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Lurid reports of rape, murder in Katrinas aftermath
exposed as frauds
By Joseph Kay
30 September 2005
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A series of articles over the past week have confirmed that
the widespread reports of massive looting, murder and violence
in hurricane-devastated New Orleans were either concocted out
of whole cloth or grossly exaggerated. In the first several days
after New Orleans was inundated, these stories were disseminated
by government officials at the federal, state and local level,
and trumpeted by the media in banner headlines and lurid TV accounts.
Now that officials have been forced to admit that they had
little or no evidence of armed thugs roaming the devastated city
and mugging, raping and killing tourists and stranded residents,
they and their media accomplices are seeking to explain away the
disinformation campaign as the inadvertent result of confusion,
fear and the breakdown in communications in New Orleans.
In fact, the picture of rampant lawlessness and violence conjured
up by the government and the media served definite and entirely
reactionary political purposes. President Bush himself picked
up the theme of lawlessness shortly after he curtailed
his Texas vacationwell after the city had been inundated
and the dimensions of the human disaster had become clearand
returned to Washington.
In an interview on ABC Televisions Good Morning
America program on September 1, he said, [T]here ought
to be zero tolerance of people breaking the law during an emergency
such as this.
In making these comments, Bush was continuing a theme already
developed by New Orleans Mayor Ray Nagin and Louisiana Governor
Kathleen Blanco, both Democrats. On August 31, just two days after
the hurricane passed over the city, Nagin declared that gangs
of looters are starting to get closer to heavily populated
areashotels, hospitals, and were going to stop it
right now. He moved to shift virtually the entire police
force from search-and-rescue to anti-looting duties.
Governor Blanco announced the same day that we will restore
law and order. She bemoaned the fact that disasters
like this often bring out the worst in people. A day later,
she announced that a force of National Guard troops was entering
the city: They have M-16s and they are locked and loaded,
she declared. These troops know how to shoot to kill...
and I expect they will.
Nagin, together with Police Superintendent Edwin Compass III,
sounded an even more sensational note the following week. The
two appeared on the Oprah television show on September
4. Compass declared, The tourists are walking around there,
and as soon as these individuals see them, theyre being
preyed upon. They are beating, they are raping them on the streets.
He repeated accounts of little babies getting raped
in the Superdome, where thousands of stranded hurricane victims
had been left by the authorities to suffer in sweltering heat
for days on end without food, water or electricity.
Nagin spoke of an almost animalistic state inside
the Superdome, where, he claimed, hooligans were killing
people, raping people.
There is no evidence that these horrible events took place.
According to a September 26 article in the New Orleans newspaper,
the Times-Picayune, the vast majority of reported
atrocities committed by evacuees have turned out to be false,
or at least unsupported by any evidence, according to key military,
law enforcement, medical and civilian officials in positions to
know.
The Times-Picayune noted that during early September,
the media in the US and internationally was reporting widespread
killings and rapes by gangs in both the Superdome and the New
Orleans Convention Center. However, an investigation by the newspaper
found that just 10 bodies were recovered from the two venues.
Of the six found in the Superdome, four died of natural
causes, one overdosed and another jumped to his death in an apparent
suicide, the newspaper wrote, citing Louisiana National
Guard Colonel Thomas Beron.
It is believed that only one of the deaths in the Convention
Center may have been a murder. The reports of widespread sexual
assaults were likewise unfounded. According to a New York Times
article of September 29, During six days when the Superdome
was used as a shelter, the head of the New Orleans Police Departments
sex crimes unit, Lt. David Benelli, said he and his officers lived
inside the dome and ran down every rumor of rape or atrocity.
In the end, they made two arrests for attempted sexual assault,
and concluded that the other attacks had not happened.
New Orleans District Attorney Eddie Jordan said that in the
city as a whole, only four murders had been confirmed during the
week after the hurricane hit, which is about average for the city.
These findings expose the utter falsehood of the stories that
were floated at the time, particularly by police officials. Compass
spoke of residents toting weapons in crowds, shooting at each
other and at police.
People would be shooting at us, and we couldnt
shoot because of the families, Compass told Chris Elsberry
of the Connecticut Post as late as September 19. All
we could do is rush toward the flash.
But Jeff Winn, the leader of the SWAT unit that Compass said
had seized 30 weapons in this way, denied that anything of the
sort happened. According to the Times-Picayune, Winn said
his unit saw muzzle flashes and heard gunshots only one time.
Despite aggressively frisking a number of suspects, the team recovered
no weapons.
The numerous reports of people shooting at helicopters that
were trying to rescue people have likewise turned out to be untrue.
As for the massive looting that was supposed to have occurred,
this too was exaggerated. Most of the looting that did occur was
directed at gaining access to food and other necessities. In at
least one case, in which a Wal-Mart store was looted, the removal
of goods was begun by police, under instructions from their commanders
to take what they needed.
As always, the US media has played a despicable role. AP reporter
Michelle Roberts noted in an article on September 27, Many
news organizations, including the Associated Press, carried the
witness accounts and official pronouncements, and in some cases
later repeated the claims as fact, without attribution.
Both right-wing and liberal news sources took the
rumors and government statements at face value. The New York
Times recorded in an article on September 19 some of the statements
made by television commentators. On September 1, Fox News anchor
John Gibson said there were all kinds of reports of looting,
fires and violence. Thugs shooting at rescue crews. Later
that night, MSNBC talking-head Tucker Carlson declared hysterically
that People are being raped. People are being murdered.
People are being shot. Police officers are being shot. These
are only a sample of the sort of comments that were ubiquitous
at the time.
On September 2, in a banner headline that stretched across
the entire front page, the Washington Post declared New
Orleans to be A City of Despair and Lawlessness. The
newspapers lead editorial of that day bemoaned the fact
that looters and carjackers, some of them armed, have run
rampant.
Given the inhuman and life-threatening conditions in which
tens of thousands of New Orleans residents were left, and the
incompetence and indifference of the authorities at all levels
of government, the wonder is not that looting occurred, along
with some acts of violence, but that they were relatively limited.
What accounts for these extraordinarily exaggerated accounts?
They served three interrelated purposes. First, to counter and
blunt the enormous outpouring of sympathy for the victims of the
hurricane, accompanied by public outrage at the governments
lack of preparations and inept response. This sympathy was felt
particularly strongly for the impoverished and largely African
American section of the population that was left stranded in the
city, either in the squalid conditions of the Superdome and Convention
Center, or trapped on rooftops of homes engulfed by the flood.
By criminalizing the population, the government, at a local
and national level, sought to draw attention away from its own
responsibility. The implication was that the victims themselves
were to blame. The idea was promoted that those who remained in
the city did so because they had willfully refused to follow evacuation
orders, even though it had long been known that tens of thousands
would be unable to follow these orders for lack of transportation.
This attempt to paint the victims with the brush of criminality
had more a hint of racism.
Second, the government and the media attempted, in the first
days after the hurricane, to blame hooligan violence for the failure
of the Federal Emergency Management Agency and other official
bodies to mount rescue and relief operations. In particular, the
reports of helicopters being shot at as they attempted to bring
relief were hyped for this purpose.
The media line in these first critical days was that rescue
efforts were rendered impossible by the lawlessness that had seized
hold of the stricken city. Law and order had to be
restored before starving and dying people could be helped.
Finally, the sensational accounts paved the way for the transformation
of New Orleans into a militarized city. As has become increasingly
clear, the Bush administration is seeking to use the hurricane
disaster as a pretext for the elimination of remaining restrictions
on military involvement in domestic missions and law enforcement.
Plans to increase the power of the military within the US have
long been in the works, institutionalized in the Department of
Homeland Security and the US Northern Command, but the devastation
of New Orleans has provided an excuse for their realization.
See Also:
In the wake of Katrina and Rita
Bush administration to expand military powers, attack social programs
[27 September 2005]
Katrina, the Iraq war and the struggle
for socialism
[23 September 2005]
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