Especially for a presidential campaign.

The way Bourne tells it, she was working with the Trump campaign on logistics for an interview with Donald Trump Monday morning, in conjunction with a rally in St. Augustine, Fla. As Bourne understood things, she’d been greenlighted to interview the candidate. The arrangements were detailed enough, says Bourne, that the Trump people had even asked for her personal information, including date of birth and Social Security number.

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The requests from the Trump campaign came either over the phone or in person, she says, so there’s no written record of the Trump campaign’s request for the questions, she says. In any case, the nature of the interaction changed after Bourne refused to provide the campaign with her questions, she tells this blog. “I can’t say for sure that they decided not to do the interview because I wouldn’t send them the questions. All I can say is that’s when they started ghosting me,” says Bourne. David Chiokadze, the Florida deputy communications director for the Trump campaign, made the request, she says. “I told him we don’t do that for anyone,” Bourne tells this blog.

Correct: News organizations don’t, or shouldn’t, share such information — which is the reason that a hacked email showing that Democratic National Committee official and former CNN contributor Donna Brazile had passed along a question for a CNN-TV One town hall event to the Clinton campaign caused such a furor. Though this blog has covered the coverage of Trump since the start of his campaign, we haven’t encountered many instances of question-requesting. Perhaps this is just an example of organizational disarray. After all, Bourne says she was getting three different signals from three different Trump officials as she went about pursuing the interview.