New York Post

NOT ENOUGH TIMES

Fact-checker cites deadline in Palin edit error

- By BEN FEUERHERD

A New York Times factchecke­r testified Monday that she didn’t look over the assertion in a 2017 editorial that there was a “clear” link between a map circulated by Sarah Palin’s political action committee and the 2011 mass shooting in which then-Arizona Rep. Gabby Giffords was wounded.

Eileen Lepping, who appeared by video at Manhattan federal court in Palin’s libel suit against the Times, said the error could be attributed to a “combinatio­n of things,” including the fast pace of her work because she was on deadline.

Grilled by judge

Lepping was responding to questions by Judge Jed Rakoff, who asked her about the fact-checking process so he clearly understood answers she had given during her testimony to attorneys for Palin and the Times.

Rakoff asked her about particular lines in the editorial, including the assertion that there was a “clear” link that showed the shooting was politicall­y incited by the map.

The map showed congressio­nal districts, including Giffords’, under crosshairs that looked like the a rifle’s sights.

“Was that because those are not the kind of facts you fact-check, or was it an oversight or what?” Rakoff asked.

“It could have been a combinatio­n of things . . . I was checking things fast on deadline . . . my reading of it led me not to have looked at that specifical­ly,” Lepping responded.

“I did the best of my ability in the time that I had,” she added.

Palin sued the Times in 2017 over the editorial that was titled “America’s Lethal Politics” and published after a gunman opened fire on congressio­nal Republican­s at a northern Virginia baseball field.

Correction issued

The editorial mentioned the Arizona mass shooting six years earlier and claimed “the link to the political incitement was clear.”

“Before the shooting, Sarah Palin’s political action committee circulated a map of targeted electoral districts that put Ms. Giffords and 19 other Democrats under stylized cross hairs,” the editorial read.

Lepping testified that the morning after the editorial ran, she reviewed a police report that stated the Arizona gunman was not motivated by politics. The Times then published a correction to the editorial.

In a statement last week, a spokespers­on for the Times said the error was unintentio­nal and Palin’s suit is meritless.

“In this trial we are seeking to reaffirm a foundation­al principle of American law: public figures should not be permitted to use libel suits to punish unintentio­nal errors by news organizati­ons,” the spokespers­on said.

“We published an editorial about an important topic that contained an inaccuracy. We set the record straight with a correction,” they added.

James Bennet, the Times’ former editorial page editor, is named as a defendant in the suit and is expected to testify at the trial later this week.

 ?? ?? PAPER TRAIL: Sarah Palin arrives at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Courthouse in lower Manhattan on Monday for the trial in her suit against The New York Times.
PAPER TRAIL: Sarah Palin arrives at the Daniel Patrick Moynihan Courthouse in lower Manhattan on Monday for the trial in her suit against The New York Times.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States