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January 10, 2005
In a statement released tonight Mary Mapes brilliantly exploits the gaps in the Thornburgh Report to defend herself against the report's findings of misfeasance on her part: I am terribly disappointed in the conclusions of the report and its effects on the four of us who will no longer work at CBS News. I am disappointed as well for the entire organization. It has been my second family and I will miss my colleagues there.In Mapes's universe, the earth is at the center of the celestial sphere and the planets move in epicycles around it. The authors of the Thornburgh Report doubt that the planets revolve around the earth, but are not ready to abandon the Church that commissioned them and place the sun at the center of the solar system; not for them the leap of Copernicus, or the bravado of Galileo. "And yet she lies!" HINDROCKET adds: There is much to criticize in Ms. Mapes's self-serving statement, but the key paragraph is this one: The contents of the new documents mesh perfectly, in large ways and small, with all previously known records. This is absurd. The best part of the Thornburgh report is a lengthy section that dissects each of the fake documents and shows how it is contradicted by any number of facts in the public record. The report addresses and makes mincemeat of Mapes's claim that the documents "mesh perfectly" with the record. The new documents also were corroborated by retired Gen. Bobby Hodges, the late Col. Killian’s commander, who said that the documents showed Col. Killian’s true sentiments as well as his actions in the case. Another lie. Mapes never showed the documents to Hodges; she merely read portions of them to him over the telephone. Hodges says she misquoted him on the program, and as soon as he saw the documents, he pronounced them forgeries. After the broadcast, Marian Carr Knox provided the same corroboration in her televised interview. Another absurdity. Ms. Knox, a rabid Democrat and Bush-hater, said the documents were fakes that she did not type, and were not typed on any equipment owned by the Texas Air National Guard. (She added, for good measure, that Lt. Col. Killian never typed and had no "personal files.") Beyond that, she had no knowledge of the facts. I assume Ms. Mapes hopes that someone will actually believe her statement, but that "someone" would have to be an individual with no knowledge of the case. UPDATE: Dafydd ab Hugh writes: Actually, I think you guys missed the funniest aspect of Mary Mapes's response to the Thornburgh report: her pretense that the only reason anyone has to doubt the authenticity of the Burkett documents is that -- they're photocopies! She spends a long paragraph patiently explaining, as though to a first-year student at Columbia J-School, that it's perfectly acceptable to use Xeroxes in a news story. That's true, of course. The funny thing is that the Thornburgh report adopts an approach rather similar to Mapes's on this point: The Panel reaches no definitive conclusion as to whether the Killian documents are authentic. Given that the Killian documents are copies and not originals, that the author is deceased, that the Panel has not found any individual who knew about them when they were created, and that there is no clear chain of custody, it may never be possible for anyone to authenticate or discredit the documents. This really makes no sense. The implication of the "photocopy" argument is that anyone can create a crude, obvious forgery and then baffle the experts by the simple expedient of copying it. This is silly. Likewise, the fact that no one purports to have seen the documents until more than twenty years after they were ostensibly created, and that no one knows where they came from, do not make it impossible to discredit the documents. They are indicia of forgery. Posted by at 9:24 PM
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