@ijbailey Profile picture
May 23 21 tweets 5 min read
A story that's not getting enough national attention: Here in the Myrtle Beach, S.C. area for the past 13 years, the FBI and local law enforcement officials left the impression that a white girl on vacation was abducted by a 16-year-old black dude who did evil things to her. 1/
They began spreading a story about him - a boy who lost one of his arms in an accident at the age of 4 - and a group of other black dudes about supposedly kidnapping Brittanee Drexel gang raping her and...it's even worse than than. 2/
They claimed they used her for human trafficking. They said the 16-year-old boy's father was involved. They said they beat her, murdered her and threw her body in a gator-infested lake. 3/
They used the local media to pressure that 16-year-old boy into confessing to the crime. They based it all on a jailhouse informant. And it was all a lie - which is typical of jailhouse informants, if you don't know. 4/
Just recently, they found Drexel's remains and charged an old white dude who has an extensive criminal sexual record. And when they announced it during a press conference held by officials from every law enforcement agency, they didn't mention the 16-year-old boy's name once. 5/
Here is the family's press conference from a few days ago. And as you can see, there are no law enforcement officials around. This is (still) America, 2022. 6/
I frequently jog by the makeshift memorial dedicated to the girl. And every time, I have given a quick-silent prayer. I'm a parent; I understand that pain the Drexels have endured these past 13 years not knowing. But they aren't the only ones hurting. 7/
They devastated the family of that then-16-year-old black boy. They never directly charged him in her case but used his past mistakes to try and pressure him to confess. On national TV, he was called an animal. His mug shot is everywhere. 8/
Despite all of that, not once at the press conference announcing that they had finally found the right person, saying this time it's based on DNA evidence, did they apologize or give any kind of nod to that boy's family, as though they didn't exist. 8/
Here's the press conference during which law enforcement officials announced the big arrest in the case. They repeatedly talked about how professional and dogged they were for 13 years. 9/
If they cannot stand up and say something about the devastation they caused that boy's family - without being forced to - that's gonna boil my blood even more than it already is. 10
As a journalist at the time at the only daily newspaper in the area, I have never stopped thinking about this case, even after I left the paper. I've covered different cases like these, and I understand the complexity at play. I truly do. 11/
Some reporting I did helped led to the uncovering of remains of a different woman who was raped/kidnapped. Can't tell you how often I felt like I let the Drexel family down because my reporting was of no use to them all this time. I get we can't solve everything. But still. 12/
I don't even really blame them for saying the awful things they said about that black boy and his family, because they were hurting and grieving and believing what the FBI was telling them. 13/
It's just that there's no way all the folks involved should just be able to walk away without grappling with how this happened - and that must include media who helped the FBI push the narrative about that boy despite no charges and zero evidence. 14/
There's some reckoning that must happen in our industry as well on cases such as these. 15/
This is some background about how this rolled out after the FBI began circulating that false story they got from a jailhouse informant.
syracuse.com/state/2016/10/…
That boy always declared his innocence. He never wavered no matter what was being said, when or why.
Every journalist should heed this call from that boy's mom: "I call for law enforcement to halt the practice of disclosing unfounded leads and names of potential suspects without credible evidence. Doing this has real-life consequences and a lasting disparaging effect."
More context on how this family was treated by media and law enforcement. Father and son were accused in horrific crimes for which they did not commit. But their arrests led to this type of framing in media: people.com/crime/brittane…
Listening back to some of the podcasts that dealt with this case is painful. This one includes Drexel’s father. While I empathize with him, it’s still hard to hear him describe the Taylor family in such ugly ways. Listen to the final 22 minutes.

podcasts.apple.com/us/podcast/pau…

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More from @ijbailey

May 14
If I can grow up in the Deep South and endure daily racism from birth without turning anti-white, a white dude can survive a bad 90-minute DEI session without becoming David Duke. That is if he chose not to. 1/
Most of us have at least a little unconscious prejudice in the form of anti-blackness. I know I do, and I’m black. But as adults, we have a responsibility to deal with the mess in our own minds. 2/
About DEI workshops. Some are awful. Some are run by people who shouldn’t be. But some are quite good when done well. The problem is we expect them to solve problems they can’t. The best simply provide tools for people to use (or not use) in their work and personal lives. 3/
Read 5 tweets
May 13
Let me take this break from grading to share with you a technique I use with many classes at @DavidsonCollege.
At the beginning of the semester, I require students to compile what I refer to as a Knee-Jerk List. It has been enormously helpful for students and for teaching. 1/
I ask students to list 3 to 5 things for which they have a seemingly Pavlovian-response any time they come across it. It can be a word, an image, a topic, whatever. The Pavlovian-response can be positive or negative. 2/
For instance. The word "woke" is on my Knee-Jerk List because it almost always triggers a Pavlovian response in me in a negative way. The point isn't to judge myself positively or negatively, but just to understand better the innerworkings of my own mind. 3/
Read 27 tweets
Mar 10
I was mentioned in this thread because of some work I'm doing on tracking self-censorship here at @DavidsonCollege , so I wanted to note a few things. 1/
From early results, it's pretty clear to me that self-censorship is a broad reality on campus. That's where I agree with Greg and @TheFIREorg. But the racial component @nhannahjones asked about is also real but isn't teased out as well by FIRE even in its data and statements. 2/
The existence of self-censorship is not really the issue. Think back to when you were that age. You likely self-censored, like most of us did - and do. That's why the real question isn't the what but rather the why. It's there I don't think FIRE has been as clear. 3/
Read 30 tweets
Mar 8
I'm gonna take off my columnist hat and put on my professor hat to give you the results of a quick survey I did of two of my classes about the much-discussed @nytopinion about self-censorship. 1/
I had students read the piece, discuss in small groups then we came back together for larger discussion and the survey. Here's what I found: 2/
nytimes.com/2022/03/07/opi…
In a class about Obama, Trump and American media, 26 of the 33 students said they agreed with the thrust of the piece; 7 disagreed. But after some discussion/debate, one student changed their mind, so it ended up here: 25 agree; 8 disagreed. 3/
Read 10 tweets
Mar 2
A quick word about @terrelljstarr and other black journalists who supposedly don't "fit" in certain environments because they don't do things in a traditional way. 1/
I used to edit Terrell when I was an editor-at-large for @TheRoot, mainly when he was traipsing across Georgia (the one in the U.S.) and Florida during the 2018 midterms. I'll say this about him. He's one of the hardest-working smart-humble journalists I know. 2/
He knew a heck of a lot, had a good deal of experience and yet was eager to learn more, to strengthen any of his perceived weaknesses. That's the dude I knew then, that's the dude you see on the tube and Twitter now. He's genuine. 3/
Read 14 tweets
Jan 13
In her own reporting, @CathyYoung63 shows that there was straight up misleading scaremongering by those on the right about white people supposedly being denied covid treatment because of "woke" racism. And yet she still decides to do the "both sides" thing. 1/
I saw this same kind of fearmongering when vaccines were initially being rolled out because some efforts were designed specifically to get black people vaccinated because of very real - yes - systemic reasons that go back generations. 2/
Then, like now, the claim was that white people were being discriminated against. It's madness. And it's ugly. And a lot of it is built upon the nonsense that if you only focus on class then all other inequities will be taken care of despite gobs of evidence to the contrary. 3/
Read 6 tweets

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