The Goldman Case: Views on the CBS Interview

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by Ernest Barteldes
Many of us were surprised last Tuesday when Sean
Goldman's Brazilian family appeared on CBS' early Show
to tell their side of the story. I myself was not aware
of the interview until someone I know wrote a comment
about it on Facebbok, but I quickly logged on to the
network's
http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/06/23/earlyshow/main5105575.shtml to check it out.
Now, I am not going to talk about supporters'
reactions on either side of the debate. My own position
about this case is pretty well known by now I believe
the boy belongs with his biological father. But I will
give my impression of what I saw.
The Brazilian family is well aware that the American
public opinion is largely against them, and it was clear
that they change that by appealing to viewers' emotions.
I noticed that when host Harry Smith mentioned the Hague
International Treaty, all stepfather Joao Paulo Lins e
Silva and grandmother Silvana Bianchi had to say was
that Sean wanted to stay in Brazil with his half-sister
and that he was well adjusted to life there. Those words
were accompanied by current images of the boy
participating in a basketball match and playing with his
half-sister (the network had conducted an interview with
Sean, but it was scrapped for legal reasons).
Now, if they flew for nine hours to get our sympathy,
I must say that they failed miserably. Lins e Silva's
arrogance was palpable when he said that Sean had spent
sixty percent of his life in Brazil and that he felt
loved there you could see that this was an exhausted
lawyer who was doing nothing but buying time in order to
stall an inevitable verdict.
Harry Smith cleverly extracted from Bianchi that her
late daughter acted surreptitiously by announcing her
desire to divorce her first husband from almost ten
thousand miles away. He was also smart when he let
family lawyer Sergio Tostes blab on about what happened
in the Brazilian courts when Bruna Bianchi was alive but
then cutting him off with the letter of the law.
CBS was really aiming for ratings when they aired
this interview. But contrary to what most have said, I
do not think that the interview damaged the the case for
David Goldman in fact, it might have helped him, for
this is a rare opportunity for American viewers to see
what kind of people Goldman has been forced to battle
with: these are individuals who because of their
economic power truly believe they are above the law.