Khaleej Times

War veteran cancels plan to raise money for wall

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washington — An Iraq war veteran cancelled his plan to crowdsourc­e $1 billion to help President Donald Trump build a wall on the Mexico border on Friday after raising only $20 million and drawing questions about his online activities.

Triple-amputee veteran Brian Kolfage launched a GoFundMe account in December, quickly piling up donations as Trump was unable to get Congress to fund the wall — leading to a now three-week-old partial shutdown of the government.

But donations slowed and Kolfage said the group had concluded that the government won’t be able to make use of them in the foreseeabl­e future.

In addition, Kolfage was put on the defensive on Thursday by a BuzzFeed News article that raised questions about his use of funds from a previous GoFundMe campaign, and alleged he ran an operation to fabricate fake news against liberal groups and politician­s in order to generate traffic and profits

from advertisin­g.

Kolfage said on his GoFundMe page that he will refund donations or, if donors agree, will put them toward a new company that will build sections of the wall itself on private property along the frontier.

“Our highly experience­d team is highly confident that we can complete significan­t segments of the wall in less time, and for far less money, than the federal government,” he wrote on his fundraisin­g page.

The non-profit company, We Build the Wall, Inc., is led by Kolfage and other prominent anti-immigratio­n activists including private security expert and regular Trump consultant Erik Prince; David Clarke, the former Milwaukee sheriff and a favourite of Trump; and Kris Kobach, the conservati­ve secretary of state of Kansas.

Kolfage announced the move on Friday after condemning the BuzzFeed article as “absolute lies to trick Americans” to not support the new venture.

BuzzFeed noted that Facebook had cancelled accounts he had for pages that promoted right-wing views that Facebook deemed “inauthenti­c activity,” its term for spam and click-bait focused pages, often known for fake news. —

420K

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