After reading "Jimmy's World," the handout, please print out the following two articles. Please be prepared to discuss them in class on Thursday. The first of the two articles was printed a few days after Cooke was awarded the Pulitzer Prize, journalism's highest award. The second article was written by Bill Green, the Washington Post's ombudsman. An ombudsman is a person who is paid by the newspaper to assess that paper's coverage, often critically. Please note that the below articles are transcriptions from Lexis-Nexis and contain typos.
TITLE: Post Reporter's Pulitzer Prize Is Withdrawn;
Pulitzer Board Withdraws Post Reporter's Prize [excerpts]
April 16, 1981, Thursday, Final Edition
BYLINE: By David A. Maraniss, Washington Post Staff Writer
BODY:
The Pulitzer Prize Committee withdrew its feature-writing prize from Washington
Post reporter Janet Cooke yesterday after she admitted that her award-winning
story was a fabrication.
Cooke's story, "Jimmy's World," was about an alleged 8-year-old heroin
addict in the District of Columbia. It was said to be based on interviews with
the boy, his mother and his mother's boyfriend. Cooke now acknowledges that she
never met or interviewed any of those people and that she made up the story of
Jimmy based on a composite of information about heroin addiction in Washington
gleaned from various social workers and other sources.
Her admission followed revelations that certain statements she had made in an
autobiographical report to the Pulitzer authorities also were false. Cooke had
said that she was a magna cum laude graduate of Vassar College and held a
master's degree from the University of Toledo. In fact, she attended Vassar for
her freshman year and received a bachelor of arts from the University of Toledo.
Cooke resigned from The Washington Post yesterday.
"It is tragedy that someone as talented and promising as Janet Cooke, with
everything going for her, felt that she had to falsify the facts," said
Benjamin C. Bradlee, executive editor of The Washington Post. "The
credibility of a newspaper is its most precious asset, and it depends almost
entirely on the integrity of its reporters. When that integrity is questioned
and found wanting, the wounds are grievous, and there is nothing to do but come
clean with our readers, apologize to the Advisory Board of the Pulitzer Prizes,
and begin immediately on the uphill task of regaining our credibility. This we
are doing."....
In a statement yesterday, Cooke, 26, said: "The [article] was a serious
misrepresentation which I deeply regret. I apologize to my newspaper, my
profession, the Pulitzer board and all seekers of the truth."....
Upon publication, the Jimmy article prompted a strong and immediate response in
the city. Mayor Marion Barry and Chief of Police Burtell Jefferson assigned a
task force of police and social workers to locate the 8-year-old cited in the
city and to obtain medical treatment for him. When the child could not be
located, Barry and Jefferson voiced deep skepticism about the validity of the
story. Barry said he believed "Jimmy" did not exist, or was a
composite of several different youngsters.
Barry and Jefferson were informed of the true circumstances of the story early
yesterday afternoon by Bradlee, who apologized to both men....
The Post learned that irregularities might exist in Cooke's autobiographical
submission to the Pulitzer board early Tuesday afternoon, when officials at
Vassar College called Bradlee and told him that Cooke had not graduated magna
cum laude, but in fact had only attended the school for her freshman year. At
the same time, the Associated Press called Post Managing Editor Howard Simons to
report the AP staffers in Ohio were being told that Cooke had not received a
master's degree from the University of Toledo....
William Green, The Post's ombudsman, who handles readers' complaints as well as
internal problems, has undertaken an investigation of the entire incident.
Bradlee has directed that all Post staff members disclose all information
relevant to the incident to Green, and Bradlee said Green's findings will be
published when they are completed.
April 19, 1981, Sunday, Final Edition
LENGTH: 13967 words
HEADLINE: THE PLAYERS: It Wasn't a Game;
THE REPORTER: When She Smiled, She Dazzled; When She Crashed . . . ;
The Story: First the Idea, and Finally the Presses Rolled;
THE PUBLICATION: 'Jimmy' Hit Washington Like a Grenade, and Bounced;
THE DOUBTS: From the Very First Moment, Some Suspected the Worst;
THE OMBUDSMAN: After the Agony, the Reappraisal;
The Prize: Of Fiefdoms and Their Knights and Ladies of Adventure;
THE CONFESSION: At the End, There Were the Questions, Then the Tears;
THE PRESSURES: Heat and the Achievers Both Have a Tendancy to Rise;
THE CONCLUSIONS: Once Again, a Fail-Safe System Proves the Exception
BYLINE: Bill Green, Washington Post Ombudsman
BODY:
In alphabetical order, here are the editors and reporters referred to or quoted
in these reports:
Vivian Aplin-Brownlee, 34, editor of the District Weekly.
Karlyn Barker, 34, metropolitan staff reporter.
Benjamin C. Bradlee, 59, executive editor.
Milton Coleman, 34, city editor.
Janet Cooke, 26, metropolitan staff reporter assigned first to the District
Weekly and then to the city staff.
Herb Denton, 37, former city editor, now national staff reporter.
Donald Graham, 37, publisher of The Washington Post.
Blaine Harden, 29, former metropolitan staff reporter, now assigned to the
national staff and The Washington Post Magazine.
Neil Henry, 26, metropolitan staff reporter assigned to the Maryland staff.
Stan Hinden, 54, Weekly editor, in charge of the District, Maryland and Virginia
Weeklies that appear in the Thursday Post.
Bo Jones, 34, lawyer for The Washington Post.
David Maraniss, 31, deputy metropolitan editor and Maryland editor.
Courtland Milloy, 29, city staff reporter.
Jonathan Neumann, 30, metropolitan staff reporter.
Joanne Omang, 38, national staff reporter.
Donnie Radcliffe, 51, reporter for the Style section.
Sandy Rovner, 52, reporter for the Style section.
Howard Simons, 51, managing editor.
Lewis Simons, 42, metropolitan staff reporter assigned to the regional desk.
Elsa Walsh, 23, reporter for the Virginia Weekly.
Tom Wilkinson, 44, assistant managing editor for personnel.
Robert U. (Bob) Woodward, 38, assistant managing editor-Metro.
THE REPORTER: When She Smiled, She Dazzled; When She Crashed . . .
On July 12, 1979, 11 days before her 25th birthday, Janet Cooke, a reporter on
the Toledo Blade, wrote a letter to Ben Bradlee.It was the kind of letter
Bradlee receives daily.
"Dear Mr. Bradlee:
"I have been a full time reporter for The Blade for slightly more than two
years, and I believe I am now ready to tackle the challenge of working for a
larger newspaper in a major city. . . ."
Attached to the letter was a resume and copies of six stories Cooke had written
for The Toledo Blade. One thing caught Bradlee's eye: the resume said Cooke was
a Phi Beta Kappa graduate of Vassar in 1976. Bradlee underlined those statements
and sent the clippings and resume to Bob Woodward. On the letter, he scrawled to
his secretary that he would see Cooke.
When Cooke visited The Post two weeks later, every interviewer was impressed.
She was a striking, smartly dressed, articulate black woman, precisely the kind
of applicant editors welcome, given the pressures to hire minorities and women.
And she could write.
As is the usual practice, she was interviewed around the newsroom, the city
editor, the Style editor, the Metro editor.
The written summary of impressions, compiled by Tom Wilkinson, assistant
managing editor for personnel, states:
"Janet Cooke came in and saw everyone and was pretty high on everyone's
list. What impressed me is that she had pretty well created her own beat. She
seems to be a pretty good self-starter. I found her to be very smart." So
did others. Only city editor Herb Denton questioned whether she was tough
enough. "There's a lot of Vassar still in her," Denton said.
Hiring is a group decision at The Post -- the editors call it collegial -- and
it takes time. Sometime in the next couple of months, nobody remembers the exact
date, a memo went to Wilkinson from Woodward. It said, "We're ready to
offer her a job on the Weekly. Can we go ahead?"
They could, and Janet was employed as a reporter by The Post on Jan. 3, 1980. So
impressed had the staff been with her and her writing that the usual check of
references was done in a cursory manner. Wilkinson vaguely remembers talking
with someone at The Blade. Others can't remember any checks.
She was assigned to the District Weekly, where a staff prepares one of the three
local sections for zoned distribution every Thursday in Maryland, Virginia and
the District of Columbia.
The editor, Stan Hinden, a veteran of 30 years in journalism, remembers:
"Janet was much like many reporters we get from smaller papers. That is,
she wrote and reported reasonably well. We tend to be detail-conscious, and she
needed to know how to get more detail, but she was good and smart and better
than most."
Cooke worked directly under Vivian Aplin-Brownlee, who had been a reporter,
editorial writer and associate editor of The Cleveland Plain Dealer. After a
year in San Diego, she joined The Post's staff in the same month that Cooke had
written her letter to Bradlee, July, 1979.
"Janet was assigned to various types of stories," Aplin-Brownlee said,
"to see how she would develop, to see if she would bring anything new to
the story."
Two weeks after she was hired, Cooke's first byline appeared. It was a story
about a black beauty contest. Other stories followed rapidly. On Jan. 31 there
were four. She was winning the confidence of her editor.
Her first big article appeared on Feb. 21. It was a dramatic story of
Washington's drug-infested riot corridor, years after the 1968 disorders, and an
hour-by-hour account of a police patrol along 14th Street.
"It was a fine piece of journalism," Aplin-Borwnlee said.
"Masterfully written."
The editor had worked with her reporter all week. "She was not really
street-savvy," Aplin-Brownlee said. "She didn't know the kinds of
people she was dealing with, but she was tenacious and talented."
Janet produced. Fifty-two of her stories appeared in The Post before the
ill-fated account of the non-existent "Jimmy."
She was a conspicuous member of the newsroom staff. When she walked, she
pranced. When she smiled, she dazzled. Her wardrobe seemed always new,
impeccable and limitless. "She has a dramatic flair," Bradlee said.
But there was something else. "She was consumed by blind and raw
ambition," Aplin-Borwnlee said. "It was obvious, but it doesn't deny
the talent.
"She was Gucci and Cardin and Yves St. Laurent. She went out on that 14th
Street story in designer jeans and came back to tell me that somebody asked,
'What kind of nigger are you?' She thought it was funny.
"She had to learn the street.She didn't know what was happening in the
nitty-gritty. I was grooming her, training her. It was ironic that she became a
reporter of the drug culture."
Cooke grew up in a middle-class home in Toledo, where her father, Stratman
Cooke, worked for 35 years for Toledo Edison and is now secretary to the
corporation. He remembers that he gave her her first typewriter when she was 5
and that a grade-school teacher said she couldn't believe the poetry Janet
wrote. It was that good.
Janet learned quickly about life in an urban slum. Her 14th Street story drew
compliments not only from her colleagues, but also Bradlee and Richard Harwood,
deputy managing editor, congratulated her.
Janet's ambition was taking shape. She wanted to move to the daily Metro staff,
which is responsible for seven-day coverage of local news. Storng, the Metro
staff is a favorite of the publisher, Donald Graham.
Graham believes the quality of the Metro staff has improved enormously in the 10
years he has been with the paper. "The city staff particularly has begun to
tell us things we didn't understand about this town," Graham said.
Bob Woodward, who is more famous as half of the Woodward and Bernstein reporting
team that broke the Watergate story in 1972, has been assistant managing editor
for metropolitan news -- the Metro editor -- since May 1, 1979. A tough,
determined and persistent administrator, Woodward is frequently the first of The
Post's top staff in the office in the morning and among the last to leave at
night. He has put the local news section on a fast track, and presides over the
largest of The Post's staffs.
Janet Cooke wanted to move quickly. She told Woodward so, and she frequently
talked with Milton Coleman, who had succeeded Herb Denton as district editor for
the daily staff. Aplin-Brownlee knew of the conversations.
Once when the "Jimmy" story was developing, Cooke told a friend,
"This story is my ticket off the Weekly."
While she aspired to the Metro staff, she had bigger ambitions."She set
enormous goals for herself," Karlyn Barker, a Metro reporter, said.
"She wanted a Pulitzer Prize in three years, and she wanted to be on the
national staff in three to five years," Barker said. "She had winner
written all over her, although it was strange, every day she acted as though she
was protecting her job. She was the last person who needed to do that."
Cooke lived alone in an apartment until December. Then she asked Elsa Walsh,
another Weekly reporter, if they might share living quarters. Walsh agreed, but
says it didn't work very well.
"Janet was hard to live with, very highstrung," Walsh recalled.
"She bought clothes lavishly. Every day she talked about her ambitions. She
had no sense of the past or even the present, except for its consequences for
the future. She always looked to the future, and she didn't care about the
people she left behind."
Cooke had money problems. The check for her deposit on the shared apartment
bounced. So did others.
When Walsh asked Cooke about other reporters who doubted the veracity of the
"Jimmy" story, she said Cooke replied: "They're just jealous.
They are not going to get where I'm going."
Sometime in August of last year, Aplin-Brownlee heard talk of a new type of
heroin on the streets of Washington. The drug was said, so she heard, to
ulcerate the skin of its users. She asked Cooke to look into it.
During background interviews on the story, Cooke didn't find the new type of
heroin, but she found out a lot about the use of heroin in Washington.
Interviewing social workers and drug rehabilitation experts, Cooke amassed
extensive notes and taped interviews with intriguing leads. In all, there were
two hours of tape-recorded interviews plus 145 pages of handwritten notes plus a
collection of pamphlets and documents on drug abuse.
When Aplin-Brownlee saw what Cooke had collected, she immediately said,
"This is a story for the daily."
"The daily" is Weekly jargon for the Metro section. Cooke took her
notebooks and her ideas to Milton Coleman. Aplin-Brownlee was not to see the
story again until it appeared on the front page of The Washington Post of Sept.
28 under the headline, "Jimmy's World."
The Story: First the Idea, and Finally the Presses Rolled
Milton Coleman is a rangy, tall man. His quietness is deceptive. He pursues news
as though it's his quarry, and admiring colleagues regard him as highly
competitive. When he sits, he sprawls. He likes to work in a vest. He is a
relentless jogger, and finished last Sunday's Washington marathon in three hours
and 25 minutes, 57 minutes behind the winner.
Coleman arrived at The Washington Post on May 12, 1976. He had been on The
Minneapolis Star for two years after Columbia Graduate School of Journalism, a
stint in radio news, a job as Washington correspndent for a black news service
and three years with the Student Orgnaization for Black Unity.He majored in fine
arts at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee.
At The Post he reported on Montgomery County and D.C. City Hall before he was
named assistant city editor in March of last year. On May 26, 1980, he took over
the city desk. He is among the most respected of The Post's editing staff.
When Janet Cooke brought her reporting notes on heroin to Coleman, stories of
heroin use in the city were running regularly. Four appeared in August and three
in September before "Jimmy's World" was published.
The stories reported on an increase in the crime rate, a drug dealer receiving a
40-year sentence, vast new drug traffic via Turkey, an indictment of a Northeast
man on a drug count, hearings on heroin use by patients dying of cancer, a life
sentence for a drug-related killing and 19 arrests in two major local drug
rings.
"I talked over Janet's materials with her," Coleman said. "She
talked about hundreds of people being hooked.And at one point she mentioned an
8-year-old-addict. I stopped her and said, 'That's the story. Go after it. It's
a front page story.'
"It appeared that the kid was at RAP Inc., a service organization for drug
addicts. I went to Managing Editor [Howard] Simons' office . . . and we talked
it through. If RAP gave us permission to talk to the boy, could we reveal the
name? We agreed that we would not under any circumstances. Would RAP let us talk
with the parents? We didn't know. Janet went back out."
Two weeks passed. On a story of this nature, it is common practice at The Post
to give a reporter all the time he or she needs.
Cooke retuned to Coleman and said she couldn't find the boy, but a week later
she said she said she had found another young addict. He was 8 years old.
"Jimmy's World" was born.
"She told me that she had gone out on the playgrounds, had asked around and
had left her cards in a number of places. One of them had found its way to the
boy's mother, who had called Janet in anger and asked, 'Why are you looking for
my boy?'"
Cooke told Coleman she had talked with the mother again but had reached no
agreement on an interview. In answer to her question, Coleman said she could
promise the mother anonymity.
"I told her if the mother called again to keep her on the phone, keep
talking, talk it through. Be persistant," Coleman said.
Coleman did not ask the mother's name or the family's street address. He had
promised Cooke confidenitiality for her sources. The jugular of journalism lay
exposed -- the faith an editor has to place in a reporter.
Simons says an editor can ask the name of a source and if a reporter refuses to
reveal it the editor has the option to reject a story. He did not ask Cooke or
Coleman to reveal any details on identity.
"Janet told me she had been back in touch with the mother and that the two
of them were to have dinner at Eastover Shopping Center," Coleman said.
Later Cooke told him she had the dinner and that two days later she visited the
mother's house, the same imaginary house she was to describe in great detail as
"Jimmy's World."
There were no further interviews with "Jimmy" or his family, she told
Coleman. But she said she was worried. "Ron," the invented mother's
invented lover, had threatened Cooke, the reporter told her editor. All during
the interview, she said, Ron had paced the room with a knife in his hand, and
once had said to her, "If I see any police, Miss Lady, or if any police
come to see me, we [he glances again at the knife] will be around to see
you."
The threat was taken so seriously by Coleman and others at The Post that when
Richard Cohen wrote a column after "Jimmy's World" appeared, Coleman
insisted that Cohen's reference to the knife be deleted. It was. Simons, whose
concern for the staff is nearly parental, wouldn't let Cooke go home for two
nights after her story was published. He arranged for her to stay with another
Post employe.
When Coleman heard her description of her "interview," he asked her to
do a memo on it. On this kind of story, Coleman wants the reporter to write the
story roughly but soon after the event, while details are fresh in the
reporter's mind.
Cooke's memo, her first draft on the subject, is 13 1/2 pages long, double
spaced on letter-sized paper. It contains exhausting detail. "Jimmy"
wears a blue and green Izod T-shirt -- "bad, ain't it. I got six of
these." There was an eight-foot plaid sofa against one living-room wall, a
matching love seat against the other. Both were covered in plastic. There was a
color television set in the room, along with a lot of Panasonic stereo eqipment,
"receiver, tape deck." There was a rubber tree plant, fake bamboo
blinds, a brown shag rug, two lamps, a chrome and glass coffee table and a
chrome and glass end table.
At this point, Coleman saw the name "Tyrone" on the memo, and
determined that this was the fictitious child's "real" first name. He
was also told the elementary school "Tyrone" attended and the general
neighborhood where he supposedly lived. This was reassuring at the time, and
later translated into general newsroom gossip that Coleman knew who the child
was.
Other editors did not ask, then or later. Managing editor Simons had earlier
given Cooke assurances that she could keep the family anonymous, according to
Coleman, who said, "Howard said she should deal with me and tell me the
child's identity. 'I don't want to know,' he said, somewhat jokingly."
"None of them asked me for the name," Coleman remembers. "I may
have been asked, do you believe it?"
Cooke's descriptive language was convincing to Coleman, but Woodward was to say
later that if he had seen the first draft he might have asked questions about
the long and seemingly perfect quotations. Woodward never looked at the first
rough draft until Cooke's Pulitzer was in question.
Coleman, who knows the streets better than Woodward, said he found no reason to
question the quotes. "Ron" is quoted as saying, for example,
"He'd be bugging me all the time about what the shots were, what people was
doin' and one day he said, 'When can I get off.' I said well s---, you can have
some now. I let him snort a little and damn, it was wild. The little dude really
did get off."
Coleman read it over, made suggestions on reworking it, suggested how to write
the "lead," the opening, how to rearrange the material.
"I wanted it to read like John Coltrane's music, strong. It was a great
story, and it never occured to me that she could make it up. There was too much
distance between Janet and the streets," Coleman said.
When the second draft came in, Coleman called in Bob Barkin, The Post's art
director, to illustrate the story. Obviously there would be no photographs. It
was Friday, Sept. 19, nine days before the story was to be published.
Barkin selected illustrator Michael Gnatek Jr. for the drawing. Bradlee was
later to find the full illustration so powerful in its horror that he insisted
it run inside the paper. "People are eating breakfast while they read the
paper, you know," he said.
The full drawing ran on page A9, only a smaller drawing of "Jimmy" ran
on the front page. It shows a young man, his face twisted in a half-smile, huge
eyes watching, his slender arm gripped by a huge fist as a needle is injected.
Coleman did some checking of his own. He found someone who knew, and asked if
Janet's description of "shooting up" is the way it's done. He wanted
to know if, as the story said, liquid ebbs out of the syringe, and is replaced
by red blood, which is then reinjected. He was satisfied with how the answers
agreed with Janet's account.
Bo Jones is The Post's counsel.He and his associate, Carol Weisman, are
frequently called in to "lawyer" a story, particularly those dealing
with subjects that might have legal implications.
Jones suggested some changes. "Ron" was said to be from Atlanta. Jones
suggested making it "from the South," because "Ron" might be
traceable in Atlanta, and the promise of anonymity was absolute. Jones also
suggested striking out "public housing." That, also, could be traced,
he said.
Woodward saw the story for the first time. He divides stories into two
categories: possible libel or criminal charges and all others. "Jimmy"
fell into Woodward's category two. It could not libel because its subjects were
anonymous.
"Janet had written a great piece," Woodward says. "In a way, both
she and the story were almost too good to be true. I had seen her go out on a
complicated story and an hour later turn in a beautifully written piece. This
story was so well-written and tied together so well that my alarm bells simply
didn't go off. My skepticism left me. I was personally negligent."
Woodward called in Cooke and asked her to tell him about it. He simply wanted to
hear her story. "She was a terrific actress, terrific," he said. She
related it all in the most disarming way. It was so personal, so dramatic, so
hard in her tummy."
None of the Post's senior editors subjected Cooke's story to close questioning.
Simons was on vacation in Florida the week before it appeared. Deputy managing
editor Richard Harwood had no role in its preparation. Ben Bradlee read the
story that week and thought it was "a helluva job."
Are they satisfied with the preliminary screening on "Jimmy's World"?
Simons answered: "Yes, there was no reason to disbelieve the story."
Bradlee said: "I am not satisfied now -- but I was then."
Coleman, who was editing Cooke's copy, reflects on this: "Much of my
attention was concentrated on the story and formulating it. Subconsciously, I
think I firmly believed that the extra eyes of the backup system would catch
anything that I missed."
Now Coleman believes other editors were relying on him. "We never really
debated whether or not it was true," he said. "I think -- if I can
gore my own ox -- they kind of took it for granted that Coleman should
know."
Art and story were complete. Bradlee had the weekend duty. He said again that it
was a front page story. He thought it was terrific. The story, colors flying,
had passed its last and most powerful filter.
Janet Cooke had one last chance to change her mind. On Friday night, before the
story was to run on Sunday, Coleman called her in. Simons had gone out of town,
but before he left, he insisted that Coleman have a talk with the reporter.
"I told her what Simons told me to say. He's almost romantic about this
kind of thing," Coleman said. "I said she had written a story that is
certain to be controversial. You have seen a crime and you may be subpoenaed. We
don't think so, but you can.You should know that The Post will stand behind you
100 percent. If you are subpoenaed, and you refuse to reveal your sources, you
may be found in contempt of court and have to spend time in jail. Before the
story goes, if you don't want to face that, we won't run it. Think it over, tell
me in the morning."
Saturday morning Cooke told Coleman to let it go.
The article had been held for Sunday publication. There is more space for long
stories -- "Jimmy's World" ran 2,256 words -- and there are more
readers -- 892,220 copies of the paper ran on Sunday, Sept. 28. "Jimmy's
World" was on the front page. The presses started running at 9:54 p.m.
THE PUBLICATION: 'Jimmy' Hit Washington Like a Grenade, and Bounced
Jimmy's story struck at Washington's heart. The paper had no sooner reached the
streets than The Washington Post's telephone switchboard lit up like a space
launch control room.
Readers were outraged. The story was described as racist and criminal. the
concern was for Jimmy. "What about the boy?" was the central question.
It was repeated for the next four days in as many versions as the human mind can
invent.
By Monday, Washington Police Chief Burtell Jefferson had launched a mammoth
citywide search. He had called on his youth division to get to work Sunday.
Mayor Marion Barry was incensed. All schools, social services and police
contacts were to be asked for "Jimmy's" whereabouts. The word went out
on the streets that big reward money was available. Last week Assistant Chief
Maurice Turner said the police had been prepared to offer up to $10,000.
The Los Angeles Times-Washington Post News Service moved the story out to 300
clients. "Jimmy" was national, then international.
Much later, after Ronald Reagan was elected president, Donnie Radcliffe of The
Post's Style staff sent a copy of the story to the nation's first-lady-to-be.
Radcliffe thought it would be useful information as the Reagans prepared to come
to Washington.
Nancy Reagan wrote back " . . . How terribly sad to read it and to know
there are so many others like him out there. I hope with all my heart I can do
something to help them. Surely there must be a way . . ."
It would be difficult to overestimate Washington's compassion for
"Jimmy" or its anger when The Post refused to reveal his identity or
address.
Police were receiving letters from all over the country, including one signed by
30 students in a Richmond school, pleading that they find "Jimmy."
At one point, as Milton Coleman and Howard Simons had predicted, police
threatened to subpoena Janet Cooke in an effort to force her to reveal names and
addresses.
At The Post, Simons sent out instructions that if the police got a search
warrant no member of the staff was to resist. Cooke, while not staying at her
apartment, was to be at work, on the newsroom floor, and out on some part of the
follow-up story.
Coleman established an 11-member reporting team for the follow-up. Five of them
were assigned to the breaking story. With these five, the other six men were
given a different assignment. They were to search for another "Jimmy,"
on the theory that if there is one, there must be others.
Cooke and fellow Metro reporter Courtland Milloy were one of the teams searching
for the second young addict.
The Post's telephones never stopped ringing. Between 50 and 60 letters to the
editor arrived.
At first the mayor announced that the city knew "Jimmy" and his family
and that he was under medical treatment, which he had been receiving for some
time. Later that statement proved premature.
By the following weekend, Coleman was uneasy. It was a slight feeling, but it
was real. "I thought the police would have found him in three days at the
outside. I'm not one of those people who believe the police can't do anything
right. They could find him. I knew it."
Courtland Milloy was also worried. He and Cooke had gone out to find the second
"Jimmy."
"We were supposed to be finding another kid," Milloy said. "But
I'll tell you the truth, I wanted to find Jimmy. Hell, that kid needed help. So
as we drove around I circled through Condon Terrace, the general area where
Janet said he lived.
"It didn't take long to see that she didn't know the area. It's one of the
toughest sections in town. I know it well. She said she didn't see the house. I
asked her if it was to the right of us, the left of us, or had we passed it. She
didn't know.
"We went to other areas where you can find dealers on the street, and I
wanted to go back to Condon Terrace but Janet's life had been threatened. I
didn't want to take any chances."
Milloy's serious doubts about the story began there.When he and Cooke had looked
for seven hours they returned to the office. Milloy went to Coleman and said,
"I think you ought to buy me a drink."
The next day, Coleman did, and Milloy told him about his growing disbelief in
Cooke's story.
Milloy went further. "I wanted to find 'Jimmy.' I mean, does The Post
sanction a reporter watching a kid getting shot up? Even the Condon Terrace
people were calling offering to help.
"I got a call from the 'Queen of the Underworld' [about whom Milloy had
written on the same Sunday Cooke's story ran], and she asked if she could help.
She wanted to find that kid, man."
Coleman listened respectfully, but was "leery" of Milloy's
conclusions. "I thought part of his doubting might be jealousy," he
said. "But also I got the distinct impression from him and from Jan that he
was concerned with our making sure that the child was identified and turned over
to authorities. My concern at that time [was] for protecting the reporter on
this story . . ."
Coleman does remember relaying Milloy's doubts to the metropolitan editor and
the managing editor.
Four days after the story ran, the telephone calls to The Post changed. They
were now asking, in great numbers, what the police were doing. Why weren't they
finding Jimmy, and what were they doing about the drug traffic?
The intense police search continued for 17 days. The city had been finely
combed. Nothing.
On Oct. 15, Mayor Barry said, "We're kind of giving up on that." It
remained an open case.
"I've been told the story is part myth, part reality," Barry said.
"We all have agreed that we don't believe that the mother or the pusher
would allow a reporter to see them shoot up."
Were Bradlee and Simons worried by City Hall's claim that the story was untrue?
Both said they felt the weight of criticism, but were reassured by the fact that
at one point the mayor had said city officials had found such a child.
Bradlee says he remembers going to either Woodward or Coleman and asking if
there was anything that should be rechecked, and being reassured by the answers
he got.
The Post stuck by its story and what it described as its First Amendment rights
to protect its sources.
"At any rate," Coleman recalls, "I voiced my concerns to Howard
[Simons], and he said in so many words that they were legitimate. But he urged
me to find the most creative way to examine them, stressing that I more than
anyone else had to stand by my reporter. At the point that I even began to hint
to her that I thought she had not been truthful, her trust in me could be
destroyed."
Simons says, "I have no memory of either Coleman or Woodward discussing
Milloy's disbelief with me at that point."
In the paper's newsroom, where doubts about the story were beginning to thump
faintly, there were congratulations and commendations for Cooke.
Publisher Don Graham wrote her a note on Oct. 7: "With all the turmoil of
the last week, it's important that one say the basic thing: not only was that a
very fine story in Sunday's paper a week ago, it was only one of many you've
done in the last year.
"The Post has no more important and tougher job than explaining life in the
black community in Washington. A special burden gets put on black reporters
doing that job, and a double-special burden on black reporters who try to see
life through their own eyes instead of seeing it the way they're told they
should. The Post seems to have many such reporters. You belong very high up
among them.
"If there's any long-term justification for what we do, it's that people
will act a bit differently and think a bit differently if we help them
understand the world even slightly better. Much of what we write fails that
first test because we don't understand what we're writing about ourselves.
"You seem to have much more than the common measure of understanding and
the ability to explain what you see. It's a great gift.
"And you went through your tests of last week with what seemed to me
world-class composure. Sincerely, Don."
On Monday morning after "Jimmy's World" appeared, Woodward walked over
to Vivian Aplin-Brownlee's desk and said Janet Cooke was now a member of the
Metro daily staff. Aplin-Brownlee was furious. She had lost her most experienced
reporter.
THE DOUBTS: From the Very First Moment, Some Suspected the Worst
From the day "Jimmy's" story appeared there were doubts about it.
Milton Coleman felt misgivings first when the police couldn't find the boy,
Courtland Milloy when he accompanied Janet Cooke on a trip through the area
where the youngster was supposed to live.
There were others. Mayor Marion Barry was one. Dr. Alyce Gullattee, director of
Howard University's Institute for Substance Abuse and Addiction, was another.
She was one of the people Cooke interviewed when she was gathering her original
material.
In a telephone call with Pat Tyler, then of The Washington Post's metro staff,
Gullattee said the story had caused a panic in the community to the extent that
addicts were hunkered down, afraid to go out to seek treatment out of fear that
they will run afoul of swarms of police looking for the 8-year-old.
Gullattee also said she didn't believe any of those people "fired up"
in front of Cooke. Junkies, she said, just don't trust reporters like that.
Elsa Walsh, Cooke's roommate, doubted. She had gone through Cooke's notes once
and found nothing on "Jimmy."
But there was more. "She's the kind of person who has fears for her own
safety," Walsh said. "My own instincts told me it was wrong. She would
have real trouble going into the 'Jimmy' setting. And then, when I tried to put
what I know of Janet together with the story itself, they wouldn't fit."
She did not express these misgivings to any editors.
Among the strongest doubters was Vivian Aplin-Brownlee of the District Weekly,
who was Janet's first editor at The Post. She had not been in touch with the
story since it was turned over to the Metro staff.
"I had been tough on Janet. She knew it and I knew it," Aplin-Brownlee
said. "But when I first read the story I was astonished. I thought it was
going to be about the use of heroin that causes skin ulcers. That's what it
started out to be.
"I never believed it, and I told Milton that. I knew her so well and the
depth of her. In her eagerness to make a name she would write farther than the
truth would allow.
"When challenged on facts on other stories, Janet would reverse herself,
but without dismay or consternation with herself.
"I knew she would be tremendously out of place in a 'shooting gallery.' I
didn't believe she could get access. No pusher would shoot up a child in her
presence.
"Some of the language didn't ring true. What 8-year-old in 'Jimmy's'
circumstances would make a connection between math and drugs?" (As the
story claimed.)
On the day Cooke's Pulitzer Prize was announced, Aplin-Brownlee went to Coleman
and said, "I hope she has committed the perfect crime."
When the hoax became known, Coleman went back to Aplin-Brownlee and said,
"It wasn't the perfect crime after all."
In mid-November, Cooke was working on another sensational story, promising to
produce the story of a 14-year-old prosititute, and when Alpin-Brownlee heard
about it, she told Coleman, "She's about to do it to you again. Why would a
14-year-old hooker and her 20-year-old pimp sit down with Janet at a restaurant
in Georgetown?"
Still, after she first expressed her incredulity to Coleman, she didn't go back
to him. Relations between the two were strained.
"He said he believed the story," Aplin-Browlee recalls now. "I
didn't have to ask why. He believed it because he wanted to."
Aplin-Brownlee said she felt that Coleman had raided her District Weekly staff
when Cooke was assigned to Metro after the "Jimmy" story. It was what
Woodward called a battlefield promotion.
Skepticism from people like Milloy and Aplin-Brownlee triggered newsroom rumors
about "Jimmy" that wouldn't go away. Woodward didn't doubt the story,
although he and Coleman talked about those who did. "I was blown away by
the story," Woodward said. "Milt seemed satisfied that by now he had a
name. I was also reassured by a letter to the editor The Post published"
(on Nov. 10.).
Dr. William Hamlin of Washington had written, ". . . The Washington
metropolitan area, as well as hundreds of other large metropolitan areas around
the country, are full of Jimmys. I know. I work with them. . . ."
"Milt did think that failed trip Janet had with Courtland was
bizarre," Woodward said. "That thought should have set off alarms for
me. It didn't. I told Milt I believed the story."
Woodward was inclined to dismiss the doubters, attributing their skepticism to
"professional jealousy."
Still, the two editors did take some precautions. As Cooke pursued the
"hooker" story, they insisted that Coleman meet with the subject of
the story, mainly to protect Cooke from more staff jealousies and to establish
once and for all the soundness of her reporting. Cooke kept arranging times and
places for such a meeting, but they were all canceled.
"I attached no particular significance to this," Woodward said,
"but it was mildly troubling."
Meanwhile, something else was filtering into The Post's reaction. It felt it was
under attack. Angry words from the mayor and the police chief were reaching the
staff's pride. Charges of irresponsibility from the public were tough to take.
Woodward said it best, "We went into our Watergate mode: protect the source
and back the reporter."
When the threat of legal action by the police department came up, publisher Dan
Graham went by Coleman's desk one day and asked, "Is there anything we
should check out?"
Neither of them quite remembers Coleman's reply, but, in part, Coleman remembers
describing Cooke's gripping account of her visit to "Jimmy's" home.
Graham went away satisfied.
About three weeks after the story appeared, Simons called Coleman and said,
"That kid is still out there and nobody's looking for him. Let's find him.
Take Janet with you."
Coleman told Cooke about the plan, but they didn't get to it right away. A day
later, Cooke went to Coleman and said she had gone to the house and found it
vacant. The family had moved to Baltimore, she said, and there was no reason for
the two of them to make a trip to "Jimmy's" house.
While Coleman had been troubled that the police were unable to find the boy,
Woodward found that unremarkable. "It seemed logical," he said,
"that his mother would take him away to Baltimore or wherever."
But Coleman was infuriated. He went to managing editor Simons and spilled out
his anger. For the first time, Simons felt misgivings about the story. "But
all I had was a hunch and the fact that she had ducked the visit. How do you
prove a negative?" he said.
The faith of an editor in his reporter that is a principal connector in all the
events of the episode was upheld. Skepticism was put aside.
Bradlee says that throughout he was unaware of the skepticism. "Nobody ever
came in this room and said, "I have doubts about the story' -- before or
after publication -- and nobody said someone else had misgivings about the
story," Bradlee said.
One editor who had early misgivings was deputy metro editor David Maraniss, who
also serves as Maryland editor. He read the story on vacation and didn't feel it
quite added up. Since it was not his territory and criticism might be viewed as
poaching, Maraniss did not take his questions to Woodward until much later.
Uncertainties and misgivings among the newsroom staff persisted. Some of them
found their way to Coleman, Woodward or Simons, but apparently made no strong
impression. Looking back on it with reporters now, they seem to agree that they
didn't have enough to go on. They felt they couldn't press the case without
evidence, and none was available. As late as February, Metro reporters were
still going to editors with their concerns, and were told that Coleman knew sho
"Jimmy" was.
When the hoax was exposed, their doubts about the story and their frustration
with management burst out in a meeting of the Metro staff at Woodward's house
last Thursday night. Coleman says now:
". . . There was undoubtedly also some degree of pride -- we had published
the story in the first place and stood by it. We probably put too much faith in
the hope that maybe things were not the way so many indicators suggested they
might be."
Woodward, likewise, feels negligent. "Questions were clearly out
there," he said. "Maraniss and Coleman were my channels of
information. I should have sat them down together and reviewed everything and
then taken it to Simons and Bradlee. Though I had a vague idea that Coleman and
Simons had talked about the questions, I never recall talking with Simons about
it. I don't think I ever once took the matter up with Bradlee, who was
apparently left in ignorance about the doubts swirling around."
Meanwhile, Aplin-Brownlee says that Cooke was having migraine headaches and
stayed out of the office more than usual.
THE OMBUDSMAN: After the Agony, the Reappraisal
I wrote this story of "Jimmy World" after being invited to do so by
The Washington Post's executive editor, Ben Bradlee. It is important to
understand the verb, "invited," because if I had been assigned to do
it, that would have violated the relationship The Post has maintained with its
ombudsmen for over a decade.
The central idea is autonomy for the person who sits in this chair. Without it,
the ombudsman would be a fake, like "Jimmy." With it, The Post takes
its chances, as it should. I have been filling this role at The Post since
September, and will return in August to my regular work in the administration of
Duke University.
All of which is to say that this piece is my own. Twenty Post reporters
discussed the one-man undertaking Wednesday afternoon and didn't like it. They
wanted the story staffed, as The Wall Street Journal did with its account of
"Jimmy" that appeared Friday. I turned the reporters away, although it
would have been great to have them share the work. But I am grateful that they
volunteered.
There are omissions in this article, perhaps some errors too. The most glaring
omission is the absence of an interview with Janet Cooke.She refused to see me.
I don't think she was trying to be evasive. I think she simply didn't want to go
over it again with a stranger now. The pain has simply been too great. Where
Cooke is quoted directly in this account, the words are attributed to the
editors or reporters who were in conversation with her.
I regret her decision because her version of the whole episode should be here.
No doubt, it would differ in some respects from this account.
After the agony of this week, deputy met metropolitan editor David Maraniss, who
has grown close to Cooke and feels protective of her, reports that she is doing
better, seems to understand what she has done, and is feeling remorseful.
"By Friday," he said, "she was beautiful again."
Four Post employes were involved in producing this story, all of them at my
request. Noel Epstein, assistant editor of Outlook, and Ron Shaffer of the Metro
staff did some research, none of the writing. William Greider, assistant
managing editor for national news, edited it. He changed nothing without my
approval. Robin Gradison, a news aide, supplied research and good cheer and
coffee for four days. She was terrific.
The Post's attitude toward this project was summarized in the catch phrase,
"full disclosure." That word went out to the staff from Bradlee and
publisher Donald Graham.
The result was that every question I asked about The Post's handling of
"Jimmy" got an answer. Maraniss declined to relate his off-the-reocrd
conversations with Cooke. Other than that, no one refused to answer my
questions.
The most impressive reaction was from the news staff members who filed in and
out of my office offering help. I am willing to lay odds that no sentence in
this piece was written without interruption except those that were typed between
midnight Friday and 8 a.m. yesterday.
The Prize: Of Fiefdoms and Their Knights and Ladies of Adventure
The Washington Post has 493 employes on its news staff.At the top of the pyramid
is the executive editor, Ben Bradlee. His second-in-command and alter ego is the
managing editor, Howard Simons. Third in line is the deputy managing editor,
Richard Harwood.
They constitute the presiding troika, and they split the duties of top news
administration, rotating, for example, weekend duties. They are the last port of
call for news decisions. Normally, Bradlee and Simons preside over daily 2:30
p.m. and 6:30 p.m. story conferences. Harwood is responsible for the Sunday
interpretative section, "Outlook," and The Washington Post Magazine,
among other duties.
Bradlee is luminescent, Simons and Harwood, philosophical. All three are former
reporters, a characteristic of most Post editors.
Below them are the archdukes and duchesses of the newsroom, the assistant
managing editors, 12 of them, nine with news staffs. The other three are
responsible for personnel, administration and special projects. oAll are called
AMEs.
Below them on the organization chart are various levels of other editors: earls,
counts, countesses, viscounts, barons.
Then there are the reporters, the knight adventurers or lady adverturers. They
writer the copy.
So prestigious is The Post among journalists and would-be journalists in this
country and abroad that one could feel comfortable betting that the entire staff
could be replaced, at least numerically, once a month by the applications the
paper receives.
The Post calls its news administration a federal system. That is intended to
indicate, and does, the enormous latitude and authority that is given to the
assistant managing editors, the archdukes.
They pull together budgets and administer them, decide on stories, hire and fire
(but only with the agreement from the troika), reward and punish, and --
importantly -- congregate every day for the story conferences. When Bradlee or
Simons wants to issue instructions, the assistant managing editors get the word
and pass it along.
The archduke of the Metro section is Bob Woodward. He presides over 108 employes,
a quarter of the entire news staff. He has been in the job for just short of two
years, having assumed it after completing the most recent of his three
best-selling books, The Brethren, an account of the decision-making
process of the Supremne Court that he co-authored with Post national reporter
Scott Armstrong.
Woodward's name has been synonymous with investigative reporting since
Watergate.
"Jimmy" was created, lived and vanished in Woodward's shop.
Among the rewards in which AMEs play a key role are nominations for the prizes
of journalism. On Nov. 17, 1980, the AME for administration, Elsie Caper, set
out a memo asking for nominations. Her list contained 73 award possibilities.
Leading the list, as always were the Pulitzer Prizes, which are awarded in 12
categories. Winners become the nobility of American journalism. The Post has won
Pulitzers 16 times.
On Woodward's Metro staff, there was competition for Pulitzer nominations. It is
not uncommon at The Post. David Maraisa, the Maryland editor, was pushing hard
for a series by the of his Maryland reporters, Neil Henry, as an entry in the
feature category.
He was so depressed when he found that Henry would be nominated in another
category that he seriously considered resigning. The Post's feature nominations
were to go to Sally Quinn (Ben Bradlee' wife), Myra McPherson and Henry Mitchell
of the Style section, where most Post features appear, and Tom Boswell of the
sports staff.
Meanwhile, Milton Coleman, Woodward's city editor, was pushing Janet Cooke's
"Jimmy's World." In a memo to Woodward on Dec. 10 he also suggested
that the story be nominated for the Sigma Delta Chi award, the Heywood Brown
award, the Ellis Willis Scipps award and as one of a package submission for the
Robert F. Kennedy award.
Coleman's memo described "Jimmy's World" as readable, accurate and
complete. "I can't think of another story that shows more enterprise and
resourcefulness on the part of a reporter in overcoming obstacles."
There was already strain between Coleman and Maraniss. Coleman thought Maraniss
encroached on his territory by giving directions to the city staff. Maraniss
disagreed.
"Jimmy's World" was The Post's sole entry for local news reporting.
Maraniss' entry was one of two nominations in the category for Local
Investigative Reporting and Other Specialized Reporting," It didn't win.
"Jimmy's World" was also entered for a prize from the Maryland-D.C.
Press Association. It won second prize.
Beore the entries were sent off, indeed while the nominations were being
considered, doubts among the staff aboout Cook's story rose to new intensity.
This time, even Maraniss was involved. After a dinner with investigative
reporter Jonathan Naumann, Maraniss re-read the story, and this time it didn't
ring true. He found he couldn't believe it. He said that to Woodward, and
suggested that Woodward re-read the story before it was nominated. In hindsight
he said he thinks he didn't put it as strongly as he he might have. He didn't
want to appear to be knocking down a story Coleman liked so much.
Neumann, who had won a Pulitzer for investigative reporting for The Philadelphia
Inquirer, was a principal in discussions among other reporters. "A number
of people felt strongly that it should not be nominated because it could
disgrace us," he said. "A couple of dozen people talked abut it but we
didn't go to top editors. I think we felt it wouldn't be fair to put her on the
carpet when we couldn't prove anything."
With all the doubts about the "Jimmy" story, how could it have been
submitted, with The Post's full backing, to the Pulitzer committee?
Woodward, who accepted Coleman's urgings and strongly supported the story to
Bradlee, Simons and Harwood, says it most tellingly: "I have used the
phrases 'in for a dime, in for a dollar' to describe my overall conclusion about
submitting the Cooke story for a Pulitzer or any other prize.
"I believed it, we published it. Official questions had been raised, but we
stood by the story and her. Internal questions had been raised, but none about
her other work. The reports were about the story not sounding right, being based
on anonymous sources, and primarily about purported lies [about] her personal
life -- [told by men reporters], two she had dated and one who felt in close
competition with her.
"I think that the decision to nominate the story for a Pulitzer is of
minimal consequence. I also think that it won is of little consequence. It is a
brilliant story -- fake and fraud that it is.
"It would be absurd for me or any other editor to review the authenticity
or accuracy of stories that are nominated for prizes.
"If so, our posture would be as follows: we published the story and said it
was true, but now we are going to nominate it for a Pulitzer -- now that's
serious business."
Bradlee, Simons and Harwood made the final decisions on Pulitzer nominations in
early January. Did Bradlee, Simons or Harwood know of any of this skepticism
about Cooke's reporting?
"No, I knew of none," Bradlee said.
Harwood said he didn't know of any , either.
"I didn't know of any staff doubts," said Simmons, who had been told
months earlier of some criticism, "but I had some of my own. I had reason
to disbelieve. And Woodward supported the nomination strongly."
All 12 cateories were entered. The paper was to win one.
When the prize of "Jimmy's World" was announced, all of the top
editors, Woodward and Coleman were jubilant. So were the undoubters among the
news staff. Publisher Donald Graham wrote his second note to Cooke:
"Dear Janet:
"Hooray. I've never heard a prize announcement make people so happy. People
here like you. They think you're the kind of journalist The Post needs for its
future because you understand people and you get a part of their nature into
your stories. And all thinking readers of the page know that the city coverage
has been getting much, much better for five years. This flash of recognition for
you (and Woodward, Miklton, Stan, Vivian and all others involved in your career
here) feels mightily like vindication. Milton and the entire staff have taken so
much abuse (you as much as anyone) for trying to do the job professionally. Your
prize seems to me to say that we're on the right track in writing about this
city and it's strong encouragement to do even better. Don."
THE CONFESSION: At the End, There Were the Questions, Then the Tears
Pulitzer Prize decisions were made on April 3. Formal announcement was scheduled
10 days later, but two members of the advisory board called Ben Bradlee within
hours after the decisions were final. He was elated, and called both Bob
Woodward and Milton Coleman.
Janet Cooke was in New Haven working on the Reagan shooting story, and John W.
Hinckley Jr. Woodward and Coleman reached her by telephone.
Later, she told an interviewer, laughing, "It was right on deadline when
they called. I thought they were calling because I hadn't filed the story yet,
and all I could think of was, 'Oh, God, is it possible to get fired from 600
miles away?'"
Executive editor Bradlee got on the telephone and repeated the message.
"Even then, I wasn't convinced," she said.
Finally persuaded, she faced an evening alone. She said she bought a bottle of
champaign, called her mother and watched "Dallas" in her motel room.
The public announcement of the awards was on April 13. At The Toledo Blade that
day, in the words of executive news editor Joe O'Conor, "We have an edition
that goes to press shortly after 8 a.m. In it, we had a sidebar on Miss Cooke
and her Toledo background.
"Sometime later that day, one of the editors showed me a copy of the AP's
biographical sketches on Pulitzer winners. The information in it did not jibe
with our information, so we did what we would normally do: we pointed out to AP
that our information and theirs didn't mesh."
At the Associated Press the story moved to Louis D. Boccardi, vice president and
executive editor in New York. He said:
"Tuesday morning, The Toledo Blade pointed out to our correspondent in
Toledo that there were discrepancies between our account of Miss Cooke's
educational background and what they knew to be the truth.
"More specifically, the background we carried, which was given by The Post
to the Pulitzer committee, said that she had a master's degree from the
University of Toledo, an undergraduate degree from Vassar, and had studied at
the Sorbonne."
Michael Holmes, the AP's correspondent in Toledo, started his own checking, and
confirmed the Blades's facts. He reported to his New York office. From there a
message went to Paris to check the Sorbonne connection, and a call was made to
Cooke at The Post.
"Miss Cooke said, essentially, that the information in her official
biography was correct. At this point, it was quite clear that something was
wrong, and so we pressed our efforts on the story," Boccardi said.
The "official" biography released by the Pulitzer committee and
carried on the AP wire came from a standard Post biographical form that had been
attached to her nomination for the prize.
Cooke filled it out. Nobody on The Post checked it, yet it differed
significantly from the resume she had filed for the Post when she applied for a
job.
The new resume claimed that she spoke or read French, Spanish, Portuguese and
Italian. Her original resume claimed only French and Spanish. The new form
claimed she had won six awards from the Ohio Newspaper Women's Association and
another from the Ohio AP. Her first resume claimed only a single award from the
Ohio Newspaper Women's Association. The new form also showed that she graduated
magna cum laude from Vassar in 1976, attended the Sorbonne in 1975 and received
a master's degree from the University of Toledo in 1977. The original made no
reference to the Sorbonne.
Vassar records show that she attended classes there for one year. She was
graduated from the University of Toledo, but received no master's degree.
Between 3 and 3:30 Tuesday afternoon telephones in managing editor Howard
Simons' and Bradlee's office rang simultaneously. Boccardi was calling Simons,
and Dixie Sheridan, assistant to the president of Vassar, was calling Bradlee.
Sheridan's call was prompted by the AP queries she had received.
The callers asked Bradlee and Simons the same questions: what did they know
about the records discrepancies? Neither of the editors had an answer.
Simons summoned Woodward, Coleman and Tom Wilkinson to Bradlee's office.
Wilkinson, The Post's assistant managing editor for personnel, brought Janet's
personnel folder and the Pulitzer biography.
"When we saw the papers, we knew we had a problem," Simons said. He
and Bradlee decided that the first thing to go after was the Vassar records
discrepancies.
To do that, they dispatched Coleman to take Cooke for a walk around the block
and talk to her.
"Take her to the woodshed," Bradlee said, borrowing a phrase Lyndon B.
Johnson once used on Hubert H. Humphrey. He meant: ask her every question, get
it right.
Coleman and Cooke walked across L Street to the Capitol Hilton Hotel. In the bar
they ordered two ginger ales, and Coleman questioned her persistently on her
background. Why was Vassar saying she only attended classes there one year when
Cooke was saying she had been graduated?
Cooke said she didn't know.
"Okay, let's call Vassar," Coleman suggested at one point. It was 4:30
in the afternoon, and he was afraid the college's registrar's office might
close.
"I don't see why it is so important," Cooke said. "The Vassar
records are just me. The 'Jimmy' story is something I did."
Coleman, after Cooke told him where Vassar is located, reached Judy Blom, a
clerk in the registrar's office. She informed Coleman that Cooke was never
graduated from the school. Coleman asked to speak to her supervisor, and was
transferred to Margaret Battistoni, administrative assistant to the registrar.
She confirmed the clerk's response.
Coleman looked at Cooke, who said she had records to prove her claim, that her
mother had the papers.
"Let's call Toledo," Coleman said, meaning the University. But Cooke
wanted to talk to her mother, and did, for 15 or 20 minutes, while Coleman stood
by.
After that conversation Cooke said, "Let's talk." They returned to the
bar and ordered two more ginger ales.
Cooke told Coleman that Vassar was right, that she had gone there but had run
into emotional problems and returned home the following year to enter the
University of Toledo, where she had been graduated.
"Then that part of your resume is wrong," Coleman said.
"Yes."
"What about languages? Do you speak four languages?"
"Yes."
"And the Sorbonne, were you there?"
"Yes."
"And the 'Jimmy' story?"
"It's true."
When Coleman went to the telephone to call Woodward, a member of the city school
board happened to be at the next pay phone, and Coleman told Woodward he would
have to speak in code.
"Vassar?" Woodward asked.
"Not true," Coleman answered.
"Jimmy?"
"She says it's true."
At the Post, Bradlee suggested that Coleman be asked to bring Cooke back into
The Post at the L Street entrance to avoid being conspicuous and to take her to
the vacant eighth-floor office of The Post's corporate president. Bradlee and
Woodward joined Cooke and Coleman there. Simons stayed in the fifth floor
newsroom to conduct the daily 6:30 story conference.
When Bradlee and Woodward arrived, Cooke was seated on a sofa, crying and
saying, "You get caught at the stupidest things."
Bradlee shook her hand, then came on strong. He, Simons and Woodward had decided
while Coleman and Cooke were out that the record's discrepancies cast serious
doubts on her honesty and that her honesty, or lack of it, was the only thing
that held the "Jimmy" story together.
Janet was crying harder, and Bradlee began to check off her language
proficiency. "Say two words to me in Portuguese," he said. She said
she couldn't.
"Do you have any Italian?" Bradlee asked.
Cooke said no.
Bradlee, fluent in French, asked her questions in the language. Her answers were
stumbling. Bradlee said later that it sounded as if she had once some high
school instruction.
Bradlee made an accusing comparison with Richard M. Nixon: "You're like
Richard Nixon -- you're trying to cover up." Later, the executive editor
said it was one of the most unpleasant conversations he'd ever had. He asked
about the six Ohio journalism awards, and Cooke's answers were inconclusive.
Bradlee asked about Jimmy's identity. Tuesday was the first time Post editors
had been told his full name, "Tyrone Davis." His mother and her
boyfriend, they were told, were named Candi Davis and Robert Jackson Anderson,
and they lived on Xenia Street. This was the first time any of them had been
told where "Jimmy" supposedly lived.
"You've got 24 hours to prove the 'Jimmy' story is true," Bradley
said.
Now it was Woodward's turn to get tough. "I don't believe you on the
'Jimmy' story," he said.
"You don't believe me," Cooke replied.
"No, I don't, and I'm going to prove it if it's the last thing I do."
It was the first time Woodward had said that even to himself.
Bradlee and Woodward left the room, and decided the next best step was to send
Coleman and Cooke to Xenia Street in an effort to establish whether she did know
the precise location where the "Jimmy" story had its origins. Once
again, Coleman and Cooke left, this time driving.
Bradlee, Simons, publisher Donald Graham and Woodward reassembled in Bradlee's
office. Graham asked if it was really safe to send Coleman and Cooke to Xenia
Street, and was told that it had to be done.
David Maraniss, deputy Metro editor and one of those who had earlier doubted the
story, joined the group. Maraniss had known Cooke since shortly after she
arrived at The Post, although he was never her editor. Genial and respected as
an editor, Maraniss develops close relationships with his staff. He and Cooke
had had lunch several times, and he had gone over her stories informally at
times. His friendship was to prove crucial during the evening.
Bradlee and Graham went to dinner at Mel Krupin's restaurant as Cooke's notes
and tapes for the Jimmy story arrived at The Post. The documents had been held
in safekeeping in the law offices of Williams & Connolly since shortly after
the story was published.
Woodward, Maraniss and Wilkinson began the laborious job of going over 145 pages
of hand-written notes and listening to her tape-recorded interviews. It was the
background for the "Jimmy" story, but this was the first time that any
editor at The Post had inspected her materials. Woodward said later that he saw
"echoes" of the published story all through her notes, but no
indication that she had actually interviewed a child using heroin.
While the three editors were poring over the tapes and notes, Coleman called. He
said they couldn't find "Jimmy's" house, and Coleman later said that
when Cooke failed to identify a house, that fact convinced him the story was a
fake. Now, everbody dealing with Cooke believed she was lying. But she stuck
with her story.
The editors called Elsa Walsh, Cooke's roommate since mid-December, who was
covering a city council meeting in Alexandria for the Virginia Weekly. She drove
to The Post and told an editor, for the first time, that she had never believed
the "Jimmy" story. Once, she said, she had looked through Cooke's
"Jimmy" notes and found none about the boy. She also recalled that
Cooke had once told her that she was valedictorian at Vassar. Walsh had not gone
to an editor with her doubts.
While Coleman and Cooke drove back to the office, Bradlee and Simons went home.
It was 11:30 p.m.. Both left instructions to be notified if anything developed.
Coleman and Cooke joined Woodward, Maraniss and Wilkinson in The Post's fifth
floor conference room, and the questioning continued.
"Janet looked awful," Maraniss said. "Her eyes were glassy, her
face contorted, and she seemed not to know what word would come out before she
said it."
Woodward led the questioning. "It's all over," he said to Cooke.
"You've got to come clean.The notes show us the story is wrong. We know it.
We can show you point by point how you concocted it."
"I was tough," Woodward said later, "but I was convinced we had
to finish it up with Janet."
Wilkinson told Cooke he was concerned for her. Woodward continued to say that he
knew she had faked the story, even though she had done it brilliantly.
"This is getting too cruel," Cooke said. "All I have left is my
story."
But Maraniss was comforting. "Give up the Pulitzer," he said to her,
"and you can have yourself back."
The editors say she continued to deny that "Jimmy" didn't exist,
repeated it 15 or 20 times, and then a subtle change crept into her answers.
"I have to believe the story.
"What am I going to do?"
Coleman remained silent. Woodward tried one last time. "If a just God were
looking down, what would he say is the truth?"
"I don't know what you mean," Cooke said.
Coleman paced the floor. Maraniss sat at the table across from Cooke.
Woodward proposed a compromise. Would she sign a statement saying she didn't
deserve a Pulitzer Prize because she couldn't prove it? Cooke replied that she
didn't know why she should say that although she understood it was necessary.
Woodward and Wilkinson left the room, and Coleman soon joined them.
Maraniss sat alone with Cooke. Both were weeping. He held her hand.
"I was afraid I was going to be left alone with you," Cooke
said."The first time I saw you today I thought, 'Oh boy, he knows, and I'm
going to have to tell him.' I couldn't lie to you. I couldn't tell them. I never
would tell Woodward. The more he yelled, the more stubborn I was. Wilkinson
represents the corporation. It means so much to Milton. You guys are smart,
Woodward for the mind, you for the heart. Why were you smiling?"
"Because," said Maraniss, "I had a tremendous surge of empathy
for you, refusing to submit to the institution in an absurd situation. You were
so strong not to give in. The institution will survive."
"Oh, David, what am I going to do?" Cooke asked.
They talked for an hour, reviewing their childhoods. Each time another editor
opened the conference room door, Maraniss waved him away.
They talked about the horror and the fear she had gone through, especially when
she was nominated for a Pulitzer.
She said she was rooting for a series by Neil Henry, a Metro reporter whose
articles were considered for a Post Pulitzer nomination in another category.
"I didn't think I had a chance," she said. "There were so many
other great stories."
"You can recover and you will," Maraniss told her.
"The only thing I can do is write," Cooke said.
"That's not true," Maraniss replied.
Then he said, "You don't have to say anything to the others, I'll do it for
you. What do I tell them?"
"There is no Jimmy and no family," she said. "It was a
fabrication. I did so much work on it, but it's a composite. I want to give the
prize back."
Woodward and Wilkinson had left the room to discuss the feasibility of putting
Cooke on indefinite leave. They called Bradlee, and he decided against it.
Bradlee said call off the questioning, it was beginning to sound like a
"third degree."
But when Woodward, Wilkinson and Coleman went back into the conference room,
Maraniss looked up and announced: "You can go home now, Jimmy is a
composite."
Each editor hugged and kissed her.
"I'm sorry I was such a son-of-a-bitch," Woodward said.
"I deserved it," Cooke answered.
"Yes, you did," Woodward said.
Woodward and Wilkinson called Bradlee, and Coleman called Cooke's parents and
said he would meet Mrs. Cooke when she flew in the next day.
Cooke had confessed the fraud, and now, emotionally spent, she talked freely
with Maraniss. She was embarrassed and humiliated, and didn't want anyone to see
her.
She had questions:
"What will happen to me? Will I be able to write again?"
Maraniss told her he would do everything he could to help her, including trying
to get her another job, and he promised to stand by her as long as she needed
him.
When the conversation drifted to why she had done it, Cooke said she felt she
knew enough to bring it off by the time she concocted the story. She had thought
about it for two days before writing the original draft she submitted to
Coleman.
"I hope," she said, "that Milton doesn't get in trouble over
this. He is a good man who cares about his people."
She said she hated Ben Bradlee because he had compared her with Richard Nixon
and that she never would have told Woodward.
There were other reasons for her confidence:
1) The cops couldn't find the boy because he didn't exist.
2) She wouldn't be afraid of the city officials.
3) Before the story was published, Simons had said that he wasn't going to ask
her the name of the boy or his mother, nor was he going to ask for the street
address. (He did direct her to tell Coleman the names, according to others'
recollections.) Cooke added, with a smile, that she might have told a
psychologist she had called, but the psychologist's calendar had been filled and
she couldn't get an appointment.
"You must have been in a panic for a year," Maraniss said, "after
you lied on your resume. How did you feel the night you won the Pulitzer?"
"Awful," she said. "I prayed I wouldn't get it, but I never told
anybody that."
Maraniss drove her to the Ontario apartments, where she stayed up all night,
talking with friends.
At 7 o'clock Wednesday morning, Bradlee broke the news to Graham, who was, as
usual, in his office by 6:30. Bradlee invited Graham to his house for breakfast,
and they talked about want to do next.
After two hours of sleep at Woodward's house, Maraniss returned to the Ontario,
where he and Cooke talked for two hours. Then he called Bradlee, who asked
Maraniss to get Cooke's resignation and a written statement.
In longhand, she wrote: "'Jimmy's World' was in essence a fabrication. I
never encountered or interviewed an 8-year-old heroin addict. The September 28,
1980, article in The Washington Post was a serious misrepresentation which I
deeply regret. I apologize to my newspaper, my profession, the Pulitzer board
and all seekers of the truth. Today, in facing up to the truth, I have submitted
my resignation. Janet Cooke."
Cooke's mother arrived from Toledo Wednesday, and her father flew to Washington
on Friday. While Janet Cooke was being grilled by Washington Post editors, her
father had spend the night of April 14 filing out his income tax returns.
"What did I do that went wrong?" Stratman Cooke asked. "I know I
was away from home a lot, had to travel a lot. But I couldn't have it both ways
. . . . She was extremely ambitious, eager to prove herself. I encouraged
that."
THE PRESSURES: Heat and the Achievers Both Have a Tendancy to Rise
There is no question about the pressures and competition in The Washington
Post's newsroom. They are powerful. Some people flourish, others get crushed. It
is major-league journalism. "Hardball," as Ben Bradlee describes it.
The troubling question is whether pressure on the staff distorts the news
published in the paper. There is another question: did pressure to excel, to
overreach, drive Janet Cooke to fake a story that won a Pulitzer Prize?
Jonathan Neumann, who doubted the "Jimmy" story from the first time he
saw it, believes not.
"It was not pressure that did Janet in," he said. "No pressure
can do that. That had to come from within her. She wanted page one."
Page one. The showpiece of the paper. The prestige place to appear. The prize.
It is the principal topic of conversation among the assistant managing editors
and Bradlee or Simons at the twice-daily story conference.Everybody on the news
staff knows that. Every AME looks for stories that he can use to compete for
page one space, and every reporter knows that.
The competition to get on page one is so strong that it effects probably cannot
be understood even by the top editors. It is one source, if not the central
source, of newsroom pressures. To have a story selected for page one is good
strokes, an ego trip.
Not many make it. The front page is dominated by national news, mostly about
politics, and that is written by the national staff, whose members are generally
older and more experienced than those on the Metro staff, or sports, Style and
financial staffs. The only regular competitor to national news is foreign news.
To get a Metro story on the front page requires an exceptional subject,
exceptionally written.
Even some national writers have a problem. Joanne Omang of the national staff
says, "Getting on the front page is the route to advancement and favor. The
editors fighting for Bradlee's smile get there by having a hot team, and they
prod us for stories they can sell for the page. Openly.
"There is little interest in yeoman labor covering a subject that only
affects people's lives; what counts in the glory department is page one, and
everyone is supposed to 'write it out' onto the front, no matter how mundane the
topic. This is part of the creative tension business.
"The sad part is that it often works -- with everyone busting elbows, the
paper is full of terrific stories. But the temptation to hype has to be resisted
all the time. I often have the feeling when I'm taking an editor off a hyped
angle, saying, 'well, no, that's not the story, it didn't happen like that,'
that editor is disappointed in me personally, that it's my fault the event isn't
page one. This has got to be part of what happened to Janet."
Making the front page is not the only source of pressure. Sandy Rovner of Style
puts it this way: "Whatever we do is perceived automatically only in terms
of what is seen as our particular self-interest. A lot of us feel intensely
loyal to The Post, but management seems not to be able even to see the
possibility ot our loyalty."
Lewis Simons of Metro says: "Pressures are so great to produce, to go
beyond excellence to the 'holy s---' story. Everyone knows that's what the
editors want. The pressure is to get the incredible story, the extraordinary
story.
"When you put that up against a fragile and vulnerable personality like
Janet's, you produce the worst case."
Bradlee, around whom the newsroom revolves, sees it differently. He believes his
system includes great delegation of authority and "encouragement, support,
prodding, teasing."
"People want to succeed. They bust their ass to succeed here. There's only
a couple of places you want to work in this business, and when you get here you
don't blow it. Of course, there's drive by the AME's, because that's the way to
get your story to the decision-making process.
"It can result in overselling a story, but a story that looks good at 2:30
may disappear by 6:30. You make 150 decisions on stories every day, and if you
start second-guessing them you'll never get the paper out.
"It means you have to have intelligent people you can trust tell you about
the best they have to offer and you have to make up your mind.
"The AMEs are very strong. We demand from them.We trust them. We back them.
And we don't spend time second-guessing them.
"There is no system to protect you from a pathological liar, and if you
constructed it that way you'd never make a deadline."
On the evening of April 6, two days after Cooke's story fell apart, about 30 to
35 members of the Metro staff attended an informal staff meeting at Bob
Woodward's home. Others were invited but couldn't make it.
The talk was about two subjects: pressure and "Jimmy's World."
Woodward and Milton Coleman went through Cooke story chronologically. Those who
had doubted the story had their say.
When the discussion turned to management and pressure, some reporters said they
felt strongly that the "system" at The Post has editors making demands
on reporters that cannot be met. That reporters are made to feel they are
failures when they cannot meet those demands. That there seems to be
insufficient guidance and comfort for new reporters. And that the system seems
to pit reporters against each other. All this, some reporters felt, helped bring
about the "Jimmy" story.
Blaine Harden, a former Metro reporter now with The Washington Post Magazine,
urges more attention to younger reporters. "Reporters who come to The Post
are usually over-achievers from other newspapers, where their identity and sense
ot value was intimately tied to their notoriety and success as a writer. Upon
taking a job at The Post, however, reporters are stripped of their identity and
forced to re-create themselves for a new set of editors and readers. In this
painful growth period, new reporters have little to emulate except the
big-splash success of a very few colleagues . . . .
"Serious, conscientous, committed reporters should be loudly praised by
editors, given raises, given prestige assignments. This happens now, of course.
Yet every reporter who's been at The Post for a while knows, for instance, that
flashy writing about quirky suburban housewives grab a lot more attention from
editors than does highly informed, analytical coverage of county
government."
Out of the crosscurrents of complaint, suggestion, concern and disgrace, what
changess are likely? It's too soon to make final judgments.
Donald Graham says, "Everybody is going to have to ask questions of
himself. This fraudulent story is very serious business, but it doesn't cast in
doubt the basic values of the paper. They remain unchanged.
"As our editorial said Thursday, it's sort of like an embezzlement from a
bank:
"We will never arrive at a point when mistakes don't happen, but our basic
reliability is tested every day.
"We can't deny the obvious. We printed a false story. We ought to ask
ourselves what changes to make and make those changes.The process is complex,
and will take some time.
"We do take what's happened very seriously, but no fair-minded person could
conclude that the integrity of any other story is called into question.
"We're looking at the process, but not at our basic job in this complicated
world and this complicated city."
Bradlee says, "We've got to be sure that our trust in reporters is not
betrayed again and in five days, I'm not sure how to do that. She was a
one-in-a-million liar."
THE CONCLUSIONS: Once Again, a Fail-Safe System Proves the Exception
So why did it all happen? And how? Milton Coleman and Bob Woodard try to take
the blame, and well they should. They had primary responsibility. But to place
all the burden on them is a huge mistake. There's enough blame to go around.
Ben Bradlee, the executive director, was wrong, and Howard Simons, the managing
editor, was wrong. Beginning, of course, with Janet Cooke, everybody who touched
this journalistic felony -- or who should have touched it and didn't -- was
wrong. It was a complete systems failure, and there's no excuse for it. These
are brilliant people. The Post newsroom runs over with high-caliber talent and
skills that weren't employed.
Other thoughts:
1)The system failed because it wasn't used, not because it is faulty. Bradlee
and Simons should have asked tough questions, so should Woodward and Coleman and
others. And every staffer who had a serious doubt about "Jimmy" had an
unavoidable responsibility to pursue it, hard.
2)This business of trusting reporters absolutely goes too far. Clearly it did in
this case.There is a point when total reliance on this kind of trust allows the
editor to duck his own responsibility. Editors have to insist on knowing and
verifying. That's one of the big reasons they hold their jobs.
3)There's a mythology hanging in the air or the newsroom. Sometimes it acts like
a disease. Young reporters come onto the staff expecting to find another
Watergate under every third rock they kick over. That is naive. Blockbusters are
not everyday occurrences. Editors are somewhat infected too, but not to the
degree that some of the reporters say they believe. Editors have to get all
there is in a news story.
4)The Post did not invent Janet Cooke. That is a ridiculous idea. Given its
competitive nature, it may very well have unwittingly encouraged her success and
thereby hastened her failure. Here was an aberration that grew in fertile
ground, according to one reporter. That's close to the mark.
5)While editors repeatedly talked about their trust in reporters, the trust
apparently only applies to written stories, not to reporters' opinions.
Otherwise, somebody with authority would have learned something about those
persistent doubts on the Cooke story and would have investigated.
6)The front page syndrome is a problem, and it may be insoluble. Page one is the
prestige position in the paper, and until the stories it is to carry have been
selected, the rest of the paper can't take shape. And Bradlee is right. The
paper has to get out, on schedule, every day. Some of the pressures reporters
talk about come with the news business.
7)No reporter or other staff member should be employed without a thorough check
of his or her credentials.
8)The scramble for journalistic prizes is poisonous. The obligation is to inform
readers, not to collect frameable certificates, however prestigious. Maybe The
Post should consider not entering contests.
9)News executives have a responsibility to resolve personnel hassles quickly.
Among the what-ifs: had Coleman and Vivian Aplin-Brownlee been on better terms,
he might have asked her to look over the Cooke story before it ran, and she,
given her instant disbelief of the story, might have challenged it effectively.
And that Coleman-Maraniss disagreement should have been attended to promptly.
10)Young reporters are impatient. Even the best of them, among whose ranks Janet
Cooke appeared to be, profit by seasoning. To push them too fast is a high-risk
undertaking.
11)Did race have anything to do with Cooke's ascendancy? Did she get choice
assignments and move up because she was handsome and black? Was she employed for
the same reason?
There's some yes and some I-don't-know in any honest answer. If there's an
employer who says he wouldn't have hired her, he hasn't seen Cooke either in
person or at work. There are white editors on this paper who want to report news
on the black community but who know they can't get at some of it in the same way
blacks can.
Milton Coleman, as good as guy as any at The Post and Cooke's last editor, is
black. So are two of her strongest critics, Vivian Aplin-Brownlee, who was her
first editor, and Courtland Milloy, who was among the first and most persistent
doubters.
Race may have played some role, but professional pride and human decency were
deeply involved in this story and that has not a diddle to do with race.
12)To believe that this mistake, big as it was, challenges the honesty of any
other story in The Post or any other newspaper, is overreaching. It won't wash.
There is no evidence whatsoever that this kind of thing is tolerated at this
paper. To over-reach the other way, if this experience tightens discipline in
the news process, it may have done some good.
13)When confidentiality is granted to a news source, by a reporter, that promise
cannot commit the supervising editor. If the reporter can't support the
integrity of his or her story by revealing the name to his or her editor, the
story shouldn't be published. And if that safeguard prevents some news stories
from appearing, so be it.
14)To give the impression that The Post is staffed by disgruntled people is
nonsense. For every reporter or editor with a complaint, however legitimate,
there is at least one other who is on a personal high because he or she works
for the newspaper. Staff loyalty to The Post is so powerful that it borders on
the absurd.
15)The Post is one of the very few great enterprises in journalism, and
everybody associated with it ought to be proud of it.
GRAPHIC: Picture 1, Vivian Aplin-Brownlee; Picture 2, Benjamin
C. Bradlee; Picture 3, Milton Coleman; Picture 4, Janet Cooke;
Picture 5, Donald Graham; Picture 6, David Maraniss; Picture 7, Courtland Milloy;
Picture 8, Howard Simons; Picture 9, Robert U. (Bob) Woodward