How Jared Kushner's Newspaper Became a Favorite Outlet for WikiLeaks Election Hacks
The New York Observer, owned by Trumps son-in-law, was a friendly outlet for the 2016 Russian hackers.
BY JENNA MCLAUGHLIN | NOVEMBER 17, 2017, 12:50 PM
In the fall of 2014, Julian Assange, the embattled head of WikiLeaks, was meeting with a steady stream of supportive journalists in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he had taken refuge to avoid extradition to Sweden on sexual assault charges. Among those seeking an audience with Assange was a freelancer working for the New York Observer, the newspaper owned and published by President Donald Trumps son-in-law and key advisor, Jared Kushner.
Ken Kurson, the newspapers editor in chief along with a freelance writer hed hired helped arrange a no-holds-barred interview with Assange that October.
My editor Ken Kurson (kkurson@observer.com) and I are very interested in an interview with Julian Assange. This would be a cover story.
We will be in London the first week of October, wrote Jacques Hyzagi, a freelance reporter for the Observer, to a press consultant who arranged interviews for WikiLeaks.
Kurson, when contacted by Foreign Policy, said he did not attend that meeting and has never communicated with Assange; he insists that the profile was Hyzagis idea. We ran an interview pitched to us by a freelancer, he wrote in an email.
I have never communicated in any way with Julian Assange and this sort of fact-free, evidenceless charge is analogous to pizzagate and other totally ludicrous conspiracies, he added.
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https://foreignpolicy.com/2017/11/17/how-jared-kushners-newspaper-became-a-favorite-outlet-for-wikileaks-election-hacks/