
The company that runs the Oakland Tribune and its sister papers published
fraudulent "best of" listings by substituting the winners of reader
surveys with current and potential advertisers, a former ad executive for the
company charges in a court case filed last week.
When presented with news of the case by an ANG reporter on Thursday, editors
of the Tribune would not print the story, newsroom employees said.
David Marin, who was fired from his job as director of advertising in March
2003, filed a lawsuit in Alameda County Superior Court alleging that the Tribune's
parent company, ANG newspapers, committed a "massive hoax" on readers,
advertisers and the general public by ignoring survey results and hand-picking
the names of businesses to receive awards.
In the suit, Mr. Marin says that before he took over the department in June
2002, another manager "would take the true poll results into a room by
herself and alter the results, emerging with a new set of 'winners.'" A
call to the home of the woman named in the suit was not returned.
Kevin Keane, vice president and executive editor of the newspaper group since
March, said he would defer comment to the publisher, John Schueler, who was
hired two weeks ago. Mr. Schueler also did not return a call for comment Thursday.
Credibility at stake
Officers of the Newspaper Guild, the union representing journalists at the papers,
said that falsifying reader surveys would be a "scandal."
"I hope it's not true," said Sean Holstege, the Tribune's
transportation reporter and chair of the ANG bargaining unit of the Guild. "My
attitude is, if proven true, it undermines the credibility and trustworthiness
of the newspaper, and that's all we have."
The suit asks the court for, among other things, punitive damages against the
company, a class-action refund to subscribers and an award for "consumers
who mistakenly patronized establishments based on false 'Best Of' showings."
It also asks the court to require the chain to publish the true winners of the
contest and to refrain from future deceptions.
In the lawsuit, Mr. Marin contends that the fraud continued for years. He claims
that his repudiation of the survey's manipulation eventually cost him his job.
He says that a high-ranking executive, who is no longer working there, penalized
him by cutting his responsibilities in half, and when he complained, false statements
were added to his personnel file, forcing him out of his job.
Mr. Marin's lawyer, David A. Hosilyk of Half Moon Bay, said neither he nor his
client would say publicly how long the practice went on or disclose any evidence.
As the case progresses, he may file an amended complaint as more information
is discovered through legal mechanisms, he said.
No story on suit
Two employees of ANG said that a staff writer discovered the lawsuit in the
course of a routine search for newsworthy case records at the Alameda County
courthouse. The reporter brought this to the attention of an editor, who said
the paper was not interested in publishing it, the employees said.
Mr. Keane said he was not aware of that exchange, but did say that the paper
had no immediate plans to publish a story about the lawsuit. He added that the
paper would "certainly consider" writing about it.
This is not the first time ANG has encountered the issue of deception in advertising
and news. Last summer Grade the News examined
ANG's real-estate inserts, finding that one section, which was not labeled
as advertising, included on the cover every week a paid ad that looked like
news. On the inside of the section corporate public-relations
text was laid out alongside legitimate journalistic housing stories from
Newsday, The Boston Globe and Scripps-Howard news service.
In April, asked about another example of advertising masquerading as news --
an eight-page
section paid for by the Oakland A's that had the look and feel of a staff-written
baseball supplement -- a newly hired management team that included Mr. Keane
said the practice would end. Future advertising copy would be labeled clearly
as such, Mr. Keane said.
Mr. Marin's suit did not specify which newspapers in the group printed the false
reader surveys. ANG, owned by Denver-based MediaNews Group, includes the Tribune,
Alameda Times-Star, Hayward Daily Review, Fremont Argus, Tri-Valley Herald
and San Mateo County Times. The combined daily circulation of the group
is more than 200,000 papers.
Read the San Francisco Chronicle story on the same topic, Aug. 6, 2004.