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11 December 2016 - 17:37
News ID: 425688
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As a result of conspiracy theory;
Rasa - Eight years ago, Gregory Jones and his wife settled in a corner of Alaska where there are very few, if any, other African-American Muslim families: The fringes of Big Lake, deep in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough.
Gregory Jones

RNA - Eight years ago, Gregory Jones and his wife settled in a corner of Alaska where there are very few, if any, other African-American Muslim families: The fringes of Big Lake, deep in the Matanuska-Susitna Borough.

 

There, Jones said, they found acceptance and prosperity. His career as an electrician took off, and he and his wife became involved in interfaith groups, civil rights activism and Democratic political circles.

 

This year, Jones was chosen as a delegate to the Democratic National Convention. He even ran for a seat in the Alaska State House of Representatives.

 

When in July a group that says it "educates the public about the threat of Islamic extremism" linked Jones in an online posting to what it termed a "terror cult," it didn't stop him from getting 17 percent of the vote in his deeply conservative district.

 

Last week, a Facebook post by Anchorage Assembly member Amy Demboski put Jones and his beliefs in the spotlight again.

 

A Facebook post, and fallout

 

It all started with a Friday night post on the Facebook page of The Amy Demboski Show, a drive-time talk radio show on the Valley news and talk station KVNT 92.5 hosted by Demboski, Assembly member and former mayoral candidate from Chugiak-Eagle River.

 

Demboski posted a link to a blog about "Islamic compounds" across the United States that were supposedly "stockpiling weapons" after the election of Donald Trump.

 

Without identifying Jones by name, Demboski wrote that the group responsible for the "compounds" had a member in Alaska, and that he had run for political office.

 

"He seemed like a nice guy, but doesn't the group, associations, and past history deserve at least a little attention? We thought so, especially since the cleric is a militant Islamic guy living in Pakistan. Reassuring that national media highlights Alaska has our own 'compound' too…." she wrote.

 

By Monday, following a post on the Alaska Commons website, there was a Support Gregory Jones Facebook page encouraging people to wear red, white and blue to Tuesday's Anchorage Assembly meeting to speak on his behalf, and #recalldemboski was circulating online.

 

On her radio show Monday afternoon, Demboski defended herself: She said she'd never called Jones a terrorist, but had instead been trying to draw attention to an idea that there might be an Islamic compound in the state stockpiling weapons.

 

"Let's talk about it, either validate or disprove it," she said on the show. "The facts lead where the facts lead."

 

Demboski said she should be able to broach the subject without being "afraid to be attacked because we dared bring it up," she said.

 

"I'm not going to be bullied or intimidated into not talking about a group the FBI in the past has linked to terrorism," she said.

 

Real or conspiracy theory?

 

The link Demboski posted traces the assertion about weapons stockpiled at compounds back to an exchange between a Fox News host and Ryan Mauro, a self-styled security analyst for the Clarion Project, the same group that said Gregory Jones was a member of a "terror cult" back in July.

 

Mauro has alleged that the organization The Muslims of America is actually a front for a group known as Jamaat Ul Fuqra, and that their rural communes in the United States are training camps for terrorists. Local law enforcement groups have said there is no evidence of that. The FBI does not consider the group a terrorist threat.

 

The Southern Poverty Law Center says the Clarion Project peddles in "anti-Muslim conspiracy theories."

 

In media interviews, people living in the settlements, which include Islamberg in New York, have insisted that they are not terrorists but simply American Muslims who have chosen to live in a community with each other, and who welcome visitors. The group says it promotes interfaith understanding of the similarities between Christians and Muslims.

 

So does the FBI believe that there's a Islamic compound stockpiling weapons in Alaska?

 

Staci Feger-Pellessier, the FBI's spokeswoman in Alaska, responded with a one word email: "No."

 

Jones said he appeared on Demboski's radio show earlier this year as a political candidate and had a cordial and open exchange with her.

 

But he sees her Facebook comments as part of a "national campaign of Islamophobia" that he thinks has gained strength in the wake of the election.

 

"The Trump climate has emboldened people like Amy Demboski. They feel like they have the federal government behind them," he said.

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Tags: Muslim FBI Alaska
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