Pat Tillman was us, but he was superhero us. He was down-home and
toothy and friendly and well-mannered, that big-jawed California boy we
could so easily adore because he was like us. We rooted for him when he
joined the NFL and put on that big uniform, Arizona Cardinals, No. 40,
and we rooted for him even more when he put on that bigger uniform, U.S.
Army Ranger, and went to that big war, because, he said, he hadn't
"done a damn thing as far as laying myself on the line like
that," and he had "a great deal of respect for those that have
and what the flag stands for."
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Then, on April 22, 2004, three bullets pierced his skull, and he
was dead. And the newspapers gave us good, heroic reasons for his death,
the way we liked it. The Boston Globe, April 24: "[H]is Rangers
patrol was attacked by small arms fire and mortars during a coordinated
ambush." The White House praised Tillman as "an inspiration
both on and off the football field." And in May there was a funeral
with a flag and a speech by a fellow soldier. And so he died for the
right reasons. And we were angry. But we were satisfied.
But we were misled. We found out, months after that dusty April
night, that what killed Pat Tillman in Afghanistan was not enemy fire,
but fratricide, jargon for friendly fire, jargon for his fellow troops.
And that a fellow soldier burned Tillman's body armor, just hours
after he died. And that Tillman had talked about getting in touch with
angry antiwar academic Noam Chomsky just before he left for war. We
learned the story wasn't what we thought it was, and we reported it
vigorously. And the Pentagon said it would keep digging. And we were
angry. But we were calmed, because we were tired. Because it was time to
lay the story to rest. Because we were, now, a little more skeptical,
but we were satisfied.
But some of us weren't.
Like Mike Fish, an investigative reporter for ESPN.com. The story
just didn't sit well with him. Brainstorming with colleagues at the
sports juggernaut in Bristol, Connecticut, in January 2006, he decided
the story couldn't rest until we knew just what happened that
night, until the soldiers of the Black Sheep platoon and the Tillman
family had their chance to speak after two years of being spoken for.
"It was too simple, too easy, too perfect," Fish says
now. "It had to be more complex."
They finally got their chance. Five months, 2,000 documents,
countless interviews, cross-country flights and FOIAs and threats later,
Fish's "An Un-American Tragedy" painted their stories
with vivid anecdotes, document descriptions, interactive maps, timelines
and videos. A 19,000-word, four-part series posted on ESPN.com in July
2006, it's a journalistic goliath, a painstaking multimedia venture
that is not just a bold recollection of the horrors faced by
Tillman's unit and an enlightening look at Tillman himself but also
a glimpse at the misdirection that still plagues the war.
It doesn't answer all the questions, Fish says. But, unlike
most other coverage of the Tillman tragedy, it poses them.
In October, "An Un-American Tragedy" will receive an
award in Arlington, Virginia, from Military Reporters and Editors, the
top prize in the group's annual competition that honors
military-interest journalism. "Tillman's Final Mission,"
the 30-minute ESPN documentary inspired by Fish's work, will take
home the MRE television award. The two are the first MRE awards the
sports network has received, says Michael Knisley, a senior deputy
editor at ESPN.com who edited the story.
"I think this is the most important story ESPN.com has ever
done," says Kevin Ball, the site's copy chief, who also worked
with Fish on the story. "Because it goes beyond sports. And I think
that's the greatest thing about sports--it's not just about
the field, but it's about life."
"It's incredibly thorough," says Ellen Shearer, a
Medill journalism professor who was one of three judges in the
competition.
It is far from the first investigative honor for Fish, who twice
has been nominated for Pulitzers in a 20-plus-year career that has
included stints at the St. Petersburg Times, the Atlanta
Journal-Constitution and Sports Illustrated. Fish's investigative
work has caused the NCAA to bring sanctions against college sports
programs and Georgia to pass the "Equity in Sports Act."
"On everything he does, he's a bulldog," Knisley says.
"He doesn't take no for an answer.... He's the single
most dogged reporter I've ever met."
Doggedness was Fish's key to success on the Tillman story, one
that relied so much on his ability to build close relationships with
sources who were ashamed or distrustful or fearful. Fish recalls talking
to Steve White, a Tillman family friend who, at Tillman's funeral
in 2004, described how Pat charged up a hill and "sacrificed
himself so his brothers could live" in a fight against the Taliban.
He provided the same story when nominating Pat for a Silver Star. Pat
won it.
The story, White revealed to Fish, was false. White, a Navy SEAL
who did not fight with Tillman's platoon, had been misled--and
embarrassed not just in front of the 2,000 people at the funeral but the
entire military community:
"They wanted me to let everyone know he was being awarded the Silver
Star, posthumously, and all that. I wanted to have an idea of what
happened. So they told me their version at the time of what happened,
which is the heroic tale that they initially came out with. I repeated
it back. I summarized it and read it back. I said, 'Does that sound
accurate?' He said, 'Absolutely.' ...
"About [three weeks after the memorial service] is when Kevin
[Tillman, Pat's brother] was at work and found out, hey, this thing was
fratricide. And he called me, devastated--'What is going on?' He had
absolutely no idea that it was fratricide."
"The guy felt he had been totally set up," Fish says.
"He had basically been used by the Army to tell this story that in
many cases was exaggerated or fabricated. He felt he'd betrayed the
family and Pat. He felt horrible."
Fish recalls the difficulty of talking to Bryan O'Neal, the
Ranger who was standing next to Tillman when both were shot. O'Neal
managed to survive. Fish flew from Atlanta to Tacoma, Washington, to
meet him. After four days of Fish's begging over the phone,
O'Neal rescinded his offer. He didn't want to talk.
"He was still in the Army. He had to be careful about what he
said," Fish says. "It seemed like a wasted effort." Years
later, that effort paid off. O'Neal talked. And provided, Fish
says, "one of the most remarkable parts of the story."
From O'Neal: "For a long time, I'd get drunk as often as possible and
try to stay drunk as long as possible. I drank probably every night. I
went through $1,000 worth of alcohol in a little over a month one time.
I used to try to stay perpetually drunk....
"I felt that I was going to die. In fact, I knew it. I was positive
while it was happening. I felt what he did, the actions he took and then
sacrificing himself the way he did, are really the main factors why I
walked off of the area alive."
A bigger challenge was the Tillman family. Pat's brother Kevin
was also a member of the Black Sheep platoon. He was there the night Pat
was killed and, like the rest of his family, unaware of the possibility
of fratricide for five weeks. Kevin hung up on Fish and refused to go on
the record. Mary Tillman, Pat's mother, did go on the record. But
she was equally distrustful:
"Pat may not have been what you call a Christian. He was about the
best person I ever knew. I mean, he was just a good guy. He didn't lie.
He was very honest. He was very generous. He was very humble. I mean, he
had an ego, but it was a healthy ego. It is like, everything those
[people] are, he wasn't."
"It was difficult. I have a great respect and admiration for
the family and everything they've been through, but it was
difficult," Fish says. "'Difficult' sounds
mean-spirited, but they were suspicious of people and media outlets.
They felt people were looking for sound bites, and they didn't want
to be compromised. They didn't want to be Cindy Sheehans."
Despite his efforts, Fish is low-key about his work. When asked
"How does it feel?" he huffs into the phone before answering:
"It's pretty neat, and I'm proud of it, but at the same
token I respect people who do this for a living--who are war
correspondents and who are in Iraq or Afghanistan or the Middle East.
There's a guilt in it. I didn't have to go to war. I was
safe."
The Worldwide Leader's investigative reporting has won other
awards in recent years, and "Tillman's Final Mission" has
already taken an investigative prize from the Deadline Club in New York
City.
[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
Nonetheless, his peers say, Fish's story is a reminder of the
value of investigative sports journalism. As such episodes as the
steroids scandal and the Michael Vick case show, there's far more
to sports journalism than covering the games. "Investigations in
sports aren't easy, and they aren't inexpensive, and there
aren't a lot of newspapers ... that would have the kind of
resources to do it the right way," Knisley says. "But
it's very important."
Says Ball, "I think many of our readers and reporters and
writers have a shorter attention span, and it's tough to stay on a
topic long-term when you're juggling other short-term
projects." But, he adds, providing unique content like the Tillman
package is "what differentiates our site from others."
COPYRIGHT 2007 University of
Maryland Reproduced with permission of the copyright holder. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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NOTE: All illustrations and photos have been removed from this article.