In recent months demands for ACORN to be investigated under
the Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO)
for repeated incidents of electoral fraud have been growing.
But voting-related fraud is just the tip of the iceberg.
ACORN runs a mob-style "protection" racket known within the
radical direct-action group as the "muscle for the money"
program, a
lawyer told the House Judiciary Committee's subcommittee on
the Constitution, Civil Rights, and Civil Liberties today.
Lawyer Heather Heidelbaugh filed an unsuccessful lawsuit
last year against ACORN, specifically, a court injunction in
Pennsylvania against ACORN's voter registration efforts in last
year's presidential campaign. (A transcript of the Oct. 29
hearing in Moyer
v. ACORN is available here.)
Heidelbaugh says that ACORN, which I profiled in the November
issue of Capital Research Center's Foundation
Watch, has provided protest-for-hire services and
extracted donations from the targets of demonstrations by shaking
down those targets mafia-style. (Heidelbaugh's written
congressional testimony is available here.)
The taxpayer-subsidized ACORN network, which owes millions of
dollars in back
taxes, also played a major role in the
subprime mortgage mess that has undermined Americans' support
for free market problem-solving and set off a worldwide chain of
financial troubles.
And then there's ACORN's eight-year-long
coverup of the million-dollar embezzlement by founder Wade
Rathke's brother. When ACORN board members Marcel Reid and Karen
Inman demanded to see the financial documents, they were
expelled from the group.
What else is ACORN hiding?