Stephen Engelberg, the editor in chief of ProPublica, said in a statement on Wednesday that ProPublica always invited people mentioned in articles to offer a response before publication.
ProPublica has run several articles in recent months about possible conflicts of interests among some Supreme Court justices.
“We were surprised to see Justice Alito’s answers appear to our questions in an opinion essay in The Wall Street Journal, but we’re happy to get a response in any form,” he said.
“We’re curious to know whether The Journal fact-checked the essay before publication,” he added.
Bill Grueskin, a professor at Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism, said that while essays on opinion pages usually got some form of fact-checking, The Journal would have been unable to do so in this case because the ProPublica investigation had not yet been published.
Persons:
Stephen Engelberg, ProPublica, “, Alito’s, ”, Misleads, Bill Grueskin
Organizations:
Street, Columbia University’s Graduate School of Journalism