in April 1999 in December 2014, where she spoke and signed copies of
Stonewalled, a book she authored that year Attkisson began her career in broadcast journalism as a reporter at
WUFT-TV, the
PBS station in
Gainesville, Florida, in 1982. She later worked as an anchor and reporter at
WTVX-TV in
Fort Pierce/
West Palm Beach from 1982 to 1985, at
WBNS-TV, the CBS affiliate in
Columbus, Ohio, from 1985 to 1986, and at
WTVT in
Tampa, from 1986 to 1990. From 1990 to 1993, Attkisson was an anchor for
CNN, and served as a key anchor for CBS covering space exploration in 1993. Attkisson left CNN in 1993, moving to
CBS, where she anchored the television news broadcast
CBS News Up to the Minute until January 1995, then became an investigative correspondent based in Washington, D.C. She served on the
University of Florida's Journalism College Advisory Board (1993–1997) and was its chair in 1996. In 2001, Attkisson received an Investigative
Emmy Award nomination for
Firestone Tire Fiasco from the
National Academy of Television Arts and Sciences. In 2002, she co-authored the college textbook
Writing Right for Broadcast and Internet News. Later that same year she won an Emmy Award for her investigative journalism about the
American Red Cross. Attkisson was part of the CBS News team that received the RTNDA-Edward R. Murrow Awards in 2005 for Overall Excellence. one of a small number of female anchors covering the
2006 midterms. Attkisson was a member of the CBS News team that received RTNDA-Edward R. Murrow Awards in 2008 for Overall Excellence. The day after Attkisson's report on the CBS Evening News, Clinton admitted there was no sniper fire and said she "misspoke". In 2009, Attkisson won an Investigative Emmy Award for Business and Financial Reporting for her exclusive reports on the
Troubled Asset Relief Program (TARP) and the bank bailout. In July 2011, Attkisson was again nominated, for
Follow the Money investigations into Congressional travel to the Copenhagen climate summit, and problems with aid to Haiti earthquake victims. In 2012, Attkisson received an award reporting on
ATF's Fast and Furious gunwalker controversy from
Accuracy in Media, a conservative
news media watchdog group. In June 2012, Attkisson's investigative reporting for the gunwalker story also won the
CBS Evening News the Radio and Television News Directors Association's National Edward R. Murrow Award for Excellence in Video Investigative Reporting. In July 2012, Attkisson's
Gunwalker: Fast and Furious reporting received an
Emmy Award. The following year,
Exposing the Business of Congress, which examined the impact of lobbyists on the United States Congress, was awarded an Emmy for investigative journalism in a newscast, while her work on
Green Energy Going Red and
Libya: Dying for Security led to nominations.
Exposing the Business of Congress was also nominated for a 2013
Gerald Loeb Award in the broadcast category. On March 10, 2014, Attkisson resigned from CBS News in what she stated was an "amicable" parting.
Politico reported that according to sources within CBS there had been tensions leading to "months of hard-fought negotiations" – that Attkisson had been frustrated over what she perceived to be the network's liberal bias and lack of dedication to investigative reporting, as well as issues she had with the network's corporate partners, while some colleagues within the network saw her reporting as agenda-driven and doubted her impartiality. He quoted Sonya McNair, a spokesman for CBS News, who had told him the operation "maintains the highest journalistic standards in what it chooses to put on the air. Those standards are applied without fear or favor." Her second book,
The Smear: How Shady Political Operatives and Fake News Control What You See, What You Think, and How You Vote, was published by
HarperCollins in summer 2017. It also became a
New York Times best seller. In 2017, Attkisson created a media bias chart that was reused by right-wing blog
PJ Media and characterized as "a bastardization" of that produced by
Ad Fontes Media. According to
PolitiFact, this chart "labels anything not overtly conservative as 'left'". The news outlets with a purported left bias include the
Associated Press,
Reuters, the American television networks
ABC,
NBC/
CNBC, and
CBS,
The New York Times,
The Washington Post,
CNN,
NPR,
Politico, and
USA Today.
BuzzFeed News reported in August 2018 that Attkisson indicated on her website that she compiled the "subjective" chart "from various sources and your feedback". She linked "various sources" to a study from the
Pew Research Center, a Washington think tank that
BuzzFeed said "measures audience bias, not the alleged bias of an outlet and a college library's website that cites another college library's project describing media outlets." Attkisson's chart includes such websites as
InfoWars (to which Attkisson is reported to link from her own site).
Anti-vaccine reporting By 2014,
Seth Mnookin, Professor of
Science Writing at the
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, described Attkisson as "one of the least responsible mainstream journalists covering vaccines and autism. Again and again, she's parroted anti-vaccine rhetoric long past the point that it's been decisively disproved." According to
Snopes, in a January 2019 episode of her television show
Full Measure, Attkisson mischaracterized the significance of statements made in 2007 by a medical expert, Andrew Zimmerman, regarding a hypothetical relationship between vaccines and autism. Snopes said that Attkisson falsely claimed that the
Omnibus Autism Proceeding (OAP), which refuted claims of a causal link between vaccines and autism, was based primarily on Zimmerman's testimony, and that Zimmerman's nuanced views on the subject were kept hidden from the public by the federal government until 2018. On the program, anti-vaccination activist
Robert F. Kennedy Jr., called this "one of the most consequential frauds, arguably in human history." ==Legal suits==