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'''Christopher Edward "Chris" Hansen''' (born March 26, 1959) is an [[United States|American]] [[television news|television]] [[infotainment]] personality. He is well-known for his work on the ''[[Dateline NBC]]'' [[television]] segment ''[[To Catch a Predator]]''. These investigations revolved around catching potential Internet sex predators using a [[sting operation]].
'''Cocktopher Edward "Cock" Hansen''' (born March 26, 1959) is an [[United States|American]] [[television news|television]] [[infotainment]] personality. He is well-known for his work on the ''[[Dateline NBC]]'' [[television]] segment ''[[To Catch a Predator]]''. These investigations revolved around catching potential Internet sex predators using a [[sting operation]].


==Background==
==Background==

Revision as of 02:12, 12 November 2009

Chris Hansen
Born
Christopher Edward Hansen
Occupation(s)Network television personality and reporter
Years active1981 – present
SpouseMary Joan Hansen

Cocktopher Edward "Cock" Hansen (born March 26, 1959) is an American television infotainment personality. He is well-known for his work on the Dateline NBC television segment To Catch a Predator. These investigations revolved around catching potential Internet sex predators using a sting operation.

Background

Hansen attended Birmingham Brother Rice High School in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan before attending Michigan State University, where he earned a B.A. from MSU's College of Communication Arts and Sciences, Department of Telecommunications, in 1981. Prior to Dateline, Hansen was a news anchor and investigative reporter for several different stations in the Lansing and Detroit, Michigan area. Hansen currently resides in Stamford, Connecticut.

Dateline

Hansen's notable work for Dateline includes coverage of the Columbine massacre, the Oklahoma City terrorist attack, the Unabomber and the TWA Flight 800 disaster; as well as investigative reports on Indian child slave labor and on counterfeit prescription drug sales in China. Hansen was responsible for most of Dateline's coverage of the 9/11 terrorist attacks, as well as stories on terrorist groups and the operations of Al-Qaeda. Hansen exposed how a group linked to Osama Bin Laden had tried to buy missiles and nuclear weapons components, and he also worked on an exclusive report detailing an attempted 1994 terrorist attack in France. Hansen's series of stories on lack of security at airports resulted in the Federal Aviation Administration opening an investigation and ultimately revising their policies.

To Catch a Predator

Hansen's online sexual predator investigations spawned a number of Internet video parodies of To Catch a Predator. Capitalizing on the success of Hansen and his Predator investigations, Dateline NBC created three Tuesday night spin-offs of its original concept, the first two of which featured Hansen as the reporter. The shows reported on by Hansen were called To Catch a Con Man and To Catch an I.D. Thief, and both had title cards similar in design to that which has been used in the most recent Predator investigations and on Hansen's new book. Continuing the momentum that sparked To Catch a Predator, Hansen and Dateline widely promoted the spin-offs as featuring "a different kind of predator".

In March 2007, Hansen's book, To Catch a Predator: Protecting Your Kids from Online Enemies Already in Your Home, was released in the American market. In its first two weeks on the market, Hansen's book was consistently in the top 1000 on Amazon.com's bestsellers list. [citation needed]

Louis Conradt Jr. controversy

Louis William "Bill" Conradt, Jr. was a district attorney in Texas who became inextricably linked to To Catch a Predator after he committed suicide when the Kaufman County SWAT team entered his house, with Dateline cameras recording the action.

Conradt's death prompted criticism of the show, already attacked by some in the legal and journalistic profession for breaking down the walls between the press and the police. A year later, Rolling Stone and Esquire magazines published articles criticizing To Catch a Predator. Hansen was criticized for his predator series; among the accusations he faced was that he colluded with law enforcement authorities to conduct the stings. Hansen denied these accusations, claiming that he and law enforcement agencies conducted "parallel investigations" and that he barely talked to law enforcement during the cases. In the Esquire article, Luke Dittrich accused Hansen of deception.[1]

In September 2007, Esquire interviewed Hansen about the show and, in particular, the case of Conradt. In the interview, Hansen defended To Catch a Predator and its practices, but admitted he never saw the MySpace page that he mentioned in his own blog and on the show to incriminate Conradt.[2]

According to the Esquire interview, Murphy detective Sam Love claims that Hansen asked the Murphy Police Department to obtain a search warrant for Conradt, since Conradt had stopped communicating with the decoy.[2] Hansen denied doing so, and claimed no knowledge of anyone from NBC or Perverted-Justice making such a request. Hansen admitted to several other inconsistencies or gaps in his personal memory. He claimed that NBC cameramen were never on Conradt's property; footage obtained by Esquire showed a cameraman on the property even before Kaufman County, Texas SWAT team members had arrived. Hansen claimed that members from Perverted-Justice were never at the scene. [2] He recanted after the Esquire interviewer described what one of the members looked like.

In June 2008 NBC settled a lawsuit with Patricia Conradt, the sister of Louis Conradt. The amount of the settlement was not disclosed. The Los Angeles Times reported that To Catch a Predator was being dropped from regular production as a result of the controversies surrounding it.[3]

State investigators subsequently found three laptops, a cell phone and several computer disks in Conradt's home, all containing child pornography.[4]

Appearances

Hansen has made appearances on The Today Show, The Daily Show with Jon Stewart, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, Late Night with Conan O'Brien, the introduction of the 58th Primetime Emmy Awards, The Adam Carolla Show, Scarborough Country, Glenn Beck Program, The Oprah Winfrey Show, The Rise Guys Morning Show, The Don and Mike Show, The Opie and Anthony Radio Show and Diggnation.

On January 9, 2007, Hansen appeared on the BET news series American Gangster. The special, which was hosted by actor Ving Rhames, focused on Detroit drug lords, the Chambers Brothers gang. Hansen gave insight into the lives of the brothers based on the reporting he had done on them in the 1980s and 1990s as a reporter for NBC affiliate WDIV (Channel 4). On January 13, 2008 he attended the NBC Golden Globes Winners Special which was poorly attended by the nominees due to the 2007–08 Writers Guild of America strike.[5]

Awards

Hansen has received seven Emmy Awards, four Edward Murrow awards, three Clarion awards, the Overseas Press club award, an IRE, the National Press Club award, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists Award; as well as awards for excellence from the Associated Press and United Press International.

Further reading

References

  1. ^ Luke Dittrich (September 5, 2007), "Tonight on Dateline This Man Will Die", Esquire, retrieved 2008-03-18
  2. ^ a b c Luke Dittrich (August 2, 2007), Interview with Chris Hansen: The Transcript, Esquire, retrieved 2008-03-18
  3. ^ Gold, Matea. NBC resolves lawsuit over "To Catch a Predator" suicide case. Los Angeles Times. June 24, 2008.
  4. ^ KTWX Headlines
  5. ^ Willow, Molly. (January 14, 2008) The Columbus Dispatch Recitation of honorees so lame it hurt, Section: Features - Life & Arts; Page 1D.

External links