Anonymous wrote:Can your husband share anything here? Maybe we have a journo who is willing to pick up the story from little snippets you provide here.
Also I'm curious.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe start with the FOIA requests and see what a few journalists think about the information?
What matters is doing your due diligence, not the end goal. If a whistle-blower informs some expert members of the public (a few journalists), and it doesn't lead to what you think should happen... then instead of thinking that the entire affair has been covered up, maybe it just means that the issues, real though they are, are not as important as you think.
But at least the whistleblower will have done his duty.
Please don't confuse releasing information and your desired outcome, which is getting Hogan out of the Senate race.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't have any real standing to do this. If your HUSBAND wants to be a source and has the goods/evidence to back up his claim, he should find either an investigative reporter or editor at the Baltimore Sun or another MD newspaper (or maybe the Washington Post) and reach out. But this isn't something for you to do. You don't have first-hand knowledge of anything and aren't a credible source.
-- former journalist.
Yes, obviously he would be the one providing the information. It has no impact on his career so he is not opposed, his former supervisor just convinced him that there are “powerful people” who would successfully cover the whole thing up.
i mean, you can't control for that.
also a former journalist and pp's advice is correct - he could also tweet out a thread and tag a bunch of publications if he wants to own the story and is fairly internet literate and a decent writer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You don't have any real standing to do this. If your HUSBAND wants to be a source and has the goods/evidence to back up his claim, he should find either an investigative reporter or editor at the Baltimore Sun or another MD newspaper (or maybe the Washington Post) and reach out. But this isn't something for you to do. You don't have first-hand knowledge of anything and aren't a credible source.
-- former journalist.
Yes, obviously he would be the one providing the information. It has no impact on his career so he is not opposed, his former supervisor just convinced him that there are “powerful people” who would successfully cover the whole thing up.
Anonymous wrote:You don't have any real standing to do this. If your HUSBAND wants to be a source and has the goods/evidence to back up his claim, he should find either an investigative reporter or editor at the Baltimore Sun or another MD newspaper (or maybe the Washington Post) and reach out. But this isn't something for you to do. You don't have first-hand knowledge of anything and aren't a credible source.
-- former journalist.
Anonymous wrote:Call the news stations??
Anonymous wrote:You don't have any real standing to do this. If your HUSBAND wants to be a source and has the goods/evidence to back up his claim, he should find either an investigative reporter or editor at the Baltimore Sun or another MD newspaper (or maybe the Washington Post) and reach out. But this isn't something for you to do. You don't have first-hand knowledge of anything and aren't a credible source.
-- former journalist.
Anonymous wrote:This is a bit late in the game. Hogan's been out for a while and so have his appointees.