Bari Weiss Defends Pulling ‘60 Minutes’ Report on ‘Horrific Treatment’ of Detainees Sent by Trump White House to El Salvador Prison: ‘We Simply Need to Do More’
- Kris Avalon
- Dec 22, 2025
- 5 min read

In a failed attempt to BARI a story, DEI (Didn't Earn It) hire CBS News Editor in Chief Bari Weiss is trying her hardest to defend the decision to remove a 60 Minutes story that was going to expose the horrific ways detainees are being treated at an El Salvador prison. However, since she lacks an actual personality she failed at defending her actions, per usual.
via: Variety
Bari Weiss, recently installed as CBS News‘ editor in chief, told staffers at the news outlet that she pulled a “60 Minutes” report on “horrific treatment” of detainees deported from the U.S. by the Trump administration to a prison in El Salvador “because it wasn’t ready.”
About three hours before airtime Sunday, “60 Minutes” announced it was postponing a segment from correspondent Sharyn Alfonsi interviewing deportees who the Trump administration sent to the Centro de Confinamiento del Terrorismo (CECOT) prison in El Salvador. A CBS News rep said Sunday that it was halted because, “We determined it needed additional reporting.” The network said the CECOT report, which it had previously promoted as documenting “brutal and tortuous conditions” at the facility, would air at a future date.
Weiss requested “numerous changes to the segment” and then spiked the report on Saturday, the New York Times reported. Among Weiss’s suggestions was that the piece should include an interview with White House deputy chief of staff Stephen Miller or another top Trump administration official. Weiss, according to the Times, gave Miller’s contact info to the “60 Minutes” team working on the CECOT segment; Alfonsi said she already requested comment from the Department of Homeland Security, the White House and the State Department.
On an editorial call Monday morning, Weiss explained to CBS News staff why she held the piece. However, it remains unclear why Weiss — who should have been aware of the CECOT segment for weeks — felt an urgent need to pull the “60 Minutes” report just a day before it was set to air, after CBS News had already broadly promoted the segment.
“The story presented very powerful testimony of abuse at CECOT, but that testimony has already been reported on by places like the [New York] Times,” she said, according to a source familiar with her remarks.
Weiss continued, “The public knows that Venezuelans have been subjected to horrific treatment in this prison. So to run a story on this subject, two months later, we simply need to do more. And this is ’60 Minutes.’ We need to be able to make every effort to get the principles on the record and on camera.”
“The only newsroom I’m interested in running is one in which we are able to have contentious disagreements about the thorniest editorial matters with respect, and, crucially, where we assume the best intent of our colleagues. Anything else is absolutely unacceptable,” Weiss said. She also said, “To me, our viewers come first, not a listing schedule or anything else, and that is my North Star, and I hope it’s the north star of every person in this newsroom.’
Variety has reached out to CBS News for additional comment.
Alfonsi, in an email to CBS colleagues Sunday, said she saw Weiss’ decision to pull the CECOT story as motivated by political concerns, not journalistic ones.
“Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices,” Alfonsi wrote in the message, first reported by the Wall Street Journal. “It is factually correct. In my view, pulling it now, after every rigorous internal check has been met, is not an editorial decision, it is a political one.”
Alfonsi also wrote, “We have been promoting this story on social media for days. Our viewers are expecting it. When it fails to air without a credible explanation, the public will correctly identify this as corporate censorship. We are trading 50 years of ‘Gold Standard’ reputation for a single week of political quiet.”
Weiss’ move to pull the CECOT piece came after President Trump had publicly complained about what he perceived was unfair treatment by “60 Minutes.” Last week, Trump blasted the Ellisons over “60 Minutes,” writing in a Dec. 16 post on his Truth Social account, “For those people that think I am close with the new owners of CBS, please understand that 60 Minutes has treated me far worse since the so-called ‘takeover,’ than they have ever treated me before. If they are friends, I’d hate to see my enemies!”
Trump earlier had slammed Lesley Stahl’s “60 Minutes” interview that aired Dec. 7 with Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Georgia), the one-time Trump supporter who has recently been critical of the president on a range of issues. The president wrote on Truth Social that the “Trump-hating” Stahl interviewed “a very poorly prepared Traitor, who in her confusion made many really stupid statements.” Trump said, “My real problem with the show, however, wasn’t the low IQ traitor, it was that the new ownership of 60 Minutes, Paramount, would allow a show like this to air. THEY ARE NO BETTER THAN THE OLD OWNERSHIP.”
David Ellison’s Paramount Skydance has launched a hostile takeover bid for Warner Bros. Discovery, attempting to convince shareholders to reject WBD’s deal with Netflix, which is set to acquire the Warner Bros. studios operations and HBO Max.
An M&A deal for Warner Bros. Discovery with either Paramount or Netflix would require approval from regulators including the U.S. Justice Department and FTC. Trump also has asserted that he would be “involved” in approving a deal.
In October, David Ellison announced a deal reportedly worth $150 million to acquire Weiss’ anti-woke outlet The Free Press and appointed Weiss as CBS News’ top editorial exec. Those moves were perceived as aimed at improving CBS News’ standing with Trump and the MAGA movement.
In her first on-air hosting gig for CBS News, Weiss on Dec. 13 moderated a “town hall” with Erika Kirk, the CEO of the conservative advocacy organization Turning Point USA and the widow of Charlie Kirk. Last week CBS News said it would launch series of similar events called “Things That Matter,” with guests slated to include VP JD Vance and OpenAI CEO Sam Altman. “We believe that the vast majority of Americans crave honest conversation and civil, passionate debate,” Weiss said in announcing the town halls. “This series is for them.”
Brian Steinberg contributed to this article.
*****
No matter how hard she tries, there's no defending trying to cover up the Trump administration deporting people and sending them to an El Salvador prison where they are raped and tortured. And if you read the 60 Minutes Facebook comments, the people are dragging the hell out of Bari.
Not a Weiss decision on her part, but this is expected from someone who doesn't have journalistic experience, and is willing to bend the knee to Trump rather than sticking to telling compelling stories, and informing boomers of the real atrocities happening in the world.



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