Alexei Barrionuevo is 3-for-3 in Times Screw Ups
Swimming upstream, and drowning

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Alexei Barrionuevo, the Times scribe who’s been outed as, at least, a two-time plagiarist, was called out for a third article about Canada and Chile’s salmon industries. Today? The requisite correction that onlookers knew was coming.

An article on March 27 reported on a virus, infectious salmon anemia, or I.S.A., killing millions of salmon cultivated for export by Chile’s salmon farming industry. It quoted an official at the port of Castro, Chile, describing bags of fish food stored at the facility by Marine Harvest, a Norwegian company, as containing antibiotics, pigments and hormones. The official, Adolfo Flores, identified himself as the port director. He in fact worked as a security guard, The Times learned subsequently. Had The Times been aware of his actual position at the time, it would not have cited him as an authority on the contents of the bags, which were labeled medicated food. The article also should have noted that Marine Harvest and SalmonChile, an industry association, deny that they use hormones or that the pigments they use pose any risk to consumers.

May 13, 2008 · Link · Respond
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