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Bari Weiss was named the top editor at CBS News this fall when its parent company, Paramount, was bought out.PATRICK T. FALLON/AFP/Getty Images

CBS News pulled a 60 Minutes report on a mega prison in El Salvador that houses hundreds of Venezuelan deportees sent by the U.S. just hours before its scheduled Sunday broadcast, saying it would air at a future time.

“The broadcast lineup for tonight’s edition of 60 Minutes has been ‍updated,” the ​program posted on social media on Sunday, three hours before it was slated to air. “Our report ’Inside CECOT’ will air in a future broadcast.”

A CBS News spokesperson said in an e-mail that the segment “needed additional reporting.”

Sharyn Alfonsi, a correspondent who reported the segment, said in a note to her team that CBS pulled the report for “political” reasons, according to a CBS News employee who confirmed the note’s contents.

“Our story was screened five times and cleared by both CBS attorneys and Standards and Practices,” Alfonsi wrote in the note, the CBS employee said, who spoke on ⁠the condition of anonymity to avoid jeopardizing their position.

“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 told the New York Times, which reported the note on Sunday evening: “I refer all questions to Bari Weiss,” referring to the new CBS News editor-in-chief. Neither Alfonsi nor Weiss responded to Reuters requests for comment.

Paramount settles with Trump over ‘60 Minutes’ interview for US$16-million

CECOT is a mega-prison in El Salvador where the U.S. has sent hundreds of mostly Venezuelan migrants without trial. It has been condemned by human rights ‌groups for its harsh conditions.

CBS is owned by Paramount ‍Skydance. Skydance Media, run by David Ellison – the son of longtime supporter of U.S. President Donald Trump, Larry Ellison – acquired Paramount in August. David Ellison helped secure regulatory approval ‍for the deal with the promise that the CBS network would reflect the “varied ideological perspectives” of ‌American viewers.

Prior to the deal, Paramount paid US$16-million to settle a 2024 lawsuit Trump filed over a 60 Minutes interview with former Vice President ⁠Kamala Harris, which he claimed gave a distorted view of his rival for the White House.

The FCC has said the settlement and regulatory review were unrelated.

On Monday, Larry Ellison stepped in to personally ​guarantee US$40.4-billion in Paramount Skydance’s latest effort to pry Warner Bros Discovery away from selling its prized Hollywood assets to streaming giant Netflix. It is unclear whether Weiss knew about the guarantee when she decided to hold the story.

Earlier this month Trump attacked the new owners of CBS over a 60 Minutes interview with his former ally Republican U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, on the same day Paramount Skydance launched a hostile bid for Warner Bros. Discovery.

In an X post Monday, Democratic Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer implied that the 60 Minutes postponement was politically motivated. “Trump and his billionaire ​buddies are trying to shape what people see and hear to create their own alternative reality,” Schumer wrote.

“The Trump administration doesn’t have a veto on what stories get told. CBS should put the full, unedited version of this story on the air ASAP. A free press doesn’t kowtow to the president – it holds him accountable.”

CBS removed a link to the “Inside CECOT” segment page on Sunday. A description on its Paramount Plus website earlier Sunday said the segment was scheduled to air at 7:30 p.m. ET, with Alfonsi speaking to recently released deportees about the “brutal and torturous” conditions they had endured in the prison.

Weiss raised several concerns with 60 Minutes producers about Alfonsi’s segment and requested a substantial amount of new material to be added, the CBS employee said. ⁠The New York Times reported that Weiss suggested adding an interview with White House official Stephen Miller or another senior Trump administration figure. Weiss further questioned the use of the ⁠term “migrants” to describe the Venezuelan men who were deported, noting they were in the U.S. illegally, the employee said.

In her note, Alfonsi stated that her team had sought comments from the White House, the State Department, and ‌the Department of Homeland Security.

“If the administration’s refusal to participate becomes a valid reason to spike a story, we have effectively handed them a ‘kill switch’ for any reporting they find inconvenient,” Alfonsi wrote. The decision comes as the network goes through changes under Weiss, who was picked to lead CBS News in October after CBS parent company Paramount Skydance acquired the online publication she founded, The Free Press.

Weiss, a former New York Times and Wall Street Journal opinion writer, was considered by some analysts as a controversial choice as she had never managed a television newsroom or produced broadcast news content before. On Dec. 10 she named Tony ‌Dokoupil as the new anchor of its flagship CBS Evening News segment, replacing the dual anchor team of John Dickerson and Maurice DuBois.

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