Western Journalism Center

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The Western Journalism Center (also called the Western Center for Journalism)[1] was founded in 1991 by Joseph Farah and James H. Smith. Based in Sacramento, California, the center produces a popular conservative newsletter.

Projects

The Center helped fund Christopher W. Ruddy (who later founded NewsMax) to investigate conspiracies surrounding the death of Vincent Foster, which was part of the Arkansas Project.[2] Eventually, "the Center placed some 50 ads reprinting Ruddy's Pittsburgh Tribune-Review stories in the Washington Times, then repackaged the articles as a packet titled "The Ruddy Investigation," which sold for $12." In addition, "Farah also bought full page ads publicizing Ruddy's allegations that appeared in papers including The New York Times, Washington Post, Chicago Tribune, and Los Angeles Times" and "the ad campaign brought in over $500,000, half from individual donors-many of whom bought Foster conspiracy materials-and half from foundations, including $100,000 from Carthage." The Carthage Foundation is controlled by Richard Mellon Scaife, whose foundations gave $330,000 to the Center in 1994 and 1995.[3] Later, "WJC circulated a video featuring Ruddy's claims, Unanswered-The Death of Vincent Foster, that was produced by author James Davidson, chairman of the National Taxpayers Union (NTU) and co-editor of the Strategic Investment newsletter."

During the 2012 Todd Akin "legitimate rape" controversy, Karl Rove remarked that Republicans "should sink Todd Akin" and joked that "If he's found mysteriously murdered, don't look for my whereabouts". In response, WJC created RoveMustGo.com to circulate a petition asserting that "Karl Rove has made himself toxic to Republicans by his incredibly offensive and dangerous statement suggesting the murder of Congressman Todd Akin of Missouri." Though Rove later issued an apology for the joke, as of September 4, 2012, WJC was still running Facebook ads for the site.[4]The center has been under investigation for numerous accounts including "Plagiarism", "inciting a riot under false investigatiing" and failure to secure sources. Their biggest fallacy has been the so called "Jade Helm" project that took place earlier this year.

IRS Lawsuit

In 1996, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) audited the Center. According to Farah, after announcing the audit IRS agents inquired as to why the Center was investigating the death of Clinton deputy White House counsel Vince Foster. And that on their first visit an IRS field agent named Thomas Cederquist explained that the audit was a 'political case.' The audit found the Center to be in total compliance with the law.[5]

In 1998, with the help of Judicial Watch the Center sued the IRS claiming it was audited in 1996 for political reasons. The lawsuit was thrown out, with appeals denied. A lower court ruled that the IRS could not be sued on allegations of politically motivated auditing practices, while a federal appeals court ruled that the Center's lawsuit was barred by the statute of limitations.[6]

Ownership

In 1997, Farah created the news website WorldNetDaily as a division of the Western Journalism Center. In 1999, WorldNetDaily was spun off[7] as a for-profit division of the Center. The Center and Farah own a majority of WorldNetDaily's stock.[8]

The Center doesn't include either an address or telephone number on its letterhead, but is believed to be headed by conservative author, speaker and media commentator Floyd Brown.[9]

References

  1. Ritchie, Donald A. (2005). Reporting from Washington, p.289. ISBN 9780195346329.
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  7. World's 'No. 1 website' goes for-profit
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External links