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Un-Gagged: FBI Whistleblower Testifies In Ohio Elec. Complaint Case

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  • Un-Gagged: FBI Whistleblower Testifies In Ohio Elec. Complaint Case

    Un-Gagged: FBI Whistleblower Testifies In Ohio Election Complaint Case »
    By Thomas C. Nash
    Mirror-Spectator Staff

    WASHINGTON - A high profile Ohio election fraud case revolving around
    the Armenian Genocide now includes the testimony of an ex-FBI
    translator who claims the US government maintained a relationship with
    Osama Bin Laden until September 11, 2001.

    Sibel Edmonds, who was recruited by the FBI as a Turkish, Farsi and
    Azerbaijani translator immediately after the September 11 attacks, was
    fired in 2002 after raising questions about the Turkish government's
    influence on US officials and illegal activities involving drug and
    arms smuggling, money laundering and the sale of nuclear secrets.

    The election complaint, stemming from accusations that an Ohio
    Republican House member took `blood money' from the Turkish government
    in exchange for denying the Armenian Genocide, has given Edmonds a
    chance to outline her knowledge of what she says are treasonous acts
    committed by Congressional, Defense and State Department officials to
    aid Turkish government.

    Edmonds has been fighting a `state secrets' gag order imposed in 2002
    by former Attorney General John Ashcroft to stymie her efforts to make
    the information public. The Ohio case has provided Edmonds a chance to
    defy that gag order after being given permission to testify by the
    Ohio Elections Commission.

    Edmonds gave a six-hour deposition at the National Whistleblowers
    Center (NWC) on August 8.

    `Every time I have attempted to [use the Freedom of Information Act],
    it's ended up in court,' Edmonds said before the testimony. `I've been
    trying to put this information forth to the American people. This
    deposition may achieve this goal to a certain degree.'

    `Blood Money'

    Edmond's deposition was sought by Democratic Ohio Congressional
    candidate David Krikorian, who has been charged with making false
    statements during a 2008 campaign for Ohio's 2nd district seat against
    Republican incumbent Jean Schmidt.

    Schmidt took issue with the then-independent Krikorian campaign's
    distribution of a flyer stating she had taken $30,000 in `blood money'
    to `deny the genocide of Christian Armenians by Muslim Turks' as
    co-chair of the Congressional Turkish Caucus.

    While Schmidt, a four-year incumbent, won the election by a wide
    margin, Krikorian contends she filed a `false claims' complaint with
    the Ohio Elections Commission in April after learning that he was
    seeking the Democratic nomination as her opponent in 2010.

    Krikorian, who two days before the 2008 election demanded Schmidt
    withdraw from the race and recommend she `seek the help of
    professional counseling,' said Edmonds' testimony will prove Schmidt
    is unduly influenced by the Turkish government.

    `There are no Turkish interests in this district,' Krikorian said
    after the deposition. `Who's pulling her strings and why is she
    allowing it to happen? She lives in the greater Cincinnati area. Why
    was she the single largest recipient of Turkish PAC money in the 2008
    campaign?'

    After hearing Edmonds' accusations, Krikorian said he now wonders
    whether Schmidt may have been forced to file the complaint by the
    Turkish government.

    `Based on some of the stuff that we heard in Edmonds testimony, it's
    clear that the Turkish government does, or did at least anyway,
    actively blackmail members of the US Congress.'

    Schmidt's office did not respond to a request for comment.

    Edmonds said she was happy to contribute to Krikorian's defense, but
    that her information reaches far beyond the Turks' disruption of the
    Armenian Genocide recognition legislation, which is awaiting review by
    the House Foreign Affairs Committee.

    `The Armenian Genocide issue is part of the information [for which]
    the US government has invoked the state secrets privilege,' she said.
    `In my case it includes other issues, but the Armenian Genocide is
    part of it. The request for [the state secrets privilege] to be
    invoked came from the State Department because of Turkish lobbying.'

    The Link to 9/11

    Much has been made of a recent radio interview in which Edmonds said
    Osama Bin Laden and the US government collaborated in operations in
    central Asia until the September 11 attacks. Edmonds said some
    operations were ongoing at the point of her termination in 2002.

    Given the timing of her deposition and what some have deemed a
    `bombshell,' Edmonds stressed that the information is nothing new.

    `I have been talking about that for seven years,' she said. `There's
    nothing explosive about it. I don't have any control over how certain
    groups use the information.'

    Among the information that remains under the state secrets label is
    her knowledge to events preceding September 11. Edmonds volunteered
    her testimony to the 9/11 Commission, but was ignored until the 9/11
    Families Steering Committee, appointed to monitor the Commission,
    insisted she be included. The contents of her testimony were left out
    of the 9/11 Commission Report and remain sealed.

    Since the gag order on Edmonds' information has not been lifted, her
    ability to testify was in doubt up until and during the August 8
    deposition.

    In letters posted online by the NWC, General Counsel of the FBI
    Valerie Caproni and Senior Counsel with the Department of Justice
    Vesper Mei responded to a request by Edmond's legal team to review the
    gag order by saying Krikorian's subpoena to testify was not valid.

    The Justice Department stated Edmonds is under `no compulsion' to
    testify and the FBI insisted that she, `does not have approval for any
    disclosure of any information.'

    The deposition, however, went on as scheduled.

    `I think people were pretty surprised that the [Department of Justice]
    did not show,' Krikorian said.

    Although the Ohio Elections Commission instructed the NWC to ban the
    media, the NWC said it hopes to release a video and full transcript of
    the testimony.

    Objections

    Krikorian was on hand at the deposition alongside his attorney, former
    Michael Jackson lawyer Mark Geragos. Standing outside the NWC
    headquarters, Krikorian gave the assembled media his recollection of
    Edmonds' testimony.

    Among the highlights, Krikorian said, was Edmonds' claim that a
    married female member of Congress was enticed into a sexual
    relationship with a woman paid by the Turkish government to videotape
    the affair.

    `Ms. Edmonds said these types of `hooking' exercises to uncover
    somebody's weaknesses was standard operating procedure,' Krikorian
    said, adding Edmonds did not identify the blackmailed Representative.

    Other lawmakers mentioned in Edmonds' testimony, according to
    Krikorian, included Dan Burton (R-IN), who Edmonds alleges took bribes
    and `engaged in espionage' for the Turkish government, former Rep.
    Dick Gephardt (D-MO), former Speaker of the House Dennis Hastert
    (R-IL) and Stephen Solarz (D-NY).

    Congressional newspaper The Hill reported in April that Hastert had
    signed a $35,000-a-month contract to lobby against the Armenian
    Genocide resolution. Gephardt, a former proponent of the resolution,
    began lobbying against it in 2007.

    Bruce Fein, an influential Washington attorney and resident scholar at
    the Turkish Coalition of America (TCA), is representing Schmidt and
    attended the deposition to object to the testimony.

    `There are two grounds for the objection,' Fein said afterwards. `The
    first was the attorney questioning her was not admitted as an attorney
    in the case. The second was (the testimony) was totally irrelevant.
    (Edmonds) hadn't even read the complaint and admitted to not knowing
    anything about the case.'

    Fein declined further comment.

    Fein is also representing historian Guenter Lewy in a lawsuit against
    the Southern Poverty Law Center alleging they defamed him by reporting
    the Turkish government paid Lewy to deny the Armenian Genocide.

    An outspoken critic of the Armenian Genocide recognition movement,
    Fein recently published an article in the Huffington Post titled,
    `Recommendations for the Armenian Diaspora,' in which he asks the
    diaspora to re-align its genocide recognition efforts toward, among
    other areas, `exposing the futility of political lobbying.'

    `This Is What I've Been Fighting for'

    The Ohio election complaint is scheduled to be heard by the Elections
    Commission review board on September 3. Before then, Krikorian said
    his legal team expects depositions from Schmidt and TCA President G.
    Lincoln McCurdy.

    Krikorian added that Edmonds' testimony will remain sealed from the
    public until September 3 in order to avoid further provoking the
    Justice Department before he is able to use it.

    `Our intention right now is on winning the case,' Krikorian said. `We
    sought the deposition not as a public spectacle but for my defense.
    We'll focus on winning this frivolous lawsuit ... What happens after
    that we'll have to wait and see.'
    Krikorian added he was unsure as to whether the Justice Department
    could block the testimony from being used.

    `Based on Ms. Edmonds testimony, I think just about anything our
    government wants to do, they can do,' he said.

    For Edmonds, it may finally be her chance to bring to light the
    information she has been fighting to disclose for seven years. She
    expressed doubt, however, in how much traction her story will gain
    from the deposition.

    `The mainstream media date has completely ignored the facts confirmed
    by Congress, and the extremity of these gag orders have completely
    blacked it out,' Edmonds said. `The American people have a right to
    know. They have the right to know about these incumbents and they have
    to be informed. In my case, forget about the foreign entities - it
    involves elected officials involved in criminal actions.'

    Edmonds has often said she would make her knowledge public to any
    major media outlet that would present her complete, unedited story.
    None have taken her up on the offer.

    `This is what I was fighting for for all these years,' she told
    journalists after the six hours of testimony. `At least now a good
    chunk of it is out.'
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