On Sept. 30, the Washington Times published a retraction of a column by James Lyons which claimed that Aaron Rich, the brother of Seth Rich — the murdered Democratic national Committee staffer about whom WorldNetDaily has pushed conspiracy theories for two years — helped Seth download DNC emails and provide them to Wikileaks. “The Washington Times understands that law enforcement officials have interviewed Mr. Rich and that he has cooperated with their investigation. The Washington Times did not intend to imply that Mr. Rich has obstructed justice in any way, and The Washington Times retracts and disavows any such implication,” the retraction further states.
Despite spending a good part of the past two years obsessed with Seth Rich conspiracies, WND has not reported on the retraction. That’s a bit dicey on its part, because WND has highlighted Lyons’ bogus claim.
A March 3 article cribbed from an item at the fake-news operation Zero Hedge about Lyons’ column, though neither WND nor Zero Hedge repeated Lyons’ claim about Aaron Rich. In a March 27 article on Aaron Rich’s lawsuit against the Washington Times, it noted: “Aaron’s lawsuit also cites a Washington Times opinion article dated March 1, 2018, and written by James A. Lyons. The commentary piece stated, ‘Interestingly, it is well known in the intelligence circles that Seth Rich and his brother, Aaron Rich, downloaded the DNC emails and was [sic] paid by Wikileaks for that information.’ The Times piece does not clarify which intelligence sources believe the Rich brothers took the emails and what evidence they have showing WikiLeaks paid for the documents.” That article went on to rehash other Rich conspiracies.
You’d think that since it was so into the Rich story, WND would want to report the entire story. But just as it censored evidence that its years-long Obama birther crusade was increasingly discredited, WND will also censor the collapse of the Seth Rich conspiracy theories.
In other words, WND was only interested in both stories until it could no longer exploit them for its right-wing political agenda, and is now dropping them as if it knew they weren’t true all along — meaning that it never really cared about journalism at all but, rather, only about exploiting a story whether or not it is actually true. Not a good look for a website perpetually trying to save itself from extinction and insisting that it’s “credible” and “fearless.”