WND Legal Defense Fund Against CAIR
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"Muslim Mafia" legal defense fund
A lawsuit brought by the Council on American-Islamic Relations against undercover investigators who probed the group’s connection to radical jihad and its founding as a front group for the Muslim Brotherhood is headed for trial this fall.
CAIR filed suit in 2009 against former federal investigator Dave Gaubatz and his son, Chris Gaubatz, after the two published their findings in the WND Books expose’ “Muslim Mafia: Inside the Secret Underworld That’s Conspiring to Islamize America.”
Attorney Daniel Horowitz, who represents the Gaubatzes, told WND a trial will likely be set for next year, and the case will not settle unless CAIR dismisses and pays the Gaubatzes’ attorney’s fees. He added his defense “will include the argument that CAIR cannot suffer damages because a member of a criminal terror conspiracy cannot collect damages when this participation is exposed.”
“Muslim Mafia” documents CAIR’s support of radical jihad, recounting its origin as a front group for the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, the worldwide movement that has stated its intent to transform the U.S. into a Saudi-style Islamic state.
New defense attorney fees for the trial are expected to exceed $200,000 – and that’s where the help is needed to hand CAIR, which claims to be a Muslim civil rights group while actually being arguably the most important Muslim Brotherhood front group in the U.S., a well-deserved defeat.
Help our attorneys hand CAIR the biggest legal defeat in its history with your contribution.
For more information about this critical case, see WND’s key coverage below:
CAIR 'terrified' jury will learn of its radical ties: 'Muslim Mafia' asking judge to block damning evidence
Federal judge rebukes CAIR in 'Muslim Mafia' case
'Muslim Mafia' cries foul for exposure as criminal enterprise
Order in 'Muslim Mafia' case exposes CAIR's shell game
Astonishing lawsuit: Make exposé vanish
FBI swoops in to halt return of 'Muslim Mafia' documents
A lawsuit brought by the Council on American-Islamic Relations against undercover investigators who probed the group’s connection to radical jihad and its founding as a front group for the Muslim Brotherhood is headed for trial this fall.
CAIR filed suit in 2009 against former federal investigator Dave Gaubatz and his son, Chris Gaubatz, after the two published their findings in the WND Books expose’ “Muslim Mafia: Inside the Secret Underworld That’s Conspiring to Islamize America.”
Attorney Daniel Horowitz, who represents the Gaubatzes, told WND a trial will likely be set for next year, and the case will not settle unless CAIR dismisses and pays the Gaubatzes’ attorney’s fees. He added his defense “will include the argument that CAIR cannot suffer damages because a member of a criminal terror conspiracy cannot collect damages when this participation is exposed.”
“Muslim Mafia” documents CAIR’s support of radical jihad, recounting its origin as a front group for the Palestinian terrorist group Hamas and the Muslim Brotherhood, the worldwide movement that has stated its intent to transform the U.S. into a Saudi-style Islamic state.
New defense attorney fees for the trial are expected to exceed $200,000 – and that’s where the help is needed to hand CAIR, which claims to be a Muslim civil rights group while actually being arguably the most important Muslim Brotherhood front group in the U.S., a well-deserved defeat.
Help our attorneys hand CAIR the biggest legal defeat in its history with your contribution.
For more information about this critical case, see WND’s key coverage below:
CAIR 'terrified' jury will learn of its radical ties: 'Muslim Mafia' asking judge to block damning evidence
Federal judge rebukes CAIR in 'Muslim Mafia' case
'Muslim Mafia' cries foul for exposure as criminal enterprise
Order in 'Muslim Mafia' case exposes CAIR's shell game
Astonishing lawsuit: Make exposé vanish
FBI swoops in to halt return of 'Muslim Mafia' documents
Organizer and beneficiary
WND .com
Organizer
Chantilly, VA
Joseph Farah
Beneficiary