| © 2002 WorldNetDaily.com
The U.S. government has been covering up FBI
evidence of a massive Saudi network to finance terrorist fronts and
anti-Semitic groups in the United States, according to a lawsuit filed
in a Florida court by former U.S. prosecutor John Loftus.
The suit targets Kuwaiti national Sami Al Arian,
a professor who has been suspended from a Florida university amid
charges that he has been a liaison of the Iranian-sponsored Islamic
Jihad of Palestine.
In his suit, Loftus charges that the Justice
Department has refused to prosecute Al Arian despite acquiring
substantial evidence to show that Al Arian had committed numerous
crimes, including mail and tax fraud.
The reason for the hands-off approach, Loftus
said, is that prosecution of Al Arian would disclose that he was a
"small, but significant part of a global money laundering network
operated under the guise of purported American charities run by the
government of Saudi Arabia."
The Saudi terror network – which supports
Islamic Jihad, Hamas, Hezbollah and al-Qaida – is said to operate out
of a charity in Herndon, Va.
Loftus, who cites "confidential client
sources," said the State Department asked Justice to terminate a
1995 criminal investigation of Al Arian after the discovery of Saudi
involvement. The pressure by State on the FBI grew so great that a key
agent, John O’Neill, quit the bureau in protest.
"In truth and in fact, the government of
Saudi Arabia has used their charitable fronts in America to fund hate
groups, racist organizations and terrorist operations like defendants
within the United States for the last thirty years," the suit
reads.
Loftus made his reputation as a tenacious hunter
of Nazi war criminals in America and for the last 20 years has been a
gadly of the U.S. intelligence community. He has investigated and
published books and articles based on information from whistleblowers in
the CIA who alleged that the intelligence community, out of political
expediency and sometimes pure spite, purposely ignored intelligence
vital to U.S. national security. |