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United States News Title: PayPal Freezes Account of Group Raising Money for Bradley Manning PayPal has frozen the account of a group that has been raising money for the legal defense of accused WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning, citing a failure to meet PayPals requirement for nonprofit groups. According to Courage to Resist, a military veterans advocacy group that has been raising donations for Mannings defense, PayPal froze the account after the group refused to link its PayPal account to its checking account, which would give the online payment provider access to funds in the checking account. We exchanged numerous e-mails and phone calls with the legal department and the office of executive escalations of PayPal, said Jeff Paterson in a press release. They said they would not unrestrict our account unless we authorized PayPal to withdraw funds from our organizations checking account by default. Our accounting does not allow for this type of direct access by a third party, nor do I trust PayPal as a business entity with this responsibility given their punitive actions against WikiLeaks an entity not charged with any crime by any government on Earth. [PayPal has since unfrozen the account. See update at bottom of this post.] The advocacy group has been raising funds for the Manning Support Network and has so far paid Mannings defense attorney at least $50,000 from money that it raised on the soldiers behalf. Paterson did not respond to a call for comment, but said in the press release that his group opened the PayPal account in 2006. A spokesman for PayPal took issue with how the advocacy group has characterized the matter, saying this was not about Courage to Resists support for Manning. Company policy requires all nonprofit organizations with 501(c)3 status [.pdf] to link their PayPal account to a bank account. That provides a clear audit trail if the IRS or other government agency ever raises questions about an organizations non-profit status. Its pretty normal practice to be honest, said PayPal spokesman Anuj Nayar. It doesnt normally cause the issues that it has caused in this case. We were very surprised to see the press release. He acknowledges that linking to the account allows PayPal to withdraw funds from the bank account as well, but said this is never done without authorization and is generally done only when PayPal has determined that a merchant or organization is engaged in fraud. He added that the frozen account was not specifically a Bradley Manning legal defense account. The release makes it very much sound like they have a legal defense fund connected to PayPal and thats what weve turned off, Nayar said. But there is no PayPal account for a Manning legal defense fund. Its a Courage to Resist account. Asked why, if the Courage to Resist account was opened in 2006, PayPal hadnt raised the issue of linking it to a bank account earlier, Nayar did not have an immediate response. He said only that nonprofit organizations are allowed to open accounts easily and quickly. We dont limit them prior to opening and saying theyre a nonprofit before allowing them to open an account, he said. With regard to PayPals assertion that its only following company policy, Courage to Resist says it repeatedly requested and was refused formal documentation from PayPal describing its policy. They opted to apply an exceptional hurdle for us to clear in order to continue as a customer, whereas we have clearly provided the legally required information and verification, the group wrote. Mannings defense is expected to cost about $115,000. In addition to the funds raised by Courage to Resist, WikiLeaks after a protracted delay contributed $15,100 to Mannings defense in January. Last December, PayPal froze the account of the Germany-based Wau Holland foundation, which manages the bulk of donations to WikiLeaks. PayPal asserted at the time that WikiLeaks was in violation of its terms of service. PayPal has permanently restricted the account used by WikiLeaks due to a violation of the PayPal Acceptable Use Policy, which states that our payment service cannot be used for any activities that encourage, promote, facilitate or instruct others to engage in illegal activity, read a statement on PayPals website. Weve notified the account holder of this action. PayPal didnt indicate the nature of the illegal activity that WikiLeaks allegedly promoted, but the move against WikiLeaks came after the site began publishing 250,000 State Department cables believe to have been obtained from Manning during the time he worked as an Army intelligence analyst in Iraq. Manning was arrested last May and is currently in custody at the U.S. Marine Corps brig in Quantico, Virginia, awaiting a hearing in his case. Updated at 6:30 pm: PayPal has released a statement on its blog saying it has decided to unfreeze the Courage to Resist account. Upon review, and as part of our normal business procedures, we have decided to lift the temporary restriction placed on their account because we have sufficient information to meet our statutory Know Your Customer obligations, the statement reads in part. The Courage to Resist PayPal account is now fully operational.
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#1. To: A K A Stone (#0)
PayPal has a bad habit of freezing accounts "just because". They froze mine for 28 days after an ebay sale, saying I had to wait until the buyer posted a positive review of the transaction. It was unfortunate because I made the sale as a favor to a friend who wanted to donate the proceeds to his church. It all worked out eventually.
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