Posted on Dec 16, 2015
MSgt Curtis Ellis
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It would seem money really is the root of evil..
Ever wonder what happened to your used truck you traded in???

The black Ford F-250 started life as a truck for a Texas-based plumbing company, carrying pipes, toilets and their ilk. But then it was sold to a Ford dealership in Houston, and after that shepherded off to parts unknown. Until, that is, it appeared as the focal point of a tweet from a supposed jihadist last December.

The photo indicated that the truck no longer carried ceramic parts; emerging from its cargo bed were a black-cloaked figure and an anti-aircraft gun shooting fire into the distance. According to the tweet, the truck was being used by Jaish al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar (or, the "Muhaijireen Brigade"), a jihadist group fighting against the Syrian government.

Yet, even with its function entirely transformed, the truck still bore the insignia of its past life, a decal that clearly read: "Mark-1 Plumbing."

Underneath this large lettering was an equally clear label of the company's phone number - a number which, after the photo went viral within days of posting - began ringing non-stop.

On the other end of these mostly caustic calls was Mark Oberholtzer, owner of Mark-1 Plumbing in Texas City, whose reputation rapidly went from small business owner to terrorist sympathizer. He wasn't the latter, but the widely-shared picture of his old truck spoke louder than his plaintive explanations.

"How it ended up in Syria, I'll never know," Oberholtzer told the Galveston County Daily News at the time. "I just want it to go away, to tell you the truth."

Now Oberholtzer has filed a lawsuit against AutoNation Ford Gulf Freeway, the Houston dealership where he traded in the truck. According to the complaint filed last week, AutoNation misrepresented their intentions to remove the decal, causing Oberholtzer, his business and his family "severe harm."

AutoNation did not immediately respond to The Washington Post's request for comment Sunday evening. According to Courthouse News, the dealership's sales manager did not respond to a phone message placed last week.

A spokesperson for the company told Huffington Post last December that "AutoNation was nothing but the pass-through for this vehicle" and had no involvement in its eventual arrival in the hands of Islamic militants.

The lawsuit claims that Oberholtzer started to peel the "Mark-1 Plumbing" decal off when a salesperson told him that doing so would blemish the paint on the vehicle. The salesperson, Edgar Velasquez, assured Oberholtzer that the dealership would remove the decal themselves using a tool that "works better."

"At no time did Mr. Velasquez or any other agent, servant or employee of the Defendant tell Plaintiff that Defendant would leave the decals on the truck, which would be transferred in some fashion to international jihadists conducting warfare upon innocents in Syria," the complaint reads, "and, Plaintiff was not in any conceivable way told, informed or placed on notice that precisely such an incomprehensible and horrific eventuality would actually occur."

The horror of the truck's ultimate destination was multiplied by the attention it received and, in turn, the attention that it drew to Oberholtzer's business.

A few days after the photo of the truck surfaced on the Internet, Stephen Colbert featured the story as an opening item on his final show - the most watched episode in The Colbert Report's history at 2.481 million viewers.

On his segment, Colbert joked that "[Syria] is going down the toilet, but for the first time, they know who to call to unclog it."

Mark-1 Plumbing received over 1,000 phone calls from around the country just two days after the tweet was posted, Oberholtzer's suit alleges. His entire family feared for their lives, and his secretary was too scared to return to the office. On the advice of agents from the Department of Homeland Security and FBI, Oberholtzer began carrying a handgun.

The complaint claims that AutoNation is guilty of, among other things, gross negligence, common law fraud, negligent misrepresentation and invasion of privacy by appropriation of name.

The most curious part of the story is perhaps how the truck reached jihadists in the first place.

An AutoNation spokesperson told the the Huffington Post that it was immediately sent to an auction house after Oberholtzer's trade-in in October of 2013, which then sold it to a local used car dealer. According to the lawsuit, a vehicle history report details that the truck was imported to Mersin, Turkey, on Dec. 18, 2013.

The damaging tweet was sent out almost exactly a year later.

Oberholtzer's Ford isn't the only vehicle being repurposed for terrorist use. The Islamic State is known for featuring Toyota trucks and SUVs in their graphic propaganda videos, prompting the U.S. government to ask the Japanese auto maker why so many of its products have landed in the militant group's clutches.

"How could these brand new trucks . . . these four wheel drives, hundreds of them - where are they coming from?" Iraqi ambassador to the United States Lukman Faily told ABC News.

Toyota distributors in the region told ABC that they did not know how their vehicles reached the Islamic State.

http://www.stripes.com/news/us/plumber-sues-ford-dealer-after-truck-with-company-logo-was-used-by-jihadists-in-syria-1.384307
Posted in these groups: D87a4d9e Import and ExportSafe image.php Terrorism
Edited 9 y ago
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CPT Military Police
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Edited 9 y ago
Yes. Is it the responsibility of the dealership where the truck was traded in to obscure or remove the decal before reselling it at auction? I don't know. I bet this guy will never trade in a truck again without knowing the answer to that or making sure it is done himself.
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SSG Audwin Scott
SSG Audwin Scott
9 y
I bet he want either!
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Capt Mark Strobl
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Edited 9 y ago
The dealership has no culpability here. Besides, the plumber would have to prove damages in order to win even a token judgment. If the plumber didn't want his company's name to be in the news, he should have removed the decal. Could have been used in a drive-by shooting... with the same "exposure."
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Capt Mark Strobl
Capt Mark Strobl
9 y
LTC (Join to see) - Agreed. But, what are his damages? That plumber will spend more in retainers than he'll recover in damages. Besides, there aren't any background checks in auto trading.
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SN Greg Wright
SN Greg Wright
9 y
Capt Mark Strobl LTC (Join to see) This is a sucky situation all around, but I agree with the Major's statement...and yours, Captain. He'll wind up spending more money than he gets.

Just a sucky situation.
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MCPO Roger Collins
MCPO Roger Collins
9 y
Right you are! If you sell your computer with the hard drive not wiped, can you sue the person for what is on it? Unless a stipulation that the removal was included as part of the deal, he needs to sue ISIS.
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SGT Francis Wright
SGT Francis Wright
9 y
Well that is why they are going to court. In Texas the dealer is responsible for returning the vehicle to its original state of manufacture. For example if they received retired police sedans from an auction all markings have to be removed before resale.
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PO3 Electrician's Mate
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Just someone want to save a few bucks from not stripping the sign and it blow up at their face now.
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