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Feds raid 'Liberty Dollar' HQ in Indiana; take coins and illegal currency featuring Ron Paul |
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Written by ABC / AP
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Sunday, 18 November 2007 |
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EVANSVILLE, Ind. - Federal agents raided the headquarters of a group that
produces illegal currency and puts it in circulation, seizing gold, silver and
two tons of copper coins featuring Republican presidential candidate Ron Paul.
Agents also took records, computers and froze the bank accounts at the
"Liberty Dollar" headquarters during the Thursday raid, Bernard von NotHaus,
founder of the National Organization for the Repeal of the Federal Reserve Act
& Internal Revenue Code, said in a posting on the group's Web site.
The organization, which is critical of the Federal Reserve, has
repeatedly clashed with the federal government, which contends that the gold,
silver and copper coins it produces are illegal. NORFED claims its Liberty
Dollars are infaltion free and can restore stability to financial markets by
allowing commerce based on a currency that does not fluctuate in value like the
U.S. dollar.
"They're running scared right now and they had to do
something," von NotHaus told The Associated Press Friday. "I'm volunteering to
meet the agents and get arrested so we can thrash this out in court."
Wendy Osborne, a spokeswoman for the FBI's Indianapolis office, declined
to comment and referred all questions to the U.S. attorney's office for the
Western District of North Carolina. Suellen Pierce, a spokeswoman for that
office, also declined to comment.
The raid comes eight months after von
NotHaus filed a lawsuit in federal court in Evansville seeking a permanent
injunction to stop the federal government from labeling the Liberty Dollar an
illegal currency.
The U.S. Mint issued a warning this year that the
Liberty Dollar violated the Constitution and warned consumers against using them
unsuspectingly.
Paul's campaign said it had not authorized production of
the Ron Paul dollars.
"We were aware they existed, but we didn't have
any affilaition with them," said Jesse Benton, a spokesman for Ron Paul's
campaign. "He didn't ask our permission to make them."
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On
the Net:
http://www.libertydollar.org/
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 18 November 2007 )
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