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'Dateline'
Pedophile Sting: One More Point
NBC Collaboration Raises Eyebrows as Well as Awareness
By Paul Farhi
Washington Post Staff Writer
Sunday, April 9, 2006; D01
The NBC newsmagazine "Dateline" agreed to pay a civilian watchdog group
more than $100,000 to create a pedophile sting operation that the
network plans to feature in a series of programs next month, network
representatives and the organization's founder said. As part of the
sting, the network also went along with police officials' deputizing of
the group's members, in effect turning "Dateline's" made-for-TV
operation into a law-enforcement action. The segments, taped last month
in Ohio, have prompted news media observers and others to question
NBC's methods and criticize its practices.
"Dateline's" orchestration of the sting crossed ethical boundaries and
could place the network in an awkward legal position, they said.
NBC's senior producer of the segments, Allan Maraynes, confirmed the
arrangements but said that the network had no qualms about them. "We've
raised the public's consciousness of a very serious issue," he said.
"We think we've created a model [for reporting on Internet pedophilia]
that accurately reflects what happens in real life."
Since 2004, "Dateline" has aired three reports in the sting operation
series, titled "To Catch a Predator." In each report, the newsmagazine
worked with a Portland, Ore., group called Perverted Justice, whose
volunteer members pose as young boys and girls in Internet chat rooms
and wait to be contacted by adult men seeking sex with minors. The
volunteers lure the men to a house rented by NBC, where they are caught
on hidden cameras and confronted by a "Dateline" reporter. Some of the
men are subsequently arrested.
"Dateline" and Perverted Justice have staged stings in Fairfax County,
Long Island, N.Y., and Riverside, Calif. During the Fairfax operation
last summer, the men lured to the house included a rabbi who worked in
Potomac, a schoolteacher from Prince George's County and a physician
from the Eastern Shore.
In each of those segments, Perverted Justice received no compensation
from NBC, nor were any of the group's members deputized.
But NBC's relationship with the group changed before "Dateline" began
taping an installment of the series last month in rural Darke County,
Ohio. After the first three "Dateline" stings each drew more than 8
million viewers, Perverted Justice hired an agent to negotiate with the
network.
NBC sources said Perverted Justice received compensation in the low six
figures for its role in the Ohio sting. The group's founder, Xavier Von
Erck, did not dispute that description but declined to provide
specifics.
To meet local statutes involving evidence-gathering, three Perverted
Justice members who engaged in Internet chats with alleged pedophiles
were deputized by Darke County's sheriff, said Richard M. Howell, the
county's prosecuting attorney. Technically, deputizing the volunteers
made them law enforcement officers during the sting, Howell said.
Mainstream news organizations typically do not pay sources for their
cooperation because such payments might unduly influence the source's
actions or information. Dateline's tactics on other stories have been
questioned recently. On Friday, NASCAR officials accused the news
magazine program of trying to "manufacture the news" by bringing a
group of Muslim men to Martinsville Speedway in Virginia to see how
they would be treated by NASCAR fans.
Moreover, it is almost unheard of for a media outlet to allow its paid
associates to act as law enforcement officials, even on a temporary
basis, journalism experts said. "I can't think of anything like that,"
said Lucy Dalglish, executive director of the Reporters Committee for
Freedom of the Press, an Arlington-based group that advises journalists
on legal issues. "It sounds to me like a very risky thing to do."
Journalists reject such an arrangement because they might be publicly
perceived as being "agents of the government" rather than as
independent news gatherers, Dalglish said. "This would certainly have
me holding my breath," she said.
Bob Steele, an ethicist with the nonprofit Poynter Institute, a
Florida-based journalism education group, said the arrangement puts NBC
in "potentially dicey legal territory" because the distinctions among
law enforcement, the news media and a paid agent of the media are
blurred. Journalists typically are protected by "shield laws" that
place news-gathering materials off-limits in legal proceedings, he
said. With the network so closely linked to the government, however,
"this could weaken the legal argument [for protection] in future
cases," Steele said. "It's very troubling."
"Dateline" did not seek the cooperation of local authorities, or even
alert them, when it set up its sting in Fairfax, said Mary Ann
Jennings, a Fairfax police spokeswoman. That caused a public relations
headache for Fairfax officials; when the "Predator" segment aired in
November, county officials had to explain to outraged residents why the
police could not immediately arrest the men who showed up at NBC's
rented house in Herndon seeking sex with children.
Jennings explained that local laws require police to have extensive
computer records of people soliciting minors for sex. In a number of
cases, she said, records kept by Perverted Justice's members were
either incomplete, ascribed to anonymous sources or were not made
available to authorities.
"As appalling as this was to most people, we couldn't just go out and
arrest everyone," Jennings said. "Until we could get into the computer
records, we couldn't prove [a crime]. . . . The standards of what works
well on TV are not necessarily the same as what [works] in court."
Von Erck said that his group turned over "everything" to local
officials after the sting was completed. (Police in Fairfax and other
jurisdictions subsequently made several arrests stemming from the
sting, but neither Jennings nor Von Erck knew the exact number.)
To avoid similar problems, Maraynes said, "Dateline" worked more
closely with officials in Riverside and in Darke County. In Ohio, where
local law-enforcement officials invited Perverted Justice and NBC to
conduct a sting, "a quirk" in local laws necessitated deputizing
Perverted Justice members, the producer said.
"It was a compromise, in a way," he said. "They [Darke County
officials] said: 'We may not be able to make the cases against these
guys. What if we deputized them?' We felt we were doing the socially
responsible thing [by agreeing to it]. We didn't want to be seen as
obstructing a case." NBC's attorneys approved the idea, he said,
adding, "We don't believe this will ever come up again."
Von Erck compared "Dateline's" cooperation with Ohio officials to
Washington Post journalist Bob Woodward's reliance on an anonymous
government source during the Watergate era. In any case, Von Erck said:
"We look at those [ethical] rules as just silliness. We've never gotten
an e-mail from a parent [after a 'Predator' report aired] saying, 'What
about journalistic ethics?' "
Even so, "Dateline's" producers were leery of being too closely
associated with police. During the Ohio sting, the network would not
allow sheriff's deputies to be in the same house as its journalists and
Perverted Justice's members. Maraynes said NBC took that step because
"we didn't want [police] to be perceived as part of our decision-making
process, and they weren't."
Darke County, which has a population of 53,000, had about half its 20
deputies monitoring the three-day sting, Howell said. The operation
resulted in the arrest of 18 men, all of whom were charged.
Maraynes disputed the notion that NBC's agreement to pay Perverted
Justice amounted to paying a news source. He called Perverted Justice
"more of a consultant than a source. We were using them for their
expertise in these pieces." He said "Dateline" would reveal to viewers
that the group was paid when the Ohio segments are scheduled to air
next month.
Von Erck said his group's members have helped identify hundreds of
alleged pedophiles through Internet stings. The group, which began in
2002, also claims to have provided police with information that led to
100 arrests and 50 convictions in 25 states. "We turn up great evidence
that stands up in court," he said.
But that claim is disputed by the group Corrupted Justice, whose
mission includes counteracting the work of Perverted Justice, and is
based near Ottawa. A spokesman for Corrupted Justice said much of
Perverted Justice's efforts are counterproductive because most of the
people it exposes suffer no legal consequence and remain free to prey
on children. Perverted Justice's members also have mistakenly
identified and harassed innocent people but are not held accountable
because they operate anonymously, typically using computer screen
names, Corrupted Justice spokesman Scott Morrow said.
"The fact is, these people are amateurs," Morrow said. "They're
volunteers, with no official training, no training in law enforcement,
no training in the rules of evidence, no idea about maintaining
evidence so it can be used in court. They shop this stuff around, and
most of the time local law enforcement tells them, 'We can't use it.' "
Morrow said NBC's involvement with Perverted Justice is particularly
troubling: "They're manufacturing the news, rather than just reporting
it. They're not only working with untrained, anonymous vigilantes, but
now they're paying them, too." He said NBC could do stories on what
police departments and the FBI are doing to hunt down pedophiles
without resorting to "questionable" tactics.
Maraynes expressed no reservations about the elaborate preparations
"Dateline" makes for each segment. Among other things, network
producers rent a house for as long as two weeks and pay the travel and
housing expenses of Perverted Justice's volunteers. "This is enterprise
journalism," he said.
The idea for the series, he said, came to him after a Philadelphia TV
station, working with Perverted Justice, aired footage of alleged
pedophiles being lured to, but not into, a decoy location in 2004.
Maraynes said he liked the general idea of identifying such would-be
felons but that the setup needed some tweaking.
"I thought, 'What if we created the illusion that there was a child
inside the house and our reporter was waiting inside?' I thought it
would be more interesting if we created a waiting room and could see
who these people were. I said, 'Let's see what happens.' "
© 2006 The Washington Post Company
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