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Thread: Sheldon Adelson: New Owner of the Largest Newspaper in Nevada

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    Diamond vegas1369's Avatar
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    Sheldon Adelson: New Owner of the Largest Newspaper in Nevada

    Some of you may or may not have been following this story, but two weeks ago Sheldon Adelson paid $140,000,000 cash for the Review Journal, Las Vegas' largest newspaper. He also tried to keep this a secret, but word got out pretty fast. The night of the Republican Debate, which was held at his casino (The Venetian), as the rumors were swirling that the secret buyer was Shelly, he went on record saying "I have no personal interest in the Review Journal"... The next day it came out that it was in fact him.

    The Review Journal has been a pretty middle of the road publication, leaning a little to the left, but now they will obv be the Fox News of Nevada publications.

    It was pretty comical at first as the editor and reporters spoke out against it, and how they would continue to report the truth and keep the integrity of the paper on the up and up... There was even a pretty damning story against Adelson about how a month ago 3 reporters from the RJ were asked for no reason whatsoever, in a move that made no sense to anyone, to investigate a judge... A judge that just so happened to be overseeing a big lawsuit against, you guessed it... Sheldon Adelson.

    Well, today this happened... http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/la...accepts-buyout

    LOL!

    So, he is obv making a big push to swing Nevada to the right for this election. If you can't beat em', buy em'.

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/opinion...review-journal

     
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      JimmyG_415: I have been following it. 3 reporter were on CNN, talking it the day of the debate, loved Jeb's tweet..

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    Typical sneaky Jew. I think his next goal will be to get a Jew elected as President.

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    Diamond vegas1369's Avatar
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    Didn't even notice, the link to the judge story was on the same page...

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/la...w-journal-sale

    Also, I wonder how fast "Pot News" will be taken off the tabs under the "News" tab.

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    Diamond vegas1369's Avatar
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    Above the law...

    In May the billionaire and the judge clashed when Adelson took the witness stand but refused to answer a routine question.

    "Sir, you need to answer the question," Gonzalez told him.

    When Adelson argued, Gonzalez told him, "Sir, you don't get to argue with me. You understand that?"

    It was not the first contentious exchange between Adelson's team and the judge. Gonzalez fined Sands and its Chinese subsidiary $25,000 in 2012 after finding their attorneys had tried to deceive the court, and this year she fined Sands China $250,000 for withholding documents.

    Last year, attorney Michael D. Davidson told the Review-Journal an Adelson representative offered to "significantly and financially" support a campaign to unseat Gonzalez. An Adelson spokesman declined comment at the time. Davidson said he declined the offer.

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    Serial Blogger BeerAndPoker's Avatar
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    We still need to get Sheldon's thoughts on how soft the Bryan Micon punishment was.

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    Plutonium sonatine's Avatar
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    Editor resigned today apparently.
    "Birds born in a cage think flying is an illness." - Alejandro Jodorowsky

    "America is not so much a nightmare as a non-dream. The American non-dream is precisely a move to wipe the dream out of existence. The dream is a spontaneous happening and therefore dangerous to a control system set up by the non-dreamers." -- William S. Burroughs

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    Plutonium big dick's Avatar
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    If he dies tomorrow it's a day to late. Fucking prick.

     
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      vegas1369:
      
      JimmyG_415: A Back Stabber at that.
    Last edited by big dick; 12-23-2015 at 03:07 AM.

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    Diamond vegas1369's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by sonatine View Post
    Editor resigned today apparently.
    You obv did not click on my link.

    He didn't resign, "he accepted a buy out"...lol

     
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      sonatine: woops!

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    Diamond vegas1369's Avatar
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    On the heels of its editor accepting a buyout from new owner Sheldon Adelson, the Las Vegas Review-Journal is a “convoluted mess” with journalists having no clue who’s pulling the strings.

    “It’s a mess — it’s a convoluted mess,” deputy editor James Wright told the New York Times. “We don’t really know in some cases who’s in charge of what.”

    Wright added that it’s unknown who’s reviewing stories about the paper’s new owners: “We’re not sure who is doing the vetting.”

    One thing is clear — stories are already being trimmed by management for what seems like dubious records.

    The Times reported that a story about editor Mike Hengel’s resignation was cut from about 20 paragraphs to three, with Hengel’s comments cut from the story.

    “Similarly, an initial article on the paper’s website about the sale was edited after it was published to remove references to the buyer’s unknown identity,” the Times reported.

    The story of Hengel’s resignation also came about in a dubious manner.

    Mr. Hengel said he was approached about taking a buyout offer on Dec. 11 — the day after the paper was sold — after he had argued with Jason Taylor, The Review-Journal’s publisher, about the changes to the initial article on the sale. The buyout offer came on Tuesday around 4 p.m., shortly before he addressed the newsroom. The statement from the new owners that said Mr. Hengel had “accepted a voluntary buyout offer” appears to have been written before he, in fact, accepted it.

    As TheWrap previously reported, journalists at the Review-Journal are uneasy at both the direction of the paper and their job security at it.

    Hegel told the Times: “I’m not sure what their plans were and how I fit into them…So when I got presented an offer based on what I knew the situation was, I had to determine whether it was acceptable or not. And for me and my family, it was.”

    https://www.yahoo.com/celebrity/news...44.html?ref=gs
    Mike Hengel accepts buyout, tells staff he expects new ownership to create “adversarial relationship” with editorial

    Name:  LVRJ.jpg
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    Drama at the Las Vegas Review-Journal continued on Tuesday as editor Mike Hengel resigned in the wake of conservative casino magnate Sheldon Adelson’s acquisition of the paper.

    After a week filled with the paper’s journalists racking their brains to uncover who the new mystery owner of the paper was, Adelson’s family came forward as the buyer and pledged to produce a paper that elevated unbiased journalism.

    Before Adelson revealed himself as owner, reporters were cautioned not to worry about the identity of the new owner — who wanted them to focus on their work.

    Right after Adelson was revealed as the owner, Hengel was offered a buyout. Tuesday evening, he told staff huddled in the newsroom why he accepted it.

    Hegel expected an “adversarial relationship” between Adelson and the paper’s journalists and thought Adelson should pick his own editor.

    “I think my resignation probably comes as a relief to the new owners, and it is in my best interest and those of my family,” Hengel told staff, according to reporter Neal Morton.

    On Wednesday, the Adelson family issued a front-page message pledging a “fair, unbiased and accurate” newspaper.

    “We decided to buy the Review-Journal to help create a better newspaper — a forward thinking newspaper that is worthy of our Las Vegas community,” the message said.

    “This journalism will be supported by new investments in services such as enhanced fact checking and a Reader Advocate or Ombudsperson to respond to reader concerns.”

    Hengel’s resignation adds fuel to a growing fire of uneasy journalists in the Review-Journal’s newsroom. On Sunday, longtime columnist John L. Smith, whom Adelson once sued, wrote that the billionaire casino magnate and longtime supporter of conservative political causes is the wrong person to own the paper.

    “Adelson is precisely the wrong person to own this or any newspaper. His disdain for the working press and its prickly processes is palpable — and easily illustrated by his well-known litigiousness,” he wrote.

    I experienced this first hand when Adelson sued me for a few lines I’d written in my 2005 book “Sharks in the Desert: The Founding Fathers and Current Kings of Las Vegas.” At the time, my daughter Amelia was being treated for brain cancer. After an excruciating civil process, during which I was forced to declare bankruptcy, the case was dismissed with prejudice by U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Bruce Markell, who declared me the prevailing party.

    A number of staffers are concerned for their jobs.

    Howard Stutz and Jennifer Robison, who co-bylined the story revealing Adelson as the new owner, told CNN they are uneasy about their job security.

    Reporters claim the Adelson-led management team has already begun meddling with editorial operations, removing or changing sections from stories relating to the sale.

    Robison said that the new owners literally stopped the presses of the paper on Dec. 10 to remove a quote about reporters being instructed not to worry about who the new owners were.

    Michael Shroeder, who manages the new media company formed by the Adelson family, News + Media Capital, said journalists are not being muzzled.

    “You can be assured that if the Adelsons attempt to skew coverage, by ordering some stories covered and others killed or watered down, the Review-Journal’s editors and reporters will fight it,” he said.

    “How can you be sure? One way is to look at how we covered the secrecy surrounding the newspaper’s sale. We dug in. We refused to stand down. We will fight for your trust. Every. Single. Day. Even if our former owners and current operators don’t want us to.”

    http://www.thewrap.com/las-vegas-rev...-buying-paper/

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    Diamond TheXFactor's Avatar
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    It's 2015 not 1995, no one gives a shit about newspapers.

    Adelson overpaid $40 million for this newspaper so he could remain anonymous.
    Since that didn't happen, can he get his money back?


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    100% Organic MumblesBadly's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by snake_in_the_ass View Post
    Typical sneaky Jew. I think his next goal will be to get a Jew elected as President.
    Bernie Sanders, perhaps?
    _____________________________________________
    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Druff View Post
    I actually hope this [second impeachment] succeeds, because I want Trump put down politically like a sick, 14-year-old dog. ... I don't want him complicating the 2024 primary season. I just want him done.
    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Druff View Post
    Were Republicans cowardly or unethical not to go along with [convicting Trump in the second impeachment Senate trial]? No. The smart move was to reject it.

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    Quote Originally Posted by TheXFactor View Post
    It's 2015 not 1995, no one gives a shit about newspapers.

    Adelson overpaid $40 million for this newspaper so he could remain anonymous.
    Since that didn't happen, can he get his money back?

    He bought it as a vehicle for promoting his political agenda.
    _____________________________________________
    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Druff View Post
    I actually hope this [second impeachment] succeeds, because I want Trump put down politically like a sick, 14-year-old dog. ... I don't want him complicating the 2024 primary season. I just want him done.
    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Druff View Post
    Were Republicans cowardly or unethical not to go along with [convicting Trump in the second impeachment Senate trial]? No. The smart move was to reject it.

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    It's pretty crazy how the right gets busted every single day trying to misinform the public. Propaganda media outlets called Fair and Balanced, countless shill radio shows, print media and web sites. Sheldon Adelson openly buying out all their pres. candidates. Oh hey Sheldon got busted buying a newspaper to spew propaganda. Nobody seems to notice, nobody seems to care.

    Pretty much all GOP elected officials openly sell out to energy n defense corporations no matter
    the cost to current and future generations. Private prisons, gerrymandering,and on and on and on. It just boggles the mind that they get over 5% of the vote.

    A up to date account of their debunked propaganda can be found here.
    http://mediamatters.org/

     
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      vegas1369: Spot on. It's painful to watch.

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    Quote Originally Posted by FPS_Russia View Post
    It's pretty crazy how the right gets busted every single day trying to misinform the public. Propaganda media outlets called Fair and Balanced, countless shill radio shows, print media and web sites. Sheldon Adelson openly buying out all their pres. candidates. Oh hey Sheldon got busted buying a newspaper to spew propaganda. Nobody seems to notice, nobody seems to care.

    Pretty much all GOP elected officials openly sell out to energy n defense corporations no matter
    the cost to current and future generations. Private prisons, gerrymandering,and on and on and on. It just boggles the mind that they get over 5% of the vote.

    A up to date account of their debunked propaganda can be found here.
    http://mediamatters.org/
    No surprise they dominate the state houses and Congress. They are masters of using the following: Racism, religion, and riches.
    _____________________________________________
    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Druff View Post
    I actually hope this [second impeachment] succeeds, because I want Trump put down politically like a sick, 14-year-old dog. ... I don't want him complicating the 2024 primary season. I just want him done.
    Quote Originally Posted by Dan Druff View Post
    Were Republicans cowardly or unethical not to go along with [convicting Trump in the second impeachment Senate trial]? No. The smart move was to reject it.

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    Diamond hongkonger's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by TheXFactor View Post
    It's 2015 not 1995, no one gives a shit about newspapers.

    Adelson overpaid $40 million for this newspaper so he could remain anonymous.
    Since that didn't happen, can he get his money back?

    Couldn't be more wrong. The format might slowly be dying, leaving the printed page for the internet, but the institutions remain and are critical to the public discourse. Newspapers still do most of the investigative reporting in America.

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    Diamond TheXFactor's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by hongkonger View Post
    Couldn't be more wrong. The format might slowly be dying, leaving the printed page for the internet, but the institutions remain and are critical to the public discourse. Newspapers still do most of the investigative reporting in America.
    The big publications like the New York Times and Los Angeles Times might survive but these other smaller newspapers won't be able to.

    Online hits doesn't translate into enough cash to keep them in business.

    Most of writers cannot afford to write for just one newspaper.

    They will publish stories instead from "independent journalists" that write for many different publications.

    The only online portal that makes money and a profit is the Huffington Post.

    Newspapers like the Boston Globe are losing $1 million a week.

    I see a lot of these "online news" websites using pay walls and other crap to try and hijack your web browser and get you to pay for content.

    Well that shit isn't going to work.

    May the newspaper and magazine business die a slow death.




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    One Percenter Pooh's Avatar
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    Do they still deliver the paper to the hotels in Vegas? Not sure if they ever did but a lot of places I stay when I travel do leave the paper, usually USA Today. If they do then that's the only way a news paper in Vegas could remain viable imo. Just curious.

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    Owner Dan Druff's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by FPS_Russia View Post
    It's pretty crazy how the right gets busted every single day trying to misinform the public. Propaganda media outlets called Fair and Balanced, countless shill radio shows, print media and web sites. Sheldon Adelson openly buying out all their pres. candidates. Oh hey Sheldon got busted buying a newspaper to spew propaganda. Nobody seems to notice, nobody seems to care.

    Pretty much all GOP elected officials openly sell out to energy n defense corporations no matter
    the cost to current and future generations. Private prisons, gerrymandering,and on and on and on. It just boggles the mind that they get over 5% of the vote.

    A up to date account of their debunked propaganda can be found here.
    http://mediamatters.org/
    Are you seriously trying to say that the right is benefiting more from shenanigans in the media than the left?

    If so....



    * Also LOL at casting gerrymandering as a Republican-only problem.

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    This dude is seriously a complete piece of shit.....

    http://www.reviewjournal.com/news/la...w-journal-sale

    y James DeHaven, Jennifer Robison and Eric Hartley
    © 2015 Las Vegas Review-Journal

    Just over a month before Sheldon Adelson's family was revealed as the new owner of the Las Vegas Review-Journal, three reporters at the newspaper received an unusual assignment passed down from the newspaper's corporate management: Drop everything and spend two weeks monitoring all activity of three Clark County judges.

    The reason for the assignment and its unprecedented nature was never explained.

    One of the three judges observed was District Judge Elizabeth Gonzalez, whose current caseload includes Jacobs v. Sands, a long-running wrongful termination lawsuit filed against Adelson and his company, Las Vegas Sands Corp., by Steven Jacobs, who ran Sands' operations in Macau.

    The case has attracted global media attention because of Jacobs' contention in court filings that he was fired for trying to break the company's links to Chinese organized crime triads, and allegations that Adelson turned a blind eye to prostitution and other illegal activities in his resorts there.

    In May the billionaire and the judge clashed when Adelson took the witness stand but refused to answer a routine question.

    "Sir, you need to answer the question," Gonzalez told him.

    When Adelson argued, Gonzalez told him, "Sir, you don't get to argue with me. You understand that?"

    It was not the first contentious exchange between Adelson's team and the judge. Gonzalez fined Sands and its Chinese subsidiary $25,000 in 2012 after finding their attorneys had tried to deceive the court, and this year she fined Sands China $250,000 for withholding documents.

    Last year, attorney Michael D. Davidson told the Review-Journal an Adelson representative offered to "significantly and financially" support a campaign to unseat Gonzalez. An Adelson spokesman declined comment at the time. Davidson said he declined the offer.

    How the judges, and Gonzalez in particular, came under scrutiny this year just as GateHouse Media was quietly finalizing the newspaper's sale and an ongoing management contract with Adelson's family remains unclear.

    None of the 15,000 words the reporters wrote about their time sitting in courtrooms was ever published by the Review-Journal, but days later a long article blasting Gonzalez's rulings in the Sands case appeared in a small Connecticut newspaper with a connection to Adelson that became known only last week.

    Unusual demands

    The monitoring effort began in Las Vegas on Nov. 6 with a call from a top GateHouse Media executive to Review-Journal Publisher Jason Taylor.

    Taylor and other Review-Journal executives have said GateHouse did not specify Gonzalez as one of the three judges. She was selected at the RJ — though not within the newsroom — because she specializes in business lawsuits and is handling unrelated high-profile cases involving Adelson and fellow casino mogul Steve Wynn.

    Family Court Judge Mathew Harter and Las Vegas Justice of the Peace Joseph Sciscento were selected by the reporters assigned to the effort.

    An internal memo outlining the court initiative notes that each reporter was to "observe how engaged the judge is in the case, whether they're prepared or not, if they favor one lawyer over another, whether they're over- or under-worked — even whether they show up for work on time, or not."

    The memo, authored by Review-Journal Deputy Editor James G. Wright, notes the initiative was undertaken without explanation from GateHouse and over the objection of the newspaper's management, and there was no expectation that anything would be published.

    "We've simply been told we must do it, and it must start on Tuesday," Wright wrote.

    Diaries kept by the reporters were submitted in mid-November to Taylor and the newspaper's attorney. Taylor said the diaries were never sent to GateHouse headquarters, nor did GateHouse corporate officials ever ask for them.

    "When the request was handed down, it seemed like little more than a waste of time and resources," Review-Journal Editor Michael Hengel said. "I still think it was a waste of time, but now I wonder what really was behind it."

    Review-Journal editors learned only Friday, after a version of this article was published online, that GateHouse management had attempted to get reporters from a Florida newspaper to investigate Las Vegas judges before forcing the assignment on the RJ.

    Bill Church, executive editor of the GateHouse-owned Sarasota Herald-Tribune, said he received a call in early November about "a potentially big story regarding the court system and potential ethics violations."

    The call was from David Arkin, GateHouse's vice president of content and audience. Church said that the call was brief and that Arkin did not name any specific judges, but did say the possible story involved campaign finances and how judges were ruling on certain cases.

    After talking to his staff, Church told Arkin they could not immediately help.

    "Given what I knew at the time, I said no, we just didn't have the resources, and there were too many questions that still needed to get resolved," Church said.

    One major concern, Church said, was why the Sarasota newspaper would be asked to help when GateHouse also owned the Review-Journal, a larger newspaper in Las Vegas. Church said he would not have allowed his reporters to work on a Las Vegas story without Hengel's blessing.

    Church said Arkin never called him about the matter again. He said he was "stunned" when he read an online version of this article on Friday, but did not know what to conclude.

    Hengel said Friday that he knew nothing of GateHouse Media's attempt to involve the Florida newspaper.

    "I've never talked to Arkin or anyone else outside of this newspaper regarding this project," Hengel said. "And the fact these discussions were going on with the Florida paper about Las Vegas without anyone in the newsroom having any knowledge of it is, to me, very troubling."

    Reached by telephone Friday, Arkin said he was getting on a plane and would have to call back. Hours later, Arkin emailed a prepared statement defending the company's request for the Sarasota paper's help as well as GateHouse Media's newsroom ethics to Hengel, Wright and reporter Eric Hartley.

    GateHouse was "engaged to tackle an investigative story in Las Vegas with no knowledge of the prospective new buyer. Because Las Vegas was relatively new to the company, we decided to approach our newsroom in Sarasota, Florida, a team that is known for tackling big investigative journalism," the statement reads in part.

    "On the face of the situation, we had what appeared to be a great story we were capable of investigating, and I wanted our team to show its talent. From my point of view, it was nothing more."

    Unusual connections

    On Nov. 30, the New Britain Herald, a tiny Connecticut newspaper not affiliated with GateHouse, published an article critical of the performance of courts that specialize in business disputes. It singled out Judge Gonzalez with scathing criticism of her "inconsistent and even contradictory" handling of the Adelson case and another lawsuit involving Wynn Resorts Ltd.

    The article suggests Gonzalez's rulings in those cases were unfair, and her work "undermines the rationale for the creation of such (business) courts in the first place — which was to provide reliable consistency, even predictability in the resolution of frequently recurring issues."

    The article also says 24 percent of Nevada lawyers rated Gonzalez as "less than adequate" in the Review-Journal's regular "Judging the Judges" survey, but incorrectly presents that as an overall rating, rather than a ranking on one category regarding bias toward lawyers or litigants appearing before her.

    The Adelson and Wynn cases were the only specific examples cited at length in the story. Two other judges were mentioned, but the critique of Gonzalez's courtroom proceedings consumed more than a quarter of the 1,900-word article.

    The article's author was identified as Edward Clarkin, whose byline is found only one other time in the archives of the Connecticut newspaper, on a review of a Polish restaurant.

    Attempts to locate Clarkin have been unsuccessful. Herald executives did not respond to requests for information, but a newspaper staffer said no one by that name works there. A nationwide search turned up no writer by that name, though laudatory reviews from Edward Clarkin, identified as being from the New Britain Herald and a sister paper, the Bristol Press, appear on the website of Tennessee mystery writer Keith Donnelly.

    Donnelly did not respond to multiple requests for comment.

    On Dec. 10, GateHouse announced the sale of the Review-Journal to News + Media LLC, a company organized in Delaware in September. At an RJ staff meeting, Michael Schroeder was introduced as the manager of the company, and said he would not identify its owners.

    Schroeder owns Central Connecticut Communications, which operates the New Britain Herald and three other papers.

    Reached at his Connecticut newspaper office Friday, Schroeder declined to say how the article came about or discuss Clarkin's role at the papers.

    "I'm not going to talk about our newsgathering," he said, later adding, "I don't talk about our reporters, either — or our freelancers or anyone else."

    Asked how a Review-Journal reporter might be able to reach Clarkin, Schroeder replied: "I have no idea."

    When contacted for comment Thursday, Gonzalez said only that she didn't mind reporters or anyone else sitting in her courtroom, which is open to the public, but declined to comment further because the issue involves pending cases.

    A District Court official who declined to be identified for fear of retribution suggested the issue may be of interest to federal authorities.

    "I almost think your question is a federal question because ... when there's a question at a District Court that could involve a conflict, that's not a question we can investigate,'' the official said. "It seems to me you might want to talk to the (Justice Department) or someone else."

    Linkage unclear

    Whether there was a link between the GateHouse-ordered court monitoring assignment, the critical article in New Britain and the sale of the RJ to the Adelson family remains unclear.

    Michael Reed, CEO of New Media Investment Corp., the parent company of GateHouse Media, declined to comment when asked whether Adelson was involved in the court monitoring directive. He said the effort was part of a "multistate, multinewsroom" investigative effort initiated by GateHouse, but said he did not know who started it or how it was approved.

    "I don't know why you're trying to create a story where there isn't one," Reed told an RJ reporter on Wednesday. "I would be focusing on the positive, not the negative."

    In a later interview with The Associated Press, Reed rejected the notion that the Review-Journal's integrity had been challenged by the secrecy surrounding its sale. He said the public didn't care about the buyer and that reporters pushed the story with the intention of creating controversy.

    "I just wish reporters had better hearts and better intentions than just trying to slam media companies trying to do good," he said.

    Taylor has said he has been assured by the Adelsons that they won't meddle in the editorial content of the newspaper.

    In an interview with Reuters in Macau on Friday ahead of the formal opening of his new St. Regis hotel, Adelson said his family bought the RJ as a financial investment, dismissing speculation the deal was aimed at controlling media in the United States.

    "The Review-Journal is already on my side of the political spectrum," Adelson said of the paper's Libertarian-leaning opinion pages.

    "This newspaper has been making money... we left the (everyday) operation in the hands of the owner from who we bought it," Adelson said. "We are not going to hire an editor, we left it up to them (current management), period. We may take some of the positive characteristics of our Israeli newspaper and add them to there, but that's all just suggestions."

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    Last Post: 10-24-2012, 12:50 AM