Wonder where the anti-Prop 8 people got their funding!FPPC gets new complaint over Prop. 8 campaignPublished: Saturday, Mar. 21, 2009 - 12:00 am
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An additional complaint about the Mormon church's support for Proposition 8 rolled into the state's Fair Political Practices Commission this week. Roman Porter, the FPPC's executive director, confirmed Friday receiving a request for more investigation – with links to alleged Mormon insider documents – from Fred Karger of the group Californians Against Hate. Karger's complaint, dated Thursday, asks the commission to look more deeply into whether the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints spent far more staff time and money on Proposition 8 than officially disclosed. The complaint will be added to the original one that Karger filed last November, Porter said. Karger accuses the Mormon church of setting up the National Organization for Marriage in 2007 to work to qualify Proposition 8 for the ballot last November. The group "came out of nowhere," he said, "and all of a sudden it began raising big, big money." Karger said the alleged insider documents he obtained – he would not say where – reveal a pattern of the church setting up "front groups" to hide church financing to stop gay marriage. In his complaint, he included alleged correspondence from the 1990s between Mormon church members involved in lobbying against gay-marriage proposals in Hawaii. The letters bear the signatures of then high-level Mormon representatives, and describe the need to lower the church's profile in the Hawaii effort by working with figures from other religions. One June 1996 letter purportedly shows a Mormon church representative was aware that media were interested in probing church donations to the Hawaii coalition. "We have organized things so the Church contribution was used in an area of coalition activity that does not have to be reported," the letter reads. In an e-mailed statement, Mormon church spokeswoman Kim Farah denied establishing the National Organization for Marriage and said the church has reported its entire contribution of $190,000 to Proposition 8. Farah said the church has not tried to verify the authenticity of the documents related to the Hawaii campaign against gay marriage. Brian Brown, National Organization for Marriage's executive director and a Roman Catholic, said, "The only way to respond to Fred Karger is one word: ridiculous." Brown said his group includes a Mormon board member and people of many other faiths. The early money used to get enough signatures to put Proposition 8 on the ballot came mostly from well-off Catholic individuals, he said. Jeff Flint, a Proposition 8 campaign manager, accused Karger of "irrational hatred" of the Mormon church. "I'm not exactly sure how to answer the latest conspiracy theory," Flint said. Call Susan Ferriss, Bee Capitol Bureau, (916) 321-1267.
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