A conservative organization thatâs tried to discredit several progressive groups - and public broadcasters â apparently has a new target. The latest potential sting appears to be a reaction to Ohioâs controversial Issue 2. It started with a phone call about a possible research paper, says Amy Hanauer with Policy Matters Ohio. âAnd the call sounded suspicious. The guy said we have a lot of money and we want to make sure the report is going to help teachers," Hanauer says. Policy Matters Ohio has researched salaries and benefits of unionized public sector workers, concluding that they actually make less than their private counterparts. Hanauer says she thinks thatâs why she got the call. âI think that they were interested in the collective bargaining fight in Ohio.â? Hanauer says when she asked the caller questions, he hung up. So Hanauer started checking, and found the domain name of the callerâs e-mail address was very similar to that of the Ohio Education Association, the stateâs largest teachers union. But the domain name was registered to Shane Cory. Thatâs also the name of the acting executive director of Project Veritas, the group led by James OâKeefe, a self-proclaimed investigative reporter whoâs used heavily edited video in stings targeting Planned Parenthood, ACORN and NPR. âI think that they were trying to get me to say on tape that we would do research to support a certain conclusion and I think that they hoped to get me on tape saying that and in that process to discredit collective bargaining," Hanauer says. OâKeefeâs group says it believes itâs proven a connection between opponents of Issue 2 and the Economic Policy Institute, which many consider to be left-leaning. A study done for EPI concluded that public sector workers earn less than private sector workers. But OâKeefe notes that researchers at the Heritage Foundation and the American Enterprise Institute, which many consider conservative, say that study is flawed. Both OâKeefeâs group and Amy Hanauer say the EPI was targeted in this potential sting. And OâKeefe has complimented Hanauer and Policy Matters Ohio for how they handled it. âOur research is not for sale â we do really unassailable research. Nobodyâs ever been able to find flaws in our methodology," Hanauer says. But some people havenât been amused by this action. OâKeefe has been blasting back at journalists following this, and some people who are peripherally involved with Policy Matters Ohio and other groups say theyâre genuinely fearful of retribution.