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Politics : Attack Iraq? -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (8138)10/5/2003 9:21:27 AM
From: lorne  Respond to of 8683
 
Theft ring, terrorism linked
By Kimball Perry
Post staff reporter
cincypost.com

More than $100 million was generated in a money laundering scheme that used a dozen convenience stores in Cincinnati's poorest neighborhoods to sell stolen goods, say police and prosecutors, who believe the money then might have been used to fund terrorism around the globe.
In the scheme, police say, organizers paid pennies on the dollar for stolen goods -- such as cigarettes and teeth-whitening strips -- and then re-sold them at a profit in Over-the-Rhine, Northside, Westwood, the West End, Fairmount, Winton Place and South Cumminsville.

Police say they can already prove that $37 million went through the bank accounts of the man they believe is the ringleader, but they estimate that was "only a third" of the total, said Cincinnati Police Chief Thomas Streicher.

Much of the money, the chief added, has been sent back to Middle Eastern countries, often in amounts just under the $10,000 limit that requires the transfer to be reported to the U.S. government.

"We can document that money is being sent to the Middle East," Streicher said, adding there is a "strong suspicion" the money is being used to fund terrorism. He acknowledges, though, "there is nothing concrete -- yet."

Omran Saleh, a Canton, Ohio, businessman who also has a Green Township address, is described as the head of the organization.

He was among 23 people arrested in connection with the two-year undercover investigation that resulted in a 105-count Hamilton County indictment.

Saleh, like most of those arrested, is of Palestinian descent, said Hamilton County Prosecutor Mike Allen. Many of the defendants are naturalized Americans.

The major players arrested have been charged with engaging in a pattern of corrupt activity, money laundering and tampering with government records, charges that carry up to 10 years in prison.

Some of those arrested are also accused of charging exorbitant fees to cash checks.

Police say the scheme operated like this:

Store owners would pay others -- "usually drug addicts," one official said -- to steal items they could then resell. Popular items were cigarettes and teeth-whitening strips. The items could be stolen in as small amounts as a few packages or as large as truckloads.

The stolen goods were resold through the markets at prices that were two, three, four or five times higher than normal, said Streicher.

"The base of the operation are all based in very poor neighborhoods -- preying on the poorest people in the city," Streicher said.

At least five of the stores searched Thursday have been padlocked and authorities will try to close them permanently.

The allegations come as little surprise to some who live in the neighborhoods.

"I know they've been buying a lot of stolen merchandise," said a man who frequently purchased cigarettes in two of the shops, Bank Café at 1135 Vine St. and Glossinger's Carryout at 1201 Vine St., in Over-the-Rhine. "I've seen it happen.

"They'd buy about anything. They'd buy your mom if you offered to sell her."

The man, who asked to remain anonymous, said he also wasn't surprised that police suspect profits from re-selling the stolen merchandise were sent overseas to support terrorism.

"The store owners look like they're from the Mideast and sometimes they would ask me what I thought about Americans being in Iraq," said the man. "I was smart enough to say, 'No comment.'"

The man said he sometimes saw people selling radios and stereos to the shop operators.

"They walk in with the stuff and sell it," he said. "It's been going on for about five years, ever since these foreigners took the stores over. It's common knowledge around here.

"They do a lot of business in the stores," he said.

"They sell a lot of liquor and cigarettes and they buy a lot of things," he said.

Store operators sometimes tore open packs of cigarettes and sold individual cigarettes to people who didn't have enough money to buy a pack, the man said.

"It used to be two cigarettes for a quarter," he said. "Then the price went up to one for a quarter."

The investigation evolved out of a 1999 probe in which owners of several other Cincinnati convenience stores in poor neighborhoods bought, relabeled and resold baby formula at high prices.

The Ohio Organized Crime Investigations Commission has been investigating the operation for two years, using undercover officers and surveillance on the stores and the accused.

The dozens of search warrants served in the investigation are allowing law enforcement -- including Ohio Attorney General Jim Petro and the U.S. Department of Agriculture -- to pore over bank accounts as well as financial and telephone records from stores and residences.

About 160 officers from the Hamilton County sheriff's office, Hamilton County prosecutor's office, Cincinnati police, the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Ohio Department of Safety Investigative Unit participated.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (8138)10/6/2003 9:00:35 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
IRAQ DOES HAVE WMD: ARMS MAN
By DEBORAH ORIN
nypost.com

October 6, 2003 -- The head of the weapons hunt in Iraq yesterday said his teams are hot on the trail of anthrax and Scud missiles, and he's "amazed" that anyone could think the search so far is a failure.
David Kay also said, "We're going to find remarkable things" about Iraq's weapons program.

His teams have already found a vial of botulinum toxin - "one of the most toxic elements known" - in the refrigerator of an Iraqi scientist who'd hidden it since 1993.

"[The Iraqi scientist] was also asked to hide others, including anthrax," Kay said. "After a couple of days, he turned them back because he said they were too dangerous - he had small children in the house.

"We're actively searching for at least one more cache of [toxins] . . . It's much larger. It contains anthrax, and that's one reason we're actively interested in getting it," he told "Fox News Sunday."

He said Iraqis have told him that until early 2002, they were able to make missile fuel for the long-range Scuds that were fired at Israel and Saudi Arabia in the 1991 Gulf War, then banned under U.N. restrictions.

"Scud-missile fuel is only useful in Scud missiles, no other class of missiles that Iraq has . . . Why would you continue to produce Scud-missile fuel if you didn't have Scuds? We're looking for the Scuds," he said.



Kay stressed that even now, Iraqi scientists who cooperate are at risk. One was assassinated the same day that he spoke to U.S. officials.

Kay, a former U.N. inspector, added that, "I'm surprised no one has paid attention to" his revelation last week that the Iraqis also violated U.N. sanctions by working on new toxins like Congo-Crimea and hemorrhagic fever.



To: GROUND ZERO™ who wrote (8138)10/6/2003 9:03:03 PM
From: lorne  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 8683
 
GZ. Think a person could stay out of jail if they said these kind of things about islam?

Controversial Cleveland murals are protected

By: DOUGLAS J. GUTH Staff Reporter
clevelandjewishnews.com.

The First Amendment protects all forms of speech, including these controversial new murals on the 55th St. Deli.
The First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution protects freedom of expression, no matter how offensive, from government interference.

With that in mind, Louis Brandeis, the first Jew to serve on the U.S. Supreme Court, uttered the famous quote that still resonates today: "The remedy for bad speech is more speech."

For those offended by murals painted on the outside walls of Brahim "Abe" Ayad's East 55th Street deli, "more speech" might be the only recourse.

Ayad, 37, a Palestinian-American who owns Grandpa's Kitchen, has had dozens of controversial images painted on his business establishment over the last few years. Public officials and Jewish Clevelanders say these murals are blatantly offensive and antisemitic.

The newest signs, painted over the spring and summer at the deli, include a group of skullcap-wearing Jews counting money at a table while Jesus hangs on a cross above them, and a supposed talmudic endorsement of pedophilia. In the latter, a Jewish priest holds a small boy in his arms. The priest is quoted as saying, "Silly man, this is not my son, he's my wife." Below this is an alleged line from the Talmud. "Like the tear comes to the eye again and again so does ... virginity to a child under 3 years and 1 day."

Above this mural is contact information for Cong. Stephanie Tubbs Jones for those seeking reparations from Israel. The congresswoman's image has also unflatteringly appeared on past murals. Ayad was angry she never followed up on a letter she sent him over two years ago, claiming she would help him get back his father's land.

Another new sign shows Hitler with the Star of David branded into his upraised and bleeding hand. A larger Star of David superimposed with a swastika is painted to the right of this image.

In the past, Ayad's signs have portrayed Jews as monkeys and pigs, and repeated canards such as Jews control the media and Jews were behind the 9/11 terror attacks. The first signs appeared on a car wash Ayad owned at E. 55th and Cedar. The images were painted over after the City Mission bought the building.

Ayad, a father of eight who lives in North Olmstead, has said he does not support violence against Jews. The murals, he notes, are a protest against "evil-doing Zionists" who, among other offenses, he claims, took away his Palestinian father's land to make way for the state of Israel.

"The Constitution states the guy has a right to be as obnoxious as he wants," says Jonathan Entin, professor of constitutional law at Case Western Reserve University. Even if the signs are perceived as hateful, it's difficult to make "a valid, legal claim" that someone is defaming a particular group.

In a landmark case in Minnesota (RAV vs. St. Paul-1992), the U.S. Supreme Court declared a city hate speech code unconstitutional. The state's law, according to the court, was "viewpoint based" and "overbroad," prohibiting speech that was constitutionally protected, Entin explains.

Put simply, "the government cannot choose sides," says the professor. Ayad's signs could be taken down only if they led to an unusually dangerous situation. Further, "If we suppress bad speech, people might be deterred from using 'good' speech," says Entin.

Clevelanders have rallied against the murals over the last few years. Last fall, a billboard stating, "The Hate Stops Here," was erected as part of a campaign begun by the Anti-Defamation League (ADL). Cleveland Mayor Jane Campbell spoke at a campaign press conference across the street from the deli, as did Congresswoman Tubbs Jones.

About 125 people, including students from the Cleveland Heights High School Unity Group and members of the Zionist Youth group Betar attended the anti-hate press conference.

No rallies are planned for the immediate future. "There's nothing you can do (to remove the murals) until the community becomes outraged enough," admits Bettysue Feuer, ADL regional director.

Councilwoman Fannie Lewis, who represents the ward where Grandpa's Kitchen is located, has tried various means to get the signs removed by the city. She has spoken to a number of lawyers, as well as to City Hall, to no avail. She recently contacted the Cleveland Planning Department, for example, to see if the murals were violating any signage codes. (They aren't.) She has also met with Ayad several times.

Lewis, who is African-American, remembers growing up in Memphis, Tenn., during the race riots of the 1960s. She fears similar violence could occur here if the murals are allowed to stay up. "When hatred is allowed to fester, it only gets worse," she says.

Ayad, however, insists that he doesn't hate anybody. He considers himself an American, and even claims Jewish ancestry. The murals, he says, are his way to vent frustration and disappointment.

Ayad says the ADL and Cleveland City Hall, among others, have been trying to shut him down for eight years. The shocking imagery on his walls are his way "of fighting fire with fire," he maintains. "If they want to insult me, they should know how it feels to be insulted."

Cong. Tubbs Jones would like to see Ayad take down the murals. She recognizes his right to speak freely, but "as a business owner, it's his responsibility to show some leadership" within the community, she told the CJN.