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Eagle Elementary School at 14 Mile and Middlebelt roads in West Bloomfield

Conservative law center is seeking
grand jury investigation of school sale.

Don Cohen
Contributing Writer

I

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16

June 28 ' 20i2

f the politically conservative Thomas
More Law Center in Ann Arbor has
its way, the contentious sale of the
former Eagle Elementary School at 14
Mile and Middlebelt in West Bloomfield
to the Islamic Cultural Association (ICA)
in Franklin will be headed to a grand
jury.
In a June 13 letter to Michigan
Attorney General Bill Schuette, the law
center's president and chief counsel,
former Oakland County prosecutor
Richard Thompson argued that "con-
cerned citizens of the Farmington Public
School District possess information
corroborating charges of bribery, accep-
tance of illegal campaign contributions,
circumvention of the Open Meetings Act,
violations of approved governmental
practices ... a rigged property evaluation,
inside dealing, and the misuse of public
office committed by some members of
the Farmington Public School Board"
that justify a call for state intervention.
The law center's rhetoric includes
charges of a "fog" of corruption and con-
spiracy in the school district, involving
"tentacles of the international threat of
Islamic radical jihad."
When made aware of the letter on June
19, Farmington Public Schools denied
any wrongdoing.
"This appears to be another effort by
the same group of individuals which has
already tried to stop the sale of Eagle
Elementary School through litigation
and lost',' the district said in a written
statement. "The court dismissed that
case. These same opponents are now
trying another attack, again twisting and
distorting the facts, making a number of
allegations that are completely false. The
district plans to rebut these claims in due
course and in an appropriate manner."
The lawsuit to stop the sale was dis-
missed by Oakland County Circuit Judge
Rae Lee Chabot on Sept. 21, 2011, and the
sale was closed on Jan. 12, 2012. Chabot
found that the plaintiffs, Farmington
Hills residents Eugene Greenstein and
Melvyn Sternberg, had no standing
to bring the action. Greenstein and
Sternberg have appealed the decision to
the Michigan Court of Appeals.

Terrorism Link Alleged
The charges of involvement with terror-
ism stem from involvement by members
of ICA's leadership with the Council
on Islamic Relations (CAIR) and the
North American Islamic Trust (NAIT).
Both groups were named as unindicted
co-conspirators of the now-defunct
Holy Land Foundation for Relief and
Development Fund, which was found
guilty of transferring funds to Hamas,
the Gaza-based arm of the Muslim
Brotherhood.
NAIT held the original deed for the
ICA property in Franklin, which since
has been transferred to another entity,
and has no known involvement in the
purchase of the Eagle property.
The Thomas More Law Center's mis-
sion is to "restore and defend America's
Judeo-Christian heritage and moral
values, and to preserve a strong national
defense, and a free and sovereign United
States of America." It has made a name
for itself fighting against homosexual
rights, abortion rights, the Obama
administration's health care legislation,
and for allowing prayer and religious
symbols in public spaces. It also has
fought against secular recognition of
"sharia law:' Islamic religious law that it
says threatens America.
Thomas More is the patron saint of
lawyers in the Catholic Church. The cen-
ter is largely funded by former Domino
Pizza magnate Tom Monaghan.
The letter to Schuette was accom-
panied by a 21-page "Statement of
Allegations" and more than 400 pages
of exhibits. The statement names Betsy
Kellman, Michigan regional director
of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL),
and Robert Cohen, director of the
Jewish Community Relations Council of
Metropolitan Detroit (JCRC), as "member
and partner organizations to the ICA,
[who] in addition to making public state-
ments to support the sale to the ICA,
were involved with the inner workings of
the sale of Eagle Elementary to the ICA."
It largely bases these charges on com-
ments made by Kellman and Cohen
at a June 15, 2011, board meeting that
concluded early the next morning with
a unanimous vote approving the sale.
It also criticizes Kellman and Cohen
for not disclosing that the school board

