[corp-focus] Stossell Tries to Scam His Public

Robert Weissman rob@essential.org
Wed, 07 Apr 2004 14:03:18 -0400


Stossell Tries to Scam His Public
By Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

In a world where young Americans are being hunted down, burned to death,
and hung from bridges in faraway lands, a story of a network reporter
trying to weasel out of something he said many years ago is admittedly
no big deal.

But the reporter in question has a network television show that
influences millions of Americans on the issue he cares about deeply --
protecting and preserving corporate power in America. And he has a book
on the New York Times bestseller list defending his thesis.

And he questions whether he said what we said he said.

So, hear us out.

On February 27, 2004, the LA Weekly published a letter from ABC News
correspondent John Stossel questioning the accuracy of a 1996 story we
ran about a speech Stossel gave to the Federalist Society in Washington, D.=
C.

At the time, we reported that Stossel, who started his television career
as a consumer reporter and now spends his time attacking government and
trial lawyers as co-host of ABC's 20/20, was asked during the
question-and-answer period after his 1996 speech:

"If you believe that consumer reporting works, and is a better regulator
than regulation or lawsuits, why did you stop doing it?"

"I got sick of it," Stossel responded. "I also now make so much money I
just lost interest in saving a buck on a can of peas. Twenty years was
enough. But mainly, I came to realize that the government was doing far
more harm to people than business and I ought to be reporting on that.
Nobody else was."

The LA Weekly ran a story earlier this year about a book party in Los
Angeles for Stossel and his new best-selling book, Give Me a Break: How
I Exposed Hucksters, Cheats, and Scam Artists and Became the Scourge of
the Liberal Media (HarperCollins, 2004). LA Weekly's Greg Goldin,
relying on our story, reported that "Years ago, when he quit exposing
consumer rip-offs, he (Stossel) told a Federalist Society audience, 'I
got sick of it. I also now make so much money, I just lost interest in
saving a buck on a can of peas.'"

Stossel wrote a letter to the LA Weekly arguing that Goldin "used a
quote that has been attributed to me over the years that I don't recall
ever uttering."

Stossel wrote: "The alleged source of that quote was a 1996 speech I
gave to the Federalist Society in which I supposedly said that I stopped
consumer reporting because 'I got sick of it. =85 I also now make so much
money, I just lost interest in saving a buck on a can of peas.' That
doesn't sound like anything I've said and certainly doesn't reflect the
reasons I shifted my focus from consumer reporting to government
programs and lawyers (I shifted because I concluded they do more harm to
consumers than business). The transcript of this speech that the
Federalist Society supplied does not include the quote. "

We attended Stossel's speech to the Federalist Society in September
1996. We taped his speech and made a transcript.

We reported the speech.

After reading Stossel's letter to the LA Weekly, we started digging
around the office.

And lo and behold, we found the transcript of the speech.

And then, unbelievably, in a stroke of sheer luck, we found a copy of
the seven-year-old tape of the speech.

So, John, if you would like us to refresh your recollection, give us a
call and we'll play the "can of peas" segment for you.

We've always wondered why you moved from being an aggressive consumer
reporter to attacking those who seek to crack down on corporate crime.
You now say it had nothing to do with money.

Back in 1996, the truth slipped out.

We have it on tape.



Russell Mokhiber is editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Corporate Crime
Reporter, http://www.corporatecrimereporter.com. Robert Weissman is
editor of the Washington, D.C.-based Multinational Monitor,
http://www.multinationalmonitor.org. They are co-authors of Corporate
Predators: The Hunt for MegaProfits and the Attack on Democracy (Monroe,
Maine: Common Courage Press; http://www.corporatepredators.org).

(c) Russell Mokhiber and Robert Weissman

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