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The Anti-War Movement Money Trail

| 6 Comments | 1 TrackBack

Byron York of the National Review has an investigative article in in the New York Post this morning templating the money trail for the anti-war group "Not In Our Name."

The trail features all the usual suspects, including Mumia Abu-Jamal ex-fund raisers, and the suspected Palestinian terrorist fund raiser and recently arrested Professor Sami Al-Arian of the University of South Florida.

Key passages from the article:

"The organization was created in March 2002 by a gathering of left-wing activists that included representatives from the Revolutionary Communist Party, the All-African Peoples Revolutionary Party, Refuse and Resist!, the International League of Peoples' Struggle and the National Lawyers Guild, among others. The organizers intended for Not In Our Name to stage protests across the country and also draft, according to the group's organizing document, a "Not In Our Name Statement of Conscience to be issued by well-known artists, intellectuals, activists and people in public life, lending their moral authority and their unified voice to the resistance movement."

At least in the latter goal, Not In Our Name has been extraordinarily effective. But it had to split in two to succeed. There had been concern among organizers that some of those who might be inclined to sign the statement might not want to be associated with Not In Our Name's activist wing. So the group created two separate entities, one called the Not In Our Name Statement (which handles the manifesto and the collecting of celebrity signatures) and the other called the Not In Our Name Project (which handles street demonstrations and other protests)."

And...
"For its fund raising, the Not In Our Name Project is allied with another foundation, this one called the Interreligious Foundation for Community Organization. Founded by several New Left leaders in 1967 to "advance the struggles of oppressed people for justice and self-determination," IFCO was originally created to serve as the fundraising arm of a variety of activist organizations that lacked the resources to raise money for themselves.

In recent years, IFCO served as fiscal sponsor for an organization called the National Coalition to Protect Political Freedom (their partnership ended when the coalition formed its own tax-exempt foundation). Founded in 1997 as a reaction to the 1996 Anti-Terrorism Act, the coalition says its function is to oppose the use of secret evidence in terrorism prosecutions.

Until recently, the group's president was Sami Al-Arian, a University of South Florida computer-science professor who has been suspended for alleged ties to terrorism. (He is still a member of the coalition's board.) According to a New York Times report last year, Al-Arian is accused of having sent hundreds of thousands of dollars, raised by another charity he runs, to Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The Times also reported that FBI investigators "suspected Mr. Al-Arian operated 'a fund-raising front' for the Islamic Jihad movement in Palestine from the late 1980s to 1995." Al-Arian also brought a man named Ramadan Abdullah Shallah to the University of South Florida to raise money for one of Al-Arian's foundations - a job Shallah held until he later became the head of Islamic Jihad."

And...
The groups have been quite successful. The most recent IRS records available for IFCO, from the year 2000, show that the foundation took in $1,119,564 in contributions. For their part, organizers of the Not In Our Name Statement report that they have taken in more than $400,000 in recent months for the purpose of publishing their statement. It is not possible to say who is giving the money, or whether it comes from many people or just a few; federal laws do not require tax-exempt foundations to reveal their donors - or even whether donations are received from inside or outside the United States."

The 'fun' part about Federal law is that an "on-going criminal conspiracy" takes past actions that were legal and later became illegal into today's legal environment, and makes everyone in the conspiracy liable for the actions of every conspiritor. The upshot is that Sami Al-Arian connection to all of this leaves this funding network very vulnerable to Federal RICO laws.

Little Green Footballs has detailed how the Clinton Administration and pre-9/11 Dubya Administration sat on the Islamic foundation fund raising investigations for political and campaign fundraising reasons. Now that we are at war, the political pull of these groups on the Bush43 Administration has vaporized with the WTC.

It is only a matter of time before Sami Al-Arian's alledgedly illegal fund raising cash flow is traced into this anti-war movement money-nexus. The Feds will start issuing subpoenas for financial records, as well as conducting terrorist investigation related IRS audits for all and sundry. This will reveal to the Federal government exactly who is on these groups' donor lists, for later evaluation and cross checking with foreign intelligence sources to shake out money laundering transactions.

This is the Department Of Defense's "Total Information Awareness" initiative written sideways.

And there is one more thing, thanks to the Congressional Democrats protection of the Clinton Administration's "Nixon Abuses" using IRS power. These donor lists will be used by Republican campaign operatives for IRS audit threat-driven shake downs of these donors, both to get more campaign money and to deny that same money to Democratic candidates and causes.

This is very much a case of "no good deed goes unpunished" for Democrats.

See also Little Green Football's take on the same article here.

1 TrackBack

Tracked: February 26, 2003 12:58 AM
The Sleet's In! from Sgt. Stryker's Daily Briefing
Excerpt: Last night it started to sleet here in Dallas shortly before I started my drive home. My normal commute time is about 25 minutes, 40 minutes if traffic is really bad. Last night it took me over 2 hours to cover the 13.5 miles home.

6 Comments

My understanding of the Anti-Terrorism and Patriot Acts is that all the assets of the fund-raisers, and possibly those of contributors who are indicted as co-conspirators, can be frozen subject to forfeiture upon conviction.

This is going to make the words "blacklist" and "censored" a reality, in a way it never was in the Hollywood of the 1950's.

Oops, I meant all the assets used in the fund-raising or to further the conspiracy. A conspirator's house won't be forfeited unless he had a home office in it. But lots of personal property could be forfeited.

Who bankrolls A.N.S.W.E.R. ? The People’s Rights Fund
is a fiscal sponsor for the International
Action Center and A.N.S.W.E.R. and is located in NY. The
Internation Action Center was founded by Ramsey Clark.
Today, a teasing link From Winds of Change(http://www.littlegre...).
indicated that it was ultimately funded by the Baath Party. Are
there other links floating around that point to Iraq?

Trent,

I'll lead with a practical question: If someone is found to be part of al-Arian's network, is this really someone whose money a wise person would want, even if it was possible to intimidate them? Rudy G. was a republican with the right idea in these cases... though with the slimy Grover Norquist' around, all bets are off.

Now for the moral case: if the Republicans follow in Clinton's footsteps and use IRS information to blackmail people, America will be well on the way to becoming the police state the Chomskyites says it is.

I hope for the sake of the Republic that doesn't happen. And if it does, I hope they're caught and jailed in an atmosphere reminiscent of Watergate.

Joe,

All political fundraisers are slimy. That is their job. The question is not whether they go into gray areas of the law. The question is are the people in this money-nexis knowingly, traitorously, criminal because they want to hurt America in their self-righteous fury.

As for the IRS power problem, the answer as always isn't with the politicians. It is with the people. When people care enough about politics to change things, it will.

The current course of power politics was trail blazed by Clinton and the Bush43 Administration is going to follow the presidence they laid down in dealing with Democrats and the media.

Right now all people care about is killing the threat to their security at home. The Democrat's abdication on the subject and partisan obstructionism for campaign money elsewhere leave them vulnerable because the public won't listen to their soon to be true complaints of Bush43 abusing executive power.

You have to have a creditable message and the ability to reach people. The Democrats lost the former by not impeaching Clinton, so the latter doesn't mean squat.

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