Facts lost in the feeding frenzy
Matthew Engel lends his expert eye
Matthew Engel
08-May-2007
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It was a letter-writer to the Daily Star, of all
papers, who summed it up best. "The story
that's unfolded in the Daily Star has been almost
unbelievable," wrote S. Norton of Birmingham.
That letter appeared nine days after Bob
Woolmer was found dead, and four days after
the Star had reported: "Woolmer's murder has
all the hallmarks of an underworld 'hit'. Police
sources say the strangling, coupled with the
administration of snake venom, is the style of a
Yardie hired killer. He would have been paid by
the angry, match-fixing Mafia overlords Bob was
threatening to expose."
Well, perhaps. But the story that unfolded in
the media - not just in the Daily Star, not just in
Britain - was indeed unbelievable.
I am writing this column three weeks
after it happened. There is currently only one
undisputed fact: the simple one, wretched
enough in itself, that Bob Woolmer has died.
Everything else, including the supposed
certainty that he was murdered, is now being
questioned.
Pending
further developments,
this may not be turning
into a triumph for the
Jamaican police and their
British front man, Mark
Shields. It has certainly
not been a triumph for the
international press.
Most murders, whether in Britain, Jamaica
or anywhere else, are squalid little affairs. The
police soon have a fair idea whodunnit and why
- whether it is a gangland feud or an emotional
tangle. If the latter, an arrest, or at least a
warrant, may follow quickly. And at that point,
in Britain anyway, the press are gagged by law.
Such cases rarely gain more than local attention.
This was different. It was a sensational case,
with global resonance (even the New York Times
and Le Monde got stuck in). And almost every
aspect of it was baffling.
Inevitably, the media descended on the
Jamaica Pegasus, a claustrophobic place at the
best of times, since the streets of Kingston are
famously uninviting. And the reporters were
effectively trapped inside because that's where
the action was. Shields was there, and all his
investigators. It was also the site of all the press
conferences.
The first task of a reporter in that situation
is "Don't miss the story". If a well-known
cricketer had been led across the foyer in
handcuffs, your career would not benefit if you
were on your balcony reading a book. But the
story was elusive, making the atmosphere tense
and febrile.
The hacks could only hang around,
talking, speculating, theorising. And guessing.
The second task is to do better than just
keeping up, by beating the opposition to extra
angles. The pressure to do this depends on the
newspaper. But that's how guesses mutate into
newspaper "facts". According to a huge splash
headline in the Daily Telegraph on March 24:
"Cricket coach was poisoned and strangled,
police believe."
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"Police believe food or alcohol delivered
to Mr Woolmer's hotel room in Jamaica after
Pakistan's shock World Cup exit might have
been poisoned to incapacitate him before he was
killed," the story went on. Other papers did not
follow up this angle because, so far as it can be
discerned, the police did not believe this.
Maybe he was poisoned and strangled. But
my understanding is that Shields was asked
whether the police would check the possibility
that Woolmer's food might have been poisoned.
Of course, he said. What else could he say? "Nah,
we won't bother."
Was it a possibility? Of course, it was
a possibility. Then, at
different stages of the
newspaper production, the
story gets, as we say
in the trade, "tickled up".
Front page headlines are
no place for nuances, even
in once old-fashioned
broadsheets.
That's just an example. There are many more:
"Enhanced CCTV footage in the Bob Woolmer
murder case has identified people in the vicinity
of his room on the night he was killed." - Daily
Mirror, March 29.
"Enhanced CCTV footage in the Bob Woolmer
has revealed nothing new, police said last night."
- Daily Mirror, March 29. Different strokes for
different editions.
There was the strange case of the three
Pakistanis: "Three fans wanted over coach
killing" (Daily Telegraph, though the one in
Sydney this time, March 28). No, they weren't
(Birmingham Post, March 28).
And the even stranger case of the 11
Pakistanis: "Players didn't kill the coach" (Sydney
Telegraph again, March 27). They might have
done, you know, said The Times of India, gleefully
rubbing salt in their neighbours' wounds. "The
Jamaica police made it amply clear that it was
not giving the team a clean chit in the Bob
Woolmer murder case." (same date)
And so on. It was a horrendous time for the
Woolmer family, a dreadful one for cricket. And
hardly journalism's finest hour, either.
Matthew Engel is editor of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 2007