Difference between revisions of "Christic Institute"

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|founders=Daniel Sheehan, Sara Nelson, Bill Davis
 
|founders=Daniel Sheehan, Sara Nelson, Bill Davis
 
|start=1980
 
|start=1980
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|end=1991
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|headquarters=Washington DC
 
|image=Christic_Institute_Poster_unmask.jpg
 
|image=Christic_Institute_Poster_unmask.jpg
 
|image_width=333px
 
|image_width=333px
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|description=A public interest law firm that exposed some operation of the [[US deep state]].
 
|description=A public interest law firm that exposed some operation of the [[US deep state]].
 
}}
 
}}
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The '''Christic Institute''' was a US non-profit law firm that took legal action against the [[US Deep state]] under racketeering [[law]].
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==Cases==
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The group represented victims of the nuclear disaster at [[Three Mile Island]]. It also prosecuted members of the [[Ku Klux Klan|KKK]] and [[American Nazi Party]] for the murder of communist workers party demonstrators in the 1979 [[Greensboro massacre|Greensboro Massacre]].
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==Iran Contra==
 
==Iran Contra==
 
In 1988 the Christic Institute accused General [[John Singlaub]], General [[John Poindexter]], General [[Richard Secord]], [[Ted Shackley]], [[Albert Hakim]] and Lt. Col. [[Oliver North]] of cooperating with Columbian [[drug cartel]]s during the [[Iran Contra]] affair.<ref name=ISGP>https://isgp-studies.com/cia-heroin-and-cocaine-drug-trafficking#christic-institute-and-daniel-sheehan-lawsuit</ref>
 
In 1988 the Christic Institute accused General [[John Singlaub]], General [[John Poindexter]], General [[Richard Secord]], [[Ted Shackley]], [[Albert Hakim]] and Lt. Col. [[Oliver North]] of cooperating with Columbian [[drug cartel]]s during the [[Iran Contra]] affair.<ref name=ISGP>https://isgp-studies.com/cia-heroin-and-cocaine-drug-trafficking#christic-institute-and-daniel-sheehan-lawsuit</ref>
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{{YouTubeVideo
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|code=b4j9kZsJcFY
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|authors=Bill Davus
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|subjects=US Deep state, Iran Contra, SDS
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|date=1990
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}}
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=="Frivolous lawsuit"==
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In 1992 the firm lost its non-profit status after having a federal case dismissed by the court in 1988 and being penalized for filing a "frivolous lawsuit". The IRS said that the Christic Institute had acted for political reasons. The case was related to journalists injured in relation to "[[Iran–Contra]]". The group was succeeded in 1998 by a new firm, the [[Romero Institute]].
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==Criticism==
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In the ''[[Columbia Journalism Review]]'', [[Chip Berlet]] described the Christic Institute as "something of a rarity among advocacy groups: starting out on the left of the political spectrum, over the years it was drawn into the [[conspiracy theories]] woven by the radical right."<ref name="Columbia Journalism Review; May–June 1993">https://web.archive.org/web/20070314051327/http://archives.cjr.org/year/93/3/index.asp</ref>
 
{{SMWDocs}}
 
{{SMWDocs}}
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==References==
 
==References==
 
{{reflist}}
 
{{reflist}}
{{Stub}}
 

Latest revision as of 00:50, 6 August 2021

Group.png Christic Institute   WebsiteRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
Christic Institute Poster unmask.jpg
Successor Romero Institute
Formation1980
Founder• Daniel Sheehan.jpg Daniel Sheehan
•  Sara Nelson
•  Bill Davis
Extinction1991
HeadquartersWashington DC
InterestsThe Enterprise, US Deep state, CIA drug trafficking, Iran Contra
A public interest law firm that exposed some operation of the US deep state.

The Christic Institute was a US non-profit law firm that took legal action against the US Deep state under racketeering law.

Cases

The group represented victims of the nuclear disaster at Three Mile Island. It also prosecuted members of the KKK and American Nazi Party for the murder of communist workers party demonstrators in the 1979 Greensboro Massacre.

Iran Contra

In 1988 the Christic Institute accused General John Singlaub, General John Poindexter, General Richard Secord, Ted Shackley, Albert Hakim and Lt. Col. Oliver North of cooperating with Columbian drug cartels during the Iran Contra affair.[1]

"Frivolous lawsuit"

In 1992 the firm lost its non-profit status after having a federal case dismissed by the court in 1988 and being penalized for filing a "frivolous lawsuit". The IRS said that the Christic Institute had acted for political reasons. The case was related to journalists injured in relation to "Iran–Contra". The group was succeeded in 1998 by a new firm, the Romero Institute.

Criticism

In the Columbia Journalism Review, Chip Berlet described the Christic Institute as "something of a rarity among advocacy groups: starting out on the left of the political spectrum, over the years it was drawn into the conspiracy theories woven by the radical right."[2]

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References