Goodbye Charlotte, Part 3 of 3

Wednesday afternoon, May 12, 1971

The Charlotte News should not have retracted, corrected and apologized for a story I had written about the wrongful arrest of a doctor for a minor boating violation, and I was determined to prove it. 

The retraction said my story had implied that the clerk of court was concealing information and may have left the impression that the clerk of court was responsible for issuance of the warrant.

Neither implication was correct,” the retraction said.

R. Max Blackburn, the clerk of Superior Court, wasn’t talking but I had covered his office for several years and I had friends in the courthouse. I called in every green stamp I owned and, by late that afternoon, I knew what had happened — and I went to see the clerk.

Thursday afternoon, May 13

The headline on my follow-up story, published in The Charlotte News the day after the retraction, said: Superior Court Clerk Takes Responsibility For Doctor Arrest

The first two graphs of a story that explain exactly what had happened.
The first two graphs of a story that explained exactly what had happened.

“Clerk of Superior Court R. Max Blackburn said yesterday that his office is responsible for a clerical error that led to the arrest of a Charlotte doctor.”

The story also said:

“I plan to visit the doctor personally and make my personal apology to him,” Blackburn said.

The Charlotte News did not retract the retraction of my original story, of course, and Editor Perry Morgan, who had ordered the retraction, did not apologize to me.  It wouldn’t have mattered.  I was done with The Charlotte News.

I called The News & Observer that Thursday afternoon and was invited to Raleigh the next day for an interview.

Friday, May 14: I drove to Raleigh, talked with the managing editor, Woodrow Price, and the executive editor, Claude Sitton, and left with a job offer.

Monday, May 17: I resigned from The Charlotte News, ending a relationship dating back more than a decade.

Postscript: Perry Morgan, editor of The Newshad recruited me, mentored me, and promoted me — he liked me. He had no personal or professional reason to retract my story. But he did. And if he hadn’t I would have stayed in Charlotte and missed out on a boatload of blessings. I believe the retraction was God’s doing: If He couldn’t lead me out of Charlotte to a better life  — The N&O had tried twice to recruit me — He would drive me out of Charlotte.

Consider this:

**The state government complex, a target-rich environment for an investigative reporter, was a five-minute walk from my new office.  And, unlike The Charlotte News, if I could find it and prove it, The N&O would publish it.

**The N&O had three times the circulation of The Charlotte News – and paid much better.  To support my family I never had to work a second job again.

**I won a Pulitzer Prize at The N&O.

**The Charlotte News went out of business.

Coming Friday: Run Off The Mountain