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Friday, August 6, 2004
Israeli
suspects face immigration hearing by Emma
Poole and
Suzanne
Wilton AS many as 15 Israelis in
Calgary are being linked to a door-to-door art scam
that has for years puzzled authorities on both
sides of U.S.-Canada border and raised the spectre
of international espionage. At least two of the foreigners were detained in
Calgary and today will face the Immigration and
Refugee Board. The board will determine whether
they will be deported and banned from the
country. Guy Grinberg and Jacky Yakov Sr.,
believed to be in their 30s, are accused of working
illegally in Canada. The two were picked up Wednesday at a southeast
car rental agency. They were allegedly peddling
fake artwork at inflated prices. Their arrest was
followed by the roundup of more than a dozen
other Israelis, who were questioned by
authorities and then released. Their passports
were seized. This is the third time in a year immigration
agents in Calgary have detained Israelis posing as
art students. Similar incidents have unfolded in
Saskatoon, Toronto and Ottawa during the same
period. But what exactly the supposed students are doing
here remains a mystery, one that has intrigued law
enforcement and intelligence agencies across Canada
and the United States. "I would assume that whether it's innocent or
otherwise, it's the sort of thing that security
agencies in both countries would or should be at
least looking into," Canada's former top spy,
Reid Morden, said Thursday from New
York. Three years ago, the U.S. National
Counterintelligence Executive warned Americans
about Israelis posing as art students who were
targeting senior U.S. officials at home, adding
it's possible the groups were comprised of
non-Israelis posing as citizens of that country and
connected to Islamic fundamentalist
organizations. Media and Internet sources have speculated on
the theory that the art student guise is being used
as a front for a sophisticated spy ring. The Washington Post ran a story in 2002
citing a Drug Enforcement Agency report that 120
young Israelis, posing as art students and selling
paintings door-to-door, had been arrested and
deported from the U.S. But no one has ever
been able to determine whether the supposed
students were running a bogus art scam or a spy
ring. Regardless, their stories
tugged at the heart strings
of victims, who handed over thousands of
dollars for worthless works of art. Tales of victimization and strife in Israel
caught Calgarian Enrico Festa "hook, line
and sinker." The Lion's Den Restaurant owner said a man first
approached him about buying a painting in August
2003. Festa said the man told him he was an Israeli
art student who had recently fled the Middle East
after a stint in the national military. "He said they wanted to get away from all the
violence and heartache in Israel," said Festa, who
eventually forked over $120 for a scenic ocean
portrait after being approached a second time. "It
was well rehearsed, and they have the ability to
show emotion." During the sales pitch, the student engaged
Festa in a political debate about the Middle East,
he said. Months later, when a pretty young woman, an art
portfolio tucked under her arm, came to his door
once again with a similar story, he relented. "It was a nice little pitch," he said, adding
the woman told him she was raising money to open an
art gallery in downtown Calgary. Jay Baydala didn't fall for the story. "They introduced themselves to us as
representatives of a school in Israel," said
Baydala, whose office is down the street from the
Lion's Den on Macleod Trail. "They needed (the money) to set up a gallery in
Vancouver." It wasn't until after
Calgary police issued a warning about the
door-to-door art scam last week that Festa
realized he'd been had. He has turned over to immigration authorities
the returned personal cheque he used to pay for the
art, which was made out to Moran Marilus and
cashed. Immigration officials, meantime, remain
tight-lipped about the case. "None of the information is in the public domain
at this time and an investigation is still
continuing," said Richard Huntley, acting
director for Citizenship and Immigration Canada in
Calgary. Huntley refused to confirm whether agents with
the Canadian Security and Intelligence Service were
involved. With so many similar incidents occurring across
the country, Morden, the head of CSIS from 1987 to
1991, said Canada's spy agency should look into the
situation, if it hasn't already. "They would be irresponsible if they didn't look
at it, at least to reassure themselves these people
are who they say they are." A CSIS spokeswoman would not confirm its agents
interviewed the Israeli citizens detained in
Calgary. "We don't comment on any operational
issues whatsoever," said Kathryn Locke. Members of Calgary's Jewish community were
surprised to learn of the scam. "The behaviour of any individual belonging to
any group should never be seen as a reflection on
the group as a whole," said Nelson Halpern,
president of the Calgary Jewish Community
Council. . . . on this
website -
Israeli "art students"
again Arrested
in Canada, accused as Mossad agents, ordered
deported; released to luxury Ottawa hotel
[This story vanished
from the website of the Ottawa Sun within
hours of it being posted. The Globe &
Mail doesn't mention a word of it.]
-
War on Terror: As
Israelis languish in U.S. jails, Jewish
activists wondering why
-
Israeli
"students" identified trying to get into secure
US buildings
-
The
Israeli "art student" mystery: a
summary
-
If you can't beat 'em, hire 'em: Israelis
Sought for U.S. Security
-
Spy-ring
latest: Antiwar.com posts leaked US Govt report
on "Israeli art students" on Internet
[report,
pdf]
-
US
asked Israeli Detainees if They Were
Spies
-
What
did the Mossad know in advance about September
11 (and not pass on to USA allies?)
-
-
Our dossier on The Mossad
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