Media: The Attack Dog

Posted on December 2008   Page 4 of 5
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Driver’s-license and time-sheet irregularities seemed to become Cole’s specialty. You sometimes wonder how he would do on a larger scale, on the hard-core Philly stuff: pay-to-play, political power struggles. Cole feels he does go after important issues — just not the obvious ones. The scourges nobody sees are everywhere, and you do get the feeling that if Cole didn’t check into them, maybe nobody would. He’s reported on open-air methadone sales in Camden, city health inspections in school cafeterias, and the amount of money fund-raisers actually give to charities. But those stories just “don’t draw the same viewer interest” as catching cheaters ducking a camera, he admits.
 
Sometimes, even in a little case of iffy time sheets, there’s a door behind the door. With Thomas Nace, shortly after Cole’s TV report, Nace was jailed on drug charges unconnected to his work hours. With Latrice Bryant, a subsequent Cole report revealed photos said to be of Goode and Bryant together on a beach in Jamaica in 2005. Zack Stalberg, president of the political watchdog group Committee of Seventy, pressed the city’s board of ethics to consider such boss-employee relationships, and says, “Cole was probably the first TV journalist to show up at a board of ethics meeting.” (Goode wrote the city a personal check for $836.35 to cover Bryant’s missing time.)
 
During confrontations, Cole politely hounds and nags and pecks the hell out of his victims. On-camera, buttoned up in a gray suit to introduce a story, he can come off as prim and prickly, the indignant man perpetually offended by life’s scoundrels. His eyes squint; his head shakes in incredulous disappointment. His voice may modulate widely in pitch as he makes a point, a vocal roller coaster that calls to mind Robin Leach. Dave Davies, a Daily News political reporter and WHYY radio host, remembers a 2006 Cole piece on Democratic ward leader Carlos Matos driving with a suspended license.
 
“For days after that, we were all imitating Jeff Cole, saying, ‘Carlos, what are you doing in that caaarrrr?’” Davies says. “What’s great is that Jeff combines rigorous research with just the right amount of theatrics. He’s got that flair for the dramatic, that exuberant tension in his voice.”
 

OFF-CAMERA, COLE dials it down. His language may still seem fussy at times (he talks about reporting with sleeves “drawn up” instead of rolled up), but the shrill TV character is gone. At home, he watches boxing, baseball. He runs but isn’t obsessive: 5Ks, not marathons. His preferred music playlist is free-form and mellow: “Stan Getz, Coltrane, Miles Davis, Bill Evans.”
 
Cole’s work has brought results, awards — and lawsuits. That’s another consequence when your job is to take an issue a step further than anyone else has. There was his 2002 report involving bones at Merion Memorial Park. A disgruntled former employee told Fox 29 the cemetery was digging up old graves and dumping bones, and it made a saucy story. But the source later admitted he was lying; the cemetery sued in 2003, and Fox “paid a substantial amount to settle the case,” says attorney Gerry Dugan, who represented the plaintiff.


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User Comments:

Jeff Cole - the real trash of philadelphia!
Posted by Anonymous | Nov. 30, 2008 at 4:01 PM
COMMENT:
Cole makes people believe he does what he does to help city tax payers...truth is he does it for money. Anything for a good story! He never mentioned mentioned that Tom Nace the City supervisor was taking that case of beer to reward one of his men for working overtime. And Cole had to be following him...but just left that part out..why? it did not make for a good stoy! Cole neglected the other 25 years of very good employment....he capitalized on a good man's midlife mistake. Cole also did not care that he confronted Nace while his 7 year old daughter was at the window scared and crying! Hopefully Cole is a better husband and father, because he is a cold hearted money hungry piece of trash.
Jeffery Cole
Posted by jamaican | Dec. 1, 2008 at 11:38 AM
COMMENT:
Jeff Cole is one of the best investigative reporters in the country. HE IS NO RACIST. His targets are crooks and people who rip off the taxpayer. Television journalism needs more reporters who will keep public officials honest, not whinners who complain when they get busted.
Jeff Cole - overpaid for his trash!
Posted by Anonymous | Dec. 1, 2008 at 7:40 PM
COMMENT:
Jeff Cole is over paid for the same story over and over. He's been talking about this story since June. Just to think he's paid for destroying people. I would think by now he could find somebody elses family or city worker to talk about. Oh the best is the income that he stated about Thomas Nace. After 27 years that's all he got paid. I don't see where that is hurting taxpayers dollars. Move ON there is PLENTY OF OTHER GOOD NEWS OUT THERE! GO FIND IT!!!!
He has every right to investigate
Posted by Tucker | Mar. 10, 2009 at 2:23 PM
COMMENT:
I don't think you guys get it. When you work for the government, you are expected to work every hour you're paid for. There is a trust in you as a civil servant--you must honor that contract even more than your private sector counterparts do. If Jeff Cole finds out you're skipping even 10 hours of work a week, he has every right to tell the taxpayer what you're doing. Have a sense of duty, or get a different job.
your missing the whole picture
Posted by Anonymous | Sep. 28, 2009 at 2:10 PM
COMMENT:
2 weeks of a man's life does not tell an accurate story of a man's work ethic. This tip was given by someone who was previously fired and wanted revenge. How else would Cole have know exactly what weeks, times, etc.?? What is it too much work for Cole to follow the bigger fish...the real tax payor waste!
 
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