Thursday, February 24, 2005

WBTV fires producer for plagarism

Mark WashburnTV/Radio Writer
WBTV fired a news producer for plagarism this week after discovering a report on Monday's 5:30 p.m. newscast contained two sentences copied verbatim from a story in Sunday's Charlotte Observer.
"It was a very short story," said Dennis Milligan, Channel 3's news director. "Two of the three sentences in the piece were directly copied."
The story, about development in Cabarrus County, was published in Sunday's Cabarrus Neighbors section and available online on charlotte.com. The script, read by anchor Tonia Bendickson, included the first paragraph of the story, written by Observer reporter Ronnie Glassberg.
Milligan said Wednesday he learned about the verbatim duplication when Scott Verner, editor in the Observer's Concord bureau, called to complain about the lack of attribution after hearing Glassberg's story read on the newscast.
"We have zero tolerance for that kind of absolute breach of ethics," said Mary MacMillan, Channel 3's vice president and general manager. The station planned to air an apology to its viewers and the newspaper in its 6 p.m. newscast Wednesday.
"We appreciate them treating it as a serious matter, as do we," said Rick Thames, editor of The Observer.
Saying it was a personnel matter, WBTV would not identify the producer responsible for the story, but a memo to newsroom staff said the person had been fired. Producers work behind the scenes, directing reporters and photographers, assembling scripts and organizing the newscasts.
Milligan said that in the wake of The New York Times plagarism scandal last year, he issued a memo to the news staff reminding them "in no uncertain terms that WBTV would not tolerate any ethical lapse." Milligan said no similar case has been investigated during his three years at the station.


TheantiMedia says. If we really fired someone everytime they used information from a newspaper there would be no news to report because everyone would be fired!!

Monday, February 14, 2005

WTVG’s Carey fed up with TV news

WTVG’s Carey fed up with TV news
Like many broadcast journalists in their late 20s/early 30s before him, Jim Carey came upon a crossroads and decided to explore a new career path.“I’m ready to try something else,” he said. “I think I’m a little burned out on the business.”TV news, he says, has become too predictable and relies too much on manufactured drama.“It’s like we [in the industry] make a big deal out of everything,” he said.When asked for an example, Carey did not hesitate. “The weather,” he said. “An inch or two of snow now isn’t what an inch or two of snow used to be.”
Jim Carey: WTVG reporter tired of "the daily grind" of TV news.
Zoom Carey, 31, wasn’t specifically criticizing his station – WTVG-TV, Channel 13, where he has spent the past 5½ years – but rather the market as a whole. (WNWO-TV, Channel 24, for example, upped the ante in August when it began branding itself as “Toledo’s Weather Station.”)While he understands news coverage – be it weather, school levies, or presidential visits – is often dictated by what the competition is doing, Carey believes in-depth features, which he considers to be his strength, are getting “squeezed out by stories that are controversial.” The situation is not unique to the Toledo market, he said.Carey’s contract expires at the end of the month. He and his wife, Gina, who works in a behind-the-scenes role at WTVG, plan to move to the state of Washington, where his parents and three siblings live, and conduct a job search from there. He would like to work in public relations in either Seattle or Portland, Ore.“I have a couple of irons in the fire,” he said. “I haven’t sent anything to television stations, but that doesn’t mean I won’t.”He said there’s only a 10 percent chance that he’ll stay in the TV news game. He was offered a one-year contract by WTVG, but turned it down. “I’m just tired of the daily grind,” he said.WTVG news director Brian Trauring acknowledged that constant deadlines take their toll. “There’s no question you have to have a lot of passion to be in this business,” he said. “Some people thrive on the daily deadlines; for other people, after a certain period of time, it becomes too much.”Carey admitted that losing his Saturday anchor position in early 2004 – when the station hired former WTOL-TV, Channel 11, anchor Bill Hormann – made him start contemplating his future in TV news. But the biggest factors, he said, were the desire to move closer to his family and the frustration over consultant-driven newscasts.EXPANDED ROLE: WNWO is using Tom Bosco as a “third anchor” for its 5 p.m. newscast, joining primary anchors Jim Blue and Jennifer Stacey, according to news director Jonathan Mitchell. He will be seen regularly in the 5:30 and 6 p.m. newscasts as well. Bosco is co-anchor of the station’s two-hour morning newscast.

Sunday, February 13, 2005

Madison TV Reporter Arrested

Police Say WKOW Reporter Was Armed With Semiautomatic Handgun And Had Drugs
Channel3000.com

BELOIT, Wis. -- Madison television reporter Joe Mason is in custody after allegedly being armed and causing a disturbance outside a Beloit radio station Friday.

Mason is the Rock County reporter for WKOW-TV, Channel 27 News.

Beloit police said Mason was exhibiting "unusual and threatening behavior" and was armed with a semiautomatic handgun. In addition to the gun, Mason also had marijuana on him, police said. He faces tentative charges of carrying a concealed weapon, disorderly conduct while armed and possession of marijuana.

Mason was on the job for WKOW-TV when police said he initiated a bizarre series of confrontations. Beloit Police Capt. Bill Tyler told WISC-TV in Madison that Mason got into an argument with a community center director earlier in the day, and then entered the radio station with a semiautomatic handgun.

All but a news anchor were evacuated from the building, police said.

A number of officers responded, and after 15 minutes, Mason was arrested after getting behind the wheel of a channel 27 news car. That's when police also discovered the marijuana, they said.

WKOW posted a short news story on its Web site at 4:21 p.m. saying Mason, whose real name is Joe Ulrey, appears to be suffering from a mental disorder and may not have been taking his medication.

According to Mason's bio on the WKOW Web site, he grew up in the suburbs of Chicago and previously worked at WBOY-TV in West Virginia as a reporter and at WGN-TV in Chicago as a weather assistant.

You gotta love it. A reporter with a gun! S

Thursday, February 10, 2005

Fake News, Fake Reporter

Why was a partisan hack, using an alias and with no journalism background, given repeated access to daily White House press briefings?By Eric Boehlert http://www.salon.com
When President Bush bypassed dozens of eager reporters from nationally and internationally recognized news outlets and selected Jeff Gannon to pose a question at his Jan. 26 news conference, Bush's recognition bestowed instant credibility on the apparently novice reporter, as well as the little-known conservative organization he worked for at the time, called Talon News. That attention only intensified when Gannon used his nationally televised press conference time to ask Bush a loaded, partisan question -- featuring a manufactured quote that mocked Democrats for being "divorced from reality."
Gannon's star turn quickly piqued the interest of many online commentators, who wondered how an obvious Republican operative had been granted access to daily White House press briefings normally reserved for accredited journalists. Two weeks later, a swarming investigation inside the blogosphere into Gannon and Talon News had produced all sorts of damning revelations about how Talon is connected at the hip to a right-wing activist organization called GOPUSA, how its "news" staff consists largely of volunteer Republican activists with no journalism experience, how Gannon often simply rewrote GOP press releases when filing his Talon dispatches. It also uncovered embarrassing information about Gannon's past as well as his fake identity. When Gannon himself this week confirmed to the Washington Post that his name was a pseudonym, it only added to the sense of a bizarre hoax waiting to be exposed.
On Tuesday night, the reporter who apparently saw himself as a trailblazing conservative "embedded with the liberal Washington press corps" abruptly quit his post as Washington bureau chief and White House correspondent for Talon News, that after earlier taunting those digging into his past that he was "hiding in plain sight." Contacted by e-mail for a comment, Gannon referred Salon to the message posted on his Web site http://www.jeffgannon.com/: "Because of the attention being paid to me I find it is no longer possible to effectively be a reporter for Talon News. In consideration of the welfare of me and my family I have decided to return to private life. Thank you to all those who supported me."
The Gannon revelations come on the heels of the discovery that Bush administration officials signed lucrative contracts for several conservative pundits who hyped White House initiatives and did not disclose the government's payments. The Talon News fiasco raises serious questions about who the White House is allowing into its daily press briefings: How can a reporter using a fake name and working for a fake news organization get press credentials from the White House, let alone curry enough favor with the notoriously disciplined Bush administration to get picked by the president in order to ask fake questions? The White House did not return Salon's calls seeking answers to those questions.
The situation "begs further investigation," says James Pinkerton, a media critic for Fox News who has worked for two Republican White Houses. "In the six years I worked for Reagan and Bush I, I remember the White House being strict about who got in. It's inconceivable to me that the White House, especially after 9/11, gives credentials to people without doing a background check."
Gannon reportedly did not have what's known as a "hard pass" for the White House press room, which allows journalists to enter daily without getting prior approval each time. Instead Gannon picked up a daily pass by contacting the White House press office each morning and asking for clearance. Mark Smith, vice president of the White House Correspondents Association, says it's up to White House officials to decide whom they want to wave in each day. "They don't consult us." If they had, Smith says, he would have been "very uncomfortable" granting Gannon the same access as professional journalists.
And the association never would have backed a reporter using an alias. Says Pinkerton: "If [Gannon] was walking around the White House with a pass that had a different name on it than his real name, that's pretty remarkable." Smith, who covers the White House for Associated Press radio, says he "could have sworn" that he saw credentials around Gannon's neck with the name "Jeff Gannon" on them.
"Somebody was waving him into the White House every day," notes David Brock, president and CEO of Media Matters for America, an online liberal advocacy group that led the way in raising questions about Gannon and Talon News.
Earlier this week, when asked about Gannon's access, White House press secretary Scott McClellan essentially threw up his hands and said he has no control over who is in the press room and whom the president calls on during his rare press conferences. "I don't think it's the role of the press secretary to get into the business of being a media critic or picking and choosing who gets credentials," he told the Washington Post.
"That's like [McClellan] saying, 'I'm chief of staff at a hospital and when a patient dies in surgery and it turns out the guy operating wasn't a doctor ... [it's] not my business to be a medical critic,'" says Ron Suskind, a former Wall Street Journal reporter who has written extensively about the inner workings of the Bush administration. "Nobody is asking him to be a media critic. They're asking him to make sure people in the press room -- the ones using up precious time during extremely rare press conferences -- are acting journalists, honest brokers dealing with genuine inquiry to get at the truth."
Suskind questions the White House's explanation that Bush had no idea who Gannon was when he called on him during the press conference. "Frankly, my sense is that almost nothing happens inside the White House episodically. They are so ardent with their message discipline. It all happens for a reason."
And it's not as if finding out the connection between Talon and GOPUSA was difficult. The Standing Committee of Correspondents, a group of congressional reporters who oversee press credential distribution on Capitol Hill, did just that last spring when Gannon approached the organization to apply for a press pass. "We didn't recognize the publication, so we asked for information about what Talon was," says Julie Davis, a reporter for the Baltimore Sun who is on the committee. "We did some digging, and it became clear it was owned by the owner of GOPUSA. And we had asked for some proof of Talon's editorial independence from that group ... They didn't provide anything, so we denied their credentials, which is pretty rare," says Davis. She adds, "There's limited space, and particularly after 9/11 there's limited access to the Capitol. Our role is to make sure journalists have as much access as possible, and to ensure that credentials mean something."
Talon's unusual access to the White House has upset journalists at other small outlets who don't enjoy the same privileged connections. "We're a weekly newspaper with a circulation of 22,000 and I'm pretty sure we couldn't get a White House press pass," says Mike Hudson, editor of the Niagara Falls Reporter in Niagara Falls, N.Y. "How does Gannon, which isn't even his real name, get past security?" Hudson wrote to Rep. Louise Slaughter, D-N.Y., asking her office "to look into how a partisan political organization and an individual with no credentials as a reporter -- and apparently operating under an assumed name -- landed a coveted spot in the White House press corps."
Slaughter, a vocal critic of the administration's pundit payola practices, wrote to the White House on Monday urging Bush "to please explain to the Congress and to the American people how and why the individual known as 'Mr. Gannon' was repeatedly cleared by your staff to join the legitimate White House press corps."
Until this week, what little was known about Gannon was vague. But several Web sites he is connected with provide some possible clues. Introducing himself to readers of his ConservativeGuy.com Web site, Gannon once wrote, "I've been a preppie, a yuppie, blue-collar, green-collar and white collar. I've served in the military, graduated from college, taught in the public school system, was a union truck driver, a management consultant, a fitness instructor and an entrepreneur. I'm a two-holiday Christian and I usually vote Republican."
When the recent controversy erupted, Gannon positioned himself as more of an ardent right-winger, not to mention ardent Christian. On JeffGannon.com he wrote, "I'm everything people on the Left seem to despise. I'm a man who is white, politically conservative, a gun-owner, an SUV driver and I've voted for Republicans. I'm pro-American, pro-military, pro-democracy, pro-capitalism, pro-free speech, anti-tax and anti-big government. Most importantly, I'm a Christian. Not only by birth, but by rebirth through the blood of Jesus Christ." Posting on the right-wing FreeRepublic.com, Gannon, while working as a White House reporter, once urged fellow Freepers to stage a demonstration outside Sen. John Kerry's headquarters and chant Jane Fonda's name and throw DNC medals, a reference to the Vietnam ribbons of honor Kerry threw away during an antiwar demonstration in the early 1970s.
As a would-be reporter, Gannon often copied entire sections from White House press releases and pasted them into his stories, according to an analysis done by Media Matters. This despite the fact he once ridiculed legitimate journalists for "working off the talking points provided by the Democrats."
According to his bio on Talon's Web site (which has now been removed), he's a graduate of the "Pennsylvania State University System," which could mean anything from Penn State to a much smaller state-run school such as West Chester University. He also noted that he's a graduate of Leadership Institute Broadcast School of Journalism -- which is a two-day, $50 seminar run by Morton Blackwell, a longtime Republican activist who co-founded the Rev. Jerry Falwell's Moral Majority and has said that those on "the ultra left harness hate and envy in their quest for unlimited power." Blackwell's journalism seminar aims to "prepare conservatives for success in politics, government and the news media," according to the institute's Web site. The classes are also designed to "bring balance to the media."
It was Blackwell, serving as a Virginia delegate to the GOP convention this summer, who handed out purple bandages in an effort to make fun of Kerry's Vietnam War wounds. They read: "It was just a self-inflicted scratch, but you see I got a Purple Heart for it?" Blackwell also served as a mentor to a young field organizer who is now Bush's deputy chief of staff. (Karl Rove called Blackwell just days after winning the 2000 election to thank him for his help.)
What likely forced Gannon to quit Talon News Tuesday were the revelations uncovered by bloggers such as World O' Crap, AmericaBlog, Mediacitizen, Daily Kos and Eschaton, along with their readers, about Gannon's past. For instance, bloggers uncovered evidence suggesting that the person and company that own the Web site JeffGannon.com also registered the gay-themed sites hotmilitarystud.com, militaryescorts.com and militaryescortsm4m.com. And according to this online research, that company, Bedrock Corp., is owned by a man named Jim Guckert, leading to speculation that Guckert and Gannon are one and the same. Bedrock is based in Wilmington, Del., where Gannon apparently is from.
As for Talon, its Web site says it is "committed to delivering accurate, unbiased news coverage to our readers." The site is run by Bobby Eberle, a Texas Republican Party delegate and political activist who also runs GOPUSA.com, which touts itself as "bringing the conservative message to America." As Media Matters documented, "In addition to Eberle's dual role as the head of both entities, both domain names TalonNews.com and GOPUSA.com are registered to the same address in Pearland, Texas, which appears to be Eberle's personal residence. The TalonNews.com domain name registration lists Eberle's e-mail address as bobby.eberle@gopusa.com ... Talon News apparently consists of little more than Eberle, Gannon, and a few volunteers, and is virtually indistinguishable from GOPUSA.com ... GOPUSA's officers and directors show a similar lack of journalism experience, but plenty of experience working for Republican causes." After Media Matters highlighted the background of Talon's "news team," Talon quickly yanked their bios from the site.
There is evidence that ownership of both Talon and GOPUSA changed hands Monday, just as the Gannon controversy was growing. More recently, many archived stories, including some dealing with the issue of homosexuality and defending the ban on gay marriage, were scrubbed from the Talon site. Eberle at Talon and GOPUSA did not respond to calls seeking comment.
Last year Gannon and Talon made a blip on the Beltway radar over an interview Gannon did with former U.S. diplomat Joseph Wilson, whose wife, Valerie Plame, was exposed as a CIA agent by conservative columnist Robert Novak. That potentially illegal disclosure prompted an independent counsel investigation. Gannon apparently attracted investigators' attention when, in the interview with Wilson, he referred to an unclassified document that may have been distributed to conservative allies in the press to bolster the administration's case that it was Wilson's wife who suggested he be sent to Niger to investigate the claim that Iraq tried to purchase uranium, or yellowcake, from the African nation.
It's likely Talon and Gannon would have remained obscure had the swaggering reporter not popped his now famous question to Bush. The details surrounding the Jan. 26 press room incident are telling, as they highlight the elasticity Gannon and other partisan advocates often use in their "reporting." Gannon asked Bush, "Senate Democratic leaders have painted a very bleak picture of the U.S. economy." He continued, "[Minority Leader] Harry Reid was talking about soup lines, and Hillary Clinton was talking about the economy being on the verge of collapse. Yet, in the same breath, they say that Social Security is rock solid and there's no crisis there. How are you going to work -- you said you're going to reach out to these people -- how are you going to work with people who seem to have divorced themselves from reality?"
Reid never made any such comment about soup lines.
That afternoon conservative talk show host Rush Limbaugh crowed that Gannon's question was "a repeat, a rehash, of a precise point I made on this program yesterday." However, Limbaugh conceded that Reid had "never actually said 'soup lines.'" That was simply Limbaugh's exaggerated characterization of Reid's concerns. Gannon either heard that phrase on Limbaugh's show or read it in Limbaugh's online column and then inserted it into his loaded question to Bush. On Feb. 2, with Gannon under fire for his lack of journalistic ethics, Limbaugh suddenly flip-flopped and told listeners that Gannon's question about Reid and soup lines "was an accurate recitation of what the Senate Democrat leaders had said." Then, in a Feb. 7 article in the Washington Post, Gannon finally conceded the quote was made up, but suggested he had nothing to apologize for.
All of which begs the question, "Who are they issuing credentials to?" asks Hudson at the Niagara Falls Reporter. "Could a guy from [Comedy Central's] 'The Daily Show' get press credentials from this White House?"
About the writer Eric Boehlert is a Senior writer at Salon.

Friday, February 04, 2005

DEATH VISITS SINCLAIR LIVE SHOT. . . SURPRISE

DEATH VISITS SINCLAIR LIVE SHOT. . . SURPRISE

COLUMBUS, OH (February 4, 2005) — Sinclair Broadcasting affiliates FOX-TV WTTE (Channel 28) and ABC WSYX-TV (Channel 6) had an unanticipated brush with Death on their noon news broadcasts today.

The Grim Reaper, grinning beneath a black hood, approached the live shot with a plastic sickle and a scroll. The Reaper lurked just behind the Sinclair reporter’s shoulder for the remainder of the shot.

NEWSBREAKERS, a media watchdog organization, posted video of the event on their website, www.newsbreakers.org.

Sinclair Broadcasting controls FOX and ABC Columbus television stations, offering viewers “The Power of Television Times Two”. The stations, which share news programming in the market, aired a report pertaining to a series of bloodless shootings and revisited a string of shootings that killed a woman in Ohio a year earlier.

NEWSBREAKERS anchor JD Rozz explained why the reaper’s assistance was needed for Sinclair’s story.

“News teams love the Reaper. They count on him to Hezazz things up all the time. Today he just wanted a little face time,” Rozz said.

“I’m tight with organizations like Sinclair. I try to respect their deadlines as my own,” said the Reaper. “I strive to preserve the synergy that exists between us.”
NEWSBREAKERS is a nonpartisan media watchdog organization that offers comment and critique on the role of TV news. The group relies on parody and non-traditional media interventions.

The group is currently planning future events.

CONTACT: (212) 931-8548 or e-mail questions to questions@newsbreakers.org

Wednesday, February 02, 2005

U.S. Journalists Fare Well On Test Of Ethics, Study Finds

Peter Johnson
USA TODAY

Recent opinion polls show declining respect for the news media and a growing belief among many Americans that reporters have little regard for ethics.

High-profile journalism scandals involving ethical lapses at CBS News, The New York Times, USA TODAY and other media outlets have fed the public's distrust of reporters.

Just this week, a survey of 112,000 high school students found that 36% say newspapers should get government approval before publishing stories and that 32% say the media enjoy too much freedom.

But in a new study, journalism turns out to be one of the most morally developed professions in the country, ranking behind only seminarians, physicians and medical students.

Two researchers from the Missouri School of Journalism and Louisiana State University administered the Defining Issues Test - a standardized test designed to measure reactions to ethical dilemmas - to 249 reporters from print and broadcast newsrooms across the USA.

Who's ethical? Profession Score (out of 100)

Seminarians and philosophers 65.1
Medical students 50.2
Practicing physicians 49.2
Journalists {+1} 48.7
Dental students 47.6
Nurses 46.3
Undergraduate students 43.2
Accounting students 42.8
Veterinary students 42.2
Orthopedic surgeons 41.0
Adults overall 40.0

Source: University of Missouri School of Journalism; 1 -based on testing of 249 journalists

The test, Missouri professor Lee Wilkins says, has been given to at least 30,000 professionals over the past 30 years, though never on a large scale to journalists.

Wilkins says journalists scored fourth-highest among the groups of professionals and students who were tested.

They ranked above dental students, nurses, graduate students, undergraduate college students, veterinary students and the adult population in general.

(By comparison, a smaller group Wilkins and Louisiana State's Renita Coleman examined for moral development - 65 advertising professionals - fared much worse ethically than journalists did.)

No significant differences were found among various groups of journalists, including men and women, broadcast and print reporters and managers and non-managers.

But journalists who did civic journalism or investigative reporting scored significantly higher than those who did not.

"Giving journalists the opportunity to work through more ethical dilemmas, whether they are real, occurring on the job or hypothetical in seminars and workshops, bodes well for the profession," Wilkins says.

"Thinking like a journalist involves moral reflection, done at a level that in most instances equals or exceeds members of other learned professions."

Tom Rosenstiel of Columbia University's Project for Excellence in Journalism says the findings echo what the Pew Research Center found in a survey of journalists in 1999. "Most of them got into the business out of a sense that journalism helps democracy work and that they are helping their fellow citizens," he says.

"Journalists get in this business out of an overriding sense of wanting to serve the public interest. They work bad hours, are grossly underpaid, they are derided by other media in Hollywood and increasingly distrusted by the public.

"So if you're not motivated by a sense of public mission, there's not a lot of reason to do it

Tuesday, February 01, 2005

AP falls for fake GI capture Story? Is it a GI JOE DOLL? Or something more sinister?

'It is our doll... to me it definitely looks like it is. Everything the guy is wearing is exactly what comes with our figure,' Liam Cusack of Dragon Models USA, inc., tells the ASSOCIATED PRESS

The original story that was released before questions were raised!
By ROBERT H. REID

(AP) U.S. Army soldiers guard the outside of the Camp Bucca Theater Internment Facility near
BAGHDAD, Iraq (AP) - Iraqi militants claimed in a Web statement Tuesday to have taken an American soldier hostage and threatened to behead him in 72 hours unless the Americans release Iraqi prisoners. The U.S. military said it was investigating, but the claim's authenticity could not be immediately confirmed.
The posting, on a Web site that frequently carried militants' statements, included a photo of what that statement said was an American soldier, wearing desert fatigues and seated on a concrete floor with his hands tied behind his back. The figure in the photo appeared stiff and expressionless, and the photo's authenticity could not be confirmed.
A gun barrel was pointed at his head, and behind him on the wall is a black banner emblazoned with the Islamic profession of faith, "There is no god but God and Muhammad is His prophet."
A U.S. military spokesman in Baghdad, Marine Sgt. Salju K. Thomas, said he had no information on the claim but "we are currently looking into it."

(AP) This image of what appears to be a captured US soldier was posted on an Iraqi militant website,...Full ImageA statement posted with the picture suggested the group was holding other soldiers.
"Our mujahadeen heroes of Iraq's Jihadi Battalion were able to capture American military man John Adam after killing a number of his comrades and capturing the rest," said the statement, signed by the "Mujahedeen Brigades."
"God willing, we will behead him if our female and male prisoners are not released from U.S. prisons within the maximum period of 72 hours from the time this statement has been released," the statement said.
The posting did not show any ID card for the alleged captive and no organization's name was written on the black banner, as have appeared in some past claims of kidnappings. The man's uniform had no U.S. insignia or names visible.
The Mujahedeen Brigades have claimed responsibility for two kidnappings in the past - the abduction in April of three Japanese who were released and that of a Brazilian engineer who went missing after an ambush that the Brigades claimed to have carried out along with the Ansar al-Sunnah Army.
More than 180 foreigners have been kidnapped in the past year. At least 10 of them, including three American civilians, remain in the hands of their kidnappers.
The only American soldier known to have been taken hostage is Pfc. Keith M. Maupin, 20, of Batavia, Ohio, who was shown in a video in April being held by militants. Another video aired in June showed what purported to be Maupin's slaying, but the picture was too unclear to confirm it was him and the military still lists him as missing.
Marine Cpl. Wassef Ali Hassoun went missing in Iraq in June and later photos surfaced on Arab television showing him blindfolded with a sword to his head. In July he made his way to the U.S. Embassy in Beirut. Back in the United States, he said he had been captured, but in December he was charged with desertion for the incident.

What ever happened to GI joe with the Kung Foo grip? I bet he was captured too!