Imperial Valley Press

Former NY Times editor acknowledg­es sourcing errors in book

- BY HILLEL ITALIE AP National Writer

NEW YORK — The former executive editor of The New York Times acknowledg­ed Thursday that her new book, “Merchants of Truth,” contains some sourcing errors and said she would correct them.

In an email Thursday to The Associated Press, Jill Abramson wrote that some page numbers in sourcing notes needed to be fixed and some sources “should have been cited as quotations in the text.”

“The notes don’t match up with the right pages in a few cases, and this was unintentio­nal and will be promptly corrected. The language is too close in some cases and should have been cited as quotations in the text. This, too, will be fixed,” she wrote.

A Twitter thread posted Wednesday by Vice Abramson correspond­ent Michael

C. Moynihan listed several examples of passages in Abramson’s book that closely resembled the work of other publicatio­ns, including Time Out and The New Yorker.

“I wouldn’t want even a misplaced comma so I will promptly fix these footnotes and quotations as I have corrected other material that Vice contested,” Abramson wrote, noting that Vice had previously pointed out factual mistakes.

“The book is over 500 pages. All of the ideas in the book are original, all the opinions are mine.

The passages in question involve facts that should have been perfectly cited in my footnotes and weren’t.”

Abramson had defended herself by saying that her book includes extensive endnotes, including web links to sources.

It is widely believed that an outside source should be credited in the body of the work if there is a close similarity.

Abramson’s book, which is subtitled “The Business of News and the Fight for Facts,” was published this week by Simon & Schuster. It is a critique of the media that focuses on two leading newspapers, the Times and The Washington Post, along with Vice and fellow digital company BuzzFeed.

“In writing ‘Merchants of Truth,’ I tried above all to accurately and properly give attributio­n to the many hundreds of sources that were part of my research,” she wrote to the AP.

“My book has 70 pages of footnotes and 100 source citations in the Vice chapters alone, including The New Yorker, the Columbia Journalism Review, The Ryerson Review of Journalism and a masters’ thesis, the sources from which Mr. Moynihan says I plagiarize­d.”

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