Just read an editorial from Scott Monroe at the Stowe Reporter. He writes on their blog, 49 School Street, that the Cashman coverage is “bankrupt.” He points to an AP story from Friday undercutting some of the assertions the press made about what Cashman said (or didn’t say) to the victim’s family.

Monroe: What’s depressing, at least to me, is that politicians (includingnational talk-show ideologue Bill O’Reilly) were allowed to spin thestory, create myth, and the press let them run with it. “The press,” bythe way, I think can fairly be described as the state’s top dailynewspapers: the Burlington Free Press, and jointly the Times Argus andRutland Herald, via the Vermont Press Bureau.

This controversial topic was allowed to boil down to a “he said/she said” issue…

But this, I think, is the kicker:

Cashman, the Times Argus reports today, is among the top issues nowat the Statehouse. Interesting it’s Cashman, not the state’s criminalsentencing law, that’s in the hot seat.

Incidentally, they don’t have ANY comments on that post. Yet…

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Seven Days’ deputy publisher and co-owner Cathy Resmer is a writer, editor and advocate for local journalism. She works in the paper’s Burlington office and lives vicariously through the reporters while raising money to pay them. Cathy started at...