The publisher said it had problems with corroboration, the trade magazine said.
From the bloomberg.com
Without independent corroboration, there is no way to know if a memory is real.
From the ocregister.com
Now there appears to be corroboration from a man with no personal axe to grind.
From the nzherald.co.nz
Tate also compares Marseilles rate of corroboration with the top six P-40 pilots.
From the en.wikipedia.org
Without other sources for corroboration, accuracy or neutrality may be suspect.
From the en.wikipedia.org
There had been corroboration from two of her friends and the other complainant.
From the guardian.co.uk
Fundamentalists and other conservative churchmen never needed such corroboration.
From the time.com
It would be necessary to get video corroboration of the attacks on protesters.
From the guardian.co.uk
However Badge's testimony was not accepted as it lacked independent corroboration.
From the en.wikipedia.org
More examples
Documentation: confirmation that some fact or statement is true through the use of documentary evidence
(corroborate) confirm: establish or strengthen as with new evidence or facts; "his story confirmed my doubts"; "The evidence supports the defendant"
(corroborate) validate: give evidence for
(corroborative) collateral: serving to support or corroborate; "collateral evidence"
Corroborating evidence is evidence that tends to support a proposition that is already supported by some evidence. For example, W, a witness, testifies that she saw X drive his automobile into a green car. ...
Corroboration is a 2001 compilation released on the Festival Mushroom Records imprint, Sputnik. It was the result of a project put together by Kurt Luthy. It brought together indigenous and non indigenous musicians and bands from various genres. It reached #92 on ARIA Top 100 Albums chart. ...
(corroborate) To confirm, strengthen or support something with additional evidence; to attest or vouch
(Corroborate) To support or enhance the believability of a fact or assertion by the presentation of additional information that confirms the truthfulness of the item.
(corroborate) To strengthen, confirm, or make certain the substance of a statement through use of an independent, but not necessarily authoritative source. ...