Wired News Pulls Freelancer's Space Stories
By Rachel Konrad
Associated Press
posted: 10 August 2006
01:13 pm ET

http://space.com/news/060810_ap_wired_fake.html


SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -- Online technology publication Wired News removed 
three articles from its Web site Wednesday after editors couldn't 
confirm the authenticity of at least one source.

All three stories were written by freelancer Philip Chien, a Florida 
author and space enthusiast who quoted and cited Robert Ash. In the 
articles, published in June and July, Chien described Ash as a "space 
historian'' and an "aeronautical engineer and amateur space historian.''

When a Wired News senior editor telephoned Ash to verify the quotation, 
Ash said he was not a space historian and never conducted an interview 
with Chien.

Ash is a professor in the aerospace engineering department of Old 
Dominion University in Norfolk, Va., and had been involved in numerous 
NASA projects. He did not respond to telephone calls and an e-mail 
Wednesday from The Associated Press.

Chien, a freelance writer who has worked for online, print and 
television news outlets, is the author of a book on the Columbia space 
shuttle disaster. He wrote two stories for Wired News in 2004 and five 
in the past several months.

Chien said Wednesday that Wired News editors didn't give him an adequate 
opportunity to defend his sourcing before pulling his articles.

"They informed me they were going to do it but didn't give me any 
notice,'' Chien said in a phone interview with The AP. "Things have been 
distorted and taken out of context, but I don't want to say anything 
more than that.''

Wired News requires all freelancers to provide e-mail addresses and 
phone numbers for everyone quoted or cited in stories. The contact 
information Chien provided for Ash was a free Hotmail account that 
included the name Robert Stevens in the address.

Editors became suspicious when they realized that Chien had quoted a man 
named Robert Stevens in at least three articles he wrote for newspapers, 
referring to him variously as a retired engineer, a NASA engineer and an 
amateur astronomer.

Wired News editors were also suspicious about another of Chien's sources 
in the space industry, a man named Ted Collins. Editors traced Collins' 
ostensible Hotmail account to an Internet forum about the space shuttle, 
in which Collins praised Chien's book, "Columbia: Final Voyage.''

"I've seen a bunch of Phil Chien's stories online and always enjoyed his 
insightful questions in the press conferences, but hadn't heard that he 
had written a book,'' the posting read. It included a link to Chien's 
Web site and inquired whether the accompanying CD-ROM would be available 
through Amazon.com.

In an explanation e-mailed to Wired News, Chien acknowledged he created 
the Ted Collins' Hotmail account and used it in an attempt to mislead 
editors. Chien said Collins died in 1997, but said he liked his quotes 
so much he wanted to use them posthumously in the past three months.

The incident comes just over a year after another sourcing problem for 
Wired News.

In May 2005, Wired News acknowledged it could not verify the accuracy or 
authenticity of roughly 160 news stories by freelance journalist 
Michelle Delio of New York City. Editors said they could not prove the 
existence of more than 40 people quoted in Delio's articles, which 
covered subjects ranging from computer viruses to the Sept. 11, 2001, 
terrorist attacks.

That episode resulted in strict sourcing policies for Wired News 
freelancers, who must now turn in contact information for anyone quoted 
or cited in any article.

"It's regrettable, obviously, that this happened,'' said Wired News 
editor-in-chief Evan Hansen. "But at the same time it speaks to the 
processes we've put in place.''




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