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Political Flier Headed To Court

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  • Political Flier Headed To Court

    POLITICAL FLIER HEADED TO COURT
    By Jessica Wehrman

    Dayton Daily News
    11:06 PM Sunday, August 9, 2009

    WASHINGTON - A bloody 1915 conflict has sparked political warfare
    in the 2nd congressional district, where U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt
    and Democrat David Krikorian are sparring about a flier Krikorian
    distributed during the tail end of the 2008 political campaign.

    The flier accused Schmidt, a member of the Turkish-American Relations
    Caucus, of taking money from the Turkish government and Turkish
    interests in exchange for her opposition to a congressional resolution
    declaring the 1915 conflict between the two a genocide. Krikorian,
    an Armenian-American whose own grandparents narrowly escaped the
    bloodshed, supports the resolution. Earlier this year, Schmidt quietly
    filed a complaint with the Ohio Elections Commission, arguing that
    the flier was based on false statements.

    A trial is set for Sept. 3. Schmidt's camp must prove that Krikorian's
    statements were false and that he knew they were false.

    Krikorian argues that two political action committees that Schmidt's
    campaign has received money from - the Turkish American Heritage
    PAC and Turkish Coalition USA - receive money directly from Turkish
    interests. The PACs describe themselves instead as PACs honoring
    Turkish heritage.

    Schmidt's camp has hired a high-powered Washington, D.C. attorney,
    Bruce Fein. Krikorian has his own: Mark Geragos, an Armenian-American
    who has defended celebrities including Michael Jackson and Winona
    Ryder.

    For his part, Krikorian defends the fliers as a freedom of speech
    issue, plain and simple. He doesn't back away from his flier's claim
    that Schmidt accepted " blood money" to deny a genocide.

    "There are no Turkish people who live in the second district," he
    said. "Why is this woman doing this? She does this for the money."

    But Bruce Pfaff, a spokesman for Schmidt said the issue isn't one
    of where one stands on Turkish-Armenian relations, but rather,
    one of truth versus lies, and what part lies should play in a
    campaign. Schmidt, he said, did not take money from Turkish interests
    in exchange for her opposition to the resolution. "She obviously
    believes atrocities were committed," he said, adding that she doesn't
    necessarily believe the bloodshed was planned by the government,
    as international law demands it to be to be deemed a genocide.

    Krikorian, who ran as an independent in 2008, said the issue is about
    something bigger.

    "This has to do with one of the absolute biggest issues we have in
    our country - the flow of money from special interest organizations to
    congressmen and senators in exchange for doing their bidding," he said.
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