Better Late Than Never: CBS & NBC on Fundraising
- The CBS
Evening News raised the charge that John Huang passed along secret
info, but CBS quickly dropped the story.
- NBC Nightly
News aired its first fundraising scandal story in three weeks, but
it mostly relayed what newspapers reported weeks ago. Yet in one
case that's still sooner than ABC or CBS.
1) As relayed
in the June 11 CyberAlert, on June 10 the New York Daily News
reported: "U.S. intelligence officials have told the White House
and Congress they've collected evidence that Democratic money man John
Huang passed classified trade information to his Indonesian
ex-bosses."
Wednesday night CBS became
the first and only broadcast network to catch up with the story,
though Dan Rather claimed it was a new discovery by CBS. On the June
11 CBS Evening News Rather announced:
"New and exclusive
information tonight about another high-profile legal case. This one
centering on a key Democratic political campaign fundraiser and his
possible leak of classified economic information to an Asian business
connection. CBS News chief Washington correspondent Bob Schieffer is
on the case."
Schieffer, as transcribed by
MRC intern Jessica Anderson, then explained:
"Investigators are
closing in on John Huang, the onetime Democratic Party fundraiser and
former Commerce Department official. Sources tell CBS News the
government now has information, collected by electronic eavesdropping
devices, suggesting that while Huang was at the Commerce Department,
he did pass on classified trade secrets and other information to his
former employer, The Lippo Group, an international company with ties
to China. House Rules Committee Chairman Gerald Solomon, who's been
pushing the investigation, believes the new information may be the
smoking gun investigators have been looking for."
CBS never picked up on April
30 and May 15 Washington Times stories on Solomon's concerns about how
Huang attended more classified briefings than previously acknowledged
and often made suspicious calls to the Lippo Group or the Chinese
Embassy soon after a briefing. But Wednesday night, after a soundbite
from Solomon, CBS finally highlighted Solomon's concerns as Schieffer
continued:
"Attorney General Reno
and FBI Director Freeh gave Senators an early read on all this during
an April visit to the Capitol, but Solomon has since learned that
Huang's access to classified information went even deeper. In a letter
to FBI Director Freeh, he says Huang not only saw Commerce Department
trade secrets, but also had access to sensitive State Department
message traffic through a computer network of the Commerce Department.
As Solomon sees it, this is just one more reason to take the case out
of the hands of Congress and the Justice Department and appoint a
special prosecutor. Dan."
(Later, Wednesday's Evening
News ran a full story by Sharyl Attkisson, prompted by the big DNC
fundraiser attended by Clinton, on the massive DNC debt and how the
party is not returning donations as it had promised.)
So just how important did CBS
consider its "new and exclusive information" on John Huang?
They didn't run a syllable about it the next morning on Thursday's CBS
This Morning.
2) Thursday's
NBC Nightly News ran a lengthy (two and a half minute) piece on the
Clinton fundraising scandal. But, as the saying goes, after watching
the story you can say the glass is half full or half empty. On the
positive side, NBC became the first broadcast network to detail how
many key figures are refusing to talk. On the negative side, all NBC
did was finally got around to reporting information weeks after it was
highlighted elsewhere. But, on the positive side, at least NBC covered
these developments, unlike ABC or CBS.
Hooking their story on the
June 11 DNC fundraiser featuring President Clinton, on Thursday night
(June 12) NBC Nightly News ran its first Clinton fundraising scandal
story in more than three weeks. The last one, a story on the Lums
pleading guilty, appeared on May 21. (On June 11 Brokaw did do a brief
anchor-read item on Clinton attending the fundraiser that night).
Noting Clinton's attendance
at the fundraiser, NBC's Lisa Myers pointed out: "But some of
last year's big donors were not around, including this man, Ted Sioeng,
a new target of congressional investigators. Sioeng, his family and
associates gave $400,000 to the Democrats. Who is he? He manufactures
Red Pagoda cigarettes in Asia and runs a pro-Beijing newspaper in
California. Investigators say they want to ask him if he's also an
agent for the Chinese government, a charge his lawyers deny. But
investigators tell NBC News Sioeng is long gone, hiding somewhere in
Asia..."
Sound familiar? As cited in
the May 13 CyberAlert, the May 12 Los Angeles Times first disclosed
Sioeng's possible espionage: "U.S. officials are investigating
whether an executive of a Chinese-language newspaper in Southern
California who sat next to President Clinton at a Democratic
fundraiser in Century City in July is an agent of the Chinese
government, according to sources familiar with an ongoing federal
inquiry."
So it took NBC more than four
weeks to get around to this revelation. But, that's better than ABC or
CBS which have yet to report a word about it on their morning or
evening shows. (CNN reported it at the time.)
Back to Myers' Thursday
story. She next noted that Charlie Trie is "also long gone"
and has been spotted at a restaurant in Beijing. In fact, Myers
reported, a "half dozen key targets" have fled and more than
two dozen are taking the Fifth. "The result: a virtual wall of
silence."
Myers explained that among
those refusing to talk are the organizer of the Buddhist Temple event
for Al Gore "and 23 monks who took vows of poverty, but whose
names appear on checks. Now their lawyers say they'll take vows of
silence. And there's the biggest player of all, John Huang, who raised
more than three million dollars for the President, including this
check from someone dead for ten years. He too is taking the
Fifth."
Nice of NBC to tell viewers,
though very briefly, about the DNC getting checks from the dead and
others who do not really exist. Last Friday the New York Times broke
this story of how fundraisers hid the true source of donations. CBS
and CNN aired stories that night. Now NBC has at least mentioned it,
but ABC's World News Tonight viewers still don't know anything about
it.
Myers did conclude with some
news about Democratic obstructionism that neither ABC or CBS mentioned
Thursday night:
"Today Republicans on
the Senate committee investigating this scandal tried to offer
immunity to some low level players, including the monks, to get them
to talk, but Democrats vowed to block it, reinforcing the wall of
silence."
--
Brent Baker
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