« Previous | Next »

star.gif The Chauncey Bailey Project

By Bruce B. Brugmann

Just as the Chauncey Bailey Project makes its presence known in Oakland and in the U.S. media,
I am off to Miami for an assembly of the InterAmerican Press Association (IAPA), the international free press association for the Americas.

For years, the hardy U.S. journalistic souls who are members of IAPA have helped do resolutions, go on free press missions throughout the Americas, and support impunity projects to investigate the murders of journalists and turn the evidence over to prosecutors and then push for successful prosecutions.

This year, for the first time, I will be pushing the IAPA for help on the deaths of two U.S. journalists who were killed in the line of duty. The first is Brad Will, the New York video journalist who filmed his own assassination last fall while filming violent demonstrations in Oaxaca province in Mexico. The second is Chauncey Bailey, the Oakland editor who was gunned down in August on his way to work at the Oakland Post by a man wearing a ski mask.

The good news is that an impressive array of journalists, news organizations, and journalism schools have come together to form the Chauncey Bailey Project and to take on the job of finishing his reporting on the suspicious activities of the Your Black Muslim Bakery. This coalition has already had some success. The San Francisco Chronicle was asked to join the project, but declined and said that it preferred to do its own reporting.
And so, for the last four days, anticipating the project's investigative reports, the Chronicle has rolled out extensive and detailed front page stories on the murder.

The investigative team plans to go further and deeper and research the activities of the Bey family empire, which operates the bakery, and their thuggish operations for the past two decades and the protection they have gotten from the Oakland political establishment. "This is a unique collaboration and we hope our work goes beyond Bailey's murder and reveals broader issues that impact the lives of Oakland's citizens," said Robert J. Rosenthal, editorial coordinator for the project and former managing editor of the Chronicle.

This amounts to an unprecedented collaboration among competing news organizations and promises to be the largest collective journalistic project since the Arizona Project was formed 31 years ago following the murder of Arizona Republic investigative reporter Don Bolles for his reporting on the tangled Arizona underworld.

The resulting collaboration and story led to the formation of the group called Investigative Reporters and Editors. But significantly, the Arizona Republic in Phoenix didn't run the story and a Tucson daily was the only daily in the state to run the story. The New Times, the local Phoenix alternative paper, ran the story, as did the Guardian in San Francisco. The story was widely run in other papers throughout the country.

This time around in Oakland, the hometown media stand fully and publicly behind the Bailey Project. "We cannot stand for a reporter to be murdered while working on behalf of the public," vowed Dori J. Maynard, president and CEO of the Robert C. Maynard Institute for Journalism Education in Oakland. "Chauncey's death is a threat to democracy, journalists will not be intimidated. This type of crime cast a chilling effect over our community. We will not be bullied. We have to prove that there is no gain, and hell to pay, when the very structure of society is challenged."

Moreover, Maynard said that the team would insure that "Chauncey did not die in vain."

Pete Wevurski, executive editor of the Oakland Tribune, said, "I'm happy that the Oakland Tribune, and our Bay Area News Group-East Bay partners the Contra Costa Times and San Jose Mercury News, are involved in this noble effort and extremely pleased that the Tribune has been able to take a lead role." Wevurski is also managing editor of BANG-EB. "Chauncey Bailey was a colleague and friend to many of us and we want to honor his work and our profession by picking up the standard that fell the morning he was assassinated. I'm extremely gratified by the numbers and caliber of journalists who have joined the coalition, and I'm astounded by the work they are turning in already.

"The project is essential to Oakland and essential to us as journalists who wish to emphasize the point that you can kill the messenger, but the message is still going to get through. Based on this alone, I believe this will be the most important work any of us have ever done and ever will do." Let me add, as an occasional critic of Dean Singleton, owner of the Media News Group, that this project may be the most important work that he or any of his papers have ever done or will do. I congratulate him for allowing his troops to plow forward on a tough story that everyone involved knows how high the stakes are.

The coalition's message is profound and dramatic: you can't kill a journalist, in the Bay Area, in California, in the United States, and get away with it. Because the best reporters and editors and news organizations in the area are going to go after you and see that the story is told and justice is done.

Journalists from the following organizations are working on the project:

Bay Area Black Journalists Association
Bay Area News Group
Center for Investigative Reporting
KGO-AM
KPIX-TV
KQED Public Radio
KTVU-TV
Maynard Institute for Journalism Education
National Association of Black Journalists
New America Media
New Voices in Independent Journalism
San Francisco State Journalism Department
San Francisco Bay Guardian
San Jose State University Journalism Department
Society of Professional Journalists, Northern California chapter
University of California, Berkeley; Graduate School of Journalism

I'll keep you posted from IAPA in Miami. Continue reading to learn more about IAPA. B3

Click here to read the Guardian's story on the Chauncey Bailey project.

IAPA General Assembly to evaluate disturbing status of press freedom in the Americas

The organization will also discuss a change in venue for its March 2008 meeting which was booked for Venezuela

MIAMI, Florida (October 8, 2007)—The Inter American Press Association (IAPA) will inaugurate its 63rd annual General Assembly in this city Friday and promises to place special focus on the review and discussion of the status of freedom of the press in the Americas during the last six months.

As the event gets underway, IAPA’s Executive Committee will also discuss its decision to change the venue for the March 2008 meeting scheduled to be held in Venezuela. After hotels in Caracas and Margarita Island said they had no vacancies for that time-period, the meeting was confirmed for Maracaibo, in the western state of Zulia.

Last week, however, the Host Committee, made up of Venezuelan newspapers belonging to the IAPA, informed that due to the prevailing situation in the South American country the hotel in Maracaibo had communicated that it was backing out of its offer to be the venue for the IAPA.

IAPA President Rafael Molina declared, “We regret, in the name of freedom of the press, democracy and the Venezuelan people, that they are closing the doors on us in such an inelegant and indirect manner” – a reference to the belief the hotels were being pressured in the same way as other privately-owned companies that do not go along with the policies of the central government.

Molina, editor of the Santo Domingo, Dominican Republic, newspaper El Día, who will chair the General Assembly, said that the Executive Committee will examine the matter in depth.

The event, which runs through October 16, will be attended by more than 500 newspaper editors and publishers from the Western Hemisphere who will discuss major topics concerning the press in the Americas such as the continued imprisonment of independent journalists in Cuba, concern over Venezuela’s closure on May 27 this year of Radio Caracas Televisión, and the murder of eight journalists and the disappearance of another two during the last six months.

The IAPA will also review some positive events that have strengthened press freedom in the same period. Among these are a law decriminalizing libel in Mexico, an Argentina Supreme Court ruling against the Neuquén provincial government for using placement of official advertising to discriminate against certain news media, a series of legislative bills in favor of access to public records in a number of countries, and the conviction by courts in Peru and Brazil of the masterminds behind the murders of journalists.

The IAPA General Assembly will also be attended by specially-invited guests, among them the president of Honduras, Manuel Zelaya, Florida Governor Charlie Crist, United States Assistant Secretary of State John Negroponte, the Commander of U.S. Southern Command, Admiral James Stavridis, and Congresswoman Ileana Ros-Lehtinen.

During the event, which will be held at Miami’s Inter-Continental Hotel, there will be a series of seminars on professional and technical topics, and a meeting of newspaper editors and publishers with Latin American journalism school deans.

The main program will also feature the presentation of the IAPA Grand Prize for Press Freedom to Marcel Granier, president of Radio Caracas Televisión.


InterAmerican Press Association • 1801 SW 3 Ave • Miami • FL • 33129

digg del.icio.usspheregoogle

Comments (1)

Hello:

I live in Atlanta, GA. Chauncey was a very good friend of mine. I love that you are keeping his story out there. He was such a great person who cared deeply about the community. I have a huge internet audience so let me know if I can be of any help in assisting you with keeping his memory alive.

Love for the people,

Cathy Harris, Speaker, Author, Consultant
Atlanta, GA
(800) 797-8663
www.angelspress.com

Post a comment



advertisement