Jihad Comes To Ohio

April 3, 2006

From Front Page Mag:

When I left my hometown of Hilliard, Ohio eleven years ago, it was still a small suburban city outside of Columbus. By the time I returned a few months ago to help care for my aging parents, little did I realize that during the time I was gone that my hometown – about as whitebread, conservative red-state America as you can get – had become one of the many battlegrounds in the Global War on Terror.

The Hilliard I grew up in was sleepy cowtown. As the son of one the local police officers (and my older brother would later follow him on the force), it was impossible to do anything serious without word quickly making its way back to my home, so I didn’t even try. No one else did for that matter. The city was safe and relatively crime-free, except for the obligatory fight at the local bar every Friday night and the annual confiscation of the slot machines at the Moose Lodge. Back then, virtually every area of town was within a half-an-hour walk. While I was in high school, after classes I would walk across the street to the local library at the entrance to the City Park to study and to pass the time.
 
Today, that former library building is now a full-time Islamic school (K-8), Sunrise Academy, funded and operated by the local-area branch of the Muslim American Society (MAS), the Islamic Society of Greater Columbus (ISGC) MAS has been identified by researchers and many media outlets (such as these recent articles in the Chicago Tribune and The Weekly Standard) as one of the U.S. front groups for the jihadist Muslim Brotherhood and funded by the extremist Saudi Wahhabi lobby. Hasan al-Banna, the Egyptian founder of the Muslim Brotherhood, stated this as the organization’s credo: “Allah is our objective. The Prophet is our leader. Qur’an is our law. Jihad is our way. Dying in the way of Allah is our highest hope.”

But the local Islamic school’s connection to the international Muslim Brotherhood terror network is far from the only manifestation of the hometown jihad. Among the regular speakers at the school is Hilliard resident, Dr. Salah Sultan, who gives monthly lectures on a number of Islam-related topics. Sultan was the founding president of the Islamic American University in Dearborn, Michigan, and still serves on the European Council for Fatwa and Research . He has self-published a number of Islamic titles available through his own publishing company. On his online resume, Sultan lists as his personal vision: “To live happily. To die as a martyr. To meet the beloved ones in the Paradise of the Lord of Heaven and the earth.”

But Sultan’s desire for martyrdom isn’t just a personal ambition; in a speech he delivered to the annual conference of the Islamic Association for Palestine (the primary U.S.-based front group for the Palestinian terrorist organization, HAMAS) in 1999, he expressed his hope that all Muslim children would dream of martyrdom for the Palestinian cause: “I want every child to sleep on the wound of Palestine and the actions of martyrdom, just like that mother in the country whose son wrote to her that they are to meet in Paradise.”

In that same speech, Sultan clearly identifies who he thinks is perpetrating the “martyrdom” of Palestinians in a tirade that could be taken straight from the pages of the anti-Semitic book, Protocols of the Elders of Zion:

What does "the Cause" mean to you? And what does it mean to your children?… How much do they know about these tragedies? Did we mention to them that the Children of Zion over there cut open the wombs of mothers. As Khalid M. Khalid mentioned in 1992 when he visited Shamir and saw on his desk a strange ashtray. He asked him, "What strange ashtray is this?" Shamir told him that this was the skull of an embryo. The skull of an embryo? An Israeli soldier opened the womb of a Palestinian mother, took out the embryo, cut off his head, and gave it to him as a present. He gave it to him as a present! This is the method of the Jews. Killing a Muslim or any other non-Jew does not matter to them. Because their motto is, "The gentiles mean nothing to us." This is what the text of the Talmud says: "If you come across a non-Jew kill him!"

Do you want this guy as your neighbor? We will be glad to see him go, quite frankly.

I’m hoping he doesn’t bring any of his friends home for a visit, like his side-kick Yusef Al-Qarawadi, the Qatar-based Muslim Brotherhood and HAMAS cleric whom Sultan hired as a faculty member for the Islamic American University. In 2001, Qaradawi issued a fatwa that authorized HAMAS to conduct suicide bombings, declaring that such acts qualified as martyrdom and did not fall under the Qur’anic prohibition against suicide.

Then again in 2004, Qaradawi issued another fatwa along with 92 other extremist religious leaders authorizing the killing and abduction of American civilians in Iraq, identifying them as “invaders”.

My neighbor Sultan and his buddy Qaradawi also serve together on the European Council for Fatwa and Research. This organization has as its goal the establishment of sharia as the operating legal system in Europe and asserts itself as the ruling government of Muslim’s living in predominately non-Muslim areas. Among the more famous of its fatwas was issued in 2003 during an annual conference organized by the council in Stockholm, Sweden, which declared that jihadist killings and suicide bombings were not to be identified as “terrorism” .

Thus, I have come to discover that the Global War on Terror is no longer a remote issue related to events taking place on the other side of the world. I understood that on September 11th when I heard that a former work colleague was aboard American Airlines Flight 77, which crashed into the Pentagon. And I am reminded of it every day when I think about my cousin that currently commands an Army unit outside of Baghdad, living day-to-day with his troops in harm’s way to bring democracy and freedom to the oppressed and victimized people of Iraq.

Though I have to confess that I never would have expected that my hometown of Hilliard, Ohio would have ever become a haven for an international apologist and recruiter for Islamic-sponsored terrorism. But it’s true.

It does make me wonder why the American government would grant someone with such readily identifiable terrorist connections, which took me just a few hours to track down on the Internet, U.S. Permanent Residency status? Have we learned nothing from 9/11? Is that day of unimaginable tragedy and horror just a distant memory?

Then I remember that not even two years ago that another local resident, Nuradin Abdi, was charged by the FBI with plotting with another known local al-Qaeda member, Iyman Faris, to blow up an area shopping mall after he had receiving extensive explosives training in Ethiopia. According to trial documents, Faris was taking orders directly from then-al-Qaeda operations chief, Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who planned the 9/11 attacks and was subsequently captured in Pakistan. It is speculated that the terror plot was uncovered by the domestic surveillance program loudly denounced recently by the mainstream media, Democratic politicians, and leftist special interest groups.

This makes me concerned that next terrorist attack on American soil won’t be in Chicago or Los Angeles, but could very well be a bombing at Otie’s Tavern on Main Street, a sarin attack at Tuttle Crossing Mall, or shootings at my alma mater, Hilliard Davidson High School. Any of those scenarios is not far-fetched. Will Cemetery Road be the scene of hundreds of burned-out cars reminiscent of the uprisings in Paris just a few months ago?

It is thoughts such as these that give rise to my fears that the eyes of the world will look in shock and horror to my hometown of Hilliard, Ohio, or one of the tens of thousands of cities like it across the country, as jihad strikes into the deepest heart of middle America. When that day of terror comes, it should be one that we should expect. I remember that my neighbor Salah Sultan and scores of his jihad-preaching associates throughout the American heartland are not just teaching Arabic. The seeds they’re sowing will inevitably bear fruit in a hometown jihad somewhere.


Toledo Blade On The Noe Affair

April 3, 2006

From The Toledo Blade:

In the months before Tom Noe came under scrutiny for his state-funded rare-coin venture, he used a federal appointment to forge relationships with U.S. Mint officials that opened doors for him on Capitol Hill, documents obtained by The Blade show.

And before he was brought down by scandal last year, the coin dealer helped persuade Congress — for the first time in the nation’s history — to authorize the minting of a 24-karat gold coin.

Mr. Noe’s quest to become a Washington power broker and to help redesign all U.S. coins fell apart last year when controversy gripped the $50 million rare-coin investment he managed for the Ohio Bureau of Workers’ Compensation and federal authorities announced they were investigating the GOP fund-raiser for allegedly laundering political contributions to President Bush’s campaign.

Last week, Greg Weinman, the Mint’s senior counsel and ethics official, told The Blade that the Treasury Department’s inspector general had opened an investigation into Mr. Noe’s role as a member and chairman of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, a panel that advises the Treasury secretary on themes and designs for coins and congressional gold medals.

In May, 2003, the White House and House Speaker Dennis Hastert recommended that Mr. Noe get a seat on the influential 11-member committee. Treasury Secretary John Snow appointed Mr. Noe, less than six months after the Toledo-area coin dealer expressed interest in joining a Mint committee to Henrietta Fore, then director of the Mint.

“I have always had interest in getting more involved on the national level,” Mr. Noe wrote to Ms. Fore.

Mr. Noe’s appointment and eventual chairmanship of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee enabled him to expand his reach into the federal government, according to more than 2,700 pages of e-mails and other committee records released last week by the Mint to The Blade. The newspaper filed a Freedom of Information Act request for the public records in June, 2005.

Documents and interviews reveal that Mr. Noe — who has pleaded not guilty to a 53-count felony theft and corruption indictment for his handling of Ohio’s rare-coin fund and not guilty to federal charges that he laundered money to President Bush’s re-election campaign — courted Mint officials at high-price restaurants in Washington, sought information on behalf of fellow coin dealers about future coins to be minted, and pushed the Mint and lawmakers to use higher-grade metals in the nation’s coins.

“Tom Noe saw a golden money pot and he wanted a piece of it,” said Damien LaVera, a spokesman for the Democratic National Committee, reacting to The Blade’s findings. “But unfortunately, the Republicans in Washington were all too willing to help out their friends if they gave enough to the campaigns.”

In 2003 and 2004, Mr. Noe earned the elite status of a Bush “Pioneer” because he raised at least $100,000 for the President’s campaign. Mr. Noe and his wife, Bernadette, a former chairman of the Lucas County Republican Party, gave more than $200,000 to GOP candidates and causes.

The White House did not return messages seeking comment.

Frequent trips to D.C.

From May, 2003, to May, 2005, as a member of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, Mr. Noe made frequent trips to Washington. He visited the Mint for meetings and built relationships with federal officials and lawmakers.

In 2004, he was picked to chair the committee, and he accepted — with a request that Madelyn Simmons Marchessault, the Mint’s director of legislative and governmental affairs, serve as the committee’s liaison. She was instrumental in getting Mr. Noe on the committee.

E-mails show that Mr. Noe grew close with Ms. Marchessault. They spoke frequently, and she set up meetings for Mr. Noe on Capitol Hill. During President Bush’s 2005 inaugural week, Ms. Marchessault and her husband, Ronald Marchessault, accepted Mr. Noe’s invitation to a gathering at The Caucus Room, an upscale Washington restaurant that offers a list of 4,000 wines.

Ms. Marchessault, now an official in the State Department’s Bureau of Management, and Ms. Fore, now the State Department’s undersecretary for management, would not respond to questions from The Blade about their dealings with Mr. Noe. The Treasury Department also refused to respond to questions.

Both Ms. Marchessault and Ms. Fore are Bush Administration appointees.

“Since it is an issue before the courts, under investigation, at this point we at the State Department and our officials aren’t in a position to comment,” said Adam Ereli, a spokesman for the department. “What we can say is that we know Henrietta Fore and Ms. Simmons [Marchessault] to be upstanding public servants of the highest integrity.”

Ute Wartenberg Kagan, a coinage committee member and executive director of the American Numismatic Society, said the allegations facing Mr. Noe related to Ohio’s rare-coin investment are “not that unusual in the wheelings and dealings of the coin business because it’s a business that is quite unregulated and based largely on cash.”

Ms. Kagan, who described Ms. Marchessault as “incredibly nice and very competent,” said she didn’t see any evidence of Mr. Noe trying to use her or any signs that Ms. Marchessault was closer to Mr. Noe than previous chairmen.

The Treasury Department’s inspector general began its probe of Mr. Noe after The Blade first reported in April, 2005, on problems with the $50 million rare-coin funds he managed for the state, e-mails show.

At the time of the initial reports in The Blade, Mr. Noe — appointed by Republican governors to serve on the Ohio Board of Regents and the Ohio Turnpike Commission — was gaining stature in Washington. And the state of Ohio was on the verge of giving him an additional $25 million to invest in rare coins — a plan that was reversed after stories about the coin funds appeared in the newspaper.

U.S. Rep. Marcy Kaptur, a Toledo Democrat, said Mr. Noe’s activities on the Mint committee mirrored his rise to prominence in state government. The fallout of Ohio’s rare-coin scandal has led to the criminal conviction of Gov. Bob Taft and four former high-ranking aides, who failed to report gifts or money they received from Mr. Noe.

In the state capital, Mr. Noe set up the “Noe Supper Club,” a group of high-ranking government officials and Statehouse insiders who gathered for dinners at Morton’s Steakhouse, where Mr. Noe picked up the tab blocks from the Statehouse.

“I believe he was walking down the same path with the federal government,” Miss Kaptur said.

Mr. Noe, though, was forced to resign from his federal appointment in May, 2005, after his attorneys told Ohio authorities to expect a shortfall of up to $13 million in the coin funds he managed for the state Bureau of Workers’ Compensation.

Miss Kaptur said it appeared that Mr. Noe’s appointment to the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee and his ascension as chairman was “wired.”

“It gave him enormous access to a lot of information,” she said. “And he had a lot of special interests. I have several unanswered questions, from his own personal collections to the involvement in the U.S. Mint in minting new coins.”

Building influence

Not only did Mr. Noe use his federal appointment to cultivate relationships at the Mint, and on Capitol Hill, but e-mails show that he used his post to influence policy and seek access to inside information that could benefit him as a rare-coin dealer.

In December, 2004, Don Herres, president of Dollar Towne, a Dayton-area rarities business, contacted Mr. Noe about the possibility of the Mint producing a coin made of palladium, a precious metal, according to e-mails.

Mr. Herres, in an interview last week, said Mr. Noe thought it was a “great idea,” and he sent him a letter saying he would raise the issue at a Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee meeting. Coin-fund records show that Mr. Noe, as manager of the $50 million state rare-coin investment, had more than $450,000 in transactions with Mr. Herres’ business.

Mr. Noe followed up in a Dec. 15, 2004, e-mail to Ms. Marchessault.

Referring to Mr. Herres, Mr. Noe wrote: “This guy is a big seller of U.S. gold and platinum eagle products … any palladium plans in the future?? Let me know.”

It’s unclear if Ms. Marchessault responded to Mr. Noe’s inquiry. The U.S. Mint has not produced a palladium coin.

But while Mr. Noe served as chairman of the advisory committee, the U.S. Mint announced plans to manufacture its first 24-karat, .9999 gold bullion investment coins. On April 28, 2005, Mr. Noe hosted a public meeting to consider themes for the 24-karat gold coins.

A year earlier, Mr. Noe testified before U.S. Rep. Michael Oxley’s House Financial Services Committee about the possibility of manufacturing .9999 bullion coins.

During the hearing, U.S. Rep. Mike Castle (R., Delaware) asked Mr. Noe for his opinion on using a lower-cost type of coinage to produce a set of coins featuring presidential spouses.

“I think there is always concern with the low cost as far as the collectibility goes. I think it might be good for school children to be able to use these for an educational tool … but a new gold bullion coin depicting America’s First Ladies will be very successful and a welcome change,” Mr. Noe testified.

“I also project that the sales will be extremely high due to not only the design change, but also the fact that the content will be .9999 percent pure gold,” the coin dealer told the committee.

“We will finally have a gold bullion coin to compete directly with the Canadian maple leaf and other world .999 percent gold coins,” Mr. Noe testified.

Jay Johnson, who served as U.S. Mint director in 2000-2001, testified at the same congressional hearing as Mr. Noe in 2004.

“Had there not been all of the problems in Ohio, he might have been a candidate at some point for Mint director,” said Mr. Johnson, a one-term Democratic congressman from Wisconsin who was nominated by President Bill Clinton for the post. “These are political appointments.”

Mr. Johnson said the Mint is “not really an independent operator” because Congress calls the shots in creating coins.

“I don’t think that Tom Noe could have used his position on this advisory committee to make any changes or pass anything that affected the market or made any personal profits for him; not even the Mint director can do that,” said Mr. Johnson, who is a consultant to Collectors Universe. The California-based company provides grading and products to dealers and collectors of coins and other collectibles.

But Scott Travers, a coin expert and author, said Mr. Noe could have benefited financially from his federal appointment.

“If you have a prestigious government appointment and you are perceived to be somebody of power, status, integrity, and responsibility, it reinforces the sky-is-the-limit mentality that people might have about you in terms of trust,” he said.

Mr. Travers, who heard that Mr. Noe was a “helpful and straightforward” committee member, said the coin dealer could have positioned himself to “funnel that trust and respect into a profitable business venture that could line the wallet.”

Chairman of coin panel

Mr. Noe had accomplished his goals of becoming one of the biggest players in both Ohio politics and the rare-coin industry by 2002. That’s when he set his sights on a new goal — Washington.

In April, 2003, President Bush signed a bill establishing the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, which replaced the Citizens Commemorative Coinage Advisory Committee, a panel that advised the treasury secretary on commemorative coin designs.

According to e-mails, the White House played a key role in helping Mr. Noe win a seat on the newly minted committee.

Officially, House Speaker Hastert, an Illinois Republican, recommended Mr. Noe to Treasury Secretary Snow, but an e-mail from Ms. Marchessault to Kim Nickles, a treasury liaison to the White House, revealed that Mr. Noe was an “original White House recommendation,” whom she was “finally able to get on the committee through the congressional recommendations.”

In February, 2003, during a visit to the White House, Mr. Noe was expected to take part in an “Ohio political strategy session” with Karl Rove, who is considered the architect of President Bush’s political career, and Ken Mehlman, who was later named the President’s campaign manager.

The legislation that created the new coinage committee — which passed through the House Financial Services Committee chaired by Congressman Oxley (R., Findlay) — changed the rules for selecting the panel’s chairman, making it easier for someone such as Mr. Noe to become the leader.

Under the new rules, the chairman was picked by the treasury secretary rather than by members of the committee.

“I think it was a very directed way of moving a candidate of the administration’s choice into the chairmanship by changing the way in which it had been traditionally done and mandating it legislatively,” Miss Kaptur said yesterday.

About a month before the 2004 election, Mr. Snow chose Mr. Noe to be the committee’s next chairman.

Upon his selection, Mr. Noe made it clear which Mint employee he wanted as the liaison to the committee. It was Ms. Marchessault, a former staff member for U.S. Sen. Phil Gramm, a Texas Republican.

Ms. Fore, in a note congratulating Mr. Noe on becoming chairman, granted his request.

“Dear Tom … Per our discussion, the primary point of contact at the United States Mint will now be Madelyn Simmons Marchessault, our Director of Legislative and Intergovernmental Affairs,” Ms. Fore wrote.

Politics of socializing

Over the next several months, until scandal in Ohio forced his resignation from the committee, Mr. Noe wrote several e-mails to Ms. Marchessault describing how much he enjoyed working with her.

“Wow, you are GOOD,” Mr. Noe told Ms. Marchessault on Dec. 16, 2004. Listing his home phone numbers, from Lake Erie to the Florida Keys, Mr. Noe added: “If you can’t find me now … I don’t exist!!!!”

“Thanks … we’re a great team!!!!” Mr. Noe wrote to her the next day. “I may even look forward to these meetings from now on!!!”

“I assure you that the pleasure has been all mine,” Mr. Noe wrote to Ms. Marchessault two months later. “You have no idea how relieved I am that you are the person we get to work with. Look forward to the future.”

“Thanks Madelyn … you are the BEST!!” Mr. Noe wrote in February, 2005.

But Mr. Noe’s cultivation of Ms. Marchessault did not stop with e-mails.

In addition to raising at least $100,000 for President Bush’s re-election, Mr. Noe in 2004 served as regional chairman of the Bush-Cheney campaign in northwest Ohio. Four days before the election, Mr. Noe at 2 a.m. apologized to Ms. Marchessault for not responding promptly to a message from her. He explained that he was busy with a “Bush event in Toledo that I am advancing.”

As part of his inauguration schedule in January, 2005, Mr. Noe invited Ms. Marchessault to socialize with him and his wife, Bernadette, then chairman of the Lucas County Republican Party.

“Let me know if you and hubby want to have a drink or dinner with Bernadette and I next week,” wrote Mr. Noe, inviting them to dinner at the Caucus Room and a second dinner at Morton’s in Georgetown.

Mr. Noe told Ms. Marchessault that he had reserved the back room at the Caucus Room and “it is under my name and company name … will be about 15 to 20 people there … we get in at 5 p.m. on private plane at [Baltimore-Washington International Airport].”

On Jan. 24, 2005, a day before the dinner at the Caucus Room, Mr. Noe asked Ms. Marchessault: “Hi! Do you want to meet for an 8 am breakfast at the Renaissance?”

Although it’s unclear how many times Ms. Marchessault met Mr. Noe for social occasions, a Jan. 28, 2005, e-mail confirms that she attended the dinner at the Caucus Room.

“Dwayne Sattler, whom you met at dinner at the Caucus Room, is going to be in DC next Monday and Tuesday … wanted to contact your husband,” Mr. Noe wrote.

A former aide to U.S. Sen. Mike DeWine, Mr. Sattler is a lobbyist. When Mr. Noe was chairman of the Ohio Board of Regents in 2003, the regents hired the firm where Mr. Sattler worked.

Mr. Sattler declined comment when reached at his home in suburban Columbus last week. Mr. Marchessault, a project manager who works in Maryland for the Battelle Memorial Institute — a worldwide science and technology enterprise based in Columbus — did not return messages seeking comment.

Mr. Weinman, the Mint’s senior legal counsel and ethics director, said Mr. Noe tried to socialize with several Mint employees.

Mr. Weinman, who grew up in the Toledo area and is a University of Toledo law school graduate, said he declined several requests from Mr. Noe but had breakfast once with him near his Vintage Coins & Collectibles shop in Monclova Township.

But Mr. Noe had more than socializing on his agenda, and he wasn’t the only one who thought he could be of help with GOP politicians on Capitol Hill.

Shortly after Mr. Noe became chairman of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee, Ms. Fore, director of the U.S. Mint, decided to use his Ohio connections.

In a Nov. 10, 2004, e-mail, Ms. Fore asked Ms. Marchessault “if the museum could move through” Congressman Oxley’s House Financial Services Committee.
Ms. Fore suggested that a Republican committee staffer, Joe Pinder, Mr. Noe, and counsel could “help with Oxley” and she could call Mr. Oxley and a Republican congressman from Delaware.

Mr. Weinman last week said it appeared the reference was to a proposal to construct a museum in the Mint headquarters in Washington.

On April 25, 2005, Mr. Noe wrote Ms. Marchessault an e-mail with “Joe P” as the subject.

“Just got off a LONG phone call with Joe … he talked about your chat with him and I think a $1-2M ask is doable this year … had LOTS of other opinions as well … he really likes you … maybe we can chat on Weds night about all of this … let me know,” Mr. Noe wrote.

Mr. Weinman said last week that he did not know what the reference to “a $1-2M ask” meant.

Mr. Pinder declined comment, referring questions to a press aide who did not return messages seeking comment.

Treasury investigation

In an interview last week, Mr. Weinman, who confirmed that Mr. Noe’s tenure on the coinage committee was the subject of a Treasury investigation, said he did not know the scope of that investigation.

“I know they came to me and they wanted to see Tom’s financial filing,” he said.
Richard Delmar, counsel to the Treasury Department’s inspector general, said results of any investigation are not available yet.

It is clear from Treasury Department e-mails that Mr. Noe’s troubles in Ohio were of concern in Washington.

On May 26, 2005, the day Mr. Noe’s attorneys told Ohio authorities there was a shortfall of up to $13 million in the state’s $50 million coin fund, Ms. Marchessault informed Mr. Pinder, the Republican staffer on Mr. Oxley’s House Financial Services Committee, of Mr. Noe’s resignation as chairman and a member of the Citizens Coinage Advisory Committee.

“Dammit,” he wrote back.

“Not looking good for him,” Ms. Marchessault replied.