Allies Accuse James O'Keefe of 'Hit Job' in Undercover NPR Sting
The fake Muslim donor had played his role perfectly. The question was what to do next.
As the world would soon learn, Simon Templar had secretly recorded National Public Radio executives
saying disparaging things about conservatives by passing himself off as
Ibrahim Kasaam of the Muslim Education Action Center. He had even
gotten a phone call with Vivian Schiller, NPR’s chief executive.
James O’Keefe,
the man behind the undercover project, wanted to make the hidden-camera
video public immediately last February as Congress debated whether to kill NPR’s funding. Templar insisted on waiting, and a confrontation ensued.
In a series of interviews with The
Daily Beast, Templar says he had designed the effort to be “a very
thoroughly researched and impeccably executed project that was by no
means limited to NPR. James wanted it to be a hit job.”
What’s more, says Templar, O’Keefe
“didn’t seem to care about the reasons why we were doing this. All he
cared about was that he had people saying embarrassing stuff on video. I
came to learn how desperate he was in terms of money and needing to
rehabilitate his reputation.”
Shaughn Adeleye, who worked with
Templar in posing as another member of the phony Muslim group, also
disagreed with O’Keefe’s tactics. “We were both sold a false bill of
goods,” says Adeleye, who devised the NPR scheme and persuaded O’Keefe
to adopt it.
He and Templar “were under the
impression we were going to go all the way with this. We did not want to
halt it at such a critical moment when we had established a footing
with our characters …
“I felt deceived and misled because
James did not live up to what we all agreed upon would be a
multifaceted project,” says Adeleye, who was born in Nigeria. “After a
while I could not deny the truth anymore.”
Reached by telephone on Monday, O’Keefe said he would have no comment.
The clash highlights the debate
swirling around O’Keefe’s surreptitious taping: Is it a new and
audacious form of citizen activism, or ideological warfare dressed up as
journalism? And why are his methods leaving some of his former allies
disillusioned?
Whatever the misgivings of the
participants, they had remarkable success by offering to donate up to $5
million to NPR if it could be done anonymously. In a phone call,
Templar told Schiller that some of his organization’s members were
affiliated with the Muslim Brotherhood, an Islamic organization founded
in Egypt that has a history of violence. He told her the Muslim
Brotherhood had been unfairly demonized as a terrorist group by the
likes of Glenn Beck and that he appreciated the stand that NPR took in firing analyst Juan Williams
for comments made on Fox News about fearing airplane passengers in
Muslim garb. Schiller responded only briefly, saying “I know” or that
she understood what Templar was saying, without endorsing his views. She
praised his generosity and said NPR would be honored to accept a check
if the legal issues could be worked out.
“I’m telling Vivian Schiller about
our Muslim Brotherhood connections and she didn’t have any problem with
it,” Templar says. One of his motivations for the project was that “I
really wanted to bring attention to the Muslim Brotherhood, one of the
most racist organizations on the planet.”
Schiller says the conversation
wasn't damaging in the slightest: "There's a reason O'Keefe never
released the phone conversation...secretly taped with me: he had
nothing. I shut them down on every pass because they've could not answer
even simple questions about their alleged organization.
"Was I polite? Of course I was," she said. "But we were never even close to taking their money."
Templar says he based the project
on "Sharia: The Threat to America," a report published by the Center for
Security Policy that outlines how, according to the report, political
correctness allows the Muslim Brotherhood to operate freely in the
United States.
When Templar and Adeleye had lunch
with the NPR executives on Feb. 22, O’Keefe’s brief career was at a low
point. He had gained wide attention by posing as a pimp and videotaping
ACORN staffers making incriminating remarks about underage prostitution
(though it turned out the tapes were edited). But O’Keefe was later
arrested for infiltrating Sen. Mary Landrieu’s office and given three
years’ probation for entering federal property under false pretenses.
And then he was caught trying to lure reporter Abbie Boudreau, then with
CNN, onto a boat laden with sex toys and pornography in an effort to
embarrass her.
The two men who pulled off James O’Keefe’s NPR sting are now criticizing the conservative activist for what one calls a ‘hit job.’ They tell Howard Kurtz exclusively why they feel exploited. - Cheat Sheet
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