AP  The provocative anti-Muslim film implicated in mob protests in Egypt  and Libya received logistical help from a man once convicted of  financial crimes and featured actors who complained that their  inflammatory dialogue was dubbed in after filming.
The  self-proclaimed director of "Innocence of Muslims" initially claimed a  Jewish and Israeli background and said he had gone into hiding because  of the international controversy set off by the movie. But by day's end  Wednesday, others involved in the film said his statements about his  background were contrived, and evidence mounted that the film's key  player was a southern Californian Coptic Christian with a checkered  past.
Nakoula Basseley Nakoula, 55, told The Associated Press in  an interview outside Los Angeles that he managed logistics for the  company that produced "Innocence of Muslims," which mocked Muslims and  the prophet Muhammad and may have inflamed mobs that attacked U.S.  missions in Egypt and Libya.

"SamBacile" = Imbecile
ReplyDeleteit is obviously a fake name, and the idea was to incriminate the Jews.