James O'Keefe leaves Project Veritas after overturned firings, employee complaints



Project Veritas founder James O'Keefe has reportedly resigned, according reporter Neil McCabe of One America News.

McCabe reported on Twitter that O'Keefe read a resignation letter to his staff and board members at the company's headquarters:

"Exclusive: James O'Keefe III, my friend and former boss at Project Veritas, just read his resignation letter to his former team and board members at their Mamaroneck, N.Y. headquarters. James will make his own way—as he always has before," said McCabe.

\u201cExclusive: @JamesOKeefeIII, my friend and former boss at @Project_Veritas, just read his resignation letter to his former team and board members at their Mamaroneck, N.Y. headquarters. James will make his own way\u2014as he always has before. @OANN\u201d
— ReporterMcCabe (@ReporterMcCabe) 1676911734

McCabe told the Daily Beast that O'Keefe "just resigns and walks out the door to start a new life." “Now we’ll see: Does the organization he created survive?" McCabe added.

Another colleague of O'Keefe however, R.C. Maxwell, claims that O'Keefe was "removed" from Project Veritas.

"This is not accurate. James was removed from his position as CEO by the Project Veritas board. They are in charge now," Maxwell said on Twitter.

\u201cThis is not accurate.\n\nJames was removed from his position as CEO by the Project Veritas board.\n\nThey are in charge now\u201d
— R.C. Maxwell \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8 (@R.C. Maxwell \ud83c\uddfa\ud83c\uddf8) 1676914713

Maxwell reported for Project Veritas as recently as three weeks before O'Keefe's alleged ousting.

Less than two weeks before his exit, O'Keefe was placed on paid leave after employees signed a letter condemning some of the founder's actions.

Executive director of Project Veritas Daniel Strack said at the time that O'Keefe was taking “a few weeks of well-deserved [paid time off].”

Prior reports stated that Project Veritas was deeply divided among board members and employees, with some sticking with O'Keefe and others complaining about his leadership.

A third of the company's employees reportedly wrote an internal memo claiming that O'Keefe had been particularly mean to some of them. Employees said they felt “publicly humiliated” by O'Keefe, suffering through what was described as “public crucifixions.”

“I would describe Project Veritas’ current environment with this saying: ‘The beatings will continue until morale improves,’” a staffer wrote in the memo.

Two executives who were fired by O'Keefe were also reportedly reinstated when he was put on leave.

Five days before his departure, Project Veritas remarked on Twitter that "of course James O'Keefe III is alive and well. Why wouldn’t he be? We’re sure many of you can agree, there is nothing better than enjoying a well deserved vacation."

\u201cOf course @JamesOKeefeIII is alive and well. Why wouldn\u2019t he be? \n\nWe\u2019re sure many of you can agree, there is nothing better than enjoying a well deserved vacation.\u201d
— Project Veritas (@Project Veritas) 1676487647

Maxwell has not yet responded to a request for comment; McCabe was unavailable for comment as well.

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Video: 'Evil' curriculum salesman caught violating CRT ban doubles down on comments while also claiming he was 'taken out of context,' Project Veritas reports



In a new video released by Project Veritas, a self-described "evil salesman," who admitted to violating Georgia laws by selling school districts curricula that contained critical race theory teachings, accused the news organization of taking his statements "out of context" while simultaneously doubling down on his remarks.

Project Veritas released a series of videos this week of curriculum salesman Dr. Quintin Bostic admitting to an undercover journalist that he disguises critical race theory teachings as diversity, equity, and inclusion.

"If you don't say the word 'critical race theory,' you can technically teach it," Bostic stated in one of the videos posted by the organization earlier this week.

Bostic admitted that the state government and the school districts are unaware that his curriculum contains critical race theory concepts.

At one point, Bostic referred to himself as "an evil salesman."

Bostic, who is also a content manager for Teaching Lab, a nonprofit organization "with a mission to fundamentally shift the paradigm of teacher professional learning for educational equity," referred to his employer as "a scam lab."

He accused the organization of secretly running a "for profit" by selling products produced with grant funding.

"My boss [Teaching Lab CEO Sarah Johnson] is a freaking psychopath. … She's running a nonprofit but it's for profit," Bostic said.

Teaching Lab released a statement in response to Bostic's claims, saying in part, "Project Veritas, a widely discredited activist group, released deceptively produced and edited videos of a Teaching Lab employee. The views expressed by the employee in these recordings are not the views of Teaching Lab, and are inaccurate and regrettable."

Even though the organization claimed the undercover videos produced by Project Veritas were deceptive, the nonprofit added that Bostic "has been placed on administrative leave pending further review."

Teaching Lab also denied Bostic's allegations that the organization sold grant-funded products.

Project Veritas released a third video on Thursday in which the organization founder, James O'Keefe, confronts Bostic about claims he made while secretly being filmed by an undercover journalist.

O'Keefe asked Bostic why he referred to himself as an "evil salesman," to which Bostic replied that "it's just a word I use."

Bostic initially denied referring to Teaching Lab as "a scam lab." He then explained that his remarks were "definitely taken out of context."

"If I publish every second of my conversation with you, you will still say that it's out of context," O'Keefe argued.

"I could," Bostic replied. "You don't have any background understanding of the work that I do, the 'why' behind my work, and things of that sort."

The curriculum salesman defended his deceptive practices as "good work" and said it does not bother him that he is hiding CRT curriculum from the public.

Bostic said that he does not believe his actions are against the law. However, he noted that if his work were found to be illegal, he would "figure out how to navigate around that."

"You cannot teach critical race theory to kindergarteners, let's be very clear when I say that. Critical race theory is a framework that help us to guide conversations about race and racism," Bostic stated.

O'Keefe then asked, "But is that what you're doing through the guise of DEI, per your own words?"

Bostic confirmed again that CRT teachings are hidden within DEI.

He also noted that Georgia banned schools from teaching CRT, but it has not outlawed each individual concept rooted in CRT.

"The state of Georgia does not have a rule that says we should not teach students to see color," Bostic explained as an example.

O'Keefe replied, "It says, 'critical race theory.'"

"Exactly," Bostic stated.

\u201cICYMI: @JamesOKeefeIII sat down with @TeachingLabHQ Director @DrQuintinBostic \n\nYou\u2019re going to want to see this if you haven\u2019t yet. \n\n#ScamLab\u201d
— Project Veritas (@Project Veritas) 1674191889

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Project Veritas tapes reveal CNN chief Zucker calling shots for anti-Trump network's coverage, setting companywide political agenda



Leaked audiotapes of CNN's 9 a.m. editorial calls published by Project Veritas reveal CNN President Jeff Zucker and other top executives and reporters at the network say in private what their coverage suggests: CNN's editorial viewpoint is anti-Trump and directed from the top down by Zucker.

The audiotapes were obtained and released by self-styled "guerrilla journalist" James O'Keefe, who on Tuesday morning announced that Project Veritas had been secretly recording CNN's morning call with Zucker for two months and would soon begin releasing the tapes. O'Keefe made his announcement while livestreaming CNN's Tuesday call, at one point interrupting the call to inform Zucker of what he'd done and ask for comment.

"This is yet another investigation Project Veritas has conducted into CNN, and once again they've demonstrated their partisan political agenda and total disconnect with journalistic ethics," O'Keefe said.

In response, CNN communications said that the company has referred O'Keefe's video to law enforcement, tweeting that "legal experts" say he may have committed a felony.

@JamesOKeefeIII @Project_Veritas @CNN Legal experts say this may be a felony. We‘ve referred it to law enforcement.
— CNN Communications (@CNN Communications)1606862328.0

Project Veritas on Tuesday published several clips from CNN's calls, promising to release more in the coming days. The clips, which have been selectively edited to highlight certain quotes from CNN's editorial team, show Zucker criticizing President Donald Trump's behavior, directing CNN's editorial team to be critical of Sen. Lindsey Graham (R-S.C.), and show CNN general counsel David Vigilante call Fox News host Tucker Carlson's program "the white supremacy hour."

The audio shows Zucker guiding CNN's editorial coverage in a way that is typically reserved for editors or an editor-in-chief, not necessarily a company president.

During one 9 a.m. call on Oct. 9, Zucker told CNN staff not to "normalize" Trump's "erratic" behavior as the president was recovering from his bout with the coronavirus, suggesting without evidence that Trump's medical treatment was influencing his mood and actions.

"OK, I just want to re-emphasize that, you know, I think we cannot normalize what has happened here in the last week with Trump and his behavior," Zucker said. "And I go back to what [CNN political Director] David, David Chalian said, that this is a president who knows he's losing, who knows he's in trouble, is sick, maybe is on the after-effects of steroids or not. I don't know, but he is acting erratically and desperately, and we need to, we need to not normalize that. ... He is all over the place and acting erratically. And I think we need to lean into that."

BREAKING: @CNN President BLASTS Trump & Republicans on 9am Call with Senior Leadership'He(@realDonaldTrump) is ac… https://t.co/1gv5IrQ99I
— James O'Keefe (@James O'Keefe)1606870811.0

In another conference call on Oct. 16, Zucker appears to suggest to CNN staff that the network shouldn't cover the Hunter Biden email scandal reported by the New York Post days prior, saying, "I don't think that we should be repeating unsubstantiated smears just because the rightwing media suggests that we should." He also dismissed reporting from conservative media on the "unmasking" of President Trump's transition team by Obama administration officials as "completely nonsensical." The day prior on Oct. 15, a Department of Justice probe into the unmasking scandal concluded without any charges filed.

On Nov. 10, during an apparent discussion on Trump's refusal to concede the election and the delayed presidential transition, CNN field producer Stephanie Becker suggested that details from the 9/11 Commission Report about how the 2000 presidential election dispute hampered the presidential transition should be part of CNN's reporting.

"On the issue of why it's important to get the transition going right, the 9/11 report talks about one of the problems was that the trouble that was brewing that [got] lost during the transition," Becker said. "So, if you want a good, concrete example of what happens when you don't have a good transition, well, look at the Twin Towers."

Zucker agreed, encouraging CNN reporters to emphasize that point.

"Yeah, so I think that's an important point," Zucker said. "I think it was just a little bit yesterday in terms of national security. I think it's really important to raise again. ... I would encourage folks to think about that 9/11 Commission Report and the lack of transition."

A week later on a Nov. 17 call, following reports that Sen. Lindsey Graham had pressured Georgia election officials to discard ballots, Zucker said that CNN had made a "mistake" in that "our banners [chyrons] have been too polite, and we need to go well after Lindsey Graham."

"There's a ton going on. Let's stay strong. Let's stay newsy. Let's stay urgent. Let's be smart. There is a lot of news out there, and Lindsey Graham really deserves it," he added.

According to Fox News, CNN several published several articles on Nov. 17 about Graham, including one accusing him of "crossing the line" to defend Trump.

The leaked editorial calls show Zucker having a heavy hand in influencing how CNN covers the news.

In another clip, CNN general counsel David Vigilante accused Tucker Carlson of "naked racism" and said that Fox News gives Carlson a platform to host a white supremacy hour every night on TV.

"Yeah, I was just going to say, if you're going to talk about the story, I think it's unavoidable that you have to talk about the naked racism of Tucker Carlson. Because that's really what drove this anti-diversity push, you know, Trump watches Tucker Carlson's show and then reacts. And just as sort of the white supremacy hour they have on Fox News every night, I think it's the — you can't disconnect the two," Vigilante said.

It is unclear what story he was referring to, but on the night before on Sep. 7, Carlson delivered a monologue criticizing critical race theory in reaction to President Trump's executive order halting the controversial theory's use in diversity training for federal employees.

O'Keefe said the statements made by Zucker and other top executives on CNN's morning calls show "they are simply not interested in being unbiased when reporting on the news."

"Calling Tucker Carlson a racist and demanding CNN employees to attack Lindsey Graham is outrageous and unprofessional behavior," he said.

TheBlaze reached out to CNN for comment but did not hear back before publication.