Who Really Paid Bart Stupak's Rent?
It's really nice to see at least one person in the media looking into the activities at the C-Street House by The Family as Rachel Maddow has done. She follows up on the previous show's reporting and continues to ask, who's paying Bart Stupak's rent? She talks to Rev. Eric Williams who along with "12 other pastors have filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service challenging C Street‘s tax-exempt status".
MADDOW: In making a name for himself, though, Mr. Stupak has opened himself up to some questions about who he is and where he‘s coming from. Last night on this show, we talked about Bart Stupak‘s long-time Washington, D.C. residence. It‘s an 8,000 square foot, 12-bedroom mansion called C Street. C Street is reportedly run by a secretive religious group called The Fellowship or The Family.
And the members of Congress who live at C Street reportedly pay the paltry sum of $600 a month for rent—which is a sweetheart deal and is pretty clearly way below market value for that area. And that raises the question: who subsidizes the rent that Bart Stupak and those other congressmen pay—or paid?
Today, Mr. Stupak‘s office responded to our questions by informing us that Mr. Stupak moved out of C Street at the end of December. They provided us with a letter that he sent his constituents upon doing so. But they have, so far, declined to answer our questions about how much Mr. Stupak paid in rent, who he paid that rent to, and who subsidized his rent if anyone.
We have looked into it on our own, because we couldn‘t get answers from them. And tonight, we have some big news to report in terms of who Mr. Stupak seems to have been paying.
With all of the controversies swirling around C Street in recent months, the secretive religious group, The Family, has attempted to distance itself from that $1.8 million townhouse. The Family now claims it has absolutely nothing to do with C Street. The president of The Fellowship which is, again, also known as The Family talked to the “Columbus Dispatch” about it just last week.
Quoting from “The Dispatch”: Richard Carver, the president of the Fellowship Foundation, said “his charitable organization does not own the C Street Center and has no control over its policy. He said he does not know who owns or runs the center. Quote, ‘It is simply not a part of anything we do.‘”
So, according to The Fellowship, they have nothing to do with C Street nothing. They don‘t even know who runs C Street.
Well, today, we were able to obtain what appears to be the official deed to the C Street house. It‘s a deed that is dated September 23rd, 2009. It‘s a deed that appears to change the ownership of the property from a group called Youth With A Mission to an organization called C Street Center Incorporated. Signing on behalf of C Street Center Incorporated is that group‘s secretary, Marty B. Sherman.
Who‘s Marty B. Sherman? Well, here‘s the 2008 tax filing of the Fellowship Foundation, again, or The Family. Right there listed on page seven, hey, wouldn‘t you know, Marty Sherman, associate.
So, The Family claims they have nothing to do with C Street and yet one of their associates is the person who‘s listed on the deed to C Street. The mystery deepens.
Now, you know, The Family is known to be a very secretive group. And one of the things we noted as being a little weird in our coverage of this last night was that Bart Stupak keeps going out of his way to say that he‘s never signed an oath of secrecy around C Street. And, indeed, in a letter to his constituents that his office he gave to us today, he reiterates, quote, “I have never been asked to sign a contract or oath of secrecy concerning C Street or its residents.” Why does he keep bringing this up?
It turns that not that long ago, when talking about C Street to the press, Bart Stupak told “The Los Angeles Times” that he kind of did abide by a code of secrecy when it came to C Street and The Family. His quote to “The L.A. Times” when they asked him about C Street was this, quote, “We sort of don‘t talk to the press about the house.”
The reason this is important is because Bart Stupak continues to deny having anything at all to do with a secretive religious group, The Family. But check this out. In 2002, when Bart Stupak was living at C Street—he‘s lived there for years—when he was living there in 2002, an associate of The Family described for the press the arrangement that The Family had with the members of Congress who have lived at that house.
And this is how The Family described it. Are you ready? Quote, “A lot of men don‘t have an extra $1,500 to rent an apartment. So, The Fellowship house does that for those who are part of The Fellowship.” “The L.A. Times” noting that rent is $600 per month h for each resident.
So the questions remain tonight. Was Bart Stupak paying The Family rent to live at C Street? Was The Family subsidizing Mr. Stupak‘s rent which seems to have been well below market rate? Why would The Family be subsidizing Stupak‘s rent if he wasn‘t, as he says, a member of the group, when The Family admits that they subsidize rent for their members? And why exactly is The Family claiming to have no ties to the house when tax and property records indicate that it clearly does?
Bottom line here, as Bart Stupak tries to shut down health reform for an anti-abortion stunt that won‘t succeed but will make him famous, who‘s been paying Bart Stupak‘s rent in Washington all these years? Has he reported it? And why won‘t he answer questions about it?
Joining us is now is the Reverend Eric Williams, senior pastor at North Congressional United Church of Christ in Columbus, Ohio. He and 12 other pastors have filed a complaint with the Internal Revenue Service challenging C Street‘s tax-exempt status.
Pastor Williams, thank you very much for your time tonight.
REV. ERIC WILLIAMS, UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST: My pleasure. Glad to join you.
MADDOW: The C Street house, as you know, is officially listed for tax purposes as a church. What prompted you and this group of other pastors to want to challenge that status?
WILLIAMS: Exactly that. When I was actually watching your show, when I heard you talking about those sex scandals and these elite powerful men seeking counseling at a boarding house that they call themselves a church, that‘s when my ear perked up. I thought, another Washington scandal—but when anyone begins to represent themselves as a church, that‘s when I pay attention.
MADDOW: As a pastor yourself, what concerns you the most about it being a church in terms of its tax-exempt status? Are you worried that people who essentially abuse that status, sort of, cheapen it for people who deserve it?
WILLIAMS: Well, that‘s right. I‘m concerned about maintaining the historic role the church has played in our society all these years. And when somebody‘s presenting themselves as a church and yet when you begin to ask questions about their activities, the reporting, their membership, and you find it doesn‘t look like a church at all, and then you say, well, what‘s the benefit they get from that?
And the benefit, I believe, is lack of transparency. Complete opacity. We don‘t know the revenue. We don‘t their membership. We don‘t know their activities. We don‘t know the extent of their influence at all.
MADDOW: That is what has attracted me to the story again and again and again. I keep thinking I‘m done talking about C Street and done talking about The Fellowship and The Family. And then it just keeps coming up.
On the specific issue of Bart Stupak, do you find it troubling specifically that members of Congress would be getting what appear to be in-kind donations from this group in the form of rent but they‘re not declared anywhere?
WILLIAMS: Oh, absolutely. I think, any time favors are given, that means there‘s an expectation that goes along with that. And if, indeed, they have been enjoying favors all these years and not declaring that, not admitting to that, it really goes to the credibility of how they are representing the work they do.
MADDOW: It‘s awkward for me because the secrecy makes it hard to report on, as well as to describe what these things mean. We know that when Bart Stupak initially introduced the abortion-related amendment in the House, he cosponsored it with Joe Pitts, who reported widely to be another member of The Family, but again, Mr. Pitts says, no, no, no, I have nothing to do with them. I will say it‘s a challenge for reporting as well.
WILLIAMS: It‘s really hard, absolutely—really hard for us to be able to learn anything. If we can shed a little bit of light on the organization, if they would open the door and invite us into a conversation, maybe they could assure us or maybe we can have some of those questions that you‘ve been digging at and digging at answered for us.
MADDOW: As we have talked about them, The Family has recently claimed that it has nothing to do with the C Street house. I understand that you have heard from affiliates from The Family since your complaint went public and made such a big splash. Is that true?
WILLIAMS: Yes, I was contacted by a couple of folks. One gentleman from Columbus, Ohio, and also was contacted by Tim Coe, son of famous Doug Coe, who expressed interest in talking about my objections and trying to reassure me. And I found that very interesting that he would contact me if, indeed, there is no relationship at all.
MADDOW: I hear your implication there. The Reverend Eric Williams—
WILLIAMS: So—
MADDOW: Yes. Sorry, go ahead.
WILLIAMS: So, I invited him to a conversation, but a public conversation and made several attempts to invite him to that. And ultimately, he turned me down, wanting only a private conversation rather than one that have some accountability.
MADDOW: So, he—just to be clear—I‘m sorry, I interrupted you there. He offered to get in touch and talk to you about C Street even as The Family denies having anything to do with C Street, but he only wanted the conversation to happen between the two of you without anybody else there.
WILLIAMS: That‘s correct. That‘s correct. They want a private, confidential, un-reportable conversation.
MADDOW: We‘ll see if he‘ll join us on this show. We‘ll reach out to
Mr. Coe now that we know he‘s reached out to you. Reverend Eric Williams --
WILLIAMS: That would be wonderful. Keep up your good work, please.
MADDOW: And you, too, sir. Thank you.
Transcript via MSNBC.



JESUS!
What did I win?
Barack Obama: Change we can only imagine
John Stewart are the only broadcasters willing to ask real questions. We are lucky to have them.
hiding dem friends like stupak are a nightmare for the American people..Rigorously putting out lies serves to confuse those who have limited time to get the facts..AntiAmerican is mild for their behavior--treason is a more aptly placed label.
Call the congress including stupak --he does not have 12 buddies willing to destroy the bill..another lie for limelight!!!Degette is correct on this.!
1.80.828.0498 Make sure you thank the Americansin Congress that are supporting the people and not the corporations! Show your disgust for the rest!
Glennzilla today poses an equally righteous question to congressional democrats:
"One of the most inane acts undertaken by the Democratic Congress was its formal and highly bipartisan condemnation of MoveOn.org's "Petraeus/Betrayus" ad. Regardless of one's views of that ad, formally opining on the views of private citizens is not the role of Congress. But since they did that, and apparently believe that repugnant political campaigns merit Congressional disapproval, shouldn't there be some form of formal sanction for the far more pernicious and genuinely McCarthyite attacks on DOJ lawyers from Liz Cheney and Bill Kristol's "Keep America Safe"?..."
This woman needs to change her last name to Morrow. This is true journalism.
is intended to be a factual statement
Which I know sounds stupid to say but I've seen plenty of people who claim that Rachel and Keith are essentially just Fox from the left. Its such nonsense. Rachel never yells at anyone, she is polite even to the most outrageous liars and unlike the Fox people she rigorously checks every fact and is the first one to admit it on the rare occasion when she gets even a minor point wrong.
One word distinguishes both Rachel and Keith from FOX. Sure they lean left and they'd admit to it. But it's that one word...facts. FOX never let facts get in the way of a good smear. Rachel and Keith uses the facts to bring you the story.
is intended to be a factual statement
It would seem that they would LIE to advance their agenda and clearly that isn't what's going on.
Barack Obama: Change we can only imagine
i have all kinds of questions about religious institutions and their charitable status. are these groups organized as 501c3 entities? do they meet all the requirements? do they stay the hell out of politics? if they qualify as 501c3, do they observe non-discrimination laws?
the special tax exempt status of churches has bothered me for a long time, as many of them have functions that are quite a lot like a business. other thing is, seems they like to stick their noses into a lot of issues that should be strictly secular, stupaks' stand being the latest and particularly egregious example.
I was searching the archives, because I though I remembered [Logan] posting a thread on this (Non-profit reporting requirements) roughly six months ago... but I could not find it. :-/
Though on a related matter, two noted FAMILY members have pushed for this and was posted here.
During my search, something caught my eye, it's related oddly enough to the afformentioned link and pertains to the women listed [Phyllis Schlafly]. I came across this thread and it seems to be the same women... right down to the red dress and pin on her collar, here and here.
As far as Non profits... the damage they are capable of doing is... literally un-measurable is as much as they are left unaccountable. On a discriminatory note...
According to lesbian/gay newsmagazine The Advocate, in 2001, the Bush administration was "willing to do whatever it takes to perpetuate, support, and defend discrimination against gay, lesbian, bisexual and transgender individuals" in exchange for The Salvation Army's lobby support for Faith-Based Initiatives, in what the publication described as a "secret arrangement." Also mention here.
When a non-profit has a $2.6 billion (2008) claim... you decide. A key word to look for in relation to THE FAMILY, quite often and coincidentally have the word Family in their title.
TPM has an interesting view → → → "The Family" as a "Pyramidal Coercive Group"
Study the symptoms not the virus...
North Congressional United Church of Christ in Columbus, Ohio. That should read North Congregational Church of Christ, etc.
Ya, the real insult to injury is that these Republican warts are taking our money every which way they can get it while they destroy civility and reason at the same time.
OK, so Stupak is a Democrat, but not really. He is a DINO, is he not?
"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-
He is a smug religious hypocrite who wears his perverted form of spirituality like some badge of superiority and righteousness. He is a religious zealot masquerading as a public servant and uses his public authority to promote his fundamentalist hypocrisy. He has crossed the line with his idiocy and needs to be drummed out of public service immediately.
"We will find fulfillment not in the goods that we have, but in the good we can do for each other."
Robert F. Kennedy
he is guilty of honest service fraud. It's about time these politicians who o that route were prosecuted. They claim that they are in Congress to represent the People, yet do anything but that once elected. They have obtained office by fraudulently presenting themselves to the public, and then fail to give honest service once elected.
Stupak looks like the perfect person to be made a prosecutorial example of.
Doesn't seem to matter how dirty it is no one will prosecute so does it matter the law is nothing to our dictators they are all above the law some liberty law school graduate will make sure to sabotage the prosecution if it ever gets that far.
One thing that never gets mentioned is that the Clintons at least at one point were (and perhaps still are) members of the family: http://www.thenation.com/doc/20080331/ehrenreich
perhaps? please, tell us more...
and who paid their rent?
"Government by organized money is just as dangerous as Government by organized mob"
-= Franklin Delano Roosevelt =-
from the primaries, don't they.
Yeah, HRC was a "member", along with how many other Democratic Congress Reps and Senators? Oh wait, the article sorta goes right past that to focus on Senator Clinton. Can you say 'hit piece'? Sure. I knew you could.
One last tidbit not mentioned. You are aware that Senator Obama also went to prayer meetings (note plural) hosted by the same group? Just as relevant to the article, to say "Not. At. All".
Though I've seen some plausible association in relation to his foundation. "There are more than 1000 PlayPump systems in sub-Saharan Africa, providing clean drinking water to more than one million impoverished people. On September 20, 2006, at the Clinton Global Initiative".
I noticed while researching the "Kill the gays bill" and commented on it here somewhere.
And "Yes... "This is the level at which Hillary Clinton is presently a member (and why I have concerns for her at this point)."
Study the symptoms not the virus...
Now that was a proper political analysis. Who, What, Where. Comparing the front-runners. In contrast, the article in 'The Nation' managed to package only SOME of the same information in order to trumpet 'More Reasons Why Billary is Bad!Eleventy!11'
In any case, Obama is President, HRC is Secretary of State, and McCain is still a Senator.
PS. What's the link? Your Video Cafe link returns a 404.
Clinton Foundation
Study the symptoms not the virus...
Thanks for the info on Stupak.
Now please tell us about John Amato's off the record session with Geithner today. AMERICAblog was swooning about it, and they mentioned that John was there. Can we expect a full report on what was said, or is C&L going down the same "anonymous source" road as the Washington Post, et al?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AutxFgxTshM
Diabolus est Deus Inversus
These men get free breakfast and dinner served to them. Obedient little female members of The Family do the cooking and cleaning.
That benefit is actually worth more than the rent. Even eating lightly, breakfast and dinner at a hotel restaurant cost $60-75/day, and these men do not eat lightly.
STRIP this church and all churches of their tax advantages. They meddle in secular matters while doing nothing to genuinely help the public. Tax the fraudsters!!!
It is a male dominated organization that uses "church" to avoid taxes and financial accountability. It is about amassing power the money throughout the globe. Jeff Sharlots book spells it all out. They are not a Christain group and their theology does not resemble any Christian beliefs at all. They are a cult working for their own aggenda. Uncovering what they truly are would make their members in Congress and the Senate truly vulnerable.
it would be a simple matter to wire the place six ways to Sunday so that a curious Justice Department or IRS couldk now every last iota of information about this organization. Wouldn't be the least bit surprised if it's already been done.
No exceptions!
Republicans are liars and simply cannot be trusted.
Even:
http://www.subgenius.com/
?
Diabolus est Deus Inversus
the subgenius
his noodlyness is the one true god
http://www.venganza.org/
Ramen!
Eh, knock-off...
At least the Bobsters know they're Discordants
That would be like sayin Family Guy is sooo much funnier than The Simpsons.
Diabolus est Deus Inversus
'nuff said ..
When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?
Not soon enough!
National Prayer Breakfast
When will government of the people, by the politicians, for the corporations perish from this Earth?
Not soon enough!
"('[T]he breakfast is regarded by the Family as merely a tool in a larger purpose: to recruit the powerful attendees into smaller, more frequent prayer meetings, where they can 'meet Jesus man to man.'"[2])
Izzat anything like what the Vatican's been doin' lately?
Diabolus est Deus Inversus
...breakfast seems to be the time for confession after you've spent the night with the boy's choir!
We're not going to get very far if you keep injecting logic into the conversation!
FFRF Sues Bush (Now Obama), Shirley Dobson and Gov. Doyle over National Day of Prayer Proclamations
Study the symptoms not the virus...
This is exactly the sort of in-depth reporting that most mainstream journalists should be doing but either can't or won't do because of the corporate media machine. There's a reason why the Founding Fathers established the Constitutional right to freedom of the press...and why they considered it so important that they put it in the First Amendment right next to freedom of speech and freedom of religion. Unfortunately, it appears that most people in the press these days would rather be lapdogs than the watchdogs our Founding Fathers wanted them and intended them to be.
Never trust anyone who insists that patriotism requires you to blindfold yourself with the flag.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NCfVFxRsKQc
Diabolus est Deus Inversus
Somebody, PLEASE, nominate this woman for a Peabody! Quality, true quality, in journalism must be recognized.
Should we start a "grassroots" effort to see Rachel suitably recognized?
We're not going to get very far if you keep injecting logic into the conversation!
Ah yes, I know this guy. He's one of the worse theofascist traitors in our government, a scumbag crook who commits treason against America for money paid by his corporate sponsors, justifying his treason against us as the will of his Christanic gods.
Fucker.
"The Catholic Church must be the biggest corporation in the U.S. We have a branch in almost every neighborhood. Our assets and real estate holdings must exceed those of Standard Oil, A.T.&T, and U.S. Steel combined. And our roster of dues-paying members must be second only to the tax rolls of the U.S. Government."
Study the symptoms not the virus...
Didn't Coburn claim to be a Deacon?
Study the symptoms not the virus...
Hey, asshole, it's DEMOCRATIC party. But then again, since your party has no actual ideas to help this nation recover from eight years of total mismanagement and greed, I realize this is the best you have to offer. Sad.
You brain-dead, Fox-talking-points-repeaters should get out more often. You know, turn off Fox Propaganda Network and actually leave your little inner sanctum of ignorance and enter the real world.
Aw, who am I kidding? It's a scary, scary world out there, what with all the brown people and intellectuals (gasp!) who disagree with what Rush tells you to believe!
Our cost of living in N GA is low, and $600 here would only get you a good doublewide trailer. In DC? A closet in the ghetto?
All this evangelism is about two things--preserving tax-exempt status for churches (and you would not believe how much land and how many businesses the LDS owns) and preserving a public face to cover extensive corruption. The lower classes, even if not churched, still believe that Christians are more trustworthy and of superior moral character than non-Christians, and they are being stolen blind by charades of the C street sort.
Dems who voted for the Stupak amendment to restrict women's rights.
And here
Study the symptoms not the virus...
is to vote him out of office. It's clear tht he is working to forward his own personal agenda, which has nothing to do with the public's business. It clear that he is willing to screw every person in the country in order to advance his private agenda...a thing that is clearly driven by religious ideology. It also appears that he is corrupt.
Screw him. Give him his pink slip. The same for any other representative who is a C Street agent, If they've forgotten that they are representatives, there is no longer any reason to retain them as such. Give them all their walking papers, and if they have earned it, prosecute them(corruption and honest service fraud).
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