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Conservative provocateur James O'Keefe and his former organization Project Veritas have settled a lawsuit filed by a Pennsylvania postmaster after the group spread a Postal Service worker's false ...
Project Veritas and James O'Keefe, the former head of the conservative organization, have settled a libel lawsuit that Robert Weisenbach, the postmaster in Erie, filed over a Project Veritas ...
The postmaster sued Hopkins, Project Veritas and O'Keefe for defamation in 2021. In February 2024, O'Keefe and Project Veritas settled the lawsuit, with O'Keefe admitting in a statement that he was "aware of no evidence or other allegation that election fraud occurred in the Erie Post Office during the 2020 Presidential Election."
In 2010, O’Keefe founded Project Veritas, which identifies itself as a news organization. Its most recent IRS filings show it brought in more than $20 million in revenue in 2021.
In 2024 O'Keefe and Project Veritas settled a lawsuit against them for defamation, brought by the postmaster of Erie, Pennsylvania. [178] [179] O'Keefe and Project Veritas had alleged improprieties in Post Office handling of mail-in ballots during the November 2020 election. Subsequent investigation by the Postal Service Inspector General found ...
Project Veritas later said James “spent an excessive amount of donor funds” on “personal luxuries,” including $150,000 in black car services and a chartered flight.
The conservative group Project Veritas and its former leader are taking the unusual step of publicly acknowledging that claims of ballot mishandling at a Pennsylvania post office in 2020 were untrue.
The "Project Veritas Exposed" site seems intent on conflating O'Keefe's previous activities (ie. the ACORN incident) before Project Veritas existed with Project Veritas, but a quick search shows that O'Keefe didn't found the organization until mid-to-late 2010, after the ACORN-related lawsuits began.