The deputy chief offers a critique

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Deputy Chief Tom Stolz wanted to meet with me about my last story, the city’s public information officer, Van Williams, told me last week.

Stolz said he thought I’d left out some important information in the story about the Wichita Police Department’s procedure for handling evidence.

Every day as a reporter, I sift through materials and interviews, trying to pick out the most pertinent facts to craft into a story. We try to take complicated issues and make them easy for people to understand. I rarely use an entire interview. Sometimes our sources question those choices. That’s natural.

“You made it sound like the Wichita Police Department just does whatever they want with evidence,” Stolz said.

That wasn’t my intention, but that was his perspective. So we met Monday afternoon at City Hall with Williams, a former colleague at the Eagle.

Although I used most of our 12-minute interview in the story, Stolz said he felt I missed three points:

  • Evidence from some older cases was lost when it was kept in a garage, where the roof caved in due to a storm in 1990. I included that detail in the original story on Feb. 13 about Ronnie Rhodes’ conviction for a 1981 murder he says he didn’t commit. Stolz said he would have appreciated it being repeated.
  • The Wichita police always have kept evidence in uncharged cases for as long as the statute of limitations is active for a particular crime. I had not chosen that detail because the story was mainly about a murder case. There is no statute of limitations on murder. Stolz said it explained the police procedure in more detail.
  • Once a case goes to trial, Wichita police are required by law to keep evidence for as long it’s needed for trial and through appeals. The police department, by law, cannot dispose of evidence without a court order.

I’d quoted Ann Swegle, a deputy district attorney, as saying the WPD followed those orders in most cases. The Rhodes case has not yet revealed any court orders allowing for the destruction of evidence.

Lack of specific polices, and different procedures used by law enforcement, are reasons why 33 other states have enacted laws specifying how evidence should be maintained.

Stolz made it clear he wasn’t criticizing the accuracy of the facts I included or his quotes. He just wished I would have included the other information. I told him we could add those details in a follow-up story, as police work to implement a policy on how to preserve evidence, especially in murder cases.

When we left the meeting, we agreed I’d give Stolz a heads-up on which quotes I would be using and check facts he’d given me. That way, he’d have a chance to point out anything that might be missing. When this blog post appears, you’ll know I’ve done that.

Anyone I interview may ask for the same courtesy.

Because really, just as police want to get the right suspect, reporters want to get the right story.

Just as people can comment on these posts, and I often respond, when someone criticizes a story in any forum, we’ll listen.

Read the next post in this series.

See all posts in this series.

Eagle reporter prevails under new shield law

In what is likely the first test of a new state shield law for reporters, a Sedgwick County district judge ruled today The Wichita Eagle does not have to reveal confidential sources sought in a lawsuit.

Judge William Woolley said Kansas’ new shield law prohibits journalists from being compelled to provide unpublished information that could be obtained by other avenues.

The ruling came as part of a lawsuit against a Wichita inflatable company by a mother whose 5-year-old son died on one of the rides last March.

The mother’s lawyer had asked Eagle reporter Suzanne Perez Tobias to reveal the names of two former workers for Pure Entertainment, who told her they were taught to “launch” children from a ride.

“It’s the first challenge I know of for the shield law,” said Lyndon Vix, attorney for the Eagle. “It’s certainly the first for the Eagle and in Sedgwick County. I think it showed the law works, at least as far as it requires reasonable efforts to be made to acquire the information through alternative means. I think the judge was proper in his interpretation of a law that’s only four months old.”

The judge said the request could be renewed after the plaintiff in the suit makes reasonable efforts to obtain what they’re seeking from other sources.

Hey, lawyers: I’m more trusted than you … kind of, for now

I always say that when I married an attorney we were both shocked, shocked, to learn that each other’s profession had a code of ethics. The public might agree.

A Gallup poll released this week shows the public rated journalists above lawyers in their perceptions of ethics and honesty. But not by much. For journalists, 25 percent of the public think we have high ethics and honesty, compared to 18 percent for lawyers. Of those distrusting us, 31 percent think journalists have low ethics. For attorneys, it’s 37 percent.

Trust in bankers fell amid the mortgage crisis. Despite making a mess of the economy, they ranked just behind journalists but still ahead of attorneys.

Nurses are perceived as having the highest ethics and honesty (84 percent), followed by pharmacists, teachers and doctors. Clergy, interestingly, were sixth on the list, behind police.

At the bottom of the list: members of Congress, auto salespeople, telemarketers and — dead last — lobbyists.

(via AM Law Daily)