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cyclone101

09/21/09 4:27 PM

#16716 RE: Traderzz #16714

WOW, serious AH news --- tomorrow we fly IMHO (THNX)
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Dolphins88

09/21/09 4:28 PM

#16717 RE: Traderzz #16714

This News is simply HUGE....

and based on how the New Management Team is set up I'd bet anything that we also hear they've got a Middle East Division ready to be rolled out...and then just think of the massive market in South America.
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timesup

09/21/09 6:40 PM

#16732 RE: Traderzz #16714

can you list the website of Fujien American Benevolent Association?
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pinky317

09/24/09 10:12 AM

#17273 RE: Traderzz #16714

Good Article

Chinese Associations and Chinese Gangs


--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
By Joshua Philipp, Epoch Times
October 22, 2008
It is known internationally and throughout the Chinese community in New York that numerous Chinese associations, also referred to as “tongs,” act as the fronts of gang and mafia-like organizations, and often work under the direct orders of the Chinese consulates.

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timesup

09/24/09 11:18 AM

#17280 RE: Traderzz #16714

Fujien is commanly known as Fukien

NEW YORK—The Fukien American Association, identified by experts on gangs as a tong with connections to human trafficking and other organized crime, has given at least $70,000 to John Liu’s campaign for New York City Comptroller, according to the World Journal. Liu has urged the members of the Fukien Association to help elect him.

The term tong is explained in the report “Chinese Transnational Organized Crime: The Fuk Ching” by James O. Finckenauer, Ph.D. at the National Institute for Justice, which is a branch of the U.S. Department of Justice, “One of the structural characteristics that makes Chinese organized crime different from other forms is the relationship between some of the street gangs and certain adult organizations. The latter are called tongs.”

According to Finckenauer, “Any political influence Chinese gangs have is exerted through the tongs with which they are affiliated.”

The Fukien American Association, which donated money to Liu’s campaign, is also affiliated with the Fuk Ching gang, according to Finckenauer. The Fuk Ching gang is known for its involvement in human trafficking, as well as extortion and protection rackets, also according to Finckenauer. 'Once that organization, the Fukien American Association, became one of the leading [China]-supported organizations, they became the host of almost all these Chinese officials who are visiting New York.'—Ko-lin Chin, a leading expert on Chinese gangs


The report by Finckenauer, which explains the connections between the Fukien American Association and organized crime, continues that the Fukien American Association also provides the Fuk Ching with a physical place to hang out—helps legitimize them in the community by allowing the gang to operate in their territory; and “provide[s] criminal opportunities (such as protecting gambling operations), as well as supplying money and guns.”

In addition to involvement in organized crime, the Fukien American Association maintains close ties with the Chinese Communist Party. They work as the hosts of visiting officials from [China]. “Once that organization, the Fukien American Association, became one of the leading [China]-supported organizations, they became the host of almost all these Chinese officials who are visiting New York,” said Ko-lin Chin, a leading expert on Chinese gangs in a phone interview.

There are two kinds of organizations in Chinatown, explained Chin—ones that are pro-Taiwan, and others that are pro-mainland China. “And of course, the Fukien American Association is a pro-China organization,” said Chin.

According to Chin, the Fukien American Association is “not like the Italian mafia group. They have thousands of legitimate members, they are involved in a lot of illegal activities ... at the same time, the organization is affiliated with a street gang, is involved in illegal gambling, and also the leadership of the organization is pretty much controlled by people who are involved in human smuggling.”

The Fukien American Association’s president back in the late 90s was referred to as the "commander-in-chief of illegal smuggling,” according to Ko-lin Chin, in his book Chinatown Gangs.
Meet and Greet

Below is a list of some of John Liu’s public meetings with the Fukien American Association, which has connections to human trafficking, prostitution, and other organized crime:

July 10, 2007: $36,000 was raised at an event organized by the Fukien American Association called “Chinese New Yorkers supporting John Liu’s 2009 candidacy fundraiser,” according to Qiao Bao, a pro-CCP newspaper.

July 2, 2008: The Fukien American Association raised at least $70,000 for Liu’s campaign, according to an article published in the Chinese-language newspaper World Journal.

Jan. 26, 2009: Liu attended the Chinese New Year celebrations in Chinatown in an event organized by the Fukien American Association. He is pictured standing next to Peng Keyu, the New York Chinese consul general, in a photo on the China News Service Web site (CNS is a CCP-controlled news outlet).

June 3, 2009: The Fukien American Association held a ceremony at Manhattan Chinatown’s Jin Fong restaurant to celebrate its anniversary. In photos of the event posted on the Fukien American Association Web site, John Liu sat next to the association’s chairman, with Chinese Consul General Peng Keyu on the other side of the chairman. The same photos show Liu speaking at a podium with a large Chinese flag behind him. The Web page about the anniversary celebration was removed the day after The Epoch Times cited it in a Sept. 3 article.

Aug. 16, 2009: Liu visited the office of the Fukien American Association, urging members that, "The final month before the election is the most critical,” and “Absolutely don’t let down your guards, you must register to vote before the 21st. Then on Sept. 15, cast your sacred ballot,” according to a World Journal article. A photo shows Liu with association members around a table, food on offer, everyone holding John Liu posters.

The Triads
Chin further explained the term triad, which has no firm generally agreed-upon definition. According to Chin, some people do not differentiate triads from tongs. Depending on who's talking, the term triad may include the street gangs, Chinese associations (tongs), and/or organizations inside China that are involved in organized crime.

“The Chinese organized crime group has been very clever to create different facades to prevent probes from the police,” said Brian McAdam, a retired Canadian diplomat who specialized in exposing human smuggling, espionage, and corruption, in a phone interview.

“The majority of women who come [through human smuggling organized by the tongs], women and children, basically end up as sex slaves, and the men end up working in restaurants and doing menial labor and carrying out crime,” according to McAdam.

According to a 2008 report from the National Gang Crime Research Center, “Females and Gangs: Sexual Violence, Prostitution, and Exploitation,” the Fukien American Association and the Fuk Ching are also involved in organized prostitution, which is typically run out of massage parlors.

“A lot of these people are murdered on the way, thrown off the ship, or are murdered in the U.S. if they do not pay off their debts,” McAdam said.

The Epoch Times contacted John Liu’s office with questions on his connections with the Fukien American Association but received no response at press time. Last Updated
Sep 23, 2009
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pinky317

10/12/09 8:43 AM

#19186 RE: Traderzz #16714

Updated: Triad-Affiliated Organization Raised $70,000 for John Liu’s Comptroller Campaign By Joshua Philipp
Epoch Times Staff Sep 23, 2009 . Facebook Digg del.icio.us StumbleUpon | |
Related articles: United States > New York City NEW YORK—The Fukien American Association, identified by experts on gangs as a tong with connections to human trafficking and other organized crime, has given at least $70,000 to John Liu’s campaign for New York City Comptroller, according to the World Journal. Liu has urged the members of the Fukien Association to help elect him.

The term tong is explained in the report “Chinese Transnational Organized Crime: The Fuk Ching” by James O. Finckenauer, Ph.D. at the National Institute for Justice, which is a branch of the U.S. Department of Justice, “One of the structural characteristics that makes Chinese organized crime different from other forms is the relationship between some of the street gangs and certain adult organizations. The latter are called tongs.”

According to Finckenauer, “Any political influence Chinese gangs have is exerted through the tongs with which they are affiliated.”

The Fukien American Association, which donated money to Liu’s campaign, is also affiliated with the Fuk Ching gang, according to Finckenauer. The Fuk Ching gang is known for its involvement in human trafficking, as well as extortion and protection rackets, also according to Finckenauer. 'Once that organization, the Fukien American Association, became one of the leading [China]-supported organizations, they became the host of almost all these Chinese officials who are visiting New York.'—Ko-lin Chin, a leading expert on Chinese gangs


The report by Finckenauer, which explains the connections between the Fukien American Association and organized crime, continues that the Fukien American Association also provides the Fuk Ching with a physical place to hang out—helps legitimize them in the community by allowing the gang to operate in their territory; and “provide[s] criminal opportunities (such as protecting gambling operations), as well as supplying money and guns.”

In addition to involvement in organized crime, the Fukien American Association maintains close ties with the Chinese Communist Party. They work as the hosts of visiting officials from [China]. “Once that organization, the Fukien American Association, became one of the leading [China]-supported organizations, they became the host of almost all these Chinese officials who are visiting New York,” said Ko-lin Chin, a leading expert on Chinese gangs in a phone interview.

There are two kinds of organizations in Chinatown, explained Chin—ones that are pro-Taiwan, and others that are pro-mainland China. “And of course, the Fukien American Association is a pro-China organization,” said Chin.

According to Chin, the Fukien American Association is “not like the Italian mafia group. They have thousands of legitimate members, they are involved in a lot of illegal activities ... at the same time, the organization is affiliated with a street gang, is involved in illegal gambling, and also the leadership of the organization is pretty much controlled by people who are involved in human smuggling.”

The Fukien American Association’s president back in the late 90s was referred to as the "commander-in-chief of illegal smuggling,” according to Ko-lin Chin, in his book Chinatown Gangs.
Meet and Greet

Below is a list of some of John Liu’s public meetings with the Fukien American Association, which has connections to human trafficking, prostitution, and other organized crime:

July 10, 2007: $36,000 was raised at an event organized by the Fukien American Association called “Chinese New Yorkers supporting John Liu’s 2009 candidacy fundraiser,” according to Qiao Bao, a pro-CCP newspaper.

July 2, 2008: The Fukien American Association raised at least $70,000 for Liu’s campaign, according to an article published in the Chinese-language newspaper World Journal.

Jan. 26, 2009: Liu attended the Chinese New Year celebrations in Chinatown in an event organized by the Fukien American Association. He is pictured standing next to Peng Keyu, the New York Chinese consul general, in a photo on the China News Service Web site (CNS is a CCP-controlled news outlet).

June 3, 2009: The Fukien American Association held a ceremony at Manhattan Chinatown’s Jin Fong restaurant to celebrate its anniversary. In photos of the event posted on the Fukien American Association Web site, John Liu sat next to the association’s chairman, with Chinese Consul General Peng Keyu on the other side of the chairman. The same photos show Liu speaking at a podium with a large Chinese flag behind him. The Web page about the anniversary celebration was removed the day after The Epoch Times cited it in a Sept. 3 article.

Aug. 16, 2009: Liu visited the office of the Fukien American Association, urging members that, "The final month before the election is the most critical,” and “Absolutely don’t let down your guards, you must register to vote before the 21st. Then on Sept. 15, cast your sacred ballot,” according to a World Journal article. A photo shows Liu with association members around a table, food on offer, everyone holding John Liu posters.

The Triads
Chin further explained the term triad, which has no firm generally agreed-upon definition. According to Chin, some people do not differentiate triads from tongs. Depending on who's talking, the term triad may include the street gangs, Chinese associations (tongs), and/or organizations inside China that are involved in organized crime.

“The Chinese organized crime group has been very clever to create different facades to prevent probes from the police,” said Brian McAdam, a retired Canadian diplomat who specialized in exposing human smuggling, espionage, and corruption, in a phone interview.

“The majority of women who come [through human smuggling organized by the tongs], women and children, basically end up as sex slaves, and the men end up working in restaurants and doing menial labor and carrying out crime,” according to McAdam.

According to a 2008 report from the National Gang Crime Research Center, “Females and Gangs: Sexual Violence, Prostitution, and Exploitation,” the Fukien American Association and the Fuk Ching are also involved in organized prostitution, which is typically run out of massage parlors.

“A lot of these people are murdered on the way, thrown off the ship, or are murdered in the U.S. if they do not pay off their debts,” McAdam said.

The Epoch Times contacted John Liu’s office with questions on his connections with the Fukien American Association but received no response at press time.


Last Updated
Sep 29, 2009