Mat Staver
The Washington Post and Jonathan Capehart are eating crow
By Mat Staver
The Washington Post's credibility, to the extent it still has any, is on the line. Jonathan Capehart cannot help himself. One shoddy article has now given rise to a second. Both reveal that he does not check his sources, and even more disturbingly, since he is on the editorial board of the Washington Post, he does not care about the facts.
On July 7, 2016, Capehart published his first missive purporting to list "enemies of equality." He included a chart created by the Paul Singer and Tim Gill funded Freedom for All Americans, allegedly showing a "vast right wing conspiracy" of interconnected groups and people. The chart shows the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) funding Liberty Counsel and Liberty Counsel representing Kim Davis.
There is big problem – the chart is wrong, and so is Capehart. He ignored numerous attempts to contact him. While Liberty Counsel does represent Kim Davis, it is not connected with or receive money from ADF.
In response to Capehart's false reporting, I issued a press release and wrote an article correcting the record. But this is where Capehart cannot help himself. In his "truth does not matter" world, he has now written what he must think is a "gotcha" article. But the "gotcha" is on Capehart.
Capehart's second Washington Post article admits that Liberty Counsel did not receive funding from ADF, but now he claims that ADF sent a $10,000 contribution to Liberty University School of Law in 2013, while I was dean of the law school. There's the connection, he thinks! Apparently, Capehart not only refuses to check his sources, he must also have a hard time reading.
He points to an ADF 2014 990 form, and, sure enough, there is listed Liberty University School of Law. But, if Capehart had read the 990, he would know that this is an obvious mistake. The address listed is Ohio and Liberty University School of Law is in Virginia. That's not all. The EIN number for the donation is nowhere near the EIN number for the law school or Liberty University. There is an obvious typo because EIN numbers do not begin with 31, as the 990 states. Had he typed the address on the 990 into a search engine, Capehart would have discovered the ADF contribution listed a private address in Ohio, not a law school in Virginia.
The pesky truth keeps causing Capehart to stumble. How annoying truth must be to his agenda.
Seemingly obsessed to find a "right wing conspiracy," Capehart has embarrassed himself. But I want to thank him for these two articles because it is now abundantly clear that Capehart's shoddy journalism cannot be trusted.
The Washington Post now has the facts. What it does from here will determine whether it wishes to wipe the egg off its face and re-establish some remnant of credibility, or continue to push its leftist tin foil hat conspiracy theories at the expense of objective journalism.
The Post should do the right thing, retract Capehart's erroneous article and immediately issue an apology to me, Liberty Counsel and the Liberty University School of Law.
© Mat Staver
August 6, 2016
The Washington Post's credibility, to the extent it still has any, is on the line. Jonathan Capehart cannot help himself. One shoddy article has now given rise to a second. Both reveal that he does not check his sources, and even more disturbingly, since he is on the editorial board of the Washington Post, he does not care about the facts.
On July 7, 2016, Capehart published his first missive purporting to list "enemies of equality." He included a chart created by the Paul Singer and Tim Gill funded Freedom for All Americans, allegedly showing a "vast right wing conspiracy" of interconnected groups and people. The chart shows the Alliance Defending Freedom (ADF) funding Liberty Counsel and Liberty Counsel representing Kim Davis.
There is big problem – the chart is wrong, and so is Capehart. He ignored numerous attempts to contact him. While Liberty Counsel does represent Kim Davis, it is not connected with or receive money from ADF.
In response to Capehart's false reporting, I issued a press release and wrote an article correcting the record. But this is where Capehart cannot help himself. In his "truth does not matter" world, he has now written what he must think is a "gotcha" article. But the "gotcha" is on Capehart.
Capehart's second Washington Post article admits that Liberty Counsel did not receive funding from ADF, but now he claims that ADF sent a $10,000 contribution to Liberty University School of Law in 2013, while I was dean of the law school. There's the connection, he thinks! Apparently, Capehart not only refuses to check his sources, he must also have a hard time reading.
He points to an ADF 2014 990 form, and, sure enough, there is listed Liberty University School of Law. But, if Capehart had read the 990, he would know that this is an obvious mistake. The address listed is Ohio and Liberty University School of Law is in Virginia. That's not all. The EIN number for the donation is nowhere near the EIN number for the law school or Liberty University. There is an obvious typo because EIN numbers do not begin with 31, as the 990 states. Had he typed the address on the 990 into a search engine, Capehart would have discovered the ADF contribution listed a private address in Ohio, not a law school in Virginia.
The pesky truth keeps causing Capehart to stumble. How annoying truth must be to his agenda.
Seemingly obsessed to find a "right wing conspiracy," Capehart has embarrassed himself. But I want to thank him for these two articles because it is now abundantly clear that Capehart's shoddy journalism cannot be trusted.
The Washington Post now has the facts. What it does from here will determine whether it wishes to wipe the egg off its face and re-establish some remnant of credibility, or continue to push its leftist tin foil hat conspiracy theories at the expense of objective journalism.
The Post should do the right thing, retract Capehart's erroneous article and immediately issue an apology to me, Liberty Counsel and the Liberty University School of Law.
© Mat Staver
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