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 AIPAC Opposes IRmep Brief Alleging Secrets 
	  Trafficking and Foreign Agency  By Grant F Smith Al-Jazeerah, CCUN, February 13, 2012   WASHINGTON, Feb. 13, 2012 /PRNewswire --  The American Israel Public Affairs Committee (AIPAC) is attempting to 
	block a brief filed by Director of the Institute for Research: Middle 
	Eastern Policy (IRmep) Grant F. Smith in the DC Court of Appeals on February 
	3, 2012. The 78-page IRmep filing asserts "AIPAC has never abandoned its 
	original role as an arm of the Israeli government in the United States."
	http://www.IRmep.org/ila/rosen
 Citing declassified criminal investigations, IRmep underscores the 
	public's interest in the outcome of the case. "AIPAC's observable standard 
	for employees is 'solicit, obtain and leverage classified information 
	without being criminally indicted.' AIPAC is never held publicly accountable 
	for these types of activities which harm governance and public perception of 
	rule of law."
 
 Exhibits include State Department files declassified 
	on January 20, 2012 revealing in detail how former AIPAC Director Morris 
	Amitay endangered US national security when he obtained Department of 
	Defense secrets in 1974. The IRmep brief also analyzes ongoing financial 
	damages from a 1984-1987 incident. The FBI investigated how AIPAC acquired 
	an International Trade Commission report full of still-classified 
	confidential business information.
 
 AIPAC characterized the IRmep 
	brief as "completely inaccurate portrayals of events that occurred decades 
	ago" but seeks dismissal on procedural grounds. IRmep argues for its 
	acceptance even though oral arguments begin February 14, because "AIPAC is 
	an organization that has long 'had it both ways' in functioning as an agent 
	of the Israeli government without registering, influencing funding flows to 
	political candidates while claiming charitable tax-exempt status, and 
	rewarding employees who obtained classified information--until they are 
	criminally indicted."
 
 Former employee Steven J. Rosen sued AIPAC and 
	its board of directors for defamation in 2009. AIPAC fired Rosen after FBI 
	wiretaps alleged Rosen had received classified national defense information. 
	Rosen was indicted for espionage in 2005 though charges were later dropped. 
	AIPAC claimed Rosen's behavior "did not comport with standards that AIPAC 
	expects of its employees." Rosen immediately appealed after the defamation 
	suit was dismissed in 2011.
 
 IRmep has previously filed formal 
	complaints seeking the revocation of AIPAC's tax exempt status and 
	registration under the 1938 Foreign Agents Registration Act. In filing the 
	appellate court brief, IRmep's director seeks to protect and advance growing 
	popular demands that AIPAC be properly regulated. Major briefs filed in the 
	Rosen v AIPAC et. al. court case may be viewed online at:
	http://www.IRmep.org/ila/rosen
 
 SOURCE Institute for Research: Middle Eastern Policy
 
 Full 
	IRmep Filing:  
	
	http://irmep.org/ILA/rosen/02032012amicus.pdf
 Full AIPAC Filing:
	
	http://irmep.org/ILA/rosen/02082012opposition.pdf News Release: 
	http://tinyurl.com/IRmep-brief Releted Court Filings:  http://www.IRmep.org/ila/rosen/ 
 
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