Why Didn’t Syracuse Cops Get the Damning Bernie Fine Tape?
It’s a crap day in the newsroom when a county prosecutor stands up and accuses your news outfit of enabling a child molester to roam free. That’s pretty much where Onandaga County, N.Y., District Attorney William Fitzpatrick came down on the handling of a taped 2002 conversation between Bobby Davis and the wife of Syracuse hoops coach Bernie Fine, whom Davis alleged had molested him as a boy. If his office had the tape, he said, “We would have known flat out the kid was telling the truth.”
The Associated Press jumped in with the ethical critique of the Syracuse Post-Standard and of ESPN, both of which had the recording of Davis’ conversation with Laurie Fine, and neither of which apparently shared it with police. In one regard, this isn’t grossly surprising: As independent observers and investigators, journalists are obliged foremost to publish stories based on the evidence they gather. Neither the Post-Standard nor Outside the Lines felt the evidence was strong enough to run with a story, so it’s plausible that they also wouldn’t consider the evidence strong enough for police action.
In hindsight, after a second accuser came forward separately to accuse Bernie Fine of crimes similar to those of Davis, the tape and the decision not to share it both look more damning. But to once again give the reporters the benefit of the doubt, most of the really juicy takeaway lines from it are sufficiently vague enough to suggest something other than child abuse. Put it this way: It would be hard to get a jury to convict on the basis of the contents of that conversation.
Still there’s a strong what the hell? quality to the lack of communication between the people with the evidence (Davis, the media) and the people who say they would have done something with it (cops, prosecutors). The conclusions reached by a couple of cops-beat experts I contacted last week were along the same lines: The media didn’t obviously botch this, but the fact that the cops didn’t know of the tape is itself unusual and may point to a counterproductive jealousy in guarding their investigations.
“There may be times when it is appropriate for journalists to suggest to law enforcement that they investigate something that a journalist has turned up,” Ted Gest, the president of Criminal Justice Journalists, a professional association, told me by email. “This should be done not as a matter of course but in extreme or unusual cases where journalists have exhausted their resources.”
Preventing a certain homicide, for instance, would rise to the level of urgency Gest is suggesting. In the Fine case, the contents of the tape should figure into the calculus, Gest said. If it wasn’t clear enough that the conversation with Laurie Fine proved, rather than merely implied, a pattern or even an instance of sexual abuse, then it’s not the smoking gun that it now appears. The mud-slinging circus that is any typical 24-hour period of cable television might suggest otherwise, but most reporters really do take care around not publishing uncorroborated single sources who allege sexual misdeeds against influential people. He also raised the question, perhaps unanswerable, of whether Fine’s status in Syracuse raises the threshold of evidence in this story (I think it just might; considered cynically, his presumed wealth and connection to a deep-pockets institution make the incentive for lawsuits higher for someone claiming to be a victim).
Then there’s Eric Ferkenhoff, who covered cops and criminal justice for different outlets in Chicago, including the Tribune, for eight years; he now teaches courses on enterprise and projects and helps out with investigative classes at Medill, Northwestern’s j-school. Like Gest, he didn’t want to speculate too far on the Post-Standard and ESPN decisions — “it’s a case-by-case call,” he said — but said a typical journalistic investigation that overlaps with a police matter is more porous than most readers might expect. In vetting any charges against a subject (Davis’s against Fine, e.g.) Ferkenhoff’s practice was always to run his evidence past the officers and detectives who might know anything about the case. The most natural reason not to take this route, he said, would be a reporters’ impulse to safeguard his findings.
“It’s not a matter of seeing whether or not the cops can get them,” Ferkenhoff said in a phone interview. “It’s ‘Let’s see what the cops have on this.’ The cops’ information may well buttress our investigation. There’s still a jealousy and selfishness involved in doing journalism in that way, but it’s a more complete investigation. I may end up tipping off the cops, but that’s not my problem anymore. My job in calling the cops is to vet someone making very serious allegations against someone.”
One instance he recalled when a news outlet did fork over the tape: The Sun-Times forwarding a video that arrived in an envelope in 2002 that depicted R. Kelly having crazy sex with a minor. But then, the Sun-Times also had the scoop, and handing over the key piece of evidence only propelled the story. Self-interest and public interest dovetailed quite neatly there. Not so much in Syracuse.
“Vet your own information, and if the authorities then drop the ball, that’s not your fault,” Ferkenhoff said. “When you circle a story completely and you vet it completely, by nature or even by accident the right people end up finding out things.”
Erik Wemple over at the Washington Post also explored this line of journo-fuzz info-swapping as he lauded ESPN (it does happen!) for its handling of the Fine story. “I say it’s a reporting breakdown,” Wemple wrote. “One job of crime reporters is to ask the authorities about evidence — and that’s how the media ‘shares’ information with the police. Why didn’t ESPN say, ‘Hey cops, what do you think of that Bobby Davis tape?’ ESPN’s Vince Doria insists there was nothing to be gained in pursuing that angle.” (The rest of the Wemple piece is a pretty solid read. He also finds that Fitzpatrick’s messenger-bashing is “grandstanding and overreaching,” another compliment to ESPN and perhaps to Doria for taking Wemple’s call.)
Maybe it was the right call by Doria not to tip off the cops to the tape. And maybe the Post-Standard also safeguarded the tape’s existence such that no one in law enforcement knew of it. But there’s also an excellent possibility that some cop in Syracuse knew about it and really didn’t care much until it exploded into a national story. By the time it was made, after all, Davis had already been turned away by the Syracuse Police once. (Fitzpatrick, to be fair, also seemed to ream the cops for not doing more at the time.) The media’s taking the heat for this one, and perhaps rightfully. Say what you want about journalistic independence and its fragility, most of us would do more to stop a possible child molester.
Still there’s a possibility that the authorities in Syracuse were aware of the tape and didn’t move on it. The reporters may not have followed the investigation through to its hilt, but they also shouldn’t have to do the legwork for the law. There’s already a group of public servants designated for that job, and they had already looked at the case and passed.

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36 Responses to “Why Didn’t Syracuse Cops Get the Damning Bernie Fine Tape?”
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December 14th, 2011 at 4:00 PM
The first question should be Why didn’t Bobby Davis give it to the cops first?
December 14th, 2011 at 4:04 PM
hm, not giving the tape to the cops, first, hiring gloria allred as your liar, waiting conveniently until you were past the statue of limitations to make the claims and then sending it to media outlets… nothing seedy there.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:05 PM
If you are in possession of potentially incriminating evidence, are you not required to bring it to the authorities?
Assuming that you will not be incriminating yourself.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:05 PM
whoops, lawyer
December 14th, 2011 at 4:08 PM
hiring gloria allred as your liar
I thought she only defended vag.
waiting conveniently until you were past the statue of limitations
I’m not going to pretend to know what they allegedly went though and why they waited.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:09 PM
through
December 14th, 2011 at 4:09 PM
Some one needs to put Eifling on a word count
December 14th, 2011 at 4:10 PM
maybe they saw that it was happening somewhere else (Penn State) and decided to come forward then..
December 14th, 2011 at 4:11 PM
i’m less in the “benefit of doubt” camp now that they’ve hired Gloria Allred as their lawyer.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:11 PM
Yeah, then he’d be able to submit these posts in time for them to be more relevant.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:12 PM
Giving the police the tape in 2002 wouldn’t change the fact that the statue of limitations had expired, even back then.
That’s why Davis went to the newspaper back then. He tried to go to the cops and they told him there wasn’t anything they could do because of the amount of time between the alleged crime and when he was reporting them was so long.
I believe Davis would have had to go to the police in the late 80s or early 90s for charges to have been brought against Fine.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:14 PM
In related news: I do not think the statute of limitations has run out on StaffDaddy and Huskerdawg…
December 14th, 2011 at 4:14 PM
I don’t care about this story anymore now that Allred is involved.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:15 PM
If someone hires Alred I automatically assume all they want is a paycheck.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:15 PM
Not a fan of GA either. She’s like Sharpton and Jesse Jackson for women. Finding injustice everywhere.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:15 PM
We’ll always have Paris
/wait, what?
December 14th, 2011 at 4:20 PM
All whores looking for attention and cash. The truth and justice matters not.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:21 PM
staffDaddy and HuskerDawg
SouvenirCity and Jeter
Vlad and Ballz
Coop and that one guy
who’s next?
December 14th, 2011 at 4:22 PM
that reminds me of the Chris Rock bit about how hiring Johnny Cochran makes you look guilty. I’d rather look greedy with a mil or two in my savings account than look financially indifferent while broke.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:22 PM
Spencer and Urban
December 14th, 2011 at 4:23 PM
Me and TJ Yates
December 14th, 2011 at 4:24 PM
Spencer and Urban
Sergio will be pissed!
December 14th, 2011 at 4:29 PM
Amazing. Want to go here.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:34 PM
Hernia and Rusty Hardin
December 14th, 2011 at 4:36 PM
Me and scripty’s mom.
Me and pkiguy’s wife.
I don’t even know what we’re talking about, but those are the correct answers.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:38 PM
CJ and Dustin Pedroia.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:40 PM
Dirt and Breesus…sure it looks like it’s all fussin’ and feudin’ but you can tell the love is there
December 14th, 2011 at 4:40 PM
This has potential. The Megan Fox cameo is funny.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:44 PM
Amazing. Want to go here.
There’s a place near my hometown where you can skate for 20+ miles on some fairly smooth ice. Not like that, but pretty good. Once the snow hits the best you can do is shovel out a small rink.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:44 PM
Mark Schlereth: Foot pounds per torque.
What a goddamn dumbass
December 14th, 2011 at 4:44 PM
WWOS and Atl_Badger
December 14th, 2011 at 4:45 PM
and on the side it is Dirt and WWoS
December 14th, 2011 at 4:45 PM
Try it with Joel Dreessen for a while and tell me how it feels.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:47 PM
This has potential. The Megan Fox cameo is funny.
If I didn’t know I would have thought that was Sandler.
December 14th, 2011 at 4:51 PM
Tebow and Tebow
December 14th, 2011 at 5:02 PM
engaged