NBC suspends Brian Williams for 6 months following controversy

Brian Williams, anchor and managing editor of "NBC Nightly News," speaks at the 2010 Women's Conference in Long Beach, Calif. NBC says it is suspending Brian Williams for six months without pay for misleading the public about his experiences covering the Iraq War. NBC chief executive Steve Burke said Tuesday that Williams' actions were inexcusable and jeopardized the trust he has built up with viewers.  Associated Press
Brian Williams, anchor and managing editor of “NBC Nightly News,” speaks at the 2010 Women’s Conference in Long Beach, Calif. NBC says it is suspending Brian Williams for six months without pay for misleading the public about his experiences covering the Iraq War. NBC chief executive Steve Burke said Tuesday that Williams’ actions were inexcusable and jeopardized the trust he has built up with viewers.
Associated Press

By Stephen Battaglio
Los Angeles Times

NEW YORK – An exaggerated tale of combat in which no one was injured has proved injurious to the career of Brian Williams, who was suspended for six months without pay from his post at the top-rated “NBC Nightly News.”

The swift punishment for Williams comes days after the news anchor announced he was taking a brief break from the anchor chair as a public relations crisis for the network continued to escalate.

“We have decided today to suspend Brian Williams as managing editor and anchor of ‘NBC Nightly News’ for six months,” NBC News President Deborah Turness said in a statement Tuesday evening. “The suspension will be without pay and is effective immediately. We let Brian know of our decision earlier today. Lester Holt will continue to substitute anchor the ‘NBC Nightly News.’ “

In recent years, Williams has said that during the Iraq war he was in a Chinook helicopter that was forced down by grenade and small-arms fire, even though his original 2003 reporting said it was another helicopter in the formation that was hit.

But military newspaper Stars and Stripes reported that a number of crew members in the 159th Aviation Regiment who were on the mission disputed Williams’ account.

Williams apologized during his “NBC Nightly News” broadcast last week, but it was widely perceived as insufficient by a chorus of media critics and war veterans.

For a major network anchor to be suspended in disgrace is largely unprecedented. The closest analogy would date from 2004, when CBS newsman Dan Rather was sharply criticized for a report about the Vietnam War record of then-President George W. Bush.

On “60 Minutes Wednesday,” Rather offered documents critical of Bush’s military service, but critics questioned the veracity of those files. A later inquiry commissioned by the network faulted the report for failing to authenticate the documents. Rather’s relations with his bosses grew frayed and he resigned the following year.

Williams’ suspension from the anchor chair marks a surprising and sudden turn of what had been a sterling broadcast journalism career.

”As a tiny child, it was the only job I could imagine doing,” he told TV Guide in 2004.

Williams attended but never graduated from George Washington University. After working as an intern in the Jimmy Carter White House, he started working as a reporter and newscaster in local stations in Pittsburgh; Philadelphia; Washington, D.C.; and eventually New York, where he was anchor at the CBS-owned and operated WCBS.

Williams was poached by NBC News in 1993 and groomed to be Tom Brokaw’s successor on the “NBC Nightly News.”

He worked as a live news anchor when MSNBC was a pure cable news channel.