James O'Keefe Announces New Project After Project Veritas Ouster

James O'Keefe Announces New Project After Project Veritas Ouster
James O'Keefe, founder Project Veritas, at the Values Voter Summit in Washington on Oct. 12, 2019. Samira Bouaou/The Epoch Times
Zachary Stieber
Updated:
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Project Veritas founder James O'Keefe has announced a new media project.

The O‘Keefe Media Group was unveiled on March 15, about three weeks after O’Keefe resigned from Project Veritas following a suspension and probe into his spending practices.

“We’re going to be sending cameras into the hands of hundreds of people,” O'Keefe said on Real America’s Voice. “We’re going to be creating a citizen army of journalists.”

Project Veritas staffers and its board had maintained that O‘Keefe could return to the organization, but O’Keefe is instead forging a new path.

The Project Veritas founder said that a “small, tight-knit group” of “elite journalists” has remained by his side and is joining in the new venture.

“They have awakened a sleeping giant,” O'Keefe said in a promotional video. “I’m back.”

The business model is based on donations that will directly sponsor cameras. Tiers run from $19.99 a month to $5,000 a year.
“Let’s build this army and keep every statehouse, every city council, every school board and everywhere people are conspiring to keep power, proactive favoritism or line their pockets with tax dollars!” O'Keefe said on Twitter. “Become a founding member today!”

Exit

O'Keefe exited Project Veritas, which he founded in 2010, on Feb. 20.
O‘Keefe was suspended by the organization’s board of directors as it investigated allegations of financial malfeasance and abuse. A preliminary probe showed O’Keefe “has spent an excessive amount of donor funds in the last three years on personal luxuries,” the board said.

The board said it did not remove O'Keefe but he said he was forced out because he no longer had any authority.

The move divided staffers, some of whom had threated to leave if O‘Keefe’s alleged conduct was not addressed. Others supported O’Keefe and have moved to the new group.

“We will never replace James O’Keefe. But for now, we see it as our job to hold the torch for him while keeping the door wide open for his return,” staffers said in a statement.
Project Veritas, which specializes in undercover recordings, published an expose of a Pfizer executive shortly before O'Keefe’s exit. It has since released several investigations into educators, including a recording showing a New York professor saying he wants to kill Republican leaders.

Some supporters had said they would stop following Project Veritas since O'Keefe is no longer there.

Eric Spracklen, a Project Veritas employee, highlighted how one clip received 700,000 views over 24 hours on Twitter. “Project Veritas is dead,” he wrote sarcastically.

Project Veritas Hires Law Firm

The board said it would hire an outside firm to perform an audit of financial practices at Project Veritas. On March 3, the firm was identified as Dorsey & Whitney LLP.

“We recognize the need for an investigation that is completely free of any bias or favor. For this reason, we have engaged a leading law firm in these matters to perform this analysis and report their findings to the Board of Directors,” the board said in a statement.

“We look forward to sharing findings of this investigation when it is complete,” it added.

A timeline for the investigation has not been outlined.

Zachary Stieber
Zachary Stieber
Senior Reporter
Zachary Stieber is a senior reporter for The Epoch Times based in Maryland. He covers U.S. and world news. Contact Zachary at [email protected]
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