The Herald and Simon Wilson have been busted for making shit up and worse still is the extremely tardy response from the Herald in rectifying their errors.

The Media Council is damning:

The Media Council has ruled an article alleging that death threats had been posted on the Community Action Network (CAN) Facebook page was inaccurate. No such threats had been published on their site.

The story, headed Battle brewing over North Shore’s future, was published online and in print on September 25, 2019, as part of a six-part series about fiercely contested Auckland wards in the lead-up to the 2019 Local Body Elections.

Liam Venter complained the death threat reference was incorrect and detrimental to the Facebook group he founded and its members. He said the comment was “clearly based on hearsay and no attempt was made by the reporter to verify the incorrect facts presented with respect to CAN”.

Venter initially complained to the New Zealand Herald wanting an “unequivocal apology” that stressed the following points. Namely that the report was incorrect and no death threat was posted on the CAN page; the reporter made no attempt to verify the claim with members of the CAN network or via his own observations; and that the threat referred to in the article was not made by anyone in any way associated with CAN.

The Herald accepted that the article was inaccurate because it stated that the page belonged to members of CAN instead of the Save Takapuna Carpark campaign group. The error was corrected “within a few hours of publication and as soon as we were informed of the error”.

However, over the course of the correspondence it became apparent that the print correction did not refer to the CAN group and the online correction had initially failed to be made.

The Media Council said there was no argument that the publication breached Principle 1 in terms of accuracy.

The reporter could have easily checked the Facebook page in question as well as contacting a representative from the page. These steps were not taken and this breach of basic journalistic practices was made worse because death threats were involved.

It is clear Venter made strenuous attempts to have a relatively simple matter corrected and it is clear that the Herald muddled what should have been a relatively simple correction.

The story was eventually corrected online and in print but both iterations had serious flaws pertaining to Venter’s grievances.

The Council notes that the Herald has offered a correction in print which Venter has accepted but as far as the Council is aware the correction has not been published or discussed further between the parties. Venter and the members of his Facebook group have waited long enough to have the record put straight.

The Council strongly encourages the New Zealand Herald to publish a correction, ideally incorporating Venter’s three suggested points.

Note that in the article, buried in the dead zone of the holiday break fails to mention the reporter even once. This is rather strange since he is mentioned several times in the finding from the Media Council, which the Herald also failed to provide a link to.

You have to search for the article to find out who it is, and it is no surprise that it is Simon Wilson. Mind you it could also have been David Fisher as he allegedly likes to interview his keyboard or simply take dictation.

The Herald has also been rather sneaky in waiting until the middle of the news dead zone to admit, albeit forcibly, to making shit up.

It does make you wonder what else Simon Wilson has made up?

When media do things like this it is little wonder that they are so distrusted.

Xavier T.R Ordinary has been involved in New Zealand politics for over 40 years as a political activist, commentator and strategist. The name Xavier Theodore Reginald Ordinary has been chosen with tongue...