Lodi News-Sentinel

How a photo and a book drive led to a false story and attacks on veep Kamala Harris

- Erin B. Logan

WASHINGTON — Last week, the city of Long Beach announced it would repurpose its convention center to temporaril­y house up to 1,000 unaccompan­ied migrant children arriving at the U.S.-Mexico border.

Officials knew that wrangling that many children would be a tall order, so they launched a drive to fill a library with books for the children to read. Someone donated a copy of Vice President Kamala Harris’ 2019 children’s book “Superheroe­s Are Everywhere.”

That book was laid on a cot last Thursday and a news photograph­er, who declined to comment to the Los Angeles Times, took a photo of it.

Then the New York Post wrote a front-page story reporting that federal officials were including the book as part of the “welcome kits” given to migrant children.

Harris “hasn’t been to the border to address a crisis she was tasked to help fix — but a children’s book she wrote is waiting there for young migrants who are being welcomed into the country,” the story originally read.

But no books, including the one in the photo, were included in welcome kits, Zhan Caplan, a spokesman for the Department of Health and Human Services,

told the Los Angeles Times on Wednesday.

“Children do not receive books as part of a welcome kit,” Caplan said in a statement. “No taxpayer dollars were used to purchase Vice President Harris’ book.”

After the Washington Post this week fact-checked the tabloid’s story, the New York paper reportedly deleted, then amended its story, according to the Post.

Laura Italiano, the reporter whose byline was on the story, tweeted Tuesday that she had resigned from the publicatio­n. Italiano did not respond to requests for comment from the Times but tweeted she was “ordered” to write the story and “failed to push back hard enough.”

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