After FoxNews.com truncated Jennings' quote, Wash. Times, Fox Nation accuse "safe school czar" of "encouraging" statutory rape
A Washington Times editorial accused "safe school czar" Kevin Jennings of "encourag[ing]" a relationship that amounted to "statutory rape," by suggesting that his only response to an underage student's revelation that he had sex with what the Times described as an "older man" was to "make sure 'to use a condom.' " In fact, Jennings stated that he hoped the student "knew to use a condom" to protect against STDs; moreover, the FoxNews.com article from which The Washington Times based this claim truncated Jennings' remarks to exclude his statement that he thought to say this because his "best friend had just died of AIDS the week before."
Wash. Times cites Fox News' discovery of audio to accuse Jennings of "encourag[ing]" statutory rape
From the September 28 editorial:
A teacher was told by a 15-year-old high school sophomore that he was having homosexual sex with an "older man." At the very least, statutory rape occurred. Fox News reported that the teacher violated a state law requiring that he report the abuse. That former teacher, Kevin Jennings, is President Obama's "safe school czar." It's getting hard to keep track of all of this president's problematic appointments. Clearly, the process for vetting White House employees has broken down.
In this one case in which Mr. Jennings had a real chance to protect a young boy from a sexual predator, he not only failed to do what the law required but actually encouraged the relationship.
According to Mr. Jennings' own description in a new audiotape discovered by Fox News, the 15-year-old boy met the "older man" in a "bus station bathroom" and was taken to the older man's home that night. When some details about the case became public, Mr. Jennings threatened to sue another teacher who called his failure to report the statutory rape "unethical." Mr. Jennings' defenders asserted that there was no evidence that he was aware the student had sex with the older man.
However, the new audiotape contradicts this claim. In 2000, Mr. Jennings gave a talk to the Iowa chapter of the Gay, Lesbian and Straight Education Network, an advocacy group that promotes homosexuality in schools. On the tape, Mr. Jennings recollected that he told the student to make sure "to use a condom" when he was with the older man. That he actively encouraged the relationship is reinforced by Mr. Jennings' own description in his 1994 book, "One Teacher in 10." In that account, the teacher boasts how he allayed the student's concerns about the relationship to such a degree that the 15-year-old "left my office with a smile on his face that I would see every time I saw him on the campus for the next two years, until he graduated."
The Fox Nation: "Did 'Safe School Czar' Encourage Statutory Rape?" On September 28, the Fox Nation linked to the Times editorial, with the headline: "Did 'Safe School Czar' Encourage Statutory Rape?"

Times editorial mischaracterized what Jennings said about condom use
Jennings said he "hope[d] you knew to use a condom" -- not "make sure 'to use a condom.' " According to audio of Jennings' comments to GLSEN in 2000, he said his "best friend had just died of AIDS the week before," so he said to the student: "You know, I hope you knew to use a condom." From audio of Jennings' statement on WThrockmorton.com:
JENNINGS: And I said, "Brewster, what are you doing in there asleep?" And he said, "Well, I'm tired." And I said, "Well, we all are tired and we all got to school today." And he said, "Well, I was out late last night." And I said, "What were you doing out late on a school night?" And he said, "Well, I was in Boston." Boston was about 45 minutes from Concord. So I said, "What were you doing in Boston on a school night, Brewster?" He got very quiet, and he finally looked at me and said, "Well, I met somebody in the bus station bathroom and I went home with him." High school sophomore, 15 years old. That was the only way he knew how to meet gay people. I was a closeted gay teacher, 24 years old, didn't know what to say. Knew I should say something quickly, so I finally -- my best friend had just died of AIDS the week before -- I looked at Brewster and said, "You know, I hope you knew to use a condom." He said to me something I will never forget. He said "Why should I, my life isn't worth saving anyway."
FoxNews.com disappears Jennings' concern about AIDS
FoxNews.com article promoting audio truncated Jennings' concern about AIDS. A September 23 FoxNews.com article linking to audio of Jennings' comments on Throckmorton's website purported to quote Jennings as saying: "I said, 'What were you doing in Boston on a school night, Brewster?' He got very quiet, and he finally looked at me and said, 'Well I met someone in the bus station bathroom and I went home with him.' High school sophomore, 15 years old' I looked at Brewster and said, 'You know, I hope you knew to use a condom.' " However, Jennings had prefaced his advice about condom use by saying "my best friend had just died of AIDS the week before." The article gave no indication that it edited Jennings' comments in any way. From the September 23 FoxNews.com article:
But a professor at Grove City College in Pennsylvania, Warren Throckmorton, has produced an audio recording of a speech Jennings gave in 2000 at a GLSEN rally in Iowa, in which Jennings made it clear that he believed the student was sexually active:
"I said, 'What were you doing in Boston on a school night, Brewster?' He got very quiet, and he finally looked at me and said, 'Well I met someone in the bus station bathroom and I went home with him.' High school sophomore, 15 years old' I looked at Brewster and said, 'You know, I hope you knew to use a condom.'" [Audio is available on the professor's Web site.]
Fox has a history of misleadingly cropping quotes
Chris Wallace repeatedly cropped quotes from a VHA document to falsely suggest that the Obama administration is pressuring veterans to end their lives prematurely. In doing so, Wallace accused assistant secretary of Veterans Affairs Tammy Duckworth of lying about the advice given in the document. In fact, contrary to Wallace's false assertions, the document he referred to does not require doctors to direct veterans to what conservatives have labeled the "Death Book for Veterans." [Fox News Sunday, 8/23/2009]
Fox News presents deceptively cropped six-month-old Biden clip as new. Fox News' Martha MacCallum claimed that "after weeks of economic doom and gloom, the Obama administration is now singing a slightly different tune. Take a look at what was said in recent interviews this weekend." Fox News then aired clips of administration officials purportedly giving an optimistic view of the economy, which included video of Vice President Joe Biden stating: "The fundamentals of the economy are strong." However, Biden did not make those remarks during an "interview" that weekend; he made them at a September 2008 campaign event in which he criticized statements by Sen. John McCain. [Live Desk, 3/16/2009]
Fox News on a witch hunt for "czars"
Fox News personalities, led by Glenn Beck, have waged war against what they describe as President Obama's "czars" -- such as former "green jobs czar" Van Jones, Obama science and technology adviser John Holdren, and Cass Sunstein, head of the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs -- by unearthing and criticizing statements the officials had made in the past rather than critiquing their job performance or their credentials for the jobs they hold. Sean Hannity, for example, has declared that "my job starting tomorrow night is to get rid of every other ['czar']."















This kind of misinformation campaign against Kevin Jennings is disgusting. He shares a personal story about the tragedy of a teen-ager feeling worthless, and Faux crops it to trash him.
Faux has a cadre of misinformation czars, declaring a war against compassion.
Of course whenever Fox News puts a question mark at the end of an false statement, they know that they're lying.
What you dislike is Fox News exposing these Czar's, along with ACORN and that illegal aliens can get access to government run health care, and that the President is failing to defend the USA and ignoring the Commander on the ground, and so on and so on.
Keep them blinders on, it obviously makes you look intelligent.
The only thing that one can possibly raise is Jennings failure to report a potential case of statutory rape, and therefore can be said to have 'encouraged' that rape.
Amazing.
Just wondering, though, are you pro-AIDS-killing-homosexuals, like Fox News and the Wash. Times?
It seems Jennings was being compassionate. There's still a difference between condoning behavior and compassion towards the motivation. The twist Fox put on it though seems common among many news avenues. My reaction didn't help much.
I know I'm feeding the troll, but enquiring minds want to know:
What's been "exposed" about the so-called czars and ACORN? Van Jones isn't a communist and ACORN doesn't run sex slave operations.
Where in the proposed bill will it allow illegal aliens access to government administered health care? Hint - it nowhere.
How is the President failing to defend the US? We haven't been attacked in the 9 months since he took office.
How is the President ignoring the commander on the ground? Which ground are you referring to? We're increasing troops in Afghanistan, aren't we?
Fox News isn't exposing anything. It's false outrage. Got any outrage about the hundreds of billions handed over to war profiteers who turn around and run guns, employ underage sex slaves, and get our soldiers killed when they take a shower? You know, real outrage as opposed to fake outrage?
You're just a whiner. Nothing more, nothing less. Obama won. Elections matter.
Mizzou blinders on... simply blind to the truth...What you <blip>like is Fox News, Czar's, ACORN, illegal aliens,and the President and so on and so on.
Blinders on makes you look intelligent.
Compare above to the following headline which would be used it it was actually a fact.
"Safe School Czar Encouraged Statutory Rape."
ANYTIME a headline takes the question form it means the reporter doesn't know or doesn't have an answer. Much of news is not actual news but just a hash of questions, lies, and relevant or irrelevant information.
Pretend for a moment that the student was tired because he had been shooting up heroin the previous night. Keep the entire conversation the same, but change the word condom to "clean needle" and see how that might shed light on the true nature of the issue.
This is about the capabilities of a teacher to recognize and deal with a troubled student. Parents place children in the care of the school and trust that they will be safe. Mr. Jennings, even if nonplussed at first had an obligation to follow up, notify his parents and get the young man the counseling he needed.
If President Obama wants to have a "safe schools czar" there are thousands of terrific and capable teachers from which to choose. Mr. Jennings was a poor choice.
You obviously just want to bash a person you don't know at all, except via right-wing propoganda.
Oy.
Ok, so I read the article twice. maybe I'm just too tired today but there are some questions I still have after reading the article:
1. How did the times know that the man the boy had sex with was "older"? How did the times know his age? In the quote, Jennings doesn't really talk about the age of the guy.
2. If there is evidence that the guy was older, then why didn't Jennings report it?
3. Whether or not Fox cut and pasted the quote, the real question is how old was the other guy and if he was older why didn't Jennings report it?
Thanks for any help to clarify this matter. I don't watch FOX and I don't think anybody should get their news from them. But I don't like the articles on mediamatters since I find they don't really give a full story either. I'm always finding myself doing much more research elsewhere. Thanks again!
The Times didn't know the older man's age, and neither did Jennings. That's essentially the point of this posting. Wash. Times made it into statutory rape because it fits their narrative and sells newspapers, but it was complete speculation on their part. That's the entire point of this posting, that nobody knows if statutory rape even occured, let alone if it was 'encouraged' or even 'ignored'