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NBC resolves lawsuit over 'To Catch a Predator' suicide

by droolingidiot@[EMAIL PROTECTED] (Drooling Idiot) Jun 25, 2008 at 02:19 PM

NBC resolves lawsuit over 'To Catch a Predator' suicide

http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/showtracker/2008/06/nbc-resolves-la.html

03:35 PM PT, Jun 24 2008

NEW YORK — NBC Universal has “amicably resolved” a $105-million lawsuit
filed by a woman whose brother committed suicide during a taping of its
controversial “Dateline NBC” series “To Catch a Predator,” both parties
said today.

Bruce Baron, an attorney for Patricia Conradt, told The Times in an
interview today that “the matter has been amicably resolved to the
satisfaction of both parties.”

Conradt’s brother, Louis William Conradt Jr., a 56-year-old assistant
county prosecutor in a Dallas suburb, shot himself in November 2006 when
officers showed up at his house as part of a pedophilia sting arranged by
“Dateline.”

Patricia Conradt sued NBC last July, claiming that the network interfered
with police duties and then failed to protect her brother's safety.

When asked today about the status of the suit, NBC News spokeswoman Jenny
Tartikoff echoed Baron, saying “the matter has been amicably resolved.”

Both sides declined to comment on when they came to agreement or the terms
of the resolution. A sealed do***ent regarding the suit was filed with the
court June 3, but the case remains open, according a spokesman for the New
York Southern District Court.

The resolution of the lawsuit caps a controversial chapter for “Dateline,”
which drew both ratings bonanzas and sharp critiques for its “To Catch a
Predator” investigations. In the segments, which NBC began airing in 2004,
the newsmagazine worked with an Internet watchdog group called Perverted
Justice to contact men online who were seeking to meet underage children
for ***, then lure them to a house, where they were confronted on camera.
Police waiting outside then arrested the men.

Media ethicists objected to the deception used in the investigation, as
well as NBC’s close relation****p with law enforcement agencies in the
jurisdictions where it set up stings.

NBC News executives staunchly defended the “Predator” investigations but
eventually concluded the series had become too highly charged to continue.
“Dateline” quietly aired its 12th and final installment of “Predator” in
late December.

Tartikoff said that “Dateline” is currently focused on investigative
stories about national security and the economy, adding that if the
newsmagazine pursues further “Predator” segments, “we want to make sure we
are complementing past investigations, not just repeating them.”

Louis Conradt was one of two dozen men in the Dallas-Fort Worth area
snared
by the ninth “Predator” sting in the fall of 2006. He allegedly engaged in
a ***ually explicit online chat with a Perverted Justice member posing as
a
13-year-old boy, and then an actor invited Conradt to meet him at a decoy
house NBC set up in Murphy, Texas.

But Conradt did not show up at a camera-rigged house, where “Dateline”
correspondent Chris Hansen and local police were waiting, outfitted with
cameras provided by NBC, Hansen later told Dallas-Fort Worth television
station WFAA-TV, which did its own investigation into the incident.

The next day, a "Dateline" crew and a team of officers went to find Conrad
at his home in a nearby town. "Dateline" cameras taped the scene as a
police tactical team forced its way into Conradt’s house. As the officers
entered, Conradt shot himself with a small-caliber semi-automatic handgun.
He died later at a nearby hospital.

“The incident was featured in a “To Catch a Predator” segment that aired
on
“Dateline” in February 2007.

In her lawsuit, Patricia Conradt accused NBC of being “concerned more with
its own profits than with pedophilia.”

She claimed a police officer at the scene of the shooting told a
“Dateline”
producer: “That’ll make good TV.”

The network said her suit was without merit.

But in February, U.S. District Judge Denny Chin ruled that the case could
go forward on claims of intentional infliction of emotional distress and
violation of civil rights.

Chin dismissed some causes of action but said in his ruling that the
network “placed itself squarely in the middle of a police operation,
pu****ng the police to engage in tactics that were unnecessary and unwise,
solely to generate more dramatic footage for a television show.”

“A reasonable jury could find that by doing so, NBC created a substantial
risk of suicide or other harm, and that it engaged in conduct so
outrageous
and extreme that no civilized society should tolerate it,” Chin wrote.

At the time, NBC said it planned to fight the claim, saying it had “acted
responsibly and lawfully.”

“Dateline’s” Murphy *** sting failed to net any convictions. The Collin
County district attorney’s office declined to pursue more than 20 cases
related to the “Predator” operation, citing problems with the evidence
gathered.
 



 1 Posts in Topic:
NBC resolves lawsuit over 'To Catch a Predator' suicide
droolingidiot@[EMAIL PROT  2008-06-25 14:19:54 

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