Shame Naming and Blaming

Introduction

Nmesis published this article earlier this year (05 Jan 02) in Europe. He named Council House administrators and directors for crimes that they allegedly committed. Washington Superior Court Judge James A. Doerty, jailed him (27 Feb 02) for 111 days (25 days in solitary confinement) for publishing that constitutionally protected information mostly derived from public records.

Nmesis also inflamed the sensibilities of Judge Anthony P. Wartnik who sits on the same bench as Doerty. Nmesis alleged criminal activity by Wartnik's air-head wife (a Council House director) and reported it to government authorities. Wartnik, without a court hearing or filing any charges, arranged with Doerty to confine Nmesis among murderers and rapists for 25 days. Presumably, a gallant ex parte act to protect his concubine from exposure by a judge sworn to uphold the law.

Nmesis could not purge the contempt while in jail because Doerty devised a catch-22. He released Nmesis after public protest over the solitary confinement became too hot for him. At the release hearing he trumpeted a diatribe of slander and character assassination.

The media reported what Doerty and Council House propagandists said without verifying it. The resultant libel has now become a matter of worldwide concern. Louis D. Boccardi, President and CEO, Associated Press, Roger Oglesby, Editor and Publisher, Seattle Post-Intelligencer, also, Lucy A. Dalglish, Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press, continue to evade the issues by feigning that they do not know what their reporters have done.

Out of jail (17 Jun 02), Nmesis removed the names of Council House individuals from his web site to comply with the court order pending an appeal. Doerty deliberately has delayed that appeal for more than a year by machination.

Readers may obtain a copy of the unexpurgated version of this essay by email for comparison. First read this censored article then read the sequel to see how a terror campaign continues with impunity. [Court-Facilitated Terror]

History

National Council of Jewish Women (NCJW) formed a non-profit corporation then built and later refurbished Council House, a residence for senior citizens on Capitol Hill, Seattle. They obtained federal financial assistance through US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) for the original construction and rehabilitation.

Council House counsel calls it a “non-profit charitable organization”. Tenants know otherwise. The facility has a history of resident abuse and misappropriation of government funds that continues with court protection despite media exposure.

Court Censored Essay

The Fourth Estate usually acts when either management or government employees fail to meet their responsibilities in handling public money. Misappropriation and abuse of residents by managers at Council House, Seattle, (a government financially-assisted residence for senior citizens) warranted investigation and reporting. The reporter hoped that public pressure would force the directors to stop the misappropriation and abuse. It has not.

US Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) funded the construction and rehabilitation of Council House. Residents then amortized mortgages by paying rent over several decades while HUD continued to subsidize some rents and services. Meanwhile, the directors have consistently abrogated their responsibility to both residents and taxpayers. They have now compounded the problems by failing to mitigate the socioeconomic damage as required by HUD directives - damage that they and their managers have caused over several years.

The directors have employed successive administrators (unnamed because of the court gag order) both with a history of resident abuse and kill-the-messenger tactics. They have used those tactics to evade addressing the same issues by trying to silence this reporter. Their attorney orchestrated court deception by suborning testimony and Judge Doerty would not allow refutation.

The directors launched a campaign to cover up crimes using judicial misconduct, denial of due process of law, and laws that do not apply. They gave their administrator large amounts of money to support that effort and condoned subornation (coercing perjury). That campaign has the sole purpose of unlawfully intimidating an accredited investigative reporter and his information sources to prevent public knowledge of misappropriation and resident abuse at Council House.

Individuals must suffer the sometimes altruistic and annoying inquisitiveness of investigative reporters and not try to abrogate their rights when the three branches of government fail them. Reporters only report the news after verifying and validating facts - they do not make the news. If others decide what they may write and what they may not write then that prior restraint starts a long trail of prohibitions for political or other self-serving purposes. A person named in a news report has the right to refute statements but not to restrict publication.

Macaulay (1800-59) may have exaggerated reporters' power when he referred to the House of Commons reporters' gallery as a "fourth estate of the realm." However, his comment provides some idea of the press role as a watchdog over wrongdoing. That trust requires reporters to follow strict ethical principles that apply to content but not genre. Political correctness (self-censorship) or prior restraint (publishing restriction) must not affect editorial decisions whether to publish or not.

Despite publishing customs and case law, Judge James A. Doerty, Washington Superior Court, continues to redefine investigative reporting. He calls it harassment and unlawful surveillance. He also has reclassified freelance reporters as non bona fide. Moreover, he ignores a recent New York Supreme Court decision. That ruling extended for the first time the same speech protections to online journalists that their print, radio, and TV colleagues, have enjoyed since 1964. [01]

Most journalists accept their responsibility to report the truth for the public good and do not allow people under investigation to use kill-the-messenger techniques to silence them. This has resulted in a long tradition of helping law enforcement by publishing research and by shame naming - a lawful activity.

Publishing names and addresses insures accuracy especially when dealing with wrongdoers having a common name. Shame naming and blaming causes some individuals to stop breaking the law because they fear the economic and legal consequences of exposure. Moreover, mitigation protects the public and opens communication. Courts have repeatedly found publishing names, addresses, telephone numbers, and ages, as both legal and constitutional. This now includes web site content that has similar rules to other publications.

If a reporter deliberately misrepresents facts or uses information maliciously then the subject can claim defamation in law. Deliberate factual distortion and malice remain the only two restrictions on publication of personal information except social security numbers. This particularly applies to material citing public records. Contra Cabal has never published social security numbers despite assertions by Council House and Doerty to the contrary.

Usually, reporters only publish names and addresses of people who have allegedly committed crimes. This applies particularly when the alleged perpetrator has misappropriated government funds. The practice insures that the public will have no doubt to whom a report applies. Generally, reporters try to hold as many people harmless as possible. They use a basic ethical principle that gives alleged wrongdoers an opportunity to mitigate or explain themselves before publishing anything.

Judge Doerty, has placed the landlords (owners) of Council House and their special interests above the law. He ordered censorship of Internet essays containing reports about resident abuse and misappropriation. He ruled against a journalist in a draconian harassment finding that disingenuously redefined the roles of reporter and perpetrator as harasser and victim.

Substituting the term ”victim” for “perpetrator" he found that:

. . . the specific posting on the Internet of victim names [and] home addresses . . . causes the victims to reasonably feel under surveillance. . . . Just because free speech is involved does not mean that the analysis eliminates the victims' perspective. . . .

Doerty then prohibited:

Posting to the Internet or [to Contra Cabal] web site, directly or indirectly, any personal identifying information including, but not limited to the name, address, phone number, social security number, or photograph, of any current, former or future staff member, resident, board member, or agent, including attorneys, of Council House.

Doerty's order, in all its ambiguity and unconstitutionality, prohibited a member of the international press corps from publishing, now or in the future, names and addresses of myriad people whose names he does not know - some dead and others not yet born.

Moreover, Doerty knowingly based that finding on a frame-up and multiple perjury. Doerty failed to question obviously suborned testimony or allow refutation. By that, he allowed people who advocate an unlawful supremacist ideology to restrict freedom of expression. That ruling cost Council House directors more than $20,000 in attorney fees and effectively covered-up alleged crimes at Council House. In addition, The court has done everything that it can to frustrate appellate review based upon unchallenged lies told by Council House administrator. In any court that defines as perjury condoned by judicial misconduct.

Little Orphan Annie and Sheila Slimeberg (pseudonyms used to comply with the court order), with Council House directors and their management staff, have allegedly filed a bogus cross-petition; suborned senior citizens; abused residents; discriminated both racially and religiously; misappropriated federal funds; falsified documents, promoted thuggery; procured unlawful eviction; denied due process of law; thwarted appellate action; practiced search and seizure; attempted to jail a reporter to silence him; then, crowned those crimes with a massive cover up and judicial misconduct. However, Doerty categorizes them all as victims. He then penalizes the reporter for stink rising after defecation by his herd of sacred cows.

The reporter wrote nothing violent, instead, he warned the public not to step into the mess left by Annie, Slimeberg, and their ilk. The constitutionally protected speech in reports about Council House merely exposed abuse of residents and misappropriation. That speech did not remotely approach the definition of violent speech claimed by Doerty or even that protected by a US Supreme Court (1982) ruling. [02] In fact, the reports only referred to violence by Council House thugs to whom Doerty has effectively granted immunity.

Superior Court Judge Robert Alsdorf (sitting in the same courthouse and a Doerty election campaign contributor) contradicts Doerty. Alsdorf recently reinforced existing case law by saying that only social security numbers count as non-publishable private information. He went on to say that the publication of lawfully obtained addresses and telephone numbers, although unwelcome to those who wish anonymity, has constitutional protection especially when lacking a credible and specific threat of harm. [03] Alsdorf opined: “This Court has concluded that on the facts presented so far to this Court defendants' dissemination of legally obtained private addresses and phone numbers and similar private information is speech protected by the First Amendment, and may not be enjoined”. Doerty’s decision prohibits reporters from doing precisely that.

The co-presidents, through Council House counsel, received repeated written warnings about all issues concerning Council House before publication of details. The reporter openly declared in advance his personal or conflicting interests especially when the content drew upon his advocacy, experience, conclusion, or interpretation. He followed the international journalism ethics codes before publishing potentially embarrassing information about Council House and its directors. He also gave notice to featured individuals so that they could respond to charges affecting their reputation or moral character. The administrator later obtained a court order that now prohibits contact with those individuals to obtain verification.

Neither co-presidents nor counsel heeded any of the warnings. Instead, Council House directors adopted a kill-the-messenger strategy to silence the reporter and obtained a no-contact court order against him then locked him out of his home/office. They chose to pour money into manipulating court procedures - easy for Orphan Annie when she faces a senior superior court judge for breakfast each morning. The directors have continued that practice and the lockout for ten months (05 Jan 02) and the administrator has encouraged physical violence by his thugs.

Obviously, exposed wrongdoers and criminals do not like having their names and addresses published - they have no choice and consideration for them ends with accuracy. However, journalists cannot report accurately if forced to use pseudonyms or inaccurate portrayals.

George Bush Sr. does not accurately identify George H. W. Bush - the former a nickname the latter the name of a past president. While using the former could refer to that president it does not accurately identify him. Similarly, in the Doerty enforced use of pseudonyms, Tall Pygmy does not properly identify the corrupt Council House administrator. That pseudonym could apply to all tall people with small minds. Likewise, the term “defecating sacred cows” does not properly identify the co-presidents. To identify them one must use their real names and name those upon whom they allegedly defecated, and where they did it.

Failing to name perpetrators of wrongdoing not only allows them to evade responsibility for their actions but leaves the reporter open to a libel suit for any mistaken identify. For example, both the administrator and his attorney have the same last name. To avoid blaming innocent people for their joint and several conspiracies to suborn witnesses the reporter must carefully identify them by their first and last names. The court ordered and approved their respective pseudonyms: Tall Pygmy and Minnie Mouse - the pseudonyms take on real meaning at first sight of these individuals.

Pseudonyms do not properly identify individuals. Tall Pygmy could apply to either of two successive Council House administrators and Minnie Mouse could apply to several female attorneys who have similar physical and psychological aberrations. Pseudonyms leave identity open to interpretation that does not hold the innocent harmless and gives anonymity to wrongdoers that leaves the public vulnerable. Publishing names incorrectly (or deliberately hiding personal identity) only works to undermine any confidence that skeptical readers may have left in an era in which journalistic credibility has reached a low ebb.

This reporter uses the Washington State Public Disclosure Act (RCW 42.17) and the US Freedom of Information Act (5 USC 552) to verify information obtained from sources. He refuses to reveal those sources by using his constitutional right as a journalist and his responsibility to hold his sources harmless and anonymous. From government sources he also obtains all state and federal documents needed to validate the statistical and supporting data that he publishes.

Conclusion

Precise identification avoids mistaken identity. Reporters will continue to use names and addresses to support exposé in a time-honored tradition and within legal constraints. Using personal data to support a story warns the public of unlawful activity and has always been considered ethical journalism. Otherwise, criminals can hide behind a curtain of censorship and anonymity. People mentioned in published material have a constitutional right to respond to what they read about themselves. They do not have a right to restrain the media from publishing information about them.

Journalists have a dual obligation, to their audience by truthfully reporting criminal wrongdoing and an often competing obligation to the wrongdoer. Reporters often meet both obligations by alerting authorities about upcoming publication when circumstances suggest violence. When those authorities do nothing then the journalist’s personal responsibility ends whatever the outcome. With Council House, the reporter followed those precepts as far as the court has allowed.

Thirty-six years ago, a New York Times (1965) reporter exposed Daniel Burros as a New York Ku Klux Klan leader from Queens, New York. Burros (28), blond and blue-eyed, served as second-in-command in the American Nazi Party under George Lincoln Rockwell. Two days later the reporter learned that Burros had Jewish parents and upbringing and had celebrated his bar mitzvah.

The reporter confronted Burros with the evidence. Burros told him that if the newspaper published details of his Jewish heritage then it would ruin his standing as a KKK leader and encourage the obloquy of Jews. Burros also said that if they did publish those details then he would kill himself. The newspaper published the story and Burros shot himself that day. [04]

  • Should the newspaper have informed the authorities about the suicide threat?
  • Did the public have a right to know about the racial and religious connotations?
  • Would Judges James A. Doerty and Anthony P. Wartnik with the all-Jewish Council House board of directors have silenced that reporter also? [05]

Nmesis.



© Copyright 2002 by Paul Trummel
All Rights Reserved: 05 Jan 02/15:58 PST
Edition: #806-10-00/04-0717-16:06
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