Who is Laura Silsby?

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Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Elvis » Sat Mar 25, 2017 11:59 pm

I think it's a fair question.

Some existing threads should be taken into account:

10 US Citizens Arrested Taking 33 Children Out Of Haiti
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=26916&p=319332&hilit=laura+silsby#p319332

ElSalvador Investigates Adviser to Americans held in Haiti
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=27083&p=331444&hilit=laura+silsby#p331444

Adviser to Americans Jailed in Haiti Is Arrested
viewtopic.php?f=8&t=27551&p=325980&hilit=laura+silsby#p325980


Thread title courtesy CBS News:

By CBSNews CBS/AP February 5, 2010, 6:30 PM
Who is Laura Silsby?

Laura Silsby, the leader of 10 U.S. Baptist missionaries facing kidnapping charges in Haiti, is no stranger to legal and financial troubles.

The 40-year-old Idaho businesswoman convinced members of Idaho's Central Valley Baptist Church to follow her dream of building an orphanage in the Dominican Republic for Haitian children. But her other business and personal ventures reveal a checkered history.

Silsby has faced 14 legal complaints for unpaid wages in connection with her online shopping business, Personal Shopper. Employees won nine of those complaints and Silsby was ordered to pay $31,000 in wages plus another $4,000 in fines, according to the New York Times.

She's also had at least nine traffic citations in the last 12 years including four for failing to register or insure her car.

Last July, Silsby defaulted on the mortgage for her Meridian, Idaho. But she used that same address to register a nonprofit, the New Life Children's Refuge - the orphanage operation linked to the current kidnapping charges.

But those who know her don't doubt her motives, noting that her problems usually stem from a lack of organization.

"In my heart, I think she probably went down there with good intentions, to help people that were in trouble, but it's a lack of foresight and planning, once again. She did that in her business life and it seems to follow her in her personal life," Bryan Jack, an employee at Personal Shopper currently suing Silsby for back pay, told CNN.

Silsby, a divorced mother of two young children, now finds herself in the middle of an international legal firestorm. The group faces kidnapping charges for trying to remove 33 Haitian children from the country without documentation. At least 22 of those children were found to still have parents.

Edwin Coq, the lawyer assigned to defend the missionaries, said Friday that Silsby knew she couldn't remove the youngsters without proper paperwork, but he characterized the other nine missionaries as unknowingly being caught up in actions they didn't understand.

"They were naive. They had no idea what was going on and they did not know that they needed official papers to cross the border. But Silsby did," he said.

In an exclusive jail cell interview with CBS News correspondent Bill Whitaker, Silsby maintained the group's innocence.

"We have not in any way trafficked or kidnapped children. We came here out of love in our hearts for these children and have done our best to help them," Silsby said. "Once we were asked at the border to provide an additional piece of paperwork for the Haitian government, we willingly complied.

"I was willing to come back the very next morning at 6:00 a.m. to complete it and the children were going to remain there until I returned. But instead, they came with [an] armed guard and took us to the police station for interrogation and held us on charges … on false charges."

Silsby had begun planning last summer to create the orphanage. When the earthquake struck she recruited other church members, and the 10 spent a week in Haiti gathering children for their project.

Most of the children came from the ravaged village of Callebas, where people told the AP they handed over their children because they were unable to feed or clothe them after the quake. They said the missionaries promised to educate the children and let relatives visit.

Their stories contradicted Silsby's account that the children came from collapsed orphanages or were handed over by distant relatives.

She also said the Americans believed they had obtained in the Dominican Republic all the documents needed to take the children out of Haiti.

The Dominican consul in Haiti, Carlos Castillo, told the AP on Thursday that the day the Americans departed for the border, Silsby visited him and said she had a document from Dominican migration officials authorizing her to take the children from Haiti.

Castillo said he warned Silsby that if she lacked adoption papers signed by the appropriate Haitian officials her mission would be considered child trafficking. "We were very specific," he said.

http://www.cbsnews.com/news/who-is-laura-silsby/



Google News has mighty slim pickin's, nothing after November.
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Re: Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Searcher08 » Mon Mar 27, 2017 6:37 am

Lots of information on Laura Silsby - and her connections with James Alefantis:
http://pizzagate.wiki/Laura_Silsby

Please bear in mind that all the information in that entry is fake news written by Putin, and obviously hate spread by Kremlin Far Right trolls who just want to discredit real victims of trafficking and are inherently incapable of appreciating modern art or edgy synth bands and are racist homophobic transphobic Otherkinphobic haters at best, and certainly worse than Hitler.
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Re: Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Elvis » Mon Mar 27, 2017 1:31 pm

Searcher08 wrote:Lots of information on Laura Silsby - and her connections with James Alefantis:
http://pizzagate.wiki/Laura_Silsby


Thanks, and first of all I learned that she now goes by a married name, Laura Gayler.

There is one connection (not "connections") with Alefantis, worthy of further scrutiny:

Connection to Max Maccoby and James Achilles Alefantis

James Achilles Alefantis is friends with Michael Maccoby. Michael's son, Max Maccoby, is a Director of Friends of the Orphans, the charity Laura Silsby was given children from while in Haiti.[22], [23] , [24]

This same Max Maccoby also represented James Achilles Alefantis and David Brock for an $850,000 blackmail case.[25]

Special thanks to Voat user Sentastixc

http://pizzagate.wiki/Laura_Silsby#Furt ... rafficking



And Silsby/Gayler's new gig is interesting:

Currently, Silsby goes by her married name, Laura Gayler, and works at AlertSense as their VP of Marketing.[9](archive.is) AlertSense provides a platform for issuing emergency alerts on a large scale. This includes Amber alerts for abducted children. For example in Arizona, Prescott eNews reported, "By broadcasting frequent public alerts, descriptions and other vital information in the crucial first hours after a child abduction, the Arizona AMBER Alert can enlist large numbers of citizens in an effort to recover the child as soon as possible. AMBER Alert notifications are supported by the AlertSense AMBER Alert Web Based System and the Emergency Alert System (EAS)"[10](archive.is)

Source: Wikipedia on New Life Children's Refuge
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Re: Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Elvis » Mon Mar 27, 2017 1:39 pm

The New York Times collection:
http://topics.nytimes.com/top/reference ... ne=nyt-per

News about Laura Silsby, including commentary and archival articles published in The New York Times.

Today is Saturday, May 16, the 136th day of 2015. There are 229 days left in the year....
May 16, 2015, Saturday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND:
Haiti: U.S. Missionary Convicted in Orphanage Case Is Freed
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

Laura Silsby, the last of 10 Americans detained while trying to take 33 children out of Haiti after the January earthquake, was sentenced to time already served in jail....
May 18, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Silsby, Laura , Orphans and Orphanages , Haiti , Earthquakes , Missionaries
Haiti: Lesser Charge For Missionary
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

A Haitian judge said that he dropped kidnapping charges against Laura Silsby and nine other American missionaries because the children they were trying to take out of Haiti were given over freely by their parents....
April 28, 2010, Wednesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Silsby, Laura , Haiti , Missionaries , Kidnapping
Haiti: 10 American Missionaries Cleared of Kidnapping Charges
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The leader of the group, Laura Silsby, is still in jail and still faces a charge of organizing the illegal transportation of 33 children in the chaos after the earthquake disaster....
April 27, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti , Missionaries , Earthquakes , Kidnapping , Orphans and Orphanages , Children and Youth
Haiti: Charges Against 10 Americans Still Pending
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

The Haitian judge investigating 10 American missionaries accused of kidnapping for trying to take a busload of children out of the country said Monday that no decision had been made on whether to drop any charges....
April 20, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti , Kidnapping
Adviser to Americans Jailed in Haiti Is Arrested
By MARC LACEY and IAN URBINA

Dominican officials said that they arrested Jorge Torres Puello, who faces charges in the U.S. and El Salvador....
March 20, 2010, Saturday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti , Human Trafficking , Kidnapping , Evangelical Movement , Christians and Christianity
Haiti: Children Reunited With Families
By MARC LACEY

The 33 Haitian children taken from their earthquake-damaged homes by American church members in January were reunited with their biological families, officials said....
March 18, 2010, Thursday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti , Orphans and Orphanages , Silsby, Laura , Earthquakes
American Freed From Haitian Jail
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

One of two Americans still being held on kidnapping charges was released from a Haitian jail and flew out of the country....
March 9, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Coulter, Charisa , Kidnapping , Silsby, Laura , Haiti , Earthquakes
Haiti: American Missionary Ordered Freed
By REUTERS

A judge signed an order on Friday to free one of two American missionaries imprisoned on child kidnapping charges, but a paperwork problem delayed her release....
March 6, 2010, Saturday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Coulter, Charisa , Kidnapping
The Missionary Impulse
By TIMOTHY EGAN

Zealous amateurs have damaged the efforts of more legitimate adoption services and relief agencies in Haiti....
February 24, 2010, Wednesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: News

Man Connected to Americans in Haiti Makes His Case
By MARC LACEY and IAN URBINA
Jorge Torres, who represented some of the 10 Americans once charged with child abduction in Haiti, said he would turn himself in to prove he had done nothing wrong....
February 24, 2010, Wednesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Puello, Jorge, Human Trafficking, Frauds and Swindling, Prostitution
Judge Releases Eight Americans Jailed in Haiti
By SIMON ROMERO and IAN URBINA

Eight of 10 Americans arrested on child abduction charges were ordered released after the parents testified....
February 18, 2010, Thursday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Kidnapping, Haiti, Children and Youth, Human Trafficking, Prisons and Prisoners, Earthquakes
Adviser to Jailed Americans in Haiti Is Accused of Trafficking
By MARC LACEY and IAN URBINA; Marc Lacey reported from Port-au-Prince, and Ian Urbina from Washington. Kitty Bennett contributed reporting from Washington, and Blake Schmidt from Managua, Nicaragua

As the 10 Americans imprisoned in Haiti for trying to remove children from the country awaited a decision on their fate Monday, the legal woes of the man who falsely portrayed himself as the group's lawyer mounted. The onetime legal adviser, w...
February 16, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: PUELLO, JORGE, NICARAGUA, PORT-AU-PRINCE (HAITI), IDAHO, HAITI, EL SALVADOR, DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, PROSTITUTION, EARTHQUAKES, CHILD ABUSE AND NEGLECT, KIDNAPPING, BAPTIST CHURCHES, ORPHANS AND ORPHANAGES, HUMAN TRAFFICKING
Trafficking Charges for Adviser to Jailed Americans in Haiti
By MARC LACEY and IAN URBINA

A man who falsely portrayed himself as a lawyer in Haiti is at large with Salvadoran charges pending against him....
February 16, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Puello, Jorge, Haiti, Human Trafficking, Sexual Slavery, El Salvador
Americans Jailed in Haiti Plead for Aid From U.S.
By IAN URBINA

The 10 Americans detained on child kidnapping charges say the U.S. government could be doing more....
February 10, 2010, Wednesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Kidnapping, Haiti, Silsby, Laura, Prisons and Prisoners, Missionaries, Earthquakes, Orphans and Orphanages
Americans Held in Haiti Are Divided Over Leader
By MARC LACEY and IAN URBINA

Eight of 10 Americans held on child abduction charges signed a note saying that their leader, Laura Silsby, misled them....
February 8, 2010, Monday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Earthquakes, Silsby, Laura, Orphans and Orphanages, Kidnapping
In Idaho, Questions on How Aid Mission Went Awry
By WILLIAM YARDLEY

Family members of the Americans being held in Haiti on child-abduction charges are desperate to get them released....
February 6, 2010, Saturday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Kidnapping, Earthquakes, Children and Youth, Baptist Churches, Silsby, Laura, Orphans and Orphanages, Idaho
Haiti Charges Americans With Child Abduction
By MARC LACEY

Members of a Baptist group who tried to take 33 children to an orphanage across the border were charged with abduction and criminal conspiracy....
February 5, 2010, Friday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Orphans and Orphanages, Earthquakes, Children and Youth, Adoptions, Silsby, Laura, Missionaries
American Charged in Haiti Had Some Troubles in Idaho
By WILLIAM YARDLEY

An Idaho businesswoman had complaints from employees over unpaid wages, state liens on a company bank account and lawsuits in small claims court....
February 5, 2010, Friday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Orphans and Orphanages, Kidnapping, Earthquakes, Idaho, Silsby, Laura
Woman Detained in Haiti Also Due in Idaho Court
By ROBERT MACKEY

A decision is expected Thursday on the fate of ten Americans who were stopped by Haitian authorities last week as they attempted to drive 33 children out of the country to an orphanage they hoped to establish in the Dominican Republic....
February 4, 2010, Friday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: News

Questions for Baptists, Praise for Scientologists in Haiti
By ROBERT MACKEY

On Wednesday, as a Haitian judge continued to question 10 Americans whose faith-based mission to Haiti went badly astray, the work of volunteer ministers from the Church of Scientology was lauded in a report on American television....
February 3, 2010, Thursday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: News
Parents Tell of Children They Entrusted to Detained Americans
By GINGER THOMPSON and SHAILA DEWAN

Several parents denied accusations that they had been given money for their children, or that they wanted their children to be put up for adoption....
February 3, 2010, Wednesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Earthquakes, Adoptions, Orphans and Orphanages, Silsby, Laura
Case Stokes Haiti’s Fear for Children, and Itself
By GINGER THOMPSON

The Americans who were detained late Friday at the Dominican border with 33 children struck a deep emotional chord in Haiti....
February 2, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: Haiti, Orphans and Orphanages, Earthquakes, Silsby, Laura
Quotation of the Day
LAURA SILSBY

God wanted us to come here to help children, we are convinced of that. LAURA SILSBY, one of 10 Americans who are in a Haitian jail, accused of trafficking children. [A1]...
February 2, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND:
10 Americans Arrested in Haiti Await Charges
By DERRICK HENRY and JACK HEALY; Joseph Berger contributed reporting from New York, and Ginger Thompson from Port-au-Prince, Haiti

The members of a Baptist group were arrested for trying to take 33 children across the border....
February 2, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: HAITI, ORPHANS AND ORPHANAGES
Road From Haiti Was Paved With Good Intentions, American Baptists Say
By ROBERT MACKEY

As ten American Baptists sit in a Haitian jail, accused of child trafficking for what they say was a hastily conceived attempt to rescue orphans, the incident has led to accusations that some religious groups may be mixing the help they offer to v...
February 1, 2010, Tuesday
MORE ON LAURA SILSBY AND: News
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Re: Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Elvis » Mon Mar 27, 2017 1:48 pm

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/03/world/americas/03orphans.html

Several parents denied accusations that they had been given money for their children, or that they wanted their children to be put up for adoption....

Parents Tell of Children They Entrusted to Detained Americans

By GINGER THOMPSON and SHAILA DEWAN
Published: February 2, 2010

FERMATHE, Haiti — Guerlaine Antoine pushed aside a tub full of laundry, wiped her soapy hands on her T-shirt and rushed barefoot to bring out photos of the 8-year-old boy she entrusted to 10 American Baptists.

“Do you think I would give this child away?” she said, opening a grade school yearbook to show her son, Carl Ramirez Antoine, in cap and gown, at his kindergarten graduation. “He is my only treasure.”

As a Haitian judge on Tuesday questioned five of the 10 Americans who were detained after trying to exit the country illegally with 33 children, the questions swirling around the case threw this town high in the mountains overlooking Port-au-Prince into confusion.

It is home to many of the children the Americans said they had planned to raise at a new orphanage in the Dominican Republic. The Americans said that the children had been orphaned in the earthquake, and that they had authorization from the Dominican government to bring the children into the country.

But it became clear on Tuesday that at least some of the children had not lost their parents in the earthquake.*

And while the Americans said they did not intend to offer the children for adoption, the Web site for their orphanage makes clear that they intended to do so.

In addition to providing a swimming pool, soccer field and access to the beach for the children, the group, known as the New Life Children’s Refuge, said it also planned to “provide opportunities for adoption,” and “seaside villas for adopting parents to stay while fulfilling the requirement for 60-90 day visit.”

An empty house in an unfinished subdivision in Meridian, Idaho, is listed on the nonprofit incorporation papers filed in Idaho for the organization. The address was listed in November on papers Laura Silsby filed to establish New Life as a nonprofit. Two days after the papers were filed, records show, Ms. Silsby sold the house at a substantial loss.

Signs in front of the house on Tuesday offered it for sale as a foreclosed property.

The missionaries’ account of their activities in the Dominican Republic was hard to verify. They said they had been in the process of buying land and building a complex in Magante, on the north coast of the country.

Mayor Aniceto Balbuena said that he had been approached by two women about building an orphanage, but that the idea had fallen through because of a legal entanglement.

In Fermathe, where most of the children were born and raised, it was clear that while their homes were woefully lacking in many ways, some of the children — and perhaps many of them — were not orphans.

Kisnel and Florence Antoine said they sent two of their children with the Baptist missionaries because they had offered educational opportunities for the children in the Dominican Republic. Ketlaine Valmont said she had sent a son.

They showed school photos and academic awards to demonstrate that they had not selfishly sent their children away to lighten their load.

In a country where more than half of all children come from families too poor to keep them in school, the parents said that the Americans’ offer of an education seemed like a gift from heaven.

They also wanted to give opportunities for something better to their children. They said that the missionaries had promised they would be able to visit their children in the Dominican Republic, and that the children would be free to come home for visits.

“If someone offers to take my children to a paradise,” Mrs. Antoine said of Carl and her daughter Jenisa, “am I supposed to say no?”

Several parents denied accusations that they had been given money for their children, or that they wanted their children to be put up for adoption.

They trusted the Americans, they said, because they arrived with the recommendation of a Baptist minister, Philippe Murphy, who runs an orphanage in the area. A woman who answered the door at Mr. Murphy’s house said he had gone to Miami. But she also said that he did not know anything about the Americans.

Ms. Valmont wondered whether her trust in Mr. Murphy had been misplaced.

“I just wanted him to have more than I have,” Ms. Valmont said of her 6-year-old son, Darwin. “What future can I give him here?”

Ginger Thompson reported from Fermathe, Haiti, and Shaila Dewan from Magante, Dominican Republic. William Yardley contributed reporting from Meridian, Idaho.

A version of this article appeared in print on February 3, 2010, on page A9 of the New York edition.



* We now know that, apparently, none of the children were orphans, as Silsby claimed.
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Re: Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Elvis » Mon Mar 27, 2017 1:54 pm

http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/08/world/americas/08haiti.html?_r=0

Eight of 10 Americans held on child abduction charges signed a note saying that their leader, Laura Silsby, misled them....

Americans Held in Haiti Are Divided Over Leader

By MARC LACEY and IAN URBINA
Published: February 7, 2010

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — Divisions emerged within the group of 10 Americans jailed in Haiti on child abduction charges, with eight of them signing a note over the weekend saying that they had been misled by Laura Silsby, the leader of the group.

“Laura wants to control,” said the scribbled note handed to a producer for NBC News. “We believe lying. We’re afraid.”

The infighting came amid a shakeup in the legal representation of the Americans, who have been charged with trying to remove 33 Haitian children from the country without government permission.

Edwin F. Coq Jr., who had been representing the group, said he had stepped down in a fee dispute. But another lawyer, Jorge Puello, based in the Dominican Republic, told The Associated Press Saturday night that he fired Mr. Coq after Mr. Coq had tried to buy the Americans’ way out of jail in an extortion scheme.

In their note, the Americans, who said they came to Haiti to rescue orphans from the earthquake, complained Saturday of general malfeasance in the case, but provided no details. “There is corruption, extortion,” they wrote.

Denying any wrongdoing, Mr. Coq said in an interview on Sunday that he had been promised $60,000 in legal fees to represent the Americans, half of which was supposed to have been paid upfront. He said he had complained about not receiving the money and eventually decided to resign when the Dominican lawyer started to disparage him.

Mr. Puello had a different version, telling The A.P. that Mr. Coq had kept increasing the amount of money he wanted and had suggested that he would use the funds to buy off judicial officials to free 9 of the 10 jailed Americans, everyone except Ms. Silsby.

Although the details of what occurred remain uncertain, corruption is endemic in Haiti’s judiciary, experts say, with one of the problems being that judges are typically paid about $500 monthly. Camille Leblanc, a former justice minister who knows Mr. Coq, described him as an honest young lawyer but said that the $60,000 appeared large to him for such a case.

“I know lawyers who would take this case for $10,000,” he said.

But another legal expert, Caves Jean, a judge who handles most of the country’s kidnapping cases, said he did not consider $60,000 an unusual amount for a kidnapping case. “In cases involving just one client charged with kidnapping, lawyers often charge their clients $50,000,” he said. “And this case involves 10 clients.”

The note signed by the group, which is affiliated with a Baptist church in Twin Falls, Idaho, made clear that they were emotionally distraught and divided. “We fear for our lives here in Haiti,” said the letter, which was signed by everyone except Ms. Silsby and Charisa Coulter, Ms. Silsby’s former nanny and co-founder of the group.

“We only came as volunteers,” the note went on. “We had NOTHING to do with any documents and have been lied to.”

The family of one of the Americans, Jim Allen, is expected to retain a lawyer to represent him, a spokeswoman for the group said Sunday. It remained unclear whether others would hire their own lawyers as well.

Meanwhile, Buddy Shipp, 61, a former Marine medic from Somerville, Tex., visited the Americans over the weekend to check on their medical condition, returning later with insulin for one who is a diabetic. Though he declined to say whether the American government had helped him get permission to visit the detainees, he said he was working for the American Samaritan Fellowship, a religious humanitarian organization based in Somerville.

“They are holding up O.K.,” he said of the detainees. “They are strong people.”

A version of this article appeared in print on February 8, 2010, on page A4 of the New York edition.
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Re: Who is Laura Silsby?

Postby Elvis » Mon Mar 27, 2017 1:56 pm

Your search - "Laura Gayler" - did not match any documents.

http://query.nytimes.com/search/sitesea ... Gayler%22/
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