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http://www.guardian.co.uk/Archive/Article/0,4273,4366611,00.html

David Irving's secret backers

The model, the Saudi prince and the U-boat commander

D.D. Guttenplan and Martin Bright

(U.K.) Observer

Sunday March 3, 2002

They are a colourful group bound in a dubious cause: a London pensioner, 
a Saudi prince with an estate in Ascot, a former Nazi U-boat commander 
and a glamorous blonde model.

All are part of the international support network for David Irving, the 
writer branded a racist, an anti-Semite and a falsifier of history by a 
High Court judge.

Their backing allows him to continue to propagate his views on the 
Holocaust and support his lavish lifestyle despite his court defeat.
Irving, who operates out of a Mayfair flat and spends much of the year 
in Florida, has always kept his finances a closely guarded secret.

Now an Observer investigation has begun to unravel the web of 
contributors and companies that keep Irving's crusade on the march. 
Until now they have been anonymous.

British contributors also fear they might be held liable for a 
substantial portion of the A32 million in costs incurred by Irving's 
opponents.

The revelations come on the eve of a bankruptcy hearing triggered by the 
failure of Irving's libel action against American academic Deborah 
Lipstadt and Penguin Books.

In April 2000 the court awarded costs to Lipstadt and her publishers and 
ordered Irving to pay A3150,000 on account to Penguin. Irving is in 
court tomorrow because of his failure to pay. His defeat in the High 
Court has not deterred him from pursuing his libel action against the 
writer Gitta Sereny and this newspaper, even though that case hinges on 
many of the same issues. The law permits bankrupts to sue for libel and 
keep any money awarded from such suits.

Irving's most recent newsletter advertises 'The Next Battle' - his suit 
against The Observer - as well as a Special A3150,000 Appeal: 'To 
defeat Lipstadt permanently and inflict the Six Million Dollar loss on 
her backers...' The reference to dollars is deliberate. Of the 4,017 
names on Irving's active contributors list, 2,495 are in the United 
States and Canada. One was Henry Kersting, a tax-avoidance specialist 
from Hawaii. According to Irving, Kersting was a former German U-boat 
commander who was 'just deeply concerned with politics. He wasn't 
anti-Jewish'.

In an exclusive interview, Irving said Kersting, who died two years ago, 
made all his donations in cash. 'He was a strange character. He would 
phone me in Key West and say "I'm sending over another 10 flowers," or 
"I'm sending over five flowers by Fedex". And then the Fedex van would 
come the next day and there was $5,000 in cash. Or $10,000 in cash.' On 
another occasion Kersting asked Irving to meet him in Amsterdam, where 
he gave him a paper bag containing $50,000 in cash.
Irving is reluctant to comment on living contributors whose names are 
known to The Observer, including one from Sweden and another from 
Switzerland who between them loaned A317,500.

He refused to even discuss Albert W. Hess, who lives in Florida and 
loaned Irving $45,000 to fund his activities. A supporter of Udo 
Walendy, the German neo-Nazi and publisher of the German translation of 
the British Holocaust denial tract Did Six Million Really Die?, Hess was 
himself a featured speaker at one far-right Florida gathering.

The Observer can also reveal the financial details of Irving's 
mysterious 'fighting fund'. Irving's newsletter Action Report solicits 
donations, but fans who prefer to make their contributions in the form 
of a loan or investment are then directed to either Focal Point 
Publications or Parforce UK Ltd - a registered company set up by 
Irving's Danish wife, Bente Hogh, and his accountant, Alan Kentto, to 
publish his books. This puts it out of the reach of creditors.

Frederick Atkin, a former insurance company employee, loaned Irving 
A35,000. Atkin, 69, told The Observer that he was motivated by 'pure 
greed': 'It was an investment as far as I was concerned. He always 
seemed above board to me.' Another Briton, Nigel Hogg of Whitley Bay in 
Northumberland, invested A35,000 with Irv ing's publishing company and 
was repaid in full with interest. He was not prepared to comment on his 
connection with Irving or whether he supported his views: 'This is a 
private matter. I am not a current funder of David Irving.'

The British donors rely on Irving's absolute discretion. Under the law 
any third parties who help to fund a libel action can potentially be 
made to help pay the costs if the action is not successful.

'If I was ever to get an order against me by the court for having been 
maintained by outsiders,' Irving said, 'then... I have firmly 
established in my own mind the principle [that] on the date that such an 
order is made I'll come straight back here and destroy all the files, 
rather than reveal the names of the people who donated to me.'

But he confirmed that all money paid to him potentially ends up in his 
fighting fund.

'It all comes through the same pipeline,' Irving explained. 'Cheques are 
written to Focal Point. Some of the cheques are now written to Parforce 
UK Ltd. As I am Focal Point I don't really take much trouble to separate 
the investment side in my head from the litigation funding side because, 
at the end of the day, it's all the same pot.'

In July, Irving thought he'd finally found his ideal benefactor: Prince 
Fahd bin Salman of Saudi Arabia. The son of the governor of Riyadh and 
eldest nephew to King Fahd invited Irving to Harewood, his estate in 
Surrey. Just a month earlier Fahd had accompanied his father on a trade 
mission to Britain when he met the Queen and the Prime Minister.

The meeting with Irving was arranged by Michele Renouf, the mysterious 
blonde model who had been a constant presence at Irving's side during 
the trial. Renouf is an Australian taxi-driver's daughter who styles 
herself 'Lady Renouf' thanks to a six-week marriage to Sir Francis 
Renouf, the late New Zealand financier.

The prince agreed terms via a telephone call from Riyadh a few days 
later. Renouf confirmed Irving's account of the negotiations in an email 
to The Observer: 'Tragically, the following day, the generous and fit 
prince died suddenly,' she added.

* D.D. Guttenplan is the author of The Holocaust on Trial, now 
available in paperback from Granta Books.


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