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  Texas reporter fired after shocking interview on transvaginal sonograms
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ContributorCraverguy 
Last EditedCraverguy  Mar 23, 2012 11:31am
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CategoryNews
AuthorStephen C. Webster
News DateFriday, March 23, 2012 05:10:00 PM UTC0:0
DescriptionAUSTIN, TEXAS — A well-known journalist was fired this week by a radio station in Houston after he featured excerpts from a shocking interview with a woman who was forced to undergo several medically unnecessary transvaginal sonograms to obtain an abortion, leaving the reporter wondering if he was canned over abortion politics, rather than station policy.

For their part, the management of KROI News 92FM in Houston, owned by media company Radio One, claims reporter Scott Braddock was fired on Tuesday because he appeared on KPFT 90.1FM, a community station run by Pacifica Radio, allegedly in violation of a non-compete agreement.

Braddock, however, told Raw Story on Friday he never signed that agreement, and that management had never taken issue with his other appearances in various related media. “I’m not an attorney, but that sounds like a stretch,” he said.

Braddock, who many activists have called a remarkably fair reporter when it comes to controversial issues like abortion, was filling in last Friday for reporter Geoff Berg, who hosts the “Partisan Gridlock” show on Houston’s KPFT.

Over the course of his hour on the air on the non-commercial station, Braddock played audio of an interview he’d conducted for KROI, featuring the galling account of Carolyn Jones, a Texas woman who was forced to undergo multiple transvaginal sonograms in her pursuit of an abortion. Her story was initially carried by The Texas Observer earlier this month.

And it’s not that Braddock was skewing the issue, either: “I’m a journalist, I cover all sides,” he said. “My thoughts on the sonogram law are simply that it’s something of great interest to Texans, and they want to hear different perspectives. I do my best to make sure people have all the facts and perspectives that they may not have considered.”

Turns out, people on the political left and right in Texas also agree that he should not have been fired.
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