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USA Today releases report on Kelley scandal; editors depart

NEW YORK (AP) - USA Today lost two high-level editors from a management upheaval touched off by a stinging report on deceptions and fabrications by former star reporter Jack Kelley. 

The newspaper's top editor, Karen Jurgensen, retired abruptly April 20 at age 55. Hal Ritter, managing editor of news, submitted his resignation two days later. He had been in his current role since 1995 and had worked at the paper since it was founded in 1982. 

Also on April 22, Executive Editor Brian Gallagher, who is in charge of day-to-day operations, told staff members he would remain in his current position only long enough to make a transition to the next editor. A search for a new editor is under way. 

Jurgensen joined the newspaper at its founding in 1982. 

"Like all of us who worked with Jack Kelley, I wish we had caught him far sooner than we did," she said in the announcement to staff members. "The sad lessons learned by all in this dreadful situation will make USA Today a stronger, better newspaper." 

In a note Publisher Craig Moon distributed to the paper's staff, Ritter said his departure will "make it easier for my colleagues in News to continue the job of making the newspaper even greater." 

Ritter's departure came the same day the newspaper revealed the conclusions of an investigation by three veteran journalists into the Kelley affair. 

Concerns about Kelley's work should have spurred editors to investigate long ago, according to the panel, which cited poor editorial oversight and a "virus" of fear that helped propagate the improprieties. 

The panel's review found Kelley committed many acts of fraudulent reporting for more than a decade, including fabricating parts of at least 20 stories and stealing at least 100 passages from other news organizations. 

The scandal has deeply embarrassed USA Today, the nation's largest-selling newspaper, and paralleled a debacle last year at The New York Times involving former reporter Jayson Blair. 

The panel's findings, which were delivered to Moon the previous week, were detailed in a full page of articles in USA Today's April 22 editions. 

The panel said USA Today's policies as well as routine editing procedures "should have raised dark shadows of doubt about Kelley's work, had his editors been vigilant and diligent. They were not." 

Before Ritter's resignation, Moon said in an interview that he anticipated making other personnel changes but had declined to be more specific. He also said he expected to keep Kelley's wife, Jacki, as the newspaper's top advertising executive. 

As for addressing the panel's concerns about a fearful culture in the newsroom, Moon said: "I think new leadership fixes that." 

Unlike Blair, who was trying to make a name for himself, Kelley was a well-established star. His work was held up to others as an example, he was given plum foreign assignments and asked to speak to various groups on behalf of the newspaper. He also co-wrote two books with USA Today's founder, Al Neuharth. 

Kelley, 43, resigned in January after admitting he tried to deceive a team of editors examining the veracity of his work. A subsequent review by the outside experts found that Kelley had engaged in extensive fakery and plagiarism dating back as early as 1991. 

Until release of the report, Kelley had stood by his work, admitting only to attempting to deceive the initial investigation. But in a statement issued to the paper through his lawyers, Kelley acknowledged making "a number of serious mistakes that violate the values that are most important to me as a person and as a journalist," he said. 

"I recognize that I cannot make amends for the harm I have caused to my family, friends and colleagues. Nor can I make it up to readers who depend upon good journalism to understand a chaotic and confusing world. I can only offer my sincere apology to those I have let down," Kelley said. 

A lawyer for Kelley, Lisa J. Banks, declined to make any further comment. 

The outside panel of experts - John Seigenthaler, Bill Kovach and Bill Hilliard - sharply criticized USA Today's management in their 28-page report. Among their conclusions were that the newspaper failed to act on early warnings of problems with Kelley's work. 

The editors spent more than 10 weeks interviewing current and former USA Today staffers in their investigation, which was also aided by several reporters at the paper. 

Seigenthaler, the head of the panel, is a former editor and publisher of The Tennessean in Nashville and the founding editorial director of USA Today. Kovach is chairman of the Committee of Concerned Journalists and former chief of the Washington bureau for The New York Times. Hilliard is a former editor of The Oregonian in Portland. 

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© 2003 Pennsylvania Newspaper Association. Limited Reproduction with permission