UNITED STATES
Huffington Post
Celia Wexler
Catholic feminist, journalist, former public interest lobbyist
Last month, at the White House Correspondents Dinner, President Obama jokingly called out noted “journalists” in the room – Mark Ruffalo, Rachel McAdams, and Liev Schreiber — who played investigative reporters in the film Spotlight. The story was about reporters who had the resources and the autonomy “to chase down the truth and hold the powerful accountable,” he said. Given the current state of journalism, Obama joked, the film was the best “fantasy” flick since Star Wars.
The film earned its Academy awards through its deft retelling of the story of the investigative reporting team that uncovered the systematic cover-up of sexual abuse of children by priests in the archdiocese of Boston. But Spotlight did not tell the whole story.
The Globe’s exposé was published in early 2002. Nine months before, in March 2001, the alternative weekly, the Boston Phoenix, published its story, “Cardinal sin,” which explored in depth allegations that Cardinal Bernard Law was complicit in the abuse cover-up. Kristen Lombardi wrote that story and seven subsequent stories. The Globe’s reporting did not acknowledge her work.
In the film, her role was consigned to a throw-away line, when Ruffalo dismisses the Phoenix as a weak and under-resourced rival that “nobody reads.”
I interviewed Lombardi, now an award-winning investigative reporter for the Center for Public Integrity, for my forthcoming book, Catholic Women Confront Their Church: Stories of Anger and Hope. Lombardi was born and raised Catholic. The abuse scandal not only challenged her as a journalist. It changed her relationship to Catholicism.
In January 2001, both The Globe and the Boston Herald ran small stories on the ongoing lawsuits against one abusive priest, John Geoghan. The stories mentioned that Cardinal Law had been added as a defendant. To Lombardi and her editor, that meant that “this particular attorney must have had some pretty damning evidence to convince a judge to do this.”
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