Calgary Herald

NBC fires producer over edited 911 call

- CHRIS FRANCESCAN­I

NBC News has fired a producer following a probe into its broadcasti­ng of a misleading edit of an audio clip of a 911 emergency response call during coverage of the Trayvon Martin shooting, two sources at the network said.

The producer, who was not identified by the sources, is Miami-based. NBC News declined to comment when asked about the dismissal, which the sources said took place on Thursday.

NBC News executives interviewe­d several employees during their investigat­ion of the network’s editing of the tape of the 911 call placed by George Zimmerman before he shot the unarmed Florida teenager, sources at the network had said on Thursday.

The edit made it appear as though Zimmerman told police that Martin was black without being prompted, when, in fact, the full tape reveals that the neighbour- hood watch captain only did so when responding to a question asked by the dispatcher.

Public pressure has been building on the network to fully explain the incident — which critics charge has inflamed racial tensions in an already volatile situation.

On Thursday, a New York Post editorial characteri­zed the edited 911 call as “pretty damning evidence of wilful misconduct by NBC News” and suggested that racial violence could ensue over irresponsi­ble news coverage.

Sources at the network said Thursday that NBC News executives did not know the 911 call was misleading­ly edited until news reports surfaced days later on right-leaning blogs, including Newsbuster­s. org and Breitbart.com.

NBC News has apologized for the incident.

The Today show’s editorial control policies — which include a script editor, senior producer oversight and, in most cases, legal and standards department reviews of material to be broadcast — missed the selective editing of the call, said an NBC executive. The network vowed to take rigorous steps to formalize editorial safeguards in the news division following the incident, one NBC source said.

News of the firing — reported by The New York Times late Friday — surprised and dismayed some NBC News employees involved in the network’s ongoing coverage of the case, according to two sources, who said the producer was highly regarded within the organizati­on.

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