Updated April 12
Photographer
Allan Detrich has resigned from the
Toledo Blade as the newspaper continues an investigation into his work.
On Thursday a managing editor at the newspaper said Detrich had submitted other questionable photographs this year, and the paper is preparing a story revaling its findings for its Sunday edition.
"I can confirm that we did find other photos that should not have been submitted and we will try our best to explain that to readers," assistant managing editor for administration
Luann Sharp told
Editor & Publisher magazine.
Last week Detrich admitted manipulating a photograph that ran on the front page of the
Blade, but said he meant to use the doctored photo for personal use and transmitted it to the paper by accident.
In an e-mail Monday, Sharp said Detrich had resigned effective April 7.
"He has not taken any photographs for the newspaper since his fact-finding meeting last Thursday, regarding the A-1 photo published March 31, on the return to baseball for the Bluffton University team," Sharp wrote. "We owe it to our readers to complete a thorough review in order to determine if there have been any other photos that were altered prior to publication in our newspaper. Once we have completed that review, we will let our readers know what we found. We expect to complete our investigation this week."
Reached by phone Monday, Detrich said he was planning to start a new business with two friends. He described the venture as a weather disaster training service, a project not related to photography.
Asked if the
Blade would find other examples of manipulation in his work as part of its investigation, Detrich said, "I don't know what they're going to find. I've put that behind me."
Sharp said the paper has frozen Detrich's images in its archive pending a further review. Additionally, the Associated Press reported last week that it removed access to 50 of Detrich's images that are in the AP photo archive.
Detrich has been writing about his situation on his personal blog,
PictureThis. In a post Thursday, he repeated the explanation he gave in an interview with
PDN, writing that he transmitted the manipulated photo to the newspaper by mistake. He also said he did not alert his editors that the wrong photo had run because he didn't see the newspaper that day.
On his blog, Detrich apologized to the other newspapers that had picked up his photo, including the
Atlanta Journal Constitution and the newspapers in Cincinnati.
Friday, Detrich wrote, "I realize now, that this might be the end to my newspaper career, I am so sorry this incident happened plain and simple."
In Detrich's March 30 photo – which showed the Bluffton University baseball team praying before their first game after five of their teammates were killed in a bus accident – a pair of legs had been cloned out of the image. It attracted attention because photographers at other papers had shot the same scene from a similar angle. The controversy was first reported Thursday by the NPPA's
News Photographer magazine.
Detrich had worked for the
Blade since 1989. He has won numerous awards, including an individual nomination for the Pulitzer Prize in feature photography in 1998.
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July 28, 2006: Charlotte Observer Photographer Fired For Altering Colors
Aug. 7, 2006: Reuters Says Freelancer Manipulated Lebanon Photos
Aug. 21, 2003: NCPPA Strips Photog's POY Awards
May 7, 2003: Brian Walski Discusses His Doctored Photo