Posted on 07/29/2007 2:00:49 PM PDT by mdittmar
Multiple studies have demonstrated that our press exhibits a liberal bias. But worse, a very disturbing phenomenon has now emerged: American newspaper editors advocating on behalf of terrorist organizations. FSM Contributing Editor Steve Emerson has the facts on one such case.
Many have noted the fairly recent trend of Hamas leaders taking to the op-ed pages of major American newspapers. (Side note: Hamas is not the only terrorist group with access to the op-ed pages of American newspapers. Just this morning, the Washington Post, in its Muslims Speak Out section, has a piece from Hizballah spiritual leader Muhammad Hussein Fadlallah, extolling the virtues of violent jihad).
But another equally insidious phenomenon has been occurring for much longer: American newspaper editors advocating on behalf of Hamas. One of the worst offenders is Don Wycliff, former Public Editor and Editorial Page Editor of the Chicago Tribune.
On July 11, 2007, Hamas operative Muhammad Salah was sentenced to 21 months in prison, fined $25,000 and ordered to do 100 hours of community service on charges of obstruction of justice related to his lying under oath in a lawsuit concerning his time as a money courier for the terrorist group.
Prior to sentencing, Salahs attorneys orchestrated a letter writing campaign to U.S. District Court Judge Amy St. Eve on behalf of their client. One of the letters came from Mr. Wycliff, who wrote:
I write on behalf of Muhammad Salah, who shortly will come before you for sentencing. I cannot claim to know Mr. Salah well. However, I can tell you that what I do know of him suggests to me that he is not a danger to the communityon the contrary, he is an assetand that if ever there was an ideal candidate for leniency, for probation, Mr. Salah is that candidate.
For Wycliff, this letter represents only the latest in a years-long advocacy campaign for Salah and his family. In 2003, on the editorial pages of the Tribune, Wycliff made a similar plea, claiming that while he could not personally vouch for Salah, that Salah surely was being grossly mistreated by the U.S. justice system.
In 2006, Wycliff took to his papers editorial page yet again, writing:
Muhammad Salah has been on my conscience for the last 13 years. What has troubled me about the Salah case from the beginning was the secrecy of it all. He and a couple of colleagues were arrested by Israeli military authorities during a trip to the occupied territories back in 1993. They were held incommunicado from the beginning, and the U.S. government seemed strangely lackadaisical about the whole business.
For that effort, Wycliff was presented a community service award by the Council of Islamic Organizations of Greater Chicago, whose Chairman kicked off the ceremony by announcing, Given that KindHearts, a Muslim Charity in Toledo, Ohio, has [recently] had its assets frozen without due trial or process, these awards have become even more meaningful. An ironic, yet telling statement, since KindHearts, like Salah, was the target of law enforcement because of its extensive links to the Hamas terrorist organization.
Just to remind everyone, the jury found Salah guilty, and the judge sentenced Salah, because he (see page 35):
corruptly endeavored to influence, obstruct and impede the due administration of justice by submitting to the United States District Court, through lawyers acting under the authority of the court, false and misleading verified answers to interrogatories propounded on defendant SALAH in a civil suit filed against defendant SALAH and others which answers falsely stated, among other things, that defendant SALAH had never provided or delivered funds for the purpose of supporting Hamas.
Thats right, the jury found Salah was a member of Hamas and had perjured himself about handling and delivering Hamas funds. Despite this, after having publicly advocating for Salah for years from his perch at the Tribune, Wycliff was not deterred from offering more public support for Salah, continuing in his letter:
I got to know Mr. Salah and his family initially as a result of my writing about him, first as editorial page editor of the Chicago Tribune and later as public editor. Maybe I am naïve, but I was appalled to see my government going after a citizen in defiance of all the due-process principles I was taught decades ago in civics classes: a trial and conviction before punishment; presumption of innocence, the right to confront ones accusers, and so forth.
At this point, one can question Wycliffs grasp on reality. It is obvious that Salah was in fact tried and convicted before he was punished, was presumed innocent before and throughout - his trial (in fact, he was acquitted on a greater charge, even if trial watchers and followers of Salahs career with Hamas feel he is guilty in fact, if not by the law), and, like all criminal defendants, had the opportunity to confront his accuser: the U.S. government.
How Wycliff missed these facts is a mystery, and it seems sour grapes to claim that a trial, in which Salah received an acquittal on a very serious racketeering charge, was somehow unfair to him. Perhaps Wycliff's years of ethically and morally questionable public advocacy on behalf of a Hamas operative has clouded his thought process.
At sentencing, Judge St. Eve told Salah, Telling the truth is the bedrock of our judicial system and a slap on the wrist will not provide a deterrent. If only Mr. Wycliff, the former public editor and long time editorial page editor of one of Americas major newspapers, felt the same way.
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FamilySecurityMatters.org Contributing Editor Steven Emerson is an internationally recognized expert on terrorism and national security and the author of five books on these subjects, most recently "Jihad Incorporated: A Guide to Militant Islam in the US." Steve blogs on the Counterterrorism Blog.
Tomkow check this out
He’s an Enemy Agent plain and simple!
at the Tribune, Don Wycliff was a member of the editorial board at the New York Times for more than five years and served as an editor in The Times' Week in Review section. He worked as a reporter and editor at several other newspapers, including the Chicago Daily News, the Chicago Sun-Times, the Houston Post and the Dallas Times Herald
“Multiple studies have demonstrated that our press exhibits a liberal bias. But worse, a very disturbing phenomenon has now emerged: American newspaper editors advocating on behalf of terrorist organizations. “
Why is this surprising? Liberalism is of and from Satan, and terrorism is of and from Satan. Of course liberals support terrorists. How could it be otherwise?
The public editors come from the same bolt of cloth as the so called journalist...They no more represent the reader than Bill Clinton speaks for marriage counselors.
No, Mr.Wycliff, you are not. You are just plain stupid.
Don Wyclif is a far-left race-pimp. I stopped reading the Trib after he became the Public Editor due to his unseemly adoration of black demagogues and his fawning approach to black-oriented issues at the expense of other viewpoints. Besides, he is an ardent supported of gun control. I know a lot of former Trib readers who stopped taking that paper because of him. The Trib was lousy to begin with, but it’s only competition, the Sun Times, was a leftist tabloid, so our choices were limited.
This is the same Don Wycliff who, as Trib public editor, defended the Trib’s refusal to run the Mohammed cartoons.
He’s a Lib and a dhimmi.
This is the same Don Wycliff who, as Trib public editor, defended the Trib’s refusal to run the Mohammed cartoons.
He’s a Lib and a dhimmi.
No dental plan at the Trib, apparently.
Multiple studies have demonstrated that our press exhibits a liberal bias. But worse, a very disturbing phenomenon has now emerged: American newspaper editors advocating on behalf of terrorist organizations.
What we see with this is another legacy of the Viet-Nam war.
Wycliff is the same public editor who called Richard Baehr (before Baehr started the American Thinker) an idiot and refused to publish his pro-Israel letter. Recently I spoke with a Tribune editor who I know to be sensitive and thoughtful. I told him that I was delighted when Wycliff left (to do PR for Notre Dame) because of his bias against Israel. This editor was surprised, a fact that surprised me, as I had assumed that everyone at the paper was aware of his biases.
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