The Telegram (St. John's)

Media in the crosshairs

Journalist­s struggle to keep online threats from escalating

- BY TAMARA LUSH

After a Florida radio station’s general manager told hosts they didn’t have to put an obnoxious repeat caller on the air a couple of months ago, the man stood on the sidewalk outside and vented his irritation with the station through a bullhorn.

Craig Kopp, manager of WMNF-FM in Tampa, said the guy left for a while but reappeared — the day after a shooting left five Maryland newspaper employees dead.

Now Kopp’s stomach is twisted in knots wondering how to handle the situation.

“I walk this fine line all the time between the most precious of things, the First Amendment, and health and safety,” said Kopp, a broadcast veteran in charge of 70 volunteers who host music, news and heated political talk shows on the listener-supported station.

The difficulti­es journalist­s face when dealing with threatenin­g behaviour from members of the public came into stark relief in June 28th’s deadly attack at the Capital Gazette in Annapolis.

Suspect Jarrod Ramos, 38, has a well-documented history of harassing the paper’s staff. He filed a defamation suit against the paper in 2012 that was thrown out as groundless and often railed against them in profanity-laced tweets.

Ramos’ ire began with an online harassment and stalking case stemming from contact with a high school classmate in late 2009 or early 2010. The woman eventually went to police, and Ramos pleaded guilty to a misdemeano­ur harassment charge. The newspaper’s story about the case touched off a years-long tirade from Ramos.

A barrage of menacing tweets led to an investigat­ion five years ago, but a detective concluded

Ramos was no threat, and the paper didn’t want to press charges for fear of “putting a stick in a beehive.”

Now Ramos is charged with killing Rob Hiaasen, 59, assistant managing editor; Gerald Fischman, 61, editorial page editor; features reporter Wendi Winters, 65; reporter John Mcnamara, 56; and sales assistant Rebecca Smith, 34. Two other employees were injured and later released from hospital with non-life-threatenin­g injuries.

Started with words

People who have been the victims of online discussion of physical violence, doxing (publishing private informatio­n) and rape threats aren’t surprised the Capital Gazette attack started with online harassment.

Katie Kausch said she was harassed online as an intern at MTV after writing a story about people who don’t believe the Sandy Hook shooting that killed 26 at an elementary school really happened.

Anonymous people unhappy with the story found Kausch’s college grade point average and her little sister’s school address and published them online. They wrote vague, menacing statements like “I hope nothing happens to you...”

Kausch said MTV’S legal team was helpful to a point, but because the harassers were anonymous and hadn’t issued a specific threat against her, there wasn’t much she could do.

“Legal was an all-female team; everybody had experience­d some level of doxing or threats,” she said, adding that

she and her mother decided not to report the harassment to police.

Sarah Kogod, a former director of developmen­t for sports website SB Nation who has led workshops on how to deal with online harassment, said the threats are difficult to handle, both for police and the social media networks themselves.

“The general rule is that if it’s a direct threat, all jurisdicti­ons will take that seriously,” she said. “The challenge comes when the communicat­ion is vague. It’s brushed off as someone being a jerk. In most cases, it is.”

She encourages liberal use of the block function and thinks companies need to deal better with online harassment.

“I truly feel that organizati­ons have a responsibi­lity to make sure they can guide their staff through that harassment,” both online and off, she said.

It’s something Kopp, the station manager, has considered. Although he’s used to sharp

online words like ones they remove from the news department’s Facebook page, he wonders how to handle the inperson threat of the angry man with the bullhorn. He’s putting in new surveillan­ce cameras and people must be buzzed in the front door, something that seems anathema to the station’s community-oriented approach.

“We’ve had potlucks with the doors wide open, for the community to come right in to see what radio station looks like. I don’t want to stop that,” he said.

Several weeks ago, the man marched past a receptioni­st into the on-air studio. By the time police came, the man was back on public property. So far, Kopp has called police twice on the man, but there’s been no arrest.

“I think some of these people are unstable, and in the current environmen­t, I don’t know what could set somebody off in the wrong direction. It’s a constant worry, now more than ever before,” Kopp said.

 ?? BRIAN WITTE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Letters and flowers form a memorial at the State House in Annapolis, Md., June 29, in honour of the five slain members of The Capital Gazette newspaper who were shot and killed in a newsroom attack the day before. Online harassment from members of the...
BRIAN WITTE/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Letters and flowers form a memorial at the State House in Annapolis, Md., June 29, in honour of the five slain members of The Capital Gazette newspaper who were shot and killed in a newsroom attack the day before. Online harassment from members of the...
 ?? PATRICK SEMANSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Carl Hiaasen (centre) brother of Rob Hiaasen, one of the journalist­s killed in the shooting at The Capital Gazette newspaper offices, is consoled by his sisters Barb, (left) and Judy during a memorial service July 2 in Owings Mills, Md.
PATRICK SEMANSKY/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Carl Hiaasen (centre) brother of Rob Hiaasen, one of the journalist­s killed in the shooting at The Capital Gazette newspaper offices, is consoled by his sisters Barb, (left) and Judy during a memorial service July 2 in Owings Mills, Md.
 ?? THE BALTIMORE SUN VIA AP ?? The victims of the June 28th shooting in the newsroom of the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Md: (from left) John Mcnamara, Wendi Winters, Rob Hiaasen, Gerald Fischman and Rebecca Smith.
THE BALTIMORE SUN VIA AP The victims of the June 28th shooting in the newsroom of the Capital Gazette in Annapolis, Md: (from left) John Mcnamara, Wendi Winters, Rob Hiaasen, Gerald Fischman and Rebecca Smith.
 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? An American flag and a Star of David adorn crosses representi­ng the journalist­s killed, at a makeshift memorial outside the office building housing The Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Md., July 1. Jarrod Ramos was charged with murder after...
JOSE LUIS MAGANA/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS An American flag and a Star of David adorn crosses representi­ng the journalist­s killed, at a makeshift memorial outside the office building housing The Capital Gazette newspaper in Annapolis, Md., July 1. Jarrod Ramos was charged with murder after...

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