Steve Rosen Accuses AIPAC of Espionage
Atheonews / Grant Smith
03-Sep-2009 (one comment)

On March 2, 2009, Rosen filed the civil lawsuit against his former employer, directors, and an outside public relations firm for libel and slander. Rosen, AIPAC’s former foreign policy chief, seeks $5 million in damages from AIPAC, and punitive damages of $500,000 from each former board member, for a total claim of $21 million. AIPAC made statements to the news media Rosen believes were "knowingly false and defamatory and issued in reckless disregard." AIPAC fired Rosen and fellow employee Keith Weissman after they were criminally indicted under the 1917 Espionage Act in 2005. Both were caught up in an FBI sting operation receiving classified information from Department of Defense employee Col. Lawrence Franklin, who pled guilty and turned state’s witness. After years of pretrial maneuvers during which presiding Judge T.S. Ellis steadily raised the standards for conviction, U.S. government prosecutors reluctantly dropped .pdf their case in May 2009.

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Ostaad

"Fifth Column" does not fully describe AIPAC...

by Ostaad on

The proper description is, "A dangerous spy agency working for a foreign country".

Along with the Jewish Anti-defamation League (ADL), these two spy agencies for the Zionist State of Israel have consistently stolen numerous US secrets in order to enable Israel to influence and/or dictate the US foreign policies at a huge cost to this country's national interests.