Bloomberg dismisses reporter, disciplines other staffers for premature story on US-Russia prisoner swap
Bloomberg News dismissed a reporter and took disciplinary action against other staffers Monday after the outlet broke a news embargo last week on the release of several American prisoners held by Russia, including Wall Street Journal reporter Evan Gershkovich.
In a memo sent to the outletâs staff on Monday and obtained by CNN, Bloomberg editor-in-chief John Micklethwait wrote that an initial story, published by the outlet at 7:41 a.m. ET Thursday, reporting that Gershkovich had been released as part of a historic U.S.-Russia prisoner exchange was posted âprematurely.â
Bloombergâs reporting âcould have endangered the negotiated swap that set them free,â Micklethwait wrote. âEven if our story mercifully ended up making no difference, it was a clear violation of the editorial standards which have made this newsroom so trusted around the world.â
Bloombergâs Standards editor conducted a âfull investigation,â Micklethwait added, and as a result the outlet was taking âdisciplinary action against a number of those involvedâ and will be reviewing their process to make sure such âfailures like this donât happen again.â
Senior White House reporter Jennifer Jacobs, who was the lead author on the , was dismissed as a result of the investigation, a person familiar with the matter said.
âIn reporting the story about Evanâs release, I worked hand in hand with my editors to adhere to editorial standards and guidelines,â Jacobs said Monday. âAt no time did I do anything that was knowingly inconsistent with the administrationâs embargo or that would put anyone involved at risk.â
A Bloomberg News spokesperson did not comment on Jacobsâ departure or disciplinary actions involving other personnel.
Another Bloomberg staffer, an editor, posted on X on Thursday that it was one of the âgreatest honors of my careerâ to help break the news of Gershkovichâs release. The editor later deleted the post, and the published story was updated to note that the prisoners had not yet been released.
âAn earlier version of this story was corrected to reflect that the Americans have not been released yet,â an editorsâ note added to the story at 8:59 a.m. ET stated.
Micklethwait said he had personally written letters to apologize to each of the prisoners and that he âimmediatelyâ apologized on Thursday to Wall Street Journal editor-in-chief Emma Tucker.
News organizations, including CNN, had agreed to hold on to news of the prisonersâ release so as not to endanger the process. According to a person familiar with The Wall Street Journalâs decision-making, the newspaper did not intend to publish a story on Gershkovichâs release until he was seen walking free during a handover at Turkeyâs Ankara airport. Most news organization did not publish the news until later that morning.
âThis was not about a broken embargo,â a spokesperson for The Wall Street Journal told CNN. âIt was a report that Evan had been freed when in fact he had not yet been. Weâre happy that Bloomberg corrected it.â
Ahead of the prisoner swap, the White House had briefed reporters from multiple news organizations around 8 a.m. ET on the activity, with an embargo time on the news of later that day, according to a person familiar with the matter.
After Bloombergâs story was posted online, the White House called the outlet asking for the story to be removed as Gershkovich and other prisoners had not yet been freed, according to this person. Bloomberg declined to take the story down, which frustrated the White House.
The historic prisoner swap, which also included U.S. Marine veteran Paul Whelan and , was the result of years of complicated behind-the-scenes negotiations involving the U.S., Russia, Belarus and Germany.
A total of eight people, including convicted Russian assassin Vadim Krasikov, were swapped back to Russia in exchange for the release of 16 people who were held in Russian detention, including four Americans.