Tuesday, June 5, 2012

When police chiefs hang out at donut shops

English: Looking northwest at Englewood Cliffs...
Englewood Cliffs built a municipal building after rejecting the police chief's request to operate out of the nearest Dunkin' Donuts.


The lead story on Page 1 of The Record today -- reporting "the latest surge" in North Jersey house burglaries -- contains not a word on what, if anything, the police are doing to prevent those crimes.

The eight reporters -- and an unknown number of editors -- who worked on this piece quote police brass or detectives in several towns, but they put the onus on homeowners.

You'd think the overpaid police chiefs got together at their favorite Dunkin' Donuts to orchestrate their quotes, deflecting attention away from the poor job they are doing to stop the burglaries.

Chief nag

Cliffs Chief Michael Cioffi is typical in blaming the victims for not being vigilant: "The problem I have is people don't set their alarms. They figure they're home, everything is OK."

Geez. If a homeowner in Englewood Cliffs or any other town can't feel safe in his own house, that's a sad commentary on the effectiveness of the police.

Copping out

Are the cops doing anything innovative to stop burglaries? 

For example, are the police masquerading as workmen and driving through neighborhoods of high-end homes in an unmarked van to catch the culprits?

What about detectives in unmarked cars posing as Realtors to find burglars before they break down doors? 

Questionable

You'd think that eight reporters, plus head Assignment Editor Deirdre Sykes and Deputy Assignment Editor Dan Sforza, would have answered those questions.

You'd think Editor Marty Gottlieb would have noticed the story he picked for the top of the front page had holes big enough for several of the Woodland Park daily's Mercedes-Benz delivery trucks. 

And although Sykes' Local section has had several recent stories about house burglaries in Tenafly, the borough where Publisher Stephen A. Borg lives isn't mentioned in today's piece or shown on an A-6 map.

Joke is on us

On A-3 today, Englewood reporter Melissa Hayes seems to have been assigned full time to cover Governor Christie's "Jersey Comeback" stand-up routine. 

The deep partisan divide caused by the no-tax positions of Christie, the Tea Party and other rabid conservatives is buried on A-5 today.

Margulies mocks first lady Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign by portraying President Obama's efforts to revive the economy as a dessert (A-10) -- another bizarre comparison from The Record's mad cartoonist.

Can readers impeach Margulies?


Greedy lawyers


On the Local front today, Staff Writer Kibret Markos keeps readers in the dark, as usual, about how much of a $6.3 million verdict for botched surgery will be going to the lawyers.

The headline says "$6M" and the first paragraph of the story says "$6 million," but on L-6, the award is given as "$6.3 million." 

Reporting lapses

Today, I see the same bylines in Local and on A-1, even a single reporter's multiple bylines, making me wonder about the staffers whose names I rarely see as the days, weeks and months roll by.

Are they being protected by Sykes, Sforza and other editors as they collect their paychecks under false pretenses?

Is it something they learned from Sykes and Sforza, who have contributed little to the local news operation in the past decade?

Where is the Hackensack and Teaneck news today or stories from many other towns? The only Englewood news is an obituary of Shirley Passow, a civic-minded resident (L-3).

Sykes and Sforza still needed big photos of a minor fire and accident to fill L-1 and L-3.

From hunger

On the Better Living cover, it's hard to understand how Staff Writer Bill Ervolino missed Balthazar Bakery in Englewood in his "North Jersey's World of Bread."

Balthazar's artisanal, preservative-free products are found in thousands of homes, as well as at hundreds of Manhattan and suburban restaurants.

Balthazar is simply better than all of the other places he mentions.
 
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4 comments:

  1. The cartoon by Margulies in no way mocked Michelle Obama's anti-obesity campaign. Obviously you are reading into it with your own agenda. It merely used the White House Garden as a setup for the gag, showing that economic growth under President Obama is drying up.
    It is certainly not the first time your inablity to understand humor has caused you to either misinterpret or needlessly castigate Margulies' sharp satire.
    The Record is fortunate to have someone of his talent, even if you are pathologically unable to recognize it.

    ReplyDelete
  2. It was a disgrace. A cheap shot and such a stretch.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. Once again, due to your inability to understand humor, you found offense where absolutely none was intended. The cartoon contrasted the SUCCESS of Michelle Obama's White House Garden, with the lack of success her husband has had in reviving the economy. There was nothing at all derogatory aimed at Mrs. Obama, and you damn well know it, or you are so blinded by your own agenda on obesity, that you cannot admit it.

      The cartoon was a poke at President Obama, not his wife.

      You are like a little old lady who is so uptight you cannot enjoy humor.

      Delete
  3. The cartoon perpetuates a grossly Inaccurate picture of the improving national economy.

    ReplyDelete

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