David Horowitz Freedom Center
The David Horowitz Freedom Center was founded in 1988 as the Center for the Study of Popular Culture. The Center adopted its current name in 2006.[1]
Funders
Top funders include the Bradley Foundation ($6 million), Sarah Scaife Foundation ($5.5 million), and Olin Foundation ($2 million) which all gave significant sums to the Center's predecessor CSPC.[2]
2012
- Bochnowski Family Foundation gave a grant of USD $10,000 in 2012[3]
- Claws Foundation gave USD $150,000 - 2012 [3]
- Allegheny Foundation gave USD $150,000 - 2012[3]
- Sarah Scaife Foundation gave USD $225,000 - 2012[3]
- Joyce and Donald Rumsfeld Foundation - gave $1000 in 2012[4]
Funding counterjihad activists
The Politico website reported in September 2010 that the Center was responsible for funding Robert Spencer's Jihad Watch website:
- Though it was not listed on the public tax reports filed by Horowitz’s Freedom Center, POLITICO has confirmed that the lion’s share of the $920,000 it provided over the past three years to Jihad Watch came from [Joyce] Chernick, whose husband, Aubrey Chernick, has a net worth of $750 million, as a result of his 2004 sale to IBM of a software company he created, and a security consulting firm he now owns.[5]
The Conservative Transparency database shows that the Horowitz Freedom Center made three donations between 2010 and 2012 to Jihad Watch: -$45,500 in 2012 -$95,000 in 2011 -$30,000 in 2010 [6]
External resources
- Sourcewatch David Horowitz Freedom Center
Notes
- ↑ About the Center, David Horowitz Freedom Center, accessed 21 September 2010.
- ↑ *Media Transparency listed [1]
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 David Horowitz Freedom Center, Conservative Transparency database, accessed 2 March 2015
- ↑ David Horowitz Freedom Center, Conservative Transparency database, accessed 3 March 2015
- ↑ Kenneth P. Vogel and Giovanni Russonello, Latest mosque issue: The money trail, Politico, 4 September 2010.
- ↑ David Horowitz Freedom Center, Grants, Conservative Transparency database, accessed 3 March 2015