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Confronted by SPLC reps, Dobbs now denies his reporter made leprosy claim that he previously defended

May 18, 2007 5:22 pm ET

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On the May 16 edition of CNN's Lou Dobbs Tonight, host and CBS Early Show special contributor Lou Dobbs accused two officials of the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC) of misrepresenting a claim made on the April 14, 2005, edition of Lou Dobbs Tonight concerning the number of leprosy cases in the United States. But the SPLC's assertion -- that CNN correspondent Christine Romans inaccurately reported there were 7,000 leprosy cases "in the past three years" -- is true, and, when confronted by CBS News correspondent corespondent Lesley Stahl in a May 6 profile of him on CBS' 60 Minutes, Dobbs insisted it was accurate, then again insisted on its accuracy on his own show the following night.

On the April 14, 2005, edition of Lou Dobbs Tonight, Romans aired a quote by Madeleine Cosman, anti-immigration activist and founding director of the City College of City University of New York's Institute for Medieval and Renaissance Studies. Cosman said, "We have some enormous problems with horrendous diseases that are being brought into America by illegal aliens." After the report, Romans said that Cosman "told us that there were about 900 cases of leprosy for 40 years. There have been 7,000 in the past three years." However, as Media Matters noted, there have not been 7,000 cases of leprosy "in the past three years," as Romans implied. According to the National Hansen's Disease Program (NHDP) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), there were just 398 cases of Hansen's disease, or leprosy, reported between 2002 and 2004 -- "the past three years" at the time Cosman made her statement.

Cosman wrote in a 2005 article: "Leprosy, Hansen's disease, was so rare in America that in 40 years only 900 people were afflicted. Suddenly, in the past three years America has more than 7,000 cases of leprosy." Cosman appears to have derived her false claim by misinterpreting a February 18, 2003, New York Times article. The Times article, written two years before Cosman's article, compared the "900 recorded cases in the United States 40 years ago" with "today," in which "more than 7,000 people have leprosy."

On the May 16 edition of Lou Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs hosted SPLC CEO J. Richard Cohen and SPLC Intelligence Project director Mark Potok. On May 9, Cohen wrote a letter to CNN asking that it retract what they called a "dangerous assertion" that Dobbs himself refused to retract "despite unequivocal evidence of its falsehood."

Indeed, despite the inaccuracy of the claim that there have been 7,000 cases of leprosy "in the past three years," Dobbs has offered several defenses of Romans' uncritical citation of Cosman's false claim in the past month:

  • On the May 6 edition of CBS' 60 Minutes, Stahl told Dobbs: "We checked that and found a report issued by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, saying 7,000 is the number of leprosy cases over the last 30 years, not the past three, and nobody knows how many of those cases involve illegal immigrants." Dobbs responded: "If we reported it, it's a fact."
  • On the May 7 edition of Lou Dobbs Tonight, Dobbs told Romans, "I stand 100 percent behind what you said." Romans said, "We don't make up numbers here," and demonstrated that her citation was accurate by quoting from Cosman's article: "Hansen's disease was so rare in America that in 40 years only 900 people were afflicted. Suddenly, in the past three years America has more than 7,000 cases of leprosy." Neither mentioned the HHS statistics cited by Stahl.
  • Wall Street Journal columnist Carl Bialik reported in a May 8 post about the leprosy statistics on his Journal weblog, The Numbers Guy:

In response to my inquiry about whether Ms. Romans used the leprosy numbers improperly, Mr. Dobbs said through a CNN spokeswoman: 'Christine Romans's comments reflected what Dr. Cosman had said: That the number of active and current cases of leprosy had risen to and remained at more than 7,000 for the past three years as a result of improved reporting and unscreened illegal immigration primarily from Southeast Asia.' "

In the above response to Bialik, Dobbs misrepresented Romans' original citation by stating that Romans and Cosman had indicated that 7,000 was "the number of active and current cases ... for the past three years" rather than the cases that occurred "in the past three years."

On May 16, Dobbs defended Romans' claim by asserting, as he did with Bialik, that Romans was referring to "active" cases of leprosy. Potok told Dobbs that "you claimed ... that there were 7,000 new cases of leprosy in a recent three-year period." Dobbs replied that "we did not say there were new cases at any time," adding, "What we said in point of fact was that there are 7,000 cases on the active -- active leprosy register." Cohen read Romans' May 7 quotation of Cosman's statement, calling it "a pretty strong implication that the number [of leprosy cases] has jumped from 900 to 7,000, or over 7,000, in a very short period of time."

Dobbs then aired a video clip of Romans' 2005 comments to show "exactly what Christine Romans said." But afterward, rather than discuss whether 7,000 referred to "new" or "active" cases, Dobbs said that "the number of cases began rising" in 2000 "to about 166" cases in 2005. Later Dobbs said, "So we did not say, we quite agree, that there were 7,000 new cases. We said there were 7,000 on the registry." Cohen responded: "I didn't agree with what you just said, Lou. ... Miss Romans on May 7, again: 'there have been 400 cases for years and suddenly in the last three years there were 7,000 cases.' I think that implies there's been an explosive growth.' " Dobbs referred to Romans' 2005 statement as "31 words uttered more than two years ago by Christine Romans in response to a question by -- from me, just before going to commercial break." Dobbs also told Potok and Cohen, "The only person that has made anything of this has been you." However, as Media Matters noted, Stahl, Bialik, and Colorado Media Matters had also challenged the leprosy claim, which, again, notwithstanding his assertion that the statement was "31 words uttered more than two years ago," Dobbs was still defending as recently as last week.

Since the airing of his profile on 60 Minutes, in which Stahl confronted Dobbs about the statistic, Dobbs hosted a radio program on New York radio station WFAN on May 15 from 6 to 10 a.m. ET. WFAN is owned by CBS Radio, and the time slot in which Dobbs appeared was formerly occupied by Don Imus, for whom WFAN served as the flagship station until his recent firing. Additionally, Stahl noted on 60 Minutes, "While we were talking to Dobbs, unbeknownst to us, he was talking to CBS News and has now joined The Early Show as a weekly commentator."

From the May 16 edition of CNN's Lou Dobbs Tonight:

DOBBS: The number of reported incidents of leprosy in this country is rising, and that isn't the worst of it. Some doctors who deal directly with that disease, also called Hansen's disease say many cases go unreported and that the actual increases and the total number of cases on the national registry may be even more significant. Bill Tucker reports.

BILL TUCKER (CNN correspondent): Dr. Bill Levis is one of the most respected doctors in the world on the treatment of leprosy, or Hansen's disease as it's now known, and he says the disease is on the rise.

Levis is the attending physician at the Hansen's disease clinic at New York City's Bellevue Hospital. It is one of 11 such federally funded clinics in eight states and Puerto Rico. Leprosy peaked in the United States 1983, when 456 new cases were reported, according to the Department of Health and Human Services, which attributes the rise to a large increase in immigration from Southeast Asia.

The number of new cases bottomed out in 2000, but the number of leprosy cases has more than doubled in the years since. Respected medical authorities say there are reasons to suspect those numbers understate the number of leprosy cases.

DR. WILLIAM LEVIS (Bellevue Hospital Hansen's Disease Clinic): In the last 30, 40 years we've had 7,000 by registry figures that are maintained, but it's likely to be significantly more than that because not all states require, including New York state, are requiring reporting of the disease. So it's underreported.

[...]

DOBBS: We want to show you now, as I get ready to talk with Mark Potok and Richard Cohen of the Southern Poverty Law Center, all of this originating in an excerpt from 60 Minutes that profiled me two Sundays ago. Lesley Stahl talked in that report with Mark Potok of the Southern Poverty Law Center.

[begin video clip]

POTOK: The impression you get pretty strongly, I think, day after day is that, you know, sort of all 11 million illegal aliens are bringing leprosy, they're bringing crime, they're bringing all these terrible things to the United States.

STAHL: If these people have come into this country illegally, what is so wrong with somebody taking it up as an advocate?

POTOK: That does not sort of give one the go-ahead to say that, you know, these are a group of rapists and disease-carrying people who are coming to, you know, essentially to destroy the culture of this country. You know, I think that's a long leap.

[end video clip]

DOBBS: A long leap. The only question here is, who made the leap?

[...]

POTOK: The point is, is that the criticism that we made of you over the leprosy claim, which was certainly false -- what you claimed was that there were 7,000 new cases of leprosy in a recent three-year period --

DOBBS: Whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa, whoa. One minute --

POTOK: In fact, that three year period is about 450 cases.

DOBBS: In point of fact. In point of fact, what we said was -- and I think we really should go to that -- we did not say there were new cases at any time. And not only have you said that there, you've said in this, this email -- well, let's go first to the ad that was placed in The New York Times and USA Today yesterday, and I want to tell our viewers, I want everybody to know I invited Mark Potok and Richard Cohen to join us last week, I believe it was last Wednesday, to join us.

Now, in the ad placed in The New York Times and the USA Today yesterday, the Southern Poverty Law Center in an open letter to CNN, said, quote, "Despite being confronted with undisputed evidence to the contrary, Mr. Dobbs says he stands 100 percent behind the claim that there have been 7,000 new cases of leprosy in the United States in recent years."

Now, Mark, Richard, gentlemen, you know we never said they were new cases. What we said in point of fact was that there are 7,000 cases on the active -- active leprosy register.

COHEN: Lou, Lou, Lou --

DOBBS: You also -- sure.

COHEN: You're letting yourself off too easy, Lou. Let's be serious here.

DOBBS: Well, I'm sure -- I'm sure that you would not permit that. Surely.

COHEN: Just wait, Lou. Just wait. You said or your reporter Christine Romans said on May 7th that Hansen's was a disease so rare that "in 40 years only 900 people were afflicted. Suddenly in the past three years America has more than 7,000 --"

DOBBS: Right.

COHEN: " --cases of leprosy." I think that makes it pretty -- that's a pretty strong implication that the number has jumped from 900 to 7,000, or over 7,000, in a very short period of time.

DOBBS: Well, let's -- Richard, let's let --

COHEN: You were wrong to claim that.

DOBBS: Let's listen, and I would ask you to listen as well along with our viewers, to exactly what Christine Romans said, and if we could roll that, please.

ROMANS [video clip]: It's interesting because the woman in our piece told us that there were about 900 cases of leprosy for 40 years. There have been 7,000 in the past three years.

DOBBS: That report, as you gentlemen know, was done two years ago. In point of fact, the up-tick in cases from 76, I believe, in 2000, which was the low point of the number of cases began rising to about 166 in the most recent year reported, 2005, the year in which that report was made.

COHEN: Lou?

DOBBS: Yes.

COHEN: You're not being fair. You're not being fair.

DOBBS: Please --

COHEN: Let me finish. Miss Romans repeated the same kind of outrageous claim on your show on May 7. The thing that hasn't -- the thing that -- leprosy cases haven't been going up in recent years, Lou, they've been bouncing around. You can see the figures, 133, 134, 131. You're looking at the same numbers I am. What has increased are the number of hate crimes against Latinos. It's a serious problem, Lou --

DOBBS: Right.

COHEN: --and you ought to talk about it.

DOBBS: How much have they increased?

COHEN: Let me finish. Let me finish. The reality is that hate crimes occur because people demonize Latinos and other persons in our country. They spread false statistics about it. The 7,000 figure that you've done on your show is all over hate websites. You, Lou, unfortunately, are one of the most popular people on the white supremacist websites. Let me finish. You can't -- you can't -- you can't -- you're not responsible, Lou, for people who admire you, but you've got to ask yourself why the Council of Conservative Citizens considers you their favorite pundit.

DOBBS: Well, I will leave that to you to divine and, as you have, I think, interestingly created some rather -- what I consider to be tangential discussion, I think you know -- I certainly know that Mark Potok knows -- that I think the CCC is a reprehensible organization based on its beliefs and its attitudes. I think you know that very well. So I'm not quite sure what you're going to, but let me -- let me go back to something here because I don't want to let you off quite that easily, either. So we did not say we quite agree that there were 7,000 new cases. We said there were 7,000 on the registry. I want to talk to you about --

COHEN: I didn't agree with what you said, Lou.

DOBBS: I'm sorry?

COHEN: I didn't agree with what you just said. Miss Romans on May 7, again there have been 400 cases for years and suddenly in the last three years there were 7,000 cases. I think that implies there's been an explosive growth, and you've got the statistics in front of you. I heard you cite them. That's not the case.

DOBBS: Let me cite them for everybody one more time, and if we've got that graphic, I'd like to do that -- which in, by the way, your publication you said the cases have been declining. Since 2000, they have in fact been doubling, rising from 76 to 110, to 133 to 131, 166, and you just listened to one of the most foremost experts in Bill Tucker's report say to you that they are absolutely, absolutely understated and significantly so.

COHEN: And they've always been understated, Lou.

DOBBS: But let's go to the more important issue here, if we may. You also take -- take me to task for using the source that was in the report that Christine Romans did. Now, I want to be clear here. We're talking about 31 words uttered more than two years ago by Christine Romans in response to a question by -- from me, just before going to commercial break. She did not ever -- the report by Bill Tucker is the first report on this broadcast ever about leprosy in relation to illegal immigration, and you gentlemen both know that.

POTOK: Let me try and make one, Lou, here.

DOBBS: The only person that has made anything of this has been you, gentlemen, and I can't imagine your motivation for doing so.

POTOK: Well, it's certainly not true that we're the only ones who have made this point. As you know, many, many organizations have made this same point.

DOBBS: Well, we certainly have not. We have done one 30-word expression --

POTOK: Look, I -- I agree with you.

DOBBS: -- at the end of a report on multi-drug resistant tuberculosis, and you have talked about it endlessly in your newsletter --

POTOK: Let me speak for just a moment.

DOBBS: -- in your intelligence report, in your advertising, which -- I don't know, does it spur fundraising? I don't know.

COHEN: You know, it's interesting, Lou, that the John Birch Society made the same claim against us that you just uttered. The reason we're taking you seriously --

DOBBS: Now you've aligned me with the CCC, the John Birch Society. Is there anyone else you'd like to align me with?

COHEN: Lou, Lou, Lou, you're an important media figure, a very important figure, and immigration is an important issue in our country. What we don't think should happen is the debate be poisoned by misleading statistics about crime, about leprosy, about anything.

Expand All Expand 1st Level Collapse All Add Comment
    • Author by scooter (May 18, 2007 5:43 pm ET)
         

      Dobbs was clearly wrong, and now want to backpedal. Hubris all the way to the bank.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by monknj80 (May 18, 2007 5:49 pm ET)
         

      Wow....Dobbs just admit it. I used to respect yo, don't turn into Hannity!

      Report Abuse
    • Author by UnEasyOne (May 18, 2007 6:22 pm ET)
         

      "I blew it.  I had confidence in those figures and it turned out that they were wrong.  I'm very sorry and we'll do better in the future."

      How hard is that to say, Lou? 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by LarryE (May 18, 2007 11:05 pm ET)
         

      ROMANS [video clip]: It's interesting because the woman in our piece told us that there were about 900 cases of leprosy for 40 years. There have been 7,000 in the past three years.

      I'm sorry, but when your own defense indicts you, how good can your case be?

      7,000 in the past three years. Not for the past three years, in. If I told Lou Dobbs that there have been 10 million illegal immigrants in the last three years, would he take that to mean that over the last three years the estimated total number of undocumented workers held steady at 10 million?

      Damn straight he wouldn't. He'd take it to mean, as most anyone would, that I was saying there had been 10 million additional such persons over the last three years.

      So it is here.

      What I wonder, as others here have, is why Dobbs is refusing to acknowledge the mistake, particularly since he can, as Uneasyone noted, blame the original source. What is the concern? 

      Report Abuse
      • Author by therick (May 19, 2007 6:59 pm ET)
           

        His concern?  He's trying to peg illegal aliens as Leprosy speaders.  His hard on for illegal aliens knows no boundries.

        Report Abuse
    • Author by jscott (May 19, 2007 11:03 am ET)
         

      Don't forget, Lou, that pride goeth before the fall.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by eyeswideoopen8678 (May 19, 2007 6:58 pm ET)
         

      I'm surprised and disappointed regarding this piece.   It was obvious that the SPLC people were reaching for an issue.   What happened here?  Did you promose you a big contribution for going along? 

      If you aren't honest with your material on this website, then you are no better and in fact, you are worse than the media liars you cover because as you know... 'media matters'.  

       

      Report Abuse
      • Author by eyeswideoopen8678 (May 19, 2007 7:01 pm ET)
           

        Typos... sorry.  The question should have been:

         Did they promise you a big contribution for going along?

        Report Abuse
    • Author by hotnuke (May 20, 2007 1:15 am ET)
         

      Lou Dobbs is simply another bigoted, lying, fascist scumbag. And anyone believing he's not simply because he's married to a woman of Mexican descent is naive in the extreme. First of all, as far as I know, she's NOT from a family of POOR Mexicans, but rather a family whose Mexican heritage is one of privilege. Since when did well-to-do people of ANY ethnicity ever give a damn about the downtrodden of their ehtnic or racial background. Sure, a few do, but the vast majority of them are snobbish scum who look upon the poor of their kind as embarrasing lowlives. When Lou Dobbs, and I'd venture, his wife, look at Illegal Mexican immigrants in this country, they don't see her countrymen, but simply lowlife scum they'd LOVE to send to a gas chamber if they could get away with it.

      This entire story is proof positive of the depths Lou Dobbs will stoop to in order to paint illegal immigrants, of any ethnicity, as disease-ridden, ignorant, lowlife criminals HELL-BENT on destroying our nation, rather than (the VAST MAJORITY of them at least), poor, honest, HARD-WORKING, salt of the earth kind of people who are ONLY doing what ANYONE in their situation would do, striving to survive and help their families live a better future.

      If I had my druthers, Lou Dobbs and his ENTIRE clan would be DEPORTED, retroactively, to ANTARCTICA, in SHORTS AND T-SHIRTS...LOL 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by ManipulationNation (May 20, 2007 5:01 am ET)
         

      I'm surprised Dobbs dealt with the issue at all.  He had no argument and no defense.  The more he talked, the clearer it became how misleading his arguments were and the more the other guy talked, the clearer it became how wrong Dobbs was.  This was "slam dunk" and "checkmate" rolled into one.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by yahavhis6653 (May 20, 2007 7:30 pm ET)
         

      While it would have been better to state there are now 7,000 active cases reported, how it was expressed does not change the fact that there are 7,000 cases.

      Over dramatization is not the same as falsification. Rabid and demented accusations of racism and fascism are far more over the top in inaccuracy than what took place during that broadcast.

      Illegal immigration is a threat to any nation. Uncontrolled communicable disease is just one of the many threats that are included among those to a nation that does not control its borders and who enters into their nation. The public does have a right to be aware of this aspect as well all other ones, such as terrorism.

      The greatest threat is not from those who over dramatize the dangers of illegal immigration, but from those who want the truth hidden and who want those who try to speak out on it silenced. 

      Report Abuse
    • Author by aDifferent McCain (May 21, 2007 11:08 am ET)
         

      I can't believe people are defending Dobbs.

      Of course we are talking about illegal immigrants, so people tend to lose the ability to think clearly. His facts are incorrect, its that simple.

      Those making claims of a conspiracy between MMFA and SPLC. That is about as logical as my theory that gravity is an evil plot, created by the  CIA and the Military Industrial Complex (which got my physics teacher laughing). The claim that SPLC was reaching for a topic is also not credible. Take a look at SPLC's website some time, read some of the material first. If I went on a national news program and made the claim that white male republicans are responsible for a steady increase in the number of new cancer cases, I should be called on it. And if I tried to defend that claim and attack those who pointed out that I was wrong, that would just show how partisan and illogical I was being. Dobbs is doing the same and should apologize for his statements.

      I would be more willing to listen to the arguments attacking illegal immigrants if they had actual data to back it up. And if those arguments did not contain this "taint" of racist overtones, that many of the speakers infuse into the conversation.

      And before you paint me as some liberal, illegal immigrant lover, or other such nonsense, I do think illegal immigration is a problem and something should be done about it. Its just that the few logical arguments that I have heard are made weaker by the screaming of many on the far right.

      Report Abuse
    • Author by aDifferent McCain (May 21, 2007 11:51 am ET)
         

      And for your enlightenment:

      CDC info:

      http://www.cdc.gov/ncidod/dbmd/diseaseinfo/hansens_t.htm

      Incidence: In 2002, the number of new cases detected worldwide was 763,917. In 2002, 96 cases occurring in the United States were reported to CDC. In 2002, WHO listed Brazil, Madagascar, Mozambique, Tanzania, and Nepal as having 90% of cases.

      Trends Prevalence has remained relatively stable in the United States. Decreasing numbers of cases worldwide with pockets of high prevalence in certain countries.

      Great facts about Hansen's Disease from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Resources: http://www.hrsa.gov/hansens/

       

      After reading that, maybe we should ban Pacific Islanders and get rid of Hawaii. (just kidding). But as you will see 95% of human population is not susceptible to infection.

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