So remember that Times column yesterday that basically came out and said CNN populist and honorary Minuteman Lou Dobbs was basically full of misinformation and deliberate inaccuracies? Well, CNN wasn't exactly pleased.

The network issued the following statement:

NYT columnist David Leonhardt today devotes a full column insisting that CNN correct inaccuracies in two of Lou Dobbs’ past reports. However, it appears that it is Mr. Leonhardt who has the responsibility to set the record straight.

Leonhardt veers from the facts when he inaccurately suggests that a 2003 report on Lou Dobbs Tonight which states that “one-third of the people in federal prisons are not United States citizens” is wildly off base. In fact, according to the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the percentage of non citizens in federal prisons was 29 percent at the time of the Dobbs report. Leonhardt claims in his column today that the figure was only 6 percent, which is grossly inaccurate and misleading.

Leonhardt also criticizes Dobbs for not correcting a claim made on his show in 2005 about the number of cases of leprosy in the U.S. In fact, Lou Dobbs took the initiative to set the record straight in a full report on the subject two weeks ago.

Leonhardt further criticizes the use of Dr. Madeline Cosman as a source for the initial leprosy reference, yet he fails to note that Dobbs told him that had he known of her controversial views he would never have quoted her. Leonhardt also omits that his own newspaper was no better informed a year later when they wrote a glowing obituary of Cosman in 2006, calling her a "prominent writer, scholar, and lecturer."

As a network, CNN is determined to set the record straight if there is ever an inaccuracy in our reporting, as we have done in this case. Earnest journalists do err from time to time, and when we do we correct the record. We call upon the New York Times to do the same.

Well, that settles it! Or does it? An additional piece by David Leonhardt, author of the initial Times column, culled the following statistics from the Department of Justice:

¶The share of state prison inmates who are noncitizens is much lower. (This is largely because immigration violations themselves are federal crimes.) In 2000, 4.6 percent of inmates in state prisons were noncitizens. This number remained quite steady over the next five years, right around 4.6 percent.

¶Over all — combining federal and state prisons — 6.4 percent of the nation's prisoners were noncitizens in 2005. This is down from 6.8 percent in 2000.

¶By comparison, 6.9 percent of the total United States population were noncitizens in 2003, according to the Census Bureau.

So who's full of shit here? We'll wait and see if the Times feels the need to offer a correction, but we're not going to hold our breath. They sort of seem to have those "fact" thingies on their side.

Immigrants and Prison [NYT]
Related: This Radar piece on Dobbs, which has the month's best kicker.