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The Spokesman-Review Newspaper
Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Tabloid Paid Woman To Entice Frank Gifford Globe Reportedly Gave Woman $75,000 To Lure Man Into Sexual Liaison

Washington Post

It looks like a typical tabloid expose: Intimate photos of former football star Frank Gifford embracing a blonde who is very definitely not Kathie Lee Gifford.

But the Globe did more than just publish the pictures: The supermarket tabloid paid the former flight attendant to entice Gifford into a Manhattan hotel room where a video camera was hidden, say sources familiar with the story. In other words, the Globe helped orchestrate the liaison between Gifford and a woman he had not previously slept with.

Even some veteran tabloid warriors were stunned. “There’s a difference between reporting the news and creating the news,” said Steve Coz, editor of the rival National Enquirer. “It’s one thing to catch a celebrity cheating and another to induce or entrap them.”

Globe Editorial Director Dan Schwartz dismissed such criticism, saying: “The issue is not what we did, the issue is what Frank Gifford did. … If we did something that someone would consider close to entrapment, I’d say so do the police every day in catching criminals. We caught a moral criminal.”

Globe Editor Tony Frost would not confirm what one source described as a minimum $75,000 payment to the woman, Suzen Johnson. But, he said, “it’s reasonable to expect that on stories like this the Globe does pay for accurate information.”

That the apparent triangle involves Kathie Lee Gifford - whom Schwartz called “a symbol of wholesomeness in American marriages” - seemed certain to magnify the tawdry tale. But the Globe’s role is also drawing scrutiny. Bill O’Reilly, the former host of “Inside Edition,” said “the reporting should be centered on how this woman set up this guy.”

After last week’s Globe alleged that Frank Gifford, 66, was romancing Johnson, 46, the Gifford family called the story fabricated garbage. The co-host of “Live With Regis and Kathie Lee” complained about a “cash-for-trash society” and said the Globe might next report that she and Regis Philbin were having an alien baby. That was too much for the Florida-based tabloid.

“Initially we had no intention of using that video,” Frost said. “Our hands were forced … after the Giffords and their lawyer attacked us and ridiculed our initial story and threatened to sue us. In the face of such strenuous denials and attempts to discredit our information, we had to prove we were telling the truth.”

The Giffords have now changed their tune. They said in a statement that “this experience has been as painful for us as it would be for any other couple” and asked “that our privacy be respected at this difficult time.”