressure people come under to stay silent in these cases".
Sonmez herself came forward in 2018 with allegations about sexual misconduct by Jonathan Kaiman, then a Los Angeles Times journalist. He later resigned, although he says the pair had consensual sex and their perceptions of what happened to differ.
On Monday she also tweeted an image of her email inbox showing her attackers, which included the names and email addresses of the senders.
The journalist contacted her editors to tell them she was being threatened. Washington Post managing editor Tracy Grant then told her to delete the tweets, and sent her an email suggesting she "consider a hotel or a friend's place for this evening", the New York Times reported.
She was later told she had been suspended with pay.
A statement by Grant said Sonmez had "displayed poor judgment that undermined the work of her colleagues", and that she was on paid leave until the paper could determine if the posts broke their social media policy.
What was the reaction?
Colleagues swiftly condemned the suspension.
"What did Sonmez do to deserve this brushback? She tweeted out a very good story from the Daily Beast," wrote the Washington Post's Mr Wemple.
"If journalists at The Post are prone to suspension for tweeting stories off their beats, the entire newsroom should be on administrative leave."
The Washington Post Guild said the paper should have shown more support for a woman who had come forward with allegations of sexual misconduct.
"Assault survivors inside and outside this newsroom deserve the treatment that is fair and transparent; that does not blame victims or compromise the safety of survivors," their letter reads.
The Washington Post has not commented further.
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