The Other McCain

"One should either write ruthlessly what one believes to be the truth, or else shut up." — Arthur Koestler

Domestic Terrorist Now Using ‘Lawfare’? Convicted Felon Kimberlin’s 501(c)3 Raised $1.8 Million in Six Years
UPDATE: ‘Convicted of Perjury’

Posted on | May 19, 2012 | 146 Comments

When terrorist Brett Kimberlin was convicted of multiple felonies in 1981,
he could have been sentenced to 230 years in federal prison.

Federal tax forms filed by convicted terrorist Brett Kimberlin’s tax-exempt non-profit Justice Through Music Project (JTMP) show that the 501(c)3 group collected $1.8 million in gifts, grants and other contributions during its first six years of operation. An analysis using database research indicates that more than $300,000 of that sum came in the form of grants from tax-exempt foundations, including the George Soros-connected Tides Foundation, the Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift Fund, the Barbara Streisand Foundation, and the Heinz Family Foundation, connected to Democrat Sen. John Kerry’s wife.

Convicted of multiple federal felonies in connection with a string of 1978 bombings in Indiana, Kimberlin’s activities recently have come under renewed scrutiny due to his attempt to press criminal charges against attorney Aaron Walker, a blogger who says Kimberlin tried to “frame” him as part of a campaign of harassment and intimidation against conservative New Media activists.

JTMP’s 2009 IRS Form 990 (link is to PDF document) declares the “program service accomplishments” of Kimberlin’s organization: “Civil rights, social action and advocacy programs. We have created DVDs with musicians to educate youth about their voting and civil rights to get them to register and vote. We created a website to do the same, and we have held voter drives to educate youth and register them to vote.” On page four of the IRS form (question 43), the organization denied having engaged in “direct or indirect campaign activities on behalf of or in opposition to candidates for public office.”

Walker’s complaint against Kimberlin — the subject of a 28,000-word account posted Thursday morning at the blog Allergic to Bull — sparked new interest in the convicted felon’s online activities. Kimberlin’s connections to influential non-profit charities, leading progressive bloggers and Democrat Party operatives expose what many observers believe is a coordinated effort to silence conservative activists online through intimidation and harassment. Less than six months before his death, New Media enterpreneur Andrew Breitbart warned about Kimberlin’s activities.

The most recent IRS Form 990 available for Kimberlin’s JTMP (click here to view the PDF document) shows that the non-profit 501(c)3 group reported contributions of $223,739 in 2010. Combined with cumulative totals of contributions of $1,561,066 shown on the Maryland-based organization’s 2009 IRS filing, this means the Justice Through Music Project collected $1,784,805 from its founding in 2005 through 2010.

So-called “lawfare” harassment and other intimidation tactics by Kimberlin’s apparently well-funded network, including Democrat campaign consultant Neal Rauhauser, have alarmed those who see these efforts as a key component of a larger election-year strategy by liberal activists determined to dominate media coverage.

The Lonely Conservative blog has called for “an Army of Davids” to help expose Kimberlin’s activities, invoking the title of a book, An Army of Davids: How Markets and Technology Empower Ordinary People to Beat Big Media, Big Government, and Other Goliaths by Professor Glenn Reynolds, who has shown interest in the Kimberlin case at his popular Instapundit blog.

Non-Profit Cash for the ‘Speedway Bomber’

The Justice Through Music Project’s tax form lists only two officials: Kimberlin as director, with a full-time salary of $20,250 in 2009, and Bethesda, Maryland, attorney Jeffrey C. Cohen, who reported receiving no compensation for his role as the non-profit’s executive director. The tax-exempt organization’s IRS form lists its revenue for five years:

2005 — $121,450
2006 — $428,815
2007 — $255,635
2008 — $558,543
2009 — $196,623

JTMP’s tax-exempt funding, including grants from major philanthropic foundations, is remarkable considering Kimberlin’s notorious record for violent crime and drug smuggling, as well as his convictions for perjury and impersonating federal officials. His 1978 terrorism spree — which earned him the sobriquet “Speedway Bomber” for the Indiana town where Kimberlin’s violent rampage occurred — included one blast outside a high school that maimed two people. Authorities said that, while awaiting trial, Kimberlin plotted to kill both the federal prosecuting attorney and one of the witnesses against him.

According to information available through online databases, it appears that JTMP’s funding by tax-exempt foundations peaked in 2006. That was the year Kimberlin’s non-profit received a $60,000 grant from the Tides Foundation, which has become controversial because of its funding from left-wing billionaire Soros. An analysis of database records appears to show the following foundation grants to JTMP:

2005

Farview Foundation ………………………….…… $9,000

2006

Tides Foundation …………………………………. $60,000
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift …..…. $45,000
HKH Foundation ……………………………..……. $20,000
Heinz Family Foundation ………….……..…. $20,000
Olive Branch Foundation …………….……… $15,000
Farview Foundation …………………………… $10,000
Barbra Streisand Foundation …………………$5,000

2007

Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift …..…. $19,000

2008

Threshold Foundation ………………..…..… $20,000
Tides Foundation ………………………….….. $10,000
Nathan Cummings Foundation ………..… $10,000
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift …..…. $20,000
Fred Gellert Family Foundation ……………. $5,000
Silicon Valley Community Foundation ..… $5,000
Barbra Streisand Foundation ……………….. $5,000

2009

Schwab Charitable Fund ………………………. $10,000
Silicon Valley Community Foundation .… $10,000
Fidelity Investments Charitable Gift …..…. $6,000

TOTAL (2005-2009) .……………………………$304,000

Kimberlin’s infamous criminal past could scarcely have been a secret to those who funded his organization. Kimberlin became a national political celebrity during the 1988 presidential campaign because of his claim, made while he was still serving time in federal prison, that he had once sold marijuana to Dan Quayle, who was then the Republican candidate for vice president.

Kimberlin offered no proof for that unsubstantiated allegation, but it drew the attention of award-winning journalist Mark Singer. A reporter for the New Yorker, Singer was initially sympathetic to Kimberlin, and the two men split an advance for a book deal to tell Kimberlin’s story. Singer ended the co-authorship deal after he became disillusioned by Kimberlin’s habitual dishonesty. In 1996, Singer published Citizen K: The Deeply Weird American Journey of Brett Kimberlin, which exposed Kimberlin as a “world-class liar” and “first-class con man.”

In fact, according to both Singer and Indianapolis Star reporter Joseph Gelarden, prosecutors suspected a particularly sinister motive for the Speedway Bomber’s terroristic rampage: To distract law enforcement officials who were investigating the July 29, 1978, murder of Julia Scyphers, the grandmother of a pre-teen girl toward whom, Gelarden wrote in 1981, Kimberlin had “strange affection . . . questionable relationship.”

‘Things That Are Not True’

Despite abundant evidence of Kimberlin’s criminality, within five years of his release from federal prison in 2000 — after serving only 17 years of a 50-year sentence — the convicted terrorist was able to receive major funding for his 501(c) tax-exempt activities. Hundreds of thousands of dollars of contributions continued to flow into Kimberlin’s Justice Through Music Project, even after a January 2007 report by Time magazine’s Massimo Calabresi recounted Kimberlin’s past and concluded that Kimberlin was still routinely lying:

In e-mails and Web postings from Kimberlin’s two organizations, Justice Through Music and Velvet Revolution, he intersperses occasionally useful pieces of information about the problems of e-voting with a hefty portion of bunk, repeatedly asserting as fact things that are not true. Kimberlin, in short, is an unlikely candidate to affect an important issue of public policy.

Calabresi’s carefully reported account of “Kimberlin’s grandiosity” and “lack of credibility”apparently did nothing to deter progressive donors and tax-exempt charitable foundations from contributing to Kimberlin’s non-profit, for which 2008 was its best-ever year in terms of revenue. JTMP told the IRS that it was not involved in “campaign activities,” but as Calabresi recounted, Kimberlin gained fame (and attracted major donations) by claiming that Republicans “stole” the 2004 election for President George W. Bush:

The turning point for Kimberlin came with an idea to attract attention. Before the 2004 presidential election, he contacted the wealthy head of a foundation in Ohio who practiced transcendental meditation with Kimberlin’s sister. After the vote, with a pledge from the benefactor, Kimberlin posted on justicethroughmusic.org a $100,000 reward for any evidence that the election had been stolen. And things took off. First, the reward attracted blogger Brad Friedman, who then co-founded the netroots voting-reform website VelvetRevolution.us with Kimberlin and serves as his face man. The reward attracted other donors (including a politically active relative of mine who last year introduced me to Kimberlin). And it produced several people who claimed to have information on problems with electronic voting. They were prominently displayed on Friedman’s site, BradBlog.com Leveraging his website’s popularity, Kimberlin made contact with congressional staff members and other activists, launching coordinated netroots campaigns for the cause.

In what has since become a consistent pattern in his highly partisan online activism, Kimberlin’s accusations of vote fraud by Republicans yielded no substantial result and his headline-generating $100,000 reward offer was never paid. However, Kimberlin gained credibility and prestige because of his partnership with Brad Friedman, who was one of the progressive bloggers most prominently mentioned in a 2005 New York Times article by Jonathan D. Glater, “Liberal Bloggers Reaching Out To Major Media.”

Having failed to prove their repeated assertions that Republicans “stole” the 2004 election, Friedman and Kimberlin moved on to new targets, displaying a canny eye for exploiting liberal obsessions through their claims of “exposing” criminal wrongdoing by high-profile right-wing scapgoats. After a 2009 undercover “sting” by young conservative journalists James O’Keefe and Hannah Giles showed that the left-wing group ACORN was willing to abet prostitution, the Friedman-Kimberlin non-profit Velvet Revolution called on Maryland officials to file felony charges against O’Keefe and Giles.

The Freidman-Kimberlin group’s July 2010 attack on two young reporters — whose work successfully launched Breitbart’s BigGovernment.com site in September 2009 — drew attention from another Breitbart project, BigJournalism.com. In October 2010, journalist Mandy Nagy (writing as “Liberty Chick”) filed a 3,600-word account of Kimberlin’s criminal career, which concluded by asking:

While the left-wing media spends countless hours of its production time trying to create the picture of impropriety around topics like American Crossroads and Andrew Breitbart, why not spend even just one hour researching the groups accusing such impropriety?
Will anyone come out and repudiate their association with a convicted terrorist?

Nagy’s heavily-documented article evidently inspired an 1,110-word report by Ed Barnes of Fox News a week later:

Using two popular leftist blogs, the 56-year-old from Bethesda, Md., has raised hundreds of thousands of dollars from the public and left-leaning foundations by promising to put conservatives he disagrees with in jail, often with offers of large rewards. So far — without success — he has called for the arrest of Karl Rove, Andrew Breitbart, Chamber of Commerce head Tom Donohue, Massey Energy Chairman Don Blankenship and other high-profile public figures.
A review of tax filings for Kimberlin’s blogs, “Velvet Revolution” and “Justice Through Music,” raises troubling questions about whether his “nonprofit” operations are dedicated to public activism — or are just a new facade for a longtime con artist.

The reports by Nagy and Barnes, however, were evidently ignored by most major national news organizations, and even most conservative journalists — who in October 2010 were focused on the mid-term election campaign — seemed to overlook the significance of Kimberlin and Friedman’s activities. Yet several bloggers, including the Patterico site where Walker spent a year as co-blogger under the penname Aaron Worthing, continued monitoring Kimberlin’s activities, including his legal actions against conservative New Media activists.

Criminal Kimberlin and ‘Hacker’ Rauhauser

Meanwhile, Kimberlin says he became an “associate” of Rauhauser, a Democrat campaign consultant whose client list includes Rep. Raul Grijalva (D-Arizona). Rauhauser gained notoriety in 2010 after Tea Party activists say he organized an online conspiracy to harass them on the social-networking site Twitter. Rauhauser evidently recruited to his so-called “Beandogs” group a number of vicious characters using aliases to send grossly obscene Twitter messages aimed at Tea Party supporters, as I reported at the time:

A self-described Internet “hacker,” Rauhauser had nevertheless been treated as a respected member of the progressive online community, with blogging privileges at the influential Daily Kos site, which invited Rauhauser to be a featured speaker at its 2010 “Netroots Nation” conference. In July 2011, however, Rauhauser’s Daily Kos privileges were terminated after he repeatedly engaged in smear attacks against a fellow contributor, liberal journalist Ron Bryaert. Three months later, on Oct. 18, 2011, Breitbart sent a Twitter message saying that connections between Rauhauser, Friedman and “their convicted domestic terrorist pal, Brett Kimberlin need exposure.” Breitbart died of a heart attack at age 43 on March 1, less than three hours after he engaged in an extended Twitter exchange with Rauhauser, which ended with this message from Breitbart: “Are Mark Rasch or Kevin Zeese your attorneys? If so, create a better working relationship with them.”

Kimberlin continued an escalating series of attacks on conservative bloggers, including Los Angeles County deputy district attorney Patrick “Patterico” Frey, who tops a list labeled “Breitbart Crew” at a Web site, “Breitbart Unmasked,” which Frey and his former blog contributor Walker say they believe is operated and/or funded by Kimberlin, Friedman, Rauhauser or their associates.

Neither Republican Party officials nor GOP members of Congress have shown any interest in the activities of Kimberlin and his associates, despite the fact that these activities appear to be an election-year effort aimed at harassing and intimidating conservative New Media activists who are attempting to counteract what Breitbart called the “Democrat Media Complex.” No Republican elected official has yet called for an investigation of whether activities by Kimberlin, Friedman and Rauhauser — which some observers attribute to partisan political motives — are being funded through tax-exempt money obtained under the guise of 501(c)3 “civil rights” and “social action.”

Since 2005, Kimberlin’s tax-exempt organization has raked in at least $1.8 million (JTMP’s 2011 IRS forms are not yet publicly available online), a remarkable total for a convicted felon who in 1981 was sentenced to 50 years in federal prison for one of the most notorious criminal rampages in Indiana history. The fact that Kimberlin appears to be especially targeting bloggers who have reported on his infamous reputation as a violent and dishonest criminal suggests the possibility that his “progressive activism” is actually an attempt to suppress the truth about his sociopathic tendencies by silencing his critics.

Law-enforcement records and extensive reporting by a host of journalists — including Gelarden, Singer, Calabresi, Nagy and Barnes — clearly document Kimberlin’s propensity for criminal acts of deceit and violence. Now, along with his accomplices Brad Friedman and self-described computer “hacker” Neal Rauhauser, the violent terrorist Kimberlin is apparently engaged in what his targets describe as an effort to hijack the court system to destroy his chosen enemies. His critics say they suspect Kimberlin’s attacks are not merely political activism, but an attempt to prevent exposure of his own nefarious conduct through a type of “lawfare,” which is defined as “the illegitimate use of domestic or international law with the intention of damaging an opponent, winning a public relations victory, financially crippling an opponent, or tying up the opponent’s time so that they cannot pursue other ventures such as running for public office.”

Renewed public attention to Kimberlin’s activities has begun, after Aaron Walker published his shocking account of his courtroom encounter with Kimberlin. Walker has urged his readers to demand an investigation of Kimberlin’s activities, including what Walker describes as a criminal attempt to “frame” him on an assault charge.

UPDATE: Suspicion that the “Breitbart Unmasked” site is operated by Kimberlin is inspired by the site’s apparent obsession with bloggers who criticize Kimberlin. In one such post (no link, for reasons that should be obvious) “Breitbart Unmasked” makes this assertion:

Patterico and Andrew Breitbart . . . started a years long campaign to destroy Mr. Kimberlin using a 34 year old criminal case against him when he was a young man, despite Mr. Kimberlin changing his life and working for charitable causes for decades.

Kimberlin was 27 years old when he was convicted of multiple federal felonies which, as the Indianapolis Star reported at the time, carried a maximum penalty of more than 20o years in prison.

The only “charitable causes” for which Kimberlin has worked, so far as I am aware, are those in which he himself has a financial interest. As he has only been out of federal prison since 2000, the claim that Kimberlin has been engaged in “charitable causes for decades” would seem self-evidently false.

In fact, Kimberlin’s persistent penchant for falsehoods is another coincidental similarity to the “Bretibart Unmasked” site, whose Twitter account has denied being operated by Kimberlin. As Indianapolis Star reporter Joe Gelarden, who covered the “Speedway Bomber” case, told Time magazine’s Massimo Calabresi in 2007:

I remember a few things about Brett that give me great pause.
First, he was convicted of perjury — in federal court — before he got out of high school. Think about that for a moment.

A notorious criminal, who was called a “top-flight con man” by award-winning journalist Mark Singer, Kimberlin has gotten $1.8 million in tax-exempt contributions since 2005.

UPDATE II: The Lonely Conservative asks:

Why the Heck is Fidelity Investments
Giving Funds to a Convicted Felon?

Certainly an interesting question, in light of how suspected domestic terrorism is in the news again today. (Hat-tip: Memeorandum.)

UPDATE III (Smitty): welcome, Instapundit readers!

PREVIOUSLY:


Comments

146 Responses to “Domestic Terrorist Now Using ‘Lawfare’? Convicted Felon Kimberlin’s 501(c)3 Raised $1.8 Million in Six Years
UPDATE: ‘Convicted of Perjury’”

  1. Joseph Fein
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:09 pm

    Here’s something else to note:

    Brad Friedman broadcasts on KPFK and the Pacifica network.  They also claim to be a 501c3, but it is truly Progressivism without the mask.

    Pacifica should NOT be classified as a 501c3 and this Kimberlain a*hole should be called out and sent back to prison.

    Not just for the bombing but because of his people harassing innocents. 

  2. The War Today « An Ex-Con's View
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:09 pm

    […] UPDATE I: Stacy McCain comes out with another great post exposing Kimberlin’s financial frauds. […]

  3. PaulLemmen
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:10 pm

    More frauds upon the citizens, misappropriation of non-profit funds, theft by diversion, misrepresentation, the list gets ever longer! He needs to go!

  4. vermontaigne
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:20 pm

    Awesome piece, Stacy.

  5. PaulLemmen
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:29 pm

    I agree, I should have stroked your ego a little first before getting to the meat of your work! My apologies for my crass behavior!

  6. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:36 pm

    Stacy, this is really excellent.

    Best point: Why haven’t the GOP paid attention?

    One thing I want to know is how JTMP spent the money, and the 990s don’t actually answer that. Oh, and I cannot believe no one’s picked up on the “no governing documents are available to the public.” That is unheard of. Look at pretty much any nonprofit, and you will see that their governing documents were submitted to their state attorney general, and are available.

  7. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:39 pm

     I think he’s misappropriated funds, but I couldn’t prove it from what I’ve presently got (990’s). Certainly, I’m rather surprised he hasn’t been investigated.

  8. Bob Belvedere
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:40 pm

    I second that motion.

    Now, Wolverines, it’s time to link this report up and spread the word.

  9. Adobe_Walls
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:53 pm

    Why?

  10. PaulLemmen
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:56 pm

    I am also. I know that as someone on unsupervised release (a form of federal probation) I must file complete financial disclosure forms yearly with the federal system and they question and demand receipts for everything, even grocery bills. For myself as well as my wife (who was not implicated in any of my crimes nor indicted or convicted of any offense). It is true I was sentenced under a different system (in which an additional sentence of time under supervised then unsupervised release is tacked on to the sentence instead of parole) I know that his parole should still be in effect as the time on parole must equal the total of the original sentence less time incarcerated. This is a failure of the federal parole system (which is administered by the DOJ, so no surprise that Kimberlin is allowed to attack those who do not support the fraud in the oval office). This goes deeper and has roots all through this administration and it’s wealthy liberal supporters. Keep digging folks!

  11. PaulLemmen
    May 19th, 2012 @ 2:59 pm

    I have been tweeting this as well as posting to Facebook. I also updated my article about this slime with a link here.

  12. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:00 pm

     Why which? Why hasn’t he been investigated? Or why am I surprised? I’m surprised because, while this is pretty small potatoes, it should have made someone sit up and take notice. Nonprofit world is rather sleepy and slow-moving, but every single thing I’m seeing on those 990’s looks off. Someone should have dug into the accounts.

  13. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:03 pm

     I had no idea how parole worked. Thank you.

  14. The Camp Of The Saints
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:16 pm

    The Attempt To Silence The Right: Convicted Terrorist Brett Kimberlin And His Friends On The Attack…

    [NOTE: I’m making this post a sticky one until further notice, so please look below for newer postings.] If you are not familiar with the name ‘Brett Kimberlin’ please see my previous posting, Connections: Soros, A Terrorist, Democrats and…

  15. Bob Belvedere
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:20 pm

    Yes, Paul, thank you.

  16. PaulLemmen
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:34 pm

    You’re welcome!

  17. PaulLemmen
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:35 pm

    You’re welcome too. Thanks for actually talking to me.

  18. Lawfare: Dems With Criminal Records Target Conservative Bloggers « Nice Deb
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:52 pm

    […] The Other McCain: Domestic Terrorist Now Using ‘Lawfare’? Convicted Felon Kimberlin’s 501(c)3 Raised $1.8 Milli… […]

  19. Evi L. Bloggerlady
    May 19th, 2012 @ 3:54 pm

    This guy earns like the Southern Poverty Law Center!  And he shakes people down like them too.  

  20. Adobe_Walls
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:02 pm

    Sounds almost sinister.

  21. Why the Heck is Fidelity Investments Giving Funds to a Convicted Felon? | The Lonely Conservative
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:04 pm

    […] day and I only have a few minutes before company comes over, but I thought I’d alert you to The Other McCain’s latest post about the convicted felon Brett Kimberlin and where he gets his funding.Federal tax forms filed by […]

  22. Pathfinder's wife
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:08 pm

    Maybe some members of the GOP have their sticky little fingers in some dirty little pie of their own?

    Wonder if Kimberlin still stops by and says hello to his old buddies back in the hicktown ‘hood?

  23. Adjoran
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:30 pm

     Close, but Dees and SPLC are experienced and dedicated – to getting the money.  They wouldn’t risk alienating donors by actually DOING anything beyond issuing scary-sounding “lists” of organizations they claim are, well, scary enough to make guilty and rich white liberals write checks.

    Kimberlin, Friedman and Rauhauser seem to be going a great deal further, and probably aren’t nearly as smart as Dees in structuring the organization to ensure their personal enrichment is perfectly legal.

  24. Evi L. Bloggerlady
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:41 pm

    Kimberlin is a thug and felon.  

    I should not make light of it (although there are definite similarities in tactics between Kimberlin and Dees/SPLC).  

  25. Update on the Speedway Bomber Brett Kimberlin Updates, and Site Notes
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:46 pm

    […] morning, Stacy put compiled an excellent “just the facts, ma’am” report on murderous thug B…, and Lonely Conservative outlines the game plan. Daily Pundit picked up the ball, too, and Dan […]

  26. Taxpayer1234
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:48 pm

    Does this guy do anything except harass others who call him out on his idiocy?  And how are his donors cool with that?

  27. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 4:56 pm

     Excellent question, and I wish I had an answer. I’m still trying to figure out how JTMP manages to spend about a quarter million on DVD’s about youth voting rights; his donors must not be paying attention.

  28. Sarah Wells
    May 19th, 2012 @ 5:03 pm

    That was a remarkably focused and clear eyed  setting out of who this guy is, and why it matters.  

    Brett Kimberlin has no “side” but his own,  and he picked the marks on one side  eager to be convinced and ready to be fleeced, the only ones that would have him.

    Since most people have consciences they can be taken in by serious claims that they themselves would never make in bad faith.   People need to know who Brett Kimberlin is.

    I’m ready to see his abuse of process and the courts ended

  29. Mm
    May 19th, 2012 @ 5:05 pm

     Yes – 501(c)(3) non profits are required BY LAW to have such documents available to ANYONE who asks for them.  You are allowed to walk into such a non-profit’s office and ask for the documentation and they must produce it.

  30. Bob Belvedere
    May 19th, 2012 @ 5:10 pm

    Make light of it Evi – the Left deserves all the ridicule we can heap on them.

    There’s nothing that says you can’t take something serious and heap ridicule on it.

    Classic Example:
    http://youtu.be/MReV9dkAVhY

  31. Bob Belvedere
    May 19th, 2012 @ 5:12 pm

    Paul: All I said was I was putting you, in a sense, on probation.  You can’t blame me for that considering you impersonated a soldier.

  32. Bob Belvedere
    May 19th, 2012 @ 5:16 pm

    Or know that’s a cover for other activities they secretly approve of.

    Reminds me of a Mafia member who wants to stay ‘legit’ in the eyes of the IRS: he buys and runs a business, claims an income, but still carries on his illegal activities.

  33. Rayabacus
    May 19th, 2012 @ 5:54 pm

    Elementary question here….has anyone looked to see if this convicted felon has registered to vote and/or has voted?

  34. richard mcenroe
    May 19th, 2012 @ 6:11 pm

     WHY would the GOP complain.  Kimberlin’s doing work they’re happy to see done, hampering and intimidating conservative new media.

  35. DaveO
    May 19th, 2012 @ 6:59 pm

    Not to attack, but are you implying that this parolee may have been recruited to do what he does by DoJ?

  36. DaveO
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:02 pm

    It’s Maryland. Also known as the People’s Republic of Maryland. Why investigate one of their own? 

    Although, now that Kimberlin’s name is out there, I wouldn’t be surprised to see him brought into cloisters.

  37. Mike G.
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:04 pm

     I’d say Bill Ayers and Brett Kimberlin are probably pretty “close.” IYKWIMAITYD

  38. Adobe_Walls
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:15 pm

    I would suggest that his “work” is considered valuable by the DoJ

  39. Adobe_Walls
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:17 pm

    Correct, our government has become a “hive of scum and villainy”.

  40. Adobe_Walls
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:20 pm

    Yet another good question.

  41. Sarah Wells
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:46 pm

    BK did mention a Chicago pal sent him “care packages” 

    See also his lawsuit  (dismissed as meritless) that he received pornography that was too lame.

  42. Sarah Wells
    May 19th, 2012 @ 7:47 pm

    Maybe felons shouldn’t be permitted to recruit voters.

  43. ThePaganTemple
    May 19th, 2012 @ 8:03 pm

    Isn’t this the weekend the #Occuscum were supposed to descend on the G8 Summit?

  44. K-Bob
    May 19th, 2012 @ 8:34 pm

    When I think how hard it is for small businesses to get money on loan, and then see that this a-moral con artist is having it lavished on him by idiots who think he actually gives a damn about their cause…

    Well, I guess I’m glad to see he’s relieving them of some cash and guilt. Clearly he’s not dumb enough to go lie in front of bulldozers in Palestine.

    Tort reform probably wouldn’t help much, either. It takes a conscience-shift to move people away from being too warm and fuzzy with punishment for bad people.

  45. Evi L. Bloggerlady
    May 19th, 2012 @ 8:37 pm

    I just do not want my jokes seem like I am making light of Stacy’s work.  Because I am impressed by his journalistic attack.  

  46. K-Bob
    May 19th, 2012 @ 8:45 pm

    Serious overtime on this one.  I agree.

    Stacy helped two major campaigns catch fire this year.  Maybe his writing on this story will help force it up certain noses.

  47. robertstacymccain
    May 19th, 2012 @ 8:52 pm

    Yeah, just 15 miles from my house, and I had to miss it: Made an executive decision as soon as I saw the name “Rauhauser” in Aaron’s story — click.

    So the chaotic antics of the Occupiers will have to be told by someone else, because this — OMFG — is really more important.

  48. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 9:22 pm

     Correct!

    No one ever asks, but most nonprofits have copies of their governing documents and their 990s in an unbound format for copying. The nonprofit is allowed to ask for the cost of copying, but they must show the documents to you for free during working hours.

  49. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 9:25 pm

     I can think of no way that would work.

  50. Dianna Deeley
    May 19th, 2012 @ 9:26 pm

     I’m snickering over that. First, that anyone would file such a suit, and second, at it being thrown out.