Introducing IMVAIN

For the purposes of this course, we use the acronym IMVA/IN to methodically evaluate sources who show up in news stories.

I:

Impartial sources are better than invested sources

M:

Multiple sources are better than single sources

V:

Sources who Verify with evidence are better than sources who assert

A / I:

Authoritative / Informed sources  are better than uninformed sources

N:

 Named sources are better than unnamed sources

These are straightforward ideas. Let’s see what happens out in the messy real world.

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Example 1:

secretservice.pngHere are headlines from a few stories about the US Secret Service. In 2014, the agency came under fire for mishandling White House and Presidential security. There was a fence jumper who made it inside the White House, an armed felon who got on the elevator with the President and this story, shots fired at the White House that the Secret Service didn’t know about until a cleaning lady found some broken glass.

When White House fence jumper Omar Gonzalez made his famous breach of the White House grounds, he got all the way into the building with a knife. When the agency was asked about what happened, they answered that they caught the man right inside the door. When the White House's press secretary was asked -- he gave no corrections to the account. However, when the truth came out, it was found that Mr. Gonzalez had gone beyond the set of doors that the Secret Service allegedly had apprehended him at. 

In the rush to find more information as the story continued to develop, cable news outlets brought on "experts" to speak on the incident, including Ron Kessler, a journalist and author of 20 non-fiction books about the U.S. Secret Service, FBI, and the CIA, and Tom Fuentes, a former FBI assistant director. See their statements below.

secretservicecaps.png

With all of these sources, if we look through the lens of independence with each, while keeping in mind that no source is perfectly independent, the news consumer might consider the following:

  • What sort of self-interests might need to protected on the Secret Service's end? (Reputation? Status?)
  • How about for the two experts? 
    • Ron Kessler has made a career of writing about the Secret Service, the FBI and the CIA,sometimes quite critically. He doesn’t work for them. But…problems probably help sell books.
    • Fuentes may be a little more independent. He has no book on the market. He has no federal paycheck.

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