Did
CBS Sign Off
on Pam Falk's
Bogus Anti
Free Press
Legal Threat?
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNdisclosed
Location,
March
23 -- For one
reporter to
send a legal
threat to
another for a
published
story may be
considered
strange.
But when the
threat is
entirely
frivolous, and
seems intended
only to
discourage
further
reporting, the
threat itself
should be
reported on.
Pamela
Falk covers
the UN for CBS
News; this
year without
any
competition
she took over
the presidency
of the UN
Correspondents
Association, a
group which
the Guardian
UK and others
showed in 2012
involved in
trying to
throw out the
investigative
Press.
Things
have gotten
worse under
Falk, with
UNCA leaders
setting up
anonymous
social media
accounts to
try to
undermine
Inner City
Press and the
new Free
UN Coalition
for Access,
defacing FUNCA
flyers, and
filing
complaints
with UN
Security based
entirely on
speech.
Falk
herself on February 22
screamed
at Inner City
Press not
to use her
name in any
reporting or
questions,
and that
contacting
media
organization
including CBS
to ask of
their policies
“might
constitute a
crime.”
Then
on March 18,
when the UN
conducted a
search of
Inner City
Press' office
without notice
or consent, Falk was
seen taking
photographs.
Inner
City Press
asked at the
March 19 noon
briefing about
the “UNCA
President” --
not using her
name, as she
requested --
taking
photographs of
the raid. But
no answer
came, from the
UN or Falk.
On
March 22 an article
appeared in
BuzzFeed
about the
raid, with
three
photographs
depicting what
the UN called
“garbage” in
Inner City
Press' office.
In the
BuzzFeed
article it
was noted that
Falk, the
president of
UNCA,
“declined to
comment.”
Inner City
Press wrote a
follow up on
the BuzzFeed
story, again
asking about
Falk's
photographing
on March 18.
On
Saturday March
23, Falk sent
Inner City
Press a “cease
and desist”
notice:
From:
Falk,
Pamela
@cbsnews.com
Date: Sat, Mar
23, 2013 at
2:28 PM
Subject: Inner
City Press
To:
Matthew.Lee
[at]
innercitypress.com
Cc: "Falk,
Pamela"
@cbsnews.com
Dear
Mr.
Lee:
On
March
22, you
published the
following
statement,
referring to
me:
“Why
did
she take, and
presumptively
give to
BuzzFeed,
photographs
from inside
Inner City
Press'
office?”
I
did not give
photographs to
BuzzFeed or to
anyone else,
and I did not
take the
photographs
that BuzzFeed
published.
Please
cease
and desist
from
publishing
statements
which are
either
inaccurate or
cast my
actions in a
false light.
Pamela
Falk
While
we continue
and will
continue to
ask about the
role of Falk's
UNCA and the
UN in taking
and
distributing
the
photographs,
including to
BuzzFeed, and
whether CBS
News signed
off on this
cease and
desist letter
about another
media's
reporting, the
legal threat
is bogus.
Here's
what came
before and
after what
Falk quoted:
"While
reporters from
among others
Al Jazeera and Tim
Witcher of
Agence France
Presse walked right by as the raid
took place,
one stopped
and took
photographs: Pamela
Falk of CBS
News.
"Why
did she take,
and
presumptively
give to
BuzzFeed,
photographs
from inside
Inner City
Press' office?
She is the
president of
the UN
Correspondents
Association,
which in 2012
tried to get Inner City Press thrown
out of the UN.
"If
Falk, who
Inner City
Press
witnessed
taking
pictures, is
not the one
who gave them
to BuzzFeed,
then the
photos were
taken by the
UN and given
to the
anonymous
'Concerned UN
Reporter' who
did."
How
could it be
legal
actionable to
ask -- ask! --
if Falk who
was seen
taking
photographs
might have
been involved
in passing
photographs to
BuzzFeed?
Why would CBS,
or a CBS
reporter, make
a legal
argument that
would cast a
legal pall
over the most
basic of news
analysis or
rumination in
the media? You
can't ask
questions?
Falk
appears to be
going off the
deep end, at
least in terms
of anti free
press, pro
corporate and
anti free
inquiry legal
arguments. At
the on the
record
February 22
meeting she
screamed, just
use my name! Audio here.
To be
charitable,
perhaps she
should not
have taken the
UNCA post, if
seeing her
name in print,
even as part
of a question,
is so painful
to her.
But
it's time to
answer: why
DID she take
photographs of
the raid of
Inner City
Press' office
on March 18?
And have CBS
and CBS News
signed off on,
or will take
action on, the
March 23 bogus
legal threat
about a
question asked
in an article?
Since
Falk says it
“might be a
crime” to
contact CBS,
we for now do
this as an
open letter,
using the two
batches of
names gleaned:
Falk appeared
on CBS Up To
The Minute,
which is
directed by
James McGrath
and Chris
Easley. Its
executive
producer is
Brian
Applegate; its
many producers
include Joseph
Gelosi, Norman
Gittleson,
Tony
DiPolvere,
Anlynn Truong,
Jenn Eaker and
Erin Petrun.
Then a
reader wrote
in: “Falk
reports to the
CBS foreign
desk not Up to
the
Minute...Jeff
Fager is the
president of
CBS
News....Leslie
Moonves is
President and
co-CEO Sumner
Redstone is
Chairman and
co-CEO...the
Dept you want
CBS standards
and
practices...
also Falk's
official title
is CBS News
foreign
affairs
consultant.....she
is not a staff
correspondent...one
would think
that she got
approval from
somebody in
Fager's office
before she ran
for UNCA
office, likely
Pamela Mason
Exec VP just
retired.”
So:
why did
CBS'
Pam Falk take
photographs of
the raid of
Inner City
Press' office
on March 18?
And have CBS
and CBS News
signed off on,
or will take
action on, the
March 23 bogus
legal threat
about a
question asked
in an article?
Watch this
site.