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2015

The ugly Islamophobia in the media coverage of the San Bernardino shooting

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Vox 

Real-time coverage of mass shootings is notoriously bad. But last night's coverage of the San Bernardino mass shooting went beyond bad: It veered into borderline Islamophobia.

As a search for the suspects dragged on for hours, speculation about the perpetrators' identities swirled on social media. Erroneous reports from major news outlets only added to the chaos and confusion.

Here are two examples of particularly bad errors — and one example of deliberate anti-Muslim fear mongering — that illustrate the problem, and why it's so dangerous when sensationalist, rush-to-the-news coverage meets incidents that play into America's deepest fears about terrorism and stereotypes about Muslims.

What's in a name?

Several news outlets, including a reporter with the Los Angeles Times, incorrectly reported that the San Bernardino police had released the name of one of the suspects:

People on social media immediately began questioning the accuracy of this information. The name sounded suspiciously close to the name of Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan and was an unlikely name for a Qatari citizen, in part because in the Arabic language, which is the language spoken in Qatar, doesn't even have the letter "p."

The questioning quickly turned to outright mockery:

(Keyser Söze is the fictional villain from the 1995 film The Usual Suspects starring Kevin Spacey; the entire plot of the film is about figuring out the true identity of the mythical "Keyser Söze," a legendary master criminal. The joke here is extra funny because in the film, Keyser Söze is Turkish, just like the "Tayyeep Bin Ardogan" name seemed to be.)

LA Times reporter Rick Serrano eventually deleted his earlier tweet and posted a correction:

But the damage had already been done:

The two shooters were eventually legitimately identified by the San Bernardino Police Department as Syed Rizwan Farook, 28, and Tashfeen Malik, 27.

Right name (sort of), wrong guy

The Daily Beast, trying to find as much information as it could on the suspect as quickly as possible (just like every other news outlet was doing), apparently found a "Syed Farook" on Facebook and published his photo, identifying him as the alleged shooter.

Unfortunately, the guy whose picture it posted was Syed Raheel Farook — the brother of the actual shooting suspect, Syed Rizwan Farook. In other words, the Daily Beast published a photo of an innocent man and labeled him a mass murderer.

To his credit, Noah Shachtman, the Daily Beast's executive editor, owned up to the error on Twitter (in addition to publishing a correction as well as updating the original article) and took steps to try to undo some of the damage by deleting all of the Daily Beast's social media posts with Raheel's photo in them:

Mixing up two brothers both named "Syed R. Farook" is an understandable mistake, but it exemplifies the danger of publishing information gleaned from social media without waiting to verify its accuracy. The innocent man's photo was spread around social media, unjustly vilifying him and potentially putting his life in danger. And deleting the erroneous posts and publishing a correction will not make it go away. It's on the internet, where things last forever.

Blatant hate-mongering

This is the cover the New York Post decided to run on Thursday, the day after the San Bernardino shooting:

The motive for the attacks is still unknown. As reported by Reuters:

Officials from San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan to President Barack Obama said the attack may have been an act of terrorism but that a motive had not yet been determined. "It is possible that this was terrorist-related. But we don't know," Obama told reporters at the White House. "It is also possible that this was workplace-related."

The only reason to highlight the religion of the attackers at this point is to link Islam to murder, which spreads fear and hatred of Muslims — in other words, Islamophobia.

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