Right-wing commentator and congressional candidate Burgess Owens frequently shared content from conspiracy theorist Alex Jones and his Infowars website. In one instance, Owens promoted an anti-Muslim smear against Gold Star father Khizr Khan that claimed that he might share responsibility for the 9/11 attacks and the death of his son in Iraq.
Media Matters previously documented that Owens, who is running for Congress in Utah's 4th Congressional District, plagiarized numerous passages in his book Why I Stand. In May, Owens appeared on a QAnon program and asked for money and support for his campaign. (He did not directly talk about the violence-linked conspiracy theory, which the FBI has said is a potential terrorist threat, but attacked Democrats as evil, among other things.)
Owens has also pushed anti-immigrant and conspiratorial rhetoric. In 2019, he praised and helped raise money for the allegedly fraudulent group We Build the Wall. During that fundraising appearance, Owens denigrated the character of undocumented immigrants and claimed that the political left knows that it “cannot depend on the Black vote en masse [to] vote for them like they have in the past. So they want to keep the borders open so that they can gain more power, gain more prestige. And that's not the American way.”
On Twitter, prior to starting his run for Congress, Owens frequently promoted Alex Jones and his Infowars website and tagged Jones' now-banned Twitter account. Jones is one of the country’s leading conspiracy theorists who has falsely claimed that the government perpetrated the 9/11 attacks and the tragedies at Sandy Hook, Columbine, Oklahoma City, and the Boston Marathon, among many others.
In one instance, Owens promoted a 2016 Infowars.com article that pushed the false claim that Trump may have actually won the 2016 popular vote because “three million votes in the U.S. presidential election were cast by illegal aliens, according to Greg Phillips of the VoteFraud.org organization.” Election law expert Richard Hasen told PolitiFact, “There is no credible evidence I have seen to show large numbers of noncitizens voting in U.S. elections anywhere. … The idea that 3 million noncitizens could have illegally voted in our elections without being detected is obscenely ludicrous."
On August 4, 2016, Owens promoted a despicable Infowars article smearing Khizr Khan, a Gold Star father whose son Army Capt. Humayun Khan was killed in Iraq in 2004. Khan spoke about his son at the 2016 Democratic National Convention.
Following Khan’s speech, then-presidential candidate Donald Trump and right-wing media personalities and outlets launched a smear campaign against him.
In the Infowars article that Owens shared, anti-Semitic conspiracy theorist Wayne Madsen claimed that Khan co-founded “an academic periodical that seeks to defend the arcane Sharia law to a legal system based on Western jurisprudence.” The article also concocted an evidence-free conspiracy theory that Khan’s legal work may have helped the 9/11 hijackers enter the United States. The Infowars article additionally claimed that in “making it easy for Saudis, Emiratis, and others to game the U.S. immigration system, Khizr Khan shares in some of the responsibility for his son’s death”: