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(AP) NEW ORLEANS – A conservative filmmaker who posed as a pimp to
target the liberal activist group ACORN was arrested with the son of a
federal prosecutor and two other men and accused of plotting to tamper
with the New Orleans offices of Sen. Mary Landrieu, D-La.
Activist James O’Keefe, 25, recorded two of the other suspects with
his cell phone as they walked into the office dressed like telephone
repairmen and said they needed to fix problems with the phone system,
according to an FBI affidavit.
In the affidavit, Special Agent Steven Rayes said O’Keefe was helping
Joseph Basel and Robert Flanagan, who were attempting to interfere with
the office’s telephone system.
A federal law enforcement official said one of the suspects was
picked up in a car a couple of blocks away with a listening device that
could pick up transmissions. The official spoke on condition of
anonymity because the information was not part of an FBI affidavit that
described the circumstances of the case.
O’Keefe said, “The truth shall set me free,” as he left a suburban
jail Tuesday with Basel and suspect Stan Dai, both 24. All declined to
comment. “There will be a time for that,” Dai said.
The fourth suspect, Robert Flanagan, the son of Shreveport-based
acting U.S. Attorney Bill Flanagan, was not with them. It was not
immediately known if he had already been released on the $10,000 bail
set for each suspect.
Bill Flanagan’s office confirmed his son was among those arrested,
but declined further comment.
Motive unclear
All four men were charged with entering federal property under false
pretenses with the intent of committing a felony.
It sounded like a Watergate-style operation, but federal officials
have not yet said why the men wanted to interfere with Landrieu’s
phones, whether they were successful, or even if the goal was political
espionage.
According to the FBI affidavit, Flanagan and Basel showed up at
Landrieu’s office Monday morning carrying white hard hats and dressed in
jeans, blue work shirts, fluorescent green vests and toolbelts. They
told an employee they were there to fix problems with the phone system.
O’Keefe told an employee he was there waiting for someone.
The affidavit says Basel asked for access to a phone at the reception
desk, then manipulated the handset and tried to call the phone with his
cell phone, but said he could not get through. Flanagan tried to call
as well, according to the affidavit.
They said they needed to work on the main system and asked where the
telephone closet was. They were directed to another office in the
building, where they again said they were telephone repairmen and an
employee asked for their credentials. They said they had left them in
their vehicle.
They were arrested later by U.S. marshals. Details of the arrest were
not available. Dai was also arrested, but Letten’s office said only
that he assisted the others in planning, coordinating and preparing.
Landrieu, a moderate Democrat, said in a statement Tuesday, “I am as
interested as everyone else about their motives and purpose, which I
hope will become clear as the investigation moves forward.”
Spokesman Aaron Saunders said Landrieu was in Washington when the men
showed up Monday in New Orleans. Landrieu has been in the news recently
because she negotiated an increase in Medicaid funds for her state
before announcing her support for Senate health care legislation.
‘Poor judgment’
An FBI criminal complaint charging the men was unsealed Tuesday. None of
the defendants, each wearing red prison jumpsuits, commented at a court
hearing held in the afternoon. All four were charged with entering
federal property under false pretenses for the purpose of committing a
felony, which could bring up to 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
“It was poor judgment,” Robert Flanagan’s lawyer, Garrison Jordan,
said in a brief interview outside the courthouse. “I don’t think there
was any intent or motive to commit a crime.”
Michael McHale, chairman of the Louisiana Democratic Party, referred
to the episode as “Louisiana Watergate” in a statement Tuesday and urged
authorities to prosecute “any wrongdoers to the fullest extent of the
law.”
O’Keefe was the brains behind a series of undercover videos that have
caused major problems for ACORN — the Association of Community
Organizers for Reform Now.
He managed to do what Republicans have been trying to for years —
hurt the political affiliates of ACORN, which have registered hundreds
of thousands of voters in urban and other poor areas of the country.
By producing undercover videos shot in ACORN offices, O’Keefe brought
a firestorm of criticism that the group was helping its low-income
clients break the law.
Using a hidden camera, O’Keefe, posing as a pimp and accompanied by a
young woman posing as a prostitute, shot videos in ACORN offices where
staffers appeared to offer illegal tax advice and to support the misuse
of public funds and illegal trafficking in children.
Edited videos of those visits to ACORN offices were first posted on
biggovernment.com, a site run by conservative Andrew Breitbart. In the
past, Breitbart has said O’Keefe — now a paid contributor to
biggovernment.com — is an independent filmmaker, not an employee.
In a statement e-mailed to The Associated Press, Breitbart said: “We
have no knowledge about or connection to any alleged acts and events
involving James O’Keefe at Senator Mary Landrieu’s office. We only just
learned about the alleged incident this afternoon. We have no
information other than what has been reported publicly by the press.
Accordingly, we simply are not in a position to make any further
comment.”
O’Keefe’s biography on a Web site where he blogs says he works at
VeritasVisuals.com, though that Web site does not currently work.
O’Keefe was in New Orleans last week to give a speech at the Libertarian
Pelican Institute.
O’Keefe has been sued in Pennsylvania and Maryland based on the ACORN
videos; he does not have an attorney of record in either case.
ACORN calls itself the largest grass roots community organization of
low- and moderate-income people in the country, claiming over 400,000
families, more than 1,200 neighborhood chapters in about 75 cities.
Until the controversy last year over the videos at ACORN offices, 10
percent of ACORN’s funds came from federal government grants. In
September, Congress blocked previously approved funds from going to the
group.
O’Keefe’s arrest “is further evidence of his disregard for the law in
pursuit of his extremist agenda,” ACORN CEO Bertha Lewis said in a
statement. The organization’s Twitter feed commented on the news:
“Couldn’t have happened to a more deserving soul.”