state news
mOre cOnfusiOn Over crOwdfunding in flOrida Tragedy Wire Report
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he more than 430 fundraisers posted on the GoFundMe website after the mass shooting at a gay nightclub in Orlando have exposed weaknesses inherent in these popular do-it-yourself charity campaigns: waste, questionable intentions and little oversight. The fundraisers – an average of more than four for each of the 49 killed and 53 wounded – include travelers asking for cash, a practitioner of ancient healing, a personal safety instructor who sells quick loaders for assault rifles, and even convicted identity impostors. “There was a deluge,” said Holly Salmons, president of the Better Business Bureau for Central Florida. “It was almost impossible for us or anyone else to be able to vet.” The crowdfunding sites operate outside traditional charitable circles and often beyond the reach of government regulation. Appeals can be created in minutes by almost anyone and shared around the world. The officially sanctioned Equality Florida campaign raised more than $7 million via GoFundMe, but another $1.3 million went to smaller appeals – mostly set up by people with little or no charity experience. The Associated Press examined 30 campaigns chosen from throughout the lengthy list produced by a GoFundMe search for “Orlando shootings.” Within a month of the June 12 shootings, they had raised more than $265,000. Half said donations would be used for legitimate-sounding purposes: to cover funeral, medical and other costs. Some campaign organizers were relatives of the dead or wounded. A high school basketball coach raised $15,297 for the family of Akyra Murray, a star player who had just graduated before dying in the attack. But most campaigns lacked key details, such as exactly what the donations would cover or even who was asking for them. Only nine of the 30 organizers agreed to interviews. One man wanted money for travel costs to Orlando to shoot independent news video. He hadn’t raised anything two months later. Another organizer raised just $25 for travel money to hold a community healing ceremony inspired by ancient shamanic rituals. She dropped that plan in favor of sending painted rocks with an inspiring word of support. Several big funds have joined forces in an official centralized campaign that raised more than $23 million, including the $7 million from Equality Florida’s GoFundMe campaign. The donations to the central fund are generally tax-deductible, since they go to registered charities. Donations to a crowdfunding site are typically not tax-deductible, unless the organizer is a tax-exempt charity. The bigger charities – unlike many crowdfunding campaigns – give timetables for distributing aid, and detail recipients and how decisions are made. Ken Feinberg, administrator for the centralized fund, has already held two town hall meetings with survivors and family members of the victims.
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flOrida man making pulse-like THreaTs arresTed By fBi Lou Chibbaro Jr., Washington Blade
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man who posted messages on Facebook last week threatening to carry out a Pulse nightclub type shooting against LGBT people on Labor Day in the gay enclave of Wilton Manors, Fla., was arrested by the FBI in Orlando on federal charges of making threats to injure people. Craig Allen Jungwirth, 50, who had been promoting a gay event in Wilton Manors and nearby Fort Lauderdale known as Beach Bear Weekend, was initially arrested on Saturday, Sept. 3, by the Florida Highway Patrol in Osceola County, Fla. near Orlando on an unrelated charge of driving with a suspended license, according to Orlando police. An arrest affidavit released by the FBI the following day says FBI agents arrested Jungworth on a federal charge of making threatening communications after his arrest for driving without a valid license. The affidavit says the FBI arrest followed a joint investigation by the FBI and the Wilton Manors Police Department into Jungwirth’s alleged threats. A press release issued by Wilton Manors police on Aug. 30 says the department opened its own investigation that day and alerted the FBI and Florida state police after being informed by members of the LGBT community that Jungwirth had allegedly made a series of Facebook postings threatening to “exterminate” LGBT people in Wilton Manors possibly over the Labor Day weekend. “Wilton Manor Police Department will have increased patrol and visibility throughout the holiday weekend, working with local bars and restaurants in an effort to beef up private security,” the Aug. 30 press release said. “In addition, we have reached out to our local law enforcement partners and asked
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Craig Allen Jungwirth
that they consider providing additional assistance.” The six-page FBI arrest affidavit quotes one of Jungwirth’s Facebook postings as saying, “None of you deserve to live. If you losers thought the Pulse nightclub shooting was bad, wait until you see what I’m planning for Labor Day.” According to the affidavit, another one of Jungwirth’s alleged postings said, “You can never catch a genius from MIT and since you faggots aren’t dying of AIDS anymore, I have a better solution to exterminate you.” The South Florida Sun Sentinel reported that investigators confirmed that Jungwirth had attended MIT. “On August 30, 2016, Craig Jungwirth was identified by the Wilton Manors Police Department as a known individual and past city resident who had previously been the subject of numerous complaints involving the harassment and stalking of Wilton Manors residents,” the FBI arrest affidavit says. South Florida Gay News, which was the first to report the Aug. 30 Facebook postings under Jungwirth’s name making the alleged threats, reported earlier this year that multiple complaints had surfaced over the way Jungwirth was operating Beach Bear Weekend. The SFGN also reported that at least two people
Sep t emb er 8 - Sep t emb er 21, 2016 // ISSue 2 3.18
who had dealings with him in Florida and Massachusetts filed court petitions for restraining orders against him on grounds of threatening behavior. SFGN, which took screen shots of Jungwirth’s Facebook postings, quoted another one as saying, “I’m gonna be killing you fags faster than cops kill niggers. It’s time to clean up Wilton Manors from all you AIDS infested losers.” An FBI spokesperson told the Sun Sentinel that Jungworth was being held since the time of his arrest in the Seminole County Jail in Sanford, Fla., near Orlando. Jungwirth was expected to appear in federal court in Orlando Sept. 6; however, the court appearance was cancelled after Jungwirth asked to go to the hospital after complaining of chest pain according to WESH2 News. The FBI arrest affidavit says Jungwirth denied making the threatening Facebook posts when questioned by FBI agents. It says he refused to speak further with agents and requested they contact his lawyer. The Sun Sentinel reported that the lawyer, Ron Baum of Ft. Lauderdale, couldn’t immediately be reached for comment. The arrest affidavit says that at the time of his arrest Jungwirth had been living at the residence of his mother, Maryann T. Jungwirth, in Orlando.