For some reason, Newsmax columnist James Hirsen feels the need to launch nasty attacks on the women who accused Alabama senatorial candidate Roy Moore of perving on them when they were teenagers.
In a Nov. 10 tweet, Hirsen went on the attack: “Purportedly Moore’s main accuser Leigh Corfman has had three divorces, filed for bankruptcy three times, and has been charged with multiple misdemeanors. Posts on Moore’s FB page indicate that Corfman, has claimed several pastors at various churches made sexual advances at her.”
Hirsen retweeted other attacks on the accusers and defenses of Moore.
Ironically (or perhaps not so much), Gibson is close to a Hollywood star with a history of questionable behavior toward women, Mel Gibson. As we’ve documented, Hirsen headed a group that owned a tract of land in Pennsylvania where Gibson’s father founded a branch of an ultraconservative Catholic sect, and has promoted Gibson on websites including Newsmax without disclosing his personal ties to the star. And when tapes surfaced revealing Gibson saying hateful and abusive things to an ex-girlfriend, he first ignored the story, then ran to his defense by claiming the tapes were edited. Only then did Hirsen finally disclose at Newsmax that he is a “business associate and friend” of Gibson.
Is this really the way Newsmax wants one of its columnists to behave? Given that it’s given Hirsen a pass on his unethical behavior so far, perhaps so.
UPDATE: Hirsen, who claims to be an attorney, offered up this Nov. 13 post on Moore’s threat to sue the Washington Post for publishing the story about his accusers: “False publication that harms reputation is actionable defamation.”
But if the claims are false, shouldn’t Moore be suing his accusers instead of a newspaper? Further, Moore would have to claim actual malice — that the Post knew the claims were false and published the story anyway — for Moore’s lawsuit to have any chance of success. Thus far, he has offered no such evidence against either the accusers or the Post.
Maybe Hirsen shouldn’t be bragging so much about being a lawyer.
And in his new Newsmax column, Hirsen continued his pro-Moore defense campaign, declaring the allegations to be “fake news.” He manages to avoid repeating his defamatory claims about Corfman — which are arguably more actionable in court than anything the Post has published about Moore, so good on Hirsen for belatedly figuring that out — but he repeated other irrelevant information about another accuser, as if being “a sign language interpreter for then-Vice President Joe Biden” has any bearing on the current controversy.”
Hirsen proudly claims that “It is predictable and wholly rational for Judge Moore’s backers to doubt the veracity of the Post story,” adding: “Alabamians have little faith in the mainstream media, particularly the Post. On the other hand, Judge Moore is known statewide as an individual who after successfully running for office served as chief justice of the Alabama Supreme Court.”
And, now, suspected pedophile. Hirsen won’t admit that, of course.