“We dispose of history the way we
dispose of everyday household garbage.”
– John MacArthur, publisher of Harper’s
It was more a newspaper of the people.
It was more a working class medium. It did not have the
pretensions of its competitor. It’s reporters were more of
the city. It deserved to continue. It certainly did
not deserve to be scuttled in a
greed-ridden deal.
That, however, is what happened.
We are coming up in June on the 25th
anniversary of the death of the Cleveland Press.
Yet, even eight years before the death
struggle had begun, I wrote in Point of View newsletter,
under the headline “Newhouse Makes Monopoly Move in Cleveland,”
the following...
“Nothing less than the death of the Cleveland Press or its complete subordination to the
Newhouse chain, owners of the Cleveland Plain Dealer,
will be the result of the conspired, forced strike at the PD and
the lockout of Press employees.” The Newhouse family owned
many newspapers under Advance Publications and many magazines,
including the New Yorker, under Conde Nast.
At the time, I was confident that
Scripps-Howard, owner of the Press and the Newhouse family, owner
of the PD, would work out an agreement to publish jointly.
It would have killed competition, journalistically and financially
in Cleveland.
In 1980, Press editor Herb Kamm told
reporters that Scripps-Howard had sought a joint operating deal
but Newhouse rejected the offer. It was too late.
Time, however, would prove a joint operation
unnecessary.
It should have been clear by then that the
Newhouses wanted total control of a shrinking market.
Businessman Joe Cole, once linked to mob
figure Moe Dalitz, was in the wings. Talk was that he could
take over the Press for a mere upfront investment of $1 to $2
million and assume a newspaper with $20 million in debt.
However, payment of the $20 million debt was predicated on
profits, which no one really expected.
Scripps-Howard must have known it would
never collect but it wanted out of Cleveland. The deal with
Cole saved the chain from killing its own child - its one-time
flagship newspaper. The chain also owned Channel 5.
The sordid tale that would unfold would
sicken most. The catalog of shabby acts is long and
disgusting.
The greed and intrigues in the drive for a
monopoly makes for a ghastly story. Now, expansion of all
kinds of new media has diluted that monopoly status of the PD to
some extent. It makes the history of this period no less
troublesome.
Cole didn’t announce the paper’s death.
Indeed, he had run from the Press building the night before as
employees began to learn of the sale of the newspaper. From
TV reports! I wrote at the time...
“Cole ‘sneaked’ down stairs, says an eye
witness. Cole’s bodyguard said, ‘We don’t know anything,’ with
staffers and others pursuing them.” Even at a press conference
the next day, Cole refused to answer questions. However, on the
final day, the Press, started as the Penny Press in 1878, was
“graced” with a portrait photograph of Joe Cole.
Here are some of the disgusting elements of
the dirty deal:
- The PD paid some $25 million to Joe
Cole ostensibly for the Press mailing list, rights to a useless
free mailer and other incidentals, as revealed by Akron Beacon
Journal reporters Peter Phipps, formerly of the Press, and Dan
Cook. The duo’s investigation forced the Justice Dept. to have to
look at the situation. What the PD really bought was a MONOPOLY. In a short time, the Pee Dee’s circulation swelled by 50,000
customers.
- Joe Cole and S. I. Newhouse, Jr.,
head of the family which owned the PD, faced a federal grand jury
into the deal made that killed the Press. However, just as we
wouldn’t expect today’s Justice Dept. to come down on Halliburton,
the Reagan Justice Dept. pulled back from anti-trust criminal
action. It could have sent the two business leaders to jail for
three years with fines up to $100,000 each and $1 million in
corporate fines.
- U. S. Federal Judge Ann Aldrich had
to turn down a lawsuit by Press printers charging anti-trust
violations against Cole & Newhouse. However, her 52-page
ruling added heat on the U. S. Justice Dept... “The
record,” she wrote, “is replete with facts from which a jury could
conclude that the Plain Dealer, Press Publishing and Cole
conspired together in restraint of trade for the purpose and with
the intent of creating a monopoly in the product market of daily
and Sunday newspapers for the greater Cleveland area…”
- Two Justice Department lawyers, hard
on the case of this rotten deal, were stopped, one transferred,
the other essentially dumped for being too aggressive. The reason
for the investigation is suggested in this Justice Dept. memo:
“The unusual circumstances surrounding the closing of the
Cleveland Press (it closed very abruptly and just before the
opening of labor negotiations with the Plain Dealer) and the
rumors regarding the amount ($6 million to $16 million) paid by
the Plain Dealer for the Cleveland Press’s subscription list and
other assets…” It looked like a dirty
deal from the start.
- The head of the Cleveland office of
the Justice Department, John Weedon, wrote: “…. You
are authorized to take no further action into the above matter.”
The prosecution was essentially killed.
- Cole “acquired” the land upon which
the Press stood and placed it in his personal real estate
portfolio. This revealed Cole’s real interest in the newspaper.
(See my previous LakewoodBuzz.com
column on this by
clicking here. Also, for a full
treatment of much in this piece, check a library for Point of
View newsletters, Vol. 16 #9, #10;Vol. 17 #6, #15, #16, #17,
#22; Vol. 18 #5, Vol. 19 #5, #10, #13, #16, #18, #21 and the
Cleveland Magazine, March 1985 issue for an exhaustive piece
on this issue by Peter Phipps.)
- It was revealed in 1985 that reputed
New York Mafia figure Anthony (Fat Tony) Salerno arranged a
front-page retraction from the PD on its 1982 story reporting
startling information that Teamster boss Jackie Presser was an FBI
informant. The Teamsters played a role, many believe, in the
demise of the Press. There was hope that the Teamsters would
strike the PD with the Press continuing to publish alone and thus
gain profitability. The Teamsters didn’t strike, however.
- The interconnections of vile
characters – Teamsters, big and smaller law firms, newspaper
bosses – revealed how distasteful our elite leaders can be as the
Press land continued to give profits to some. Dick Pogue
representing the town’s elite law firm and Mike Climaco
representing the city’s most politically connected law firm, both
enjoyed benefits.
- Jones Day represented Cole and ended
up with a 25% interest in the North Point Building - the
site of the Press. Thereafter Jones Day occupied the building
built upon the Press’ foundation. However, not before a legal
battle
between Jones Day and the Climaco firm, which also claimed a right
to the same tenancy as Jones Day. Climaco represented the
Teamsters nationally; Dick Pogue of Jones Day represented Cole. What a crew of scoundrels.
- This lawsuit had a clear odor of
conflict of interest. It also revealed a circuitous route for the
exchange of swag that hides transactions among these
moneygrubbers. To settle the lawsuit, Cole gave the Climaco firm,
lawyers for Presser and the Teamsters, a 12% interest in
North Point. A short time later, Cole bought back the 12%,
presumably giving Teamsters’ lawyers a neat unearned profit. One
hand washing the other did not relieve the deal of a certain
stink.
- Although the PD gained some 50,000
circulation quickly after the Press went under, the paper decided
it would not hire – as similarly done in other cities in those
circumstances – any Press reporters. Some thought the PD failed to
hire Press people to avoid an anti-trust taint. It must have rued
that decision since it would not hire Peter Phipps who then did
the major investigation of the rotten deal of the Press buyout.
- Joe Cole and his “secretary” picked
up thousands of dollars worth of appliances in exchange for ad
space at a time the Press was in dire need of cash. I wrote
at the time, “You get the picture of greasy hands, quickly
shoveling food into a fat, piggish mouth. Oily dribbling down the
chin.”
With the Press slowly losing economic ground, Cole was giving
advertising in exchange for new TV sets, video movie cassettes and
other appliances for personal use. Indeed, the day the Press
died, according to an appliance dealer, Cole was asking for
$45,000 in appliances. The secretary didn’t have trouble
finding a new job. She went on the Cuyahoga County payroll of
Commissioner Ed Feighan and then his successor Tim Hagan. Hands still washing hands.
I wrote then...
“In a city of incestuous relationships you
really have to wonder how big the bed gets for these people to
share a cozy nest, to say nothing of other monetary enjoyments.”
When there is a carcass to feed on, the
greedy bunch that runs things all want in on the feast. The
following reveals how it sometimes works. Even years later.
In a newsletter piece written in June 1987,
five years after the death of the Press, I started thusly...
“The short, stern man walked up to the
counter and spoke to no one in particular.
“‘Where’s George Forbes’ office?’ he
asked, more like a demand than a question.
“‘Sir, you’ll have to see his secretary,’
said Councilwoman Fannie Lewis respectfully.”
To make a long story shorter, the impatient
man was Joe Cole. It should have been, as I wrote, a happy
day for him. The U. S. Justice Department that very day ruled not
to indict him.
However, Cole had other business at
Cleveland City
Hall. He was concerned about a piece of legislation before
Council that afternoon.
Forbes – chairing the Council Finance
Committee in the next room – was
“punching
holes in legislation that would allow Cole and his partners to
build a 1,000 slot parking facility on city land behind the old
Press building.” It would provide parking for Cole’s new
North Point Building and Jones Day, as it does today.
Forbes was giving Cole and co-developer John
Ferchill a tough time. He had a message delivered to Cole
cooling his heels in the Council offices: Don’t bother me,
I’m busy. Cole unhappily walked out.
Ferchill, attending the hearing, tried to
interject from the audience. Forbes glared and told him
sharply: “If I were you, I’d let my lawyer do the talking.”
Ferchill shut up. Ironically, the lawyer, Lee Kohrman, was a
personal lawyer of Forbes. Indeed, Kohrman’s firm had hired
Forbes’s daughter Helen’s husband, Darrell Fields.
Forbes spent much of the hearing berating
the deal on the parking lot from every direction. He had
something on his mind. It was classic Forbes. The
legislation would give Cole & Ferchill use of the land for 50
years at $120,000 a year.
The real reason for the holdup? Forbes
wanted personally to select the firm to operate Cole’s parking
facility. Exactly what the deal was between Forbes and the
parking operator was unknown, but they were closely allied.
Cole had to accede to Forbes since he controlled the legislation
on the city land.
I wrote in 1987: “It’s the kind of public
behavior that has got to stop in Cleveland but there is little
reason to believe that it will.” It has not stopped,
obviously.
Both Cole and Newhouse got off without any
cost or conviction. However, it was extraordinary that they
had to defend themselves in a courtroom. It was particularly
delicious to find a billionaire like Newhouse on the griddle.
The original letter that documented the
federal investigation said...
“We opened the investigation because of
strong suspicions that this transaction involved a Section 1
conspiracy along these lines: the parties realized an
acquisition of the Press by Newhouse would have violated the
anti-trust laws, and thus they devised a sham transaction under
which (1) Newhouse would buy at extraordinarily inflated amounts
the Press subscription list and the DelCom business (a cheap ad
sheet created by Cole) and (2) there would be a side deal that
operating assets of the newspaper would be disposed of in such a
manner that Newhouse would not thereafter be faced with
competition.”
The latter referred to the sale of all the
Press’ printing equipment that could be used to start another
daily newspaper.
One of the Justice Dept. lawyers charged
that the very people who should have been pursuing it derailed the
investigation.
“… What I do know is that there has been a
course of conduct in this investigation to derail it and impede
it ... consistent with one direction: To minimize evidence to
immunize Cole and (his partners) and to not obtain evidence that
you should be obtaining,” wrote the Justice Department lawyer.
He got sacked.
It was anguishing to follow the case since
the Justice lawyers had to remain silent but reporters following
the case knew that something was amiss. I wrote at the
time...
“Whenever I would meet the two (Justice
Dept. lawyers) in passing they would make a clear effort to
avoid being seen talking. There was clearly fear but there were
hints in their avoidances that they were under great pressure
and that unusual events were taking place in the secrecy of the
grand jury investigation.
“The if-only-I-could tell you facial
expressions and groans foretold of the troubles now being
experienced by Twist (Russell Twist) fired, not for going public
with his whistle-blowing but for pursuing his complaint within
the legal bureaucratic structure,” I wrote in Point of View.
Despite the fact that the fix was in, the
exceedingly secretive S. I. Newhouse, Jr.
had to appear before the grand jury. A
minor victory in my mind. Newhouse, a billionaire times
over, was
on
the stand for three days in all-day sessions.
The grand jury meets secretly but the old
federal courthouse was a rather small place and security was lax.
It was open to the public. I spotted Newhouse’s lawyer,
Richard Urowsky of New York, in a room in the court building.
It also revealed S. I. Newhouse’s appearance.
“The usually dour Urowsky, putting on a
sarcastically confident face, passed
reporters in the hallway, remarking to Newhouse as he came aside
him and obviously for their (reporters) benefit, ‘Lovely day,
isn’t it?’
“But,” as I wrote at the time, “the bravado
doesn’t dispel the fact that Newhouse was a long time before the
jury. And he didn’t look as spry at the end.”
Of course, the PD was not covering its own
story and it avoided the Newhouse’s appearance.
I have to return – reminded by the book
“Newhouse – All the Glitter, Power and Glory of America’s Richest
Media Empire and the Secretive Man Behind It” by Thomas Maier – to
something I wrote shortly after the Press demise.
“The problem of The Plain Dealer’s
inadequacies has become more than a problem of a newspaper.
In the past few weeks particularly, it
has become a problem for the community.
When the Press died in June, it left The Plain Dealer –
fat and arrogant – the only kid on the block in a city with all
the terminal illnesses of a big, old northern American city.”
The community problem of The Plain Dealer,
25 years later remains. Ohio - a
backward state in many respects - needs the prodding
that could come from a more progressive newspaper in this old,
once most progressive city in America. See Lincoln Steffens.
One hopes the PD’s new editor, Susan
Goldberg, takes the time to heed the warning implied in
MacArthur’s quote leading into this column.
She needs to understand the culture of her
newspaper as much as that of her adopted city. I hope she
takes the time.