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CNN’s Abby Phillip forced to correct false claim about ISIS-inspired NYC bombing

CNN host Abby Phillip issued an on-air correction after falsely telling viewers that bombs thrown by ISIS-inspired suspects in New York City targeted Mayor Zohran Mamdani. They didn’t.

The correction came after Phillip’s original claim drew swift backlash. She had described the weekend incident as “an attempted terror attack against New York’s Mayor Zohran Mamdani.” The bombs were actually thrown into a crowd of protesters and police near the mayor’s residence, not at Mamdani himself.

That distinction matters. Framing the attack as targeting the mayor turns terrorists into political assassins and the mayor into a victim. It buries the real story: ISIS-inspired suspects allegedly attacked civilians on American soil.

## The correction

As Townhall reported, Phillip posted an apology on X and then delivered an on-air correction. She said:

“This morning I issued a correction, first thing in the morning, on X for a mistake that I made in last night’s show, but I also wanted to do so on air as well. I incorrectly said that the bombs that were thrown by ISIS-inspired suspects in New York over the weekend were directed at Mayor Mamdani. They were not. I failed to catch and correct that mistake in real time, and I take full responsibility for that. And while we do make mistakes, it is important to acknowledge and correct those errors when they happen.”

Credit where it’s due: on-air corrections are rare in cable news. Jorge Bonilla, who posted the clip on X, noted the same: “We seldom see on-air corrections for on-air botches but here it is.”

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But the correction only went so far.

## What she left out

Critics noticed Phillip corrected the target of the attack but never identified who carried it out or why. Stephen L. Miller posted on X: “Notice she did not state who those bombs were intended for. Baby steps I guess.”

Republican panelist Joe Borelli pushed back directly on CNN’s air. Fox News reported that Borelli said the attack involved a suspect shouting “Allah Akbar” and throwing a bomb at protesters opposing Mamdani, not at the mayor.

“To be clear, the attack wasn’t on Mayor Mamdani.”

Borelli also warned against the false framing. The New York Post reported his blunt assessment: “To frame it as an anti-Muslim attack would actually completely reverse what happened.”

That’s exactly what the original broadcast did.

## A pattern, not a slip

Phillip wasn’t the only CNN figure who got it wrong. CNN senior reporter Edward-Isaac Dovere deleted a post that had called Mamdani a “target of political violence,” later correcting it. CNN also deleted a separate social media post about the suspects after backlash that it failed to reflect the gravity of the alleged terror plot.

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The errors all bent the same direction:

  • The mayor was cast as a victim rather than a bystander.
  • The ISIS-inspired nature of the attack was downplayed or obscured.
  • The actual targets, protesters and police, were erased from the story.

X user Steven Cook put it plainly: “Again, this wasn’t a mistake. This is them retreating to the position that if they somehow make out the violence to be directed at someone they like, they get to play the victim and not ask any tough questions about the attackers. Typical playbook.”

## The bigger picture

The Townhall article also noted a separate incident: a shooting in Austin, Texas, where a naturalized citizen from Senegal named Ndiaga Diagne allegedly opened fire on bar patrons. A clip posted by Sara Rose on March 11 quoted a panelist identified as Moynihan telling Phillip, “We’ve had 2 terrorist attacks in NYC the last 10 days.” Phillip’s response, according to the clip: “What does that have to do with whether Muslims belong in American society as a group?”

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Nobody serious argues that all Muslims are terrorists. But when ISIS-inspired suspects throw bombs at Americans, the public deserves a press corps that reports the facts straight, not one that reflexively shields preferred narratives from hard questions.

Accountability starts with honesty

Phillip’s correction was a step. But a correction that names the wrong target while still avoiding the identity and motive of the attackers is only half the job. Viewers deserve the whole truth, not a carefully edited version of it.

When the media’s first instinct after a terror attack is to find a way to make the wrong person the victim, the problem isn’t a mistake, it’s a reflex.

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