21 March 2006

Jack Waterford thunders at ACT Policing media management

| johnboy
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The Canberra Times is running a rare and welcome tirade by Jack Waterford against the restrictive media relations empire of ACT Policing.

Australian Federal Police serving the ACT are now operating under such complete media management arrangements that the public has almost no information about what the police are doing, how efficiently and effectively they are doing it, and is not given even the most basic information about crime and order in the community.

The ability of ACT Policing to hide in the shadows has worried me for some time too.

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Affirmative Action Man11:16 am 21 Feb 12

SnapperJack said :

When you consider that Waterford wrote a story in 2008 that directly caused the then ACT Police Commissioner to commit suicide, you can well understand their reluctance to deal with him.

Are you serious !!! The Commissioners death was tragic but are you seriously suggesting that the we are not allowed to criticise the police ? All it shows is that she probably should not have been in the job she was in or that she should have been receiving help.

“When you consider that Waterford wrote a story in 2008 that directly caused the then ACT Police Commissioner to commit suicide…”

Audrey Fagan died in 2007.

When you consider that Waterford wrote a story in 2008 that directly caused the then ACT Police Commissioner to commit suicide, you can well understand their reluctance to deal with him.

Ralph said :

Crime stats, by street and by suburb, which were previously available on the neighbourhood watch site, have recently disappeared as well….

Crime stats can still be found on the ACT Policing site. Might not be a street by street breakdown but it is broken down into sectors within their patrol zones, which makes sense to me from a data collection standpoint.

http://www.police.act.gov.au/community-safety/crime-statistics.aspx

Cathbad said :

There is no such thing, at this date of the world’s history, in America(or anywhere else), as an independent press. You know it and I know it.

There is not one of you who dares to write your honest opinions, and if you did, you know beforehand that it would never appear in print. I am paid weekly for keeping my honest opinion out of the paper I am connected with. Others of you are paid similar salaries for similar things, and any of you who would be so foolish as to write honest opinions would be out on the streets looking for another job. If I allowed my honest opinions to appear in one issue of my paper, before twenty-four hours my occupation would be gone.

The business of the journalists is to destroy the truth, to lie outright, to pervert, to vilify, to fawn at the feet of mammon, and to sell his country and his race for his daily bread. You know it and I know it, and what folly is this toasting an independent press?

We are the tools and vassals of rich men behind the scenes. We are the jumping jacks, they pull the strings and we dance. Our talents, our possibilities and our lives are all the property of other men. We are intellectual prostitutes.

I always wondered what Sinatra meant. Have no illusions.

This has got to be a record for thread resurrection.

There is no such thing, at this date of the world’s history, in America(or anywhere else), as an independent press. You know it and I know it.

There is not one of you who dares to write your honest opinions, and if you did, you know beforehand that it would never appear in print. I am paid weekly for keeping my honest opinion out of the paper I am connected with. Others of you are paid similar salaries for similar things, and any of you who would be so foolish as to write honest opinions would be out on the streets looking for another job. If I allowed my honest opinions to appear in one issue of my paper, before twenty-four hours my occupation would be gone.

The business of the journalists is to destroy the truth, to lie outright, to pervert, to vilify, to fawn at the feet of mammon, and to sell his country and his race for his daily bread. You know it and I know it, and what folly is this toasting an independent press?

We are the tools and vassals of rich men behind the scenes. We are the jumping jacks, they pull the strings and we dance. Our talents, our possibilities and our lives are all the property of other men. We are intellectual prostitutes.

I always wondered what Sinatra meant. Have no illusions.

*sigh*

I think you’d find that if you weren’t using us to grossly defame someone under cover of anonymity we’d take a more robust stand.

Walk a mile in these shoes dude.

1. An AFP member is not allowed to identfy themselves as such in a forum like this. (ask VG why he has been quiet of late)
(NOT THAT I AM SAYING THAT I AM)

2. Since Johnboy sent the AFP the riotact logs over a Liberal party stoush (despite there being no offence committed and he wasn’t obliged to) one would be mad to comment professionally http://the-riotact.com/article.php?sid=4502

TAD – and you’d would be working in the employ of the AFP?

jack.waterford@ canberratimes.com.au

This is not an ACT only issue. In 2004 there was a submission from the Australian Press Council to the QLD Crime and Misconduct Commission after the police in that state changed their police radio system to a digitally encypted one (such as is used in Canberra). Thé new radio sytem meant that the press could no longer monitor the radio and so were reliant on the police media to tell them about crime. (very much as we do here). Thé submission was that the press should have access to the new radio system.

Although unsuccessful in their submission there are some very good points made within in that are very relevant in this discussion :
– By scrutinising police activity the media provide the police with an incentive to behave with integrity and commitment.
– Relying on police media units facilitates the manipulation of the media for the purposes of propaganda.
– Media access to police radio is an important channel for the flow of information to the public regarding crime, policing and other events potentially affecting the public interest. As such, police radio provides a unique window through which the public can scrutinize police activity, thereby making a significant contribution to accountability.
– Police may fail to pass information on to the media in order to camouflage inefficiency, to prevent criticism of their operational practices, or for other invalid reasons.
– There is a risk that the information which ultimately reaches the media via the media liaison office gives a partial and therefore skewed or misleading impression of situation.
– The monitoring of police radio scanners is an important mechanism by which journalists can obtain information which has not been pre-digested and packaged.

http://www.presscouncil.org.au/pcsite/fop/fop_subs/policeradio.html

Locally there are a couple of extra factors :

Firstly, the ACT Police operates on a purchase agreement with the ACT Government whereby the performance of the AFP is judged upon various things such as crime stats, attendance times, prosecutions etc. Another indicator is “the fear of crime” which is measured in satisfaction surveys of members of the public.

The second is that the Canberra Times absolutely hate the police and will not miss an opportunity to criticize it. This includes beating up reports of crime that are expected in a city this size and reporting it as a crime out of control. (You may remember a couple of Civic assaults that were reported as “rampaging gangs” etc).

Add these two factors together and you get a police force afraid to release details of crime because it would negatively affect the “fear of crime” amongst the community particularly because the Canberra Times will put their slant on it and beat it up if possible.

So what you get are AFP media releases with scant details ONLY if the AFP needs the public’s help with an investigation and so they end up being postage stamped size news stories buried deep in the paper. (Such as the recent spate of rapes in the first couple of media releases). These media releases serve no purpose and do not help the police solve the crimes or the public to be informed.

The only other media releases you get are the PR positive stories such as the recent fabulous release of the “Dognapped pooch returned to owner” http://www.afp.gov.au/afp/page/Media/ACTMedia/2006/act_060214_042.pdf

Have a quick look at the AFP Media release site http://www.afp.gov.au/afp/page/Media/ACTMedia/2006/Home.asp and you would be hard pressed to find a release that wasn’t “Help needed” or positive PR “We arrested somebody”.

As for the public’s “Right to know”, it does not exist.

If the police get any more invisible in Canberra they will disappear and noone will even notice.

The CT will smear shit on ACT Policing at any given opportunity, they have for the last 30 years and will for the next 30 years this is another example of that.

Look at the letters they print from people with nothing better to do than write in about how they saw a Police van park in a no stopping zone and 3 coppers get out and walk around the Lyneham shops ??

I wonder if the loser who wrote in had the common sense to work out that although there was no armed robbery in progress perhaps the cops were being pro-active and getting out and walking around the shops and talking to people face to face instead of just drving around.

Funny how you will never, ever see a letter in the CT from someone praising ACT Policing. I have no doubt that any letters the CT receive containing a positive word about the AFP gets filed immediately in the Classified Waste bin.

The media are a pack of dogs they will generate whatever news they can to sell papers and get ratings, and on a slow news day when they have nothing else to do they put shit on the coppers. Poor form.

Crime stats, by street and by suburb, which were previously available on the neighbourhood watch site, have recently disappeared as well….

I know you did the last CPO JB and what a bland read it was too (not your fault) but if Audrey could be persuaded to answer in her own words…or is that hoping for too much. Just a thought anyway.

Special G – it’s more than a one-off. This has been an ongoing issue for some time.

The problem, in my opinion, is an entrenched culture that sees no value in the media – or sees the media as an enemy.

In my experience, and with some justification, cops see their job as catching bad guys, not handling media enquiries. Unfortunately, this sometimes leads to problems and turns the media against you. It’s the same with firies and, as I saw it, was a big part of the failure to give adequate warnings to the public before the 2003 bushfires – they saw their job as fighting fires, not talking to journalists.

It needs a huge culture shift, led from the very top. Sure, operational considerations should take precedence, but good media relations are important too.

Heavs, Waterford has just been given the dubious promotion of editor-at-large. As part of this (since this is what their reader surveys told them people wanted) he will continue to write the weekday editorials but will also have more bylined pieces. He is however still a full-time employee of the CT, unlike Crispin Hull and Ian Warden.

Johnboy – I’m sure I remember reading something in the CT a few weeks back about Waterford actually getting a regular op.ed writing gig in the paper.

It’s a bit of a side note from the police media spin issue I know but I reckon it’s good to read a local opinion piece from someone else than that poor Akerboltsen clone, Angela Shanahan.

We did the last CPO, John Davies.

While that came out pretty well, I wouldn’t care to repeat the negotiations with police media.

Having just read the paper It looks like Corbell was doing all the talking to the Press on this, How about getting top cop Audrey up for one of Kerces’ email inetrviews,

Jack’s just upset because someone said no. SO he writes an article about how he wasn’t given information – must be a slow news day.

The AFP kept quiet about some of the Inner North rapes for a long, long time.

And it was only after they went public with the details that a man was charged.

i guess the ability of the media to have questions answered falls under the obligations of the police to be accountable to the public.

media units always spin. thats what they do.

i dont think people have unrealistic expectations about police capability – the very nature of 99% of police work is reactive.

but the afp have always concerned me. im unconvinced that david eastman killed commissioner winchester. i dont liek the way they routinely blame speed for accidents when the act has the best designed road system in oz. i dont lik the fact that so much of their policing is done from the front seat of a divvy van. i dont like the fact that so few policing resources exist in canberras suburbs.

i realise many of these issues are govt and money related, but basic honesty and working with media wouldnt go astray.

and to the cops out there – this isnt a bash.

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