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Simon is a "60 Minutes II" correspondent and a regular contributor to "60 Minutes"
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WASHINGTON,
June 6 (IslamOnline.net) – A number of American Muslim charities,
including the International Institute of Islamic Thought (IIIT), as
well as individuals are suing the CBS for allegedly accusing them of
links to Osama Bin Laden and Al-Qaeda, reported the Council on
American-Islamic Relations (CAIR).
Speaking
at a press conference in Washington, June 5, Muslims’ lawyers
announced filing a $80 million defamation suit against an anonymous
"terrorist hunter," CBS, correspondent Bob Simon, and the
SITE Institute, a self-proclaimed counter-terrorism group.
In
a CBS "60 Minutes" report on May 4 titled "Terrorist
Hunter" an anonymous woman called "Sarah" was shown in
disguise outside a Herndon, Va., office building that she claimed was
"the heart of a terrorist funding ring."
That
office was one of many raided by U.S. federal authorities in March of
2002, apparently based largely on allegations propagated by
"Sarah," identified in the lawsuit as the SITE Institute's
Director Rita Katz.
More
than a year after the raids, which triggered an outrage among the
Muslim American community, no criminal charges have been pressed
against anyone individual or organization.
The
lawsuit argues that those allegedly defamed in the "60
Minutes" program were not given an opportunity to respond to the
charges prior to broadcast.
The
plaintiffs are seeking a judgment in the amount of $80 million in
compensatory and punitive damages.
The
North American Islamic Trust (NAIT) repudiated
Wednesday, May 7, the allegations propagated by the CBS report.
Sarah
claimed she had donned a Muslim garb, hid a tape recorder underneath
and went mosques to record imams calling for jihad “against Jews,
against the United States.”
She
alleged that the "most radical mosques" were all owned by
NAIT.
Sarah
had also alleged that when she visited NAIT offices in 555 Grove
Street, Herndon, Virginia, she removed some "documents" from
the trash and thus "stumbled upon the heart of a
terrorist-financing ring."
A
NAIT spokesperson dismissed the claims " unconscionable, and
libelous.
"Not
only was it shoddy journalism in that it was completely one-sided, it
was false and portrayed our entities in a false light. We will demand
retraction from 60 Minutes and CBS."
He
had threatened that "if a retraction is not forthcoming, we will
have no recourse but to sue for retraction and damages."
In
a letter to Don Hewitt of CBS News, Nancy Lugue, NAIT lawyer, stressed
"there was no attempt whatsoever to provide any balance to
allegations" by the so-called Sarah, whose credentials are never
described.