08/23/2021 / By News Editors
(Article by Catherine Salgado republished from TheNationalPulse.com)
BuzzFeed News uncovered the evidence that Mikkelson wrote under an assumed identity for Snopes, and plagiarized extensively between 2015 and 2019. Mikkelson claimed to be a “bulwark in the fight against rumors and fake news. But he has been lying to the site’s tens of millions of readers,” noted Buzzfeed. In an internal review prompted by BuzzFeed News’ inquiries, Snopes confirmed Mikkelson wrote and published 54 articles containing plagiarized material from outlets such as Reuters and the Guardian. The articles were published under Mikkelson’s own name, the “Snopes byline,” and a pseudonym, and included topics such as “same-sex marriage licenses.”
Snopes Chief Operating Officer Vinny Green and Snopes VP of Editorial and Managing Editor Doreen Marchionni released a statement saying, “Our internal research so far has found a total of 54 stories Mikkelson published that used appropriated material, including all of the stories Buzzfeed shared with us.” Marchionni, pending “a comprehensive internal investigation,” did suspend Mikkelson from his editorial duties, but Mikkelson still remains an officer of Snopes and a 50 percent shareholder in the company. “Let us be clear: Plagiarism undermines our mission and values, full stop. It has no place in any context within this organization,” Marchionni said.
All of the articles in question will be retracted and advertising on them disabled, as well as add to each piece an editor’s note of explanation, Snopes told BuzzFeed News. The editorial staff of Snopes also disavowed Mikkelson in a separate statement, which eight current writers of the outlet signed.
“Jeff Zarronandia” wrote at least 23 articles for Snopes, including pieces claiming to disprove accusations against Hillary Clinton, or attacking Donald Trump. Zarronandia had a Twitter profile and a bio claiming he “won the Pulitzer Prize for numismatics in 2006. . .[and] the Distinguished Conflagration Award of the American Society of Muleskinners for 2005.”
There is in fact no Pulitzer Prize for numismatics and no American Society of Muleskinners, but there is also no Jeff Zarronandia. The former managing editor for Snopes, Brooke Binkowski, said that “Zarronandia” was an alternate name for Mikkelson, and that “He used to write about topics he knew would get him hate mail under that assumed name. Plus it made it appear he had more staff than he had.” There are other trolls on the Snopes site, such as “The Repository of Lost Legends” section, which contains not only fact-checks that are spoofs but also forms the acronym TROLL with its title.
Mikkelson told BuzzFeed News that he invented the pseudonym and personality of Zarronandia for a joke deliberately meant to mislead both trolls and those he judged conspiracy theorists in the time leading up to the US presidential election in 2016. Mikkelson called it “kind of a stress-relief thing” and added, “Let’s have some fun and watch these people vent their spleen inventing reasons why this nonexistent persona is biased.” Mikkelson was writing trolling articles under a false name while simultaneously mocking Trump and Trump supporters as conspiracy theorists.
As Zarronandia, Mikkelson defended Khizr Khan, who gave an anti-Trump speech to the Democratic National Convention in 2016 and was later accused of being on the payroll of the Clinton Foundation. Mikkelson believed that the 2016 election cycle provided many opportunities to “debunk” stories.
Steve Bannon, then campaign strategist for Donald Trump, is specifically mentioned in BuzzFeed’s account of Mickelson’s motives.
The Zarronandia author page has now been removed from Snopes and the byline replaced with “Snopes staff.”
Read more at: TheNationalPulse.com or Snopes.news
Tagged Under: David Mikkelson, disinfo, Fact Check, Journalism, left cult, lies, plagiarism, propaganda, Snopes
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