Tag Archives: Hartford Courant

Hartford Courant acknowledges plagiarism of recent articles, promises printed apology letter is original

It took two weeks, but the nation’s oldest paper is publicly acknowledging their repeated plagiarism of articles from rival papers. Nearly a week after they said they “discovered a mistake” in their editing process, the Hartford Courant is publishing an apology letter written by Richard Graziano, the paper’s CEO, president and editor, in today’s print edition.

The letter — the Courant swears this one was actually written by the credited author — reads, in brief:

After an extensive internal review, we have determined that over the last several weeks The Courant plagiarized the work of some of our competitors. This was not our intent, but it is in fact what happened. We are taking corrective action to prevent it from happening again. We have also disciplined the individuals involved.

According to a blog for former employees of the Courant, those disciplined include the content manager Jeff Levine, editor Naedine Hazell and four other members of the newspaper staff.

And though the actual nature of the discipline is unclear, at least the Courant hasn’t said they are laying off any of their newsroom staffers. Apparently, only real newspapers do that.

The sad case of the Hartford Courant: how the nation’s oldest paper became just another blog

It looks like online sites aren’t the only ones getting in trouble for news aggregation anymore. And what better paper to illustrate the decline of journalistic integrity than the Hartford Courant?

Earlier this month, the Courant fired their consumer columnist George Gombossy when he lambasted one of the paper’s key advertisers in an article, a decision that shed some light on the questionable editorial decisions carried out by the nation’s oldest paper.

But even more alarming is this: On August 22, James Smith, a former member of the Courant and currently executive editor of The Herald of New Britain and The Bristol Press, accused the Courant of plagiarizing stories from other local papers. In his scathing column highlighting the tactics of his former paper, he wrote:

Sometimes, and this is most troubling, our coverage will appear virtually word for word, but in a shorter version with no credit. That’s called plagiarism, a fireable offense in any newsroom, as egregious as pandering to advertisers.
The once mighty Courant has been reduced to copying from its smaller competition.

The blatant allegation is one usually reserved for blogs and sites like the Daily Beast, but in this case, the Courant sseems equally guilty of breaching journalistic ethics.

Don’t worry, though. The Courant did respond, even if they weren’t so quick to dismiss the heated charge.

After The Journal Inquirer, another Connecticut paper, issued an investigative report validating Smith’s claim, Jeffrey Levine, the Courant’s director of content wrote on August 29th, an entire week after Smith’s column appeared:

We discovered a mistake in our editing process when we take articles from our website to our print newspaper. We found that we inappropriately dropped the attribution or proper credit and in some cases credited ourselves with a byline to a Courant reporter.

Former Courant reporters were unimpressed. Said Paul Stern, who writes a blog for ex-staff members:

Our reading of the statement didn’t leave us with the impression the Courant plans to stop aggregating other papers’ stories.

But maybe the Courant isn’t that out of line. Many bigger papers such as the Seattle Times and the Miami Herald are teaming up with bloggers and small local papers to encompass more local news on their own pages without having to fund their own local reporters.

Of course, these papers know that attribution is a key part of an “overall aggregation strategy,” but Gawker needed some legitimate competition anyway.

On redesigned newspaper Web site, new media beats breaking news

CourantLike many Tribune-owned Web sites, the Hartford Courant’s online news site underwent a summer redesign. On June 28, Courant.com relaunched with a less-cluttered, photo-heavy homepage that featured tabbed access to major news items, user-friendly browsing tools and centrally located breaking news headlines.

But after its first full month, the change has led to decreased online readership. According to an August 15th Courant blog post, total page views had declined, though the number of unique views had increased by 40,000.

Despite these relatively depressing numbers, the author of the post was quick to offer an explanation:

Change in any publication almost always comes with an initial loss of readers, and the redesign of Courant.com appears to be no exception. Given that it’s summer, however, when readership drops off a little anyway, the first full month since the web site’s relaunch looks fairly promising.

The post also revealed the top five most-viewed pages:

1) Hartford Courant / news / Connecticut – Front … 269,878
2) The Day In Pictures …. 266,327
3) George David and Marie Douglas-David photos … 194,477
4) How To Spend $53,000 A Week Like Marie Douglas-David photos … 170,096
5) Joe Jackson: Omer Bhatti is Michael’s Secret Son … 105,768

The Courant may be the country’s oldest newspaper, but its online readers are apparently more captivated by pictures and photo essays on how to spend $53,000 like the estranged ex-wife of a multi-millionaire than breaking news.

Or at least they all want to know how to spend more money in a week than the newspaper can now hope to make in online advertising.