by Phil Williams
Chief Investigative Reporter
Chief Investigative Reporter
NASHVILLE,
Tenn. - Who's providing free foreign trips to state lawmakers -- and
what do they want?
A group of Tennessee
legislators will soon be packing their bags and heading overseas for what most
Tennesseans would consider an exotic trip.
But those lawmakers will
not be picking up the tab -- and few seemed to know anything about the group
that is.
In the waning days of this
year's legislative session, lawmakers debated whether proposed changes to the
state's campaign finance laws would open the door to foreign influence.
"If you want to know
who contributes to my campaign, it's as easy as the click of the mouse,"
said Rep. Terri Lynn Weaver, a Smith County Republican.
Still, what you won't find
online -- and what Weaver did not mention -- is that, in late May, a select
group of state lawmakers will be jetting off for a 12-day, all-expenses paid
trip, landing first in Azerbaijan, then heading a few days later to nearby
Turkey.
The invitations came from a
group called the Turkish American Chamber of Commerce of the
Southeast -- with the money coming from a sister group called the Turquoise Council of Americans and Eurasians.
Both groups have ties to a
movement headed by a moderate Muslim imam named Fethullah Gulen.
"You have accepted the
invitation to go on the trip?" NewsChannel
5 Investigates asked Rep. Mark White.
"I would like to look
into going on that, yes," the Memphis Republican answered.
"Why is that?"
"Because it's an
educational experience."
White is one of the nine
lawmakers who have accepted the invitation to go on the trip.
Others, according to a list
provided to NewsChannel 5, are:
Sen. Stacey Campfield,
R-Knoxville; Sen. Brian Kelsey, R-Germantown; Rep. Vance Dennis, R-Savannah;
Rep. Roger Kane, R-Knoxville; Rep. Antonio Parkinson, D-Memphis; Rep. Joe
Towns, D-Memphis; Rep. Johnnie Turner, D-Memphis; and Terri Lynn Weaver.
Tennessee Safety
Commissioner Bill Gibbons has also agreed to go, as has his assistant
commissioner David Purkey.
"Does it matter to you
who is paying for this trip?" we asked White.
"Yeah, we'll find that
out," he answered on the last day of the legislative session. "Like I
say, I just have not had a chance to -- we've been so busy in session -- just
haven't had a chance to look into that yet."
Fethullah Gulen has
generally drawn praise for his moderate religious views and his message of
tolerance. Time Magazine just named him to its lists of the 100 most influential
people in the world.
But a U.S. State Department cable published by
Wikileaks describes his movement as being one that "officially
professes to be interested in ecumenical understanding, but whose roots are
intensely Islamic."
As 60 Minutes reported
last year, the movement is also behind a secular network of science
and math charter schools that began in Turkey and has now spread to the U.S.
One of those is in Memphis.
In fact, our NewsChannel 5
investigation discovered that the president of the Turkish American Chamber,
Ayhan Korucu, is also the president of a Gulen school, the Fulton Science
Academy, in Atlanta.
And the president of the
Turquoise Council, Kemal Oksuz, is -- according to the New
York Times -- a principal in a company that has built Gulen
schools in the U.S. Oksuz also has served as chairman of the Gulen Institute in
Houston and was interviewed for a PBS story on the imam.
The trip comes at a time
that some lawmakers, like White, are pushing legislation to make it easier for
charter schools to get approval to open across the state.
"You're telling me
something that I haven't heard before," White said.
"Should you have asked
who was providing the funding before you accepted?" NewsChannel 5 Investigates asked.
"Well," the
lawmaker answered, "it's been done for so many years I didn't see any
problem with it."
House Education Committee
Chairman Harry Brooks, a Knoxville Republican who has been helping to
coordinate the upcoming trip, keeps in his office mementos from both Azerbaijan
and Turkey from a trip he accepted last year.
Brooks said that there were
five Tennessee lawmakers on that trip.
Other lawmakers, according
to Brooks, were: Sen. Reginald Tate, D-Memphis; Rep. Joe Armstrong,
R-Knoxville; Rep. Josh Evans, R-Greenbrier; and Rep. Gary Odom, D-Nashville.
It was trip that Brooks
described as part economic development, part goodwill.
"What we gain is, one,
an understanding of a society that wants to be a friend to this country,"
he added.
But Brooks insisted that
charter schools were never discussed.
"That has never been
an item of discussion," he said.
And Tennessee isn't alone
in getting attention from the Turkish groups.
According to a news report,
some lawmakers have had second thoughts about
such trips in Texas, where there's a whole chain of Gulen schools.
But even if the ultimate
goal is to curry favor with lawmakers, Brooks still doesn't see a problem.
"If you're a
legislator in the state of Tennessee and if you don't have the courage to vote
your conviction -- whether someone has given you a donation or not -- you don't
need to be down here -- simple fact," he said.
One of those invitees, Rep.
Johnnie Turner, insisted that she is a staunch charter school opponent and has
never discussed the issue with her hosts.
Under Tennessee law, if the
hosts had hired lobbyists, these trips would be illegal.
But, as is, they are
entirely legal -- and no one has to disclose them to the public.
Late Monday, NewsChannel 5 Investigates heard from Kemal Oksuz --
and he put the cost at close to $4,000 a person. He said lawmakers from several
states were being invited.
Still, Oksuz insisted the
goal is about establishing opportunities for partnerships, not about charter
schools.
E-mail: pwilliams@newschannel5.com http://www.newschannel5.com/story/22111765/free-foreign-trips-for-state-lawmakers
View
selected State Department cables (via Wikileaks):
Turkey's Invisible Man Casts Long Shadow
Turkish Gulenist Movement in Turkmenistan
Turkish Fethullah Gulen Network's Presence in Azerbaijan
Turkish Gulenist Schools: Be Everywhere or Be Nowhere
Fethullah Gulen: Why Are His Followers Traveling?
Verdict Suspended In Case Against Islamic Leader Fethullah Gulen
Turkey's Invisible Man Casts Long Shadow
Turkish Gulenist Movement in Turkmenistan
Turkish Fethullah Gulen Network's Presence in Azerbaijan
Turkish Gulenist Schools: Be Everywhere or Be Nowhere
Fethullah Gulen: Why Are His Followers Traveling?
Verdict Suspended In Case Against Islamic Leader Fethullah Gulen
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