Paper says reporter forced to resign after deception
Tuesday, January 13, 2004
(01-13) 01:30 PST ARLINGTON, Va. (AP) --
Foreign correspondent Jack Kelley was forced to resign from USA Today last week after he repeatedly misled editors during an internal investigation into some of his stories, the paper's top editors said.
Kelley told The Washington Post he concluded he should resign because he "panicked and used poor judgment" by encouraging a translator who was not present during a 1999 interview that had come under scrutiny to impersonate a translator who was there and confirm his story to USA Today investigators. He told the Post he realized his error and apologized to the paper's top executives two weeks later.
"The reason for ending Kelley's employment was that he engaged in an elaborate deception during an investigation into his work," USA Today editor Karen Jurgensen said in a lengthy statement posted Tuesday on the paper's Internet site. "He admitted that he engaged in conduct designed to deceive the investigation."
Her statement said the paper "had chosen to treat the issue as a confidential personnel matter, but because Kelley made it public and because some published accounts have contained inaccurate information, we are providing a summary of the central events that led editors to end Kelley's employment."
(snip/...)
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/news/archive/2004/01/13/national0411EST0445.DTL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~August 2000; Volume 24 Issue 07
Truth in the trenches
By Randall Murphree - AFA Journal Editor
"Truth is the first casualty of any war," said Jack Kelley to his audience of Christian journalists. I wish I'd thought to ask him if that applies to culture wars. Kelley, a foreign correspondent for USA Today, is regularly in the first wave of journalists dispatched to every war-torn spot on the globe. He runs with the big dogs of world news. I wonder if he thinks Truth is a casualty of this moral turmoil that afflicts our culture today. I wonder if he sees Christian media using Truth selectively, stretching or manipulating it to serve our own ends.
At age 21, Kelley had a story in the first edition of USA Today in 1983. So, he's a real veteran, not only of the world's most dangerous war zones, but also of spiritual warfare as well. For Jack Kelley is a committed Christian. At this year's Evangelical Press convention, he mesmerized his audience with his experiences--scrapes with death, miraculous escapes, interviews with the world's elite.
We won't forget his stories, but I hope the principles he espoused have a more lasting impact. Again and again, Kelley emphasized that it is imperative for Christian journalists to be people of integrity, writers who are certain of every detail, believers who stay the course set by Christ Himself. It's a principle that should be true for any believer in any career. But we in activist ministries, if we let our calling become a crusade, are vulnerable to the temptation to shape Truth to fit our will, not God's.
(snip/...)
http://www.afajournal.org/cover/media_3.asp
http://www.newseum.org/warstories/interviews/mp3/journalists/bio.asp?id=5