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A former New York Times staffer quietly left the paper after revealing he had solicited charitable donations from Jeffrey Epstein

Ben Winck   

A former New York Times staffer quietly left the paper after revealing he had solicited charitable donations from Jeffrey Epstein
Stock Market2 min read

The New York Times headquarters.

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  • Former New York Times financial journalist Landon Thomas Jr. left the paper after revealing to editors he solicited charitable donations from Jeffrey Epstein, NPR reported Thursday.
  • Thomas Jr. reportedly told his editors he became friends with the disgraced financier after profiling him in 2008. He had asked Epstein to make a $30,000 donation to a Harlem cultural center in 2017.
  • The Times issued a statement confirming his exit and called his solicitation "a clear violation" of their ethics policy, NPR said.
  • Thomas' action "was a shocking lapse of journalistic standards," an unnamed source with the Times told The Daily Beast.
  • Visit the Markets Insider homepage for more stories.

A former New York Times reporter was ousted from the publication after asking convicted sex offender Jeffrey Epstein to make a $30,000 charitable donation, NPR reported Thursday.

Financial journalist Landon Thomas Jr. told his editors in summer 2018 he had become friends with Epstein after covering the financier years earlier, according to the report. He also revealed he'd convinced Epstein to donate the five-figure sum to a Harlem cultural center in 2017.

Thomas tried to convince his editors that Epstein was merely a source of information and not a subject he reported on, according to the report, but they rejected the explanation and disavowed him from any professional contact with the disgraced investor.

"This was a shocking lapse of journalistic standards," an unnamed Times insider told The Daily Beast. "It was clearly a fuck-up of epic proportions."

Thomas quietly left the paper in early 2019 in a move kept secret from most of the newsroom, according to The Daily Beast. It wasn't until NPR's Thursday scoop that the paper officially addressed the departure.

The Times said that employees could only ask for small donations from figures not being covered by the paper.

"Soliciting a donation to a personal charity is a clear violation of the policy that governs Times journalists's relationships with their sources, and as soon as editors became aware of it, they took action," a spokesperson for the paper told NPR.

The Daily Beast reported that Thomas was then "pushed out" by top business editor Ellen Pollock.

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Thomas' actions were first revealed after he was asked to interview Epstein about rumors that he was advising Tesla CEO Elon Musk. After conducting the interview, Thomas debriefed his team on The Times' business desk and revealed the solicitation to his editor, David Enrich, according to The Daily Beast.

Read the full NPR story here.

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