Fox is giving their viewers permission to buy into the conspiracy theories, without directly adopting them.
Star host Tucker Carlson’s lengthy Monday opening monologue provides a useful case study in how that strategy works. He does not explicitly say that he believes Pelosi and DePape were lovers. What he does do is run down the same set of details of the case that conspiracy theorists had spent the weekend ranting about; present those details as open questions that could lead to reasonable suspicions; ignore that the charging document specifically answered those questions; and hide the extreme right-wing views DePape has expressed online, instead suggesting that the assailant is is actually a leftist.
Carlson began by arguing that there is little “we can say for certain” about the story besides that police found DePape and Paul Pelosi in the Pelosi residence and observed DePape strike Pelosi with a hammer. The rest of the story, he claimed, “remains muddy.”
Carlson then presented a series of questions he claimed had not been sufficiently answered. The questions largely matched the claims right-wing conspiracy theorists had been promoting over the past few days, and have answers, even if Carlson apparently doesn’t like them.
Carlson’s first question was, “How, for example, did DePape get inside the Pelosi home?” He claimed that there should have been security present at the house and suggested that DePape might have been let in.
In fact, the charging document states that in his Mirandized interview with the San Francisco Police Department, DePape “stated that he broke into the house through a glass door, which was a difficult task that required the use of a hammer.” That is consistent with aerial photos and video showing shattered glass around the rear entryway.
Carlson’s second question was, “Was there a third person at the home? We don't know, but it's not crazy to assume there was.” According to the Fox host, “San Francisco police suggested there was a third person in the home when police arrived and Politico dutifully reported that, ‘officers arrived at the house, knocked on the front door and were led inside by an unknown person.’ In other words, by a person who was not David DePape or Paul Pelosi.”
In fact, San Francisco Police Chief William Scott said during his Friday press conference that “When the officers arrived and knocked on the front door of the residence this morning, the door was opened by someone inside. And the officers observed through the open door Mr. Pelosi and the suspect, Mr. DePape, inside the entryway of the home.” This is admittedly vague language that apparently confused reporters. But Scott did not actually specify that a third person had been present, SFPD subsequently confirmed that only DePape and Pelosi were present at the Pelosi residence when police arrived, and DePape told SFPD that Pelosi had opened the door, according to the charging document.
Third, after stating that “common sense suggests it probably couldn't have been Pelosi or Pappy who opened it” because “they were locked in a life-or-death drama, a struggle, over a hammer,” Carlson then suggested the two knew each other before the home invasion. “The documents filed today assert that Paul Pelosi had never seen David DePape before yet in Pelosi's 911 call he knew DePape's first name and apparently referred to him as a friend,” Carlson said, citing the 911 dispatcher relaying Pelosi's call to police.
Carlson does not reveal that Pelosi, according to law enforcement, was making that 911 call surreptitiously from the bathroom and speaking in “coded information” to the dispatcher in an attempt to avoid raising DePape’s suspicions.
Fourth, after alleging that “basic facts seem to be in dispute,” Carlson stated: