You Don't Think Someone Is Lying To Hide Something, Do You?
 
What Did The Vegan "Former Member Of ALF" HSUS Conflict Industrialist Post On A YAHOO List  That Supports Those Who Support Domestic Terrorists?
 
Pro-Animal-Rights ·
A list discussing animal rights. This list supports PETA and Friends of the Earth.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Pro-Animal-Rights/
 
 
From:   "J.P. Goodwin" <politicalanimal13@yahoo.com.>
Date:  Wed Mar 26, 2003  7:05 pm
Subject:  Cockfighters Trying to Close Pro AR Yahoo Groups
Please forward to other animal protection lists...

The following post is from Gamefowl News, a cockfighters listserv. For the second day in a row they are trying to get their people to complain to Yahoo about animal rights lists hosted by Yahoo.

They are angry because Yahoo canceled two of their lists for violations of the Yahoo Terms of Service. What they don't seem to realize is that one, possibly both, of the pro cockfighting email lists were canceled because of complaints sent by their fellow cockfighters during a period of infighting.

Perhaps people angry that the cockfighters are fabricating reasons to cancel pro animal lists will want to visit groups.yahoo.com. Put in "Gamecock", "Gamefowl" and "cockfighting" so you can see their groups. (Note: When you put in Gamecock a lot of University of South Carolina groups pop up). When they start talking about illegal animal fighting, you can report it to
abuse@yahoo.com and ask they cancel the animal fighters Yahoo Groups.

Two can play at this game!
-----


<snip>
 
Source: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Pro-Animal-Rights/message/4776
 

..........What they don't seem to realize is that one, possibly both, of the pro cockfighting email lists were canceled because of complaints sent by their fellow cockfighters during a period of infighting.........

Why Was YAHOO Complained To And By Who?

 
Who Contacted Yahoo And Complained About The Gamefowl News And Why?
 
Here is the letter from Yahoo with physical time listed and the two original Gamefowl News messages with time of deletion from the News Archive by Yahoo Customer Service on the initial complaint.
 
Do you have any idea who might have whined to YAHOO and why?
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
----- Original Message -----
From: "Yahoo!" <yahoo-dev-null@yahoo-inc.com>
To: <GamefowlNews@CHARIOTe.com>
Sent: Thursday, September 26, 2002 9:37 AM
Subject: Yahoo! Groups

Dear Yahoo! account holder:
 
By creating and using your Yahoo! account, you agree to abide by Yahoo!'s Terms of Service (TOS).  Pursuant to the TOS, Yahoo! reserves the right to terminate your account or otherwise prohibit use of your account in the event that, among other things, Yahoo! believes that you have violated or acted inconsistently with the letter or spirit of the TOS.
 
It has come to our attention that you may have violated the TOS.  Please reread the TOS and cease any use of your account that may violate the TOS.
 
If your use of your Yahoo! account is brought to our attention again, and we believe that such use violates the TOS, then we may terminate your account without further notice.
 
Please do not reply to this email.  Any questions concerning Yahoo!'s Services should be submitted through the on-line form in the help area ( http://help.yahoo.com ).
 
-Yahoo!
 
 

9/26/2002 9:36 am customersupport <Email Private> Deleted message #2037
9/26/2002 9:36 am customersupport <Email Private> Deleted message #2157
 

 
Deleted message #2037
 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Gamefowl News Report
To: Gamefowl_News@egroups.com
Sent: Sunday, August 04, 2002 3:20 AM
Subject: unaware any donors might support terror

 
Remember The HUSA Endorsed Representative
Cynthia McKinney Who Was A
CoSponsor Of HR1275 In 1999 And A CoSponsor Of HR1155 In 2001
 
.........unaware any donors might support terror......
 
Do You Think Cynthia Knows Who This HSUS Conflict Industrialist Is?
 
http://www.furcommission.com/news/newsF03i.htm
 
************************************************************************************

Some McKinney donors probed for terror ties
DeKalb Democrat said unaware any donors might support terror

By BILL TORPY
Atlanta Journal-Constitution Staff Writer


Rep. Cynthia McKinney is backed by many Islamic individuals and groups.
Rep. Cynthia McKinney's re-election campaign has accepted contributions from several people who have come under federal investigation for suspected links to Middle Eastern terrorists or have voiced support for extremist groups.

The outspoken DeKalb County Democrat, a frequent critic of U.S. Middle East policy, has long drawn Arab and Muslim financial support. Most of McKinney's individual donors listed on disclosure reports in 2001 and this year have Arabic names and live out of state.

According to a review of federal campaign disclosure records, they include:

Abdurahman Alamoudi, leader of a Muslim organization, who during a 2000 rally outside the White House expressed support for the violent Palestinian group Hamas and for Hezbollah, the Lebanese Shiite party linked to bombings. The controversy surrounding his comments caused Senate candidate Hillary Rodham Clinton and George W. Bush's presidential campaign to return his contributions.

A professor who was jailed in 1998 on contempt charges for refusing to answer a grand jury's questions about alleged money-laundering links to Hamas.

Five businessmen whose homes or businesses were searched in March during an FBI raid investigating financial links to terrorism. Another was an officer in one of the groups under investigation, according to Federal Election Commission reports.

Bill Banks, manager of McKinney's re-election campaign, said this week that the congresswoman was not aware that any of her donors might support terrorist activities, or have ties to organizations involved with terrorism.

The McKinney campaign reported most of those contributions as having come Sept. 11, the date of the terror attacks in New York and Washington. But Banks said the campaign had organized a fund-raiser a few days before Sept. 11 and the donations collected were coincidentally recorded on that date.

FEC spokeswoman Kelly Huff said the date listed on disclosure reports is supposed to be, by law, the date the campaign received the money. But FEC officials said it was up to the campaign to document the proper date.

McKinney campaign coordinator Wendell Muhamad downplayed the FBI investigations of the donors, saying the agency historically has hounded minorities and is now targeting Muslims and people with Arab names.

"They're doing stuff like they did in the '60s to Dr. [Martin Luther] King," said Muhamad. "These are American citizens learning to use their money like the very small population which sways a lot of opinion with their money -- the Jewish community. That's the American way."

Banks said the campaign accepted contributors' money believing "in good faith that they are law-abiding citizens. If you did an investigation of everyone who gave money, people would stop giving."

McKinney is locked in what a poll released this week shows to be a virtual dead heat against former DeKalb County State Court Judge Denise Majette in the Aug. 20 Democratic primary. Majette declined to comment Friday on McKinney's fund-raising.

McKinney caused a tempest earlier this year by suggesting President Bush knew the Sept. 11 attacks were coming but did nothing so his associates could make money in the ensuing war. And last October, she also caused controversy for apologizing to a Saudi prince whose $10 million donation for terror victims was rejected by New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani. The prince had laid part of the blame for the Sept. 11 attacks on U.S. policy. The following week, McKinney collected $32,150 in a fund-raiser, her best fund-raising day in 2001.

McKinney's support for Arab causes is well known. The Council on American-Islamic Relations, an Islamic advocacy group whose director was named on the Sept. 11 listing as giving McKinney $500, recently asked members to support her. "She is our strategic choice. Pro-Muslim candidate. Supporter of Palestinian state for over seven years. Against secret evidence. Against aid to Israel."

Steven Emerson, who runs a private counterterrorist institute in Washington, called McKinney's contributors "the A list of militant Islamic front groups." Two years ago, Emerson warned a Senate committee about increasing terrorist activity in America, sometimes in the name of charity.

Alamoudi, the president of the American Muslim Foundation who expressed support for Hamas and Hezbollah, gave the maximum allowable contribution of $2,000.

Clinton, then a Democratic Senate candidate in New York, returned the $1,000 Alamoudi gave her after her opponent called the donation "blood money." Her spokesman, explaining the decision to return the money, said, "Hillary is a strong supporter of peace and security for Israel." Reps. James Moran (D-Va.) and David Bonior (D-Mich.), Republican Senate candidate John Sununu of New Hampshire and the Bush presidential campaign all have returned Alamoudi's contributions since last fall.

Alamoudi did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Another donor, Abdelhaleem Ashqar, now a Howard University professor, who gave $250, was jailed for six months in 1998 after refusing to testify before a federal grand jury investigating money laundering in the United States by Hamas. Ashqar told the grand jury that he would not testify because the information would be "used against my friends, family and colleagues in the Palestinian liberation movement." He was never charged with a crime and did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Six of McKinney's donors were officers with companies and organizations that are under investigation.

On March 20 and 21, Treasury agents served warrants on the Herndon Va.-based Saar Foundation, Safa Trust, the International Institute of Islamic Thought and 13 other locations. The groups are part of a Saudi-based financial empire that U.S. investigators say has handled $1.7 billion since the mid-1990s, allegedly sending some of it to groups that authorities have linked to terrorists, The Washington Post reported. No charges have been filed in that investigation.

Listed as McKinney donors on Sept. 11 are M. Yaqub Mirza, Mohamed Omeish and Ahmad Totonji.

Federal agents in March searched the offices of Mirza, who contributed $500. The former president of Saar, Mirza was the central figure in the interlocking multinational corporations being investigated. He is the president of Mar-Jac, which includes investment firms and a North Georgia poultry plant, which also was searched in March. He did not return phone calls seeking comment.

Omeish is president of Success Foundation, a refugee relief organization whose office was searched in March. He is listed as having given $500. Omeish said investigators returned computers taken from his office.

Totonji, founder of Saar and the IIIT, gave $1,000. Federal agents carted away numerous computers from his offices in the March raid.

Two weeks later, on Sept. 26, Jamal Barzinji, Taha Alalwani of Herndon, Va., and Hisham Al Talib of California all gave $500 to McKinney's campaign, according to FEC records.

Barzinji, a business associate of Mirza's, is also president of Mar-Jac Poultry in Gainesville.

Alalwani is a founder of the IIIT and Al Talib, was the treasurer for Safa and the IIIT vice president.

Source:   http://www.accessatlanta.com/ajc/metro/0802/03mcmoney.html
 

 
Deleted message #2157
 
----- Original Message -----
From: Gamefowl News Report
To: Gamefowl_News@egroups.com
Sent: Sunday, September 08, 2002 1:29 PM
Subject: Terrorism law includes penalties for extremists targeting animal-related business

Special-Interest Terrorism
 
Does It Make You Think Of The Legislative Terrorism Gamefowl Breeders Endure At The Hands Of HUSA?
Or.......
Does It Make You Think Of The Emotional Terrorism Gamefowl Breeders Endure At The Hands Of HSUS?
Or.......
Does It Make You Think Of The HSUS Conflict Industrialist?
http://www.furcommission.com/news/newsF03i.htm
 
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
Terrorism law includes penalties for extremists targeting animal-related businesses

Legislation signed by President Bush in June includes a provision imposing fines and prison sentences on persons committing terrorist attacks or conspiring to attack animal enterprises, including facilities that use animals as part of research.

Included in the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Response Act of 2002 is a section aimed at penalizing extremists who vandalize laboratories, furriers, farms, and other animal-related businesses.

Sponsored by Washington Rep. George R. Nethercutt Jr., the section of the bioterrorism bill increases penalties for damage to property, including animals and records. Violators are subject to restitution for all economic damage resulting from their actions and will be subject to life imprisonment for crimes that lead to the death of a person.

The new law also authorizes grants to support reviews of security standards and practices at research universities, and makes funds available to associations representing food producers for educational programs to teach farmers how to protect against an attack.

"This law is a significant step forward, but I still believe we must go farther to root out ecoterrorists," Nethercutt wrote in his June 14 newsletter.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation estimates that since 1996, the Animal Liberation Front and Environmental Liberation Front have committed more than 600 criminal acts in the United States, resulting in damages of more than $43 million.

Testifying before the House Subcommittee on Forests and Forest Health earlier this year, James F. Jarboe, chief of the FBI's domestic terrorism section, explained that special-interest terrorism has emerged as a serious national threat in recent years.

"Some special interest extremists, most notably within the animal rights and environmental movements, have turned increasingly toward vandalism and terrorist activity in attempts to further their causes," Jarboe said. The ALF, he continued, has become one of the most active extremist groups in the United States.

Founded in Great Britain in the 1970s, the animal rights group came to America in the later half of the decade, according to the FBI.

On its Web site, the ALF describes itself as a decentralized organization of small, autonomous cells comprising vegetarians who engage in "direct actions" against companies that use animals for research or economic gain. Rescuing animals and destroying property are the group's immediate goals, with the long-term objective of putting targeted companies out of business.

ALF alleges on its site that its activists caused property damage at several businesses, usually without claiming responsibility. Activists purportedly vandalized banks, animal breeding facilities, and fast food restaurants, and released more than 4,000 captive animals in 2001. Vandalism committed by ELF members against animal-related businesses is included in the summary, the site notes.

Despite its destructive operations, the ALF has as its philosophy to wage a nonviolent campaign, with activists being careful not to harm people or animals. Jarboe told the House subcommittee that animal rights groups, including the ALF, have generally complied with this directive.

Source:   http://www.avma.org/onlnews/javma/sep02/020915a.asp
 
 
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
 
........canceled because of complaints sent by their fellow cockfighters during a period of infighting........
 
You Don't Think Someone Is Lying To Hide Something, Do You?
 


 
 
.......The program is part of HSUS's plan to introduce children, grades kindergarten through six, to the animal rights movement.....
 
HSUS?
Introduce Children, Grades Kindergarten Through Six, To The Animal Rights Movement?
Isn't That The Same Tax-Free Charity That.........
.......has been quietly funding an Internet service used by the violent criminals of the Animal Liberation Front (ALF)......
 
 
Company Partners with Anti's in the Classroom
From the USSA

Pet supply retail giant PETCO is working in partnership with the Humane Society of the United States (HSUS), the nation's largest anti-hunting group, to bring the animal rights message to school children across the country. The U.S. Sportsmen's Alliance demands that this relationship be terminated.

The PETCO Foundation, the charitable arm of PETCO Animal Supplies, Inc., is sponsoring the HSUS's National Association for Humane and Environmental Education (NAHEE) Adopt a Teacher program in 500 elementary schools across the country. The program is part of HSUS's plan to introduce children, grades kindergarten through six, to the animal rights movement.

The Adopt a Teacher program places the HSUS publication Kids In Nature‚s Defense (KIND) News into the hands of teachers and students on a monthly basis during the school year. It provides classrooms with materials that promote the HSUS and its agenda, which is to eliminate animal use including hunting, fishing and trapping.

The HSUS is on record in opposition to all hunting. The animal rights organization calls hunting "fundamentally at odds with the values of a humane, just and caring society," and has been the principal opponent of hunters and trappers in dozens of campaigns in the 50 state legislatures, in Congress, in the courts and in over a dozen voter issues.

Despite HSUS's anti-hunting and anti-animal use agenda, PETCO Foundation‚s Director Paul Jolly is pleased with PETCO's partnership with the group. He says the PETCO Foundation is "proud to be able to support the NAHEE‚s KIND News campaign."

Sportsmen have seen similar situations before. A company, with which millions of sportsmen and sportswomen do business, agrees to partner with HSUS without considering the complete agenda of the organization. The fact that PETCO is bringing HSUS directly to America's children makes the situation a true crisis.

"Businesses tend to be uneducated about the real intentions of groups like the Humane Society of the United States," said U.S. Sportsmen‚s Alliance President Walter P. Pidgeon. "The U.S. Sportsmen‚s Alliance calls on sportsmen to speak in defense of their hunting, fishing and trapping heritage. Let PETCO know that it is unacceptable for a business to help bring the anti-hunting sentiment of the animal rights movement into America's classrooms.

Take Action! Sportsmen should contact PETCO and let the company know that its support of an animal rights group that is working to end America‚s outdoor heritage is unacceptable. Contact:

Brian Devine, President & CEO, PETCO Animal Supplies, Inc.
9125 Rehco Rd.
San Diego, CA 92121

Phone: (858) 453-7845 ext. 3046
Fax: (858) 453-6585.

Source: http://www.buckmasters.com/buckmasters_links/features/030324USSAclass.html


 
A Vegan Animal Rights Campaigner And Animal Rights Spells Murder......
 
 
Fortuyn suspect 'confesses'

28mar03

A DUTCH animal rights activist overnight confessed to killing right-wing populist Pim Fortuyn on the first day of the long-awaited trial over a murder that shook the Netherlands to its core...............

Source: http://www.thecouriermail.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5936,6200769%255E401,00.html

More Available At: http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main.jhtml;$sessionid$I3EUXU0ZGQYADQFIQMGSFFWAVCBQWIV0?xml=/news/2003/03/28/wpim28.xml&sSheet=/news/2003/03/28/ixworld.html


 
Attempting To Pave The Way To Racketerring Convictions For All Forms Of Animal Use?
 

Felony charges beat bad politics

THE ISSUE

Maui authorities are seeking felony gambling and racketeering convictions of cockfighting enthusiasts

OBSTRUCTIONIST politics again threatens to protect criminals engaged in the brutal blood sport of cockfighting, but Maui law-enforcement authorities are employing a novel and aggressive approach. Many of the 35 people on the Valley Isle charged with the misdemeanor of animal cruelty also face potential felony charges of racketeering and promotion of gambling. Honolulu police should use the same method to crack down on cockfighting on Oahu.

As it did last year, the state Senate has approved a bill that would make "aggravated cruelty to animals" -- including roosters -- a felony, punishable by up to five years in prison and a $10,000 fine. Twenty-eight states now treat cockfighting as a felony. House Judiciary Chairman Eric Hamakawa, who has noted "a lot of cockfighting constituents" in his Big Island district, again has shamelessly blocked the bill in his committee. If successful, Maui authorities could render Hamakawa's obstruction irrelevant.

Maui police made the arrests in January after a year-long investigation of two alleged cockfighting organizations. While some of those arrested were charged with animal cruelty and gambling, both misdemeanors, at least 20 were charged with racketeering or promoting gambling, felonies that carry maximum prison terms of 10 and five years respectively. The charges against most of the defendants were dismissed because of a grand juror's impropriety, but they are expected to be indicted again by another grand jury.

As Honolulu police Sgt. Aaron Farias has explained to community groups, cockfighting would not exist as a sport if not for gambling. Farias links the activity to organized crime, extortion, domestic violence, theft and drug dealing. One dispute concerning a Kalihi cockfight led to the 2001 beating death of a gambler.

According to Honolulu police, cockfighting season runs from November through July, with fights nearly every weekend at locations around the island. As many as 300 people are drawn to large fights, or derbies, described by police as having "a carnival-like atmosphere with vending machines and entire families attending."

Police on Oahu have long been frustrated by the typical $100 fines of those found guilty of cockfighting. Enthusiasts of cockfighting also may be fined $250 to $1,000 for possession of gaffs, the sharp metal spurs attached to gamecocks to gouge opposing roosters. Those fines amount to little more than a cockfighting license fee. By tacking on charges of racketeering and promotion of gambling, Maui authorities have dramatically raised the stakes.


Source: http://starbulletin.com/2003/03/27/editorial/editorials.html