Rename Newseum's Terrace now honoring convicted felon with Irgun terrorist ties

  • von: Irmep Research
  • empfänger: Journalists, Americans who want better Middle East reporting, Newseum visitors

Hank Greenspun was a convicted felon who, according to his FBI file, in the late forties stole .50 calibre machine guns from the US Navy and violated Arms Export control laws in order to arm the terrorist Irgun gang.  

http://www.irmep.org/ila/greenspun

Greenspun tried but failed to bribe federal officials with $25,000 into dropping smuggling charges against him, but in the end paid only $10,000 in fines and served no jail time.

Greenpun then parlayed huge smugglng profits into a Las Vegas media empire. 

Greenspun was "bad news," said Dan Moldea, author of The Hoffa Wars and other groundbreaking works on organized crime.  "Hank Greenspun was a journalistic nihilist who used his First Amendment protections to reward his friends and to punish his enemies, as well as to promote his personal causes and to accept money from nefarious individuals," Moldea told SpyTalk. 

In 2006, Greenspun's wife gave the Newseum $7 million, which named a terrace on Pennsylvania Avenue after him.  It is useful to consider that ff Hank had earned just 4.9% annually on the $500k the FBI estimates he made stealing weapons from the US military for terrorists, it would have just paid for his terrace—but you can't buy legitimacy.


The continuing presence of Greenspun's name on the Pennsylvania Avenue Terrace of the Newseum is an embarrassment to all legitimate journalists and news organizations. 

http://spytalkblog.blogspot.com/2013/04/las-vegas-and-israel-early-years.html

 

Dear Concerned American,

Should the Newseum honor a smuggler convicted of a felony, who armed a foreign terror gang, and used profits to put together a Las Vegas media empire?

We don't think so either!

Tell the Newseum it is time to rename their "Hank Greenspun Terrace" for a journalist who didn't plunder taxpayer funded assets to put together a media empire one author called, "bad news." 

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