Book Alleging Biden Corruption in Ukraine Lifted Passages From Wikipedia

Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

A book that has fueled corruption allegations at the center of an unfolding impeachment inquiry against President Donald Trump appears to have lifted portions of text from news articles and Wikipedia pages without proper citation or attribution.

The Daily Beast found more than a dozen instances in which Secret Empires, the bestselling book by investigative journalist Peter Schweizer, copied nearly complete sentences or sizable portions of them verbatim or near-verbatim from other sources. In a number of instances, those sources were uncited Wikipedia pages created before the books publication in early 2018.

Many of the passages included citations of the works from which language was drawn, but did not put that language in quotation marks. In one case, Schweizers book used language nearly identical to a post on a website of a prominent progressive think tank, but cited not that think tank, but a news article based on the same data.

The Daily Beast presented Schweizers spokesperson and his publisher, HarperCollins, with a detailed spreadsheet comparing the books text with that of the sources from which he appeared to have lifted language. That spokesperson, Sandy Schulz, denied that the examples constituted any sort of journalistic or academic misconduct.

This is not plagiarism, she said in an emailed statement. Secret Empires was run through Grammarlys plagiarism checker years ago. The examples you cite are trivial snatches of words occurring in a straightforward recitation of publicly available facts... If the analysis you apply to these selected passages were to become the standard, research-driven journalism, including yours, would become near-impossible.

Schweizers book unearthed extensive details of allegedly corrupt schemes involving, among others, Hunter Biden, the youngest son of Democratic presidential candidate and former Vice President Joe Biden. Schweizer's reporting has informed allegations by others, chiefly President Donald Trump, that the elder Biden helped unseat a Ukrainian prosecutor to protect a company whose board included Bidens son from investigation. That allegation has been largely debunked. But controversy spawned in large measure by Schweizer's reporting is nevertheless central to a rapidly escalating scandal that threatens to envelop the Trump administration.

None of the passages examined by The Daily Beast came from the section of the book that deals with the Bidens. The most problematic portion of Secret Empires appears to be a chapter focused on former Chicago Mayor Richard Daley. That chapter contains four passages that are largely copied from the Wikipedia page for Daleys son Patrick. The books footnotes cite news stories that are cited in the same Wikipedia page, but the language appears to be lifted from the latter.

<div class="inline-image__credit">Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast</div>
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

Three other passages in the book also appear to draw on Wikipedia pages, though with smaller sections of the sentences at issue, and in less specific language.

<div class="inline-image__credit">Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast</div>
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

Other sections of the book more directly cite the sources from which language appears to have been lifted. But those sections nonetheless copy large portions of text from those sources and do not place quotation marks around them.

A section on the family of Illinois Gov. J.B. Pritzker, for instance, draws from and cites a Chicago Tribune article about a federal clean-energy grant to a Chicago-based company with ties to the Pritzker clan. But significant portions of the passage mirror, word-for-word, language in the Tribune piece, and do not appear in quotation marks.

<div class="inline-image__credit">Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast</div>
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

The Daily Beast found five other instances in which Schweizer uses similar or identical language to sources that are cited in the text, but without denoting any direct quotation.

<div class="inline-image__credit">Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast</div>
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

In one instance, Schweizer appears to have lifted language from a piece on the website of the Center for American Progress, a prominent progressive think tank, regarding Trumps business activities abroad. The book cites not that piece but a Washington Post story on the underlying data. But Schweizers language mirrors not the Posts, but CAPs, down to the names of the same four countries, out of 18, in which Trump did business and the order in which theyre mentioned.

<div class="inline-image__credit">Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast</div>
Photo Illustration by Elizabeth Brockway/The Daily Beast

Columbia University defines intentional plagiarism to include a direct copy [and] paste of source text or a small modification by word switch. Its definition of unintentional plagiarism includes a failure to quote or block quote author's exact words, even if documented and a failure to put a paraphrase in your own words, even if documented.

Hard-and-fast definitions of plagiarism are nonetheless disputed, especially in the digital age. Both journalism and plagiarism have fallen into a murky new reality in which theres no clear consensus about the old rules. Even the authorities who make the rules disagree over basic definitions, wrote Washington Post senior editor Marc Fischer in a 2015 column in the Columbia Journalism Review. The same technology that has softened the definition of plagiarism has also made it radically easier to plagiarize, intentionally or not.

According to the acknowledgements in Secret Empires, Schweizer, who leads the nonprofit Government Accountability Institute, received assistance for the book from eight researchers and two interns.

Its not his first work to upend American politics heading into a presidential election. His previous book, the bestseller Clinton Cash, detailed extensive conflict-of-interest allegations against then-Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton. Scrutiny of her familys charitable foundation dogged Clintons candidacy until her eventual defeat.

The investigative work in Secret Empires is sure to have a similar effect if Biden wins the Democratic nomination and challenges Trump next year. But already its fueling a national scandal that has congressional Democrats eyeing impeachment proceedings against the president.

The books allegations against the Bidens were front and center in Trumps mind during a now-infamous July phone call with the new president of Ukraine, whom Trump asked to rekindle an official investigation into the elder Bidens efforts to get the former prosecutor in Kyiv fired.

Trump has also credited Schweizers work publicly, quoting and name-checking him in a recent tweet that went after Biden.

All the attention has made Schweizers book a bestseller once again, as noted by Breitbart News, where he serves as a senior contributor. Schweizers Secret Empires Rockets to #17 on Amazon 1.5 Years After Release, declared a headline Sunday.

An earlier version of this story gave the impression Schweizer had alleged a role by former vice president Joe Biden in the firing of a Ukrainian prosecutor. Schweizer has not made that allegation.

Read more at The Daily Beast.

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