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US judge says there’s reason to believe US-based media nonprofit aided Hamas |
2025-05-09 |
[IsraelTimes] Lawsuit filed by former hostages makes ‘plausible claim’ that Palestine Chronicle, whose employee held the Israelis captive, aided in their kidnapping A US federal judge on Tuesday said there was reason to believe a US nonprofit knew its employee was holding Israelis captive in Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with a rusty iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... and was affiliated with Hamas ![]() , marking a win for former hostages in a legal battle against the group. The judge’s statement came in response to a lawsuit by freed hostages Almog Meir Jan, Andrey Kozlov and Shlomi Ziv. All three were taken from the Nova music festival in southern Israel during Hamas’s October 2023 invasion of Israel. They were held in Gaza by Abdallah Aljamal, according to the lawsuit and the IDF. Aljamal was a writer for the Paleostine Chronicle, a news outlet run by the People Media Project, a US-based, tax-exempt nonprofit that is the focus of the lawsuit. The hostages were rescued after 246 days in captivity in an IDF operation in June that also extracted hostage Noa Argamani, who was held separately nearby. Aljamal, his wife Fatima and his father Ahmad Aljamal were all killed during the hostage rescue mission. The family’s children survived. The lawsuit argues that the Paleostine Chronicle provided Aljamal with a platform to "disseminate Hamas propaganda," providing material support to a US-designated terrorist organization, in violation of international law. The defendants filed to dismiss the case in March. Tuesday’s letter was a response to that motion. US District Judge Tiffany Cartwright said the hostages had "stated a plausible claim that [the Paleostine Chronicle] aided and abetted their kidnapping and Hamas’s acts of terrorism." Cartwright added that the Paleostine Chronicle’s claims that it was ignorant of Aljamal’s terror ties were "unpersuasive." Aljamal’s direct communications with the defendants, his public appearances as a Hamas spokesperson, and his social media support for Hamas "support a reasonable inference that [the Paleostine Chronicle] knew Aljamal was affiliated with Hamas and involved in the October 7 attack," the judge said. She added that the close relationship between the Paleostine Chronicle and Aljamal, and the timing of their coordination on work activities, were reason to believe that the nonprofit’s payments to Aljaamal assisted him in holding the hostages. The court denied the Paleostine Chronicle’s motion to dismiss and an attempt to prevent the case from entering the discovery phase. The lawsuit, backed by the National Jewish Advocacy Center, was filed in a federal court in Washington State, where the People Media Project is based. The lawsuit has also revealed that Aljamal told the hostages that "Hamas was in contact and actively coordinating with its affiliates in the media and on college campuses," according to an amended complaint filed in February that was first reported by The Times of Israel. Aljamal told the hostages that "Hamas was going to ensure that the United States, as well as Jews and Israelis, are hated everywhere and that Hamas in Gaza was coordinating with its allies, including its allies in the media and on college campuses, to foment hatred against Israel and Jews," the complaint said. The Paleostine Chronicle was reporting about US campus protests around the same time, and in August 2024, published an article about Hamas leader Khaled Meshaal urging university students to protest. Aljamal was previously a spokesperson for the Hamas-run labor ministry in Gaza. He was open about his affiliation with the terror group, appearing publicly in Arabic media as a spokesperson and posting Hamas graphics and photos of his son wearing a Hamas headband on social media. He began writing for the Paleostine Chronicle in 2019 while still serving as a spokesperson for Hamas’s labor ministry, according to the lawsuit. Aljamal appears to have had foreknowledge of the Hamas attack. On October 7, at 5:43 a.m., immediately before the invasion, he posted a message on TikTok that said, "O God, guide us.. O God, grant us the victory that you promised.. O God, acceptance, acceptance, acceptance.. Your victory, O God," followed by a heart emoji. Later in the day, Aljamal praised the attack on Facebook. He began writing for the Paleostine Chronicle more frequently after the attack, sometimes publishing multiple articles per day, while he was holding the Israelis hostage and communicating with the outlet’s staff in the US. Immediately after the hostage rescue, the Paleostine Chronicle changed Aljamal’s description on its website from "correspondent" to "contributor," then later described him as a "freelance contributor" writing on "a voluntary basis." It also eulogized him in an article after his death, calling him a "well-known journalist murdered in Gaza," and denied that he had been holding the hostages. The hostages were aware that Aljamal was communicating with terror groups, recording footage and writing about their own captivity, the complaint said. All three were "terrorized" during their captivity, subjected to arbitrary punishment, physical threats, and physical and psychological abuse, the lawsuit said. The outlet’s tax-exempt status means US taxpayers were subsidizing Hamas propaganda published to a US audience, the lawsuit argues, adding that the salary he was paid also helped him imprison the hostages. Related: People Media Project: 2025-02-22 Gaza captor told hostages that Hamas collaborates with US campus protesters, lawsuit alleges People Media Project: 2025-02-04 US judge dismisses rescued hostage’s lawsuit against company that employed his captor Related: Almog Meir Jan 02/26/2025 Released hostage says Ben Gvir’s comments worsened conditions in captivity Almog Meir Jan 02/22/2025 Gaza captor told hostages that Hamas collaborates with US campus protesters, lawsuit alleges Almog Meir Jan 02/04/2025 US judge dismisses rescued hostage’s lawsuit against company that employed his captor |
Posted by:trailing wife |
#3 Complacency. Same with the crossing of the Suez. The Egyptians practiced it numerous times till the Israelis treated it as just another exercise. Then one day it wasn't. The situation with Hamas wasn't helped by having an American squishy administration the enemy could rely upon to dither and do nothing. |
Posted by: Procopius2k 2025-05-09 10:46 |
#2 Nova music festival and the Vegas Route 91 Harvest festival; why I have always avoided large crowds and music related events. Nova had to be months in the planning, yet nobody noticed. An intelligence failure or a raison d'être ? |
Posted by: Besoeker 2025-05-09 07:24 |
#1 I've stopped after "US judge". |
Posted by: Grom the Affective 2025-05-09 06:17 |