Federal judge rules in favor of Raw Story in fight to access records from U.S. Navy

A federal judge categorically knocked down exemptions claimed by the U.S. Navy in a sweeping order that handed a victory to Raw Story in its effort to access records of an investigation into whether a neo-Nazi and Marine Corps veteran mishandled classified materials.

“The court agrees with Raw Story that there is substantial public interest in the requested records,” wrote Judge Loren L. AliKhan, who was appointed to the federal bench in District of Columbia in December 2023, in an order issued on Monday.

The order categorically rejected the Navy’s claims that even acknowledging whether it has the responsive records would both put national security at risk and violate the former service member’s privacy rights.

"It is crucial for Americans to have a comprehensive understanding of the military's policies and actions taken in response to domestic extremism and security," said Raw Story publisher Roxanne Cooper. "This transparency is not merely a matter of curiosity, but a cornerstone of democratic oversight and accountability. We're glad Judge AliKhan agrees."

A federal prosecutor disclosed in court that classified materials were found on an external hard drive belonging to Jordan Duncan when he was arrested in Boise, Idaho in October 2020. Duncan was arrested as part of an alleged neo-Nazi plot to launch a race war by sabotaging the power grid and carrying out an assassination campaign. The case against Duncan, who was previously stationed at Camp Lejeune in North Carolina, and four co-defendants grew out of an investigation initiated by the Naval Criminal Investigative Service.

A prosecutor acknowledged in open court that the FBI was investigating Duncan for potentially mishandling the materials.

In June, Duncan pleaded guilty to aiding and abetting the manufacturing of a firearm, and awaits sentencing in the Eastern District of North Carolina.

AliKhan directly referenced Raw Story’s motion for summary judgment in her order describing the public interest value of the records sought by the news outlet.

“Here, ‘disclosure of the requested records would likely reveal a great deal about law enforcement policy,’ including how defendants handle investigations related to the mishandling of classified information and how the ‘military is addressing extremism in its ranks,’” she wrote. “Thus, disclosure would offer the public visibility into defendants’ ‘performance of [their] statutory duties’ and would further ‘let citizens know ‘what their government is up to.’”

The Navy argued that it did not have to confirm or deny if it possesses the records because “the fact of the existence or non-existence” of the records is classified itself. AliKhan rejected that argument. The Navy had claimed that the existence of the records is classified because the records refer to classified material. But the fact that agencies routinely discuss facts about classified records negates the Navy’s claim, she said.

In a declaration cited by the Navy, a lawyer for Naval Criminal Investigative Service had asserted that if the agency were to acknowledge whether it had the records, “adversaries of the U.S. government… could use such information to better avoid detection and reveal facts about the NCIS’s counterintelligence services and defenses against foreign intelligence threats.”

AliKhan rejected that argument as “as vague and conclusory statements that could apply to any NCIS investigation.”

The judge also dismissed the Navy’s claim that the records should be withheld to protect Duncan’s privacy interests.

“Because the existence of the [Department of Justice] investigation is already public information, it is difficult to see how Mr. Duncan’s privacy interests could be significantly impacted by defendants’ disclosure of records confirming what is already in the public domain,” AliKhan wrote. She also wrote that Duncan’s privacy interests are outweighed by the strong public interest in the records.

Likewise, she wrote that the Navy can’t ignore the records request just because another agency, the Department of Justice, led the investigation into Duncan’s potential mishandling of classified documents.

“To the extent that defendants have arguments about whether the Navy has obtained or controls responsive records in its possession that were generated by DOJ,” AliKhan wrote, the agency can’t make those arguments without acknowledging that it possesses the records, which the Navy refused to do.

Stephen Stich Match, an attorney for Raw Story, hailed the order.

“This order represents a win for transparency over excessive government secrecy, as the court rejected all of the Navy’s exemptions, which involved both national security and privacy,” he said. “On national security, the court held that Navy failed to show either that whether it does (or does not) possess responsive records is a classified fact or that confirming or denying it would harm national security.

“On privacy, it held that Duncan’s privacy interests were diminished by the fact that the public already knows that the Justice Department investigated him, and that they were outweighed by the ‘substantial’ public interest in understanding how the government is addressing extremism in the military,” Match continued.

The order sets a deadline of Oct. 15 for the Navy and Raw Story to file a joint status report proposing next steps.

AliKhan said in her order that “now that the court has dispensed” with the Navy’s claim that it can neither confirm nor deny the existence of the records, it “must acknowledge the existence of responsive records, review them, and offer evidence” that the records are exempt from disclosure.

“Given the court’s order, Navy no longer has a valid basis for refusing to confirm or deny if it possesses responsive records,” Match explained. “As a next step, Navy should search for documents responsive to Raw Story’s request and produce all the documents that it believes are not exempt.”

Right-wing extremist tied to threats against Raw Story reporter arrested on gun charges

Editor's note: This article has been updated to include new details released by the U.S. Attorney's Office of the Eastern District of North Carolina and confirmation that Nix is no longer serving in the Army following the original publication of this article on Sunday, Aug. 18.

Kai Liam Nix, a 20-year-old Army soldier tied to extremist threats against a Raw Story reporter, was arrested on Aug. 15 and is being detained in a North Carolina jail on a “federal hold,” Raw Story has confirmed.

The New Yorker, which published an extensive article Sunday about right-wing extremism, further detailed that Nix’s federal charges involve “illicit sales of firearms and lying on a background check.”

Update, 5:01 p.m., Aug. 19, 2024: A federal grand jury indicted Nix — also known as Kai Brazelton — with unlawful firearms trafficking, including the sale of two stolen firearms, according to a statement Monday from the U.S. Attorney's Office of the Eastern District of North Carolina.

The grand jury also indicted Nix on making false statements to the government by allegedly lying on a security clearance application document by saying he had "never been a member of a group dedicated to the use of violence or force to overthrow the U.S. government."

The FBI; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives; and the U.S. Army Criminal Investigations Department have combined to investigate Nix's case, according to the U.S. Attorney's Office of the Eastern District of North Carolina.

Together, the charges carry a maximum penalty of 30 years in federal prison.

Update, 12:10 a.m., Aug. 21, 2024: Bryce S. Dubee, an Army spokesperson, confirmed to Raw Story that Nix "has left the Army," while referring additional questions to the Department of Justice.

Robert J. Parrott Jr., a public defender, told the New York Times "that we should avoid rushing to judgement" on Nix, adding that the defendant "looks forward to making his case in court."

The story by New Yorker reporter David Kirkpatrick links Nix to a demonstration by neo-Nazis in February outside the Greensboro, N.C., home of Raw Story reporter Jordan Green.

The article also links Nix to photographs of a bogus pizza delivery at Green’s home in January — ones circulated by extremists in an attempt to intimidate Green, who was then completing reporting on a neo-Nazi youth gang 2119, also known as the Blood and Soil Crew.

RELATED ARTICLE: Inside the neo-Nazi hate network grooming children for a race war

As detailed by the New Yorker, the license plate of a pickup truck parked outside Green’s home and containing someone surreptitiously photographing the pizza delivery traced back to Nix. The photo apparently taken by Nix was posted by a 2119 member on the social media app Telegram the day after the incident.

Nix, who is an active-duty soldier based at Fort Liberty, N.C., per the New Yorker’s reporting, was also reportedly present at the neo-Nazi demonstration in front of Green’s home in February.

RELATED ARTICLE: Florida teens tied to ‘2119’ neo-Nazi gang to plead guilty for antisemitic attacks

The New Yorker indicated that Nix photographed four men wearing skull masks holding burning flares in Hitler salutes while flanking a fifth man, who held a sign warning of a “consequence” for Green’s reporting.

The man holding the sign, Sean Kauffmann, along with two of the men making Hitler salutes — Jarrett William Smith and David Fair — had been the subject of Green’s previous reporting.

Photos of the demonstration soon appeared on a Telegram channel named Appalachian Archives.

Also posted: photos of the Nazis posing next to a historical marker commemorating the Greensboro massacre, where a coalition of Nazis and Ku Klux Klan members fatally gunned down five labor organizers in 1979.

Raw Story attempted to reach the Army to confirm Nix's service status, but did not receive a response before publication on Sunday. Messages left for the FBI and the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of North Carolina likewise went unreturned Sunday.

Raw Story wins three national awards from women’s press organization

Three Raw Story investigations by investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson won first place prizes in the National Federation of Press Women’s 2024 Professional Communications Contest.

Jacobson’s work was honored on June 22 at the organization’s national conference in St. Louis, Mo. Jacobson won first place in three categories:

  • Continuing Coverage or Unfolding News for her series with Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal, “Lawmakers, Law Breakers,” that identified at least 37 congressional violators of a federal conflicts-of-interest and financial disclosure law
  • In-depth Reporting for “Losing Track,” a three-part series about various failures of the country’s enfeebled national security vetting system
  • Specialty Articles: Education for “‘Too preposterous to be real’: College hires ‘pink slime’ publisher as journalism prof” about a Tennessee university’s controversial hire of an executive associated with a widely scrutinized conservative PAC-backed media network

“The NFPW professional communications contest puts a spotlight on outstanding entries from throughout the United States,” said Helen S. Plotkin, National Federation of Press Women professional contest director. “Our judges continue to comment about the high quality of entries they judge in the contest. The entries showcase high quality and exceptional efforts.”

Said Levinthal: “Alex has established herself as an investigative reporter whose journalism must be paid attention. Her work is exhaustive, relentless and fair, and Raw Story is honored that the National Federation of Press Women celebrated her efforts as it has.”

Raw Story investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson.

The National Federation of Press Women is a nationwide organization of women and men pursuing communications careers, including print and electronic journalism.

Nearly 2,000 contest entries were submitted from Canada and the United States across 36 states and Washington, D.C.

Jacobson’s entries previously won first place at the Illinois Woman’s Press Association’s 2024 Mate E. Palmer Professional Communications Contest before advancing to the national contest, where they earned top honors.

Her story, “‘Just sitting there’: Why a dormant government fund got another cash infusion,” won second place in the “Specialty Articles: Government or politics” category of the IWPA contest.

The National Federation of Press Women honors come during a year when Raw Story has been widely recognized for its investigative and explanatory journalism.

Earlier this month, Raw Story won four 2024 Folio Awards from the Fair Media Council for investigative reports on politics, government and extremism.

Levinthal this month also won a 2024 Dateline Award from the Society of Professional Journalists’ Washington, D.C., chapter, for a series that unveiled how South Carolina public military college The Citadel closed ranks to support honorary degree recipient Rudy Giuliani.

In April, Jacobson won the Sidney Award for her report on the shambolic state of the U.S. Postal Service's police force amid spikes in mail theft and assault on carriers.

Editor & Publisher magazine named Raw Story the best news and political blog of 2023. Other recent honors include a Best in Business Award from the Society Advancing Business Editing and Writing and an ION Award for investigative journalism.

Founded in 2004, and now celebrating its 20th anniversary, Raw Story is America’s largest independently-owned political news site.

Raw Story journalists win four 2024 Folio Awards for investigative reporting

Raw Story journalists have won four 2024 Folio Awards for their investigative reporting on politics, government and extremism, the Fair Media Council announced today at its annual luncheon on Long Island, N.Y.

Raw Story awardees include:

  • Investigative reporter Mark Alesia won the Sean. A. Fanelli Award for education news for his chilling tale about an Indiana school administrator who became the subject of death threats and national ridicule after a conservative nonprofit and Fox News teamed up to "unfairly and inaccurately" thrust her into the crucible of "culture war cruelty." Folio Award judges wrote that Alesia's report earned "high marks for relevance" and is a "well-rounded examination of the issue."
  • Editor-in-chief Dave Levinthal and congressional correspondent Matt Laslo took top honors in the public policy news category for a data-driven deep dive that revealed how the Senate Ethics Committee had failed to punish any of its Senate colleagues during its last 1,523 tries. "The topic and investigative approach to the data earned this story high marks," judges wrote.
  • Investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson and Levinthal won in the enterprise news category for their "Lawmakers, Law Breakers" series that revealed how 37 members of the current Congress last year violated a federal law designed to stop insider trading, curb financial conflicts of interest and enhance public transparency. (The number this year has grown to 46 members.) "Great topic," judges wrote.
  • Investigative reporter Jordan Green won in the January 6 coverage category for his "Our Best Face" series, which revealed how "peaceful" pro-Trump rally organizers cultivated ties to violent extremists in the weeks before the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. "Exhaustive coverage of a seminal event in American history" and "great investigative reporting," judges wrote. Last year, Green became the first journalist in Raw Story's history to win a Folio Award, doing so for his investigative reporting on extremism.

The Fair Media Council, one of the nation's oldest nonprofit news consumer advocacy organizations, describes the annual Folio Awards as "the gold standard for recognizing the best in news and social media."

"Winning four Folio Awards is an incredible honor, and it's a testament to the quality and impact of Raw Story's investigative journalism," Raw Story publisher Roxanne Cooper said.

The Folio Awards come during a year when Raw Story has been widely recognized for its investigative and explanatory journalism.

Dave Levinthal of Raw StoryRaw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal accepts four 2024 Folio Awards from the Fair Media Council at the organization's annual luncheon on June 7, 2024, in Garden City, N.Y. (Photo: Christopher Zepeda)

In April, Jacobson won the Sidney Award for her report on the shambolic state of the U.S. Postal Service's police force amid spikes in mail theft and assault on carriers. Editor & Publisher magazine named Raw Story the best news and political blog of 2023. Other recent honors include a Best in Business Award from the Society Advancing Business Editing and Writing and an ION Award for investigative journalism.

Founded in 2004, and now celebrating its 20th anniversary, Raw Story is America’s largest independently-owned political news site.

Last year, Raw Story significantly expanded its investigative and original reporting team. Hires include Levinthal, Jacobson and Alesia, as well as Executive Editor Adam Nichols, Assistant Managing Editor Kathleen Culliton, Night Editor David McAfee and Senior Editor Daniel Hampton.

'Sitting there neutered': Laughing pundit mocks Trump's hush money trial campaign tactics

Donny Deutsch believes former President Donald Trump's criminal trial is having a surprising effect, considering it involves accusations that he paid hush money to an adult film star.

"Anybody who thinks this is making him empathetic or rallying his troops, no," Deutsch said during a Monday appearance on MSNBC. "He's sitting there neutered, powerless. For the first time in his life and he can't do and say what he wants."

Deutsch argued that the nation is watching an important challenge to what he described as the former president's privilege.

"Look, here's what our system says," Deutsch said. "There's this privileged person who tried to take advantage of the law in a way you can't, and he's not above the law."

The commentator argued Trump's attempt to brand himself a renegade will end up with a label that could spell trouble for his 2024 presidential campaign: "convicted felon."

Host Nicolle Wallace was quick to agree with Deutsch's assessment of the Manhattan criminal court trial where Trump stands accused of falsifying business records in a bid to bury alleged scandals ahead of the 2016 presidential election.

"He knows that," Wallace said.

Wallace then proceeded to list the women expected to testify in the case, brought by Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg, with whom Trump had relationships she described as intimate.

"Hope [Hicks] is a close adviser who was known to steam his pants while he was wearing them," Wallace said. "A very trusted consigliere."

Deustch broke into laughter and said, "Can we get rid of that image, please?"

Deutsch later repeated his assertion that President Joe Biden's best bet for reclaiming the White House next year is a media cycle dominated by "more Trump."

ALSO READ: Bill Barr: The GOP's master 'fixer' for decades exposed

"That is what happened in 2020," Deutsch explained. "More Trump is out there. You know, in a weird and bizarre way, although I said this earlier that it makes him look neutered, it is keeping him quiet."

He explained that he wants Trump to get back out on the campaign trail to remind Americans of who he is.

"So, I like gag orders but I want to hear his voice out there, and the more he shows himself, the more Biden has a better chance of winning," Deutsch said. "So, he's in this little encampment now that contains him. Let's get him back out on the streets."

See the discussion below or at the link here.


Correction: In an earlier version of this article, Hope Hicks' first name was misspelled.

Raw Story named to Editor & Publisher's '10 to Watch' list

Editor & Publisher has named Raw Story to its 2024 "News Media's 10 to Watch" list — an honor recognizing 10 news organizations for their innovation and ingenuity.

The publication praised Raw Story's staff expansion, "deep reporting" and growth in readership and subscribers.

" Raw Story spent 2023 investing heavily in investigative and enterprise journalism, and it isn’t stopping," Editor & Publisher wrote in an article published online Thursday. "These investments aim to dramatically expand its original journalism, increase its subscriber base and enhance its overall leadership in national media."

Among the recent Raw Story investigations Editor & Publisher cited:

"With investigations like these, Raw Story will continue to be one to watch," Editor & Publisher wrote.

Said Raw Story Publisher Roxanne Cooper: "Whether it's our up-to-the-second breaking news, incisive opinion pieces or, certainly, our big investigations, we expect to give our readers many reasons throughout this pivotal election year to watch and read Raw Story."

The Alabama Media Group, Star Tribune in Minneapolis and New York Amsterdam News, one of the nation's leading Black newspapers, also appear with Raw Story on the "10 to Watch" list.

Raw Story's recognition from Editor & Publisher comes the same week the Sidney Hillman Foundation awarded investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson a prestigious Sidney Award for her months-long investigation into violence against letter carriers and a recent spike in mail-related crime.

The Sidney Award is a monthly prize for "outstanding investigative journalism that exposes social and economic injustices" and given to only one investigation nationwide per month.

Raw Story's investigative reporting has won several other national awards in recent months, including a Best in Business Award from the Society for Advancing Business Editing Writing, a Folio Award from the Fair Media Council and an ION Award. In November, Editor & Publisher named Raw Story the "best news/political blog" of 2023.

Founded in 2004, Raw Story is America’s largest independently-owned political news site.

Long known for its rapid-fire breaking news reports and commentary, Raw Story has significantly expanded its investigative and enterprise reporting team. Hires during the past year include Dave Levinthal, Executive Editor Adam Nichols, Assistant Managing Editor Kathleen Culliton, Night Editor David McAfee and investigative reporters Mark Alesia and Jacobson.

Raw Story's Alexandria Jacobson wins Sidney Award for investigation into postal crime

Raw Story investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson has won the prestigious Sidney Award for her months-long investigation into violence against letter carriers and a recent spike in mail-related crime.

Jacobson's investigation, "Letter carriers face bullets and beatings while postal service sidelines police," prompted immediate reaction from federal lawmakers who called on Congress to pass legislation that helped enhance safety for postal workers and the mail itself.

“Jacobson’s meticulous reporting casts a light on the risks faced by letter carriers and the official indifference to their wellbeing on the job,” Sidney Award judge Lindsay Beyerstein said Wednesday. “This story makes it clear how the security of letter carriers affects not only the workers involved but all of us in terms of the scale of thefts and fraud.”

The Sidney Award is a monthly prize, sponsored by the Sidney Hillman Foundation, for "outstanding investigative journalism that exposes social and economic injustices" and given to only one investigation per month.

Other recent recipients of the Sidney Award include journalists from the Associated Press, New York Times, New Yorker, Washington Post, Wall Street Journal and San Francisco Chronicle.

"Alex's investigation combines the the best of data journalism and shoe-leather reporting into a decidedly human story that genuinely affects anyone who uses the U.S. mail," Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal said. "In reporting this story, Alex faced numerous obstacles over several months and overcame them all."

Raw Story's investigative reporting has won several national awards in recent months, including a Best in Business Award from the Society for Advancing Business Editing Writing, a Folio Award from the Fair Media Council and an ION Award. In November, Editor & Publisher named Raw Story the "best news/political blog" of 2023.

Founded in 2004, Raw Story is America’s largest independently-owned political news site.

Long known for its rapid-fire breaking news reports and commentary, Raw Story has significantly expanded its investigative and enterprise reporting team. Hires during the past year include Levinthal, Executive Editor Adam Nichols, Assistant Managing Editor Kathleen Culliton, Night Editor David McAfee and investigative reporters Mark Alesia and Jacobson.

Raw Story wins 2023 'Best in Business' journalism award, earns two honorable mentions

Raw Story investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson and Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal today won a 2023 Best in Business Award for their ongoing "Lawmakers, Law Breakers" series that's revealed how dozens of members of Congress have violated a federal law designed to stop insider trading and curb conflicts of interest.

The award, sponsored by the Society for Advancing Business Editing and Writing, comes in the contest's personal finance category.

Judges wrote of the "Lawmakers, Law Breakers" series: "In this well-executed investigation, Alexandria Jacobson and Dave Levinthal reveal that 37 members of Congress failed to properly disclose personal stock trades in just one year. Their dogged reporting effort raises important questions about the adequacy and policing of financial conflict-of-interest laws designed to give Americans confidence in their lawmakers’ impartiality."

Raw Story reporters also earned two honorable mentions in the 2023 Best in Business Awards.

Investigative reporter Mark Alesia received an honorable mention in the explanatory category for his "Monuments to Me" investigation about how former politicians use surplus campaign cash to bolster their legacies.

"The reporting includes sleuthing into under-reported public filings and holding political leaders accountable for their spending. It is a fascinating deep dive into how these leftover zombie funds are being used," judges wrote of Alesia's work.

Jacobson received an honorable mention in the government category for her "Losing Track" series, which revealed major weaknesses in the federal government's security clearance systems.

"This is an important but much overlooked and taken for granted area that calls for more scrutiny, especially given the new relevance with the investigations into former President Trump’s alleged mishandling of classified documents," judges wrote of Jacobson's series.

Founded in 2004, Raw Story is America’s largest independently-owned political news site. In November, Editor & Publisher named Raw Story the "best news/political blog" of 2023.

Long known for its rapid-fire breaking news reports and commentary, Raw Story has significantly expanded its investigative and enterprise reporting team. Hires during the past year include Levinthal, Executive Editor Adam Nichols, Assistant Managing Editor Kathleen Culliton, Night Editor David McAfee and investigative reporters Jacobson and Alesia.

Raw Story sues OpenAI for violating Copyright Act

NEW YORK — Raw Story, America’s largest independent progressive news site, today filed suit against OpenAI for using thousands of Raw Story’s news articles to train ChatGPT in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

“Raw Story’s copyright-protected journalism is the result of significant efforts of human journalists who report the news,” said Raw Story Publisher Roxanne Cooper. “Rather than license that work, OpenAI taught ChatGPT to ignore journalists’ copyrights and hide its use of copyright-protected material.”

Raw Story is a trusted source of breaking political news and investigative journalism, whose mission is to surface underreported news and expose political hypocrisy. Begun as a small, one-man political blog, Raw Story grew to become the largest independent progressive news website in America. Today, more than 1,000,000 daily readers consume Raw Story journalism.

“It is time that news organizations fight back against Big Tech’s continued attempts to monetize other people’s work,” said Raw Story CEO and founder John Byrne. “For 20 years, Raw Story has spent millions of dollars in efforts to help Americans make important decisions about their leaders and their lives. Big Tech has decimated journalism. It’s time that publishers take a stand.”

Raw Story’s lawsuit, filed alongside suits by The Intercept and AlterNet, follows a complaint filed by The New York Times alleging massive copyright infringement. The suit is case 24-cv-01514, Raw Story Media, Inc. et al v. OpenAI, Inc. et al.

For two decades Raw Story has focused on political hypocrisy, white nationalists and domestic extremists. It received acclaim for its coverage of the Proud Boys in the lead-up to the Jan. 6, 2021 U.S. Capitol attack. Raw Story’s expose on a neo-Nazi youth network was featured in last week’s Washington Post.

In 2016, Raw Story’s Arun Gupta was on the scene when Oregon State Patrol shot and killed a militant who occupied an Oregon state park. Raw Story’s recent investigations have pursued neo-Nazis and the Proud Boys, who went largely ignored by the mainstream media until the Capitol riot.

Editor & Publisher has published several articles focused on Raw Story’s reporting. In 2022, E&P celebrated Raw Story reporter Jordan Green’s courageous reporting in the feature article, “At the Front Lines, on the Homefront — Domestic extremism deserves astute, relentless coverage, but there are few journalists on the beat.” According to E&P, Raw Story “predicted exactly what would happen that fateful day” of January 6, 2021, the morning of the U.S. Capitol riot.

Raw Story is also known for its breaking news summaries, which are valuable for AI models because they help train systems to summarize reports. Over the last 20 years, Raw Story has produced more than 200,000 articles, thousands of which were included in data sets used by OpenAI.

Raw Story reporters and editors are part of the Washington-Baltimore News Guild, which also represents the editorial staff of The Washington Post. The site’s breaking news model, begun in 2004, seeded the formation of other digital publishers. In recent years, Raw Story innovated to support hybrid free and paid investigative journalism, providing a blueprint for expanding critical investigative news reporting. It was named the best news/political blog in America by Editor & Publisherin both 2022 and 2023.

“The news industry has been subject to the whims of tech billionaires for two decades,” added Raw Story founder John Byrne. “We will not stand idly by as yet another wunderkind skims billions of dollars of profit from important human work.”

Contact:

John Byrne, CEO
john@rawstory.com

Raw Story reporter stalked by Nazis exposes plot by nationwide Nazi youth network

WASHINGTON — Raw Story today revealed how a neo-Nazi organization led by teenagers has launched a multi-state campaign of violence aimed at Jews, African Americans, LGBTQ+ people and leftists.

The organization, known as 2119, aspires to even greater acts of terror, Raw Story reports in a 6,500-word investigative article headlined “Inside the neo-Nazi hate network grooming children for a race war.

The four-month investigation is accompanied by a first-person account by its author, Raw Story reporter Jordan Green, of how neo-Nazis and other extremists have attempted to stop him from pursuing and publishing information about 2119.

“Green unearthed shocking, essential truths about dangerous extremists at significant personal risk,” said Dave Levinthal, editor-in-chief of Raw Story, the nation’s largest independently owned progressive news website. “His reporting today underscores the power — and peril — of independent, investigative journalism at a time when press freedoms are under constant attack and fascist ideologies creep into the mainstream.”

Extremists’ actions against Green include death threats, online doxxing and visiting his house earlier this month dressed in skull masks and holding burning flares.

As Green writes in “Hunted by Nazis: How extremists stalked me while I reported on their violence,” the threats white supremacists have directed at him “would become ever more extreme — and strange.

“The experience was unsettling, but their efforts at intimidation only confirmed in my mind that we had a story that was worth telling,” Green writes.

Green’s ordeal in exposing a violent neo-Nazi group are emblematic of dangers journalists across the nation face while exposing wrongdoing, from corruption in government to plotting by hate groups.

A second Raw Story article about the Nazi youth network to be published Feb. 21 explores the roles parents play in the lives of 2119 members.

Raw Story celebrates its 20th anniversary this year. The site significantly expanded its investigative and original reporting team in 2023, redoubling its commitment to journalism focused on domestic extremism, political malfeasance and government accountability.

“Violent extremists threaten our freedoms and the very foundation of democracy,” said Raw Story CEO and founder John Byrne. “The nation is a better place because of Jordan Green’s courageous reporting. Raw Story is proud to support journalism that matters.”

In August, Raw Story filed a federal Freedom of Information Act lawsuit against the Navy and U.S. Department of Defense following the agencies’ refusal to release records related to a former U.S. Marine and avowed neo-Nazi.

Green, who joined Raw Story in 2021, reports on extremism full-time and has regularly broken national news stories. Last year, he won a Folio Award from the Fair Media Council for his investigative reporting on extremism in America.

Green revealed that a Marine Corps veteran and former defense contractor facing prosecution for his role in a neo-Nazi terror plot is suspected by the government of mishandling classified documents.

He also reported that a former soldier convicted of distributing bomb-making instructions and advocating for the assassination of former Rep. Beto O’Rourke (D-TX) menaced a drag show at an LGBTQ community center in North Carolina.

Green’s reporting on the January 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol ranks as among the most incisive in the nation. On the morning of the Jan. 6 attack, Green wrote an article headlined “We’re gonna kill Congress.” As Editor & Publisher later noted, Green’s story predicted “exactly what would happen on that fateful day.”

Contact: Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal, levinthal@rawstory.com

'Crashing together': Trump, Congress and courts headed for a collision

Key decisions in Congress, courts and the ballot box will all crash together "in a most profound way," Raw Story Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal predicted today.

"And it begins in earnest," Levinthal told "A New Morning" host Susan Rose on WBEN-AM 930.

At stake in Congress: the fate of funding for federal government agencies, Southern border policies and support for Ukraine and Israel. A government shutdown is again in play.

ALSO READ: Five unresolved questions surrounding the Jan. 6 attack

Meanwhile, former President Donald Trump will face rivals that include Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis and former South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley in the Iowa Caucus and New Hampshire primary.

Trump will also face a bevy of early 2024 court dates on matters that range from his eligibility for certain state primary ballots to criminal charges pending against him.

“My goodness, if you got a shiny calendar that you got for Christmas for 2024 you’ve got about 75 dates right off the bat that you’ve got to circle on it.”

Among those dates to circle:

• January 6: Third anniversary of the attack on the U.S. Capitol

• January 15: Iowa Caucuses (Republican)

• January 19: Funding runs out for some government agencies, including the departments of Agriculture, Energy and Transportion

• January 23: New Hampshire primary

• February 2: Funding runs out for other government agencies, including the Department of Defense

• February 8: Nevada Caucuses

• February 24: South Carolina primary (Republican)

• March 4: Scheduled start of Trump's trial in the federal case charging him with attempting to overturn the 2020 presidential election

• March 5: Super Tuesday presidential primaries

“If you’re looking for a placid beginning for your 2024 in the New Year, sorry guys," Levinthal said. "You’re not going to get it.”

Listen to the full interview here or below.

Why members of Congress keep breaking financial laws over and over again

Throughout 2023, federal lawmakers kept introducing a steady stream of bills designed to stop congressional stock trading.

At the same time, their colleagues continued breaking existing financial disclosure and conflicts-of-interest laws.

Nothing has come of those bills yet, but Raw Story has identified at least 37 members of Congress this year who violated federal law by not properly disclosing their personal finances as required by the Ethics in Government Act of 1978 and the Stop Trading on Congressional Knowledge (STOCK) Act of 2012.

"These laws matter in a large part for public trust and transparency," said Raw Story investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson on "The Julie Mason Show" on SiriusXM's POTUS Politics channel Tuesday.

Jacobson's latest reporting found another 11 members of Congress, including embattled Rep. George Santos (R-NY), who all failed to properly file their annual financial disclosure reports on time.

"We find these violations happen on both sides of the aisle," Jacobson said, noting that of the 11 who didn't file on time, seven were Democrats and four were Republicans.

Santos, who is facing numerous criminal charges and expulsion from the U.S. House, didn't file at all.

One of the original authors of the STOCK Act, former Rep. Brian Baird (D-WA) called out his former colleagues earlier this year for their "dog ate my homework excuses" for not following the laws and the lack of consequences enforced by congressional ethics committees.

"The House Ethics Committee certainly could act and enforce consequences for these violations of federal laws, but oftentimes, they don't. Either the fees get waived, or they just pay a nominal $200 fee for not being transparent and following the law," Jacobson said.

Other Raw Story reporting this year revealed a handful of members of congressional Armed Services Committees who owned defense contractor stock, such as Sens. Markwayne Mullin (R-OK) and Tommy Tuberville (R-AL) and Rep. Bill Keating (D-MA).

"It’s definitely a lot of labor, but we think it’s very important for the public to be able to know this information, and we’re happy to dig into that and share that," Jacobson said.

In October, Jacobson won first prize in the ION Awards contest for investigative journalism for her reporting on the personal finances of public officials.

Listen to the full interview:

Raw Story named 'best news/political blog' of 2023 by Editor & Publisher magazine

Editor & Publisher magazine has awarded Raw Story a 2023 EPPY Award as the "best news / political blog" among all news sites with 1 million or more unique monthly visitors.

Raw Story was judged on its "overall content regarding news and politics — with focus on analysis and insight as well as wit and wisdom" as well as a submitted portfolio of published articles.

"Being acknowledged alongside some of the nation's most respected news outlets is a privilege," Raw Story Publisher Roxanne Cooper said. "I'm especially proud in the investigative projects we've undertaken in the past year — all made possible by the steadfast support of our loyal subscribers."

Among the articles included in Raw Story's entry portfolio:

  • An investigation by Editor-in-Chief Dave Levinthal and congressional correspondent Matt Laslo into failures by the U.S. Senate Select Committee on Ethics to issue a single formal punishment in 16 years, despite fielding 1,523 complaints and launching 204 preliminary inquiries into alleged misdeeds among senators and Senate staffers.
  • A damning, deeply reported column by Donnell Alexander on the "deafening silence" by U.S. Sen. Tommy Tuberville's former football players amid his public embrace of white nationalists.
  • An exposé by investigative reporter Jordan Green about how the federal government had quietly banned a violent January 6 attack participant from Tennessee nuclear power facilities where he worked but hadn't charged or arrested him despite "bevy of evidence that he illegally entered the U.S. Capitol in a manner that’s resulted in charges against hundreds of other rioters." Less than three months after Green's story published, the FBI arrested the man, William Beals, and charged him with several counts related to his participation in the attack on the U.S. Capitol.
  • A first-person narrative from Levinthal — based on numerous internal records obtained through the South Carolina Freedom of Information Act and extensive interviews — about how storied military college The Citadel "camouflaged its connection to Rudy Giuliani" and deflected attention from its refusal to rescind an honorary degree it awarded the legally and ethically troubled former New York City mayor and Donald Trump lawyer.

Other 2023 EPPY Award winners include NBC News, USA Today, ProPublica, the Boston Globe and the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists.

This is the third major award Raw Story has won in 2023 for its journalism.

In June, Green received a 2023 Folio Award from the Fair Media Council for his reporting on extremism in the aftermath of the January 6 attack.

In October, investigative reporter Alexandria Jacobson won first prize in the 2023 ION Awards contest for her series of exclusive reports about members of Congress violating a federal law designed to stop insider trading, curb financial conflicts of interest and enhance public transparency.

This is also Raw Story's second EPPY Award during its 19-year history, having earned honors in 2022 for a gripping, tell-all column, "How I left the far right," by Dakota Adams, the son of former Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes.

Founded in 2004, Raw Story is America’s largest independently-owned political news site.

Long known for its rapid-fire breaking news reports and commentary, Raw Story has this year significantly expanded its investigative and original reporting team. Hires this year include Levinthal, Executive Editor Adam Nichols, Assistant Managing Editor Kathleen Culliton, Night Editor David McAfee, investigative reporters Jacobson and Mark Alesia and news writer M.L. Nestel.

Raw Story adds new assistant managing editor, news writer

Raw Story, America’s largest independently-owned political news site, has hired a new assistant managing editor and news writer as it continues to expand its breaking news and investigative reporting staffs.

Assistant Managing Editor Kathleen Culliton comes from New York City Patch, where she served as the local news outlet's managing editor for New York City.

Culliton has covered local and national news for more than a decade for outlets that include the New York Post, Al Jazeera, DNAinfo New York, Bustle, the New York Daily News, WNYC, NY1 and City Limits. Kathleen is an alumna of the CUNY Graduate School of Journalism and originally hails from New York City.

Veteran news writer M.L. Nestel brings deep reporting experience to Raw Story, having previously worked at Newsweek, ABC News, The Daily Beast, The Daily Mail, The New York Post, The New York Daily News and Newsday.

"I'm so excited to add Kathleen and M.L. to the team," said Executive Editor Adam Nichols. "Between them, they bring a depth of experience and talent that is going to be invaluable to fulfilling Raw Story's mission of bringing vital news to our readers quickly and accurately."

Since January, Raw Story has made several key hires in an effort to expand its original reporting and national reach. Among them: Editor-in-chief Dave Levinthal, investigative reporters Alexandria Jacobson and Mark Alesia, night editor David McAfee and Nichols.

This year, Raw Story investigative reporter Jordan Green won a 2023 Folio Award for his reporting on extremism while Jacobson won first prize in the ION Awards contest for her series of exclusive reports about members of Congress violating a federal law designed to stop insider trading, curb financial conflicts of interest and enhance public transparency.

Raw Story has also aggressively pursued stories through legal means, including the frequent filing of Freedom of Information Act and state-level open records requests, and suing the federal government when it refuses to release records to which the public should have access.

Contact: Executive Editor Adam Nichols, nichols@rawstory.com