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Local Voices

Flynn's Battle with Media Reminder of Importance of Watchdog Journalism

The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reports that Police Chief Ed Flynn will meet with the Common Council’s Public Safety Committee to discuss the much-debated crime data. This comes after a very public dispute between Flynn and the paper over its reporting of misclassifications of more than 500 serious assaults.

The crime data is not the only area of contention between Flynn and the paper. He has also taken issue with their coverage of the way his officers handled the investigation of teenager Darius Simmons’ shooting.

Flynn had a prickly dispute with a Journal Sentinel reporter that was captured on camera. He then turned to a friendly venue to vent his frustrations. Speaking with conservative radio host Charlie Sykes, not exactly a supporter of the “mainstream media,” Chief Flynn went on a bit of a tirade.

"I believe there is an effort to mislead the public about crime in this city, but it's not us,” Flynn said. “It's the Journal Sentinel.” He added, "They (The Journal Sentinel) are doing everything they can to misrepresent the work of this police department to its community."

His anger is not surprising and Flynn is hardly the first prominent city official to spar with the media. It is safe to say that Milwaukee County Sheriff David Clarke is no fan of the Journal Sentinel.

An acrimonious relationship with the media is not limited to law enforcement. Milwaukee Public Schools has not always been pleased with its media coverage. In fact Flynn and MPS probably see eye-to-eye when it comes to complaints regarding media coverage of their respective institutions. It feels like only negative stories receive any attention.

There are some who believe the Journal Sentinel is unfairly attacking Flynn. Urban Milwaukee’s Bruce Murphy penned a piece earlier this week titled "The War Against Chief Flynn." He writes that “the newspaper has lost all perspective on Flynn, and is engaged in gotcha journalism that’s intended to undermine him.”

The Journal Sentinel claims it is serving a vital function as a community watchdog when reporting on issues such as crime data errors. They are right. Its readers can make up their own minds regarding the seriousness of misclassified data and crime rates. They can decide whether or not the police were insensitive while investigating the Simmons shooting.

What’s important is having media outlets that scrutinize powerful institutions. Think about what New Orleans is going through at the moment. Their venerable newspaper, the Times-Picayune, cut one-third of its staff and will limit printing to three days per week. In 2006 it received two Pulitzer Prizes for its reporting on Hurricane Katrina, for public service and breaking news coverage. Going forward will it be possible for them to continue serving as a vigorous community watchdog? If they are unable to, who will fill the void?

No one is ever going to be completely happy with any media outlet’s reporting. No matter how uncomfortable it makes Flynn or Clarke or MPS, the local media needs to ask tough questions, investigate contentious issues, and not worry about their popularity. In fact, when angry rhetoric is heaved in their direction, it probably means they are doing something right.

Denise Konkol

9:15 pm on Thursday, June 21, 2012

Flynn isn't upset that the numbers were reported. What was missing was context. Over-reporting wasn't part of the story. I tend to side with Flynn on this one. The tone of the story was that MPD was trying to hide something, which does sell newspapers v. "MPD is making mistakes in reports" What my take away from this issue is that journalists should report the whole of a story as much as possible.

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Greg

10:45 pm on Thursday, June 21, 2012

I think the last paragraph says it best. The Chief got his hand slapped for speeding, he should feel lucky he did not get a ticket. Maybe he will watch his speed for a while. Welcome to our world. I think the Chief does a good job and he will easily get past this. I hope Barrett gives him some tools to help fix the problem.

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Dolf

7:51 am on Friday, June 22, 2012

I would trust Chief Flynn over the JS reporters any day of the week......

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Greg

2:30 pm on Friday, June 22, 2012

Trust who you want, but in the end the department record keeping is a mess and Flynn is responsible. He has know it was a mess for several years and he failed to correct the issues. I really don't think that there was any cooking of the books, but the Chief is far from being blameless. If he followed his broken windows policy for running his department, he would not have this problem.

Phil

7:53 am on Friday, June 22, 2012

The Journal is seeking headlines and sales.......what Chief of Police ever looks to be part of the headlines?

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jack ryan

3:58 pm on Saturday, June 23, 2012

How many crimes happen if these types of numbers will not have much effect.

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David Price

2:23 pm on Tuesday, June 26, 2012

Crime in the city is absolutely getting worse. In the last two weeks I know three people who have been mugged downtown. All three have said that when reporting it to the police, the officers have outright stated, "We are not likely to catch them." I hear these kind of comments all too often from the police. I was also recently hit by a women driving a stolen car and they told me the same thing. Its like MPD have just given up on catching real criminals and just want to generate revenue from petty tickets.

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