A professor at Northwest Iowa Community College claims that
the FBI is investigating students and faculty there on suspicions
that pirated music, movies, and software are being sold to help
fund al Qaeda.
College President William Giddings acknowledges that law enforcement
officers were asked to look into problems with excessive bandwidth
use and possible illicit file-sharing, but he expressed bewilderment
at allegations of an al Qaeda connection.
The al Qaeda story comes from computer science professor Steven
Gifford, who says that he was visited by the FBI and "they
told us the college had alleged that my students and I were
running a piracy ring. We were downloading, cracking and re-selling
software, movies and music and were doing this in support of
al Qaeda terrorists."
"I was a little stunned," Gifford stated. "There
would be no benefit to me to do anything to harm my country.
... I am a patriot."
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Gifford, who has been on paid administrative leave since January
25 over budget issues, suggested that the real problem might
be that he is about to become president of the faculty association
and the administration doesn't like him. He accused college
president William Giddings of wanting "to humiliate and
intimidate me."
President Giddings was reluctant to make any comment about
Gifford. He said he did not know who the target of the FBI investigation
was but that it definitely did not involve terrorism.
This video is 9 News, KCAL, broadcast February 7, 2008.