FOIA request the records of the transaction involving who made the edit, and then focus the investigation on that individual. There sill be a record generated identifying which logged in account was used to make the update.
Looks pretty obvious to me. Crowder outs it on his show, he says he was fact-checked, someone called the registrar and told them the problem, also claiming to be a reporter. (That's why the 'spokesman' wasn't going to go into his discussions with other reporters.) And they fixed it based on that interaction.
FOIA request the records of the transaction involving who made the edit, and then focus the investigation on that individual. There sill be a record generated identifying which logged in account was used to make the update.
Looks pretty obvious to me. Crowder outs it on his show, he says he was fact-checked, someone called the registrar and told them the problem, also claiming to be a reporter. (That's why the 'spokesman' wasn't going to go into his discussions with other reporters.) And they fixed it based on that interaction.