About Dr. Paul L. Williams,
PhD Dr. Paul L. Williams, PhD, is an American
author, journalist and consultant on radical Islam and
counterterrorism. He is also an adjunct professor of humanities.
He is the author of six books, including The Day of Islam: The
Annihilation of America and the Western World, in which he
expands on the American Hiroshima scenario he believes to be
imminent, in which simultaneous nuclear attacks on 7 to 10
American cities would create havoc in American society. Prior to
this, he served for seven years as a consultant to the FBI about
terrorist and mafia criminal organizations.
Dr. Paul L. Williams, PhD
Americans Must Defend Constitutional Rights from
Foreign Attack
October 16, 2009
I am a United
States citizen on trial in Canada for exposing a
situation at McMaster University in Hamilton,
Ontario that threatened the lives and welfare of
Canadians and Americans alike. My book "The Dunces
of Doomsday," published in the U.S. by Cumberland
House, revealed potential terrorist threats from
al-Qaeda affiliates at McMaster. The university is
suing me for libel, demanding $4 million in punitive
and aggregated damages.
Unlike American libel laws where the plaintiff must
prove that what said about him is not true and it
was said in malice, Canadian libel laws, like the
British, put the burden of proof on the defendant,
not on the plaintiff.
What I wrote and said about McMaster from my home in
Pennsylvania falls well within the standards of
responsible journalism. Nevertheless, I have been
dragged into court in Toronto, Canada, to be tried
under Canadian law that lacks the U.S.
Constitutional protection of free speech.
This ordeal has damaged my professional career,
depleted my life savings, and placed me in financial
jeopardy.
I am not alone.
Other writers have suffered a similar fate,
including Joe Sharkey, a New Jersey-based freelance
business journalist is being sued for reporting
about a plane crash he survived over the Amazon. A
woman who claims Sharkey offended the “dignity” of
Brazil by criticizing its air-traffic control is
suing him for libel in Brazil. This despite the U.S.
National Transportation Safety Board’s conclusion
that the Brazilian air traffic control was
responsible to the crash. She demands $500,000 and
apologies in national and international media
outlets.
Dr. Rachel Ehrenfeld, whose criticism of a Khalid
bin Mahfouz, a Saudi billionaire who funded al
Qaeda, has resulted in a judgment by default in
British court against her for allegedly defaming the
Saudi. She was ordered to pay $250,000, apologize in
international media outlets and destroy her book:
Funding Evil; How Terrorism Is Financed – and How to
Stop It.
The same ordeal can befall all investigative
reporters in the U.S. unless federal legislators
pass The Free Speech Protection Act 2009, which is
now before the Senate Judiciary Committee.
Last week my pretrial took place in Toronto. It was
not a pleasant experience. My Canadian lawyers and
the appointed mediator spent seven hours attempting
to coerce me into signing an apology to McMaster
University for stating the truth. They maintained
that none of my statements were factual according to
Canadian libel laws.
I pointed to the fact that McMaster was home to
several al-Qaeda members who plotted to blow up
Canada’s Parliament and behead its prime minister.
In fact, a week before my pretrial took place, the
guilty plea of a McMaster student, Saad Gaya, to
charges of terrorism captured the headlines of
Canadian newspapers. Gaya was one of eighteen
al-Qaeda affiliates also charged with planning to
blow up trucks loaded with bombs at the Toronto
Stock Exchange, the Toronto office of the Canadian
Security intelligence Service and a military base on
Ontario. He was the eleventh to be convicted. The
remaining seven members of the group, known as the
“Toronto 18,” remain in prison awaiting trial. Such
statements of fact have done little to persuade
McMaster to drop the lawsuit, and my trial is set
for April 2010.
In Canada, as in England and Brazil, truth is not an
absolute defense.
No American citizen should be stripped of his/her
Constitutional rights by foreign countries or
foreign entities.
Congress should act immediately to pass the Free
Speech Protection Act 2009.