James O'Keefe

James O’Keefe is a professional liar, he just isn’t very good at it.

James Edward O'Keefe III describes himself as an investigative journalist and filmmaker, having founded Project Veritas. He specializes in "sting" operations, where he or his associates secretly videotape the subjects of his investigations and bait the victims into saying something incriminating or embarrassing. His investigations have thus far been exclusively focused on doing heavily-slanted attack pieces against organizations or individuals considered to be liberal, and these efforts have made him a conservative media favorite. In February 2023, O'Keefe was fired from Project Veritas after the organization's board said O'Keefe had spent inordinate amounts of donor money on personal luxuries.

Stings
Most of O'Keefe's videos feature a young man or woman posing as a stereotype demonized by the American right-wing, such as a welfare queen seeking more money, an illegal immigrant inexplicably eager to vote, or a student obsessed with political correctness. The organization in question then gets into trouble to the extent they are willing to help the undercover operative achieve these goals. Unfortunately, simple politeness often appears incriminating in such a context, as many innocents have discovered.

Lucky Charms
O'Keefe began his career as a hidden camera provocateur while studying at Rutgers University in 2004. In his first-ever recorded "sting", O'Keefe and several other students met with Rutgers dining staff to demand the removal of Lucky Charms cereal from campus cafeterias, arguing that its leprechaun mascot represents an offensive stereotype of Irish-Americans. His intent in carrying out this glorified prank was to "illustrate the absurdity that is political correctness" and place school officials in a no-win situation where they would either have to appear insensitive to an ethnic group or willing to cave in to trivial complaints. The students claim they succeeded in getting the cereal removed for a time, but a Rutgers spokesman stated it was never taken off the menu.

Planned Parenthood
In 2006 and 2007, O'Keefe teamed up with anti-abortion activist Lila Rose to help her plan and produce two sting operations against reproductive healthcare provider Planned Parenthood. For the first clandestine operation, O'Keefe and Rose went to two Planned Parenthood clinics in greater Los Angeles in March 2007 and another in Santa Monica in May 2007, secretly taping counseling sessions in which Rose, then 18 years old, posed as a pregnant 15-year-old girl seeking an abortion, and O'Keefe posed as her 23-year-old boyfriend. The goal was to catch (or some might say entrap) employees saying things that made it look like they were willing to let statutory rape go unreported.

The second sting operation Rose and O'Keefe collaborated on involved the latter phoning regional Planned Parenthood offices in Idaho, Ohio, New Mexico, and Oklahoma in the summer of 2007, posing as a racist interested in making a donation "specifically for the abortions of African-American babies". The intent was to prove that the provider was founded by Margaret Sanger (true), an advocate of eugenics (true), with the intent of wiping out the black race (false), a claim commonly propagated by pro-life activists. When Rose's anti-abortion group Live Action (which O'Keefe served as an advisor to) released the calls in early 2008, it resulted in Autumn Kersey, a Planned Parenthood representative who answered the call to the Idaho office, being suspended from her job. Rose admitted that her group deliberately targeted Planned Parenthood offices in states where it was legal to record a phone conversation without the other party's consent.

Taxpayer's Prize Patrol
O'Keefe was also involved in a brief series of videos in 2009 called the "Taxpayer's Prize Patrol". The videos consisted of him and other young white people visiting minority homes in a van labeled "Taxpayer's Prize Patrol", in the style of the long-running "Publisher's Clearinghouse Prize Patrol". After the homeowners' initial confusion and excitement, O'Keefe would tell them they'd "won" an invoice for a portion of the financial industry bail-out being administered at the time and ask them to sign the giant check he handed them. This series has not been very well-publicized, possibly because afterwards they realized the awkwardness involved in having a group of white people visit the homes of Hispanic or black families, raise their hopes, and then taunt them.

ACORN


O'Keefe first rose to prominence on the strength of his investigation of ACORN (Association of Community Organizers for Reform Now), whose stated purpose had been to advocate for low-income families; it sought to do this through a wide range of activities, such as economic advising, lobbying, and voter-registration drives. The latter had long earned the organization the enmity of some right-wing figures (such as 2008 presidential candidate John McCain ), who believed that ACORN was regularly involved in fraud to steal elections away from the rightful victors (Republicans). The kernel of truth in this is that the poor tend to overwhelmingly vote Democratic, so any efforts to encourage the poor to vote will inevitably be to the detriment of Republican candidates. Even though ACORN had never been convicted or even charged with anything like voter fraud, there was a great deal of resentment, making the situation ripe for someone like O'Keefe.

During the summer of 2009, O'Keefe and an associate visited ACORN offices in eight cities and recorded their interviews with financial counselors there who were offering them help. They posed as a prostitute and a pimp seeking advice about free medical care and tax evasion on behalf of illegal immigrant prostitutes, and several ACORN counselors gave the pair advice on their "activities".

O'Keefe used a great deal of editing in the resulting videos; his questions tended to be vague or leading and frequently received only appropriate responses from the counselors. The segments of the videos that seemed to be the most damaging were edited together, and included such items as the counselors advising them not to tell the police what they did for a living, how to open multiple bank accounts to avoid suspicion, and where to get medical care for the prostitutes. Furthermore, O'Keefe edited in a segment at the beginning showing him wearing a large fur coat and feathered hat and carrying a cane ("dressed like a pimp"), whereas in reality, he visited the offices in fairly conservative attire. The overall idea, of course, was that ACORN was enthusiastically and knowingly helping a pimp oppress prostitutes and break the law.

The videos exploded into the media, championed first by Andrew Breitbart on his website Big Government. ACORN fired the employees involved, but this wasn't enough to curtail the gleeful pouncing of the right wing. Congress stripped away ACORN funding and despite a later investigation that ruled there had been no wrongdoing by the organization, it filed for bankruptcy and closed in November 2010; it was the first scalp on O'Keefe's belt. Such victory was not without cost, however; in filming the videos, O'Keefe and his female cohort Hannah Giles broke a California state law prohibiting the recording of someone else's voice or image without their knowledge or consent. Facing these charges, they acquired immunity from criminal prosecution by releasing the complete unedited recordings.

Several years later, despite the evasion of criminal charges, O'Keefe was forced to settle a privacy lawsuit from an ACORN employee who had been fired, paying Juan Carlos Vera $100,000. O'Keefe called the lawsuit "meritless" and the "cost of exposing the truth".

Landrieu
Following the massive success of the ACORN videos, O'Keefe was arrested and charged with entering federal property under false pretenses for the purposes of committing a felony when he and three associates dressed up as phone company employees and lied their way into the New Orleans offices of Democratic Louisiana senator Mary Landrieu and began "manipulat[ing]" the telephone system. O'Keefe stated he hadn't intended to tap Landrieu's phone lines, but rather that he was investigating whether or not they were broken:

His excuse was noted, however absurd (does he really not know that "jammed" means busy, not broken?), and O'Keefe pled guilty to the lesser charge of entering a federal building under false pretenses.

In the wake of his arrest and sentencing, O'Keefe made a music video featuring his performance of an original song. The video, "Landrieu Dance," also showcases a Landrieu impersonator.

Dildos
Undeterred, O'Keefe and his crew got right back to work. Their next plot was to attempt to embarrass the news organization CNN, by seducing one of their female star reporters. Or something. It's not entirely clear what the end result would have been, because one of the confederates became uncomfortable with the level of sleaze and told CNN ahead of time about the "investigation."

According to the planning document, given to CNN by Izzy Santa, one of O'Keefe's confederates, the plan was to meet and attempt to seduce a female reporter, and engage in "kinky" sex with her. After this, he would attempt to feed her a false, politically charged story, and then - after it aired - debunk it. He would follow this up by revealing the affair and denigrating her as someone who only worried about sex and getting the easy, politically hot, stories.

The proposed script for the presentation video:

The equipment list reads, in part:

O'Keefe claims that while he liked the idea he "never considered [it] for a moment" and that "[Boudreau] was not going to be faux 'seduced”' unless she wanted to be." In his statement, however, O'Keefe neglected to comment on an email obtained by CNN in which he asks an associate, "Ben, you think I could get her on the boat?"

Voter fraud
During the New Hampshire GOP Primary in 2012, O'Keefe and company attempted to create another sting video highlighting the need for voter ID cards&mdash;a contentious issue among Americans, as voter fraud is near non-existent, but members of the GOP contend that it is a significant issue. Several states have passed legislation requiring voter ID cards, effectively disenfranchising longtime voters, mostly elderly individuals who have not previously needed a form of identification. They successfully acquired ballots of dead citizens&mdash;in doing so, his companions actually committed voter fraud.

Imagine a video that warns of the rampant problem of robbery, and proves it by stealing someone's stereo.

Teachers Gone Wild
Even though his fuzzy-handcuff-related plans went awry, O'Keefe continued his efforts. In November 2010, he proceeded with a sting on a teachers' union conference in New Jersey. His video is a parody of the Girls Gone Wild line of softcore pornographic videos, mimicking their raucous language and style as it presents members of the teachers' union drinking alcohol and gossiping. But even though teachers' unions have long been a dire foe of the right wing (which considers them both an impediment to education and to elections), this video was not very well-received because the contents are simply not very shocking. Even those who hate teachers' unions couldn't find much to complain about in the fact that some teachers were drinking at a weekend conference.

The main result from the video was that New Jersey teacher Alissa Ploshnick was fired for her comments to the undercover "reporter". She was filmed flirting with him and chatting with him about how hard it was to get a tenured teacher fired, complaining about the level of behavior they could get away with. As one example of such outrageous behavior, she mentioned one tenured teacher who had used the word "nigger" and how ridiculous that was.

Despite the fact that she was quoting someone else and was unhappy about the situation, as well as the sleaziness of pretending to flirt with someone over drinks to get them to say something incriminating, Ploshnick lost her job after twenty years of teaching. The students of New Jersey are probably not well-served by this loss, since Ploshnick's last brush with fame came in 1997, when she "threw herself in front of a careening van to protect her students and landed in the hospital with broken ribs, a fractured wrist, a badly bruised pelvis and glass cuts in her eyes." Alas, even the letter of commendation from then-President Clinton ("I recently heard about your act of heroism and wanted to commend you for your selflessness."), couldn't save her job.

NPR
Finding that his efforts since the ACORN sting had been getting less and less traction, O'Keefe set up a new sting in January of 2011, creating a fake advocacy agency called the "Muslim Education Action Center," whose website contained fairly generic pablum about spreading the real truth of Islam, assisting Islamic schools in America, and opposing the "corrupt entities such as Roger Ailes' Fox News." It was not terribly radical, although that didn't prevent at least one conservative blogger from noticing and screeching about "how they are going to shove the sharia down your kafir throat."

With this background in place, O'Keefe's team contacted representatives of National Public Radio, and set up a meeting. At the meeting, "Ibrahim" then proceeded to make outlandish or racist statements while dangling the prospect of making a donation, and taped the money-hungry NPR executives' agreement. It was not terribly surprising to anyone that representatives from a nonprofit would nod and smile to even the most batshit sentiments, as long as a fat check hung before their eyes.

Unfortunately, NPR merely fired the executives in question and shrugged off the controversy with disavowals, and it never managed to get much hold. This is probably in large part because even conservative news outlets had grown suspicious of O'Keefe's dildo-laden antics; the Glenn Beck-founded news site The Blaze even posted a long criticism of the O'Keefe video, illustrating the selective editing that made the NPR executives appear much worse than they really were, and concluding that "even if you are of the opinion, as I am, that undercover reporting is acceptable and ethical in very defined situations, it is another thing to approve of editing tactics that seem designed to intentionally lie or mislead about the material being presented."

Voter Fraud, Part Two
Perhaps in an effort to redeem their previous failure at exposing voter fraud, O'Keefe's Project Veritas released a new video in May of 2012. The video purports to show various examples of voter fraud and misconduct, in support of the oft-repeated but never-demonstrated Republican claim that the practice is rampant.

In the first segment, the video describes two non-citizens who are registered to vote in North Carolina, one of whom actually did vote in 2008 and 2010, according to the ballot rolls. Unfortunately for O'Keefe, both people in question are naturalized citizens and so are legal voters.

The second part of the North Carolina video repeats the failed tactics of the previous "voter fraud" sting: a hired actor goes to a voting center and purposefully commits voter fraud, posing as a Colombian national who wants a ballot. This is to demonstrate that non-citizens must be routinely voting in American elections. His phrasing is carefully designed to be ambiguous and seem incriminatory.

Twice in the video, "Romero" refers to his Colombian passport, making it seem as though he is confessing to being a non-citizen. But this admission is only made in Spanish, which the workers don't appear to understand.

Another demonstration of voter fraud is likewise deeply flawed; an actor obtains a ballot in the name of "Michael G. Bolton," something that should be impossible because the person in question was dead and shouldn't be on the voter rolls. However, the unedited version of the video reveals that he actually got the ballot of "Michael G. Bolton Jr.."

In the third major segment, the video shows a "student" of the University of North Carolina meeting with university officials and chatting about his own plan to commit voter fraud; they fail to outright condemn his plan - at least on the sections of the video that have been released.

In summary, then, the video proves that a legal citizen voted, that two other legal citizens were impersonated by Project Veritas, and that some people will laugh nervously at the idea of voter fraud.

Moran Moron
In the last few weeks of the 2012 electoral season, O'Keefe released a new video, showing a discussion of voter fraud with Patrick Moran, the son and field director of Representative James Moran (D-VA). Moran spoke at length with the undercover videographer, agreeing enthusiastically with a plan to cast a hundred fake ballots in the upcoming election and proposing logistics for the illegal plot. The resulting video is remarkable for two things: its blatant plotting of electoral fraud, and James O'Keefe actually being right about something. Moran resigned his position as his father's field director within the day. The elder Moran still won re-election by 34 percentage points.

Shredded constitutions
In 2015, O'Keefe had an undercover reporter for Veritas impersonate students at Oberlin College, Vassar College, and Cornell University. In a poorly done parody of social justice advocacy, the fake student told administrators that she thought the United States Constitution "triggered" her. This video proves nothing other than support staff of colleges being willing to listen to students instead of being judgmental. Apparently, O'Keefe can't make a genuine, sincere argument against trigger warnings other than knocking down a strawman. Sadly, with all the discrediting that's been done, O'Keefe still attracts enough small minds to get loads of virtual high-fives on YouTube.

A Cornell vice president responded to the video: "...the video shows a 'reporter' misrepresent herself as a student with a mental health crisis. Under the guise of addressing her mental health issues, the 'student' asked the employee to help her shred the document she brought with her that was the apparent source of her anguish. Whatever personal views she may have shared in order to connect with a 'student' who appeared to be in crisis, as an employee of Cornell University she was appropriately focused on addressing the apparently urgent need of the person before her and not on any larger political context."

Failed Washington Post sting
In light of the growing sexual misconduct allegations against Roy Moore, O'Keefe sent out one of his undercover goons in November 2017 to the Washington Post in a half-assed attempt to peddle a fake story. The woman, named Jaime T. Phillips, approached a Post reporter claiming that Moore had impregnated her as a teenager back in 1992 while she was attending a church youth group. He then allegedly made her have an abortion. Unsurprisingly, she was keen on having the reporter confirm that Moore would lose if her story broke in an obvious attempt at catching the reporter admitting to the vast liberal conspiracy to take down God-fearing men like Moore. The reporter didn't take the bait, and found that Phillips' story was full of holes after a fact-check. In addition to later spotting her entering Project Veritas' New York office, the Post also discovered that in May 2017 Phillips foolishly started a Go-Fund-Me campaign under her own name, stating that she was moving to New York from Alabama to join a "conservative media movement" to combat the "lies and deceit of the liberal MSM". O'Keefe, of course, has refused to comment in detail.

Suspended from Twitter for doxxing and sockpuppets
On February 12, 2021, Project Veritas' Twitter account was permanently given the boot for "repeated violations of Twitter’s private information policy", after a video of one of their "reporters" confronting Facebook vice president Guy Rosen revealed his personal address.

On April 15, 2021, O'Keefe's personal Twitter account was suspended for, according to a representative, “operating fake accounts” and attempting to “artificially amplify or disrupt conversations through the use of multiple accounts”. Right-wing media figures, predictably, howled that Twitter was cancelling O'Keefe in order to (according to Donald Trump Jr.) run "interference to protect CNN", who was the subject of O'Keefe's latest expose. O'Keefe's expose reportedly involved creating a fake account in order to supposedly woo a CNN sound board guy to "tell all" about CNN's left-of-Fox News bias (as if this is new news). Apparently to conservative media, it would be shocking if a troll like O'Keefe, who creates fake Tinder accounts for their exposes, would ever create fake sockpuppets on Twitter.

Ashley Biden’s diary
In September 2020, Project Veritas announced that they were in possession of the personal diary of Ashley Biden, daughter of then candidate Joe Biden who has maintained a low public profile through her father’s career. She began keeping this diary as she underwent treatment for addiction. The diary appears to have been stolen from Biden after she had stayed in a friend’s house in the Philadelphia area. Biden had left a duffel bag of her property in this house. Later, the owner allowed a friend named Aimee Harris to stay. It appears that Project Veritas purchased the diary either from Harris or a convicted drug dealer and money launderer named Robert Kurlander. Kurlander is a known associate of a Trump donor named Elizabeth Fago, who had visited the White House twice, received an appointment to the National Cancer Advisory Board, and is the mother of a real estate agent who sold a mansion to Donald Jr. and Project Veritas then essentially attempted to extort the Biden campaign, threatening to publish the diary had he not given them an interview. This did not happen as Ashley Biden’s lawyer told Project Veritas that the diary was not abandoned but was stolen. Lawyers for project Veritas surrendered the bags to the Delary Beach Police Department who then notified the Secret Service and FBI, who subsequently raided the offices of Project Veritas.

Toxic workplace complaints and ouster from Project Veritas
As federal prosecutors were investigating the Ashley Biden diary incident, in August 2022, Project Veritas had to deal with other lawsuits filed by former employees of the organization. Perhaps unsurprisingly for an organization being run by an asshole, the lawsuits complained of a toxic workplace at Project Veritas, where work culture was "highly sexualized", daytime drinking and drug use were common, and that supervisors were sexually involved with subordinates. One of the lawsuits alleged that she was sexually assaulted at a Project Veritas Christmas party by a superior high on marijuana (and was subsequently fired for rejecting his advances). As a rather shitty aside, the same lawsuit complained that she once allegedly had to rush to buy cleaning supplies when participants in a particularly rowdy Project Veritas boat outing defecated on the floor of the boat.

Later details emerged in February 2023 which seemed to indicate that the toxic workplace issues were, by and large, the fault of O'Keefe. Reports emerged that, in addition to the frat-boy antics, O'Keefe had become incredibly paranoid and afraid of leakers, reportedly even setting up an internal "mole hunt" complete with private investigators and a lie detector test on one occasion. (Forcing an employee to submit to a polygraph is generally a violation of the federal . Plus, those things don't catch liars anyway.) O'Keefe unsurprisingly was an asshole to his staff, who were often subject to widespread "verbal abuse" and "public crucifixions" in front of donors or other employees. O'Keefe's shitty treatment of his employees (as well as some rude interactions with his donors) was actually bad enough to irritate both some of his donors as well as many members of the Project Veritas board. Ultimately, in early February 2023, this management conflict culminated in O'Keefe firing two executives critical of his "power drunk tyrant" management style, CFO Tom O'Hara and chief strategy officer Barry Ginckley.

On February 8 2023, the Project Veritas board struck back. In an emergency meeting, both executives O'Keefe had fired were reinstated; O'Keefe was placed on paid leave.

On February 20 2023, O'Keefe confirmed that the board stripped him of his title and authorities; though the exact details of the situation were unclear, it was clear that O'Keefe was no longer involved in the project he founded. Later that day, the group's board of directors released a statement that claimed (in addition to the above concerns concerning treatment of employees and donors) that it had uncovered "financial malfeasance" and accused O'Keefe of spending "an excessive amount of donor funds in the last three years on personal luxuries", including charter flights, dance events, and "black cars".

Tactics
O'Keefe's tactics are ethically questionable and yield mixed results, at best. Nonetheless, they have become increasingly popular among a variety of conservative activists. His methods are cheap, well-suited to today's media, and highly inflammatory: "[Y]oung conservatives have made a cottage industry of going undercover and trying to goad people working at perceived liberal institutions — like Acorn, NPR and Planned Parenthood — into saying something stupid." "Then they release videos that have often been heavily edited," and in turn "[c]onservative Congressional representatives call for investigations and try to slash financing."

The New York Times has the story of one of several failed "sting" attempts:

The Donald
As you might have expected, Donald Trump happens to be a fan. In 2015, he donated $20,000 to the group. Now, their videos are used by federal attorneys as "evidence" in trials of anti-Trump protesters.