After the credibility of the November Rolling Stone story “A Rape on Campus” began to unravel, the magazine asked the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism to independently investigate what had gone wrong. Here are some key aspects of the 12,000-word report by deans Steve Coll and Sheila Coronel and postgraduate research scholar Derek Kravitz, and what has so far emerged in response to it.
1. No one is getting fired, despite major journalistic failures. That’s according to the magazine’s owner and publisher, Jann Wenner. The story technically went through two layers of editing and a factchecker, but at several points, both senior staff and the reporter abdicated their basic responsibilities in favor of pushing forward with the story. To name a few instances: After “Jackie” stopped responding to messages late in the process, editors agreed Erdely could use a pseudonym for the accused and stop trying to contact him. Erdely did not try to contact three friends of Jackie’s who are portrayed as callously indifferent to their friend on the night of the alleged assault, and her editor, though he remembers some events differently from Erdely, allowed the story to go to press without interviewing the friends (or even disclosing the friends had not been interviewed) because “I felt we had enough.”
Strikingly, in an interview with The New York Times, Wenner focused the blame first on Jackie and then on Erdely, who “dropped her journalistic training, scruples and rules and convinced Sean [Woods, her editor] to do the same.” But it is the two more senior, full-time editors, Woods and managing editor Will Dana, who are supposed to serve as journalistic gatekeepers and quality control, the report points out.
2. “Jackie” remains silent. The woman known as Jackie has given no public statements since shortly after the Rolling Stone story was published. She last spoke with the Washington Post as its reporting began to suggest there were major holes in the magazine’s account. According to the Charlottesville Police, Jackie did not speak to them for their investigation. She didn’t talk to the Columbia Journalism School authors, either, who were told by Jackie’s Legal Aid lawyer that it “is in her best interest to remain silent at this time.”








