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15 weeks 13 hours 28 min ago
Reporter apologizes for publishing Spygate rumor

BOSTON (AP) - The Boston Herald sports writer who reported the
New England Patriots taped a pre-Super Bowl walkthrough by the St.
Louis Rams in 2002 said he will regret the erroneous story for the
rest of his life.

"First and foremost, this is about a writer breaking one of the
cardinal rules of journalism. I failed to keep challenging what I
had been told," wrote John Tomase in Friday's editions of the
newspaper.

Tomase explained what led up to the publication of the Feb. 2
story, which appeared one day before the Patriots' 17-14 Super Bowl
loss to the New York Giants. The Herald on Wednesday apologized for
the story, after former Patriots video assistant Matt Walsh told
NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell that he did not tape the walkthrough
and did not know of anyone who had.

Tomase wrote that he first heard rumors that the walkthrough had
been taped during the 2006 season. Those rumors strengthened after
the Patriots were caught illegally taping signals by New York Jets'
coaches during the opening game of the 2007 season. Goodell fined
coach Bill Belichick $500,000 and the team $250,000 for that
incident, and stripped New England of a first-round draft choice.

"I had repeatedly heard that this walkthrough had been taped,
and from people I trusted. Eventually I accepted it as fact and
stopped questioning the assertion," Tomase said.

After

verifying that a member of the team's video staff had been
setting up a camera at the walkthrough, Tomase said he then made a
"devastating leap of logic," by assuming the camera was rolling.

Tomase said none of his sources told him they had seen a tape.

"I should not have written the story without seeing the tape or
getting multiple, firsthand confirmations from members of the
organization," he wrote.

He also conceded that he should have given the Patriots more
time to investigate and respond. The team adamantly denied the
story.

Tomase explained that while he had several sources of
information, the Feb. 2 story included only one unnamed source,
because he relied on that source more than the others. He said
despite a "clamoring" to reveal the sources, he would not do so
because he had promised anonymity and breaking that promise would
hurt his ability to pursue stories in the future.

Tomase said he planned to continue covering the Patriots and
will work to regain the trust of both the organization and his
readers.

"I take immense pride in what I do and the paper I work for. I
truly believe it's a privilege to serve as a link between the fans
and their team."

(Copyright 2008 by The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

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