The most memorable reporting I did at the NY Daily News was on murders. In some ways I feel that crime reporting is journalism at its most elemental and crucial.
Local tragedy and violence doesn't make front pages but it has tremendous importance for people in the communities affected - more so perhaps than foreign wars and national politics.
As a reporter just starting out, knocking on doors and talking to family members and neighbors of victims, showed me how important it is for people to feel that their sorrow is not disconnected from the world around them. That it has meaning and shape beyond their house or block.
Those family members were usually so eager to tell me what their child meant to the those in his or her life and how this will affect them. People always wanted to make sure I knew - and that the pubic knew - that their loved ones were separate from the violence that ended their lives. That dying by the sword didn't mean they lived by it.
I have long thought the NY Times is poor at covering the city. It's not just that Metro coverage is given secondary billing - but the level of coverage given to city news is less than what you would expect to see from a good paper in Akron.
The Times often does not cover murders in its city - which offers a hint at how they view the importance of local coverage.
But now the Times offers an interactive map that charts murders throughout the city. Readers can look at patterns in homicides across time and place and make recommendations for trend stories. This seems like a great chance for communities to become more involved in helping to direct important stories. I hope this, along with The Local project partnered with CUNY, is sign that the Times plans to take its job in the city a bit more seriously.
As I was going through the map I found many of the victims I reported on, and I wanted to see if I could use the google maps tool also - but for a more personal purpose. The Times map shows a birdeye view. But I wanted to give an interactive street view of some of my memories.
New Bronx school copes with tragedy of student murders
View Larger Map
Man killed, 2nd hurt at Bronx party
View Larger Map
Man slain in Brooklyn on grandma's doorstep
View Larger Map
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Showing posts with label NYC. Show all posts
Saturday, June 20, 2009
Homicide reporting: Some Scenes I Have Seen.
Posted by
Joel Schectman
at
3:26 PM
6
comments
Labels: crime reporting, journalism, New York, news, ny daily news, ny times, NYC
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)