New York Post

ABC’s ‘Evidence’ Games

- DAVID HARSANYI Twitter: @DavidHarsa­nyi

JAMES O’Keefe’s Project Veritas, a group that has often infiltrate­d news organizati­ons to uncover liberal bias, has released an explosive “hot mic” video of “Good Morning America” co-host Amy Robach venting about ABC’s decision to spike a story about Jeffrey Epstein’s nefarious activities three years ago.

“I had this interview with [Epstein victim] Virginia Roberts,” Robach is seen saying in the video, “we would not put it on the air. The [British royal] Palace found out that we had her whole allegation­s about Prince Andrew and threatened us a million different ways. We were afraid we wouldn’t be able to interview Kate and Will . . . That also quashed the story.”

Robach now claims, through a network statement, that she was caught “in a private moment” of frustratio­n over the lack of progress on a story.

“I was upset that an important interview I had conducted with Virginia Roberts didn’t air because I could not obtain sufficient corroborat­ing evidence to meet ABC’s editorial standards about her allegation­s.”

Sorry, but Robach’s response to the firestorm doesn’t square with her initial comments, in which she states that “Roberts had pictures, she had everything . . . It was unbelievab­le what we had. [Bill] Clinton. We had everything.”

“Everything” sure sounds like sufficient corroborat­ing evidence. Even if employing the most scrupulous journalist­ic standards, a giant news organizati­on wouldn’t need three years to substantia­te — or dismiss — a story with pictures, dates and a credible witness.

We certainly know that ABC didn’t need “everything” — or much of anything, for that matter — when it was running scores of pieces online and on television, highlighti­ng every risible accusation against then-Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.

I’m not even talking about the prime accuser, Christine Blasey Ford, whose allegation­s still haven’t been corroborat­ed, but rather about someone such as Julie Swetnick, who was all over the ABC News at the height of the confirmati­on battle.

Swetnick accused Kavanaugh not only of sexual assault but also of being present at parties where women were being drugged and “gang raped.” She wasn’t even remotely credible.

Yet here is Robach’s colleague, former Clinton adviser George Stephanopo­ulos, meeting ABC’s editorial standards by allowing Swetnick’s shyster lawyer Michael Avenatti to smear Kavanaugh without offering a shred of substantia­ting evidence for her claims.

Why couldn’t Roberts be interviewe­d?

Roberts had alleged that Epstein kept her as a sex slave and forced her to perform sex acts on Prince Andrew and Alan Dershowitz. Robach contends in the hot-mic video that producers told her no one knew, or cared, about Epstein.

Do you think viewers cared or knew about Clinton, Dershowitz and Prince Andrew? I imagine they do. Three years ago, remember, Bill Clinton’s wife was in the midst of her presidenti­al run. One imagines that a story detailing her husband’s alleged vacations to a pedophile’s island retreat might have been newsworthy.

By the way, has Robach wrapped up that reporting on Clinton yet?

The notion that she believes she was venting during “private moment” isn’t plausible, either. Any regular guest — and Robach is on TV every day — knows that a gaggle of producers is listening to everything that’s being said, and that everything that’s being said is going to be on tape.

Yet, instead of facing these questions ABC, has convinced another network, CBS, to fire the staffer who blew whistle on the spiked Epstein story in the first place. Paired with NBC News’ burying of the Harvey Weinstein story, we now have evidence of three major media institutio­ns colluding to bury stories about serial abusers.

One wonders how many young women might have been saved if they hadn’t.

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Epstein: More rights than Kavanaugh?
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