Last week I doubted that the press would be too hard on themselves over their reporting of the Haut de la Garenne affair. Here's Richard Webster:

Perhaps the most fascinating and telling feature of the coverage of the Haut de la Garenne story in today's Sunday papers is just how little of it there is. The revelation last week that one of the biggest child protection stories in the history of the British media was based on the delusions and confusions of a senior police officer was extraordinary.

Given that journalists on both broadsheet and tabloid newspapers had, week after week, accepted unquestioningly the pronouncements of Lenny Harper, and continued to do so even after evidence that he had misled journalists had been placed squarely in the public domain, one might have expected a little soul-searching and and even a little self-criticism from some of our more reflective journalists. Yet, unless I have missed something, this is almost entirely absent from today's papers….

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One response to “The Delusions and Confusions of a Senior Police Officer”

  1. Alan Sparrow Avatar
    Alan Sparrow

    As I have expressed elsewhere … This story is, after all,just about buttercups and bunnies and teeny-weeny bits of imagination … Haut de la Garenne was a paradise for kids with angels in charge, just as we all know the moon is, after all, entirely made of cheese!

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