Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Woman peddles false tale of Moore to Post

Accuser traced to sting group’s offices

- SHAWN BOBURG, AARON C. DAVIS AND ALICE CRITES

woman who falsely claimed to The Washington Post that Roy Moore, the Republican U.S. Senate candidate from Alabama, impregnate­d her as a teenager appears to work with an organizati­on that uses deceptive tactics to secretly record conversati­ons in an effort to embarrass its targets.

In a series of interviews over two weeks, the woman shared a story about an alleged sexual relationsh­ip with Moore in 1992 that led to an abortion when she was 15. During the interviews, she repeatedly pressed Post reporters to give their opinions on the effects that her claims could have on Moore’s candidacy if she went public.

The Post did not publish an article based on her unsubstant­iated account. When Post reporters confronted her with inconsiste­ncies in her story and an Internet

posting that raised doubts about her motivation­s, she insisted that she was not working with any organizati­on that targets journalist­s.

But on Monday morning, Post reporters saw her walking into the New York offices of Project Veritas, an organizati­on that targets the mainstream news media and left-leaning groups. The organizati­on sets up undercover “stings” that involve using false cover stories and covert video recordings meant to expose what the group says is media bias.

Project Veritas founder James O’Keefe, who was convicted of a misdemeano­r in 2010 for using a fake identity to enter a federal building during a previous sting, declined to answer questions about the woman Monday morning outside the Project Veritas office, a storefront in Mamaroneck, N.Y.

“I am not doing an interview right now, so I’m not going to say a word,” O’Keefe said.

In a follow-up interview, O’Keefe declined to answer repeated questions about whether the woman was employed at Project Veritas.

Reached by the The Associated Press Monday evening, O’Keefe said, “We don’t comment on investigat­ions real or imagined, or imagined stings.”

Earlier in the day, O’Keefe released an unrelated video that he said exposed liberal bias at The Post.

The video featured a series of secretly recorded conversati­ons with Post employees. One reporter, Dan Lamothe, suggests that the Post’s opinion page is too critical of President Donald Trump’s administra­tion. But he also says its more traditiona­l news coverage calls out the Trump administra­tion’s missteps while giving “him credit where there’s credit” due.

The group’s efforts illustrate the lengths to which activists have gone to try to discredit media outlets for reporting on allegation­s from multiple women that Moore pursued them when they were teenagers and he was in his early 30s. Moore has denied that he did anything improper.

A spokesman for Moore’s campaign did not immediatel­y respond to a message for comment.

The woman who approached Post reporters, Jaime T. Phillips, did not respond to calls to her cellphone Monday morning. Her car remained in the Project Veritas parking lot for more than an hour.

OFF-THE-RECORD

After Phillips was seen entering the Project Veritas office, The Post made the unusual decision to report her previous off-the-record comments.

“We always honor ‘offthe-record’ agreements when they’re entered into in good faith,” said Martin Baron, The Post’s executive editor. “But this so-called off-the-record conversati­on was the essence of a scheme to deceive and embarrass us. The intent by Project Veritas clearly was to publicize the conversati­on if we fell for the trap. Because of our customary journalist­ic rigor, we weren’t fooled, and we can’t honor an ‘off-the-record’ agreement that was solicited in maliciousl­y bad faith.”

Phillips’ arrival at the Project Veritas office capped a weekslong effort that began only hours after The Post published an article Nov. 9 that included allegation­s that Moore once initiated a sexual encounter with a 14-year-old named Leigh Corfman.

Post reporter Beth Reinhard, who co-wrote the article about Corfman, received a cryptic email early the next morning.

“Roy Moore in Alabama … I might know something but I need to keep myself safe. How do we do this?” the apparent tipster wrote under an account with the name “Lindsay James.”

The email’s subject line was “Roy Moore in AL.” The sender’s email address included “rolltide,” the rallying cry of the University of Alabama’s sports teams, which are nicknamed the Crimson Tide.

Reinhard sent an email asking whether the person was willing to talk off the record.

“Not sure if I trust the phone,” came the reply. “Can we just stick to email?”

“I need to be confident that you can protect me before I will tell all,” the person wrote in a subsequent email. “I have stuff I’ve been hiding for a long time but maybe it should stay that way.”

The tipster’s email came amid counteratt­acks by Moore supporters aimed at The Post and its reporters.

That same day, Gateway Pundit, a conservati­ve site, spread a false story from a Twitter account, umpire43, that said, “A family friend in Alabama just told my wife that a WAPO reporter named Beth offer her $1000 to accuse Roy Moore.” The Twitter account, which has a history of spreading misinforma­tion, has since been deleted.

The Post, like many other news organizati­ons, has a strict policy against paying people for informatio­n and did not do so in its coverage of Moore.

On Nov. 14, a pastor in Alabama said he received a voice mail from a man falsely claiming to be a Post reporter and seeking women “willing to make damaging remarks” about Moore for money. No one associated with The Post made any such call.

In the days that followed the purported tipster’s initial emails, Reinhard communicat­ed with the woman through an encrypted text messaging service and spoke by phone with the person to set up a meeting. When the woman suggested a meeting in New York, Reinhard told her she would have to know more about her story and her background. The woman offered that her real name was Jaime Phillips.

Phillips said she lived in New York but would be in the Washington, D.C., area during Thanksgivi­ng week and suggested a meeting Tuesday in a shopping mall in Tysons Corner, Va. “I’m planning to do some shopping there so I’ll find a good place to meet before you get there,” Phillips wrote in a message sent via Signal, the encrypted messaging service.

When Reinhard suggested taking along another reporter, Phillips wrote, “I’m not really comfortabl­e with anyone else being there this time.”

Reinhard arrived to find Phillips already seated in a booth in the restaurant.

The 41-year-old said she had been abused as a child, Reinhard said. Her family had moved often. She said she moved in with an aunt in the Talladega area of Alabama and started attending a church youth group when she met Moore in 1992, the year he became a county judge. She said she was 15. She said they started a “secret” sexual relationsh­ip.

“I knew it wasn’t right, but I didn’t care,” she said.

She said that she got pregnant, that Moore talked her into an abortion, and that he drove her to Mississipp­i to get it.

Phillips said she had started thinking about coming forward after the allegation­s about Hollywood film producer Harvey Weinstein surfaced. Then, she said, she saw the news about Moore flashing across the television screen while in a break room at her job at a company called NFM Lending in Westcheste­r County, N.Y., Reinhard said.

Phillips also repeatedly asked the reporter to guarantee that Moore would lose the election if she came forward. Reinhard told her in a subsequent text message that she could not predict what the effect would be. Reinhard said she also explained to Phillips that her claims would have to be fact-checked. Additional­ly, Reinhard asked her for documents that would corroborat­e or support her story.

Later that day, Phillips told Reinhard that she felt “anxiety & negative energy after our meeting,” text messages show. “You just didn’t convince me that I should come forward,” she wrote.

Reinhard replied, “I’m so sorry but I want to be straight with you about the fact-checking process and the fact that we can’t guarantee what will happen as a result of another story.”

Phillips was not satisfied. On Wednesday, the day before Thanksgivi­ng, she suggested meeting with another Post reporter, Stephanie McCrummen, who co-wrote the initial article about Corfman. “I’d rather go to another paper than talk to you again,” Phillips told Reinhard.

WEBPAGE FOR FUNDING

Back at the newsroom, Reinhard became concerned about elements of Phillips’ story. Phillips had said she lived in Alabama only for a summer while a teenager, but the cellphone number Phillips provided had an Alabama area code. Reinhard called NFM Lending but was told that a person named Jaime Phillips did not work there.

Alice Crites, a Post researcher who was looking into Phillips’ background, found the document that strongly reinforced the reporters’ suspicions: a Web page for a fundraisin­g campaign by someone with the same name. It was on the website GoFundMe.com under the name Jaime Phillips.

“I’m moving to New York!” the May 29 appeal said. “I’ve accepted a job to work in the conservati­ve media movement to combat the lies and deceipt of the liberal MSM. I’ll be using my skills as a researcher and fact-checker to help our movement.

I was laid off from my mortgage job a few months ago and came across the opportunit­y to change my career path.”

In a March posting on its Facebook page, Project Veritas said it was seeking 12 new “undercover reporters,” though the organizati­on’s operatives use methods that are eschewed by mainstream journalist­s, such as misreprese­nting themselves.

A posting for the “journalist” job on the Project Veritas website that month warned that the job “is not a role for the faint of heart.”

The job’s listed goal: “To adopt an alias persona, gain access to an identified person of interest and persuade that person to reveal informatio­n.”

It also listed tasks that the job applicant should be able to master, including: “Learning a script,” “Preparing a background story to support your role,” “Gaining an appointmen­t or access to the target of the investigat­ion,” and “Operating concealed recording equipment.”

Jaime Phillips is a relatively common name, but there was another telling detail. One of two donations listed on the site was from a name that matched her daughter’s, according to public records.

McCrummen agreed to meet Phillips that afternoon.

Phillips suggested meeting somewhere in Alexandria, Va., saying she was shopping in the area. Post videograph­ers accompanie­d McCrummen, who took a printout of the fundraisin­g page to the interview.

Again, Phillips had arrived early and was waiting for McCrummen, her purse resting on the table. When McCrummen put her purse near Phillips’ purse to block a possible camera, Phillips moved hers.

The Post videograph­ers sat separately, unnoticed, at an adjacent table.

Phillips said she didn’t want to get into the details of what she had said happened between her and Moore.

She said she wanted McCrummen to assure her that the article would result in Moore’s defeat, according to a recording. McCrummen instead asked her about her story regarding Moore.

Phillips complained that President Donald Trump had endorsed Moore.

“So my whole thing is, like, I want [Moore] to be completely taken out of the race,” she said. “And I really expected that was going to happen, and now it’s not. So I don’t know what you

think about that.”

McCrummen asked Phillips to verify her identity with a photo identifica­tion. Phillips provided a Georgia driver’s license.

McCrummen then asked her about the GoFundMe page.

“We have a process of doing background, checking background­s and this kind of thing, so I wanted to ask you about one thing,” McCrummen said, pulling out a copy of the page and reading from it. “So I just wanted to ask you if you could explain this, and I also wanted to let you know, Jaime, that this is being recorded and video recorded.”

“OK,” Phillips said. “Um, yeah, I was looking to take a job last summer in New York, but it fell through,” Phillips said. “Yeah, it was going to be with the Daily Caller, but it ended up falling through, so I wasn’t able to do it.”

When asked who at the Daily Caller interviewe­d her, Phillips said, “Kathy,” pausing before adding the last name, “Johnson.”

Paul Conner, executive editor of the Daily Caller, said Monday that no one with the name Kathy Johnson works for the publicatio­n and that he has no record of having personally interviewe­d Phillips. Conner later said in an email that he had asked other top editors at the Daily Caller and the affiliated Daily Caller News Foundation about Phillips.

“None of us has interviewe­d a woman by the name Jaime Phillips,” Conner wrote.

At the Alexandria restaurant on Wednesday, Phillips also told The Post that she had not been in contact with the Moore campaign and told McCrummen that she was not recording the conversati­on.

“I think I probably just want to cancel and not go through with it at this point,” Phillips said shortly before ending the interview.

“I’m not going to answer any more questions,” she said. “I think I’m just going to go.”

She picked up her coat and bag, returned her drink to the front counter and left the restaurant.

By 7 p.m., the message on the GoFundMe page was gone, replaced by a new one.

“Campaign is complete and no longer active,” it read.

Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Tom LeGro and Dalton Bennett of The Washington Post and Steve Peoples of The Associated Press.

 ?? THE WASHINGTON POST/DALTON BENNETT ?? Washington Post reporter Stephanie McCrummen (left) interviews Jaime T. Phillips at a Greek restaurant last Wednesday in Alexandria, Va.
THE WASHINGTON POST/DALTON BENNETT Washington Post reporter Stephanie McCrummen (left) interviews Jaime T. Phillips at a Greek restaurant last Wednesday in Alexandria, Va.

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