If you read Westword, you might think that Scott McInnis had a utterly uniqe writing style on display in his 150 pages of water articles for the Hasan Family Foundation.
If so, you were wrong, because the writing wasn’t unique to McInnis. Some of it was penned by now Supreme Court Justice Gregory Hobbs, according to a Spot Blog post in The Denver Post.
The Spot post reports that sentences and paragraphs in McInnis’ Hasan writings are identical to Hobbs’ work.
According to the Spot, The Post will publish more details, including samples of the identical writings, in the newspaper tomorrow.
Strangely, however, The Post did not use the word “plagiarism” to describe the identical writings. The Post did not use the P word in its blog post today.
Neither did The Post use the word “plagiarism” in a blog post ealier this year when Jane Norton lifted a quote, almost exactly, from Gerry Ford. She used it the announcement of her U.S. Senate bid.
I blogged at the time that The Post should have used the word “plagiarism” to describe Norton’s lapse–and that reporters should have demanded an explanation from Norton, even though the plagiarism looked minor to many people.
Norton said, “I believe a government big enough to give you everything you want, is a government that’s big enough to take everything you have.”
Ford said, “A government big enough to give you everything you want is a government big enough to take from you everything you have.”
This may look like simple sloganeering, but for writers and people in public life, this is serious stuff.
One of the most respected ethicists in the journalism world, Prof. Robert Steele, who is the Nelson Poynter Scholar for Journalism Values at The Poynter Institute and the Director of the Jane Prindle Institute for Ethics at DePauw University, agreed with me about the Norton quote. Here’s what he wrote me regarding Norton:
If one uses a common understanding of plagiarism – using the specific words or nearly exact thoughts of someone else and claiming them as your original writing or thoughts – then Norton’s use of this quote falls into that category.
My guess is that many politicians have used a variation of this phrase over the years to capture an ideological position about the role of government in our society. If Norton had just taken the broad concept and stated it in her own words, she might have been OK. For instance, if she said something like, “A government that gives can take. We should be wary of big government that promises too much and makes us pay back all we receive,” she would have made her point (albeit with a less resounding quote) and avoided the plagiarism trap.
Given her use of the exact wording, Norton should have attributed the phrase to Ford (assuming he was the originator of the phrase and didn’t borrow it himself from someone else).
If a journalist used this same exact phrase without attribution, I would want to know how it happened. I would ask the journalist how and why she/he used that phrase and why it wasn’t attributed. I would also check other work produced by that journalist to see if there are other problems with attribution. I would discipline the journalist based on the extent and reason for the failure in this case and whether the journalist has a history of plagiarism. That discipline could range from a serious reprimand to a suspension to dismissal.
In this case, I would ask Norton some questions. How did this happen? Did you write this speech? If so, where did you get that line? If not, who wrote the speech and/or that line? Perhaps one of her speech writers did this. Norton, as the person who used the words is still primarily responsible, of course. I would also do some plagiarism checking of her other speeches to see if this is a recurring problem.
I made certain that Steele saw that Norton’s words weren’t exactly the same as Ford’s.
“Norton’s words are very, very close to the exact wording of the Ford quote and her expression of this thought is almost verbatim to Ford’s expression,” he wrote back. “Norton should have attributed the statement to Ford. By not doing so, she claimed it as her original thought. That’s wrong.”
If that’s what Steele had to say about Norton’s plagiarism, you can only imagine what he’d say about McInnis’ apparent plagiarism, which involves numerous sentences and paragraphs, according to The Spot.
Norton’s plagiarism is likely tiny potatoes compared to what everyone expects to see from McInnis in tomorrow’s Denver Post.
If that’s true, then journalists should definitely call it plagiarism, and all the questions suggested by Steele are in order. Already, for example, the McInnis campaign is, according to the Spot, blaming the plagiarism on someone else. Steele would want reporters to ask why McInnis is not taking responsibility.
Interestingly, Post reporters did use the P word at least once this year. When Vice President Joe Biden came to Denver in April, GOP chair Dick Wadhams joked to a Post reporter about Joe Biden’s past plagiarism problems. In a piece quoting Wadhams. The Spot reported that Vice President Joe Biden was accused of “plagiarism.”
I emailed a Post editor and reporter asking why the word “plagiarism” wasn’t used to describe McInnis’ lapse, but I did not get an immediate response.
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Once when he claimed Justice Hobbs’ work as his own and once when he claimed the supposedly guilty researcher’s work as his own.
You don’t get to subcontract an academic fellowship just like you don’t get to farm out your LSATs.
And thanks for challenging the media to push on the Hasan Foundation/McInnis connection.
To call someone a plagiarist is reserved for pond scum like Ward Churchhill, right? Certainly wouldn’t want to pin that moniker on the front runner GOP candidate for governor now would ya?
If you recall Singleton wouldn’t use the word “bankruptcy” when discussing the bankruptcy of Media News.
When McInnis’ own campaign acknowledges that what was done was wrong – but blames someone else – then there is no question that the wrongdoing was indeed plagiarism.
It has been established beyond a doubt that plagiarism occurred. So that is the proper word to use.
Now the media can look into McInnis’ excuses for the plagiarism. And the media will hopefully look into the real nature of the $300K payment by the Hasan Foundation, and whether the Foundation is going to get its money back now that the scholarship it allegedly purchased was an outright fraud.
AND I hope that the media can dig up one, just one, quote from McInnis demanding that Ward Churchill lose his job because of HIS plagiarism.
.
McInnis stuff – no question.
Coming from someone whose magnum opus was submitted to a government agency for evaluation in a manner that is supposed to protect IP, and ended up both plagiarized and stolen.
.
Without your fine work, your diligence, your persistence, I doubt McInnis’ articles would ever have come to light.
Tuesday’s Post story is now available. An expert the Post consulted calls the articles “a clear piece of plagiarism.” And some newer lies are being exposed, including McInnis’ attorneys apparently marking the articles “drafts.”
I expect the lying to continue. So — keep up the good work!
Because of this:
Jason, great work, I agree with you 100%. This is a disgrace.
It can be discreet.
Jason, you kept this story alive when everybody else thought it was done, and now it could be the biggest story of this election. Hats off – we really need to find you a paper to write for again.
Jason has broken open the biggest political story of the year. Very well done.
In no uncertain terms today.
Didn’t Joe Biden have a similar problem back in the day?
Was everybody that is calling for McInnis’ head today as righteously indignant when the guy one heart beat away from being President was revealed to have “borrowed” someone else’s work?
There are distinctions.
One of them is the party affiliation of the guilty party?
Just askin’?
How about a $300,000 payment.
How about a freshman kid in college vs. a Senatorial hopeful?
I don’t remember all the details off the top of my head about the Biden deal. These seem like 2 pretty big distinctions though.