Author: mopress

  • Email from Riad Hamad: I Will be at Hutto in the Morning (12/23/06)

    After receiving an email from the Palestine Solidarity Committee, the Texas Civil Rights Review sent an email to Riad Hamad asking for details about his “toy drive.” The following email was received at 10:08 p.m., Dec. 23, 2006.–gm

    Marhaba,

    I have no idea about the toy drive . . . just went to the ” residential facility” which is horrendous and they did not let me in since it was after 5. I will be there in the morning with some women friends to visit the Palestinian family and give the mother some cash and phone cards to keep in touch with her son and husband.

    They are not allowing any gifts etc to the “detainees” as I am concerned for the pregnant woman and her husband who is ill with diabetes. No one contacted me and I did not contact anyone regarding this . . if you can call me tomorrow during the day . . I would fill you in . . Mexicans have a country to go to. Africans have countries to go to. Asians have countries that could take them. Palesitnians have NO WHERE TO Go..hence my passion for them. .

    Looking forward to hearing from you and THANKS for your work and support for peace and justice.

    Salamat
    Riad Hamad

  • Email from Riad Hamad: Take Toys, Food, Clothing (12/23/06)

    The following email contains an appeal from Riad Hamad forwarded by the Palestine Solidarity Committee at the University of Texas at Austin. The email from the PSC was received at 8:41 p.m. on Dec. 23, 2006.–gm

    Dear friends,

    There are two Palestinian families consisting of a pregnant woman and children as young as two years old being held in TEXAS jails under horrible conditions. They are being denied proper medical care, food, etc. They are also unable to make phonecalls, apparently.

    To find out more, read the links below:
    http://www.ntimc.org/
    http://texascivilrightsreview.org/phpnuke/. . .

    Riad Hamad, part of the PCWF, the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund (pcwf.org), sent the following email. If you are interested in helping please contact Riad at 512 779 . . . to find out what you can do.

    [Forwarded message from Riad Hamad]

    “I just contacted the attorney who suggested that I take toys, food, clothing and other things for the family in the jail which is in the town of HUTTO, 30 miles north of Austin.

    Also, he suggested that I contact the media to be present in case I am denied entry to see the family and I did KVUE TV station, the local ABC news. The woman who answered the phone indicated that she might be interested in covering the story and asked me to call back in two hours or about 3 o’clock in the afternoon. I am planning to call her back and plan to call other media outlets in the state to be present..and might go today and again tomorrow.

    IF the media reps can not be there today. If you or some one you know is interested in helping contact the media, going to the jail to deliver the gifts and the food please email me or call me.
    Looking forward to hearing from you and thank you for helping and trying to help this Palestinian family.

    Salamat
    Riad Hamad”

    Thanks for your help.
    Always in solidarity,
    PSC

  • Email from Riad Hamad: This is Appalling (12/21/06)

    Received Dec. 21, 2006, 9:48 p.m. Here Riad Hamad responds to news that Palestinian families are being held at T. Don Hutto prison in Taylor, Texas. In at least one case, a younger child, who was born American, was placed in foster care.–gm

    Subject: This is appalling

    Marhaba ( hello in Arabic) I just called . . . the attorney in Dallas and will try; to call him in the morning . . . do you know where the children are in foster homes.

    I am very willing, capable and determined to help if you can give me more information about these families and how we can help . . . Looking forward to hearing from you and THANKS for your work for peace and justice in these dark days of humanity led by the evil empire and its emperor George W. Bush.

    Salam/ Peace with justice
    Riad Hamad

  • Riad Hamad Search Warrant Affidavit Released

    Austin media this evening are reporting allegations contained in a search warrant affidavit that was just released in the matter of Riad Hamad. Here is how the Austin American-Statesman is describing the document:

    According to a search warrant affidavit, Hamad operated the Palestine Children’s Welfare Fund, which bills itself as an organization to improve the lives of Palestinian children.

    It said that Hamad received $633,965 in donations and that he sent some of the money — about $527,000 — to the Middle East. But the affidavit said authorities “can not determine the ultimate disposition of these funds at this time.”

    The affidavit said authorities think Hamad was using the donated money for personal use and not paying federal income tax on it.

    The document also said that Hamad failed to file several income tax returns from 2000 to 2006 and did not pay any taxes on earned income during those years.

    Hamad also gave copies of unfiled federal income tax returns and false documents to various universities in Texas to obtain federal loans in the amount of $135,000, the affidavit said.

    The lead paragraph of the story says federal authorities “could not trace the whereabouts of more than $500,000 he received for his charity”; yet the body of the article says that $527,000 was sent to the Middle East. Surely, the editors are aware that the impression they create in the lead paragraph is defamatory, especially by comparison to the facts that follow.

    There is a curious use of the word “some.” It is used, for example, to describe most of the money raised, yet not used to describe the smaller sum in question that could have “allegedly” been used for personal purposes. We would have preferred the report to say “most” of the money went to the Middle East (83 percent says our calculator), while “some” of the remaining money is still under investigation.

    If it is the case that Mr. Hamad secured loans on the basis of tax forms not actually filed, then perhaps the loans in question are student loans? Mr. Hamad was a lifelong student with several graduate degrees.

    A local Fox News package (that is not yet posted online) mentioned the word “fraud.” As the narrator of the news report at 9pm talked about money allegedly going into family accounts, the screen zoomed to a high six-digit figure. But the news account from the Statesman suggests that 83 percent of the money raised went to the Middle East.

    Nothing is yet clear about what federal officials allege regarding the $135,000 that did not go to the Middle East. For example, we believe (and reporters should know this much) that he spent some money on Palestinian refugees in Texas. He made it very clear at the time that he was making an exception to his usual rule that all money goes to the children of Palestine. But they were locking up Palestinian children at the T. Don Hutto prison, and Riad Hamad responded to their needs — without hesitation. He talked about driving to the prison and bringing care packages.

    When federal officials claim in a document that they don’t know “at this time” exactly where the $527,000 went after it got to the Middle East, it is not clear how they are using their investigative power. They are apparently not saying that they know the money was mis-spent. If they had said such a thing clearly, wouldn’t the news reports have been more straightforward?

    Fox News interviewed a neighbor who wanted to think the best things about Riad Hamad. And we venture to guess that anyone who ever met Riad Hamad shares his neighbor’s best hopes.

    Riad Hamad is dead. He can’t make any further use of his good reputation with people who knew him. Nevertheless, we would very much appreciate more careful and respectful reporting on the life of a man who by all accounts was generous from inside out.–gm

    Additional reporting from KVUE has been posted:

    A federal search warrant reveals what Hamad was being accused of.

    According to an investigator with the Internal Revenue Service, “… Riad Hamad, with the assistance of his son, Abdullah Hamad, his ex-wife, Diana Hamad, and his daughter, Rita Hamad, are using the ‘donated funds’ for personal use and not paying federal income taxes on these funds.”

    Authorities believe Hamad was operating three organizations from his Southwest Austin home — The Palestinian Children’s Welfare Fund, Clean Air of Austin and kKnder Kreative Konsultants.

    The search warrant shows donations totaling more than $633,000 were collected. Investigators also traced $892,000 in cash being deposited into Hamad family bank accounts. It’s believed these are proceeds from donations to the Children’s Welfare Fund.

    SOURCE: “Teacher found in lake investigated for spending donated money” (03:50 PM CDT on Thursday, May 1, 2008)
    By MELISSA MCGUIRE, KVUE News