Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Former Miller aide feels guilt over girls' 10 years in captivity




Scott MacFarlane, a former press secretary for Congresswoman Candy Miller, is a veteran journalist who covered the initial story of the missing girls in Cleveland who were discovered alive after a decade of being held captive.
A TV reporter, MacFarlane wrote an interesting piece today for the Dayton Daily News in which he expresses a journalist’s guilt, wondering if he could have done more in his reporting to help uncover the girls’ whereabouts.

Reflecting on a 3 a.m. moment in which he awoke to a wave of second-guessing, the Washington-based Cox News reporter wrote this:
“Did I once walk past that westside Cleveland house from which the girls were rescued?
“Did I walk past it while canvassing the neighborhood in April 2004, seeking tips and reaction from neighbors, while reporting the original disappearance?

“Yup. It’s spooky how close this alleged “house of hell” sits to the homes in which these girls were raised and in which their families still reside. Same neighborhood. Same community. Did we follow police search dogs down that very street? Did we follow one of the many candlelight vigils down that very street?
“At 3 a.m., I wondered: could the girls hear the police cars outside between 2004 and 2013? Could the girls hear the reporters knocking on doors? Did they hear our live broadcasts?”

You can read more here.

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