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{{short description|Six documents containing unsubstantiated critical allegations about President George W. Bush}}
{{current}}
{{Further|Killian documents authenticity issues|George W. Bush military service controversy}}
{{use mdy dates|date=October 2022}}
]'s animated GIF image comparing a memo purportedly typewritten in 1973 with a proportional-spaced document made in Microsoft Word with default settings in 2004]]
The '''Killian documents controversy''' (also referred to as '''Memogate''' or '''Rathergate'''<ref>{{cite news |last1=Jenny Attiyeh |title=Who's got the power? |url=https://news.harvard.edu/gazette/story/2005/02/whos-got-the-power/ |access-date=April 16, 2021 |work=] |date=February 3, 2005 |quote=Assaulted by a string of disasters – with "Rathergate" as the most recent example – the conventional press is on the defensive}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |title=''Rathergate'' |url=https://www.pbs.org/wgbh/pages/frontline/newswar/tags/rathergate.html |website=] |publisher=] |access-date=April 16, 2021 |date=2007 |quote=Of course your most famous bump-up in recognition came during the 2004 election. Can you just lay out the story for us? I called that post "The 61st Minute,"}}</ref>) involved six documents containing false allegations about President ]'s service in the ] in 1972–73, allegedly typed in 1973. ] presented four of these documents<ref>Two entitled "Memo to File," one "Memorandum," and one "Memorandum for Record," see here for ] versions at the ] website.</ref> as authentic in a '']'' broadcast aired by CBS on September 8, 2004, less than two months before the ], but it was later found that CBS had failed to authenticate them.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A18982-2004Sep13?language=printer|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110514062505/http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A18982-2004Sep13?language=printer|url-status=dead|archive-date=May 14, 2011|title=Expert Cited by CBS Says He Didn't Authenticate Papers.|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=September 14, 2004|author1=Dobbs, Michael |author2=Howard Kurtz|access-date=2008-03-14}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|url=https://abcnews.go.com/WNT/Investigation/Story?id=131423&page=1|title=Document Analysts: CBS News Ignored Doubts.|publisher=ABC News|access-date=2008-03-14|date=September 14, 2004|author1=Ross, Brian |author2=Howard Rosenberg}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=CBS ousts 4 over Bush Guard story.|agency=Associated Press|date=January 10, 2005|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna6807825|access-date=2008-03-14}}</ref> Several typewriter and typography experts soon concluded that they were forgeries.<ref>Including Peter Tytell, Thomas Phinney, and Joseph Newcomer, a man with 35 years of computer font technology experience. See: Last, Jonathan. {{cite web|url=http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/005/124mrhci.asp?pg=1 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050112152154/http://weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/005/124mrhci.asp?pg=1 |url-status=dead |archive-date=January 12, 2005 |title=It's Worse Than You Thought |access-date=2008-03-10 }} ''The Weekly Standard'', January 11, 2005, and Cohen, Sandee. {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070927230255/http://www.creativepro.com/story/feature/21939.html?cprose=5-39 |date=2007-09-27 }}, creativepro.com, September 23, 2004.</ref><ref>Also, Bill Flynn, "one of country's top authorities on document authentication."{{cite web|work=ABC News|url=https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2004/Story?id=123461&page=2|title=Officer's Widow Questions Bush Guard Memos.|access-date=2008-03-18|date=September 10, 2004}} and document expert Sandra Ramsey Lines: "'I'm virtually certain these were computer generated,'" {{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bush-guard-memos-questioned/|title=Bush Guard Memos Questioned|access-date=2008-03-12 | work=CBS News | date=September 10, 2004}} ''CBS News'', September 10, 2004.</ref> Lieutenant Colonel ] provided the documents to CBS, but he claims to have burned the originals after faxing them copies.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-21-cover-guard_x.htm |title=CBS backs off Guard story|author1=Dave Moniz |author2=Kevin Johnson |author3=Jim Drinkard |work=USA Today|date=September 21, 2004|access-date=2008-03-18}}</ref>


CBS News producer ] obtained the copied documents from Burkett, a former officer in the ], while pursuing a story about the George W. Bush military service controversy. Burkett claimed that Bush's commander, Lieutenant Colonel Jerry B. Killian, wrote them, which included criticisms of Bush's service in the Guard during the 1970s. In the ''60 Minutes'' segment, Rather stated that the documents "were taken from Lieutenant Colonel Killian's personal files",<ref>Thornburgh–Boccardi report, p. 127.</ref> and he falsely asserted that they had been authenticated by experts retained by CBS.<ref>Thornburgh–Boccardi report, p. 127: "This statement was without factual support"; "It is without question, however, that Matley did not authenticate any of the documents in question."</ref>
The '''Killian memos''' are documents which were allegedly written in ] and ] by ] ] (who died in ]), which the ] organization and producer ] used as the basis for a '']'' segment in ], claiming that President ] disobeyed orders while in the ] (TANG), and had undue influence exerted on his behalf to improve his record.


The ] was challenged within minutes<ref>{{cite web | url=https://freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1210516/posts?page=107#107 | title=Live Thread: Ben Barnes and CBS Attempt Another Bush Smear (60 Minutes) }}</ref> on Internet forums and blogs, with questions initially focused on ] in the format and typography, and the scandal quickly spread to the mass media.<ref name="memmot">{{cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-21-guard-scoops-skepticism_x.htm|title=Scoops and skepticism: How the story unfolded.|work=USA Today|date=September 21, 2004|access-date=2008-03-21|author=Memmot, Mark}}</ref> CBS and Rather defended the authenticity and usage of the documents for two weeks, but other news organizations continued to scrutinize the evidence, and '']'' obtained an independent analysis from outside experts. CBS finally repudiated the use of the documents on September 20, 2004. Rather stated, "if I knew then what I know now – I would not have gone ahead with the story as it was aired, and I certainly would not have used the documents in question",<ref name="rather statement">{{cite news|title= Dan Rather Statement On Memos |work=CBS News|date=September 20, 2005|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/dan-rather-statement-on-memos/ |access-date=2017-01-17}}</ref> and CBS News President ] said, "Based on what we now know, CBS News cannot prove that the documents are authentic, which is the only acceptable journalistic standard to justify using them in the report. We should not have used them. That was a mistake, which we deeply regret."<ref name="rather statement" /><ref name="CBS statement on panel">{{cite news | title=CBS Names Memo Probe Panel|date=September 22, 2004 | url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-names-memo-probe-panel/ | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref>
After controversy about the documents' authenticity erupted, many document authentication experts consulted by other major media entities cast doubt on the memos. Afterwards, CBS News admitted they cannot prove the authenticity of documents, that their source ] lied about how he got the documents, and that airing the story was a "mistake" that CBS regretted.
], the reporter on the story, has apologized. Burkett, a former Texas Army National Guard officer, has been extremely critical of President Bush in the past and has previously claimed that Bush's National Guard record files had been purged. Burkett admits he misled CBS and now claims that the documents came to him from another source, one CBS has yet been unable to verify.


Several months later, a CBS-appointed panel led by ] and ] criticized both the initial CBS news segment and CBS's "strident defense" during the aftermath.<ref>{{cite news | title= Thornburgh-Boccardi report | url=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/CBS_Report.pdf | access-date=2005-12-21 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref> CBS fired producer Mapes, requested resignations from several senior news executives, and apologized to viewers by saying that there were "substantial questions regarding the authenticity of the Killian documents".
After CBS ran its story '']'' received copies of the four documents used by CBS and two additional memos. USA Today has identified Burkett as the source for this set of documents.


The story of the controversy was dramatized in the 2015 film '']'' starring ] as Dan Rather and ] as Mary Mapes, directed by ]. It is based on Mapes' memoir '']''. Former CBS President and CEO ] refused to approve the film, and CBS refused to air advertisements for it. A CBS spokesman stated that it contained "too many distortions, evasions, and baseless conspiracy theories".<ref name=HR>{{cite news|url=http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/cbs-bans-ads-dan-rather-832635|title=CBS Bans Ads for Dan Rather Movie 'Truth'|magazine=The Hollywood Reporter|date=October 16, 2015|access-date=September 26, 2016}}</ref>
Copies of the documents were first released to the public by the White House. Press Secretary ] stated that the memos had been provided to them by CBS in the days prior to the report and that, "We had every reason to believe that they were authentic at that time." Critics have suggested that this belief of authenticity by the White House could not have existed if the memos contained information they knew to be inaccurate.


==Background and timeline==
] in uniform.
Investigations into his military service led to the Killian documents controversy.]]The memos, allegedly written in 1972 and 1973, were obtained by CBS News producer ] and freelance journalist Michael Smith, from Lieutenant Colonel Bill Burkett, a former ] officer.<ref>Burkett, Bill. {{cite web|url=http://onlinejournal.com/bush/031903Burkett/031903burkett.html |title=What do you say? |access-date=2012-05-11 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080609203137/http://onlinejournal.com/bush/031903Burkett/031903burkett.html |archive-date=June 9, 2008 }} archived copy from ''archive.org'' of story originally from ''onlinejournal.com'', March 19, 2003.</ref> Mapes and Dan Rather, among many other journalists, had been investigating for several years the story of Bush's ].<ref>See {{cite news|url=http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,1101040920-695873,00.html|archive-url=https://archive.today/20130104234427/http://www.time.com/time/magazine/printout/0,8816,1101040920-695873,00.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 4, 2013|title=The X Files Of Lt. Bush: A flurry of contested memos and memories sheds more heat than light on his record|work=Time Magazine|date=September 13, 2004|access-date=2008-03-25|author=Ripley, Amanda}} and {{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A14627-2004Sep11.html|title=Gaps in Service Continue to Dog Bush|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=September 12, 2004|access-date=2008-03-25|author=Dobbs, Michael}}</ref>


Burkett had received publicity in 2000, after making and then retracting a claim that he had been transferred to ] for refusing "to falsify personnel records of Governor Bush",<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 53.</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-21-burkett-side_x.htm|title=Texan has made allegations for years|author1=Moniz, Dave |author2=Drinkard, Jim |author3=Kevin Johnson |date=September 21, 2004|work=USA Today|access-date=2008-03-13}}</ref> and in February 2004, when he claimed to have knowledge of "scrubbing" of Bush's ] records.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://onlinejournal.com/bush/031903Burkett/031903burkett.html |title=What do you say? |author=Bill Burkett |date=March 19, 2003 |work=Online Journal |access-date=2006-03-20 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060210152055/http://onlinejournal.com/bush/031903Burkett/031903burkett.html |archive-date=February 10, 2006 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/02/13/doubts_raised_on_bush_accuser?mode=PF|author=Michael Rezendes|title=Doubts raised on Bush accuser|work=Boston Globe online|date=February 13, 2004|access-date=2005-12-20}}</ref> Mapes was "by her own account many in the press considered Burkett an 'anti-Bush zealot', his credibility in question".<ref>{{cite news|work=The Boston Globe|date=December 11, 2005|title=Truth and Duty: a distorted lens|author=Robinson, Walter V.|access-date=2008-03-13|url=http://www.boston.com/ae/books/articles/2005/12/11/truth_and_duty_a_distorted_lens/?page=2}}</ref>
==Allegations purportedly supported by memos==
The disputed documents include the following accusations:
#An order directing Bush to submit to a physical examination. This order was not carried out.
#A note of a telephone conversation with Bush in which Bush sought to be excused from "drill." The note records that Bush said he did not have the time to attend to his National Guard duties because of his responsibilities with the Blount campaign.
#A note that Killian had grounded Bush from flying for failing to live up to the standards of the U.S. Air Force and the National Guard and for failure to submit to a physical examination. Killian also requested that a flight inquiry board be convened, as required by regulations, to examine the reasons for Bush's loss of flight status.
#A note (labeled "CYA" for "cover your ass") claiming that Killian was being pressured from above to give Bush better marks in his yearly evaluation than he had earned. The note attributed to Killian says that he was being asked to "sugarcoat" Bush's performance. "I'm having trouble running interference and doing my job."


Mapes and Smith made contact with Burkett in late August, and on August 24 Burkett offered to meet with them to share the documents he possessed, and later told reporters from '']'' "that he had agreed to turn over the documents to CBS if the network would arrange a conversation with the ] campaign",<ref>{{cite news|work=USA Today|date=September 20, 2004|author1=Johnson, Kevin |author2=Moniz, Dave |author3=Jim Drinkard |title=CBS arranged for meeting with Lockhart|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-20-cbs-documents_x.htm|access-date=2008-03-14}}</ref> a claim substantiated by emails between Smith and Mapes detailing Burkett's additional requests for help with negotiating a book deal, security, and financial compensation.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 60–62.</ref> During the last week of August, Mapes asked Josh Howard, her immediate superior at CBS, for permission to facilitate contact between Burkett and the Kerry campaign; Howard and Mapes subsequently disputed whether such permission had been given.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 64–65.</ref>
Brig. Gen. ] (ret'd) who once worked for an assistant secretary of defense, said that these documents prove that Bush did not complete his national service commitments, even if the records showed that he had been paid during this time. Lawrence Korb said that a truthful evaluation by Killian would have resulted in Bush's being drafted for active duty in Vietnam.


Two documents were provided by Burkett to Mapes on September 2 and four others on September 5, 2004. At that time, Burkett told Mapes that they were copies of originals that had been obtained from Killian's personal files via Chief ] George Conn, another former member of the TexANG.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-21-cover-guard_x.htm|work=USA Today|date=September 21, 2004|access-date=2008-03-14|author1=Dave Moniz |author2=Kevin Johnson |author3=Jim Drinkard |title=CBS backs off Guard story}}</ref>
==Initial skepticism==
A few hours after the release of the ''60 Minutes II'' segment, a discussion began on ], a right-wing Internet forum. This quickly spread to various ] that the copies of these memos from the CBS News website displayed characteristics inconsistent with being produced by 1972 typewriter technology. These claims quickly found their way into the mainstream press, and the following night CBS News gave a firm rebuttal. The initial skepticism appeared in the following posts on Free Republic:


Mapes informed Rather of the progress of the story, which was being targeted to air on September 8 along with footage of an interview with ], a former ], who would publicly state for the first time his opinion that Bush had received preferential treatment to get into the National Guard.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-questions-on-bush-guard-duty-08-09-2004/|title=New Questions on Bush Guard Duty|work=CBS News|date=September 8, 2004|access-date=2008-03-14}}</ref> Mapes had also been in contact with the Kerry campaign several times between late August and September 6, when she spoke with senior Kerry advisor ] regarding the progressing story. Lockhart subsequently stated he was "wary" of contact with Mapes at this stage, because if the story were true, his involvement might undermine its credibility, and if it were false, "he did not want to be associated with it".<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 90–91.</ref> Lockhart called Burkett on September 6 at the number provided by Mapes, and both men stated they discussed Burkett's view of Kerry's presidential campaign strategy, not the existence of the documents or the related story.<ref>{{cite news|title=Kerry Aide Talked to Bush Guard Docs Figure|work=FoxNews.com|access-date=2008-03-14|date=September 22, 2004|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,132996,00.html|author=Carl Cameron|display-authors=etal}}</ref>
:"TankerKC," 19 minutes after the broadcast began: ''" not in the style that we used when I came into the ]...Can we get a copy of those memos?"''
:"Buckhead," responded less than four hours later: "Howlin, every single one of these memos to file is in a proportionally spaced font, probably Palatino or Times New Roman. In 1972 people used typewriters for this sort of thing, and typewriters used monospaced fonts...I am saying these documents are forgeries, run through a copier for 15 generations to make them look old. This should be pursued aggressively."''


===Content of the memos===
"Buckhead", who quickly became an internet folk hero of sorts, was later revealed to be ] lawyer Harry W. MacDougald, who has worked for right-wing groups such as the ] and the ] and helped draft the petition to the Arkansas Supreme Court for the disbarment of President ]. MacDougald's identity and the fact that he posted specific technical complaints about the memos so soon after the broadcast has fueled speculation of a right-wing conspiracy.
The documents claimed that Bush had disobeyed orders while in the Guard, and that undue influence had been exerted on Bush's behalf to improve his record. The documents included the following:


#An order directing Bush to submit to a physical examination.<ref>{{cite news|title=Memorandum, May 4, 1972|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/BushGuardmay4.pdf|access-date=2006-03-17| work=CBS News}}</ref>
Various conservative discussion groups and Internet blogs quickly picked on the story, some contributing evidence of forgery (notably ] and ]). Left-wing blogs tended to be skeptical of this. Blogger ] of the '']'', one of the most influential left-wing blogs on the Internet, wrote in a preface to his rebuttal of forgery arguments:
#A note that Killian had grounded Bush from flying due to "failure to perform to ]&nbsp;/ TexANG standards", and for failure to submit to the physical examination as ordered. Killian also requested that a flight inquiry board be convened, as required by regulations, to examine the reasons for Bush's loss of flight status.<ref>{{cite news|title=Memorandum for Record, August 1, 1972|url= http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/BushGuardaugust1.pdf|access-date=2006-03-17| work=CBS News}}</ref>
:''"As everyone on the planet no doubt knows by now, the hard-right of the freeper contingent ... discovered that if you used the same typeface, you could make documents that looked almost -- but not exactly -- like the TANG documents discovered by CBS News.''"
#A note of a telephone conversation with Bush in which Bush sought to be excused from "drill". The note records that Bush said he did not have the time to attend to his National Guard duties because he had a campaign to do (the Senate campaign of ] in Alabama).<ref>{{cite news|title=Memo to File, May 19, 1972|url= http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/BushGuardmay19.pdf|access-date=2006-03-17| work=CBS News}}</ref>
#A note (labeled "CYA" for "]") claiming that Killian was being pressured from above to give Bush better marks in his yearly evaluation than he had earned. The note attributed to Killian says that he was being asked to "sugarcoat" Bush's performance. "I'm having trouble running interference and doing my job."<ref>{{cite news|title=Memo to File, August 18, 1973|url= http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/BushGuardaugust18.pdf|access-date=2006-03-17| work=CBS News}}</ref>


'']'' also received copies of the four documents used by CBS,<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-09-bush-guard-memos_x.htm|title=Guard commander's memos criticize Bush.|access-date=2008-03-17|author1=Moniz, Dave |author2=Drinkard, Jim|work=USA Today|date=2004-09-09}}</ref> reporting this and publishing them the morning after the CBS segment, along with two additional memos.<ref>{{cite news|title= Bush documents obtained by USA TODAY|url= https://www.usatoday.com/news/nation/2004-09-09bushdocs.pdf |access-date=2006-03-17| work=USA Today}}</ref> Burkett was assured by ''USA Today'' that they would keep the source confidential.<ref name="usatoday_cbsbacksoff">{{cite news| url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-21-cover-guard_x.htm|author1=Dave Moniz |author2=Kevin Johnson |author3=Jim Drinkard |title=CBS backs off Guard story|work=USA TODAY|date= September 21, 2004|access-date=2005-12-20}}</ref>
Independent media and blog sites accused CBS of ].


===CBS investigations prior to airing the segment===
== CBS' response ==
Mapes and her colleagues began interviewing people who might be able to corroborate the information in the documents, while also retaining four ], Marcel J. Matley, James J. Pierce, Emily Will, and Linda James, to determine the validity of the memos.
CBS News initially claimed the documents were "thoroughly vetted by independent experts" and that they "are convinced of their authenticity." On September 10, a CBS memo reiterated their confidence in the authenticity of the documents, which they said were "backed up not only by independent handwriting and forensic document experts but by sources familiar with their content" and insisted that no internal investigation would take place. ], appearing on CNN, asserted "I know that this story is true. I believe that the witnesses and the documents are authentic. We wouldn't have gone to air if they would not have been."


CBS interviewed Robert Strong, a friend of Killian's who ran the Texas Air National Guard administrative office at the time. Strong believed the documents are authentic, saying "They are compatible with the way business was done at the time. They are compatible with the man that I remember Jerry Killian being." On September 5, CBS interviewed Killian's friend Robert Strong, who ran the Texas Air National Guard administrative office. Among other issues covered in his interview with Rather and Mapes, Strong was asked if he thought the documents were genuine. Strong stated, "they are compatible with the way business was done at the time. They are compatible with the man that I remember Jerry Killian being."<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bush-guard-memos-questioned/ |title=Bush Guard Memos Questioned.|work=CBS News, Associated Press|date=September 10, 2004|access-date=2005-12-20}}</ref> Strong had first seen the documents twenty minutes earlier and also said he had no personal knowledge of their content;<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 88.</ref> he later claimed he had been told to assume the content of the documents was accurate.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 129.</ref>
CBS also cited Killian's immediate superior at the time, Major General Bobby W. Hodges, who reportedly said that the memos were familiar to him and that details read to him over the phone were "the things that Killian had expressed to me at the time." According to Hodges, when CBS read portions of the memos to him he simply stated, "well if he wrote them that's what he felt." However, Hodges later claimed that he was misled by CBS and that the quote does not reflect what he said.


On September 6, CBS interviewed General Robert "Bobby" Hodges, a former officer at the Texas Air National Guard and Killian's immediate superior at the time. Hodges declined CBS' request for an on-camera interview, and Mapes read the documents to him over the telephone—or perhaps only portions of the documents; his recollection and Mapes's differed.<ref name="Thornburgh-Boccardi Report, p. 103">Thornburgh-Boccardi Report, p. 103.</ref> According to Mapes, Hodges agreed with CBS's assessment that the documents were real, and CBS reported that Hodges stated that these were "the things that Killian had expressed to me at the time".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A9967-2004Sep9.html |title=Some Question Authenticity of Papers on Bush|author1=Michael Dobbs |author2=Mike Allen |newspaper=Washington Post|date=September 9, 2004 |access-date=2004-12-20}}</ref> However, according to Hodges, when Mapes read portions of the memos to him he simply stated, "well if he wrote them, that's what he felt", and he stated he never confirmed the validity of the content of the documents. General Hodges later asserted to the investigatory panel that he told Mapes that Killian had never, to his knowledge, ordered anyone to take a physical and that he had never been pressured regarding Lieutenant Bush, as the documents alleged.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 103.</ref> Hodges also claims that when CBS interviewed him, he thought the memos were handwritten, not typed,<ref>{{cite news| url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/12/politics/campaign/12guard.html?ex=1135227600&en=70edb1f42aa3edfe&ei=5070 |title=An Ex-Officer Now Believes Guard Memo Isn't Genuine|author1=Ralph Blumenthal |author2=Jim Rutenberg |work=New York Times|date=September 12, 2004 |access-date=2005-12-20}} Registration required.</ref><ref name="Thornburgh-Boccardi Report, p. 103"/> and following the September 8 broadcast, when Hodges had seen the documents and heard of claims of forgery by Killian's wife and son, he was "convinced they were not authentic" and told Rather and Mapes on September 10.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 12.</ref>
After further investigation, CBS News stated on ] that their source, Bill Burkett,
"admits that he deliberately misled the CBS News producer working on the report, giving her a false account of the documents' origins to protect a promise of confidentiality to the actual source."
The network did not state that the memos were forgeries,
but CBS News president ] did state "Based on what we now know, CBS News cannot prove that the documents are authentic, which is the only acceptable journalistic standard to justify using them in the report. We should not have used them. That was a mistake, which we deeply regret."


===Response of the document examiners===
Soon after, CBS established a review panel "to help determine what errors occurred in the preparation of the report and what actions need to be taken." ], former ] and ], and ], retired president and chief executive officer and former executive editor of the ], make up the two-person review board.
Prior to airing, all four of the examiners responded to Mapes' request for document analysis, though only two to Mapes directly:<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 84–86.</ref>


*Emily Will noted discrepancies in the signatures on the memos, and had questions about the letterhead, the proportional spacing of the font, the ]ed "th" and the improper formatting of the date. Will requested other documents to use for comparison.<ref name=rushtoair>{{cite news|title=In Rush to Air, CBS Quashed Memo Worries.|newspaper=The Washington Post|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A31727-2004Sep18_2.html|access-date=2008-03-17|author1=Howard Kurtz |author2=Michael Dobbs |author3=James V. Grimaldi |date=September 19, 2004}}</ref>
==Typographical questions==
*Linda James was "unable to reach a conclusion about the signature" and noted that the superscripted "th" was not in common use at the time the memos were allegedly written; she later recalled telling CBS, "the two memos she looked at 'had problems.'"<ref name=rushtoair/>
===Proportional fonts===
*James Pierce concluded that both of the documents were written by the same person and that the signature matched Killian's from the official Bush records. Only one of the two documents provided to Pierce had a signature. James Pierce wrote, "the balance of the Jerry B. Killian signatures appearing on the photocopied questioned documents are consistent and in basic agreement", and stated that based on what he knew, "the documents in question are authentic".<ref name="cbsnews.com">{{cite news|title=GOP Slams CBS on Bush Memos|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/gop-slams-cbs-on-bush-memos/|access-date=2008-03-17|date=September 15, 2004|work=CBS News|author=CBS/AP}}</ref> However, Pierce also told Mapes he could not be sure if the documents had been altered because he was reviewing copies, not original documents.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 86.</ref>
The majority of typewriters available in 1972 used fixed width ]. Typewriters with proportional fonts were first introduced in 1941, mass-produced from 1948 onwards, and were in use by 1972.
*Marcel Matley's review was initially limited to Killian's signature on one of the Burkett documents, which he compared to signatures from the official Bush records. Matley "seemed fairly confident" that the signature was Killian's. On September 6, Matley was interviewed by Rather and Mapes and was provided with the other four documents obtained from CBS (he would prove to be the only reviewer to see these documents prior to the segment). Matley told Rather "he could not authenticate the documents due to the fact that they were poor quality copies".<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 98–99.</ref> In the interview, Matley told Rather that with respect to the signatures, they were relying on "poor material" and that there were inconsistencies in the signatures, but also replied "Yes", when asked if it would be safe to say the documents were written by the person who signed them.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 101.</ref>
*Both Emily Will and Linda James suggested to Mapes that CBS contact typewriter expert Peter Tytell (son of ]). Associate producer Yvonne Miller left him a voicemail on September 7; he returned the call at 11 am on September 8 but was told they "did not need him anymore".<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 108–110.</ref>


==September 8 segment and initial reactions==
The only known typewriters available in 1972 with proportional font support and a similar (though not exact) match to the font some claim was used in the memos (11-point Press Roman vs. 12-point Times New Roman) is the IBM Selectric Composer. The IBM Executive supported a single serifed proportional font that is very different from the Selectric Composer font that most closely matches the font some believe is used in the memos; however, the actual font used is almost impossible to identify, and various fonts supported by the Selectric and the Executive are likely candidates.
The segment entitled ''"For the Record"'' aired on ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' on September 8.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/1B.pdf |title=Transcript of CBS segment |access-date=2010-05-24 | work=CBS News}}</ref> After introducing the documents, Rather said, in reference to Matley, "We consulted a handwriting analyst and document expert who believes the material is authentic."<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.baltimoresun.com/features/bal-to.cbs13sep13,1,3810194.story?coll=bal-features-headlines|work=The Baltimore Sun|author=David Folkenflik|date=September 13, 2004|title=Rather's doubters unmoved|access-date=2008-03-17}}</ref>


The segment introduced Lieutenant Robert Strong's interview, describing him as a "friend of Killian" (without noting he had not worked in the same location and without mentioning he had left the TexANG prior to the dates on the memos). The segment used the sound bite of Strong saying the documents were compatible with how business was done but did not include a disclaimer that Strong was told to assume the documents were authentic.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 128–129.</ref>
Bill Glennon, a technology consultant in ] who worked for IBM repairing typewriters from 1973 to 1985, says experts making the claim that typewriters were incapable of producing the memos "are full of crap. They just don't know." He says there were IBM machines capable of producing the spacing, and a customized key &mdash; the likes of which he says were not unusual &mdash; that created the superscript <sup>th</sup> (discussed below). Responding directly to Glennon was Thomas Phinney, program manager for fonts at ], which helped to develop the modern Times New Roman font. Phinney stated that the memos could not have been produced with IBM typewriters, including the Selectric and Executive models, due to differences in font width.


In Rather's narration about one of the memos, he referred to pressure being applied on Bush's behalf by General Buck Staudt, and described Staudt as "the man in charge of the Texas National Guard". Staudt had retired from the guard a year and a half prior to the dates of the memos.
Phinney's view is supported by some typeface designers. The theory is that each time a typeface is redeveloped for new technology, the widths, heights or designs will vary slightly. Hence Times Roman on an Apple LaserWriter is different from the Times New Roman on Windows operating systems.


Interview clips with ], former Speaker of the Texas House, created the impression "that there was no question but that President Bush had received Barnes' help to get into the TexANG", because Barnes had made a telephone call on Bush's behalf, when Barnes himself had acknowledged that there was no proof his call was the reason, and that "sometimes a call to General Rose did not work". Barnes' disclaimer was not included in the segment.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 130.</ref>
''Desktop'' magazine in ] analysed the documents in its ] 2004 issue and concluded that the typeface was a post-1985 version of Times Roman, rather than Times New Roman, both of which are different in detail to IBM Press Roman. The article did not dispute that superscripts and proportional fonts were available in the 1970s.


===Internet skepticism spreads===
The Selectric Composer cost $3,600 to $4,400 in 1973 dollars ($16,000 to $22,000 in 2004 dollars). (Regular Selectrics were available second-hand for around $150 , but could not have produced the documents in question.) Most of the known genuine documents from Bush's ANG base were typed using the more typical fixed width fonts commonly associated with typewriters. However, one document released by the Pentagon on September 24 (well after the controversy erupted) uses a proportionally spaced font similar (but not identical) to the font used in the Killian memos .
Discussion quickly spread to various ] in the ], principally ] and ].<ref name=HK2004.0919>{{cite news |author=] |newspaper=Washington Post |title=After Blogs Got Hits, CBS Got a Black Eye |date=2004-09-20 |url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A34153-2004Sep19.html }}</ref> The initial analysis appeared in posts by "Buckhead", a ] of Harry W. MacDougald, an ] attorney who had worked for conservative groups such as the ] and the Southeastern Legal Foundation, and who had helped draft the petition to the ] Supreme Court for the ] of President ].<ref name="LATimes_2015">{{cite news |author=Wallsten, Peter| title=GOP Activist Made Allegations on CBS Memos | url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-sep-18-na-buckhead18-story.html | access-date= July 11, 2015|work=Los Angeles Times |date=September 18, 2004}}</ref><ref name="AJC_Baxter_2004">{{cite web|last1=Baxter |first1=Tom |title=Atlantan challenged CBS documents first |url=http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/0904/19bushguard.html |website=Atlanta Journal-Constitution |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050903213724/http://www.ajc.com/metro/content/metro/0904/19bushguard.html?UrAuth=aNcNUObNTUbTTUWUXUUUZTYU%2FWUbUbUZUbU%5EUcTYWVVZV |archive-date=September 3, 2005 |date=September 19, 2004 |url-status=dead }}</ref> MacDougald questioned the validity of the documents on the basis of their typography, writing that the memos were "in a proportionally spaced font, probably ] or ]", and alleging that this was an ]: "I am saying these documents are forgeries, run through a copier for 15 generations to make them look old. This should be pursued aggressively."<ref>{{cite news|work=The Seattle Times |date=September 18, 2004 |title=Buckhead, who said CBS memos were forged, is a GOP-linked attorney |author=Wallsten, Peter |access-date=2008-03-17 |url=http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002039080_buckhead18.html |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070809230831/http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/nationworld/2002039080_buckhead18.html |archive-date=August 9, 2007 }}</ref>


By the following day, questions about the authenticity of the documents were being publicized by the '']'', which linked to the analysis at the Powerline blog in the mid-afternoon,<ref>{{cite news|title=Blogs have their day.|author=Grossman, Lev|work=Time Magazine|date=December 19, 2004|access-date=2008-03-18|url=http://www.time.com/time/subscriber/personoftheyear/2004/poyblogger.html|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070104133324/http://www.time.com/time/subscriber/personoftheyear/2004/poyblogger.html|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 4, 2007}}</ref> and the story was covered on the website of the magazine '']''<ref>{{cite web|title=Is it a hoax?|author=Hayes, Stephen F.|work=The Weekly Standard|date=September 9, 2004|access-date=2008-03-18|url=http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/596astgo.asp|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040910084136/http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/596astgo.asp|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 10, 2004}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|title=Swift Boat flacks attack CBS|author=Boehlert, Eric|work=Salon.com|date=September 10, 2004|access-date=2008-03-18|url=http://dir.salon.com/story/news/feature/2004/09/10/forgery/}}</ref> and broke into mass media outlets, including the ] and the major television news networks. It also was receiving serious attention from conservative writers such as ]'s ].<ref>{{cite news | title=About that Bush document. |author=Jim Geraghty |date=September 10, 2004| url=http://tks.nationalreview.com/post/?q=YTFmODM3ZWI1MjY4NjQwNTdhMzg1MTE5NjJkNGMxMWY | access-date=2008-03-18 | publisher=National Review Online}}</ref> By the afternoon of September 9, ] of Little Green Footballs had posted his attempt to recreate one of the documents using ] with the default settings.<ref>{{Cite web|last=Wallsten|first=Peter|date=2004-09-12|title=No Disputing It: Blogs Are Major Players|url=https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-2004-sep-12-na-blog12-story.html|access-date=2023-01-05|website=Los Angeles Times|language=en-US}}</ref> The September 9 edition of ]'s '']'' made mention of the controversy, along with an article on the ] website.<ref>{{cite web|title=Officer's Widow Questions Bush Guard Documents|url=https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/Vote2004/story?id=123461&page=1|access-date=2008-03-19|date=September 10, 2004|work=ABC News}}</ref>
===Sophisticated spacing===
Some argue that the Killian memos display ], a sophisticated character spacing that is ubiquitous with word-processing documents and uncommon in typewriters in 1972. Technically, Microsoft Word does not perform true kerning by default, but the TrueType engine used by Windows supports something called "hinting" or pseudo-kerning, which is not implemented on mechanical typewriters.


Thirteen days after this controversy had emerged the national newspaper ''USA Today'' published a timeline of events surrounding the CBS story.<ref name="memmot"/> Accordingly, on the September 9 morning after the "60 minutes" report, the broadcast was front-page news in the ''New York Times'' and ''Washington Post''. Additionally, the story was given two-thirds of a full page within ''USA Today'''s news section, which mentioned that it had also obtained copies of the documents. However, the authenticity of the memos was not part of the story carried by major news outlets on that day.<ref name="memmot"/> Also on that day, CBS published the reaction of Killian's son, Gary, to the documents, reporting that Gary Killian questioned one of the memos but stated that others "appeared legitimate" and characterized the collection as "a mixture of truth and fiction".<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/new-scrutiny-of-bushs-service/|title=New Scrutiny Of Bush's Service | date=September 9, 2004| access-date=2006-03-20|publisher=CBS News}}</ref> In an interview with ], Gary Killian expressed doubts about the documents' authenticity on the basis of his father's positive view of Bush.<ref>{{cite news|url=http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,132047,00.html|title=FOX Interviews Commander's Son|date=September 10, 2004|access-date=2008-03-25|author=Rosen, James|work=Fox News}}</ref>
Some typewriters that were available at the time, the IBM Executive and the IBM Selectric Composer, were capable of kerning. However, on these typewriters, kerning required additional operations such as backspacing or manually moving the carriage back slightly.


In 2006, the two ] (Rathergate) bloggers, Harry W. MacDougald, username "Buckhead", an Atlanta-based lawyer<ref name="LATimes_2015" /><ref name="AJC_Baxter_2004" /> and Paul Boley, username "TankerKC", were awarded the ''Reed Irvine Award for New Media'' by the ] ] at the ] (CPAC).<ref>{{citation |url=http://www.aim.org/media-monitor/aim-to-honor-people-in-pajamas/|title=AIM to Honor People in Pajamas |author=Roger Aronoff |date=November 4, 2005 |access-date=February 14, 2017}}</ref><ref name="AIM_2013">{{cite web |url=http://www.aim.org/annual-reed-irvine-awards/ |title=Annual Reed Irvine Awards |publisher=] |quote=Jim Hoft, Proprietor of Gateway Pundit |access-date=February 10, 2017}}</ref>
===Word wrapping===
Because a typewriter does not have the ability to know what the user is going to type next, it is up to the typist to decide when to move the carriage to the next line. Often, a typist will use hyphenation to split a word between two lines on a syllable boundary, while computer word processors (and Microsoft Word in particular) do not do this by default. The lines in the memos are split along word boundaries at the exact location where Microsoft Word would have split them.


===CBS's response and widening media coverage===
===Superscripted "th"===
At 5:00&nbsp;p.m. on Thursday, September 9, CBS News released a statement saying the memos were "thoroughly investigated by independent experts, and we are convinced of their authenticity",<ref name="somequestion"/> and stating, "this report was not based solely on recovered documents, but rather on a preponderance of evidence, including documents that were provided by unimpeachable sources".<ref name="cbsstandsby">{{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-stands-by-bush-guard-memos-11-09-2004/|access-date=2008-03-18|date=September 10, 2004|title=CBS Stands By Bush-Guard Memos|work=CBS News}}</ref> The statement was replaced later that day with one that omitted this claim.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.abcnews.go.com/sections/politics/TheNote/TheNote_Sept1004.html|title=The Note|work=ABC News|date=September 10, 2004|access-date=2007-03-20}}</ref>
The Killian Memos display ]ed "th" glyphs in a smaller font on numbers (such as 111<sup>th</sup>) that are generated automatically by Microsoft Word but some claim would require excessive effort to create using most 1972 typewriters.


The first newspaper articles questioning the documents appeared on September 10 in '']'',<ref name="somequestion">{{cite news | title=Some Question Authenticity of Papers on Bush|date=September 10, 2004 |page=A01| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A9967-2004Sep9.html | access-date=2008-03-18|newspaper=The Washington Post|author1=Michael Dobbs |author2=Mike Allen }}</ref> ''The New York Times''<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/10/politics/campaign/10guard.html|author1=Seelye, Katharine Q. |author2=Rutenberg, Jim|date=September 10, 2004|access-date=2008-03-18|title=Commander's Son Questions Memos on Bush's Service | work=The New York Times}}</ref> and in ''USA Today'' via the ].<ref name="APauthenticity">{{cite news|work=USA Today|agency=Associated Press|date=September 10, 2004|access-date=March 19, 2008|url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-10-bush-guard_x.htm|title=Authenticity of new Bush military papers questioned.}}</ref> The Associated Press reported, "Document examiner Sandra Ramsey Lines ... said she was 'virtually certain' were generated by computer. Lines said that meant she could testify in court that, beyond a reasonable doubt, her opinion was that the memos were written on a computer."<ref name="APauthenticity"/>
] has pointed out several documents of unquestioned authenticity in the Bush records have apparently superscripted 'th' characters interspersed throughout. However, these are not technically superscripts, since they are not raised above the level of the normal text, like an actual superscript would be. The CBS memos show signs of true superscripts.


Also on September 10, '']'' reported, "the officer named in one memo as exerting pressure to 'sugarcoat' Bush's military record was discharged a year and a half before the memo was written.<ref>{{cite news|author=Slover, Pete |url=http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/washington/elections2004/stories/091104dnpolguard.117c8.html |work=Dallas Morning News |date=September 11, 2004 |access-date=March 24, 2008 |title=Authenticity of memo to 'sugar coat' Bush record is further questioned |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050912163545/http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/news/washington/elections2004/stories/091104dnpolguard.117c8.html |archive-date=September 12, 2005 }} '']'' also published this story as "". The archived DallasNews.com article requires ] to be disabled to work; a permalinked version of the link with all scripts disabled is .</ref> The paper cited a military record showing that Col. Walter 'Buck' Staudt was honorably discharged on March 1, 1972, while the memo cited by CBS as showing that Staudt was interfering with evaluations of Bush was dated August 18, 1973."<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=The Washington Post|title=Rather Defends CBS Over Memos on Bush|author=Kurtz, Howard|access-date=2008-03-25|date=September 11, 2004|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A12809-2004Sep10.html}}</ref>
Lt. Col. Jerry Killian's former secretary, Marian Carr Knox, a registered Democrat, who worked from 1956 to 1979 at Ellington Air Force Base in Houston, recalls that during her time at the Guard, she used a mechanical Olympia typewriter, which did have a special "th" key. She said it was replaced by an IBM Selectric in the early 1970s. She asserts that the memos are not real, as the typeface does not match either of the two typewriters and that she would have remembered typing them. However, she also says that the content of the memos is genuine, and speculates that they may have been copied from originals that Killian had her type in the early 1970s.


In response to the media attention, a CBS memo said that the documents were "backed up not only by independent handwriting and forensic document experts but by sources familiar with their content" and insisted that no internal investigation would take place.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/bush-guard-memos-questioned/|title=Bush Guard Memos Questioned|access-date=2008-03-12|date=September 10, 2004|work=CBS News}}</ref> On the CBS Evening News of September 10, Rather defended the story and noted that its critics included "partisan political operatives".<ref name="Report 1D">{{cite news | title=CBS Evening News Transcript|date=September 10, 2004 | url=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/1D.pdf | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref>
===Centered headers===
Some have found it suspicious that two of the memos, dated May 4 and August 1, 1972, feature a three-line centered heading which aligns exactly, not only between the two memos (dated three months apart), but also with a comparison document created using the auto-centering feature of Microsoft Word.


*In the broadcast, Rather stated that Marcel Matley "analyzed the documents for CBS News. He believes they are real", and broadcast additional excerpts from Matley's September 6 interview showing Matley's agreement that the signatures appeared to be from the same source. Rather did not report that Matley had referred to them as "poor material", that he had only opined about the signatures or that he had specifically not authenticated the documents.
In fact, centering headers, even if the font is proportional, is not difficult at all. For example, one can left-justify the header and then use the space bar to count the number of spaces from the end of the text to the right margin. The IBM Executive and Selectric also have a kerning key which would give a more accurate measure of the whitespace. Once this number is determined, halving it gives the number of leading spaces for the centered header.
*Rather presented footage of the Strong interview, introducing it by stating Robert Strong "is standing by his judgment that the documents are real", despite Strong's lack of standing to authenticate them and his brief exposure to the documents.<ref name="Report 1D" />
*Rather concluded by stating, "If any definitive evidence to the contrary of our story is found, we will report it. So far, there is none."<ref name="Report 1D" /><ref name="look back">{{cite news | title=A Look Back At The Controversy|date=January 11, 2005 | url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/a-look-back-at-the-controversy/ | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref>


In an appearance on ] that day, Rather asserted "I know that this story is true. I believe that the witnesses and the documents are authentic. We wouldn't have gone to air if they would not have been."
A typist who had centered a header once with this procedure could then duplicate this exactly the next time this centered header was needed, resulting in headings that match perfectly.


However, CBS's Josh Howard spoke at length by telephone with typewriter expert Peter Tytell and later told the panel that the discussion was "an 'unsettling event' that shook his belief in the authenticity of the documents". Producer Mapes dismissed Tytell's concerns.<ref>Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 174.</ref>
It is unclear how the auto-centering done by Microsoft Word compares to this method.


{{anchor|Pajamahadeen}}
===Smart quotes===
A former vice president of CBS News, Jonathan Klein, dismissed the allegations of bloggers, suggesting that the "checks and balances" of a professional news organization were superior to those of individuals sitting at their home computers "in their pajamas".<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/640pgolk.asp?pg=2|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040923024922/http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/640pgolk.asp?pg=2|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 23, 2004|title=What Blogs Have Wrought|access-date=2008-03-20|author=Last, Jonathan|work=The Weekly Standard|date=September 27, 2004}}</ref>
Another feature of computer word processors such as Microsoft Word is "smart quotes"&mdash;the automatic translation of typed apostrophes and quotation marks depending on context. While typewriters of that era generally only supported a single kind of apostrophe ( <font size=3>'</font> ) and a single kind of quotation mark ( <font size=3>"</font> ), word processors have the ability to display curved marks like those used in typeset text. An example from the Killian memo is the word "I<font size=4>&rsquo;</font>m", which would have been rendered as "I<font size=3>'</font>m" on a typewriter or computer word processor without this feature. Word processors can also convert typed quotation marks into curved left and right marks, so <font size=3>"</font>this<font size=3>"</font> automatically becomes <font size=4>&ldquo;</font>this<font size=4>&rdquo;</font>. Double quotation marks are not used in any of the Killian memos. (You may have to enlarge the font size of your browser or print this page in order to see the difference between the two kinds of apostrophes.)


==CBS's defense, apology==
This of a ] ] for an IBM Executive typewriter allegedly shows the ability of that machine to produce left and right quote marks. However, close examination where the individual pixels are visible shows the resolution of the image is to low to make such a determination. Many analysts have disqualified the IBM Executive on other grounds, particularly the typeface and spacing differences (see above).
<!-- Image with inadequate rationale removed: ] opening sequence.]] -->
As media coverage widened and intensified, CBS at first attempted to produce additional evidence to support its claims. On September 11, a CBS News segment stated that document expert Phillip Bouffard thought the documents "could have been prepared on an IBM Selectric Composer typewriter, available at the time".<ref name="Report 1E">{{cite news | title=CBS Evening News Transcript |date=September 11, 2004| url=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/1E.pdf | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title=Further scrutiny lessens doubts on Bush memos / Some skeptics now say IBM typewriter could have been used | url=http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2004/09/11/MNGO68NEKR1.DTL | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=San Francisco Chronicle | first1=Francie | last1=Latour | first2=Michael | last2=Rezendes | date=September 11, 2004}}</ref> The ] was introduced in 1966 for use by ] professionals to generate ] copy;<ref>{{Cite web|title=Your WordPress! Site hosted with CloudAccess.net – Just another WordPress site|url=http://ibmcomposer.info/|access-date=2023-01-05|language=en-US}}</ref> according to ] archives describing this specialized equipment, "To produce copy which can be reproduced with 'justified', or straight left-and right-hand margins, the operator types the copy once and the composer computes the number of spaces needed to justify the line. As the operator types the copy a second time, the spaces are added automatically."<ref>{{Cite web|date=2003-01-23|title=IBM Archives: IBM Office Products Division highlights - page 2|url=https://www.ibm.com/ibm/history/exhibits/modelb/modelb_office2.html|access-date=2023-01-05|website=www.ibm.com|language=en-US}}</ref> Bouffard's comments were also cited by the ''Boston Globe'' in an article entitled "Authenticity backed on Bush documents".<ref>{{cite news | title=Authenticity backed on Bush documents |url=http://www.boston.com/ae/media/articles/2004/09/11/authenticity_backed_on_bush_documents/|access-date=2007-03-25 | work=The Boston Globe | date=September 11, 2004 | first1=Francie | last1=Latour | first2=Michael | last2=Rezendes}}</ref> However, the ''Globe'' soon printed a retraction regarding the title.<ref>{{cite news|title=For the Record |url=http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/09/15/for_the_record/ |access-date=2007-03-25 |publisher=The Boston Globe, September 15, 2004 |date=September 15, 2004 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060619025429/http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2004/09/15/for_the_record/ |archive-date=June 19, 2006 }}</ref> CBS noted that although General Hodges was now stating he thought the documents were inauthentic, "we believed General Hodges the first time we spoke with him." CBS reiterated: "we believe the documents to be genuine".<ref name="Report 1E" />


By September 13, CBS's position had shifted slightly, as Rather acknowledged "some of these questions come from people who are not active political partisans", and stated that CBS "talked to handwriting and document analysts and other experts who strongly insist the documents could have been created in the '70s".<ref name="Report 1F">{{cite news | title=CBS Evening News Transcript|date=September 13, 2004| url=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/1F.pdf | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref> The analysts and experts cited by Rather did not include the original four consulted by CBS. Rather instead presented the views of Bill Glennon and Richard Katz. Glennon, a former typewriter repairman with no specific credentials in typesetting beyond that job, was found by CBS after posting several defenses of the memos on blogs including ] and ]'s blog hosted at '']''.<ref>{{cite web|title=Killian Memo Update|url=http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2004_09/004669.php#261559|author=Kevin Drum|date=September 10, 2004|work=Washington Monthly|access-date=2017-01-17|archive-date=March 15, 2006|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060315153129/http://www.washingtonmonthly.com/archives/individual/2004_09/004669.php#261559|url-status=dead}}</ref> However, in the actual broadcast, neither interviewee asserted that the memos were genuine.
=== Allegedly reproducible using modern technology ===
Some critics claim that the memo could be duplicated identically with the default settings in ] 2003 , while others dispute this, noting, among other discrepancies, letters and words in the original which are not aligned properly and variations in boldness of letters . CBS does not possess the original documents, and the discrepancies could have been introduced by a combination of FAX transmission, repeated photocopying (a technique often used by forgers to give the appearance of age), and/or Photoshop manipulation. It seems illogical, however, that a hypothetical forger would have used advanced techniques such as Photoshop, whilst having seemingly made other errors through being hasty. Using a custom computer algorithm to find the best alignment between the scanned memo and the Word version shows an exact overlay, demonstrating how the low fidelity of the CBS documents can give the appearance of differences between individual letters in the two versions due to the random "thickening" introduced during the FAXing and/or photocopying process . However, the same low fidelty also aids the appearance of an exact overlay, as the re-sizing of the CBS documents obscures details.


As a result, some CBS critics began to accuse CBS of ].<ref>{{cite web|work=The Weekly Standard|title=Dear Mr. Rather|author=Emery, Noemie|date=September 21, 2004|access-date=2008-03-24|url=http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/660naguj.asp|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040923015750/http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/660naguj.asp|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 23, 2004}}</ref>
Some claim that screenshot of an Word document is an exact replica. Others point to discrepancies such as the inconsistent baseline in the original and the divergent locations of the 'th' supercript . In response, the creator of the screenshot printed the Word document to a PDF and obtained a much closer match to the superscript, but not to the baseline irregularities . In Microsoft Word, the 'th' superscript is drawn in a different location on the screen than it is when printed. Another experiment showed that faxing, scanning, and copying a Word document creates random baseline irregularities . It has been reported that at least one of the documents obtained by CBS had a fax header indicating it had been faxed from a Kinko's copy center .


===''60 Minutes Wednesday'', one week later===
] of ] published an animated ] of one of the CBS memos and a version he typed in Microsoft Word on Mac OS X using the software's default settings. The allows easy examination of Johnson's claim that the two are essentially identical. When using other versions of Microsoft Word or alternative products such as Wordperfect, with their default settings on, such an exact match is not usually obtained .
The original document examiners, however, continued to be part of the story. By September 15, Emily Will was publicly stating that she had told CBS that she had doubts about both the production of the memos and the handwriting prior to the segment. Linda James stated that the memos were of "very poor quality" and that she did not authenticate them,<ref name="CNN1">{{cite news | title=CBS' experts say they didn't authenticate Bush memos|date=September 15, 2004 | url=http://edition.cnn.com/2004/ALLPOLITICS/09/15/bush.guard.memos/index.html | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CNN }}</ref> telling ABC News, "I did not authenticate anything and I don't want it understood that I did."<ref name="cbsnews.com"/>


In response, ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' released a statement suggesting that Will and James had "misrepresented" their role in the authentication of the documents and had played only a small part in the process.<ref name="60min statement">{{cite news |title=CBS News affirms its intention to continue to report all aspects of the story | date=September 15, 2004 | url=http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/cbsstatement.pdf | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref> CBS News concurrently amended its previous claim that Matley had authenticated the documents, saying instead that he had authenticated only the signatures.<ref>{{cite news | title=CBS Defends Bush Memos|date=September 15, 2004 | url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-defends-bush-memos/ | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref> On CNN, Matley stated he had only verified that the signatures were "from the same source", not that they were authentically Killian's: "When I saw the documents, I could not verify the documents were authentic or inauthentic. I could only verify that the signatures came from the same source", Matley said. "I could not authenticate the documents themselves. But at the same time, there was nothing to tell me that they were not authentic."<ref name="CNN1" />
=== Inability to reproduce using contemporary technology ===
Thus far, no one has been able to reproduce the exact typography, spacing and layout of the Killian memos using technology available in 1972. One critic even offers a reward of over $50,000 to anyone who can "reasonably" duplicate the memos using the default setup of a 1972 typewriter..


On the evening of September 15, CBS aired a segment that featured an interview with Marian Carr Knox, a secretary at ] from 1956 to 1979, and who was Killian's assistant on the dates shown in the documents. Dan Rather prefaced the segment on the recorded interview by stating, "She told us she believes what the documents actually say is, exactly, as we reported." In the aired interview, Knox expressed her belief that the documents reflected Killian's "sentiments" about Bush's service, and that this belief motivated her decision to reach out to CBS to provide the interview.<ref name="60min statement" /><ref>{{Cite web|title=For The Record: Bush Documents|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/for-the-record-bush-documents-15-09-2004/|access-date=2023-01-05|website=www.cbsnews.com|date=September 15, 2004 |language=en-US}}</ref> In response to a direct question from Rather about the authenticity of the memo on Bush's alleged insubordination, she stated that no such memo was ever written; she further emphasized that she would have known if such a memo existed, as she had sole responsibility to type Killian's memos in that time period. At this point, she also admitted she had no firsthand knowledge of Bush's time in the Guard.<ref>{{citation|title=Ex-staffer: Bush records are fake; Secretary to military officer says she never typed the memos|author1=Crowe, Robert |author2=Mason, Julie|work=Houston Chronicle|date=September 15, 2004|page=A7|url=http://www.chron.com/news/politics/article/Secretary-to-military-officer-says-Bush-records-1665422.php|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040915234617/http://www.chron.com/cs/CDA/ssistory.mpl/nation/2796630|archive-date=September 15, 2004|url-status=live}}</ref> However, controversially, Knox said later in the interview, "The information in here was correct, but it was picked up from the real ones." She went on to say, "I probably typed the information and somebody picked up the information some way or another."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/15/us/the-2004-campaign-national-guard-memos-on-bush-are-fake-but-accurate-typist-says.html|title=Memos on Bush Are Fake but Accurate, Typist Says|work=The New York Times|date=September 15, 2004|access-date=2008-03-24|author1=Balleza, Maureen|author2=Zernike, Kate|archive-date=2015-10-05|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20151005164349/http://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/15/us/the-2004-campaign-national-guard-memos-on-bush-are-fake-but-accurate-typist-says.html|url-status=dead}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|last=Slover |first=Pete |title=Ex-aide disavows Bush Guard memos |url=http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/091504dnpolnatguard.1185eb4ae.html |work=Dallas Morning News |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040918013740/http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/dn/latestnews/stories/091504dnpolnatguard.1185eb4ae.html |archive-date=September 18, 2004 }} The archived link works only with JavaScript disabled in the browser; a version with all scripts disabled is .</ref> The ''New York Times''' headline report on this interview, including the phrase "Fake but Accurate", created an immediate backlash from critics of CBS's broadcast. The conservative-leaning ''Weekly Standard'' proceeded to predict the end of CBS's news division.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/634lbcgo.asp|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040922040337/http://www.weeklystandard.com/Content/Public/Articles/000/000/004/634lbcgo.asp|url-status=dead|archive-date=September 22, 2004|title=The fake but accurate media.|date=September 27, 2004|work=The Weekly Standard|access-date=2008-03-24}}</ref><ref>{{cite web|author=Taranto, James|title=All the News that's Fake but Accurate.|date=September 15, 2004|work=The Wall Street Journal Online|access-date=2008-03-15|url=http://www.opinionjournal.com/best/?id=110005624}}</ref>
=== No similar contemporary documents ===
The Washington Post reported that "f more than 100 records made available by the 147th Group and the Texas Air National Guard, none used the proportional spacing techniques characteristic of the CBS documents". This raises the question of the likelihood of a National Guard office having access to this type of equipment.


At this time, Dan Rather first acknowledged there were problems in establishing the validity of the documents used in the report, stating: "If the documents are not what we were led to believe, I'd like to break that story."<ref>{{cite news|newspaper=The Washington Post|date=September 16, 2004|access-date=2008-03-25|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24633-2004Sep15.html|author=Kurtz, Howard|title=Rather Concedes Papers Are Suspect; CBS Anchor Urges Media to Focus On Bush Service}}</ref>
'''Update:'''
On September 24th, 2004, just four days after CBS admitted it couldn't authenticate the Killian memos, another PDF packet of Bush's Guard records appeared on this Pentagon site containing the full master list of the officially released records: http://www.defenselink.mil/pubs/foi/bush_records
The PDF packet is simply labeled "Documents Released on September 24, 2004"
and the sixth document, dated 19 February 1971 and titled "Appointment and Federal Recognition," is proportionally spaced. While it appears to be of a different font style than that used in the Killian memos, it is apparently the first officially released document that is in some sort of obviously proportionally spaced font.


Copies of the documents were first released to the public by the ]. Press Secretary ] stated that the memos had been provided to them by CBS in the days prior to the report and that, "We had every reason to believe that they were authentic at that time."<ref>{{cite web|url=https://georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov/news/releases/2004/09/20040915-3.html |title=Scott McClellan briefing, September 15, 2004, at |publisher=Georgewbush-whitehouse.archives.gov |date=2004-09-15 |access-date=2010-05-24}}</ref>
=== One's versus Ell's ===


The ''Washington Post'' reported that at least one of the documents obtained by CBS had a fax header indicating it had been faxed from a Kinko's copy center in Abilene, Texas,<ref>{{cite news | title=CBS Guard Documents Traced to Tex. Kinko's |date=September 15, 2004|page=A06| url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A24635-2004Sep15.html | access-date=2006-03-20 | newspaper=The Washington Post | first=Michael | last=Dobbs}}</ref> leading some to trace the documents back to Burkett.
On September 13th, ] introduced two new claimed experts to vouch for the authenticity of the memos. One of the invididuals, a software designer named Richard Katz, claimed that a lower case ell was used in place of the numeral one in the memos. Further, it was claimed that this would be difficult to duplicate on the computer today. Mr. Katz did not elaborate on how he was able to determine ell's were used in place of one's and why it would be difficult to duplicate on a computer.


===CBS states that use of the documents was a mistake===
There is speculation that Mr. Katz was referring to the fact that early typewriters did not have a one
As a growing number of independent document examiners and competing news outlets reported their findings about the documents, CBS News stopped defending the documents and began to report on the problems with their story. On September 20 they reported that their source, Bill Burkett, "admits that he deliberately misled the CBS News producer working on the report, giving her a false account of the documents' origins to protect a promise of confidentiality to the actual source."<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-statement-on-bush-memos/|date=February 11, 2009<!-- 7:51 PM-->|author=Jarrett Murphy|title=CBS Statement On Bush Memos|access-date=2011-07-27|work=CBS News}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/20/politics/campaign/20CND-GUAR.html?_r=1&hp&oref=slogin|date=September 20, 2004|author1=Rutenberg, Jim |author2=Prendergast, Mark J.|title=CBS Asserts It Was Misled by Ex-Officer on Bush Documents|access-date=2008-03-25|work=The New York Times}}</ref> While the network did not state that the memos were forgeries, CBS News president ] said,
or zero key and that typists learned to use ell's and the letter "O" in their place. However, analysis by other individuals have shown that it is exceedingly difficult to discern a one from a lowercase ell even when dealing with a pristine original, let alone poor quality photocopies. Further, the one discerning trait that can be analyzed, the character space occupied by ell's versus one's, indicates that the typist did in fact use one's rather than ell's where the numeric character was appropriate.


<blockquote>Based on what we now know, CBS News cannot prove that the documents are authentic, which is the only acceptable journalistic standard to justify using them in the report. We should not have used them. That was a mistake, which we deeply regret.<ref name="rather statement" /><ref name="CBS statement on panel" /></blockquote>
== Other issues ==
In addition to the typographical concerns, other issues have been raised regarding the content and formatting of the memos.


Dan Rather stated, "if I knew then what I know now – I would not have gone ahead with the story as it was aired, and I certainly would not have used the documents in question."<ref name="rather statement" />
=== Signatures ===
Of the documents, only the May 4 memo bears a full signature. This signature was confirmed as authentic by Marcel Matley , an expert consulted by CBS. Matley examined only the signature and made no attempt to authenticate the documents themselves . An independent certified forensic document examiner said Killian did not sign the documents .


In an interview with Rather, Burkett admitted that he misled CBS about the source of the documents, and then claimed that the documents came to him from someone he claimed was named "Lucy Ramirez", whom CBS was unable to contact or identify as an actual person. Burkett said he then made copies at the local ] and burned the original documents.<ref name="usatoday_cbsbacksoff" /><ref>{{cite news | title=CBS Statement On Bush Memos|date=September 20, 2004| url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-statement-on-bush-memos/ | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref> Investigations by CBS, CNN and the ''Washington Post'' failed to turn up evidence of "Lucy Ramirez" being an actual person.<ref>{{Cite web|title=The Whacking of CBS (washingtonpost.com)|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A458-2005Jan11.html|access-date=2023-01-05|website=www.washingtonpost.com}}</ref><ref>, ''The Weekly Standard'', January 10, 2005.</ref><ref>{{Cite web|url=http://www.cnn.com/2004/POLITICS/09/21/cbs.documents/|title=CNN Sept 21, 2004|website=] }}</ref>
===Skepticism from Killian's family and others===
Jerry Killian's wife and son argued that their father never used typewriting equipment and would have written these memos by hand. The family also stated that Killian was not known for keeping personal memos and that he had been very pleased with George Bush's performance in his TANG unit.


On September 21, CBS News addressed the contact with the Kerry campaign in its statement, saying "it is obviously against CBS News standards and those of every other reputable news organization to be associated with any political agenda."<ref name="look back" />
In contrast, Killian's secretary at the time, Marian Carr Knox, stated, "We did discuss Bush's conduct and it was a problem Killian was concerned about," Mrs. Knox said. "I think he was writing the memos so there would be some record that he was aware of what was going on and what he had done." She added that Killian had her type the memos and locked them away in his private files. She did not believe the CBS documents were real, due to inconsistencies, but said the content is accurate and was perhaps copied from the originals. Gary Killian, Killian's son, disputed her version of the history.


The next day the network announced it was forming an independent review panel to perform an internal investigation.
Earl W. Lively, who at the time was the commanding officer at the Austin TANG facility was quoted in the '']'' as saying, "They're forged as hell."


==Review panel established==
===Mention of influence by retired officer===
], named by CBS to investigate with ] the events that led to the CBS report.]]
An officer, Walter Staudt, cited in the memo dated ], ] as exerting pressure on officers to "sugar coat" their evaluations of Bush, had in fact retired from the service in March of 1972. Defenders contend that Staudt could have continued to exert influence after his retirement.


Soon after, CBS established a review panel "to help determine what errors occurred in the preparation of the report and what actions need to be taken".<ref>{{cite news |title=CBS News Statement On Panel |date=September 22, 2004 |url=https://www.cbsnews.com/news/cbs-news-statement-on-panel/ | access-date=2006-03-20 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref> ], a ] former ] and ] under George H.W. Bush, and ], retired president and chief executive officer and former executive editor of the ], made up the two-person review board. CBS also hired a ], former ] agent Erik T. Rigler, to gather further information about the story.<ref>{{cite web|title=Dan Rather's Long Goodbye: Who Done It? |work=The New York Observer |date=March 13, 2005 |access-date=2008-03-24 |author=Hagen, Joe |url=http://www.observer.com/node/50507 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071029202857/http://www.observer.com/node/50507 |url-status=dead |archive-date=October 29, 2007}}</ref>
Staudt, however, in an exclusive interview with ABC Sept 17th, has denied this.
“Staudt said he never tried to influence Killian or other Guardsmen, and added that he never came under any pressure himself to accept Bush. “No one called me about taking George Bush into the Air National Guard,” he said. “It was my decision. I swore him in. I never heard anything from anybody.”
And
"I never pressured anybody about George Bush because I had no reason to," Staudt told ABC News in his first interview since the documents were made public.


===Unsubstantiated Content=== ===Findings===
On January 5, 2005, the ''Report of the Independent Review Panel'' on the September 8, 2004, ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' segment "For the Record Concerning President Bush's Air National Guard Service" was released.<ref>Dick Thornburgh and Louis D. Boccardi, . CBS News: January 5, 2005.</ref> The purpose of the panel was to examine the process by which the September 8 segment was prepared and broadcast, to examine the circumstances surrounding the subsequent public statements and news reports by CBS News defending the segment, and to make any recommendations it deemed appropriate. Among the Panel's conclusions were the following:
One of the memos indicates that Killian had requested that a flight inquiry board be convened to examine the causes of Bush's loss of flight status. However, no records of this request or the flight inquiry board itself have been found. Regulations required such a review following the grounding of any pilot.


:The most serious defects in the reporting and production of the September 8 segment were:
===Improper formatting===
:# The failure to obtain clear authentication of any of the Killian documents from any document examiner;
According to U.S. Air Force practice of the 1970s, the memo dated "04 May 1972" should have had the date formatted as "4 May 72". Months were abbreviated to three characters, leading zeros were not used, and only the last two digits of the year were used up until the year 2000. In this memo, other discrepancies include:
:# The false statement in the September 8 segment that an expert had authenticated the Killian documents when all he had done was authenticate one signature from one document used in the segment;
* The terminology "MEMORANDUM FOR" was never used in the 1970s.
:# The failure of ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' management to scrutinize the publicly available, and at times controversial, background of the source of the documents, retired Texas Army National Guard Lieutenant Colonel Bill Burkett;
* The abbreviations in this letter are incorrectly formatted, in that a period is used after military rank (1st Lt.). According to the Air Force style manual, periods are not used in military rank abbreviations.
:# The failure to find and interview the individual who was understood at the outset to be Lieutenant Colonel Burkett's source of the Killian documents, and thus to establish the ];
* The abbreviation for Fighter Interceptor Squadron (FIS) includes periods after each capital letter. Again, periods are not used.
:# The failure to establish a basis for the statement in the segment that the documents "were taken from Colonel Killian's personal files";
* In paragraph 1, the phrase "not later than" is spelled out, followed by (NLT). NLT was, and is, a widely recognized abbreviation for "not later than" throughout all military services, so the inclusion of "not later than" was not a generally accepted practice and completely unnecessary in a letter from one military member to another.
:# The failure to develop adequate corroboration to support the statements in the Killian documents and to carefully compare the Killian documents to official TexANG records, which would have identified, at a minimum, notable inconsistencies in content and format;
* According to an ex-Guard commander, retired Col. Bobby W. Hodges, the Guard never used the abbreviation "grp" for "group" or "OETR" for an officer evaluation review, as in the CBS documents. The correct terminology, he said, is "gp" and "OER."
:# The failure to interview a range of former National Guardsmen who served with Lieutenant Colonel Killian and who had different perspectives about the documents;
* Lieutenant Colonel Killian's signature element is incorrect for letters prepared in the 1970s. This letter uses a three-line signature element, which was normally not used. Three-line signature elements were almost the exclusive domain of colonels and generals in organizations well above the squadron level.
:# The misleading impression conveyed in the segment that Lieutenant Strong had authenticated the content of the documents when he did not have the personal knowledge to do so;
* Finally, the signature element is placed far to the right, instead of being left justified. The placement of the signature element to the right was not used or directed by Air Force standards until almost 20 years after the date of this letter.
:# The failure to have a vetting process capable of dealing effectively with the production speed, significance and sensitivity of the segment; and
:# The telephone call prior to the segment's airing by the producer of the segment to a senior campaign official of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry – a clear conflict of interest – that created the appearance of a political bias.


:Once questions were raised about the September 8 segment, the reporting thereafter was mishandled and compounded the damage done. Among the more egregious shortcomings during the Aftermath were:
===Paper size===
:# The strident defense of the September 8 segment by CBS News without adequately probing whether any of the questions raised had merit;
In 1921, two different committees decided on standard paper sizes for the United States. A group called the Permanent Conference on Printing established the '''8" by 10&frac12;"''' size as the general U.S. government letterhead standard, while a Committee on the Simplification of Paper Sizes came up with the more familiar '''8&frac12;" by 11"''' size now known as '''US Letter'''. The U.S. military used the smaller size up until the early 1980s. So a low-quality photocopy of the memos might have shown thin vertical lines or some other indication of the smaller paper size in a photocopy of the memos if they had been typed on the 8" by 10&frac12;" paper.
:# Allowing many of the same individuals who produced and vetted the by-then controversial September 8 segment to also produce the follow-up news reports defending the segment;
:# The inaccurate press statements issued by CBS News after the broadcast of the segment that the source of the documents was "unimpeachable" and that experts had vouched for their authenticity;
:# The misleading stories defending the segment that aired on the CBS Evening News after September 8 despite strong and multiple indications of serious flaws;
:# The efforts by ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' to find additional document examiners who would vouch for the authenticity of the documents instead of identifying the best examiners available regardless of whether they would support this position; and
:# Preparing news stories that sought to support the segment, instead of providing accurate and balanced coverage of a raging controversy.


=== CBS's "smoking gun" === ===Panel's view of the documents===
The Panel did not undertake a thorough examination of the authenticity of the Killian documents, but consulted Peter Tytell, a New York City-based forensic document examiner and typewriter and typography expert. Tytell had been contacted by ''60 Minutes'' producers prior to the broadcast, and had informed associate producer Yvonne Miller and executive producer Josh Howard on September 10 that he believed the documents were forgeries. The Panel report stated, "The Panel met with Peter Tytell, and found his analysis sound in terms of why he thought the documents were not authentic ... The Panel reaches no conclusion as to whether Tytell was correct in all respects."<ref name="Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pg. 175">Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 175.</ref>
CBS authenticated their documents with General Robert "Bobby" Hodges, a former officer at the Texas Air National Guard. Hodges agreed with CBS's assessment that the documents were real. However, he declined CBS's request that he give an interview and review the documents in person. The authentication was performed via telephone. Once Hodges had seen the documents and heard of claims of forgery by Killian's wife and son, he stated that they had been falsified. Hodges also claims that when CBS interviewed him, he thought the memos were handwritten, not typed. ( '']'', ], 2004)


==Aftermath==
=== Inconsistency with Killian's earlier memos ===
The controversy had long-reaching personal, political and legal consequences. In a 2010 issue of '']'', Rather's report was ranked {{Numero|3}} on a list of TV's ten biggest "blunders".<ref>Battaglio, Stephen. "The Blunder Years", '']'', November 1, 2010, pp. 20–21.</ref>
The memos released by CBS appear to be inconsistent with earlier memorandums, written by Killian, and released by the ]. According to the '']'' on ], ], "''The analysis shows that half a dozen Killian memos released earlier by the military were written with a standard typewriter using different formatting techniques from those characteristic of computer-generated documents. CBS's Killian memos bear numerous signs that are more consistent with modern-day word-processing programs, particularly Microsoft Word...''" The language and terminology in the memos also differed from standard military usage, (for example, in the use of abbreviations, and in punctuation).


===CBS personnel and programming changes===
In fact, on September 14, 2004, Marian Carr Knox stated that the memos were not written by Killian. Knox was a secretary at Ellington Air Force from 1956 to 1979 that typed up documents for Killian. She said that although she did not recall typing the memos reported by CBS News, they accurately reflect the viewpoints of Col. Killian and documents that would have been in the personal file. Referring to the disputed memos, Knox commented "The information in here was correct, but it was picked up from the real ones," she said. "I probably typed the information and somebody picked up the information some way or another."
CBS terminated Mary Mapes and demanded the resignations of ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' Executive Producer Josh Howard and Howard's top deputy, Senior Broadcast Producer Mary Murphy, as well as Senior Vice President Betsy West, who had been in charge of all prime time newscasts. Murphy and West resigned on February 25, 2005,<ref>{{cite news|title=2 Involved in Flawed Report at CBS Resign|author=Jacques Steinberg|work=The New York Times|date=February 26, 2005|page=B18}}</ref> and after settling a legal dispute regarding his level of responsibility for the segment, Josh Howard resigned on March 25, 2005.<ref>{{cite news | title= Final Figure in '60 Minutes' Scandal Resigns|date=March 25, 2005|agency=Associated Press | url=https://www.foxnews.com/story/final-figure-in-60-minutes-scandal-resigns | access-date=2006-03-20 | work=Fox News}}</ref>


Dan Rather announced on November 23, 2004, that he would step down in early 2005 and on March 9, his 24th anniversary as anchor, he left the network. It is unclear whether or not Rather's retirement was directly caused by this incident. ], CEO of CBS, stated "Dan Rather has already apologized for the segment and taken responsibility for his part in the broadcast. He voluntarily moved to set a date to step down from the ''CBS Evening News'' in March of 2005." He added, "We believe any further action would not be appropriate."<ref>{{cite news|author=Carter, Bill|title=Analysis: Post-Mortem of CBS's Flawed Broadcast|url=https://www.nytimes.com/2005/01/11/business/media/11network.html?pagewanted=1&ei=5094&en=36f0636021244f73&hp&ex=1105506000&partner=homepage|date=January 11, 2005|work=The New York Times|access-date=2008-03-24}}</ref>
===Experts contacted by CBS===
Some of the experts that were contacted by CBS about the memos have publicly stated that they could not verify the authenticity of the Killian memos. Emily Will had examined two of the memos for CBS prior to the story being aired. She stated that she told CBS that she had doubts in both the production of the memos and the handwriting. Linda James, another document examiner hired by CBS, stated that the memos were "very poor quality" and did not authenicate them.


CBS was originally planning to show a ''60 Minutes'' report critical of the Bush administration justification for going to war in Iraq. This segment was replaced with the Killian documents segment. CBS further postponed airing the Iraq segment until after the election due to the controversy over the Killian documents. "We now believe it would be inappropriate to air the report so close to the presidential election", CBS spokesman Kelli Edwards said in a statement.<ref>{{cite news | last = Zernike | first = Kate | title = '60 Minutes' Delays Report Questioning Reasons for Iraq War | work = The New York Times | date = 2004-09-25 | url = https://www.nytimes.com/2004/09/25/politics/campaign/25cbs.html?ex=1253851200&en=5c69abd689bb79d5&ei=5088&partner=rssnyt | access-date = 2007-09-20 }}</ref>
==Independent experts==
The vast majority of independent document authentication experts contacted by the major news media and bloggers have indicated a strong likelihood that the Killian memos are forgeries constructed with the use of modern word processing software and printer technology, with the memos "aged" using multiple generations of copying to blur the characters. Several are "certain" that the documents are fraudulent. For example, ], the forger whose story was told in the movie '']'', believes the memos are forgeries from what he has seen on television; Abagnale has not personally examined the documents or any copies. In contrast, Dr. David Hailey, who holds a doctorate in technical communication and is an associate professor and director of a media lab at Utah State University, stated in October 2004 that "evidence from a forensic examination of the Bush memos indicates that they were typed on a typewriter." Hailey's study has been controversial with critics pointing out that Hailey donated $250 to Kerry's campaign; Hailey has also been the subject of an email campaign demanding his dismissal from the university. Dr. Joseph Newcomer, described by ] as "an expert in computer-based typesetting", called Hailey's study "deeply flawed".


After the Killian documents controversy, the show was renamed ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' to differentiate it from the original '']'' Sunday edition, and reverted to its original title on July 8, 2005, when it was moved to the 8 p.m. Friday timeslot. It was cancelled in 2005 due to low ratings.
Forensic document examiner Dr. ] has claimed there is a very high probability that the memos are fake , yet the ''Boston Globe'' cited him as a "skeptic" whose "further study" caused his views to shift . Bouffard claims that further study left him "more convinced" that the memos were forgeries and that he was quoted out of context by the Boston Globe.


===Mapes's and Rather's view of the documents===
Many analysts have said that they were not concerned with whether or not it was hypothetically possible to duplicate one or even a few of the typographic features with 1973 technology, but whether it was likely that all of them would have matched, at least as closely as the Microsoft Word samples, using a single typewriter that could plausibly have been in use at a remote national guard base in 1973 (and apparently wasn't used to type any other memos from that base). Several people with experience in operating either the IBM Executive or the Selectric Composer have said that they were much more complicated to operate than a regular typewriter and therefore were reserved for important correspondence within the companies where they had worked.
On November 9, 2005, Mary Mapes gave an interview to ABC News correspondent Brian Ross. Mapes stated that the documents have never been proved to be forgeries. Ross expressed the view that the responsibility is on the reporter to verify their authenticity. Mapes responded with, "I don't think that's the standard." This stands in contrast to the statement of the president of CBS News that proof of authenticity is "the only acceptable journalistic standard". Also in November 2005, Mapes told readers of the ''Washington Post'', "I personally believe the documents are not false" and "I was fired for airing a story that could not definitively be proved false but made CBS's public relations department cringe."<ref>{{cite news|date=November 11, 2005|newspaper=The Washington Post|title="Final Days at "60 Minutes"|access-date=2008-03-25|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2005/11/10/DI2005111001414.html?nav=nsc | first=Mary | last=Mapes}}</ref> As of September 2007, Mapes continued to defend the authenticity of the documents: "the far right blogosphere bully boys ... screamed objections that ultimately proved to have no basis in fact."<ref>{{cite news | title = Courage for Dan Rather | last = Mapes | first = Mary | work =The Huffington Post | date = 2007-09-20 | url = http://www.huffingtonpost.com/mary-mapes/courage-for-dan-rather_b_65257.html | access-date = 2008-01-22 }}</ref>


On November 7, 2006, Rather defended the report in a radio interview, and rejected the ] investigation's findings. In response, CBS spokesman Kevin Tedesco told the ], "CBS News stands by the report the independent panel issued on this matter and to this day, no one has been able to authenticate the documents in question."<ref name="apnov2006">{{cite news | last = Baker| first = Mike| title = Rather defends discredited 60 Minutes segment in radio interview| agency = Associated Press| date = 2006-11-07| url = http://www.wistv.com/story/5648070/rather-defends-discredited-60-minutes-segment-in-radio-interview| access-date = 2006-11-10 }}</ref>
To some, the case seemed so obvious that they have suggested that the documents were more likely forged by the Bush camp to embarrass their opponents, the argument being that someone wanting to create plausible forgeries would likely have used an actual old-style typewriter. Others would suggest that these documents could easily have been produced on the equipment used by the National Guard at that time (although they have not demonstrated how), making it unlikely for them to be forgeries. A third group suspects that the memos are forgeries, produced by the Bush camp, not to embarrass their opponents but to distract from the more tangible evidence that Bush allegedly disobeyed orders and was allegedly AWOL. And there's a fourth group that believes that the Kerry camp or someone with sympathy for the Kerry camp created these documents to get the news media attention off of the ] ads, critical of Kerry's military service, and bring the focus of their attention to Bush's activities during Vietnam. A fifth group believes that the memos were created as a ] intended to demonstrate a lack of standards by major news organizations.


Dan Rather continued to stand by the story, and in subsequent interviews stated that he believed that the documents have never conclusively been proven to be forgeries – and that even if the documents are false, the underlying story is true.<ref>{{cite news | title=Transcript of WPTF interview with Dan Rather | work=The News & Observer|url=http://www.newsobserver.com/308/story/507427.html|access-date=2006-11-09}}</ref>
==Pertinent facts==
''The Washington Post'' traced the faxes to a ] in ], ]. Abeline's Kinko's is the closest copy shop to the ], ] home of Bill Burkett. It was that Burkett has a standing account at this Kinko's, and was in the store three days before CBS aired the story.


=== Rather's lawsuit against CBS/Viacom ===
Not all '']'' personalities agreed with Dan Rather and CBS management. ] indicated on ], ] that he believed the documents were falsified, but hoped that CBS might salvage its reputation with other authenticating evidence. Referring to CBS management, Rooney said, "I'm surprised at their reluctance to concede they're wrong."
On September 19, 2007, Rather filed a $70 million lawsuit against CBS and its former corporate parent, ], claiming they had made him a "]" over the controversy caused by the 2004 ''60 Minutes Wednesday'' report that featured the Killian documents.<ref>{{cite news|url=https://www.nbcnews.com/id/wbna20874051|access-date=2008-03-24|date=September 20, 2007|agency=Associated Press|title=Rather files $70 million lawsuit against CBS Newsman alleges network made him 'scapegoat' for discredited story}}</ref> The suit named as defendants: CBS and its CEO, Leslie Moonves: Viacom, ], chairman of both Viacom and CBS Corporation; and ], the former president of CBS News.<ref>A PDF copy of the suit can be found on at .</ref>


In January 2008, the legal teams for Rather and CBS reached an agreement to produce for Rather's attorneys "virtually all of the materials" related to the case, including the findings of Erik T. Rigler's report to CBS about the documents and the story.<ref>{{cite web|url=http://www.observer.com/2008/cbs-agrees-hand-over-rigler-report-rathers-legal-team|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080128234938/http://www.observer.com/2008/cbs-agrees-hand-over-rigler-report-rathers-legal-team|url-status=dead|archive-date=January 28, 2008|work=The New York Observer|access-date=2008-03-24|date=January 23, 2008|author=Gilette, Felix|title=CBS Agrees to Hand Over 'Rigler Report' to Rather's Legal Team}}</ref>
==Investigation==
On ], ], ] ] (]-]) an investigation of the Killian memos by the ]. He did not level specific charges in his request, but potential claims ostensibly might include violation of ] or falsification of government documents.


On September 29, 2009, ] dismissed Rather's lawsuit and stated that the lower court should have honored CBS's request to throw out the entire lawsuit instead of just throwing out parts.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090929/tv_nm/us_rather_cbs_1|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20091002082508/http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20090929/tv_nm/us_rather_cbs_1|url-status=dead|title=Appeals court dismisses Dan Rather's suit vs. CBS|archivedate=October 2, 2009}}</ref>
== Partisan conflicts of interest ==


==Authentication issues==
One common thread to the debate over the documents' authenticity lies in the fact that the most influential ]gers currently supporting the claim of authenticity are well-known for holding ] views, while the earliest and most influential bloggers to question their authenticity generally hold ] views. This leads to a conflict of interest, as the people who believe that the documents are authentic are generally supporters of ] or the Democratic Party in general (including Dan Rather, who raised $20,000 for the Texas Democratic party at an event he did not know in beforehand was a fundraiser in 2001), while those questioning their authenticity are generally supporters of President Bush. However, many supporters of John Kerry believe that the memos are fraudulent, including several of the most qualified document experts who have examined the evidence. There do not appear to be any Bush supporters who believe the memos are authentic.
{{Main|Killian documents authenticity issues}}

No generally recognized document experts have positively authenticated the memos. Since CBS used only faxed and photocopied duplicates, authentication to professional standards is impossible, regardless of the provenance of the originals.

Document experts have challenged the authenticity of the documents as photocopies of valid originals on a variety of grounds ranging from anachronisms of their typography, their quick reproducibility using modern technology, and to errors in their content and style.<ref name=wapoexpert>{{Cite web|title=Document Experts Say CBS Ignored Memo 'Red Flags' (washingtonpost.com)|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A21675-2004Sep14.html?nav=hcmodule|access-date=2023-01-05|website=www.washingtonpost.com}}</ref>

The CBS independent panel report did not specifically take up the question of whether the documents were forgeries, but retained a document expert, Peter Tytell, who concluded the documents used by CBS were produced using current word processing technology.<ref>{{cite news | title=Thornburg-Boccardi Report, Appendix 4 | url=http://wwwimage.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/appendix_4.pdf | access-date=2005-12-21 | publisher=CBS News }}</ref>

<blockquote>Tytell concluded ... that (i) the relevant portion of the Superscript Exemplar was produced on an Olympia manual typewriter, (ii) the Killian documents were not produced on an Olympia manual typewriter and (iii) the Killian documents were produced on a computer in Times New Roman typestyle the Killian documents were not produced on a typewriter in the early 1970s and therefore were not authentic.</blockquote>

==Accusations of bias==
Some critics of CBS and Dan Rather argued that by proceeding with the story when the documents had not been authenticated, CBS was exhibiting ] and attempting to influence the outcome of the ]. Freelance journalist Michael Smith had emailed Mapes, asking, "What if there was a person who might have some information that could possibly change the momentum of an election but we needed to get an ASAP book deal to help get us the information?" Mapes replied, "that looks good, hypothetically speaking of course".<ref>Thornburgh–Boccardi report, p. 62.</ref> The Thornburgh–Boccardi report found that Mapes' contact with Kerry adviser Joe Lockhart was "highly inappropriate", and that it "crossed the line as, at a minimum, it gave the appearance of a political bias and could have been perceived as a news organizations' assisting a campaign as opposed to reporting on a story";<ref name="Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pg. 175"/> however, the Panel did not "find a basis to accuse those who investigated, produced, vetted or aired the Segment of having a political bias".<ref>Thornburgh–Boccardi Report, p. 211.</ref> In a later interview with '']'', when asked about the issue of political bias, review panel member Louis Boccardi said "bias is a hard thing to prove".<ref>{{Cite web|title=Critics Question No-Bias Finding By CBS Panel (washingtonpost.com)|url=https://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A2148-2005Jan11.html|access-date=2023-01-05|website=www.washingtonpost.com}}</ref> The panel concluded that the problems occurred "primarily because of a rush to air that overwhelmed the proper application of the CBS News Standards".<ref>Thornburgh–Boccardi Report, p. 221.</ref>

Some Democratic critics of Bush suggested that the memos were produced by the Bush campaign to discredit the media's reporting on Bush's National Guard service. The chairman of the ], ], suggested that the memos might have originated with long-time Bush strategist ]. McAuliffe told reporters on September 10, "I can tell you that nobody at the Democratic National Committee or groups associated with us were involved in any way with these documents", he said. "I'm just saying that I would ask Karl Rove the same question."<ref>{{cite news|title= CBS; Guard memos are authentic; Dems rip Bush's service |author=Noelle Straub |work=The Boston Herald|date=September 11, 2004|page=10}}</ref><ref>{{cite news|title= Who Is Buckhead? Kerry Assaulter Seemed Prepped|author=Robert Sam Anson|date=September 20, 2004|work=New York Observer|page=1}} via Lexis/Nexis.</ref> McAuliffe later pointed out that Rove and another Republican operative, ], had "a known history of dirty tricks", and he asked whether ] chairman ] would rule out any involvement by GOP consultant ].<ref>{{cite news|title=The Case of the Phony Memos|author=Matthew Continetti|work=The Weekly Standard|date=October 4, 2004}} via Lexis/Nexis.</ref><ref>{{cite news|title=Kerry camp rejects CBS link|author1=Stephen Dinan |author2=Bill Sammon |work=The Washington Times|date=September 22, 2004|page=A01|url=http://washingtontimes.com/national/20040922-122835-2135r.htm|access-date=2006-03-20}}</ref> At a community forum in ] in 2005, ] ] (D-NY) pointed out that the controversy served Rove's objectives: "Once they did that, then it undermined everything else about Bush's draft dodging. ... That had the effect of taking the whole issue away."<ref name="Brooks">{{Cite news| last = Brooks| first = Paul| title = Hinchey sees hand of Rove| newspaper = ]| date = February 22, 2005| url = http://archive.recordonline.com/archive/2005/02/22/hinchey2.htm}}</ref> After being criticized, Hinchey responded, "I didn't allege I had any facts. I said this is what I believe and take it for what it's worth."<ref name="Brooks"/>

Rove and Stone have denied any involvement.<ref>{{cite news | title=Rove rejects charges he was CBS source|work=The Washington Times |date=September 22, 2004 | url=http://www.washtimes.com/national/20040922-101433-4296r.htm | access-date=2005-12-21 }}</ref><ref>{{cite news | title=Parties lob accusations over suspect papers |work=USA Today|date=September 21, 2004| url=https://www.usatoday.com/news/politicselections/nation/president/2004-09-21-cbs-parties_x.htm | access-date=2005-12-21 | first1=Martin | last1=Kasindorf | first2=Richard | last2=Benedetto}}</ref> In a 2008 interview in '']'', Stone said "It was nuts to think I had anything to do with those documents ... hose papers were potentially devastating to George Bush. You couldn't put them out there assuming that they would be discredited. You couldn't have assumed that this would rebound to Bush's benefit. I believe in bank shots, but that one was too big a risk."<ref>{{cite magazine|magazine=The New Yorker|author=Toobin, Jeffrey|title=The Dirty Trickster|date=June 2, 2008|access-date=2008-06-14|url=http://www.newyorker.com/reporting/2008/06/02/080602fa_fact_toobin?currentPage=all}}</ref>


==See also== ==See also==
{{Portal|United States|Politics|Journalism}}
* ] * ]
* ] * ]

{{Clear}}

==Footnotes==
{{Reflist|30em}}


==External links== ==External links==


=== Most recent news === === Killian documents PDF files ===
These are the Killian documents supplied to CBS Reports by Bill Burkett:
* (CBS News)
* (CBS News)
* (CBS News)
* (CBS News)
* (USA Today, six memos in one.pdf file)

=== Bush documents from the TexANG archives ===
Page 31 is a November 3, 1970, memo from the office of Lt Col Killian on promotion of Lt Bush:
* (''USA Today'')

=== 60 Minutes II, September 8 transcript ===
*

=== Dan Rather interviews Marion Carr Knox - September 15, 2004 ===
* YouTube

=== Statements of the CBS document examiners ===
*
*
*
*

=== Thornburgh–Boccardi report ===
*{{cite news|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/htdocs/pdf/complete_report/CBS_Report.pdf|title=The Complete Independent Panel Report on CBS News|access-date=2006-03-18}}
*{{cite news|url=http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/01/10/national/main665818.shtml |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050112064947/http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2005/01/10/national/main665818.shtml |url-status=dead |archive-date=January 12, 2005 |title=Exhibits and Appendices for report|access-date=2006-03-18 | work=CBS News | date=January 10, 2005}}

===Document analysis===
* — ''The Washington Post'', September 14, 2004
* ''The Washington Post'', September 18, 2004
* ''The Washington Post'', September 19, 2004
* ]
*, response by Joseph Newcomer
*, analysis by Richard Polt


===Overview timeline at ''USA Today''===
* NY Times - Sept. 15, 2004
* — timeline from ''USA Today'' — September 21, 2004
* ''Washington Post'' - Sept. 16, 2004
* ''Washington Post'' - Sept. 16, 2004
* Seattle Times - Sept. 17, 2004
* - added here Sept 18, 2004
* ''Washington Post'' - Sept. 19, 2004
* ''Washington Post'' - Sept. 19, 2004
* - ''New York Times'' - September 20, 2004
* - timeline from ''USA Today'' - Sept. 21, 2004
* '']'', Oct. 07, 2004


=== The memos === ===Further reading===
*''Truth and Duty: The Press, the President, and the Privilege of Power'' ({{ISBN|0-312-35195-X}}), by Mary Mapes, November 2005, St. Martin's Press, {{ISBN|0-312-35195-X}}
* (pdf)
* (pdf)
* (pdf)
* (pdf)
*


===News items=== ===In other media===
* '']'', 2015 film starring ] and ], whose story is based on the Mapes book above about this controversy.
* CNSNews.com - September 09, 2004
* YouTube
* ABC News - Sept. 9, 2004
* Washington Post - September 10, 2004
* Los Angeles Times - September 10, 2004
* ABC News - Sept. 10, 2004
* American Spectator - September 10, 2004
* FOX News - September 10, 2004
* Washington Post - September 11, 2004
* Los Angeles Times - September 11, 2004
* The Seattle Times - September 11, 2004
* The American Thinker - September 11, 2004
* Washington Post - September 12, 2004
* Time - September 13, 2004
* Washington Post - September 14, 2004
* Washington Post - Wednesday, September 15, 2004
* Los Angeles Times - September 15, 2004
*


{{George W. Bush}}
===Editorials===
{{60 Minutes}}
* Mark Steyn (opinion) Chicago Sun-Times - Sept. 12, 2004
* Los Angeles Times - September 15, 2004
*


]
=== Blog and other links ===
]
* and The original blog posts which called attention to the integrity of the documents.
]
*
]
* &#8211; Enlargement created by a medical imaging professional in a way that does not degrade resolution.
]
*
*, an anti-Rather site which has been calling the anchorman liberally biased
*
* lists the various suspicious elements of the memos.
*
*
* Anti-authenticity site
* disputing forgery arguments
* disputing claims memos could not be from 1970s
*
* by The Washington Post print edition.
* A detailed analysis supporting authenticity.
] ]
]
]
]
]

Latest revision as of 21:29, 13 December 2024

Six documents containing unsubstantiated critical allegations about President George W. Bush Further information: Killian documents authenticity issues and George W. Bush military service controversy

Charles Foster Johnson's animated GIF image comparing a memo purportedly typewritten in 1973 with a proportional-spaced document made in Microsoft Word with default settings in 2004

The Killian documents controversy (also referred to as Memogate or Rathergate) involved six documents containing false allegations about President George W. Bush's service in the Texas Air National Guard in 1972–73, allegedly typed in 1973. Dan Rather presented four of these documents as authentic in a 60 Minutes II broadcast aired by CBS on September 8, 2004, less than two months before the 2004 presidential election, but it was later found that CBS had failed to authenticate them. Several typewriter and typography experts soon concluded that they were forgeries. Lieutenant Colonel Bill Burkett provided the documents to CBS, but he claims to have burned the originals after faxing them copies.

CBS News producer Mary Mapes obtained the copied documents from Burkett, a former officer in the Texas Army National Guard, while pursuing a story about the George W. Bush military service controversy. Burkett claimed that Bush's commander, Lieutenant Colonel Jerry B. Killian, wrote them, which included criticisms of Bush's service in the Guard during the 1970s. In the 60 Minutes segment, Rather stated that the documents "were taken from Lieutenant Colonel Killian's personal files", and he falsely asserted that they had been authenticated by experts retained by CBS.

The authenticity of the documents was challenged within minutes on Internet forums and blogs, with questions initially focused on anachronisms in the format and typography, and the scandal quickly spread to the mass media. CBS and Rather defended the authenticity and usage of the documents for two weeks, but other news organizations continued to scrutinize the evidence, and USA Today obtained an independent analysis from outside experts. CBS finally repudiated the use of the documents on September 20, 2004. Rather stated, "if I knew then what I know now – I would not have gone ahead with the story as it was aired, and I certainly would not have used the documents in question", and CBS News President Andrew Heyward said, "Based on what we now know, CBS News cannot prove that the documents are authentic, which is the only acceptable journalistic standard to justify using them in the report. We should not have used them. That was a mistake, which we deeply regret."

Several months later, a CBS-appointed panel led by Dick Thornburgh and Louis Boccardi criticized both the initial CBS news segment and CBS's "strident defense" during the aftermath. CBS fired producer Mapes, requested resignations from several senior news executives, and apologized to viewers by saying that there were "substantial questions regarding the authenticity of the Killian documents".

The story of the controversy was dramatized in the 2015 film Truth starring Robert Redford as Dan Rather and Cate Blanchett as Mary Mapes, directed by James Vanderbilt. It is based on Mapes' memoir Truth and Duty: The Press, the President, and the Privilege of Power. Former CBS President and CEO Les Moonves refused to approve the film, and CBS refused to air advertisements for it. A CBS spokesman stated that it contained "too many distortions, evasions, and baseless conspiracy theories".

Background and timeline

1st Lieutenant George W. Bush in uniform. Investigations into his military service led to the Killian documents controversy.

The memos, allegedly written in 1972 and 1973, were obtained by CBS News producer Mary Mapes and freelance journalist Michael Smith, from Lieutenant Colonel Bill Burkett, a former US Army National Guard officer. Mapes and Dan Rather, among many other journalists, had been investigating for several years the story of Bush's alleged failure to fulfill his obligations to the National Guard.

Burkett had received publicity in 2000, after making and then retracting a claim that he had been transferred to Panama for refusing "to falsify personnel records of Governor Bush", and in February 2004, when he claimed to have knowledge of "scrubbing" of Bush's Texas Air National Guard records. Mapes was "by her own account many in the press considered Burkett an 'anti-Bush zealot', his credibility in question".

Mapes and Smith made contact with Burkett in late August, and on August 24 Burkett offered to meet with them to share the documents he possessed, and later told reporters from USA Today "that he had agreed to turn over the documents to CBS if the network would arrange a conversation with the Kerry campaign", a claim substantiated by emails between Smith and Mapes detailing Burkett's additional requests for help with negotiating a book deal, security, and financial compensation. During the last week of August, Mapes asked Josh Howard, her immediate superior at CBS, for permission to facilitate contact between Burkett and the Kerry campaign; Howard and Mapes subsequently disputed whether such permission had been given.

Two documents were provided by Burkett to Mapes on September 2 and four others on September 5, 2004. At that time, Burkett told Mapes that they were copies of originals that had been obtained from Killian's personal files via Chief Warrant Officer George Conn, another former member of the TexANG.

Mapes informed Rather of the progress of the story, which was being targeted to air on September 8 along with footage of an interview with Ben Barnes, a former Lieutenant Governor of Texas, who would publicly state for the first time his opinion that Bush had received preferential treatment to get into the National Guard. Mapes had also been in contact with the Kerry campaign several times between late August and September 6, when she spoke with senior Kerry advisor Joe Lockhart regarding the progressing story. Lockhart subsequently stated he was "wary" of contact with Mapes at this stage, because if the story were true, his involvement might undermine its credibility, and if it were false, "he did not want to be associated with it". Lockhart called Burkett on September 6 at the number provided by Mapes, and both men stated they discussed Burkett's view of Kerry's presidential campaign strategy, not the existence of the documents or the related story.

Content of the memos

The documents claimed that Bush had disobeyed orders while in the Guard, and that undue influence had been exerted on Bush's behalf to improve his record. The documents included the following:

  1. An order directing Bush to submit to a physical examination.
  2. A note that Killian had grounded Bush from flying due to "failure to perform to USAF / TexANG standards", and for failure to submit to the physical examination as ordered. Killian also requested that a flight inquiry board be convened, as required by regulations, to examine the reasons for Bush's loss of flight status.
  3. A note of a telephone conversation with Bush in which Bush sought to be excused from "drill". The note records that Bush said he did not have the time to attend to his National Guard duties because he had a campaign to do (the Senate campaign of Winton M. Blount in Alabama).
  4. A note (labeled "CYA" for "cover your ass") claiming that Killian was being pressured from above to give Bush better marks in his yearly evaluation than he had earned. The note attributed to Killian says that he was being asked to "sugarcoat" Bush's performance. "I'm having trouble running interference and doing my job."

USA Today also received copies of the four documents used by CBS, reporting this and publishing them the morning after the CBS segment, along with two additional memos. Burkett was assured by USA Today that they would keep the source confidential.

CBS investigations prior to airing the segment

Mapes and her colleagues began interviewing people who might be able to corroborate the information in the documents, while also retaining four forensic document experts, Marcel J. Matley, James J. Pierce, Emily Will, and Linda James, to determine the validity of the memos.

On September 5, CBS interviewed Killian's friend Robert Strong, who ran the Texas Air National Guard administrative office. Among other issues covered in his interview with Rather and Mapes, Strong was asked if he thought the documents were genuine. Strong stated, "they are compatible with the way business was done at the time. They are compatible with the man that I remember Jerry Killian being." Strong had first seen the documents twenty minutes earlier and also said he had no personal knowledge of their content; he later claimed he had been told to assume the content of the documents was accurate.

On September 6, CBS interviewed General Robert "Bobby" Hodges, a former officer at the Texas Air National Guard and Killian's immediate superior at the time. Hodges declined CBS' request for an on-camera interview, and Mapes read the documents to him over the telephone—or perhaps only portions of the documents; his recollection and Mapes's differed. According to Mapes, Hodges agreed with CBS's assessment that the documents were real, and CBS reported that Hodges stated that these were "the things that Killian had expressed to me at the time". However, according to Hodges, when Mapes read portions of the memos to him he simply stated, "well if he wrote them, that's what he felt", and he stated he never confirmed the validity of the content of the documents. General Hodges later asserted to the investigatory panel that he told Mapes that Killian had never, to his knowledge, ordered anyone to take a physical and that he had never been pressured regarding Lieutenant Bush, as the documents alleged. Hodges also claims that when CBS interviewed him, he thought the memos were handwritten, not typed, and following the September 8 broadcast, when Hodges had seen the documents and heard of claims of forgery by Killian's wife and son, he was "convinced they were not authentic" and told Rather and Mapes on September 10.

Response of the document examiners

Prior to airing, all four of the examiners responded to Mapes' request for document analysis, though only two to Mapes directly:

  • Emily Will noted discrepancies in the signatures on the memos, and had questions about the letterhead, the proportional spacing of the font, the superscripted "th" and the improper formatting of the date. Will requested other documents to use for comparison.
  • Linda James was "unable to reach a conclusion about the signature" and noted that the superscripted "th" was not in common use at the time the memos were allegedly written; she later recalled telling CBS, "the two memos she looked at 'had problems.'"
  • James Pierce concluded that both of the documents were written by the same person and that the signature matched Killian's from the official Bush records. Only one of the two documents provided to Pierce had a signature. James Pierce wrote, "the balance of the Jerry B. Killian signatures appearing on the photocopied questioned documents are consistent and in basic agreement", and stated that based on what he knew, "the documents in question are authentic". However, Pierce also told Mapes he could not be sure if the documents had been altered because he was reviewing copies, not original documents.
  • Marcel Matley's review was initially limited to Killian's signature on one of the Burkett documents, which he compared to signatures from the official Bush records. Matley "seemed fairly confident" that the signature was Killian's. On September 6, Matley was interviewed by Rather and Mapes and was provided with the other four documents obtained from CBS (he would prove to be the only reviewer to see these documents prior to the segment). Matley told Rather "he could not authenticate the documents due to the fact that they were poor quality copies". In the interview, Matley told Rather that with respect to the signatures, they were relying on "poor material" and that there were inconsistencies in the signatures, but also replied "Yes", when asked if it would be safe to say the documents were written by the person who signed them.
  • Both Emily Will and Linda James suggested to Mapes that CBS contact typewriter expert Peter Tytell (son of Martin Tytell). Associate producer Yvonne Miller left him a voicemail on September 7; he returned the call at 11 am on September 8 but was told they "did not need him anymore".

September 8 segment and initial reactions

The segment entitled "For the Record" aired on 60 Minutes Wednesday on September 8. After introducing the documents, Rather said, in reference to Matley, "We consulted a handwriting analyst and document expert who believes the material is authentic."

The segment introduced Lieutenant Robert Strong's interview, describing him as a "friend of Killian" (without noting he had not worked in the same location and without mentioning he had left the TexANG prior to the dates on the memos). The segment used the sound bite of Strong saying the documents were compatible with how business was done but did not include a disclaimer that Strong was told to assume the documents were authentic.

In Rather's narration about one of the memos, he referred to pressure being applied on Bush's behalf by General Buck Staudt, and described Staudt as "the man in charge of the Texas National Guard". Staudt had retired from the guard a year and a half prior to the dates of the memos.

Interview clips with Ben Barnes, former Speaker of the Texas House, created the impression "that there was no question but that President Bush had received Barnes' help to get into the TexANG", because Barnes had made a telephone call on Bush's behalf, when Barnes himself had acknowledged that there was no proof his call was the reason, and that "sometimes a call to General Rose did not work". Barnes' disclaimer was not included in the segment.

Internet skepticism spreads

Discussion quickly spread to various weblogs in the blogosphere, principally Little Green Footballs and Power Line. The initial analysis appeared in posts by "Buckhead", a username of Harry W. MacDougald, an Atlanta attorney who had worked for conservative groups such as the Federalist Society and the Southeastern Legal Foundation, and who had helped draft the petition to the Arkansas Supreme Court for the disbarment of President Bill Clinton. MacDougald questioned the validity of the documents on the basis of their typography, writing that the memos were "in a proportionally spaced font, probably Palatino or Times New Roman", and alleging that this was an anachronism: "I am saying these documents are forgeries, run through a copier for 15 generations to make them look old. This should be pursued aggressively."

By the following day, questions about the authenticity of the documents were being publicized by the Drudge Report, which linked to the analysis at the Powerline blog in the mid-afternoon, and the story was covered on the website of the magazine The Weekly Standard and broke into mass media outlets, including the Associated Press and the major television news networks. It also was receiving serious attention from conservative writers such as National Review Online's Jim Geraghty. By the afternoon of September 9, Charles Foster Johnson of Little Green Footballs had posted his attempt to recreate one of the documents using Microsoft Word with the default settings. The September 9 edition of ABC's Nightline made mention of the controversy, along with an article on the ABC News website.

Thirteen days after this controversy had emerged the national newspaper USA Today published a timeline of events surrounding the CBS story. Accordingly, on the September 9 morning after the "60 minutes" report, the broadcast was front-page news in the New York Times and Washington Post. Additionally, the story was given two-thirds of a full page within USA Today's news section, which mentioned that it had also obtained copies of the documents. However, the authenticity of the memos was not part of the story carried by major news outlets on that day. Also on that day, CBS published the reaction of Killian's son, Gary, to the documents, reporting that Gary Killian questioned one of the memos but stated that others "appeared legitimate" and characterized the collection as "a mixture of truth and fiction". In an interview with Fox News, Gary Killian expressed doubts about the documents' authenticity on the basis of his father's positive view of Bush.

In 2006, the two Free Republic (Rathergate) bloggers, Harry W. MacDougald, username "Buckhead", an Atlanta-based lawyer and Paul Boley, username "TankerKC", were awarded the Reed Irvine Award for New Media by the Accuracy in Media watchdog at the Conservative Political Action Conference (CPAC).

CBS's response and widening media coverage

At 5:00 p.m. on Thursday, September 9, CBS News released a statement saying the memos were "thoroughly investigated by independent experts, and we are convinced of their authenticity", and stating, "this report was not based solely on recovered documents, but rather on a preponderance of evidence, including documents that were provided by unimpeachable sources". The statement was replaced later that day with one that omitted this claim.

The first newspaper articles questioning the documents appeared on September 10 in The Washington Post, The New York Times and in USA Today via the Associated Press. The Associated Press reported, "Document examiner Sandra Ramsey Lines ... said she was 'virtually certain' were generated by computer. Lines said that meant she could testify in court that, beyond a reasonable doubt, her opinion was that the memos were written on a computer."

Also on September 10, The Dallas Morning News reported, "the officer named in one memo as exerting pressure to 'sugarcoat' Bush's military record was discharged a year and a half before the memo was written. The paper cited a military record showing that Col. Walter 'Buck' Staudt was honorably discharged on March 1, 1972, while the memo cited by CBS as showing that Staudt was interfering with evaluations of Bush was dated August 18, 1973."

In response to the media attention, a CBS memo said that the documents were "backed up not only by independent handwriting and forensic document experts but by sources familiar with their content" and insisted that no internal investigation would take place. On the CBS Evening News of September 10, Rather defended the story and noted that its critics included "partisan political operatives".

  • In the broadcast, Rather stated that Marcel Matley "analyzed the documents for CBS News. He believes they are real", and broadcast additional excerpts from Matley's September 6 interview showing Matley's agreement that the signatures appeared to be from the same source. Rather did not report that Matley had referred to them as "poor material", that he had only opined about the signatures or that he had specifically not authenticated the documents.
  • Rather presented footage of the Strong interview, introducing it by stating Robert Strong "is standing by his judgment that the documents are real", despite Strong's lack of standing to authenticate them and his brief exposure to the documents.
  • Rather concluded by stating, "If any definitive evidence to the contrary of our story is found, we will report it. So far, there is none."

In an appearance on CNN that day, Rather asserted "I know that this story is true. I believe that the witnesses and the documents are authentic. We wouldn't have gone to air if they would not have been."

However, CBS's Josh Howard spoke at length by telephone with typewriter expert Peter Tytell and later told the panel that the discussion was "an 'unsettling event' that shook his belief in the authenticity of the documents". Producer Mapes dismissed Tytell's concerns.

A former vice president of CBS News, Jonathan Klein, dismissed the allegations of bloggers, suggesting that the "checks and balances" of a professional news organization were superior to those of individuals sitting at their home computers "in their pajamas".

CBS's defense, apology

As media coverage widened and intensified, CBS at first attempted to produce additional evidence to support its claims. On September 11, a CBS News segment stated that document expert Phillip Bouffard thought the documents "could have been prepared on an IBM Selectric Composer typewriter, available at the time". The Selectric Composer was introduced in 1966 for use by typesetting professionals to generate camera-ready copy; according to IBM archives describing this specialized equipment, "To produce copy which can be reproduced with 'justified', or straight left-and right-hand margins, the operator types the copy once and the composer computes the number of spaces needed to justify the line. As the operator types the copy a second time, the spaces are added automatically." Bouffard's comments were also cited by the Boston Globe in an article entitled "Authenticity backed on Bush documents". However, the Globe soon printed a retraction regarding the title. CBS noted that although General Hodges was now stating he thought the documents were inauthentic, "we believed General Hodges the first time we spoke with him." CBS reiterated: "we believe the documents to be genuine".

By September 13, CBS's position had shifted slightly, as Rather acknowledged "some of these questions come from people who are not active political partisans", and stated that CBS "talked to handwriting and document analysts and other experts who strongly insist the documents could have been created in the '70s". The analysts and experts cited by Rather did not include the original four consulted by CBS. Rather instead presented the views of Bill Glennon and Richard Katz. Glennon, a former typewriter repairman with no specific credentials in typesetting beyond that job, was found by CBS after posting several defenses of the memos on blogs including Daily Kos and Kevin Drum's blog hosted at Washington Monthly. However, in the actual broadcast, neither interviewee asserted that the memos were genuine.

As a result, some CBS critics began to accuse CBS of expert shopping.

60 Minutes Wednesday, one week later

The original document examiners, however, continued to be part of the story. By September 15, Emily Will was publicly stating that she had told CBS that she had doubts about both the production of the memos and the handwriting prior to the segment. Linda James stated that the memos were of "very poor quality" and that she did not authenticate them, telling ABC News, "I did not authenticate anything and I don't want it understood that I did."

In response, 60 Minutes Wednesday released a statement suggesting that Will and James had "misrepresented" their role in the authentication of the documents and had played only a small part in the process. CBS News concurrently amended its previous claim that Matley had authenticated the documents, saying instead that he had authenticated only the signatures. On CNN, Matley stated he had only verified that the signatures were "from the same source", not that they were authentically Killian's: "When I saw the documents, I could not verify the documents were authentic or inauthentic. I could only verify that the signatures came from the same source", Matley said. "I could not authenticate the documents themselves. But at the same time, there was nothing to tell me that they were not authentic."

On the evening of September 15, CBS aired a segment that featured an interview with Marian Carr Knox, a secretary at Ellington Air Force Base from 1956 to 1979, and who was Killian's assistant on the dates shown in the documents. Dan Rather prefaced the segment on the recorded interview by stating, "She told us she believes what the documents actually say is, exactly, as we reported." In the aired interview, Knox expressed her belief that the documents reflected Killian's "sentiments" about Bush's service, and that this belief motivated her decision to reach out to CBS to provide the interview. In response to a direct question from Rather about the authenticity of the memo on Bush's alleged insubordination, she stated that no such memo was ever written; she further emphasized that she would have known if such a memo existed, as she had sole responsibility to type Killian's memos in that time period. At this point, she also admitted she had no firsthand knowledge of Bush's time in the Guard. However, controversially, Knox said later in the interview, "The information in here was correct, but it was picked up from the real ones." She went on to say, "I probably typed the information and somebody picked up the information some way or another." The New York Times' headline report on this interview, including the phrase "Fake but Accurate", created an immediate backlash from critics of CBS's broadcast. The conservative-leaning Weekly Standard proceeded to predict the end of CBS's news division.

At this time, Dan Rather first acknowledged there were problems in establishing the validity of the documents used in the report, stating: "If the documents are not what we were led to believe, I'd like to break that story."

Copies of the documents were first released to the public by the White House. Press Secretary Scott McClellan stated that the memos had been provided to them by CBS in the days prior to the report and that, "We had every reason to believe that they were authentic at that time."

The Washington Post reported that at least one of the documents obtained by CBS had a fax header indicating it had been faxed from a Kinko's copy center in Abilene, Texas, leading some to trace the documents back to Burkett.

CBS states that use of the documents was a mistake

As a growing number of independent document examiners and competing news outlets reported their findings about the documents, CBS News stopped defending the documents and began to report on the problems with their story. On September 20 they reported that their source, Bill Burkett, "admits that he deliberately misled the CBS News producer working on the report, giving her a false account of the documents' origins to protect a promise of confidentiality to the actual source." While the network did not state that the memos were forgeries, CBS News president Andrew Heyward said,

Based on what we now know, CBS News cannot prove that the documents are authentic, which is the only acceptable journalistic standard to justify using them in the report. We should not have used them. That was a mistake, which we deeply regret.

Dan Rather stated, "if I knew then what I know now – I would not have gone ahead with the story as it was aired, and I certainly would not have used the documents in question."

In an interview with Rather, Burkett admitted that he misled CBS about the source of the documents, and then claimed that the documents came to him from someone he claimed was named "Lucy Ramirez", whom CBS was unable to contact or identify as an actual person. Burkett said he then made copies at the local Kinko's and burned the original documents. Investigations by CBS, CNN and the Washington Post failed to turn up evidence of "Lucy Ramirez" being an actual person.

On September 21, CBS News addressed the contact with the Kerry campaign in its statement, saying "it is obviously against CBS News standards and those of every other reputable news organization to be associated with any political agenda."

The next day the network announced it was forming an independent review panel to perform an internal investigation.

Review panel established

Dick Thornburgh, named by CBS to investigate with Louis Boccardi the events that led to the CBS report.

Soon after, CBS established a review panel "to help determine what errors occurred in the preparation of the report and what actions need to be taken". Dick Thornburgh, a Republican former governor of Pennsylvania and United States Attorney General under George H.W. Bush, and Louis Boccardi, retired president and chief executive officer and former executive editor of the Associated Press, made up the two-person review board. CBS also hired a private investigator, former FBI agent Erik T. Rigler, to gather further information about the story.

Findings

On January 5, 2005, the Report of the Independent Review Panel on the September 8, 2004, 60 Minutes Wednesday segment "For the Record Concerning President Bush's Air National Guard Service" was released. The purpose of the panel was to examine the process by which the September 8 segment was prepared and broadcast, to examine the circumstances surrounding the subsequent public statements and news reports by CBS News defending the segment, and to make any recommendations it deemed appropriate. Among the Panel's conclusions were the following:

The most serious defects in the reporting and production of the September 8 segment were:
  1. The failure to obtain clear authentication of any of the Killian documents from any document examiner;
  2. The false statement in the September 8 segment that an expert had authenticated the Killian documents when all he had done was authenticate one signature from one document used in the segment;
  3. The failure of 60 Minutes Wednesday management to scrutinize the publicly available, and at times controversial, background of the source of the documents, retired Texas Army National Guard Lieutenant Colonel Bill Burkett;
  4. The failure to find and interview the individual who was understood at the outset to be Lieutenant Colonel Burkett's source of the Killian documents, and thus to establish the chain of custody;
  5. The failure to establish a basis for the statement in the segment that the documents "were taken from Colonel Killian's personal files";
  6. The failure to develop adequate corroboration to support the statements in the Killian documents and to carefully compare the Killian documents to official TexANG records, which would have identified, at a minimum, notable inconsistencies in content and format;
  7. The failure to interview a range of former National Guardsmen who served with Lieutenant Colonel Killian and who had different perspectives about the documents;
  8. The misleading impression conveyed in the segment that Lieutenant Strong had authenticated the content of the documents when he did not have the personal knowledge to do so;
  9. The failure to have a vetting process capable of dealing effectively with the production speed, significance and sensitivity of the segment; and
  10. The telephone call prior to the segment's airing by the producer of the segment to a senior campaign official of Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry – a clear conflict of interest – that created the appearance of a political bias.
Once questions were raised about the September 8 segment, the reporting thereafter was mishandled and compounded the damage done. Among the more egregious shortcomings during the Aftermath were:
  1. The strident defense of the September 8 segment by CBS News without adequately probing whether any of the questions raised had merit;
  2. Allowing many of the same individuals who produced and vetted the by-then controversial September 8 segment to also produce the follow-up news reports defending the segment;
  3. The inaccurate press statements issued by CBS News after the broadcast of the segment that the source of the documents was "unimpeachable" and that experts had vouched for their authenticity;
  4. The misleading stories defending the segment that aired on the CBS Evening News after September 8 despite strong and multiple indications of serious flaws;
  5. The efforts by 60 Minutes Wednesday to find additional document examiners who would vouch for the authenticity of the documents instead of identifying the best examiners available regardless of whether they would support this position; and
  6. Preparing news stories that sought to support the segment, instead of providing accurate and balanced coverage of a raging controversy.

Panel's view of the documents

The Panel did not undertake a thorough examination of the authenticity of the Killian documents, but consulted Peter Tytell, a New York City-based forensic document examiner and typewriter and typography expert. Tytell had been contacted by 60 Minutes producers prior to the broadcast, and had informed associate producer Yvonne Miller and executive producer Josh Howard on September 10 that he believed the documents were forgeries. The Panel report stated, "The Panel met with Peter Tytell, and found his analysis sound in terms of why he thought the documents were not authentic ... The Panel reaches no conclusion as to whether Tytell was correct in all respects."

Aftermath

The controversy had long-reaching personal, political and legal consequences. In a 2010 issue of TV Guide, Rather's report was ranked No. 3 on a list of TV's ten biggest "blunders".

CBS personnel and programming changes

CBS terminated Mary Mapes and demanded the resignations of 60 Minutes Wednesday Executive Producer Josh Howard and Howard's top deputy, Senior Broadcast Producer Mary Murphy, as well as Senior Vice President Betsy West, who had been in charge of all prime time newscasts. Murphy and West resigned on February 25, 2005, and after settling a legal dispute regarding his level of responsibility for the segment, Josh Howard resigned on March 25, 2005.

Dan Rather announced on November 23, 2004, that he would step down in early 2005 and on March 9, his 24th anniversary as anchor, he left the network. It is unclear whether or not Rather's retirement was directly caused by this incident. Les Moonves, CEO of CBS, stated "Dan Rather has already apologized for the segment and taken responsibility for his part in the broadcast. He voluntarily moved to set a date to step down from the CBS Evening News in March of 2005." He added, "We believe any further action would not be appropriate."

CBS was originally planning to show a 60 Minutes report critical of the Bush administration justification for going to war in Iraq. This segment was replaced with the Killian documents segment. CBS further postponed airing the Iraq segment until after the election due to the controversy over the Killian documents. "We now believe it would be inappropriate to air the report so close to the presidential election", CBS spokesman Kelli Edwards said in a statement.

After the Killian documents controversy, the show was renamed 60 Minutes Wednesday to differentiate it from the original 60 Minutes Sunday edition, and reverted to its original title on July 8, 2005, when it was moved to the 8 p.m. Friday timeslot. It was cancelled in 2005 due to low ratings.

Mapes's and Rather's view of the documents

On November 9, 2005, Mary Mapes gave an interview to ABC News correspondent Brian Ross. Mapes stated that the documents have never been proved to be forgeries. Ross expressed the view that the responsibility is on the reporter to verify their authenticity. Mapes responded with, "I don't think that's the standard." This stands in contrast to the statement of the president of CBS News that proof of authenticity is "the only acceptable journalistic standard". Also in November 2005, Mapes told readers of the Washington Post, "I personally believe the documents are not false" and "I was fired for airing a story that could not definitively be proved false but made CBS's public relations department cringe." As of September 2007, Mapes continued to defend the authenticity of the documents: "the far right blogosphere bully boys ... screamed objections that ultimately proved to have no basis in fact."

On November 7, 2006, Rather defended the report in a radio interview, and rejected the CBS investigation's findings. In response, CBS spokesman Kevin Tedesco told the Associated Press, "CBS News stands by the report the independent panel issued on this matter and to this day, no one has been able to authenticate the documents in question."

Dan Rather continued to stand by the story, and in subsequent interviews stated that he believed that the documents have never conclusively been proven to be forgeries – and that even if the documents are false, the underlying story is true.

Rather's lawsuit against CBS/Viacom

On September 19, 2007, Rather filed a $70 million lawsuit against CBS and its former corporate parent, Viacom, claiming they had made him a "scapegoat" over the controversy caused by the 2004 60 Minutes Wednesday report that featured the Killian documents. The suit named as defendants: CBS and its CEO, Leslie Moonves: Viacom, Sumner Redstone, chairman of both Viacom and CBS Corporation; and Andrew Heyward, the former president of CBS News.

In January 2008, the legal teams for Rather and CBS reached an agreement to produce for Rather's attorneys "virtually all of the materials" related to the case, including the findings of Erik T. Rigler's report to CBS about the documents and the story.

On September 29, 2009, New York State Court of Appeals dismissed Rather's lawsuit and stated that the lower court should have honored CBS's request to throw out the entire lawsuit instead of just throwing out parts.

Authentication issues

Main article: Killian documents authenticity issues

No generally recognized document experts have positively authenticated the memos. Since CBS used only faxed and photocopied duplicates, authentication to professional standards is impossible, regardless of the provenance of the originals.

Document experts have challenged the authenticity of the documents as photocopies of valid originals on a variety of grounds ranging from anachronisms of their typography, their quick reproducibility using modern technology, and to errors in their content and style.

The CBS independent panel report did not specifically take up the question of whether the documents were forgeries, but retained a document expert, Peter Tytell, who concluded the documents used by CBS were produced using current word processing technology.

Tytell concluded ... that (i) the relevant portion of the Superscript Exemplar was produced on an Olympia manual typewriter, (ii) the Killian documents were not produced on an Olympia manual typewriter and (iii) the Killian documents were produced on a computer in Times New Roman typestyle the Killian documents were not produced on a typewriter in the early 1970s and therefore were not authentic.

Accusations of bias

Some critics of CBS and Dan Rather argued that by proceeding with the story when the documents had not been authenticated, CBS was exhibiting media bias and attempting to influence the outcome of the 2004 presidential election. Freelance journalist Michael Smith had emailed Mapes, asking, "What if there was a person who might have some information that could possibly change the momentum of an election but we needed to get an ASAP book deal to help get us the information?" Mapes replied, "that looks good, hypothetically speaking of course". The Thornburgh–Boccardi report found that Mapes' contact with Kerry adviser Joe Lockhart was "highly inappropriate", and that it "crossed the line as, at a minimum, it gave the appearance of a political bias and could have been perceived as a news organizations' assisting a campaign as opposed to reporting on a story"; however, the Panel did not "find a basis to accuse those who investigated, produced, vetted or aired the Segment of having a political bias". In a later interview with The Washington Post, when asked about the issue of political bias, review panel member Louis Boccardi said "bias is a hard thing to prove". The panel concluded that the problems occurred "primarily because of a rush to air that overwhelmed the proper application of the CBS News Standards".

Some Democratic critics of Bush suggested that the memos were produced by the Bush campaign to discredit the media's reporting on Bush's National Guard service. The chairman of the Democratic National Committee, Terry McAuliffe, suggested that the memos might have originated with long-time Bush strategist Karl Rove. McAuliffe told reporters on September 10, "I can tell you that nobody at the Democratic National Committee or groups associated with us were involved in any way with these documents", he said. "I'm just saying that I would ask Karl Rove the same question." McAuliffe later pointed out that Rove and another Republican operative, Ralph Reed, had "a known history of dirty tricks", and he asked whether Republican National Committee chairman Ed Gillespie would rule out any involvement by GOP consultant Roger Stone. At a community forum in Utica, New York in 2005, U.S. Representative Maurice Hinchey (D-NY) pointed out that the controversy served Rove's objectives: "Once they did that, then it undermined everything else about Bush's draft dodging. ... That had the effect of taking the whole issue away." After being criticized, Hinchey responded, "I didn't allege I had any facts. I said this is what I believe and take it for what it's worth."

Rove and Stone have denied any involvement. In a 2008 interview in The New Yorker, Stone said "It was nuts to think I had anything to do with those documents ... hose papers were potentially devastating to George Bush. You couldn't put them out there assuming that they would be discredited. You couldn't have assumed that this would rebound to Bush's benefit. I believe in bank shots, but that one was too big a risk."

See also

Footnotes

  1. Jenny Attiyeh (February 3, 2005). "Who's got the power?". The Harvard Gazette. Retrieved April 16, 2021. Assaulted by a string of disasters – with "Rathergate" as the most recent example – the conventional press is on the defensive
  2. "Rathergate". Frontline (American TV program). Public Broadcasting Service. 2007. Retrieved April 16, 2021. Of course your most famous bump-up in recognition came during the 2004 election. Can you just lay out the story for us? I called that post "The 61st Minute,"
  3. Two entitled "Memo to File," one "Memorandum," and one "Memorandum for Record," see here for PDF versions at the Washington Post website.
  4. Dobbs, Michael; Howard Kurtz (September 14, 2004). "Expert Cited by CBS Says He Didn't Authenticate Papers". The Washington Post. Archived from the original on May 14, 2011. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  5. Ross, Brian; Howard Rosenberg (September 14, 2004). "Document Analysts: CBS News Ignored Doubts". ABC News. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  6. "CBS ousts 4 over Bush Guard story". Associated Press. January 10, 2005. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  7. Including Peter Tytell, Thomas Phinney, and Joseph Newcomer, a man with 35 years of computer font technology experience. See: Last, Jonathan. "It's Worse Than You Thought". Archived from the original on January 12, 2005. Retrieved March 10, 2008. The Weekly Standard, January 11, 2005, and Cohen, Sandee. Making Headlines, Not Setting Them Archived 2007-09-27 at the Wayback Machine, creativepro.com, September 23, 2004.
  8. Also, Bill Flynn, "one of country's top authorities on document authentication.""Officer's Widow Questions Bush Guard Memos". ABC News. September 10, 2004. Retrieved March 18, 2008. and document expert Sandra Ramsey Lines: "'I'm virtually certain these were computer generated,'" "Bush Guard Memos Questioned". CBS News. September 10, 2004. Retrieved March 12, 2008. CBS News, September 10, 2004.
  9. Dave Moniz; Kevin Johnson; Jim Drinkard (September 21, 2004). "CBS backs off Guard story". USA Today. Retrieved March 18, 2008.
  10. Thornburgh–Boccardi report, p. 127.
  11. Thornburgh–Boccardi report, p. 127: "This statement was without factual support"; "It is without question, however, that Matley did not authenticate any of the documents in question."
  12. "Live Thread: Ben Barnes and CBS Attempt Another Bush Smear (60 Minutes)".
  13. ^ Memmot, Mark (September 21, 2004). "Scoops and skepticism: How the story unfolded". USA Today. Retrieved March 21, 2008.
  14. ^ "Dan Rather Statement On Memos". CBS News. September 20, 2005. Retrieved January 17, 2017.
  15. ^ "CBS Names Memo Probe Panel". CBS News. September 22, 2004. Retrieved March 20, 2006.
  16. "Thornburgh-Boccardi report" (PDF). CBS News. Retrieved December 21, 2005.
  17. "CBS Bans Ads for Dan Rather Movie 'Truth'". The Hollywood Reporter. October 16, 2015. Retrieved September 26, 2016.
  18. Burkett, Bill. "What do you say?". Archived from the original on June 9, 2008. Retrieved May 11, 2012. archived copy from archive.org of story originally from onlinejournal.com, March 19, 2003.
  19. See Ripley, Amanda (September 13, 2004). "The X Files Of Lt. Bush: A flurry of contested memos and memories sheds more heat than light on his record". Time Magazine. Archived from the original on January 4, 2013. Retrieved March 25, 2008. and Dobbs, Michael (September 12, 2004). "Gaps in Service Continue to Dog Bush". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 25, 2008.
  20. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 53.
  21. Moniz, Dave; Drinkard, Jim; Kevin Johnson (September 21, 2004). "Texan has made allegations for years". USA Today. Retrieved March 13, 2008.
  22. Bill Burkett (March 19, 2003). "What do you say?". Online Journal. Archived from the original on February 10, 2006. Retrieved March 20, 2006.
  23. Michael Rezendes (February 13, 2004). "Doubts raised on Bush accuser". Boston Globe online. Retrieved December 20, 2005.
  24. Robinson, Walter V. (December 11, 2005). "Truth and Duty: a distorted lens". The Boston Globe. Retrieved March 13, 2008.
  25. Johnson, Kevin; Moniz, Dave; Jim Drinkard (September 20, 2004). "CBS arranged for meeting with Lockhart". USA Today. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  26. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 60–62.
  27. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 64–65.
  28. Dave Moniz; Kevin Johnson; Jim Drinkard (September 21, 2004). "CBS backs off Guard story". USA Today. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  29. "New Questions on Bush Guard Duty". CBS News. September 8, 2004. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  30. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 90–91.
  31. Carl Cameron; et al. (September 22, 2004). "Kerry Aide Talked to Bush Guard Docs Figure". FoxNews.com. Retrieved March 14, 2008.
  32. "Memorandum, May 4, 1972" (PDF). CBS News. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  33. "Memorandum for Record, August 1, 1972" (PDF). CBS News. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  34. "Memo to File, May 19, 1972" (PDF). CBS News. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  35. "Memo to File, August 18, 1973" (PDF). CBS News. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  36. Moniz, Dave; Drinkard, Jim (September 9, 2004). "Guard commander's memos criticize Bush". USA Today. Retrieved March 17, 2008.
  37. "Bush documents obtained by USA TODAY" (PDF). USA Today. Retrieved March 17, 2006.
  38. ^ Dave Moniz; Kevin Johnson; Jim Drinkard (September 21, 2004). "CBS backs off Guard story". USA TODAY. Retrieved December 20, 2005.
  39. "Bush Guard Memos Questioned". CBS News, Associated Press. September 10, 2004. Retrieved December 20, 2005.
  40. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 88.
  41. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 129.
  42. ^ Thornburgh-Boccardi Report, p. 103.
  43. Michael Dobbs; Mike Allen (September 9, 2004). "Some Question Authenticity of Papers on Bush". Washington Post. Retrieved December 20, 2004.
  44. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 103.
  45. Ralph Blumenthal; Jim Rutenberg (September 12, 2004). "An Ex-Officer Now Believes Guard Memo Isn't Genuine". New York Times. Retrieved December 20, 2005. Registration required.
  46. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 12.
  47. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 84–86.
  48. ^ Howard Kurtz; Michael Dobbs; James V. Grimaldi (September 19, 2004). "In Rush to Air, CBS Quashed Memo Worries". The Washington Post. Retrieved March 17, 2008.
  49. ^ CBS/AP (September 15, 2004). "GOP Slams CBS on Bush Memos". CBS News. Retrieved March 17, 2008.
  50. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 86.
  51. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 98–99.
  52. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 101.
  53. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 108–110.
  54. "Transcript of CBS segment" (PDF). CBS News. Retrieved May 24, 2010.
  55. David Folkenflik (September 13, 2004). "Rather's doubters unmoved". The Baltimore Sun. Retrieved March 17, 2008.
  56. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, pp. 128–129.
  57. Thornburgh-Boccardi report, p. 130.
  58. Howard Kurtz (September 20, 2004). "After Blogs Got Hits, CBS Got a Black Eye". Washington Post.
  59. ^ Wallsten, Peter (September 18, 2004). "GOP Activist Made Allegations on CBS Memos". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved July 11, 2015.
  60. ^ Baxter, Tom (September 19, 2004). "Atlantan challenged CBS documents first". Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Archived from the original on September 3, 2005.
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External links

Killian documents PDF files

These are the Killian documents supplied to CBS Reports by Bill Burkett:

Bush documents from the TexANG archives

Page 31 is a November 3, 1970, memo from the office of Lt Col Killian on promotion of Lt Bush:

60 Minutes II, September 8 transcript

Dan Rather interviews Marion Carr Knox - September 15, 2004

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Statements of the CBS document examiners

Thornburgh–Boccardi report

Document analysis

Overview timeline at USA Today

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