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O'Reilly attacked Courant editorial for opposing mandatory minimums, but the editorial didn't mention them

September 14, 2005 7:38 pm ET

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Fox News host Bill O'Reilly attacked a September 12 Hartford Courant editorial that he falsely characterized as opposing mandatory minimum prison sentences for child sex offenders. In fact, the editorial did not take a position on mandatory minimums; rather, it explored proposals for enhancing post-incarceration monitoring of convicted sex offenders' movements. Further, Media Matters for America discovered no evidence that the Courant has endorsed or opposed minimum sentences for child sex offenders.

During his September 13 discussion with former prosecutor Wendy Murphy, O'Reilly held up the case of one particular sex offender as an example to illustrate "why Connecticut needs mandatories. ... And obviously, the state needs an overhaul, but the paper doesn't want it." He also commented that "[t]he wording [of the Courant editorial] is almost identical to the Houston Chronicle," O'Reilly told Murphy, "in the sense that we can't really throw mandatories at them because we have to throw the key away." Murphy agreed, saying "Yes, you've got that right"; she noted that Connecticut does have mandatory minimum sentences for sex offenses that she said judges and prosecutors skirt.

O'Reilly, however, completely mischaracterized the Courant editorial, which does not even mention mandatory minimum sentences, much less oppose them. From the September 12 Courant editorial, titled "Sexual Abuse Hysteria":

Along with punishment, predators need treatment. Studies show that treatment is effective in helping to reduce recidivism.

Lawmakers must be careful to separate one-time offenders involved in relatively minor incidents from truly serious cases in which there is a strong possibility that the person will strike again. One-size-fits-all legislation unfairly stigmatizes offenders without protecting children. [Sentences quoted by O'Reilly are italicized]

A Nexis search* found no evidence that the Courant has recently taken a position on mandatory minimum prison sentences for child sex offenders. However, in a Dec. 3, 1998 editorial, the paper did say that "[m]uch longer sentences for sexual predators" could be "one answer" to the problem of convicted sex offenders who have served their time but are not ready to return to society.

O'Reilly's reference to the Houston Chronicle alluded to a controversy earlier this year in which, as with the Courant, O'Reilly mischaracterized the content of a newspaper editorial. On the May 10 edition of The O'Reilly Factor, he falsely claimed that a May 10 Chronicle editorial had attacked the mandatory minimum sentences imposed in Florida's "Jessica's Law" as "too harsh." As the Chronicle noted in a May 12 editorial exposing O'Reilly's distortion, "O'Reilly told his viewers that the Chronicle editorial said the Florida law was too harsh. He was mistaken. The editorial excerpts that O'Reilly projected on the screen said nothing about the harshness of the punishment." Subsequently, O'Reilly apologized for misattributing the quotation and admitted that the Chronicle "didn't actually say" that the mandatory sentence stipulated by "Jessica's Law" was "too harsh." However, O'Reilly continued to argue that he was justified in attacking the Chronicle based on "everything that I extrapolated from the editorial."

From the September 13 edition of Fox News' The O'Reilly Factor:

O'REILLY: That law [Florida's Jessica Lunsford Act] mandates 25 years in prison for felony sexual battery first offense on a child 12 and under. Yesterday, the largest newspaper in Connecticut, the Hartford Courant, editorialized this way, quote: "Along with punishment, predators need treatment. One-size-fits-all legislation unfairly stigmatizes offenders without protecting children." The guy who wrote it, [Courant editorial writer] Bill Williams, declined to appear with us this evening. ... In Connecticut, in July, a guy named [omitted] sentenced to three years in prison for sexually violating an 11-year-old girl, three years. This is why Connecticut needs mandatories. And it's -- I have a whole list of people who are serving nothing, no jail at all, for abusing children. And obviously, the state needs an overhaul, but the paper doesn't want it.

MURPHY: Yes, you've got that right. You know, Connecticut, actually, among the states does have some mandatory minimums, so out of 51 jurisdictions, 50 states plus D.C., Connecticut is in that minority of states that has a mandatory minimum.

[...]

O'REILLY: Now, I don't understand the Hartford Courant. I know it's a liberal paper, professor. But the wording is almost identical to the Houston Chronicle in the sense that, well, we have to give -- we can't really throw mandatories at them and throw the key away, because they have to be rehabilitated and on and on and on. Is this -- is this in keeping with the paper's theme?

RICH HANLEY (Quinnipiac University journalism professor): It generally editorializes in favor of any sort of civil liberty. Its general editorial tone, however, is one of centrist, middle-of-the-road nonpartisanship.

*Nexis search was "(mandatory w/20 (minimum or prison or jail or sentence)) and (sex! or rape or molest!) and section (editorial or opinion)" for all available dates on Nexis' Hartford Courant database.

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    • Author by Dr. Van Nostrand (September 14, 2005 8:45 pm ET)
         

      I'm not so sure the Courant is a liberal paper. The Courant endorsed Bush for president last year.

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    • Author by capitalist (September 14, 2005 9:08 pm ET)
         

      How is this "conservative" misinformation? Shouldn't child molestation be a non-partisan issue?

      Report Abuse
      • Author by wolfe (September 15, 2005 8:29 am ET)
           

        "How is this "conservative" misinformation? Shouldn't child molestation be a non-partisan issue?"

        Are you serious? This is "conservative" misinformation becasue Bill's a conservative. This is just the latest example of how he sets up a straw man and puts words in other people's mouths so he can look ilke a hero rebuking claims that others didn't even make. What a sham.

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        • Author by prettymarshin (September 15, 2005 10:22 am ET)
             

          I agree with that. It seems like Mr. O'Reilly will go so far as to make up a false viewpoint, pin it on what may or may not be a liberal paper, and then proceed to turn the knife in back. I especially like the part where he said the author of the article refused to comment or be interviewed, this means he can rant and rave all he wants and he doesn't actually have to defend his point with any evidence at all. I wonder if he was actually ever asked to appear. All this from a man who claimed to have won a Peabody award for Journalism. What a hack.

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        • Author by capitalist (September 15, 2005 4:33 pm ET)
             

          How can Bill O'Reilly be a conservative when he bashes Bush all the time? The other day Bill said that Bush might end up being as bad of a president as Jimmy Carter was. I'd like to see MMFA post that comment.

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          • Author by losingfaith (September 15, 2005 6:02 pm ET)
               

            "How can Bill O'Reilly be a conservative when he bashes Bush all the time?"

            Not all conseratives are still blind enough to follow this fool of a president. There are MANY examples of many different consevative inividuals and groups who have voiced opposition to this president and admin. In fact, his latest approval polls show he's down around 37% - 43%. Are you suggesting there's been approximately 12% of the population that's become liberal since the last national election?

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          • Author by Sagra (September 15, 2005 6:17 pm ET)
               

            No doubt Roger Ailes will take him to the woodshed for that.

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    • Author by jackdavis (September 14, 2005 10:35 pm ET)
         

      Does this guy lie every day? It seems so. I wrote him another letter but I'm going to assume it's not going to be aired.

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    • Author by Sagra (September 15, 2005 9:34 am ET)
         

      >> However, O'Reilly continued to argue that he was justified in attacking the Chronicle based on "everything that I extrapolated from the editorial."

      O'Reilly always brings the funny.

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    • Author by publius (September 15, 2005 11:36 am ET)
         

      However, O'Reilly continued to argue that he was justified in attacking the Chronicle based on "everything that I extrapolated from the editorial." In others words, based on anything he could pull out of his you-know-what. He's good a putting words in people's mouths and taking statements out of context; he's a master at it.

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    • Author by mdprime (September 15, 2005 12:24 pm ET)
         

      What I've found impressive by people like O'Reilly is how they can pull fast ones like

      "I know I'm right. You know I'm right."

      and actually continue the conversation without being refuted by something as simple as

      "Believing it doesn't make it true"

      Would it be worth it to play on O'Reilly's playing field? It seems there's little else that can be done to get through to his ears and head.

      [link to mediamatters.org]

      Really though, Franken pushed O'Reilly using research and sarcasm - which really isn't that hard - and look at what happened to "Lies And the Lying Liars Who Tell Them".

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    • Author by leftisright (September 16, 2005 5:58 am ET)
         

      This is the scenario of how O'Reilly responds when his august and profound statements are called out: YOU'RE WRONG I AM RIGHT...YOU DON'T KNOW WHAT YOU ARE TALKING ABOUT...TURN OFF HIS MIKE!!!! O'Reilly lies to present his absurd views on a daily basis...it is no surprise to me that he would make up nonsense for no reason, as he did here. I never can watch his show and it beats me why anyone with a thinking mind would torture themselves by seeing him. He is the lowest of the low, a vulgar bully with bombast as his trademark, a latter day Joe McCarthy.

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    • Author by 1428a (September 16, 2005 12:57 pm ET)
         

      Classic O'Reilly/Fox News, attack something even if it's non-existent (in the editorial, or opinion). Infer, if necessary, put people on the defensive, by doing so. Corner the opposing side by making them appear to be dodging the question when they say what O'Reilly is saying is non-topical. They are thereby forced to either agree or defend (and appear weak/anti-American) in doing so.

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