Avenatti PSA on journalism: Don't go public with unsubstantiated allegations

Say what you will about Micheal Avenatti, but this is actually excellent advice. It’s just that it’s, oh, 72 days late. Now that the ox-gore is in the other torso, however, Avenatti suddenly realizes the value of not regurgitating embarrassing allegations simply because someone made them.

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Somewhere, Brett Kavanaugh is laughing. Or retching.

The Free Beacon’s Natalie Johnson swooped in for the easy dunk, via Twitchy:

Say, whatever happened to Julie Swetnick, anyway? Supposedly Avenatti had several “witnesses” that would “confirm” her stories about Brett Kavanaugh running gang-rape rings in suburban Washington DC as a high-school junior. Avenatti threatened to take the case to the media at the end of September, but instead the media took the case out of Avenatti’s hide by asking the obvious question — why would Swetnick keep attending these parties and not report the crimes?

After that, the media suddenly got a lot more curious about Swetnick’s claims and Avenatti’s lack of substantiation. Megyn Kelly gave Avenatti similar advice at that time, saying that he’d better put up or shut up by filing a criminal complaint and producing confirmation. What did Avenatti think of that warning at the time? Er ….

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Avenatti then put Swetnick into an interview with NBC’s Kate Snow, which turned out to be disastrous. Swetnick contradicted the statements in the affidavit Avenatti proferred, and reported that they couldn’t confirm anything Swetnick said in either version of her story. Other than putting Swetnick on the air, NBC actually did what Avenatti now demands from journalists. Did he like those results?

The only thing Avenatti got out of his publicity-seeking Swetnick stunt was a criminal referral from the Senate Judiciary Committee for both his client and himself. That may not go far, although Avenatti had better hope the DoJ has better things to do than to confirm his role in filing false claims under oath and making them in public.

It’s great advice. Don’t expect Avenatti to see the irony or the hypocrisy in it, however.

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