Longtime SUNY New Paltz journalism prof pens story of America’s greatest muckraker

“In 1975, Hersh did an expose of the CIA, a major major story … showing that the CIA was in violation of the law, opening the mail and tapping the phones of American citizens. Sound familiar?”

“He got incredible heat. They hung him out to dry for about six months, kept saying he was wrong, he was terrible, how could he write this, it’s not true … then it all gets confirmed. In fact, [Hersh] underestimated the number of dossiers. He was [NSA leaker extraordinaire Edward] Snowden in ’75. All the crap that happened to Snowden happened to him.”

Speaking of Snowden, are leakers like him vital to investigative reporting? Miraldi, who taught a course in muckraking journalism that this writer took back in 1989, says they’re a start, but just a start. “It’s a disservice to people like [Bob] Woodward and Hersh to say they live off leakers,” Miraldi said. “They certainly profit and do very well from leakers. A guy like Hersh might have two leakers and then 12 or 15 or 20 sources on the record and a trove of documents and records. They build the whole package.”

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Partly cooperative process

Miraldi calls the book a “semi-authorized biography” — Hersh took part in the process, mostly answering questions via phone and e-mail, but was, the author says, agnostic as to how it would turn out.

“He clearly didn’t authorize it. From the outset he was clear, as I say in the introduction to the book, ‘Until these sons of bitches are out of the White House — he was talking about Bush — I don’t have time to sit down and talk about myself.’ … He doesn’t think he’s the story.”

Miraldi interviewed hundreds of people for the book, and heard the same story time after time from subjects who asked Hersh if he minded them talking to a biographer. Hersh’s response was, “I don’t give a shit. If you want to talk to him, talk to him.” (The ace reporter’s family was a notable exception; Hersh, said Miraldi, shut down access to the people closest to him.)

The book reveals Hersh as more than just the most determined reporter around — his ego, drive to be the best and desire to be paid for what he does are all explored, rounding out a picture of a human being as journalist. It also gets into the incredible, burning drive Hersh has to use journalism as a bringer of justice. “He’s a man still on fire — he’s maintained some sense of being indignant at terrible things.”

Miraldi sees Hersh and Woodward competing for the title of America’s best investigative reporter, but gives Hersh the edge.

“Of the two of them, I think he’s the greatest in the sense that he’s continued to do muckraking and investigative reporting and exposé journalism while Woodward became an insider,” said Miraldi. (Woodward, who gained fame for, with Carl Bernstein, breaking the Watergate story has recently blasted Snowden, saying he does not consider him a hero — and that Snowden should have come to him instead of Glenn Greenwald and The Guardian.) “Hersh has just done more things for more years than anyone. … Hersh has never allowed anything to interrupt him … I think he’s the greatest reporter America’s ever had.”

Scoop Artist, released a couple of months ago, has gotten some attention and positive reviews. Kirkus gave it a star, which it bestows upon “books of exceptional merit,” and called it “an important, long overdue biography.” It was also included in Harvard University’s Niemann Foundation for Journalism’s list of the top 10 investigative journalism books of 2013; Niemann Reports’ Steve Weinberg writes, “[Miraldi] has captured Hersh’s unusual personality, his mad-dog pursuit of evidence, and his masterful information-gathering techniques.”

For more about the book, check out scoopartistthebook.com.