Elfdart wrote:If these are fakes, it wouldn't be a first for the Republicans.
And if these are fakes it wouldn't be the first time that CBS got taken.
WSJ Editorial wrote:"60 Minutes" may have a sterling reputation in journalism, but it has been burned before by forged documents. In 1997 it broadcast a report alleging that U.S. Customs Service inspectors looked the other way as drugs crossed the Mexican border at San Diego. The story's prize exhibit was a memo from Rudy Comacho, head of the San Diego customs office, ordering that vehicles belonging to one trucking company should be given special leniency in crossing the border. The memo was given to "60 Minutes" by Mike Horner, a former customs inspector who had left the service five years earlier. When asked by CBS for additional proof, he sent another copy with an official stamp on it.
CBS did not interview Mr. Camacho for its story. "It was horrible for him," says Bill Anthony, at the time head of public affairs for the Customs Service. "For 18 months, internal affairs and the Secret Service had him under a cloud while they established that Horner had forged the document out of bitterness over how he'd been treated." In 2000, Mr. Horner admitted he forged the memo "for media exposure" and was sentenced to 10 months in federal prison. "Mr. Camacho's reputation was tarnished significantly," Judge Judith Keep noted.
Mr. Camacho sued CBS and eventually settled for an undisclosed sum. In 1999 Leslie Stahl read an apology on the air: "We have concluded we were deceived, and ultimately, so were you, the viewers."
I personally believe these are fakes. I started to come to that opinion as I was typing the May 4 memeorandum for the comparison Durandal put up on page 2 of this thread and came upon PO Box
34567.
I expected CBS to come out with their experts to either verify or discredit the documents. But on Friday, they basically said, "They're authentic because we say so". They stated that they did not have or work from the originals, only photocopies, and the handwriting expert they brought used to verify Killian's signature is previously on record stating:
Marcel Matley wrote:''Do not passively accept a copy as the sole basis of a case. Every copy, intentionally or unintentionally, is in some way false to the original. In fact, modern copiers and computer printers are so good that they permit easy fabrication of quality forgeries.''
The memos put the slam in the dunk of the 60 Minutes piece last Wednesday. It connected all the dots and verified what people have been
trying for years to prove about Bush's Guard service. Without them, there are only blank spaces in the official record; the memos left no wiggle room for Bush. Without the memos, Rather had no story over what every other news orgaization was going to put out.
For me, the thread isn't about Bush's service record (the DoD files should be enough to at least raise your eybrows in question) but whether CBS put out documents of questionable veracity which apparently fell from the sky into their laps despite people seacrching for years for this smoking gun without properly vetting them.
As for burden of proof, how can anyone attempting to verify/discredit the memos do so when the originals are not, and apparently will not be, made available, even to CBS. Has CBS met the burden of proof?
As Wong feared, the debate over the memos has eclipsed the debate on Bush's guard service. And for the tin-foilers, adding Rove to the mix helps how?