
Ethan Miller / Staff / Getty Images
In
those few hours before the world would learn about all of the others
that lost their lives in the accident, including Bryant's 13-year-old
daughter Gianna Maria-Onore Bryant, television reporters were sharing unsubstantiated information that they'd picked up from social media. ABC News
correspondent Matt Gutman shared on-air that Bryant died alongside all
four of his daughters, a report that sent shocked the wrold. Of course,
we now know that isn't true, and because of his mistake, Gutman has been
suspended by ABC News."Reporting the facts accurately is the cornerstone of our journalism," an ABC News spokesperson reportedly said in a statement to CNN. "As he acknowledged on Sunday, Matt Gutman's initial reporting was not accurate and failed to meet our editorial standards." On Wednesday (January 29), Gutman issued a public apology. "We are in the business of holding people accountable. And I hold myself accountable for a terrible mistake, which I deeply regret," Gutman said. "I want to personally apologize to the Bryant family for this wrenching loss and any additional anguish my report caused."
The award-winning reporter has been apart of the ABC News family since 2008 and has been responsible for covering some of the nation's most controversial and harrowing incidents. Gutman isn't the only reporter who found themselves disciplined for comments involving Kobe Bryant since the basketball icon's death; The Washington Post reporter Felicia Sonmez was suspended after she tweeted about Kobe Bryant's rape case scandal in the wake of his death.
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