AP, TV organizations pull questioned video

Jul 10, 2008  1:05 AM (ET)

By DAVID BAUDER
Associated Press

http://apnews.myway.com//article/20080710/D91QPIKG0.html


NEW YORK (AP) - The Associated Press and video services operated by CBS and 
NBC have pulled video allegedly taken of a tornado in Nebraska last weekend 
after questions were raised about its authenticity.

A tornado chaser has claimed that the video was a doctored version of 
pictures he had taken of a twister that touched down four years ago in 
Rock, Kan.

The AP paid another storm chaser, Andy Fabel, $295 for footage of a tornado 
that briefly touched down Saturday afternoon near Valentine, Neb. The video 
was sent Sunday to nearly 2,000 Web sites that subscribe to the AP's Online 
Video Network, and more than 60 large digital customers that buy AP's 
online content individually.

Yet on Tuesday, a person who asked that his name not be used contacted the 
AP and said the supposed Nebraska footage was really video he had taken 
four years ago. The image was "flipped" to make it seem the tornado was 
pointed in another direction, and the action sped up. The Nebraska images 
add power lines and subtracts trees that were in the Kansas pictures.

Upon seeing the video evidence, the AP eliminated Fabel's video from the 
Online Video Network late Tuesday and contacted its other customers to urge 
them not to use it, said Kevin Roach, the AP's acting head of domestic 
broadcast news operations.

"We never want to mislead people," Roach said. "Based on evidence provided 
to us, we believe that the video was not authentic."

Fabel did not immediately return an e-mail and message left on his cell 
phone by the AP. Officials with NBC News Channel and CBS News Path said 
they had talked to Fabel and he had insisted his pictures were authentic.

Both the NBC and CBS services provide video to the network's affiliates. 
Both had purchased Fabel's video and sent it out, then took it off their 
servers on Tuesday after suspicions were raised about its authenticity, 
representatives said.

"There was enough evidence for us to make it suspect," said Sharon Houston, 
an executive producer with NBC News Channel.

The AP has purchased tornado video from Fabel three times before, Roach said.


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu

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