The three disputes below differ in subject but share a structure: a claim made in coverage, an exhibit available on the public record, and a measurable distance between the two. In each case we reproduce the contested language alongside the underlying source, and let the reader weigh the gap.
I. The attributed statement
The first dispute concerns a sentence attributed in coverage to a named party. The sentence as quoted appears in the relevant exhibit, but it is preceded by a clause that materially changes its meaning. The clause was not reproduced.
As reported
"[Named party] wrote: 'I do not see how this is sustainable.'"
In the exhibit
"If we keep going at this pace without bringing in the second team, I do not see how this is sustainable."
The reported sentence accurately reproduces nine words of the source. It omits the seventeen words that precede them — a conditional clause that scopes the entire statement. The two formulations carry different meanings; the omission is not preserved by an ellipsis.
II. The quantitative summary
The second dispute concerns a numeric summary. Coverage describes a tabulation in the exhibits as showing that "more than half" of the items in a category meet a particular condition. The tabulation, reproduced below, shows the figure is 47 percent.1
III. The "independent" source
The third dispute concerns an expert quoted in coverage as an "independent" voice on the matter. Public records indicate that the same expert was retained by one of the parties on a related matter eighteen months earlier; the retention is disclosed in a separate court filing on the public docket.
Each of these three disputes is small. Their force is cumulative: a clause omitted, a figure rounded, a relationship undisclosed.
From the analysis above.
Conclusion
The cases above are not equivalent in severity. The first is a paraphrase that has lost its conditional; the second is a summary that has rounded across a threshold; the third is a descriptor that has skipped a disclosure. Each is small. Each is reachable from the public record. None requires interviewing the subject; all require reading the same documents the coverage itself cited.
Sources
Notes
- "More than half" is a defensible rounding of 50.0 percent or higher. 47 percent is not 50 percent. We note the convention rather than litigate it. ↩︎