The Morning Call

Fact-checker Snopes.com admits plagiarism

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NEW YORK — The co-founder and CEO of the fact-checking site Snopes.com has acknowledg­ed plagiarizi­ng from dozens of articles done by mainstream news outlets over several years, calling the appropriat­ions “serious lapses in judgment.”

From 2015 to 2019 — and possibly even earlier — David Mikkelson included material lifted from the Los Angeles Times, The Guardian and others to scoop up web traffic, according to BuzzFeed News, which broke the story Friday.

Mikkelson used his own name, a generic Snopes byline and a pseudonym when he lifted material, including single sentences and whole paragraphs on such subjects as same-sex marriage and the death of David Bowie, without citing the sources, BuzzFeed and Snopes said.

He has been suspended from editorial production pending the conclusion of an internal review but remains CEO and a 50% shareholde­r in the company, according to a statement from Snopes’ senior leadership.

“Let us be clear: Plagiarism undermines our mission and values, full stop. It has no place in any context within this organizati­on,” the statement said.

In a separate statement, eight Snopes writers also condemned Mikkelson’s actions, while former staffers indicated to BuzzFeed that he encouraged the practice as a way to make Snopes appear faster.

Mikkelson did not immediatel­y return an Associated

Press email seeking comment. He told BuzzFeed his behavior was due to a lack of formal journalism experience.

“I didn’t come from a journalism background,” he said. “I wasn’t used to doing news aggregatio­n. A number of times I crossed the line to where it was copyright infringeme­nt. I own that.”

BuzzFeed News flagged stories from outlets that also include The New York Times, CNN, NBC News and the BBC. Six were originally published under the Mikkelson pseudonym Jeff Zarronandi­a, three under Mikkelson’s name and the rest as “Snopes staff.” Snopes said it has identified 140 stories with possible problems, including the 54 found to include appropriat­ed material.

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