A reporter's life has become a horror story after writing about a horror story. Kurt Eichenwald first published about Justin Berry in 2005, and continued to explore cyberpedophilia with the New York Times in 2006. Eichenwald combined journalism with personal intervention, exposing a criminal world in order to save some boys, which was apparently a tricky balance to achieve. Berry has since transformed his life into some commercial success and is attending college.
But Eichenwald, according to New York Magazine, lost his New York Times gig and suffers badly from physical and mental health problems. He's fighting multiple lawsuits and journalistic critics, while fearing for his career and life from the vengeance of online pedophiles.
Eichenwald has bunkered himself in his Dallas home....
He’s teary, volatile, largely unable to work. He left the Times, then walked away from a large contract at Portfolio. His career is in tatters. For this, he blames a campaign by the convicts he’s exposed, other child molesters he doesn’t even know, random anonymous bloggers, and journalists, specifically the advocacy journalist Debbie Nathan, who has written several long pieces questioning his reporting methods and whom he calls “the high priestess of pedophilia.” He believes they are acting in concert to destroy him, professionally and emotionally.
A Gothic and cyberGothic story follows a cyberGothic story.
(via MetaFilter)
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