CNN's Woodruff Exploits Sniper to Push Gun Control -- 10/24/2002 CyberAlert
CNN's Woodruff Exploits Sniper to Push Gun Control; NBC Finds Nationwide Fear of Sniper; Two Weeks After National Review, ABC Finds Terrorist Visa Foul-Up; Kevin Spacey: Dems "Help People" While Repubs Want Power CNN's Judy Woodruff exploited the sniper case this week to do what she could to advance the gun control cause. Though the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence has run TV ads, since the sniper murders started, against Maryland Republican gubernatorial candidate Bob Ehrlich, on Wednesday's Inside Politics Sarah Brady promised Woodruff that "nobody has capitalized" on the sniper case. Woodruff didn't point out her group's ads, but maybe that's because Woodruff herself was capitalizing on the situation to push gun control.
Woodruff showed some soundbites from gun rights advocates at an NRA convention, but she treated Brady as overwhelmed by "powerful and relentless" forces as she wondered how Brady is able to "keep going" in the face of such opposition: "Even gun control advocates say that the political climate has changed, that the gun rights lobby is so strong and so powerful and so relentless, that it's hard to make a difference. I mean, how do you keep going in this situation when even your own advocates are saying the climate is just not right for this?" Opening the program on Tuesday, Woodruff gave special credibility to the pro-gun control Democratic candidate in Maryland: "Also ahead, Maryland Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend on the sniper spree and the high price she and her family have paid for gun violence." Woodruff did ask Townsend about how present gun laws did not stop the sniper, but she empathized with Townsend: "Everyone is aware of your family background, the fact that your father was assassinated by someone using a gun. What does it mean to you personally, this issue of guns and the availability?" And: "How important is this to you, I mean, to Kathleen Kennedy Townsend the person, not the public figure?" Wrapping up that segment, over video Charlton Heston holding up a rifle, Woodruff demanded: "Is this the right picture for NRA President Charlton Heston to be starring in as the sniper case plays out?" During neither her interview with Brady nor Townsend did Woodruff point out how for four months earlier this year the state of Maryland, under Lieutenant Governor Townsend who advocates creating a ballistic database, failed to comply with FBI requests for background information for potential gun buyers. The Washington Post reported that. But in interviewing Ehrlich two weeks earlier, an interview in which she obsessed with how he must be "on the defensive" on the gun issue, she managed to catch another Post story and used it to lecture Ehrlich: Of course, she never challenged Townsend or Brady with such a hard-hitting question. Now, more details about the three Inside Politics interview sessions, in date order: > October 9. Woodruff showed an anti-Ehrlich attack ad from the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. The ad's announcer charged: "Bob Ehrlich is dead wrong. Uzis and AK-47s don't belong in our neighborhoods. In Congress Bob Ehrlich voted to put dangerous assault weapons back on our streets." Woodruff pointed out that the Townsend campaign had not asked for the ads to be pulled and has not disavowed them before she showed a taped interview with Republican Ehrlich. Her questions: -- "These ads that are running now, the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, the point they're making is that you, as someone who has been a longtime defender of the right to own guns, should now be on the defensive because of what's happened." -- "So when they run this ad and they say that you are somebody who has been on the wrong side of the gun issue, how do you-" -- "But you -- but the point -- you just said that they are running, they're behind in this campaign. But these ads are not being run not by the Townsend campaign." -- "So you don't feel you're on the defensive right now?" > Tuesday, October 22. At the top of the show Woodruff trumpeted: "Also ahead, Maryland Lieutenant Governor Kathleen Kennedy Townsend on the sniper spree and the high price she and her family have paid for gun violence." Setting up the subsequent segment Woodruff reminded viewers of how Townsend is "a member of a family devastated more than once by gun violence." Woodruff's largely empathetic questions to Townsend delivered during an interview taped outdoors, starting after a soundbite of Townsend declaring how "I believe that we should have a ban on assault weapons, that we should have a ban on Saturday night specials, that ballistic testing can be very helpful to law enforcement, and my opponent has not voted that way and not supported it." -- "He says the focus should be on keeping guns out of the hands of people who do terrible things like what's going on now, rather than keeping guns out of everybody's hand." -- "Everyone is aware of your family background, the fact that your father was assassinated by someone using a gun. What does it mean to you personally, this issue of guns and the availability? What does it-" -- "But he and others would point out Maryland has some of the strictest gun laws in the country, and you still have something horrible like what's going on now." -- "Finally, how important is this to you, I mean, to Kathleen Kennedy Townsend the person, not the public figure?" Plugging an upcoming segment, Woodruff scolded, over video of Heston holding up a rifle: "There's much more ahead on the sniper investigation and on the political fallout from the killings. Is this the right picture for NRA President Charlton Heston to be starring in as the sniper case plays out? We'll check in on a tight House race in Maryland where some voters may be too scared to attend campaign rallies or perhaps even to go to the polls on election day." Woodruff failed to raise with Townsend Maryland's refusal to cooperate with current laws which mandate state contribution of information to a national database. An October 16 Washington Post story by Craig Whitlock began: Hundreds of people with criminal records in Maryland may have been allowed to purchase guns illegally this year because the state temporarily stopped conducting background checks for the FBI, state and federal officials disclosed yesterday. Maryland's state archivists notified the FBI in March that they would no longer perform criminal background checks of people who had applied to buy firearms because budget cuts had left the agency shorthanded, documents show. The problem was not resolved until July, when state and federal officials agreed to provide about $45,000 to the state archives to pay the cost of conducting the checks. It was unclear yesterday how many background checks were not completed during the four-month period, though officials said the state archives normally would have received about 400 to 500 requests from the FBI during that time. Virtually all cases referred to the archives involved applicants with some sort of criminal history that federal authorities were seeking to clarify through old state records. Authorities said they did not know how many people were able to purchase guns improperly because of the lapse.... END of Excerpt That story is online at: > Wednesday, October 23. Woodruff plugged the upcoming segment: "Dueling voices in the gun debate are still ahead. I will ask gun control activist Sarah Brady why the sniper spree has not prompted more politicians to talk up her cause. And we'll hear the NRA's rallying cry." Woodruff began the subsequent segment with some soundbites from attendees at an NRA rally in Wisconsin. After a clip of NRA Executive Vice President Wayne LaPierre, Woodruff acknowledgd: Woodruff picked up: "Well, it's fair to say the sniper shootings have energized advocates on both sides of the gun debate. There are, of course, those who don't agree with groups like the NRA. Among the most outspoken is gun control advocate Sarah Brady, the wife of former White House Press Secretary James Brady. Of course, he was shot back in 1981. Earlier I spoke with Mrs. Brady. I started by asking her about the gun control laws already on the books in Maryland and if gun control really helps prevent violence." -- Woodruff lamented: "But when you talk to people who follow the politics of this, even gun control advocates say that the political climate has changed, that the gun rights lobby is so strong and so powerful and so relentless, that it's hard to make a difference. I mean, how do you keep going in this situation when even your own advocates are saying the climate is just not right for this?" -- Woodruff's only other question: "These terrible sniper killings, shootings in the Washington area, have they in a way helped candidates like Kathleen Kennedy Townsend?" Except by Brady and Woodruff. Confusing media watching with reality? Every sniper killing occurred within 100 miles of Washington, DC, yet 82 percent of Americans worry that the sniper attacks could affect where they live and nearly half fear for their own safety, Today news reader Lester Holt revealed in relaying a finding of a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll. MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens caught what he dubbed the "most useless national poll ever" as recounted by Holt on the October 23 Today: A good example of how what people see on TV overwhelms rational reasoning. Better late than never? On Wednesday night ABC News caught up with National Review. Two weeks ago National Review disclosed that the State Department approved visas for 15 of the 19 hijackers despite how their application forms were incomplete, inaccurate and provided ridiculous statements. But on Wednesday night, October 23, before crediting National Review, ABC anchor Peter Jennings referred to how "there has been another revelation this week about the September 11th hijackers. We're just beginning to learn how easily some of them were able to get into the country." While it took ABC a while to catch up with a conservative magazine and its story which has been discussed on the cable networks (National Review Washington Editor Kate O'Beirne made it her "Outrage of the Week" on the October 12 Capital Gang on CNN and the author of the piece, Joel Mowbray, has appeared more than once on FNC and I believe MSNBC), ABC and Jennings do deserve credit for picking up on the example of a government agency's bureaucratic incompetence that has yet to be raised on ABC or CBS. Jennings set up the story on the October 23 World News Tonight: "There has been another revelation this week about the September 11th hijackers. We're just beginning to learn how easily some of them were able to get into the country. The journal, magazine National Review obtained the visa applications for 15 of the 19 hijackers. ABC's Martha Raddatz reports from Washington." Raddatz explained, as taken down by MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth: "Almost all of the hijackers' visas were issued at the U.S. embassy or consulates in Saudi Arabia. The visa applications are incomplete and often incomprehensible. Yet every one of the hijackers who filled out the forms was allowed to come to the United States." Mowbray's piece, which is the cover story in the October 28 National Review published on October 11, was first published on October 9 on National Review Online. Mowbray determined: For Mowbray's piece in full, with links to images of several of the ridiculously inaccurate applications: The Hollywood community is liberal and supports Democrats over Republicans, actor Kevin Spacey told CNN's Lou Dobbs last week, because Democrats "look at the world and believe that they can truly help people and they govern through evidence," but Republicans "govern through ideology and power." For a picture and bio of Spacey with a list of all the movies in which he's starred, see his Internet Movie Database page: Dobbs broadcast Friday's Moneyline from Los Angeles where he interviewed Spacey with the Hollywood sign in the background. MRC analyst Brian Boyd reminded me of this exchange which took place on the October 18 program: Dobbs: "Let's turn, if we may, to the politics of Hollywood. A lot of concern expressed, as you know, in Congress about, if you will, the liberal cant of Hollywood and the movie production business -- the money that is raised here, the decidedly Democratic cant of Hollywood. First, why is that? Is it a cultural issue?" But he doesn't steer away that hard. The Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee listed him as a donor to the big fundraiser headlined by Barbra Streisand last month. See: Spacey, unsurprisingly, implied to Dobbs that he opposes Bush on Iraq: "In terms of whether we head into a war or not, I think there's a solid argument to do as much as we possibly can to try to find peace and stability in another way." So much for Hollywood liberals wanting leaders who "govern through evidence." -- Brent Baker
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