Minor league owner refuses to meet with Muslim rights group

Minor league owner refuses to meet with Muslim rights group

Published Aug. 15, 2019 6:00 p.m. ET

NORWICH, Conn. (AP) — The owner of two minor league baseball teams is refusing to meet with a Muslim civil rights group, accusing it of supporting terrorists.

The Connecticut chapter of the Council on American-Islamic Relations sought a meeting with E. Miles Prentice, owner of the Single-A Connecticut Tigers and co-owner of the Double-A Midland (Texas) RockHounds.

CAIR is concerned that Prentice is chairman of the Center for Security Policy, an organization identified by the Southern Poverty Law Center as an anti-Muslim hate group.

Prentice said Thursday he is not a racist. He said he considers the SPLC "radical leftists" and has no plans to meet with CAIR.

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"My colleagues and I at the Center for Security Policy are more than willing to debate the content of our research and advocacy on behalf of freedom and the practice of peace through strength with Americans of differing views, but who are also committed to freedom and our Constitution," he said in a statement. "We see no utility, however, to meeting with, or otherwise legitimating, those who seek to silence us or are associated with terrorist organizations like Hamas."

The Tigers, an affiliate of the Detroit Tigers, and the RockHounds, an affiliate of the Oakland Athletics, both declined to comment.

Tark Aouadi, the executive director of CAIR, Connecticut called Prentice's statement racist. He and several other members of the Muslim community requested the meeting with Prentice Wednesday after discussing their concerns at a meeting of the Norwich Baseball Stadium Authority.

The SPLC's website describes the Center for Security Policy as an organization that "has gone from a respected hawkish think tank focused on foreign affairs to a conspiracy-oriented mouthpiece for the growing anti-Muslim movement in the United States."

Aouadi said Prentice is entitled to his personal beliefs, but he wants to make sure hate plays no role in how people are treated when they attend a baseball game.

"It is unfortunate, but expected, that instead of sitting down to talk about legitimate local concerns of safety, inclusion, and otherwise participate in the free exchange of ideas, that the Tiger's team owner has opted to smear the messenger," he said.

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AP reporter Chris Ehrmann contributed to this report.

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