A reporter with the Cody Enterprise Newspaper out of Cody, Wyoming was recently caught using artificial intelligence to create fake quotes within his written publications.
Quotes from Wyomingโs governor and a local prosecutor were the first things that seemed slightly off to Powell Tribune reporter CJ Baker. Then, it was some of the phrases in the stories that struck him as nearly robotic.
The dead giveaway, though, that a reporter from a competing news outlet was using generative artificial intelligence to help write his stories came in a June 26 article about the comedian Larry the Cable Guy being chosen as the grand marshal of a local parade. It concluded with an explanation of the inverted pyramid, the basic approach to writing a breaking news story which, Baker says, โensures that the most critical information is presented first, making it easier for readers to grasp the main points quickly.โ
After doing some digging, Baker, who has been a reporter for more than 15 years, met with Aaron Pelczar, a 40-year-old who was new to journalism and who Baker says admitted that he had used AI in his stories before he resigned from the Enterprise.
The publisher and editor at the Enterprise have since apologized and vowed to take steps to ensure it never happens again. In an editorial published Monday, Enterprise Editor Chris Bacon said he โfailed to catchโ the AI copy and false quotes.
In his Powell Tribune story breaking the news about Pelczarโs use of AI in articles, Baker wrote that he had an uncomfortable but cordial meeting with Pelczar and Bacon. During the meeting, Pelczar said, โObviously Iโve never intentionally tried to misquote anybodyโ and promised to โcorrect them and issue apologies and say they are misstatements,โ Baker wrote, noting that Pelczar insisted his mistakes shouldnโt reflect on his Cody Enterprise editors.