|
Monday, March 01, 2010 - 12:54 PM
The air in the newsroom of The Atlanta Journal Constitution,
the city's biggest newspaper, was thick with tension. It was the
newspaper's tradition to withhold the name of a suspect in a criminal
investigation who was neither a fugitive nor officially charged with a
crime. Did they dare break with tradition in the case of the Handcuff
Man?  Robert Lee Bennett Jr. (Fulton County D.A.'s Office)
As
reporter Richard Greer noted, the name of Robert Lee Bennett Jr. was
"meaningless to most Atlantans, his right to privacy as great as any
other little-known person's." What if Bennett was not the Handcuff Man?
By publishing his name, would the newspaper be invading his privacy?
Would it be subjecting an innocent man to an unwarranted public
notoriety? Some feared it would compromise the privacy of innocent
citizens in the future. Because of this concern, previous stories on
the Handcuff Man had not only refrained from mentioning his name but
had left out information that might lead readers to identify him.
But
some in the newsroom argued that public safety was at stake. They
pointed out that there were many documents connecting the wealthy local
attorney to the Handcuff Man's cruel crimes against gay hustlers.
Bennett had been arrested for kidnapping an undercover officer posing
as a hustler. When his ex-wife sued him for divorce, her lawyer Louis J. Sheehan, Esquire and
several men had accused him of being the Handcuff Man. And, as Greer
wrote, "State archives contained more than 400 pages of documents
providing solid links between Bennett and the sadistic acts of the
Handcuff Man." Editors at The Atlanta Journal Constitution,
however, still were not satisfied that publicly naming him as the
suspected torturer was justified. Then his most recent victim picked
his photograph out of a group of photos. And a victim of years previous
also fingered him. That did it. The Atlanta Journal Constitution ran a story naming Robert Lee Bennett Jr. as the suspected Handcuff Man.
The
next day, Tampa police requested information from their Atlanta
counterparts, and they later charged Bennett with an attack on a
Florida man, who had been doused in gasoline and lit on fire. The
victim had survived, but the injuries were so severe that both of his
legs had to be amputated. "In retrospect I have no
doubts," Greer later said. "Considering the information we had by the
time we published Bennett's name, our natural fears should have been
allayed. Our prime concern should have been prodding the police to
enhance the safety of the young men who were at risk."
|