This post was contributed by a community member. The views expressed here are the author's own.

Community Corner

Murder in a Small Town

Wilton's patricide story proves the news media adage — "If It Bleeds, It Leads" — but how many gory details and rumors are too many?

 


Extra! Extra! Read all about it!
 

And I mean ALL about it.

Find out what's happening in Bethelwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

If you wanted to find out all the gory details about last week’s , it was extraordinarily easy to do so. Read how a father, found brutally slain, was lying ‘in a pool of blood.’ Listen to the 911 call to hear the anguish of the wife of the victim—also the mother of the accused. Learn how the victim’s son admitted to police that he , and all the things he was after his arrest.

Inquiring minds want to know!

Find out what's happening in Bethelwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Rumblings started happening almost immediately, as the first ‘breaking news’ alerts began hitting the Web just a short time after the actual murder took place—perhaps only an hour or two after at the most.

It didn’t take long for news of the Ramsey family slaying to spread, as word rippled out through town—emails and Facebook and phone calls started passing the information along the small town network.

“Did you hear? The police called it a ‘suspicious death.’ Up on Signal Hill Road. Do you think it was someone who’s still on the loose?”

I live in Wilton, and admittedly, I wasn’t wearing my just-the-facts-ma’am journalist hat at first, either; instead I was simply a concerned neighbor, leaning more toward the neurotic, horrified type. Our first call was to friends on the same street where the killing happened to make sure they were OK.

Less than 24 hours later, Wilton became ground zero for media madness. A press conference was held for local, regional, state and even New York metropolitan news outlets. Our little, semi-rural village had suddenly become the location for the lead story on the evening news.

The press wanted every detail: What weapon did killer use? Was the victim stabbed after the fatal blow was struck, or before? Was the son mentally ill and psychotic?

Why did the reporters want to know? Because many of you wanted to know. The more gruesome the headline could be meant more newspapers would sell, more clicks would be made on online articles, and more viewers would flock to the “News at 11.” I’m no novice, and I know the phrase “If It Bleeds, It Leads” exists for a reason.

Heck, it got my mom in New Jersey to make an urgent call to me shortly after the 5 pm news aired the story the day after the murder, to make sure I lived on the other side of town from where the crime was committed. I hadn’t even thought to call her to tell her what had happened, but I shouldn’t have been surprised that she would have heard the story. By that point our small town murder had become big town news.

Small town also means rumor, gossip and curiosity. I got cornered wherever I went—”What happened? What’s the true story?”  Chatter was active on Facebook, with people passing along whatever tidbit they’d heard. It was also my job to cover the news in the neighborhood where I live, to report on the .

For me, the lines began to blur. I can’t ever listen to 911 calls from a crime which are released to the media, be it Trayvon Martin’s death or the Ramsey case here in Wilton. As a journalist, I understand their potential news value—they provide clues about the crime that are reportable, and they may indicate other newsworthy things. For example, one Patch reader suggested it was clear from listening to the 911 call that it took too much time for police to arrive on the scene once dispatch received that call. That might be a news story worth looking in to, and if the media don’t listen to the calls, they wouldn’t know.

But as a mother, a sensitive person, and a human being, I just can’t bring myself to eavesdrop on another human being’s raw, private anguish. The empathetic pain is too great, and to me it’s none of my business. Some media go so far as to link to the actual audio from the call; I’m personally glad this news outlet wasn’t one of them.

With stories like this one, journalists place calls to the victim’s family friends, they knock on neighbors doors—and the reception is often much, much less than welcoming. They get screamed at or even spit upon for intruding past the moral barriers of propriety and niceness, in order to try and paint a complete picture of what happened and, perhaps, why.

It seems the public is conflicted too, as some Patch commenters favored the discussion and continued reporting about what happened; some even offered their own theories as to why Ramsey might have killed his father—? Mental illness? Other people felt how tasteless and crass it was to dig into the privacy of the family and the Ramseys should just be left alone with their grief.

It didn’t stop rumors from circulating and getting whispered over luncheon counters and in nail salons. “Was he the stepson?” asked one town resident. “He was definitely into drugs,” said another.

It’s a jumble of needs—the family needs privacy and compassion; the accused needs a fair trial; the public thinks it has a right to know; the journalists wants to get the scoop to feed that hungry public.

But here’s what I think each of us really needs:  to take a good look in the mirror and decide—for you and you alone—exactly whose need is more important.

Do we, as a public, have a right to know what happened when a potential crime happens in our own backyard?

Does the family at the center of the tragedy need to keep private their saddest, most awful truths from being torn open for all to learn?

Do journalists need to fulfill their professional mission and continue to cover the story as the conduit for the public’s right to know?

Does the accused son’s status of innocent until proven guilty need to supersede the media’s right to uncover and publish as much information as possible before any trial?

If you’ve read to the bottom of this story, or even clicked on it in the first place, maybe your greatest need of all is to look at yourself in the mirror and try to figure it all out.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

The views expressed in this post are the author's own. Want to post on Patch?