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-Lurid Crime Tales-
CBS News having trouble understanding that one of their own is a scumbag
2009-10-08
Inside CBS News, Robert Joel Halderman was a widely liked and well-regarded producer, known for chasing action and taking chances.

But none of his previous experiences covering wars, school killings and the mob gave any hint that Mr. Halderman might himself become the central figure in a crime story that seemed like fodder for his current CBS program, "48 Hours Mystery."

In interviews, friends and colleagues of Mr. Halderman said they were stunned last week by the news of his arrest in front of CBS News headquarters on charges of trying to blackmail David Letterman for $2 million. The case compelled Mr. Letterman to admit on his television show, "Late Show With David Letterman," that he had had sex with female staff members.
Hey, that's OK, it's not sexual harassment or anything!
It's sexual harassment only when it's a Republican doing it ...
"I said to my mother that this was like her waking up to find out I'd been arrested for this," said Marcy McGinnis, Mr. Halderman's boss for many years in the 1990s as the London bureau chief for CBS.

Stephanie Birkitt, a longtime Letterman staff member, also lived for a time with Mr. Halderman. Ms. Birkitt is on a paid leave of absence, according to a spokesman for Mr. Letterman's production company, Worldwide Pants. Mr. Halderman has been suspended with pay by CBS pending legal developments.

CBS colleagues described Mr. Halderman, known as Joe, as a big personality with a penchant for running to the hottest news spots -- the Falkland Islands, Bosnia and Somalia.

"Joe went to every nasty place there was," Ms. McGinnis said. She recalled him saying after hearing the news of the killing of 16 children at a school in Scotland in 1996: "Just let me grab a bag and I'm there."
Ghoul.
In another sign of how much support Mr. Halderman still commands inside CBS, two of his current co-workers, Andy Soto and Marc Goldbaum, posted the bond for Mr. Halderman's bail. Neither man would comment Wednesday, but Mr. Halderman's lawyer, Gerald L. Shargel, confirmed that the men had posted the bond.
Supporting a scumbag, nice.
Mr. Shargel continued to argue on Wednesday that Mr. Letterman's behavior and credibility would be relevant issues in the case, repeating, as he has in several media outlets, that Mr. Letterman sexually harassed his staff members. He said that it was valid for him to make what he called "this media blitz" of comments about Mr. Letterman.

"I'm looking to level the playing field," Mr. Shargel said. He said that the Manhattan district attorney, Robert M. Morgenthau, "seemed to embrace Letterman's story" in a news conference last week and made it appear that "this was an open and shut case" against his client. And he said that Mr. Letterman had a national television show on which to make his points.

"All I'm saying is, there is more to the story," Mr. Shargel said. A spokeswoman said the district attorney's office would not comment on the remarks.

Asked about the accusation that he seemed to be trying to muddy Mr. Letterman's reputation, Mr. Shargel said: "This is not a parlor game. My client is facing 15 years in jail. If Letterman gets muddied up, so be it."
Red on red.
One former CBS colleague said that the case was not surprising in that it involved money and sex. "He lived on the edge," said the colleague, who asked not to be identified because of the limit CBS has imposed on comments about the case. "He had a bit of a checkered love life."

Some other colleagues said that Mr. Halderman was known to be very confident around women, though Ms. McGinnis, who called him "a flirty guy," said she had never witnessed anything inappropriate. "I was his boss, of course, but he never put the moves on me."

Tom Fenton, a former CBS News correspondent who traveled overseas extensively with Mr. Halderman as his producer, said he was "absolutely dumbfounded" by the accusations.

"It's like he was struck by lightning," said Mr. Fenton.
Posted by:gromky

#8  Is this a popcorn moment?
Posted by: gorb   2009-10-08 17:10  

#7  "I was his boss, of course, but he never put the moves on me."

So he's not completely stupid?
Posted by: Barbara Skolaut   2009-10-08 15:01  

#6  I think the unnamed women involved also score high on the scummy meter. Or the slutty meter, actually.

I mean, it shouldn't have been difficult to say "No!" to an ugly old geezer like Letterman.
Posted by: Scooter McGruder   2009-10-08 13:57  

#5  Their basic problem is that they can't tag any of them with the dreaded '-R' designation. Their logic rationale mechanisms locks into an infinite loop.
Posted by: Procopius2k   2009-10-08 12:41  

#4  You mean all three of them - Geraldo included.
Posted by: CrazyFool   2009-10-08 10:27  

#3  Geraldo implied Letterman shagged Halderman's girl--sex, lies, and videotapes--and it was jealousy that prompted the blackmail. They both are scumbags.
Posted by: Lumpy Elmoluck5091   2009-10-08 10:26  

#2  I'd like to be a HR person at CBS. What a cushy job! You don't have to worry about ethics or sexual harrassment training
Posted by: Frank G   2009-10-08 09:32  

#1  Judging from the headline I thought this was about Letterman.
Posted by: BrerRabbit   2009-10-08 08:55  

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