[Vision2020] Jay Shelledy story

Greg Burton gburton@sltrib.com
Thu, 01 May 2003 17:45:34 -0600


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Here is the AP's version

URGENT|
Tribune editor resigns after reporters were fired for selling info to
tabloid|
Eds: Combines pvs; SUBS 18th graf to restore first reference to
Butterfield; will be LED|
|By C.G. WALLACE|
|Associated Press Writer|
 SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Salt Lake Tribune editor James E. Shelledy resigned
Thursday, two days after two of his reporters were dismissed for lying
about the sale of information to the National Enquirer in the Elizabeth
Smart case.
 Tribune publisher Dean Singleton, who also is vice chairman and chief
executive officer of the newspaper’s owner, MediaNews Group Inc., announced
Shelledy’s resignation after meeting with the Tribune staff Thursday
afternoon.
 Shelledy will remain with MediaNews Group, but it wasn’t immediately clear
where he was going. Bill Long, corporate editor for MediaNews, was
appointed interim editor.
 ‘‘I don’t think the public image was that imperiled. The big shock was in
the newsroom,’’ Singleton told The Associated Press moments after the
announcement.
 Shelledy issued a short written statement after Thursday’s meeting.
 ‘‘It has become clear to me and the publisher that it will take a new
editor to bring an end to the newsroom contention over what will forever be
known as the Enquirer affair,’’ the statement said. ‘‘I am tired; we both
see needs for new direction.’’
 Singleton was in Salt Lake City on Wednesday and Thursday to meet with
staffers who feared the reporters’ involvement with the tabloid — and
Shelledy’s handling of the case — had done serious damage to the Tribune’s
credibility.
 Michael Vigh and Kevin Cantera sold information about Elizabeth’s
abduction case to a supermarket tabloid for a story that has since been
retracted.
 Shelledy said he fired Vigh and Cantera, who were each paid $10,000,
because they misled him about the level of their involvement with the
tabloid.
 While the reporters told Shelledy they had given the tabloid merely a
‘‘roadmap’’ of the investigation, Shelledy later said the reporters
provided a much larger part of the story.
 Vigh and Cantera were paid for their help on a July 2 Enquirer story
headlined ‘‘Utah Cops: Secret Diary Exposes Family Sex Ring.’’ The story
has been retracted as part of a settlement between the Smart family and the
tabloid.
 Vigh and Cantera, the lead reporters on the Smart kidnapping, didn’t tell
Shelledy of their dealings with the Enquirer until last week, when they
offered to resign. He refused their resignations, but put them on a year’s
probation and forbade them from doing any freelance work. The two also were
pulled off coverage of the Smart case.
 The tabloid article was published about a month after Elizabeth, then 14,
was abducted at knifepoint from her bedroom. She was found March 12 in a
Salt Lake suburb with two people now charged with kidnapping her.
 Shelledy wrote about his reporters’ involvement with the Florida-based
Enquirer in his weekly column Sunday. He said Vigh and Cantera relayed
rumors and ‘‘assumed the Enquirer played by mainstream rules and would
consider as hearsay that which could not be confirmed, on or off the
record, through police sources.’’
 In the column, which was written before Shelledy learned of the reporters’
deeper involvement, he wrote that the reporters’ behavior was neither
‘‘illegal nor unethical.’’ He likened the early version of events as akin
to being caught drinking from a toilet. ‘‘Dumb, distasteful, and when
observed, embarrassing.’’
 But on Monday, the Enquirer sent a letter to the Tribune demanding a
retraction for the column, saying Shelledy misrepresented how the tabloid
got the story and wrongly implied the Tribune reporters had merely provided
unsubstantiated rumors.
 The Enquirer reporter who brokered the deal with Vigh and Cantera played
the AP two brief portions of a telephone conversation with Cantera taped
without the reporter’s knowledge the day after the three agreed to work
together.
 In one of the snippets, Alan Butterfield is heard asking Cantera to make
sure the Tribune did not scoop the Enquirer on the Smart details. Cantera
responded by saying he would push for the Tribune to publish the story, but
that the newspaper probably would reject it. ‘‘My editors are a different
story. They’re real lightweights sometimes,’’ he said.
 In the other taped snippet, Butterfield asked, ‘‘Everything you told me
last night, you’re solid on?’’
 ‘‘Oh yeah,’’ Cantera answered.
 Shelledy said he decided to fire the reporters after he was told about the
tape by the Enquirer and confronted Cantera. ‘‘He said that he probably
hadn’t come clean on everything,’’ Shelledy said.
 But anger lingered among Tribune reporters over the paper’s handling of
the case. Singleton said the episode was the worst of his newspaper career.

 Vigh and Cantera are looking for work and will not appeal their firings,
their attorney LeGrand Curtis said Wednesday. Curtis said he knew of no
pending legal actions against the two.
 ‘‘It’s all a very bad incident that everyone is trying to recover from,’’
Curtis said.
 Shelledy started at The Salt Lake Tribune in 1990 after five years as
publisher at the Idahonian, now The Moscow-Pullman Daily News. Prior to
that, he was executive editor of the Lewiston Morning Tribune in Lewiston,
Idaho.
 He had been an editor and reporter at that paper before being promoted. He
attended Gonzaga College in Spokane, and worked for The Spokesman-Review
and The Associated Press in the early 1970s.




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