As the institute • On September 23, 2004,
The New York Times'' reported "Several Islamic groups and charities...sued for defamation after (Katz) claimed they were terrorist fronts, even though they were not charged with a crime." • On 30 May 2008,
The Daily Telegraph published an online article reporting that SITE had wrongly identified footage from the
post-apocalyptic computer game
Fallout 3 as being created by terrorists considering a nuclear attack against the West. According to the article, SITE found the
Fallout 3 images in a video called
Nuclear Jihad: The Ultimate Terror, posted on two possibly al-Qaeda affiliated and password protected websites, where it also gleaned chat logs from users discussing nuclear attacks on the West. SITE released a statement to clarify its position, stating that it never claimed the images were produced by terrorists, although it didn't admit to knowing from the start that they were video game images.
The Daily Telegraph subsequently removed the article from its website.
As the group On September 2, 2014, SITE sent the video of
Steven Sotloff's beheading to its subscribers before the
Islamic State released the video. ==See also==