The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

New York Times: ‘Caliphate’ podcast didn’t meet standards

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The New York Times admitted Friday that it could not verify the claims of a Canadian man whose account of committing atrocities for the Islamic State in Syria was a central part of its 2018 podcast “Caliphate.”

The series had won a Peabody Award, the first ever for a podcast produced by the newspaper, but within hours administra­tors said the Times would return the award. The Overseas Press Club of America said it was rescinding its honor for “Caliphate.”

With a major hole blown in the narrative, the Times affixed an audio correction to the beginning of each part of the 12-part podcast and published an investigat­ion into what went wrong with the story in Friday’s newspaper. The story’s central reporter, Rukmini Callimachi, will be reassigned off the terrorism beat, the Times said.

Dean Baquet, the paper’s executive editor, said in a podcast distribute­d Friday that “this failing wasn’t about any one reporter. I think this was an institutio­nal failing.”

The Times assigned an investigat­ive team to look into the story after Canadian police in September arrested Shehroze Chaudhry, who used the alias Abu Huzayfah, for perpetrati­ng a terrorist hoax. He told the Times that as an Islamic State soldier, he had shot one man in the head and stabbed another in the heart.

Chaudhry’s story fell apart upon further examinatio­n. Investigat­ors concluded they couldn’t be sure he’d ever been in Syria and almost certainly didn’t commit the atrocities he’d claimed. Supposed evidence he offered to back up his story, including photos from Syria, were gathered from other sources.

The Times concluded he was a “fabulist” who concocted stories as an escape from his mundane life in a Toronto suburb or living with grandparen­ts in Pakistan.

“All the evidence that he presented that he went to Syria was either ripped from somewhere else, was inconclusi­ve or just didn’t hold up,” Mark Mazzetti, who led the Times’ investigat­ive team on Chaudhry, said in the podcast. “We found a lot of misreprese­ntations by him, and nothing that independen­tly corroborat­ed his claims of being an ISIS executione­r inside Syria.”

Chaudhry’s lawyer, Nader Hasan, would not comment on the Times’ story. He said Chaudhry was not guilty of the Canadian charges and will “vigorously defend himself.”

The Times had ample reason to be suspicious of Chaudhry’s account, since an episode of “Caliphate” was devoted to discrepanc­ies in his story and its own fact-checking. But Baquet likened it to confirmati­on bias, of wanting to believe what seemed like a great story.

“This is one of those cases where I think we just didn’t listen hard enough to the stuff that challenged the story or to the signs that the story wasn’t as strong as we thought it was,” he said.

Callimachi said Friday that it was “gutting” to let down her colleagues. She said she should have caught more of the “lies” Chaudhry told her, and tried to make clear what the newspaper did and didn’t know.

“It wasn’t enough,” she said in a statement. “To our listeners, I apologize for what we missed and what we got wrong. We are correcting the record and I commit to doing better in the future.”

Callimachi worked at the Associated Press from 2003 to 2014. The news organizati­on said Friday that her reporting on terrorism “went through a rigorous editing process at all stages of the reporting and prior to publicatio­n. We stand by the stories.”

As a result of an investigat­ion into her work, the Times attached editor’s notes correcting some of the details in two other stories under her byline. In a 2014 story about a Syrian journalist who claimed he saw American hostages being held in a former factory in Syria, the Times notes that the source had given inconsiste­nt stories to others. The Times also called into question the documents that were the basis for a 2019 story that Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi had been hidden at the base of a rival group because he had paid protection money.

The brother of murdered American journalist James Foley had in the past called into question details of a Callimachi story about her brother, but the Times backed her work.

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