One America News is one of the few large outlets covering the sordid tale of “Dr. Pizza,” the Ars Technica journalist who has a history of defending child sexual abuse publicly. Why is the arrest of such a prominent journalist apparently being covered up?

Could it be new revelations that Peter Bright’s posts on internal Ars Technica boards showed him debating with colleagues over legalizing child porn? Is it simply too embarrassing for a left-leaning tech company to have seen clear indications of sexual deviancy, yet chose to ignore them for two decades?

At least someone is reporting on it:

Peter Bright was until recently a tech journalist who worked for Ars Technica and Conde Nast. Bright also had an extremely active presence on social media, especially Twitter under the name “Dr. Pizza.” He frequently tweeted anti-Christian anti-Republican sentiment including extreme left-wing hatred of President Trump and Trump supporters.

He also participated in numerous left-wing hate mobs targeting the families of conservatives such as Jack Posobiec.

In May, Dr. Pizza was arrested by the FBI for federals child sex crimes. According to charges filed in the Southern District of New York, Dr. Pizza connected with an undercover FBI agent through a website called Kink D. The agent was posing as the mother of a nine-year-old boy and a seven-year-old girl. Dr. Pizza reached out to the post and started suggesting that he should meet the children for sexual acts.

The text messages Dr. Pizza sent are highly disturbing and in them he also claimed he was currently engaged in a sexual relationship with an 11-year-old girl. Dr. Pizza described his child molestation act in extreme detail. He was arrested after attempting to meet the undercover agent. However, due to his public posts, many are asking how much he did to hide his child sex crimes.

On his Twitter page he described himself as “pervy.” In Tweets, Dr. Pizza wrote, “I think that age-based rape laws are stupid.”

He has a long history of public Tweets that disturbingly show support for other forms of child abuse. In response to all of this, Twitter has not taken down Dr. Pizza’s account, but it has removed his verification check. Perhaps even more disturbingly, One American News obtained archives of an internal message board from his company, Ars Technica. There, journalist Dr. Pizza advocated for the legalization of child pornography and the decriminalization of those who view child porn.

He wrote, “All child porn legislation is illogical and unnecessary.”

He engaged in extreme debates with Ars Technica colleagues about why child pornography should be legalized. What is further shocking is these posts date back 20 years to 1999.

You won’t find any reporting about Dr. Pizza and his arrest on CNN or the New York Times.

Now there are further questions for Ars Technica and its parent company Conde Nast. Why was this advocate for child porn legalization allowed to continue at the company for 20 years? Were his posts investigated by Ars Technica or their parent, Conde Nast? And if Dr. Pizza was reported to the company as he once claimed on Twitter, what investigation by the company took place, if any?