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Columbia Crew Coffins Mistaken for Caskets of U.S. Military Casualties
http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...ryc asualties By Anthony Duignan-Cabrera Managing Editor, SPACE.com UPDATE: Story first posted 5:30 p.m. EDT, April 23, 2004 It is a story that will have journalism professors, conspiracy theorists and free speech advocates confused, amused and most likely up-in-arms until the next media scandal appears. On Friday, NASA sent out a press release saying that several news organizations had mistakenly identified pictures of the flag-draped coffins of the Space Shuttle Columbia's crew with images of coffins of war casualties from Iraq (news - web sites). The story began Thursday when the free speech website thememoryhole.org published what it said were images of the coffins of U.S. military personnel who had died while on duty in Iraq. The images had been released to the site because of a Freedom of Information Act request. However, eagle-eyed NASA (news - web sites)-watchers as well as NASA employees recognized the images to be from February 2003, when the remains of the space shuttle's crew were brought to the Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware. According to NASA spokesperson Bob Jacobs, the error was first brought to his attention Thursday evening by Keith Cowing, the editor of the website NASAwatch . "(Cowing) was the very first person to notify me because he saw (the picture) on CNN's Headline News," Jacobs said. The fact that NASA Deputy Administrator Frederick Gregory featured prominently in one of the pictures on the website's homepage may have been a clue. [see images on SPACE.com] At first, Jacobs thought it was a one-off mistake, but his opinion changed Friday morning when another NASA public affairs official called to tell him that the image had appeared in the morning's Washington Post. "We thought (CNN) was a freak accident," Jacobs said. "We didn't know the pictures were posted on a website." As the day wore on, Cowing collected a list of news organizations, including Reuters and the Associated Press, that kept referring to the images as those of the coffins of U.S. military personnel. The NASA press statement, released late in the afternoon, asked editors to "confirm that the images used in news reports are in fact those of American casualties and not those of the NASA astronauts who were killed Feb.1, 2003, in the Columbia tragedy." "An initial review of the images featured on the Internet site www.thememoryhole.org shows that more than 18 rows of images from Dover Air Force Base in Delaware are actually photographs of honors rendered to Columbia's seven astronauts." The brief press release went on to say that "news organizations across the world have been publishing and distributing images featured on the web site." Russ Kick, editor of thememoryhole.org, was not immediately available for comment. Jacobs said NASA contacted the Columbia crew's family members to let them know that the images of their loved ones' coffins were being misidentified in the media. "We wanted to make them aware of the situation, just in case they were watching CNN or reading a publication that uses one of the photos," said Jacobs. |
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Rusty Barton cut-n-pasted in part:
The story began Thursday when the free speech website thememoryhole.org published what it said were images of the coffins of U.S. military personnel who had died while on duty in Iraq. The images had been released to the site because of a Freedom of Information Act request. However, eagle-eyed NASA (news - web sites)-watchers as well as NASA employees recognized the images to be from February 2003, when the remains of the space shuttle's crew were brought to the Dover Air Force Base in Dover, Delaware. Most likely case: a poorly-formed FOIA request followed up by an even poorer response. There's an art to those things. The requestor is usually trying to get something that the government doesn't really wanna release, and the government is usually trying to make the requestor just go away. But not to worry. If present trends continue in the US, soon we won't have to be concerned about that nasty ol' Freedom Of Information Act at all. Corry -- It Came From C. L. Smith's Unclaimed Mysteries. http://www.unclaimedmysteries.net |
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(http://story.news.yahoo.com/news?tmp...r380943150.jpg)
"ATTENTION EDITORS: CAPTION CLARIFICATION STATING THAT COFFINS ARE NOT OF U.S. MILITARY PERSONNEL BUT ARE BELIEVED TO BE OF CREW MEMBERS OF SPACE SHUTTLE COLUMBIA" Correction to the correction: Five Columbia astronauts WERE US military personnel. Active duty USAF Col, LtCol, and USN Capt, Capt, and Cmdr to be exact. ~ CT |
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