Many posts have discussed myths and misinformation.
Within 24 hours of the Bourbon Street terror attack, reporters pieced together a relatively complete picture of the suspect. But a key early bit of misreporting confused the public – and possibly the president-elect. It's a cautionary tale for everyone in the news industry as the new year begins.
Just after 10 a.m. Wednesday, Fox News reported that the suspect's truck crossed the U.S. border in Eagle Pass, Texas "two days ago." Some of Fox's coverage explicitly said "the suspect" drove across the border, leading Fox viewers to believe that a foreigner might be responsible for the deadly carnage.
Evidently, Fox was misinformed by anonymous sources. The network walked it back within two hours and said the truck was in Eagle Pass nearly two months ago, not two days ago. And more importantly, the truck was being driven by someone else at the time, so the detail about the border was completely irrelevant and misleading.
But the damage was already done. President-elect Donald Trump, seemingly misinformed by Fox, issued a statement about "criminals coming in" from other countries. "Biden's parting gift to America — migrant terrorists," Donald Trump Jr. wrote, sharing the Fox claim. "Shut the border down!!!" Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene exclaimed.
The president-elect ironically used the New Orleans attack to say that he was right and the "Fake News Media" was wrong about the threat posed by illegal immigration. If he had waited a couple hours to react, he would have learned that the suspect was a U.S. citizen and Army veteran.
"Some Republicans continued to beat the border drum well after Fox News retracted its initial report," The Daily Beast's Josh Fiallo wrote last night. This morning I'm still seeing people on social media share the misinfo.
A couple of takeaways: One, it's incredibly difficult to claw back a bogus claim that people want to believe. And two, in a repeat of 2017-2020, it's going to be crucial for reporters to scrutinize Trump's sources of information, since his favorite sources have so often misled him in the past.
Many posts have discussed myths and misinformation.
Breaking News Handbook, Terrorism Edition: