There are many reasons nobody believes WorldNetDaily, and its shoddy writing is just one of them.
A Sept. 11 WND article by Leo Hohmann carries the headline “Bin Laden crane collapses, kills 107 on 9/11 anniversary.” But the article makes no mention of Osama bin Laden, as the headline implies: instead, it notes that “The giant Binladin Group was heading up the nearly two-year construction project to enlarge the mosque by 4.3 million square feet, enough space to accommodate 2.2 million Muslim worshipers inside the mosque at one time.”
Hohmann later writes: “The Binladen Group was founded by Osama Bin Laden’s billionaire father Mohammed and the sprawling construction conglomerate runs a large amount of major building contracts in the Saudi kingdom.”
Between the headline and Hohmann’s incomplete reporting, WND is suggesting that Osama bin Laden has had a role in the operation of the Binladin Group — which is a lie.
The Wall Street Journal reported shortly after the 9/11 attacks that the Binladin family had disowned Osama long before the attacks, that Osama never owned an equity stake in the Binladin Group, and that a family spokesman expressed “the strongest denunciation and condemnation of this sad event, which resulted in the loss of many innocent men, women, and children, and which contradicts our Islamic faith.”
In 2013, a U.S. appeals court upheld the dismissal of lawsuits against the Binladin Group by victims and survivors of the 9/11 attacks, which had claimed the group supported the attacks.
All of this information about how the Binladen Group hasn’t had ties with Osama bin Laden for decades is easily found, but Hohmann didn’t feel the need to put that in his article.
On top of that, it’s not clear who actually was responsible for the crane. As ABC News reported, “It was not immediately clear who owned the crane that collapsed.” In other words, Hohmann is making assumptions beyond the established facts — something a real reporter would never do.
But then, Hohmann works for WND, which isn’t exactly known for real reporting.