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jps February 4th 10 08:58 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 09:09 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 3:58 PM, jps wrote:

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.



Details, please...


Attorney: 10 US Baptists charged with child kidnap

The Associated Press
3:50 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Ten members of a U.S. missionary group who said
they were trying to rescue 33 child victims of Haiti's devastating
earthquake were charged with child kidnapping and criminal association
on Thursday, their lawyer said.

Edwin Coq said after a court hearing that a judge found sufficient
evidence to charge the Americans, who were arrested Friday at Haiti's
border with the Dominican Republic. Coq attended Thursday's hearing and
represents the entire group in Haiti.

Group leader Laura Silsby has said they were trying to take orphans and
abandoned children to an orphanage in the neighboring Dominican
Republic. She acknowledged they had not sought permission from Haitian
officials, but said they just meant to help victims of the quake.

The children taken from the group, ranging in age from 2 to 12, were
being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in
Port-au-Prince on Wednesday.

The U.S. citizens, most of them members of an Idaho-based church group,
were whisked away from the closed court hearing to jail in
Port-au-Prince, the capital. Silsby waved and smiled faintly to
reporters but declined to answer questions.

Coq said that under Haiti's legal system, there won't be an open trial,
but a judge will consider the evidence and could render a verdict in
about three months.

Coq said a Haitian prosecutor told him the Americans were charged
because they had the children in their possession. No one from the
Haitian government could be reached immediately for comment.

Each kidnapping count carries a possible sentence of five to 15 years in
prison. Each criminal association count has a potential sentence of
three to nine years.

Coq said that nine of the 10 knew nothing about the alleged scheme, or
that paperwork for the children was not in order.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out," Coq said. That
would still leave mission leader Laura Silsby facing charges.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington the U.S. was
open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants — an apparent
reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion that Haiti
could consider sending the Americans back to the United States for
prosecution.

Several parents of the children in Callebas, a quake-wracked Haitian
village near the capital, told The Associated Press Wednesday they had
handed over their children willingly because they were unable to feed or
clothe their children and the American missionaries promised to give
them a better life.

Their accounts contradicted statements by Silsby, of Meridian, Idaho.

In a jailhouse interview Saturday, Silsby told the AP that most of the
children had been delivered to the Americans by distant relatives, while
some came from orphanages that had collapsed in the quake.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families and
are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his compassion,"
she said.

In Callebas, parents said a local orphanage worker, fluent in English
and acting on behalf of the Baptists, had convened nearly the entire
village of 500 people on a dirt soccer field to present the Americans'
offer.

Isaac Adrien, 20, told his neighbors the missionaries would educate
their children in the neighboring Dominican Republic, the villagers
said, adding that they were also assured they would be free to visit
their children there.

Many parents jumped at the offer.

Adrien said he met Silsby in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 26. She told him she
was looking for homeless children, he said, and he knew exactly where to
find them.

He rushed home to Callebas, where people scrape by growing carrots,
peppers and onions. That very day, he had a list of 20 children.

As they loaded children onto a bus in Callebas on Jan. 28, the Americans
took down contact information for all the families and assured them a
relative would be able to visit them in the Dominican Republic.

The Americans' journey began last summer after Silsby and her former
nanny, 24-year-old Charisa Coulter, resolved to establish an orphanage
for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. Coulter is among the
jailed Americans.

They began buying up used clothing and collecting donations from their
Central Valley Baptist Church in Meridian and in November, Silsby
registered the New Life Children's Refuge Inc., the nonprofit
organization coordinating the rescue mission. It listed the address of
her now-foreclosed home in Meridian as its headquarters.

Then the quake hit. Silsby and Coulter moved into high gear, gathering
donations and assembling a team to go into Haiti and urgently take out
children, the younger woman's father, Mel Coulter, told the AP from his
home in Kuna, Idaho.

The group packed 40 plastic bins of donated goods into a U-Haul trailer
and drove to Salt Lake City on Jan. 22, where they took a flight to the
Dominican Republic. They made their way to Haiti, where four days later,
they were introduced to Adrien.

Adrien, who had served as the go-between and translator for the
missionaries, said he had no knowledge of the group's larger plans;
villagers said they were told none of their children would be offered
for adoption.

A Haitian-born pastor who said he worked as an unpaid consultant for the
group insisted the Baptists had done nothing wrong.

The Rev. Jean Sainvil said some of the children were orphans and might
have been put up for adoption. Children with parents were to be kept in
the Dominican Republic, and would not lose contact with their families,
Sainvil said in Atlanta.

"Everybody agreed that they knew where the children were going. The
parents were told, and we confirmed they would be allowed to see the
children and even take them back if need be," he said.

Sainvil stressed that in Haiti it is not uncommon for parents who can't
support their children to send them to orphanages.

Even Prime Minister Max Bellerive has said he recognized the Americans
may simply have been well-meaning who believed their charitable
Christian intent justified trying to remove the children from
quake-crippled Haiti.

Only minutes before the charges, the Americans' Dominican lawyer, Jorge
Puello, had said he expected at least nine of the 10 to be released and
said he was arranging a charter flight for them from Santo Domingo, the
Dominican capital.

After the Haitian lawyer's announcement, Puello could not be reached by
telephone for comment.

"I'm at the airport (in Santo Domingo) and we're getting the plane
ready. We're just waiting for the green light," Puello said. "I spoke to
a source inside the jail — a government official — who said nine would
be released but one would be held for further investigation."

___

Throw the book at these crazy fundies, and lock 'em up for a couple of
decades. If they had a "charitable christian intent," they'd be handing
out food, medicines, and toiletries to the suffering haitians, not
stealing haitian children.


lil abner February 4th 10 09:50 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.

Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?

lil abner February 4th 10 09:51 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 3:58 PM, jps wrote:

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.



Details, please...


Attorney: 10 US Baptists charged with child kidnap

The Associated Press
3:50 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? Ten members of a U.S. missionary group who said
they were trying to rescue 33 child victims of Haiti's devastating
earthquake were charged with child kidnapping and criminal association
on Thursday, their lawyer said.

Edwin Coq said after a court hearing that a judge found sufficient
evidence to charge the Americans, who were arrested Friday at Haiti's
border with the Dominican Republic. Coq attended Thursday's hearing and
represents the entire group in Haiti.

Group leader Laura Silsby has said they were trying to take orphans and
abandoned children to an orphanage in the neighboring Dominican
Republic. She acknowledged they had not sought permission from Haitian
officials, but said they just meant to help victims of the quake.

The children taken from the group, ranging in age from 2 to 12, were
being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in
Port-au-Prince on Wednesday.

The U.S. citizens, most of them members of an Idaho-based church group,
were whisked away from the closed court hearing to jail in
Port-au-Prince, the capital. Silsby waved and smiled faintly to
reporters but declined to answer questions.

Coq said that under Haiti's legal system, there won't be an open trial,
but a judge will consider the evidence and could render a verdict in
about three months.

Coq said a Haitian prosecutor told him the Americans were charged
because they had the children in their possession. No one from the
Haitian government could be reached immediately for comment.

Each kidnapping count carries a possible sentence of five to 15 years in
prison. Each criminal association count has a potential sentence of
three to nine years.

Coq said that nine of the 10 knew nothing about the alleged scheme, or
that paperwork for the children was not in order.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out," Coq said. That
would still leave mission leader Laura Silsby facing charges.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington the U.S. was
open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants ? an apparent
reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion that Haiti
could consider sending the Americans back to the United States for
prosecution.

Several parents of the children in Callebas, a quake-wracked Haitian
village near the capital, told The Associated Press Wednesday they had
handed over their children willingly because they were unable to feed or
clothe their children and the American missionaries promised to give
them a better life.

Their accounts contradicted statements by Silsby, of Meridian, Idaho.

In a jailhouse interview Saturday, Silsby told the AP that most of the
children had been delivered to the Americans by distant relatives, while
some came from orphanages that had collapsed in the quake.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families and
are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his compassion,"
she said.

In Callebas, parents said a local orphanage worker, fluent in English
and acting on behalf of the Baptists, had convened nearly the entire
village of 500 people on a dirt soccer field to present the Americans'
offer.

Isaac Adrien, 20, told his neighbors the missionaries would educate
their children in the neighboring Dominican Republic, the villagers
said, adding that they were also assured they would be free to visit
their children there.

Many parents jumped at the offer.

Adrien said he met Silsby in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 26. She told him she
was looking for homeless children, he said, and he knew exactly where to
find them.

He rushed home to Callebas, where people scrape by growing carrots,
peppers and onions. That very day, he had a list of 20 children.

As they loaded children onto a bus in Callebas on Jan. 28, the Americans
took down contact information for all the families and assured them a
relative would be able to visit them in the Dominican Republic.

The Americans' journey began last summer after Silsby and her former
nanny, 24-year-old Charisa Coulter, resolved to establish an orphanage
for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. Coulter is among the
jailed Americans.

They began buying up used clothing and collecting donations from their
Central Valley Baptist Church in Meridian and in November, Silsby
registered the New Life Children's Refuge Inc., the nonprofit
organization coordinating the rescue mission. It listed the address of
her now-foreclosed home in Meridian as its headquarters.

Then the quake hit. Silsby and Coulter moved into high gear, gathering
donations and assembling a team to go into Haiti and urgently take out
children, the younger woman's father, Mel Coulter, told the AP from his
home in Kuna, Idaho.

The group packed 40 plastic bins of donated goods into a U-Haul trailer
and drove to Salt Lake City on Jan. 22, where they took a flight to the
Dominican Republic. They made their way to Haiti, where four days later,
they were introduced to Adrien.

Adrien, who had served as the go-between and translator for the
missionaries, said he had no knowledge of the group's larger plans;
villagers said they were told none of their children would be offered
for adoption.

A Haitian-born pastor who said he worked as an unpaid consultant for the
group insisted the Baptists had done nothing wrong.

The Rev. Jean Sainvil said some of the children were orphans and might
have been put up for adoption. Children with parents were to be kept in
the Dominican Republic, and would not lose contact with their families,
Sainvil said in Atlanta.

"Everybody agreed that they knew where the children were going. The
parents were told, and we confirmed they would be allowed to see the
children and even take them back if need be," he said.

Sainvil stressed that in Haiti it is not uncommon for parents who can't
support their children to send them to orphanages.

Even Prime Minister Max Bellerive has said he recognized the Americans
may simply have been well-meaning who believed their charitable
Christian intent justified trying to remove the children from
quake-crippled Haiti.

Only minutes before the charges, the Americans' Dominican lawyer, Jorge
Puello, had said he expected at least nine of the 10 to be released and
said he was arranging a charter flight for them from Santo Domingo, the
Dominican capital.

After the Haitian lawyer's announcement, Puello could not be reached by
telephone for comment.

"I'm at the airport (in Santo Domingo) and we're getting the plane
ready. We're just waiting for the green light," Puello said. "I spoke to
a source inside the jail ? a government official ? who said nine would
be released but one would be held for further investigation."

___

Throw the book at these crazy fundies, and lock 'em up for a couple of
decades. If they had a "charitable christian intent," they'd be handing
out food, medicines, and toiletries to the suffering haitians, not
stealing haitian children.

Just a bunch of well meaning but amateurs.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 09:55 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.

Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.



Jim February 4th 10 09:56 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 3:58 PM, jps wrote:

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.



Details, please...


Attorney: 10 US Baptists charged with child kidnap

The Associated Press
3:50 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? Ten members of a U.S. missionary group who
said they were trying to rescue 33 child victims of Haiti's
devastating earthquake were charged with child kidnapping and criminal
association on Thursday, their lawyer said.

Edwin Coq said after a court hearing that a judge found sufficient
evidence to charge the Americans, who were arrested Friday at Haiti's
border with the Dominican Republic. Coq attended Thursday's hearing
and represents the entire group in Haiti.

Group leader Laura Silsby has said they were trying to take orphans
and abandoned children to an orphanage in the neighboring Dominican
Republic. She acknowledged they had not sought permission from Haitian
officials, but said they just meant to help victims of the quake.

The children taken from the group, ranging in age from 2 to 12, were
being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in
Port-au-Prince on Wednesday.

The U.S. citizens, most of them members of an Idaho-based church
group, were whisked away from the closed court hearing to jail in
Port-au-Prince, the capital. Silsby waved and smiled faintly to
reporters but declined to answer questions.

Coq said that under Haiti's legal system, there won't be an open
trial, but a judge will consider the evidence and could render a
verdict in about three months.

Coq said a Haitian prosecutor told him the Americans were charged
because they had the children in their possession. No one from the
Haitian government could be reached immediately for comment.

Each kidnapping count carries a possible sentence of five to 15 years
in prison. Each criminal association count has a potential sentence of
three to nine years.

Coq said that nine of the 10 knew nothing about the alleged scheme, or
that paperwork for the children was not in order.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out," Coq said. That
would still leave mission leader Laura Silsby facing charges.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington the U.S.
was open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants ? an
apparent reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion
that Haiti could consider sending the Americans back to the United
States for prosecution.

Several parents of the children in Callebas, a quake-wracked Haitian
village near the capital, told The Associated Press Wednesday they had
handed over their children willingly because they were unable to feed
or clothe their children and the American missionaries promised to
give them a better life.

Their accounts contradicted statements by Silsby, of Meridian, Idaho.

In a jailhouse interview Saturday, Silsby told the AP that most of the
children had been delivered to the Americans by distant relatives,
while some came from orphanages that had collapsed in the quake.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families
and are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his
compassion," she said.

In Callebas, parents said a local orphanage worker, fluent in English
and acting on behalf of the Baptists, had convened nearly the entire
village of 500 people on a dirt soccer field to present the Americans'
offer.

Isaac Adrien, 20, told his neighbors the missionaries would educate
their children in the neighboring Dominican Republic, the villagers
said, adding that they were also assured they would be free to visit
their children there.

Many parents jumped at the offer.

Adrien said he met Silsby in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 26. She told him
she was looking for homeless children, he said, and he knew exactly
where to find them.

He rushed home to Callebas, where people scrape by growing carrots,
peppers and onions. That very day, he had a list of 20 children.

As they loaded children onto a bus in Callebas on Jan. 28, the
Americans took down contact information for all the families and
assured them a relative would be able to visit them in the Dominican
Republic.

The Americans' journey began last summer after Silsby and her former
nanny, 24-year-old Charisa Coulter, resolved to establish an orphanage
for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. Coulter is among the
jailed Americans.

They began buying up used clothing and collecting donations from their
Central Valley Baptist Church in Meridian and in November, Silsby
registered the New Life Children's Refuge Inc., the nonprofit
organization coordinating the rescue mission. It listed the address of
her now-foreclosed home in Meridian as its headquarters.

Then the quake hit. Silsby and Coulter moved into high gear, gathering
donations and assembling a team to go into Haiti and urgently take out
children, the younger woman's father, Mel Coulter, told the AP from
his home in Kuna, Idaho.

The group packed 40 plastic bins of donated goods into a U-Haul
trailer and drove to Salt Lake City on Jan. 22, where they took a
flight to the Dominican Republic. They made their way to Haiti, where
four days later, they were introduced to Adrien.

Adrien, who had served as the go-between and translator for the
missionaries, said he had no knowledge of the group's larger plans;
villagers said they were told none of their children would be offered
for adoption.

A Haitian-born pastor who said he worked as an unpaid consultant for
the group insisted the Baptists had done nothing wrong.

The Rev. Jean Sainvil said some of the children were orphans and might
have been put up for adoption. Children with parents were to be kept
in the Dominican Republic, and would not lose contact with their
families, Sainvil said in Atlanta.

"Everybody agreed that they knew where the children were going. The
parents were told, and we confirmed they would be allowed to see the
children and even take them back if need be," he said.

Sainvil stressed that in Haiti it is not uncommon for parents who
can't support their children to send them to orphanages.

Even Prime Minister Max Bellerive has said he recognized the Americans
may simply have been well-meaning who believed their charitable
Christian intent justified trying to remove the children from
quake-crippled Haiti.

Only minutes before the charges, the Americans' Dominican lawyer,
Jorge Puello, had said he expected at least nine of the 10 to be
released and said he was arranging a charter flight for them from
Santo Domingo, the Dominican capital.

After the Haitian lawyer's announcement, Puello could not be reached
by telephone for comment.

"I'm at the airport (in Santo Domingo) and we're getting the plane
ready. We're just waiting for the green light," Puello said. "I spoke
to a source inside the jail ? a government official ? who said nine
would be released but one would be held for further investigation."

___

Throw the book at these crazy fundies, and lock 'em up for a couple of
decades. If they had a "charitable christian intent," they'd be
handing out food, medicines, and toiletries to the suffering haitians,
not stealing haitian children.

Just a bunch of well meaning but amateurs.


Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 09:56 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 4:51 PM, lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 3:58 PM, jps wrote:

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.



Details, please...


Attorney: 10 US Baptists charged with child kidnap

The Associated Press
3:50 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? Ten members of a U.S. missionary group who
said they were trying to rescue 33 child victims of Haiti's
devastating earthquake were charged with child kidnapping and criminal
association on Thursday, their lawyer said.

Edwin Coq said after a court hearing that a judge found sufficient
evidence to charge the Americans, who were arrested Friday at Haiti's
border with the Dominican Republic. Coq attended Thursday's hearing
and represents the entire group in Haiti.

Group leader Laura Silsby has said they were trying to take orphans
and abandoned children to an orphanage in the neighboring Dominican
Republic. She acknowledged they had not sought permission from Haitian
officials, but said they just meant to help victims of the quake.

The children taken from the group, ranging in age from 2 to 12, were
being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in
Port-au-Prince on Wednesday.

The U.S. citizens, most of them members of an Idaho-based church
group, were whisked away from the closed court hearing to jail in
Port-au-Prince, the capital. Silsby waved and smiled faintly to
reporters but declined to answer questions.

Coq said that under Haiti's legal system, there won't be an open
trial, but a judge will consider the evidence and could render a
verdict in about three months.

Coq said a Haitian prosecutor told him the Americans were charged
because they had the children in their possession. No one from the
Haitian government could be reached immediately for comment.

Each kidnapping count carries a possible sentence of five to 15 years
in prison. Each criminal association count has a potential sentence of
three to nine years.

Coq said that nine of the 10 knew nothing about the alleged scheme, or
that paperwork for the children was not in order.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out," Coq said. That
would still leave mission leader Laura Silsby facing charges.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington the U.S.
was open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants ? an
apparent reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion
that Haiti could consider sending the Americans back to the United
States for prosecution.

Several parents of the children in Callebas, a quake-wracked Haitian
village near the capital, told The Associated Press Wednesday they had
handed over their children willingly because they were unable to feed
or clothe their children and the American missionaries promised to
give them a better life.

Their accounts contradicted statements by Silsby, of Meridian, Idaho.

In a jailhouse interview Saturday, Silsby told the AP that most of the
children had been delivered to the Americans by distant relatives,
while some came from orphanages that had collapsed in the quake.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families
and are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his
compassion," she said.

In Callebas, parents said a local orphanage worker, fluent in English
and acting on behalf of the Baptists, had convened nearly the entire
village of 500 people on a dirt soccer field to present the Americans'
offer.

Isaac Adrien, 20, told his neighbors the missionaries would educate
their children in the neighboring Dominican Republic, the villagers
said, adding that they were also assured they would be free to visit
their children there.

Many parents jumped at the offer.

Adrien said he met Silsby in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 26. She told him
she was looking for homeless children, he said, and he knew exactly
where to find them.

He rushed home to Callebas, where people scrape by growing carrots,
peppers and onions. That very day, he had a list of 20 children.

As they loaded children onto a bus in Callebas on Jan. 28, the
Americans took down contact information for all the families and
assured them a relative would be able to visit them in the Dominican
Republic.

The Americans' journey began last summer after Silsby and her former
nanny, 24-year-old Charisa Coulter, resolved to establish an orphanage
for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. Coulter is among the
jailed Americans.

They began buying up used clothing and collecting donations from their
Central Valley Baptist Church in Meridian and in November, Silsby
registered the New Life Children's Refuge Inc., the nonprofit
organization coordinating the rescue mission. It listed the address of
her now-foreclosed home in Meridian as its headquarters.

Then the quake hit. Silsby and Coulter moved into high gear, gathering
donations and assembling a team to go into Haiti and urgently take out
children, the younger woman's father, Mel Coulter, told the AP from
his home in Kuna, Idaho.

The group packed 40 plastic bins of donated goods into a U-Haul
trailer and drove to Salt Lake City on Jan. 22, where they took a
flight to the Dominican Republic. They made their way to Haiti, where
four days later, they were introduced to Adrien.

Adrien, who had served as the go-between and translator for the
missionaries, said he had no knowledge of the group's larger plans;
villagers said they were told none of their children would be offered
for adoption.

A Haitian-born pastor who said he worked as an unpaid consultant for
the group insisted the Baptists had done nothing wrong.

The Rev. Jean Sainvil said some of the children were orphans and might
have been put up for adoption. Children with parents were to be kept
in the Dominican Republic, and would not lose contact with their
families, Sainvil said in Atlanta.

"Everybody agreed that they knew where the children were going. The
parents were told, and we confirmed they would be allowed to see the
children and even take them back if need be," he said.

Sainvil stressed that in Haiti it is not uncommon for parents who
can't support their children to send them to orphanages.

Even Prime Minister Max Bellerive has said he recognized the Americans
may simply have been well-meaning who believed their charitable
Christian intent justified trying to remove the children from
quake-crippled Haiti.

Only minutes before the charges, the Americans' Dominican lawyer,
Jorge Puello, had said he expected at least nine of the 10 to be
released and said he was arranging a charter flight for them from
Santo Domingo, the Dominican capital.

After the Haitian lawyer's announcement, Puello could not be reached
by telephone for comment.

"I'm at the airport (in Santo Domingo) and we're getting the plane
ready. We're just waiting for the green light," Puello said. "I spoke
to a source inside the jail ? a government official ? who said nine
would be released but one would be held for further investigation."

___

Throw the book at these crazy fundies, and lock 'em up for a couple of
decades. If they had a "charitable christian intent," they'd be
handing out food, medicines, and toiletries to the suffering haitians,
not stealing haitian children.

Just a bunch of well meaning but amateurs.



People who steal children are "well-meaning"?



Jim February 4th 10 09:59 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:51 PM, lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 3:58 PM, jps wrote:

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.


Details, please...


Attorney: 10 US Baptists charged with child kidnap

The Associated Press
3:50 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? Ten members of a U.S. missionary group who
said they were trying to rescue 33 child victims of Haiti's
devastating earthquake were charged with child kidnapping and criminal
association on Thursday, their lawyer said.

Edwin Coq said after a court hearing that a judge found sufficient
evidence to charge the Americans, who were arrested Friday at Haiti's
border with the Dominican Republic. Coq attended Thursday's hearing
and represents the entire group in Haiti.

Group leader Laura Silsby has said they were trying to take orphans
and abandoned children to an orphanage in the neighboring Dominican
Republic. She acknowledged they had not sought permission from Haitian
officials, but said they just meant to help victims of the quake.

The children taken from the group, ranging in age from 2 to 12, were
being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in
Port-au-Prince on Wednesday.

The U.S. citizens, most of them members of an Idaho-based church
group, were whisked away from the closed court hearing to jail in
Port-au-Prince, the capital. Silsby waved and smiled faintly to
reporters but declined to answer questions.

Coq said that under Haiti's legal system, there won't be an open
trial, but a judge will consider the evidence and could render a
verdict in about three months.

Coq said a Haitian prosecutor told him the Americans were charged
because they had the children in their possession. No one from the
Haitian government could be reached immediately for comment.

Each kidnapping count carries a possible sentence of five to 15 years
in prison. Each criminal association count has a potential sentence of
three to nine years.

Coq said that nine of the 10 knew nothing about the alleged scheme, or
that paperwork for the children was not in order.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out," Coq said. That
would still leave mission leader Laura Silsby facing charges.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington the U.S.
was open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants ? an
apparent reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion
that Haiti could consider sending the Americans back to the United
States for prosecution.

Several parents of the children in Callebas, a quake-wracked Haitian
village near the capital, told The Associated Press Wednesday they had
handed over their children willingly because they were unable to feed
or clothe their children and the American missionaries promised to
give them a better life.

Their accounts contradicted statements by Silsby, of Meridian, Idaho.

In a jailhouse interview Saturday, Silsby told the AP that most of the
children had been delivered to the Americans by distant relatives,
while some came from orphanages that had collapsed in the quake.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families
and are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his
compassion," she said.

In Callebas, parents said a local orphanage worker, fluent in English
and acting on behalf of the Baptists, had convened nearly the entire
village of 500 people on a dirt soccer field to present the Americans'
offer.

Isaac Adrien, 20, told his neighbors the missionaries would educate
their children in the neighboring Dominican Republic, the villagers
said, adding that they were also assured they would be free to visit
their children there.

Many parents jumped at the offer.

Adrien said he met Silsby in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 26. She told him
she was looking for homeless children, he said, and he knew exactly
where to find them.

He rushed home to Callebas, where people scrape by growing carrots,
peppers and onions. That very day, he had a list of 20 children.

As they loaded children onto a bus in Callebas on Jan. 28, the
Americans took down contact information for all the families and
assured them a relative would be able to visit them in the Dominican
Republic.

The Americans' journey began last summer after Silsby and her former
nanny, 24-year-old Charisa Coulter, resolved to establish an orphanage
for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. Coulter is among the
jailed Americans.

They began buying up used clothing and collecting donations from their
Central Valley Baptist Church in Meridian and in November, Silsby
registered the New Life Children's Refuge Inc., the nonprofit
organization coordinating the rescue mission. It listed the address of
her now-foreclosed home in Meridian as its headquarters.

Then the quake hit. Silsby and Coulter moved into high gear, gathering
donations and assembling a team to go into Haiti and urgently take out
children, the younger woman's father, Mel Coulter, told the AP from
his home in Kuna, Idaho.

The group packed 40 plastic bins of donated goods into a U-Haul
trailer and drove to Salt Lake City on Jan. 22, where they took a
flight to the Dominican Republic. They made their way to Haiti, where
four days later, they were introduced to Adrien.

Adrien, who had served as the go-between and translator for the
missionaries, said he had no knowledge of the group's larger plans;
villagers said they were told none of their children would be offered
for adoption.

A Haitian-born pastor who said he worked as an unpaid consultant for
the group insisted the Baptists had done nothing wrong.

The Rev. Jean Sainvil said some of the children were orphans and might
have been put up for adoption. Children with parents were to be kept
in the Dominican Republic, and would not lose contact with their
families, Sainvil said in Atlanta.

"Everybody agreed that they knew where the children were going. The
parents were told, and we confirmed they would be allowed to see the
children and even take them back if need be," he said.

Sainvil stressed that in Haiti it is not uncommon for parents who
can't support their children to send them to orphanages.

Even Prime Minister Max Bellerive has said he recognized the Americans
may simply have been well-meaning who believed their charitable
Christian intent justified trying to remove the children from
quake-crippled Haiti.

Only minutes before the charges, the Americans' Dominican lawyer,
Jorge Puello, had said he expected at least nine of the 10 to be
released and said he was arranging a charter flight for them from
Santo Domingo, the Dominican capital.

After the Haitian lawyer's announcement, Puello could not be reached
by telephone for comment.

"I'm at the airport (in Santo Domingo) and we're getting the plane
ready. We're just waiting for the green light," Puello said. "I spoke
to a source inside the jail ? a government official ? who said nine
would be released but one would be held for further investigation."

___

Throw the book at these crazy fundies, and lock 'em up for a couple of
decades. If they had a "charitable christian intent," they'd be
handing out food, medicines, and toiletries to the suffering haitians,
not stealing haitian children.

Just a bunch of well meaning but amateurs.



People who steal children are "well-meaning"?


Wacko tin hat talk.

lil abner February 4th 10 09:59 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.

Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.

Jim February 4th 10 10:04 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do
with the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members
from claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.


I get the feeling this Harry feller is a little wacked out, like that
Muslim who shot up the GI's at Fort Hood.
Hope they keep firearms away from him.

Jack[_3_] February 4th 10 10:07 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On Feb 4, 4:59*pm, lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?


That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?


Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.


harold is a bigoted shut-in living in his wife's basement. What he
proclaims as fact has little to do with reality, except in his own
demented mind. He's spending what is left of his pathetic life
spewing his bile, while pulling his pud, on this NG. He hasn't seen
the inside of a church in years.

He does live practically next door to the KKK HQ up in Maryland,
however. He may have some insider info on them and their MO. The
hate has certainly spread to him.


Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:15 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:51 PM, lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 3:58 PM, jps wrote:

Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.


Details, please...


Attorney: 10 US Baptists charged with child kidnap

The Associated Press
3:50 p.m. Thursday, February 4, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti ? Ten members of a U.S. missionary group who
said they were trying to rescue 33 child victims of Haiti's
devastating earthquake were charged with child kidnapping and criminal
association on Thursday, their lawyer said.

Edwin Coq said after a court hearing that a judge found sufficient
evidence to charge the Americans, who were arrested Friday at Haiti's
border with the Dominican Republic. Coq attended Thursday's hearing
and represents the entire group in Haiti.

Group leader Laura Silsby has said they were trying to take orphans
and abandoned children to an orphanage in the neighboring Dominican
Republic. She acknowledged they had not sought permission from Haitian
officials, but said they just meant to help victims of the quake.

The children taken from the group, ranging in age from 2 to 12, were
being cared for at the Austrian-run SOS Children's Village in
Port-au-Prince on Wednesday.

The U.S. citizens, most of them members of an Idaho-based church
group, were whisked away from the closed court hearing to jail in
Port-au-Prince, the capital. Silsby waved and smiled faintly to
reporters but declined to answer questions.

Coq said that under Haiti's legal system, there won't be an open
trial, but a judge will consider the evidence and could render a
verdict in about three months.

Coq said a Haitian prosecutor told him the Americans were charged
because they had the children in their possession. No one from the
Haitian government could be reached immediately for comment.

Each kidnapping count carries a possible sentence of five to 15 years
in prison. Each criminal association count has a potential sentence of
three to nine years.

Coq said that nine of the 10 knew nothing about the alleged scheme, or
that paperwork for the children was not in order.

"I'm going to do everything I can to get the nine out," Coq said. That
would still leave mission leader Laura Silsby facing charges.

State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley said in Washington the U.S.
was open to discuss "other legal avenues" for the defendants ? an
apparent reference to the Haitian prime minister's earlier suggestion
that Haiti could consider sending the Americans back to the United
States for prosecution.

Several parents of the children in Callebas, a quake-wracked Haitian
village near the capital, told The Associated Press Wednesday they had
handed over their children willingly because they were unable to feed
or clothe their children and the American missionaries promised to
give them a better life.

Their accounts contradicted statements by Silsby, of Meridian, Idaho.

In a jailhouse interview Saturday, Silsby told the AP that most of the
children had been delivered to the Americans by distant relatives,
while some came from orphanages that had collapsed in the quake.

"They are very precious kids that have lost their homes and families
and are so deeply in need of, most of all, God's love and his
compassion," she said.

In Callebas, parents said a local orphanage worker, fluent in English
and acting on behalf of the Baptists, had convened nearly the entire
village of 500 people on a dirt soccer field to present the Americans'
offer.

Isaac Adrien, 20, told his neighbors the missionaries would educate
their children in the neighboring Dominican Republic, the villagers
said, adding that they were also assured they would be free to visit
their children there.

Many parents jumped at the offer.

Adrien said he met Silsby in Port-au-Prince on Jan. 26. She told him
she was looking for homeless children, he said, and he knew exactly
where to find them.

He rushed home to Callebas, where people scrape by growing carrots,
peppers and onions. That very day, he had a list of 20 children.

As they loaded children onto a bus in Callebas on Jan. 28, the
Americans took down contact information for all the families and
assured them a relative would be able to visit them in the Dominican
Republic.

The Americans' journey began last summer after Silsby and her former
nanny, 24-year-old Charisa Coulter, resolved to establish an orphanage
for Haitian children in the Dominican Republic. Coulter is among the
jailed Americans.

They began buying up used clothing and collecting donations from their
Central Valley Baptist Church in Meridian and in November, Silsby
registered the New Life Children's Refuge Inc., the nonprofit
organization coordinating the rescue mission. It listed the address of
her now-foreclosed home in Meridian as its headquarters.

Then the quake hit. Silsby and Coulter moved into high gear, gathering
donations and assembling a team to go into Haiti and urgently take out
children, the younger woman's father, Mel Coulter, told the AP from
his home in Kuna, Idaho.

The group packed 40 plastic bins of donated goods into a U-Haul
trailer and drove to Salt Lake City on Jan. 22, where they took a
flight to the Dominican Republic. They made their way to Haiti, where
four days later, they were introduced to Adrien.

Adrien, who had served as the go-between and translator for the
missionaries, said he had no knowledge of the group's larger plans;
villagers said they were told none of their children would be offered
for adoption.

A Haitian-born pastor who said he worked as an unpaid consultant for
the group insisted the Baptists had done nothing wrong.

The Rev. Jean Sainvil said some of the children were orphans and might
have been put up for adoption. Children with parents were to be kept
in the Dominican Republic, and would not lose contact with their
families, Sainvil said in Atlanta.

"Everybody agreed that they knew where the children were going. The
parents were told, and we confirmed they would be allowed to see the
children and even take them back if need be," he said.

Sainvil stressed that in Haiti it is not uncommon for parents who
can't support their children to send them to orphanages.

Even Prime Minister Max Bellerive has said he recognized the Americans
may simply have been well-meaning who believed their charitable
Christian intent justified trying to remove the children from
quake-crippled Haiti.

Only minutes before the charges, the Americans' Dominican lawyer,
Jorge Puello, had said he expected at least nine of the 10 to be
released and said he was arranging a charter flight for them from
Santo Domingo, the Dominican capital.

After the Haitian lawyer's announcement, Puello could not be reached
by telephone for comment.

"I'm at the airport (in Santo Domingo) and we're getting the plane
ready. We're just waiting for the green light," Puello said. "I spoke
to a source inside the jail ? a government official ? who said nine
would be released but one would be held for further investigation."

___

Throw the book at these crazy fundies, and lock 'em up for a couple of
decades. If they had a "charitable christian intent," they'd be
handing out food, medicines, and toiletries to the suffering haitians,
not stealing haitian children.

Just a bunch of well meaning but amateurs.



People who steal children are "well-meaning"?


People who say eat **** and die at the drop of a hat are "well-meaning"?

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:17 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 4:59 PM, lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do
with the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members
from claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.



Problems reading for content, eh?
Too bad. It dooms you to being...stupid.



Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:19 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.

Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


And of course you have first hand knowlege of the klan and its followers.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:25 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 5:19 PM, Harry wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do
with the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members
from claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


And of course you have first hand knowlege of the klan and its followers.



What do *you* believe is the predominant religious affiliation of klan
members?

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.



nom=de=plume February 4th 10 10:33 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
"lil abner" wrote in message
...
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?



Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians. They
"proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.



Persecution of religion (if you're talking Puritans) founded this nation.
They were all Christian extremists (according to the people in England at
the time).

--
Nom=de=Plume



Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:36 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 5:33 PM, nom=de=plume wrote:
"lil wrote in message
...
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?


Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians. They
"proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.



Persecution of religion (if you're talking Puritans) founded this nation.
They were all Christian extremists (according to the people in England at
the time).



The puritans were fundies...

Jim February 4th 10 10:37 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:19 PM, Harry wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?

That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?


Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do
with the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members
from claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


And of course you have first hand knowlege of the klan and its followers.



What do *you* believe is the predominant religious affiliation of klan
members?

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.


Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:43 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.



Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger, Jackoff,
and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.


Jim February 4th 10 10:49 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.



Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger, Jackoff,
and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.

In that case welcome aboard. So long as you adhere to Groucho's rule
about belonging to a club that would have you as a member.
Otherwise I withdraw the welcome.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 10:52 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 5:49 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.



Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger,
Jackoff, and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.

In that case welcome aboard. So long as you adhere to Groucho's rule
about belonging to a club that would have you as a member.
Otherwise I withdraw the welcome.



Sorry...I wouldn't want to walk on the same sidewalk as the members of
this group's conservatrashers. The smell of them...yuck.



Jim February 4th 10 11:01 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:49 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.


Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger,
Jackoff, and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.

In that case welcome aboard. So long as you adhere to Groucho's rule
about belonging to a club that would have you as a member.
Otherwise I withdraw the welcome.



Sorry...I wouldn't want to walk on the same sidewalk as the members of
this group's conservatrashers. The smell of them...yuck.

Looks like you don't know Groucho's club membership rule, or choose to
ignore it.
Just shows that Groucho playing the fool showed more sense than you.
If you choose to stay, be nice. Then you'll make it.





Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 11:04 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 6:01 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:49 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.


Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger,
Jackoff, and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.

In that case welcome aboard. So long as you adhere to Groucho's rule
about belonging to a club that would have you as a member.
Otherwise I withdraw the welcome.



Sorry...I wouldn't want to walk on the same sidewalk as the members of
this group's conservatrashers. The smell of them...yuck.

Looks like you don't know Groucho's club membership rule, or choose to
ignore it.
Just shows that Groucho playing the fool showed more sense than you.
If you choose to stay, be nice. Then you'll make it.





Am I really supposed to consider posts from the flajims?

I'm nice to those who deserve it. The conservatrash do not.


Jim February 4th 10 11:09 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:01 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:49 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.


Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger,
Jackoff, and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.

In that case welcome aboard. So long as you adhere to Groucho's rule
about belonging to a club that would have you as a member.
Otherwise I withdraw the welcome.


Sorry...I wouldn't want to walk on the same sidewalk as the members of
this group's conservatrashers. The smell of them...yuck.

Looks like you don't know Groucho's club membership rule, or choose to
ignore it.
Just shows that Groucho playing the fool showed more sense than you.
If you choose to stay, be nice. Then you'll make it.





Am I really supposed to consider posts from the flajims?

Yes. That's the rules. If it makes you feel better, cussing is allowed.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 11:13 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 6:09 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:01 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:49 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 5:37 PM, Jim wrote:

There's only one answer: protestant. The klan was founded by and is
maintained by white protestant males.

Yeah, and so was The John Birch Society, The American Nazi Party and
maybe The Knights of The Round Table.
And they all have the same relevance now.
Get with the 21st Century kiddo.
Take your bigotry elsewhere.
The honorable men and women of rec.boats want no part of you.


Honorable? Well, that would exclude you, snotty, BAR, Krueger,
Jackoff, and the rest of the pack of stench-covered conservatrashers.

In that case welcome aboard. So long as you adhere to Groucho's rule
about belonging to a club that would have you as a member.
Otherwise I withdraw the welcome.


Sorry...I wouldn't want to walk on the same sidewalk as the members of
this group's conservatrashers. The smell of them...yuck.

Looks like you don't know Groucho's club membership rule, or choose to
ignore it.
Just shows that Groucho playing the fool showed more sense than you.
If you choose to stay, be nice. Then you'll make it.





Am I really supposed to consider posts from the flajims?

Yes. That's the rules. If it makes you feel better, cussing is allowed.




I take the flajims as seriously as I take that right-wing racist, herring.



jps February 4th 10 11:24 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, Jim wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.

mmc February 4th 10 11:24 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 

"jps" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, Jim wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.

Hot dogs?



Jim February 4th 10 11:28 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, Jim wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.


Probably the only game in town since the great God Kraft slew Best Kosher.

*e#c February 4th 10 11:38 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On Feb 4, 4:59*pm, lil abner wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 4:50 PM, lil abner wrote:
jps wrote:
Don't those prosecutors know those kind Baptists from Idaho are just
trying to help humanity in Jesus Christ's name?


That the kids were being fitted for little white hoods should have no
bearing on whether they were being kidnapped.
Where did you read that the Arian nation was kidnapping kids?
My newspaper must be out of date.
May be it was Wiccans?


Uh, who do you think attends klan meetings? Mostly white christians.
They "proclaim" themselves as members of the klan, organizations that
supposedly promote the goals of white christians. As in, no jews or
catholics are welcome. Most reputable christians have nothing to do with
the klan, of course, but that doesn't prevent the klan's members from
claiming to be christians promoting christianity.


You gotta get out more Dude. Go to a Church.
It isn't a clan or terrorist hot spot.
Christianity is what founded this nation. Christianity is this Nation.
Not all that took the name were in fact Christian.
We don't do mosque and follow the Koran.


If you think that...you're in for a big surprise.More Muslims in your
Country now than a decade ago. Man, your heads in the sand.

Harry[_2_] February 4th 10 11:38 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/10 6:24 PM, jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.



Good dogs, probably the best national brand. There are other, local
kosher hotdogs available.

I always liked Rossler's Franks, a Connecticut brand that was served at
the fabulous Jimmie's of Savin Rock restaurants in West Haven. There's
still a Jimmie's, but it is in a small, mostly indoor restaurant now, or
was, the last timeI was in New Haven. I remember the first, second, and
third Jimmie's restaurants best, when the store was run by Jimmie
Gagliardi. Gagliardi had a fabulous house just east of the entrance to
Milford harbor, and he also had a really fast and beautiful mahogany
inboard speedboat.

Ahh, Jimmies...home of the properly grilled 25 cent hot dog and the 55
cent lobster roll. :)

Jim February 5th 10 12:04 AM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:24 PM, jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.



Good dogs, probably the best national brand. There are other, local
kosher hotdogs available.

I always liked Rossler's Franks, a Connecticut brand that was served at
the fabulous Jimmie's of Savin Rock restaurants in West Haven. There's
still a Jimmie's, but it is in a small, mostly indoor restaurant now, or
was, the last timeI was in New Haven. I remember the first, second, and
third Jimmie's restaurants best, when the store was run by Jimmie
Gagliardi. Gagliardi had a fabulous house just east of the entrance to
Milford harbor, and he also had a really fast and beautiful mahogany
inboard speedboat.

Ahh, Jimmies...home of the properly grilled 25 cent hot dog and the 55
cent lobster roll. :)


Isn't Jimmy Gagliardi a cousin of Jimmy Boombatz, Vinnie's half brother?
The Philly Boombatzes I'm talking about, who run most of the Philly
cheesesteak shacks in south Philly, besides the numbers games.
Seem to remember Gagliardi/Boombatz connection, but maybe I got it
wrong. Don't get to New Haven or Philly much since I moved to Florida.
Ever have the Eggs Benedict at Spilotriano's?
Comes with a glass of grappa. Good stuff. Joe gets the grappa directly
from Georgio's winery out in Brookfield. Great stuff for washing down
Eggs Benedict
If you get there, tell Joe that Jim sent you. He'll treat you right.
In case you have trouble finding it, maybe they closed.
Been a while since I was there.
Don't worry about it. There's other places.

jps February 5th 10 12:55 AM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On Thu, 4 Feb 2010 18:24:44 -0500, "mmc" wrote:


"jps" wrote in message
.. .
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, Jim wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.


Hot dogs?


Sure, works for dogs. Worked for GW Bush in Iraq, Scott Roeder
killing a doctor, Pat Robertson with gays.

Works for bin Laden but he's spruiking a different brand.

Don White[_6_] February 5th 10 12:52 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/2010 6:38 PM, Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:24 PM, jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.


Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.



Good dogs, probably the best national brand. There are other, local
kosher hotdogs available.

I always liked Rossler's Franks, a Connecticut brand that was served at
the fabulous Jimmie's of Savin Rock restaurants in West Haven. There's
still a Jimmie's, but it is in a small, mostly indoor restaurant now, or
was, the last timeI was in New Haven. I remember the first, second, and
third Jimmie's restaurants best, when the store was run by Jimmie
Gagliardi. Gagliardi had a fabulous house just east of the entrance to
Milford harbor, and he also had a really fast and beautiful mahogany
inboard speedboat.

Ahh, Jimmies...home of the properly grilled 25 cent hot dog and the 55
cent lobster roll. :)


Harry, these spoofers have you down so well, I can't figure out if this
is you or them spoofing your pompous bombastic boring persona. Damn
they are good. Your Butt Buddy, Don

PS - I wish you would do a better job washing. My nose is getting a
permanent brown stain.

Don White[_6_] February 5th 10 12:54 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/4/2010 7:04 PM, Jim wrote:
Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:24 PM, jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.

Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.



Good dogs, probably the best national brand. There are other, local
kosher hotdogs available.

I always liked Rossler's Franks, a Connecticut brand that was served
at the fabulous Jimmie's of Savin Rock restaurants in West Haven.
There's still a Jimmie's, but it is in a small, mostly indoor
restaurant now, or was, the last timeI was in New Haven. I remember
the first, second, and third Jimmie's restaurants best, when the store
was run by Jimmie Gagliardi. Gagliardi had a fabulous house just east
of the entrance to Milford harbor, and he also had a really fast and
beautiful mahogany inboard speedboat.

Ahh, Jimmies...home of the properly grilled 25 cent hot dog and the 55
cent lobster roll. :)


Isn't Jimmy Gagliardi a cousin of Jimmy Boombatz, Vinnie's half brother?
The Philly Boombatzes I'm talking about, who run most of the Philly
cheesesteak shacks in south Philly, besides the numbers games.
Seem to remember Gagliardi/Boombatz connection, but maybe I got it
wrong. Don't get to New Haven or Philly much since I moved to Florida.
Ever have the Eggs Benedict at Spilotriano's?
Comes with a glass of grappa. Good stuff. Joe gets the grappa directly
from Georgio's winery out in Brookfield. Great stuff for washing down
Eggs Benedict
If you get there, tell Joe that Jim sent you. He'll treat you right.
In case you have trouble finding it, maybe they closed.
Been a while since I was there.
Don't worry about it. There's other places.


Are you Harry's half brother by a different mother? You both sound so
much alike.

Don White February 5th 10 02:03 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 

"Don White" wrote in message
...
On 2/4/2010 6:38 PM, Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:24 PM, jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.

Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.



Good dogs, probably the best national brand. There are other, local
kosher hotdogs available.

I always liked Rossler's Franks, a Connecticut brand that was served at
the fabulous Jimmie's of Savin Rock restaurants in West Haven. There's
still a Jimmie's, but it is in a small, mostly indoor restaurant now, or
was, the last timeI was in New Haven. I remember the first, second, and
third Jimmie's restaurants best, when the store was run by Jimmie
Gagliardi. Gagliardi had a fabulous house just east of the entrance to
Milford harbor, and he also had a really fast and beautiful mahogany
inboard speedboat.

Ahh, Jimmies...home of the properly grilled 25 cent hot dog and the 55
cent lobster roll. :)


Harry, these spoofers have you down so well, I can't figure out if this is
you or them spoofing your pompous bombastic boring persona. Damn they
are good. Your Butt Buddy, Don

PS - I wish you would do a better job washing. My nose is getting a
permanent brown stain.


Let me see...biggest assholes in here..mmmm
has to be either Diaper Dan or QC



Don White[_6_] February 5th 10 03:16 PM

Idaho Baptists charged with Kidnapping
 
On 2/5/2010 9:03 AM, Don White wrote:
"Don wrote in message
...
On 2/4/2010 6:38 PM, Harry wrote:
On 2/4/10 6:24 PM, jps wrote:
On Thu, 04 Feb 2010 15:56:00 -0600, wrote:

Looks like they were trying to keep some poor kids from starving, maybe
get them some education and some steps past life's starting line.
Didn't follow the law though.
I expect they'll get cut loose.

Christians don't need to follow the law, they're working for a higher
authority. Just like Hebrew National.


Good dogs, probably the best national brand. There are other, local
kosher hotdogs available.

I always liked Rossler's Franks, a Connecticut brand that was served at
the fabulous Jimmie's of Savin Rock restaurants in West Haven. There's
still a Jimmie's, but it is in a small, mostly indoor restaurant now, or
was, the last timeI was in New Haven. I remember the first, second, and
third Jimmie's restaurants best, when the store was run by Jimmie
Gagliardi. Gagliardi had a fabulous house just east of the entrance to
Milford harbor, and he also had a really fast and beautiful mahogany
inboard speedboat.

Ahh, Jimmies...home of the properly grilled 25 cent hot dog and the 55
cent lobster roll. :)


Harry, these spoofers have you down so well, I can't figure out if this is
you or them spoofing your pompous bombastic boring persona. Damn they
are good. Your Butt Buddy, Don

PS - I wish you would do a better job washing. My nose is getting a
permanent brown stain.


Let me see...biggest assholes in here..mmmm
has to be either Diaper Dan or QC


I just have make an addendum here. As someone who has inspected and had
my nose up many an asshole, I do consider myself an expert in any
subject concerning assholes. In fact our local paper calls me all the
time whenever they have a question about assholes.

Don White
A Perfect Asshole (if I don't mind saying so myself)


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