NPR retracts ‘inaccurate’ story saying supreme court justice Samuel Alito retiring
Samuel Alito in Rome last year. A court spokesperson called NPR’s reporting ‘inaccurate’. Photograph: Vincenzo Livieri/ReutersView image in fullscreenSamuel Alito in Rome last year. A court spokesperson called NPR’s reporting ‘inaccurate’. Photograph: Vincenzo Livieri/ReutersNPRNPR retracts ‘inaccurate’ story saying supreme court justice Samuel Alito retiringStory from Nina Totenberg removed and replaced with editor’s note after journalist misheard announcement made by chief justice
The US public broadcasting organization National Public Radio (NPR) on Tuesday took the unusual step of formally retracting a major news story, after it published what seemed like a bombshell scoop that the supreme court justice Samuel Alito was retiring.
The story was written by Nina Totenberg, 82, one of the most prominent chroniclers of the supreme court in American media. NPR later explained that Totenberg had misheard a court announcement about upcoming retirements.
The nearly 1,200-word story was completely removed and replaced with the following editor’s note: “Earlier today we erroneously published a story saying that Supreme Court Justice Samuel Alito was retiring. He has not announced his retirement and we have retracted the story.”
The opening paragraph of the story cited a “court announcement” that Alito was retiring, but no announcement had been made at the time of publication.
Patricia McCabe, a spokesperson for the court, told NBC News that “NPR’s reporting regarding Justice Alito is inaccurate” and that “their reporting that there was any kind of court statement is inaccurate”.
On Tuesday afternoon, NPR’s top editor, Thomas Evans, chalked the errant publication up to a “misunderstanding”.
“Neither Justice Alito nor the Supreme Court Public Information Office has announced his retirement,” Evans said in the statement. “As soon as the error was realized, the story was retracted and removed from NPR’s website and an on-air correction was broadcast. We regret the error and any confusion this may have caused.”
Journalistic ethics expert Kelly McBride, who serves as NPR’s public editor, published a story on Tuesday afternoon clarifying what happened. The error stemmed from Totenberg mishearing an announcement made by Chief Justice John Roberts about upcoming retirements.
“NPR had the lengthy story about Alito’s retirement already written, because that’s what newsrooms do in anticipation of significant retirements and even deaths,” McBride wrote. “Totenberg spoke with both her intern, who was at the court with her, and NPR executive editor Krishnadev Calamur, and told them what she heard. Calamur surfaced the story that NPR had previously prepared for the day Alito did announce his retirement and published it.”
Totenberg appeared on NPR on Tuesday afternoon and called it a “rookie mistake”, saying: “This is on me, and only me.”
She also read from a letter that she sent to Alito apologizing for the error. “It was the worst professional mistake of my more than 50 years of journalism,” she wrote. “I could go on, but I don’t know what else to say, other than to say that I am so, so sorry.”
Original Headline
NPR retracts ‘inaccurate’ story saying supreme court justice Samuel Alito retiring