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- NATION, Page 33Debtor's Prison
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- Lyndon LaRouche goes to jail for swindling his supporters
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- From his perch on the fringe of the American political
- spectrum, Lyndon H. LaRouche Jr. has accused Queen Elizabeth II
- of drug trafficking and blamed the International Monetary Fund
- for creating and spreading the AIDS virus. Henry Kissinger and
- Walter Mondale, among others, have earned spots on his list of
- Communist spies. But last week LaRouche gave his conspiracy
- theories a more personal and self-aggrandizing touch. In an
- Alexandria, Va., courtroom, he declared that as a result of his
- conviction last month on fraud charges, "the vital interests of
- the United States have been put in jeopardy." A four-time
- presidential candidate on small-party tickets, he accused the
- Government of waging a campaign to "eliminate" him from the
- political scene.
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- "Arrant nonsense," retorted U.S. District Judge Albert V.
- Bryan. He proceeded to sentence LaRouche, 66, to 15 years in
- prison for evading taxes and swindling his political
- contributors out of $30 million in loans. Six LaRouche
- associates also received prison sentences of three to five years
- and fines of $6,000 to $11,000. Soon afterward, federal
- prosecutors in Boston dropped obstruction of justice charges
- against LaRouche. Four years of investigations into the
- financial shenanigans of the LaRouche movement had come to an
- end. "This is not a political case," said Assistant U.S.
- Attorney Kent Robinson. "This was a case of theft."
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- A former computer operator and onetime Marxist who moved to
- the far right in the mid-1970s, LaRouche has been living in
- luxury on an estate near Leesburg, Va., where heavily armed
- guards watch for would-be assassins. His followers set up tables
- in airports to solicit contributions and sell books and
- magazines whose extreme views are disguised by innocuous titles
- like Executive Intelligence Review. Believing that LaRouche's
- goals justified his means, others borrowed millions from
- supporters, knowing the money would never be returned. Judge
- Bryan refused to grant LaRouche bail pending appeal, and
- dispatched him to an Alexandria jail in handcuffs. If his
- sentence is upheld, LaRouche will have to serve at least five
- years in prison. He has declared himself an innocent victim of
- Soviet sympathizers in the top tiers of U.S. Government. His
- enemies, he said, would kill him behind bars.
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