Kill the Messenger: How the CIA's Crack-Cocaine Controversy Destroyed Journalist Gary Webb
by Nick Schou
Since it was the country's major newspapers who did in Gary Webb, it is not surprising that Nick Schou's book about Webb's life and "Dark Alliance," his controversial story about the CIA and crack cocaine, has yet to be reviewed by any of them.
Unlike most of his critics, Gary Webb was a real investigative reporter with a Pulitzer to his name. He dug relentlessly into corporate and government corruption and by all accounts had I.F. Stone's gift for researching documentary evidence. He was also not afraid to seek out sources and question them until he got answers: "One of the ways people would harass each other in Columbus was by saying that Gary Webb of the Plain Dealer wants to interview you. It was a way of giving people heartburn," said a former co-worker.
Webb's instinct for the big story led him to investigate a scandal which had been all but ignored by the media for a decade: the CIA's knowledge of drug trafficking by people linked to its counterrevolutionary war against Nicaragua in the 1980s, and its protection of those traffickers even as they peddled crack in the inner cities of the United States. The story, "Dark Alliance," was published in three parts by the San Jose Mercury News in 1996. It sparked outrage in African American communities, which had been devastated by cheap crack cocaine in the 1980s, and where many suspected the government was behind the epidemic.
Then the backlash began: The Washington Post, the New York Times and the Los Angeles Times all assigned teams of reporters to investigate Webb and find fault with the series. When the executive editor of The Mercury News caved in to the pressure and backed off from the story, Webb felt humilliated by his paper and eventually resigned. He never got a job at a major newspaper again, and fell into a depression which ended with his suicide in 2004.
Schou was moved to write Kill the Messenger because, as an investigative journalist himself, he wanted to set the record straight. He had worked with Webb, investigating a retired Laguna Beach cop, Ronald Lister, who proved to be the crucial link between the CIA and Los Angeles crack wholesaler "Freeway" Ricky Ross. It was this point, more than any other, that newspapers had seized on to discredit Webb--the lack of a "smoking gun" that tied sales of crack in the inner cities to the CIA. While Webb had high hopes that the discovery of Lister's role would clear his name, the Los Angeles Times chose to dismiss Lister as a "con artist."
Webb's series forced the CIA Inspector General to do an investigation, much of which vindicated Webb; but by the time the final report was released in 1998 the big three newspapers had destroyed his career as a newspaperman.
At the same time that Kill the Messenger illuminates the CIA-cocaine connection, it paints an intimate portrait of Webb through interviews with his former bosses and colleagues, family and friends. This is an honest but respectful tribute to a hardworking and talented man who broke the story that many thought would never be told, and who paid the ultimate price.
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