In Competition for Top Jobs, in the N.F.L. and Beyond, It Pays to be a White Man - The New York Times

In Competition for Top Jobs, in the N.F.L. and Beyond, It Pays to be a White Man - The New York Times

17.46
In Competition for Top Jobs, in the N.F.L. and Beyond, It Pays to be a White Man - The New York Times

The hiring season for head coaches in the N.F.L., the world’s richest sports organization, is nearing its end the way it almost does.

Four N.F.L. teams replaced their head coaches, and only one of the new hires was not white. After reaching a high-water mark of eight minority coaches two years ago, the league has just four now, with the Cleveland Browns still deciding who their next head coach will be.

The dearth of coaches of color stands out in a league in which about three-quarters of the players are black, a figure that has steadily risen during the past several decades. The Giants have been criticized by diversity advocates for choosing Joe Judge, a white man, to be their new head coach even though he has no such experience. He does have recommendations from prominent coaches he had worked for, including Bill Belichick, who has led the New England Patriots to six Super Bowl championships.

Judge “just has a certain presence about him,” Giants co-owner John Mara said, in explaining why Judge stood out.

For many, Mara’s explanation of how the Giants settled on Judge encapsulated the flawed processes and thinking that many of the country’s elite institutions, the N.F.L. included, follow when evaluating candidates for top positions. Yet the N.F.L.’s failures stand out because black athletes dominate team rosters and the league has long struggled with race issues.

Hiring processes often include nods toward inclusion. In the N.F.L.’s case, that is the Rooney Rule, which requires teams to “interview at least one diverse candidate from the Career Development Advisory Panel list or a diverse candidate not currently employed by the club.”

The rule has been around since 2003, yet when it’s time to choose a leader, decision makers, who are largely white, have usually selected someone who looks like them and they are rarely punished for violating the letter or the spirit of the rule. In addition to the paucity of coaches of color, just two teams employ minority general managers, the senior football position in N.F.L. front offices.

The N.F.L. is not alone. According to a report last year from Harvard Law School’s Forum on Corporate Governance, white executives accounted for 80.7 percent of the corporate board seats filled from 2016 to 2018 at Fortune 500 companies. Currently, there are just four black chief executives at Fortune 500 companies.

Richard Lapchick, the director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, which tracks diversity at major sports leagues, said the N.F.L. and corporate America have the same self-inflicted problem — a failure to provide access to the clubby, largely white and male world at the highest echelon of power.

“Corporations are definitely not stocked with women and minorities at its higher ranks,” Lapchick said. “It’s very much a white man’s environment.”

But unlike large corporations, which have the flexibility to create new positions and can define success in a multitude of ways, the N.F.L. has a stark racial contrast between its players and coaches that is hard to hide when millions of fans see the team sidelines every weekend. This has turned into a source of embarrassment for the league.

“When we look at the numbers, they’re not where they should be,” Troy Vincent, the executive vice president of football operations at the N.F.L., said last month. “Who can pound their chest and be proud of what we see?”

Recently, the main avenue to head coaching jobs in the N.F.L. has been experience guiding an offense, a role in which minorities have been underrepresented. Among the 32 teams this season, there were two African-American offensive coordinators and 10 defensive coordinators.

In November, the N.F.L. acknowledged that it must do more to promote diversity when it hired Dasha Smith as its chief people officer, responsible for “talent and diversity strategies” and other initiatives. Smith previously worked at Sony Music, Time Inc. and at an investment firm.

Unlike big corporations like Sony that have boards and shareholders, the N.F.L.’s 32 owners essentially govern themselves. Commissioner Roger Goodell serves at the pleasure of the owners, and he cannot force them to hire coaches of color, nor can he impose quotas. He rarely uses his bully pulpit to pressure the owners about hiring practices or anything else.

Marvin Lewis, who is black and has been without a head coaching job since 2018, acknowledged that owners are essentially unaccountable. “This is somebody’s business, this is somebody’s franchise, and nobody’s going to tell them who to hire,” said Lewis, who guided the Cincinnati Bengals to the playoffs seven times in 16 seasons as head coach.

Richard Sherman, a cornerback for the San Francisco 49ers, said the actions of N.F.L. owners give him little faith that they have any interest in changing their ways. Just two N.F.L. owners are not white.

“Owners still look a certain way, they still come from a very old background,” Sherman said. “They could not care less.”

Race continues to be a fraught issue for the N.F.L. The league was roiled when black players knelt during the playing of the national anthem to shine a light on police brutality. The controversy went into hyper-drive when President Trump urged the owners to fire players who protested. Colin Kaepernick, the former quarterback who popularized kneeling during the anthem, has been out of work since 2017.

This year, each of the five teams with open head coaching slots reportedly spoke with candidates of color. The Carolina Panthers, Giants and Cleveland Browns interviewed Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy. The Dallas Cowboys brought in Lewis. So far, only Ron Rivera, who is Hispanic and was fired last year by the Panthers, has received a job, as head coach in Washington.

Diversity advocates say that the preference for white coaches and general managers is unlikely to change much until more team owners are people of color.

While 28 percent of management jobs at the league headquarters belong to people of color, the representation among the teams’ top front-office executives is 11 percent, according to the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, which compiles an annual report on the hiring of women and minorities in the N.F.L.

“People hire people they’re comfortable with, and the people you feel most comfortable with are people with similar ideas,” said Rod Graves, a former N.F.L. general manager and league executive who now runs the Fritz Pollard Alliance, which promotes diversity in football.

Jerry Jones, the owner of the Cowboys, hired Mike McCarthy, who won a Super Bowl with the Green Bay Packers. Both men are white. While the Cowboys followed the Rooney Rule and interviewed minority candidates, Jones revealed that he’d had his heart set on McCarthy all along.

“I knew Mike McCarthy long before he ever walked through these doors,” Jones said on Wednesday. “So much more went into how and why he’s sitting at this table today.”

The job interview, it seemed, was a mere formality.

As for the Giants, Mara touted the team’s search process, which he said included “the deepest and most talented group of candidates that I’ve seen.” Judge, 38, who until this season had never coached a unit in the N.F.L. other than special teams, prevailed because of his intangibles, Mara said.

Experts say the only way the N.F.L. will change is if the owners take it upon themselves to expand their view of available candidates.

The Rooney Rule could require teams to interview minority candidates not just for head coach and general manager, but for other coaching jobs. The rule could be expanded to front office positions, Graves at the Fritz Pollard Alliance said. The league office took a similar step in 2016 when it mandated that at least one woman be interviewed for any executive openings in the N.F.L. head office.

However, any rule forcing change would require N.F.L. owners to do something they rarely do — strip themselves of the power to do what they want.

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In Competition for Top Jobs, in the N.F.L. and Beyond, It Pays to be a White Man - The New York Times

In Competition for Top Jobs, in the N.F.L. and Beyond, It Pays to be a White Man - The New York Times

17.16
In Competition for Top Jobs, in the N.F.L. and Beyond, It Pays to be a White Man - The New York Times

The hiring season for head coaches in the N.F.L., the world’s richest sports organization, is nearing its end the way it almost does.

Four N.F.L. teams replaced their head coaches, and only one of the new hires was not white. After reaching a high-water mark of eight minority coaches two years ago, the league has just four now, with the Cleveland Browns still deciding who their next head coach will be.

The dearth of coaches of color stands out in a league in which about three-quarters of the players are black, a figure that has steadily risen during the past several decades. The Giants have been criticized by diversity advocates for choosing Joe Judge, a white man, to be their new head coach even though he has no such experience. He does have recommendations from prominent coaches he had worked for, including Bill Belichick, who has led the New England Patriots to six Super Bowl championships.

Judge “just has a certain presence about him,” Giants co-owner John Mara said, in explaining why Judge stood out.

For many, Mara’s explanation of how the Giants settled on Judge encapsulated the flawed processes and thinking that many of the country’s elite institutions, the N.F.L. included, follow when evaluating candidates for top positions. Yet the N.F.L.’s failures stand out because black athletes dominate team rosters and the league has long struggled with race issues.

Hiring processes often include nods toward inclusion. In the N.F.L.’s case, that is the Rooney Rule, which requires teams to “interview at least one diverse candidate from the Career Development Advisory Panel list or a diverse candidate not currently employed by the club.”

The rule has been around since 2003, yet when it’s time to choose a leader, decision makers, who are largely white, have usually selected someone who looks like them and they are rarely punished for violating the letter or the spirit of the rule. In addition to the paucity of coaches of color, just two teams employ minority general managers, the senior football position in N.F.L. front offices.

The N.F.L. is not alone. According to a report last year from Harvard Law School’s Forum on Corporate Governance, white executives accounted for 80.7 percent of the corporate board seats filled from 2016 to 2018 at Fortune 500 companies. Currently, there are just four black chief executives at Fortune 500 companies.

Richard Lapchick, the director of the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, which tracks diversity at major sports leagues, said the N.F.L. and corporate America have the same self-inflicted problem — a failure to provide access to the clubby, largely white and male world at the highest echelon of power.

“Corporations are definitely not stocked with women and minorities at its higher ranks,” Lapchick said. “It’s very much a white man’s environment.”

But unlike large corporations, which have the flexibility to create new positions and can define success in a multitude of ways, the N.F.L. has a stark racial contrast between its players and coaches that is hard to hide when millions of fans see the team sidelines every weekend. This has turned into a source of embarrassment for the league.

“When we look at the numbers, they’re not where they should be,” Troy Vincent, the executive vice president of football operations at the N.F.L., said last month. “Who can pound their chest and be proud of what we see?”

Recently, the main avenue to head coaching jobs in the N.F.L. has been experience guiding an offense, a role in which minorities have been underrepresented. Among the 32 teams this season, there were two African-American offensive coordinators and 10 defensive coordinators.

In November, the N.F.L. acknowledged that it must do more to promote diversity when it hired Dasha Smith as its chief people officer, responsible for “talent and diversity strategies” and other initiatives. Smith previously worked at Sony Music, Time Inc. and at an investment firm.

Unlike big corporations like Sony that have boards and shareholders, the N.F.L.’s 32 owners essentially govern themselves. Commissioner Roger Goodell serves at the pleasure of the owners, and he cannot force them to hire coaches of color, nor can he impose quotas. He rarely uses his bully pulpit to pressure the owners about hiring practices or anything else.

Marvin Lewis, who is black and has been without a head coaching job since 2018, acknowledged that owners are essentially unaccountable. “This is somebody’s business, this is somebody’s franchise, and nobody’s going to tell them who to hire,” said Lewis, who guided the Cincinnati Bengals to the playoffs seven times in 16 seasons as head coach.

Richard Sherman, a cornerback for the San Francisco 49ers, said the actions of N.F.L. owners give him little faith that they have any interest in changing their ways. Just two N.F.L. owners are not white.

“Owners still look a certain way, they still come from a very old background,” Sherman said. “They could not care less.”

Race continues to be a fraught issue for the N.F.L. The league was roiled when black players knelt during the playing of the national anthem to shine a light on police brutality. The controversy went into hyper-drive when President Trump urged the owners to fire players who protested. Colin Kaepernick, the former quarterback who popularized kneeling during the anthem, has been out of work since 2017.

This year, each of the five teams with open head coaching slots reportedly spoke with candidates of color. The Carolina Panthers, Giants and Cleveland Browns interviewed Kansas City Chiefs offensive coordinator Eric Bieniemy. The Dallas Cowboys brought in Lewis. So far, only Ron Rivera, who is Hispanic and was fired last year by the Panthers, has received a job, as head coach in Washington.

Diversity advocates say that the preference for white coaches and general managers is unlikely to change much until more team owners are people of color.

While 28 percent of management jobs at the league headquarters belong to people of color, the representation among the teams’ top front-office executives is 11 percent, according to the Institute for Diversity and Ethics in Sport, which compiles an annual report on the hiring of women and minorities in the N.F.L.

“People hire people they’re comfortable with, and the people you feel most comfortable with are people with similar ideas,” said Rod Graves, a former N.F.L. general manager and league executive who now runs the Fritz Pollard Alliance, which promotes diversity in football.

Jerry Jones, the owner of the Cowboys, hired Mike McCarthy, who won a Super Bowl with the Green Bay Packers. Both men are white. While the Cowboys followed the Rooney Rule and interviewed minority candidates, Jones revealed that he’d had his heart set on McCarthy all along.

“I knew Mike McCarthy long before he ever walked through these doors,” Jones said on Wednesday. “So much more went into how and why he’s sitting at this table today.”

The job interview, it seemed, was a mere formality.

As for the Giants, Mara touted the team’s search process, which he said included “the deepest and most talented group of candidates that I’ve seen.” Judge, 38, who until this season had never coached a unit in the N.F.L. other than special teams, prevailed because of his intangibles, Mara said.

Experts say the only way the N.F.L. will change is if the owners take it upon themselves to expand their view of available candidates.

The Rooney Rule could require teams to interview minority candidates not just for head coach and general manager, but for other coaching jobs. The rule could be expanded to front office positions, Graves at the Fritz Pollard Alliance said. The league office took a similar step in 2016 when it mandated that at least one woman be interviewed for any executive openings in the N.F.L. head office.

However, any rule forcing change would require N.F.L. owners to do something they rarely do — strip themselves of the power to do what they want.

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Deddy Corbuzier Terluka Parah? Polda Metro Jaya Beri Penjelasannya

16.33

Beritaterheboh.com - SELEBRITAS Deddy Corbuzier atau Deodatus Andreas Deddy Cahyadi Sunjoyo dikabarkan terluka parah dengan tubuh dipenuhi sayatan.

Hal itu diperkuat dengan sebuah foto seorang pria plontos berbalut kain putih dengan banyak bercak merah yang beredar di aplikasi pesan instan WhatsApp sejak Rabu (8/1).

Menanggapi foto yang beredar lewat WhatsApp itu, Kepala Bidang Hubungan Masyarakat Kepolisian Daerah Metro Jaya Kombes Yusri Yunus memberikan klarifikasi.

Dia memastikan gambar pria yang terbaring akibat luka fisik itu bukan sosok Deddy Corbuzier.

Menurut Yusri, Deddy tengah memandu sebuah acara secara langsung di stasiun televisi swasta saat foto tersebut ramai diperbincangkan. "Deddy lagi syuting. Barusan ngomong sama dia," ujar Yusri.

Deddy juga langsug memberikan komentar terkait informasi bohong tentang dirinya yang beredar melalui WhatsApp.

Melalui video di Youtube berjudul "SOSOK DIBALIK TOPENG SPIDERMAN PEMBERANTAS SAMPAH | HITAM PUTIH (08/01/20) PART 4", Deddy menjelaskan gambar yang tersebar di WhatsApp bukanlah dirinya.

Pada menit ke-7 lewat 21 detik di video itu, dia menyayangkan hoaks yang beredar.

"Jari itu ngetik cepat banget ya. Untuk gosip saya yang katanya saya lagi di rumah sakit Surabaya, cepat banget hoaksnya. Di Indonesia, ini luar biasa. Apa yang lebih cepat daripada kecepatan cahaya? Orang bodoh nyebarin hoaks." (X-15/mediaindonesia.com)

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Anies Baswedan Heran Banjir Jakarta Paling Heboh di Media Sosial. Begini Curhatnya

15.04

Beritaterheboh.com - Gubernur DKI Jakarta Anies Baswedan menyebut Jakarta menjadi pusat perhatian dan percakapan di media sosial selama banjir di awal Januari. Padahal, menurutnya, banjir yang disebabkan cuaca ekstrem terjadi dari Lebak, Banten sampai Bekasi di Jawa Barat.

"Kenyataannya Indonesia sedang mengalami tantangan cuaca yang luar biasa. Kalau di Jawa bagian barat, (banjir) dari mulai Lebak sampai Bekasi. Sayangnya, tidak semua dapat perhatian dalam percakapan," ujar Anies di Balai Kota DKI Jakarta, Kamis (9/1).

Padahal, Anies menilai dampak banjir di daerah lain justru lebih parah dibandingkanJakarta. Ia mencontohkan tidak ada jembatan dan rumah yang hanyut.

"Di Jakarta ini alhamdulillah, gedung hilang tidak ada, rumah longsor tidak ada, jalan rusak tidak ada, betul ya? Kantor tutup tidak ada, mal tutup tidak ada, Bundaran HI ketutup tidak ada. Itu semua tidak ada, tapi pembicaraannya tinggi. Tapi di tempat yang ada itu semua, malah tidak jadi pembicaraan," jelasnya.

Oleh karena itu, Anies enggan mengomentari percakapan atau pendapat di media sosial. Sebab, DKI bekerja berdasar kenyataan bukan percakapan di medsos.

"Jadi ada percakapan, ada kenyataan. Saya fokus pada kenyataan. Kenyataannya Indonesia sedang mengalami tantangan cuaca yang luar biasa," katanya.

"Pemerintah harus bekerja menggunakan kenyataan, fakta, bukan memfokuskan pada percakapan, karena percakapan bisa naik turun dan bisa positif, negatif. Tapi kami bekerja untuk memastikan pelayanan berjalan baik, warga terlindungi," tambah Anies.(merdeka.com)



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Parto 'Patrio' Ngaku Pernah Buang Anaknya Ketika Masih Bayi, Ini Penyebabnya

14.33

Beritaterheboh.com - Komedian Eddy Soepono atau akrab disapa Parto 'Patrio' mengaku pernah membuang putrinya, Amanda Casa, ketika masih bayi. Hal itu dilakukan untuk keselamatan Amanda.

"Jadi dia (Amanda Casa) pernah saya buang gitu. Iya serius," ujar Parto di Kawasan Tandean, Jakarta Selatan, Jum'at (10/1).

Parto menjelaskan sengaja membuang buah hatinya pada waktu itu karena menurut kalender Jawa, kelahiran dirinya dengan sang anak sama.

"Karena orang Jawa kalau Senin pon itu pengaruh ya. Dia Senin pon, saya juga Senin pon, jadi saya tahu sifatnya dia. Makanya kalau orang Jawa, bapak sama anak tanggalannya sama itu enggak boleh," jelasnya.

"Jahat banget, saya dibuang," timpal Amanda Casa.

Agar putrinya tidak berprasangka buruk mengenai kejadian tersebut, Parto pun menjelaskan maksudnya.

Buang yang dimaksud adalah menitipkan sementara waktu kepada sang mertua, lalu nantinya akan diambil kembali dengan menukarkan uang pecahan seratus ribuan.

"Begitu dari rumah sakit dia dibawa ke mertua saya, terus saya datang dengan istri saya 'bu, anaknya mau saya ambil boleh enggak?', saya kasi duit Rp100 saya bawa pulang," jelasnya.

Parto menceritakan pernah menyarankan sahabatnya agar melakukan cara tersebut saat alami tanggal lahir sama. Tambah Parto, anak sahabatnya yang semula sering sakit, maka kini sehat karena mempraktekan cara tersebut.

"Karena ini kejadian mau percaya mau enggak ya, karena kejadiannya saya cerita ke teman saya, ternyata teman saya juga ngalamin 'gila nih To, saya sama anak gue tanggalannya sama, sampai sekarang anak gue sakit-sakitan mulu," katanya.

"Terus gue bilang, yasudah lu coba lakuin apa yang gue lakukan. Dia lakukan juga, jadi anaknya dititipin ke om-nya, terus dia datang ke rumah om-nya, anaknya diambil dan diganti dengan uang, pulang sehat Alhamdulillah sampai sekarang," tambahnya.[akurat.co]

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Walkot Depok Razia LGBT Gegara Kasus Reynhard, Guntur Romli Beri Sindiran Pedas!

14.03

Beritaterheboh.com - Politisi Partai Solidaritas Indonesia Mohamad Guntur Romli menanggapi kebijakan Wali Kota Depok Muhammad Idris yang perintahkan razia LGBT setelah munculnya kasus Reynhard Sinaga di Manchester, Inggris.

Guntur Romli menilai, jika kasus Reynhard tersebut berada di luar Indonesia dan merupakan kasus personal. Sebab itu, ia mempertanyakan maksud Wali Kota Depok membuat perintah tersebut.

"TKP kasus Reynhard kan di Inggris, kasus personal, kok yang "tantrum" Walikota Depok dan nyasar kemana-mana, ibarat gatal di kepala yang digaruk malah dengkul, tumit, ibu jari kaki," tulis @Gun_Romli di twitter.


Reynhard diputus bersalah dan dihukum seumur hidup. Agar hal serupa tidak terjadi di Kota Depok, Wali Kota Depok Muhammad Idris menginstruksikan Perangkat Daerah di ataranya Satpol PP, Dinas Kepebdudukan dan Catatan Sipil (Disdukcapil), Dinas Sosial dan Dinas Perlidungan Anak, Pemberdayaan Masyarakat dan Keluarga (DPAPMK) untuk ikut aktif dalam mengatasi persoalan kekerasan seksual.

"Untuk Satpol PP Kota Depok saya minta untuk aktif melakukan penindakan dengan razia sejumlah penghuni kos-kosan, kontrakan, apartemen, dan lainnya berkaitan pencegahan dan penyebaran perilaku LGBT," ujar Idris dilansir dari republika.

Dia mengatakan peningkatan upaya pencegahan ini guna memperkuat ketahanan keluarga. Perlindungan terhadap anak khususnya, tentu sangat penting agar masyarakat tidak resah.[akurat.co]


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KPK Disebut Belum Dapat Izin Pengawas Geledah Kantor PDIP, Ustad Tengku Zul Mulai Nyinyir

13.33


Beritaterheboh.com - Wakil Sekretaris Jenderal Majelis Ulama Indonesia (MUI) Pusat, Tengku Zulkarnain merasa kasihan dengan Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi (KPK) yang harus mendapat izin terlebih dahulu dari Dewan Pengawas KPK untuk menggeledah kantor DPP PDIP terkait kasus suap yang menjerat Komisioner Komisi Pemilihan Umum (KPU) Wahyu Setiawan.


"Kasihannya KPK RI. Mau geledah kantor PDIP saja mesti izin Dewan Pengawas, padahal mau mengembangkan kasus OTT," kata Tengku melalui akun Twitter @ustadtengkuzul, Sabtu (11/1/2020).


Tengku mengatakan, sudah dua hari sejak diajukan, izin penggeledahan itu belum juga diterbitkan oleh Dewan Pengawas KPK. Ia khawatir keterlambatan izin tersebut menjadi peluang hilangnya barang bukti yang dibutuhkan KPK.


"Sudah dua hari izin belum keluar juga. Nasib...nasib...Barang Bukti bisa lenyap dong...Sebenarnya kita ini benci korupsi atau pelindung korupsi...? Monggo...," tutur Tengku.


Seperti diketahui, KPK telah menangkap Wahyu Setiawan karena diduga menerima suap dari politikus PDIP Harun Masiku. Wahyu diduga meminta dana operasional kepada Harun untuk ditetapkan sebagai Anggota DPR pengganti antar waktu.


Menurut Wakil Ketua KPK Lili Pintauli, kasus ini bermula setelah PDIP mengajukan nama Harun sebagai pengganti Nazarudin Kiemas yang telah meninggal dunia, di DPR.




Dewas KPK: Izin Geledah dan Sita Kasus Komisioner KPU Terbit Jumat Malam


Dewan Pengawas (Dewas) KPK mengatakan telah mengeluarkan izin penggeledahan dan penyitaan terkait kasus dugaan suap yang menjerat Komisioner KPU Wahyu Setiawan. Surat itu diterbitkan pada Jumat (10/1) malam.


"Untuk diketahui publik, KPK baru mengajukan permintaan izin penggeledahan dan penyitaan kasus OTT komisioner KPU kepada Dewas pada sore jelang malam tanggal 10 Januari 2020. Malam (Jumat, 10 Januari 2020) itu juga Dewas memberi izin geledah dan sita kasus komisioner KPU," kata anggota Dewas KPK Syamsudin Haris kepada detikcom, Sabtu (11/1/2020).

Syamsuddin menyebut KPK baru mengajukan pemintaan izin untuk penggeledahan dan penyitaan pada Jumat sore. Padahal, menurutnya, Dewas KPK sudah menunggu sejak Kamis (9/1).

"Padahal, Dewas sudah menunggu datangnya permintaan izin geledah dan sita itu sejak kamis tanggal 9 Januari 2020. Jumat tanggal 10 Januari hingga siang, permintaan izin belum ada juga," ucapnya.

Ia mengatakan Dewas akan merespons cepat bila KPK mengajukan izin terkait penanganan perkara korupsi. Ia memastikan Dewas tidak akan pernah menghambat pengungkapan kasus korupsi.


"Dewan Pengawas KPK pada prinsipnya tidak akan pernah menghambat pengungkapan kasus korupsi," tutur Syamsuddin Haris.


KPK Luruskan Kabar Soal Gagal Geledah Kantor PDIP

 Wakil Ketua Komisi Pemberantasan Korupsi (KPK) Lili Pintauli Siregar meluruskan kabar yang menyebut tim penyelidik gagal menggeledah kantor DPP PDI Perjuangan lantaran dihalangi petugas keamanan kantor banteng tersebut.

Lili menuturkan sejak awal pihaknya memang tidak berniat menggeledah, tetapi hanya menyegel. Penyegelan dilakukan, kata dia, untuk mengamankan lokasi terlebih dahulu. Terlebih ia menjelaskan terkait pengeledahan musti mendapatkan izin dari dewan pengawas terlebih dahulu.

"Sebetulnya tim penyelidik ini, tim lidik teman-teman tadi itu, hanya ingin mengamankan lokasi jadi model police line, tapi ini KPK line," kata Lili dalam keterangan pers di Kantornya, Jakarta, Kamis (9/1).


Lili menegaskan bahwa tim penyelidik dibekali dengan kelengkapan surat. Mereka, tutur dia, juga telah berkoordinasi dengan petugas keamanan DPP PDIP. Namun, tim penyelidik tidak serta merta diberikan izin lantaran petugas keamanan harus konfirmasi ke atasannya lebih dulu.

"Ketika mau pamit ke atasannya telepon itu enggak terangkat-angkat oleh atasannya, karena lama, mereka [tim penyelidik] mau (menyegel) beberapa objek lagi jadi ditinggalkan," ucapnya.

Lebih lanjut, Lili mengungkapkan saat ini pihaknya sudah berkomunikasi dengan dewan pengawas agar diberikan izin untuk menggeledah beberapa objek yang telah disegel.



"Kalau sprindik sudah terbit dan mungkin besok penyidikan, pasti mereka akan melakukan penggeledahan kan," imbuh Lili.

Diberitakan sebelumnya, Ketua DPP PDI Perjuangan, Djarot Saiful Hidayat menampik kabar yang menyatakan bahwa terdapat oknum yang menghalang-halangi penggeledahan di DPP PDIP. Menurut dia, saat penggeledahan, KPK tidak dapat menunjukkan surat-surat resmi.

"Informasi yang saya terima bahwa yang bersangkutan tidak ada bukti-bukti yang kuat, surat, dan sebagainya," jelas Djarot.


(akurat.co/CNNIndonesia.co)

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