Anonymous ID: 1fa6d8 Dec. 24, 2018, 8:23 a.m. No.4451461   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1528 >>1535 >>1544 >>1941 >>2019 >>2146

==Brett McGurk

Gina Chon

 

A Wall Street Journal reporter who had an affair with an American official she was covering in Iraq resigned from the newspaper Tuesday, a week after racy e-mails disclosing the relationship surfaced.

 

The newspaper said the reporter also shared “certain unpublished news articles” with the official in violation of company policy.

 

Gina Chon, who had covered Iraq for the Journal, quit under pressure after the disclosure of her relationship with Brett McGurk while both lived in Baghdad in 2008. McGurk, who was on the National Security Council staff during the Bush administration, is President Obama’s nominee to be ambassador to Iraq.

 

McGurk and Chon apparently were married to others at the time that they struck up a relationship; they obtained divorces and recently married.

 

Chon may be the highest-profile journalist to lose her job over an intimate relationship with a source, but she’s not the first. Although it rarely captures headlines, reporters “get involved with sources fairly often,” said Kelly McBride, an ethics specialist for the Poynter Institute, a Florida-based journalism education organization.

 

McBride said she receives “five to 10” calls from news organizations every year seeking advice on how to deal with journalists who are having relationships with people they’re covering.

 

The situations have ranged from a newspaper political reporter involved with a county chairman to a health reporter who was having a relationship with the public-relations executive of a local hospital. “It happens all the time, because people fall in love,” McBride said.

Chon’s mistake appears to have been that she hid her relationship with McGurk from her bosses at the Journal.

 

The newspaper said in a statement Tuesday that Chon “agreed to resign” after she “entered into a personal relationship with Mr. McGurk, which she failed to disclose to her editor.” It said it found no evidence that her work was negatively affected by her affair.

 

The paper declined to say what Chon may have disclosed to McGurk. It’s also not clear that McGurk disclosed any sensitive information to Chon.

 

News organizations typically discourage personal relationships with sources and will usually reassign journalists who are romantically involved with someone they cover.

 

The idea is to avoid relationships that could compromise a reporter’s judgment or give the appearance of playing favorites, said John K. Hartman, a professor of journalism at Central Michigan University. “Serious journalists know that it is imperative to avoid any conflict of interest and any situation that might taint their reporting perspective,” he said. Sometimes, however, reporters “can take cozying up to sources too far.”

 

https://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/gina-chon-wsj-reporter-resigns-after-admitting-affair-with-us-official/2012/06/12/gJQAxQBYYV_story.html?noredirect=on&utm_term=.448a7cf86173

 

https://www.reuters.com/journalists/gina-chon

Anonymous ID: 1fa6d8 Dec. 24, 2018, 8:33 a.m. No.4451535   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1566 >>1574 >>1740 >>1941 >>2019 >>2146

>>4451461

 

Hillary Blocked McGurk Probe

 

Top State Department staff under Hillary Clinton allegedly blocked an investigation into the president's nominee for ambassador to Iraq.

 

The ambassador-designate, Brett McGurk, was accused of engaging in inappropriate behavior with a reporter from the Wall Street Journal and funneling her information he was not authorized to disclose.

 

McGurk withdrew his name from consideration for the ambassadorship in the face of a growing scandal over emails that revealed his extra-marital affair with the reporter, Gina Chon. His relationship with the journalist prompted concerns among Republican lawmakers, although the extent of the internal cover-up of his conduct was not then known.

McGurk is presently one of President Obama's key advisers on the Islamic State, having survived the scandal in 2012 with the help of higher-ups in the Bureau of Diplomatic Security.

 

An inspector general memo dated October 23, 2012 and obtained by the Washington Examiner alleges Cheryl Mills, chief of staff to then-Secretary Clinton, prevented investigators in that bureau from speaking with McGurk.

 

"[The special investigations division] never interviewed McGurk, allegedly because Cheryl Mills from the Secretary's office interceded. Without that interview, [special investigations division] has been unable to close the case," the memo said.

 

"Email from Mills reportedly shows her agreeing to a particular course of action for the case, but then reneging and advising McGurk to withdraw his name from consideration for the ambassadorship," the document continued.

 

A former official with the State Department's office of inspector general said Mills was briefed about the situation "as a courtesy" by staff in the bureau of diplomatic security. The former official requested anonymity to speak candidly.

 

https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/records-suggest-hillary-chief-of-staff-blocked-probe-of-ambassador-nominee