FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Mar 07, 2012 11:25 pm

Since 1998 when the FBI budget was FY 2008 $1,409,938,000.00
it has increased by almost 500% since FBI agents created 911.
see http://www.fas.org/irp/agency/doj/fbi/2008just.pdf


see link for full story
http://www.thecypresstimes.com/article/ ... 2013/57101


CONGRESSIONAL TESTIMONY: FBI BUDGET REQUEST FOR FISCAL YEAR 2013
Published 03/07/2012 - 1:54 p.m. CST
Good morning Chairman Wolf, Ranking Member Fattah, and members of the subcommittee. On behalf of the over 34,000 men and women of the FBI, I would like to thank you for the years of support you have provided to the Bureau.

The FBI remains focused on defending the United States against terrorism, foreign intelligence, and cyber threats; upholding and enforcing the criminal laws of the United States; protecting civil rights and civil liberties; and providing leadership and criminal justice services to federal, state, municipal, and international agencies and partners. Our continued ability to carry out this complex and demanding mission reflects the support and oversight provided by this subcommittee.

More than 10 years after the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the FBI continues to be a threat-focused, intelligence-driven organization that is guided by clear operational strategies. And we remain firmly committed to carrying out these strategies under guidelines established by the attorney general that protect the civil liberties of those entrusting us with the authorities to carry out our mission.

As our nation’s national security and criminal adversaries constantly adapt and evolve, so must the FBI be able to respond with new or revised strategies and operations to counter these threats. The FBI continues to shift to be more predictive, preventative, and actively engaged with the communities we serve. The FBI’s evolution has been made possible by greater use of technology to gather, analyze, and share information on current and emerging threats; expansion of collaboration with new partners, both domestically and internationally; and investments in training, developing, and maximizing our workforce. The FBI continues to be successful in maintaining this momentum of transformation even during these challenging times.

The FBI’s fiscal year (FY) 2013 budget request totals $8.2 billion in direct budget authority, including 34,083 permanent positions (13,018 special agents, 3,025 intelligence analysts, and 18,040 professional staff). This funding level continues increases provided to the Bureau in the past, most recently in FY 2012, allowing the FBI to maintain its forward progress, including targeting additional resources on investigating financial and mortgage fraud.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Mar 08, 2012 12:42 am

see link for full story
http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03 ... i-in-2002/

Mueller grilled on FBI's release of al-Awlaki in 2002

By Catherine Herridge

Published March 07, 2012

|

Several congressional committees want the FBI director to explain why one of his agents ordered the release of Anwar al-Awlaki from federal custody on Oct. 10, 2002, when there was an outstanding warrant for the American Muslim cleric’s arrest.

“There are a number of committees interested in the facts of what happened early on with al-Awlaki, and we'd be happy to give you a briefing of what we know. We've done it before, we'll do it again,” FBI Director Robert Mueller told Republican Rep. Frank Wolf of Virginia.



Wolf first wrote to Mueller in spring 2010, based on the Fox News’ ongoing investigation of al-Awlaki, who was killed last year in a CIA-led drone strike in Yemen, on Sept. 30. Fox News was told that the congressman, whose district once included the cleric’s Virginia mosque, was not satisfied by the FBI’s earlier briefings.

Now that the cleric is dead, Wolf urged Mueller to be more transparent about the bureau’s interactions with al-Awlaki.

“I believe the bureau could, hopefully, be more forthcoming with regard to the 2002 incident. It is important that we look at how past incidents were handled so we're better prepared for the future," Wolf said. "And I can't help but think how history could've been different, especially at Fort Hood, if al-Awlaki had been arrested and prosecuted back in October 2002.”

Thirteen peole were killed at Fort Hood and more than 30 injured. Mueller said he was “painfully aware” of the facts. The alleged Fort Hood shooter, Maj. Nidal Hasan, was in contact, via email, with al-Awlaki, who may have inspired the massacre.

“Our sympathy to the victims' families, it's, you know, very painful and every one of us feels badly that it occurred and that we could not stop it,” Mueller explained.

Fox News' Specials Unit reported that the cleric was held by customs agents at JFK International Airport in New York City in early morning of Oct. 10, 2002, until FBI Agent Wade Ammerman ordered his release – even though a warrant for the cleric’s arrest on passport fraud was still active.

The warrant was generated by the Joint Terrorism Task Force in San Diego, which considered the cleric a “tier one” target because of his connections to at least three of the 9/11 hijackers. The passport fraud warrant was described to Fox News as a holding charge that would allow federal investigators to pressure al-Awlaki over his 9/11 contacts.

The warrant was pulled by a judge in Colorado, after the cleric entered the U.S. A U.S. attorney in Colorado who oversaw the warrant and the Justice Department claimed the cleric’s earlier lies to the Social Security Administration, the basis of the charge, had been corrected. But new documents obtained by Fox News through the Freedom of Information Act show otherwise.

After al-Awlaki re-entered the U.S. in the fall of 2002 with the FBI’s help, the cleric then appeared in a high-profile investigation, in which Agent Ammerman was a lead investigator. The FBI has not made the agent available to Fox News to interview, nor has the Department of Justice made the U.S. attorney on the case available. Former FBI agents say Ammerman would have needed permission from higher up in the bureau to let al-Awlaki go.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Mar 08, 2012 1:27 am

see link for full story

http://www.sacbee.com/2012/03/07/432000 ... -feds.html
Fugitive killed by LA police, feds was unarmed

Published: Wednesday, Mar. 7, 2012 - 5:24 pm

LOS ANGELES -- A fugitive shot and killed by police and a federal agent as he stood on a rooftop was not armed, despite initial reports that he not only had a gun but fired it, authorities said Wednesday.

The investigation into last week's shooting in La Mirada found no evidence that Frank Martinez had fired or been in possession of a handgun. Police and witnesses reported seeing one, and officers thought he had fired at least one shot, Los Angeles police Cmdr. Andrew Smith told The Associated Press.

"The officers believed that the suspect had a gun hidden in his pocket," Smith said.

FBI spokeswoman Laura Eimiller confirmed the preliminary findings, saying, "it's very important to correct the record."

Neither would give a reason why Martinez was believed to have a gun. They said that both agencies were beginning a far-reaching probe involving Los Angeles police and the FBI.

Read more here: http://www.sacbee.com/2012/03/07/432000 ... rylink=cpy
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Mar 08, 2012 2:02 pm

Leonard Gates was committing voter fraud for the FBI in Cincinnati
see http://www.thelandesreport.com/Donsanto.htm

and now this

Elections - POLITICS
Former West Virginia sheriff, county clerk plead guilty to attempting to steal election

By Eric Shawn

Published March 07, 2012

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2012/03 ... latestnews
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Mar 08, 2012 4:11 pm

http://www.collapsenet.com/free-resourc ... on-us-soil

Thursday, 08 March 2012 19:47
FBI Director Defers to Justice Dept. Over Killing Americans on U.S. Soil
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Mar 08, 2012 11:18 pm

America’s NarcoBank: Wachovia Bank was BCCI with a drawl
Posted on February 20, 2012 by dhopsicker
see link for full story
http://www.madcowprod.com/
Convicted Sarasota Ponzi fraudster Art Nadel, currently holed up in a Federal prison in North Carolina, is back in the news, after a Federal bankruptcy receiver filed a lawsuit accusing Wachovia Bank of criminal complicity in Nadel’s theft of $168 million.

This is a story about financial fraud, drug money, and a global crime network that links BCCI, known as the Bank of Crooks & Criminals Incorporated, with North Carolina’s Wachovia Bank.

While Art Nadel's Ponzi scheme was at its peak, between 2003 and 2007, Wachovia Bank was engaged in more continuing criminal activity than in all six seasons of The Sopranos.

Wachovia helped Nadel—who had recently been playing piano lounges around Sarasota for a living— masquerade as a "hedge fund advisor," even though the bank knew he was nothing of the kind, the suit alleges.

Wachovia Bank was “inexplicably unconcerned,” the suit alleges, that Nadel, a lawyer disbarred for stealing $50K from his clients to pay off a loan-shark, improperly opened shadow bank accounts to loot six hedge funds he was supposedly “advising.”

Nadel engaged in at least a dozen regular financial transactions that were serious criminal violations, the suit alleges. About them all, Wachovia remained "inexplicably unconcerned."

For Wachovia's failure, there is "no legitimate explanation," the suit states baldly.

One of the attorneys for federal receiver Burt Wiand, Terry Smiljanich, told me flatly, “Wachovia has a history of assisting and profiting from the commission of fraud by the bank’s account holders.”
The American Drug Lords speak English solamente.

Wachovia was assisting in systematically defrauding $150 million from senior citizens on fixed incomes. While there was far more to be made laundering drug money, for the bank this was still a sweet score.
Every night, working from lists of names and phone numbers, telemarketing boiler rooms called World War II veterans, retired schoolteachers and thousands of other elderly Americans, posing as government and insurance workers updating their files.

They tricked people like Richard Guthrie, 92, a World War II veteran in Iowa, into revealing their banking information. Guthrie lived alone since his wife died. His children had moved away from the farm.

“I loved getting those calls,” Guthrie told the New York Times. "Since my wife passed away, I don’t have many people to talk with. One gal in particular loved to hear stories about when I was younger.

After getting the banking information, the crooks emptied the old people’s bank accounts, assisted by Wachovia Bank. Wachovia let them withdraw funds from Guthrie’s account using unsigned checks.

When Guthrie’s bank told Wachovia that the checks had not been authorized, Wachovia returned his funds, but never investigated whether the bank was being used by criminals, according to prosecutors who studied the transactions. They never asked the question because they already knew the answer.

Wachovia collected millions of dollars in fees for cashing $142 million in unsigned checks.

“I can’t understand why they were allowed inside my account,” Guthrie told a reporter. “I just chatted with this woman for a few minutes. I didn’t know they were stealing from me until everything was gone. They took everything I had.”
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Mar 10, 2012 9:39 am

March 9, 2012
Feds: NYC hacker also involved with drug dealing


see link for full story
http://online.wsj.com/article/APac378a3 ... 879da.html
NEW YORK — The American computer hacker who shocked other Internet saboteurs by becoming an FBI informant didn't just break the law on the Web: He also carried a gun and was involved in drug dealing.

Court documents unsealed this week show that in exchange for his help locking up fellow hackers, federal prosecutors agreed not to prosecute Hector Xavier Monsegur for a litany of other crimes he admitted committing, including illegal handgun possession and his attempted sale of a pound of marijuana in 2010 and 4 more pounds in 2003.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Mar 10, 2012 9:44 am

Hacker being evicted from NYC public housing
see link for full story
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 805S58.DTL

Friday, March 9, 2012


(03-09) 13:18 PST NEW YORK, (AP) --

A computer hacker who shocked other Internet saboteurs by becoming an FBI informant is being thrown out of his apartment.

New York City's housing authority confirmed Friday that it has been going to court for two years to get Hector Xavier Monsegur evicted from his late grandmother's apartment in a public housing project. It recently got an eviction order.

Monsegur is also facing charges that he impersonated a federal agent.

The charge was filed after an encounter between the hacker and a uniformed police officer at the housing project on Feb. 3.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Mar 10, 2012 10:05 am

2 reads about FBI Supervisor Weis


1st read
FBI Sought to Fire Complaining Agent
Jul 14th, 2004
http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/loca ... 5096.story

FBI sought to fire complaining agent
Memo describes retaliation plan

By Todd Lighty
Tribune staff reporter
Published July 13, 2004

A Chicago FBI agent who has complained to the media and Congress that the bureau bungled terrorism investigations had been targeted for firing by supervisors who vowed to "take him out," according to a memo written by a former high-ranking official in the FBI's disciplinary office.

The FBI opened an internal investigation against Agent Robert G. Wright Jr. in 2003 just days after his appearance at a news conference and on a national television news program, according to the memo obtained by the Tribune.

The top two agents in the FBI's disciplinary office at the time, Robert J. Jordan and J.P. "Jody" Weis, ordered an investigation into Wright for insubordination and had already made up their minds to have him fired, according to the memo.

The memo, written by John Roberts when he was third in command of the Office of Professional Responsibility, questioned how often supervisors misused the disciplinary process to silence employees critical of the FBI.

2nd read
Ex-police head resigns from Chicago crime group
see link for full story
http://qctimes.com/news/state-and-regio ... 1bd35.html
March 9, 2012

Former Chicago Police Superintendent Jody Weis has announced his resignation as president of the Chicago Crime Commission.

Weis is a former FBI agent who took over as Chicago's top cop in 2008. He resigned last year when his contract came to an end.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Mar 10, 2012 10:25 am

see link for full story
http://www.counterpunch.org/2012/03/09/ ... ory-right/

Weekend Edition March 9-11, 2012

Max Holland’s Page-Turner Explaining Deep Throat’s Motives
Getting Watergate History Right
by JOHN DEAN

As we approach the 40th anniversary of Watergate a number of books are being published to mark the occasion. Several of my friends report that they are reading Thomas Mallon’s novel, Watergate and they have asked me if Pat Nixon really did have an affair. To my knowledge, she didn’t, and it certainly was not possible that an affair could have occurred as Mallon describes it happening in the novel. A reporter also called me with a question about Don Folsom’s recently released Nixon’s Darkest Secrets: The Inside Story of America’s Most Troubled President, which, based on the questions the reporter posed to me, sounds more like fiction than Mallon’s work does, although I’ve not read it.

Strikingly, and ironically, as more information has become available about Watergate, more writers are getting this history wrong. I suspect this is happening because the record is so massive that it has become overwhelming for most. For this reason, it is nice to discover a writer who not only get the facts right, but actually sheds light upon this dark history as never before. That is precisely what Max Holland has done with his terrific new work, Leak: Why Mark Felt Became Deep Throat. As the title indicates, this work is about why the FBI Assistant Director leaked key information about the Watergate investigation to the news media.

Because I was asked by the publisher to read Holland’s work in manuscript form, I do not consider this a review. Rather, I believe it is a pre-publication opportunity to call attention to excellent work, and to take note of how Holland tackled the massive, complex, and often confusing record. The short explanation is that he did so very carefully, which takes time.

To show how Holland effectively dealt with this difficult record, I will point out how another very able author fell short when recently writing on the same subject. Albeit, he wrote only cursorily and quite broadly about Watergate, unfortunately, he did so incorrectly.

Dealing With a Massive Record

The primary records of the Nixon presidency, together with the related Watergate investigation materials, have been conservatively estimated to exceed forty million pages, along with four thousand hours of secretly recorded conversations (most of which has never been transcribed). In addition, there are literally hundreds of thousands of pages of secondary sources. To effectively navigate this vast body of material requires not only familiarity with it, but a clear focus on what to look for and a knowledge of where to find it, at least if such research is to be undertaken in any reasonable period of time.

Max Holland did a great job in using this material effectively and accurately. He started exploring it in 2007, some five years ago, broadly at first. Then, about two-and-a-half years ago, he became particularly interested in Mark Felt’s motive in leaking the FBI Watergate investigation to reporters. Holland’s narrowed focus then enabled him to deal with this massive record. By seeking the assistance of others who know this record well, he was able to be certain he had found virtually all of the available material that was relevant to his inquiry. In writing his book, Holland has carefully documented where he found everything, thereby further explaining why and how he drew the only reasonable conclusions that could be drawn from the clear and convincing evidence.

Holland’s fast-paced narrative runs just under 200 pages. It’s a great story, well told. But the narrative is also the tip of an iceberg. From page 201 to page 274, Holland lists his sources, the foundation underlying his narrative. There are approximately 81,000 words in the narrative. There are some 37,000 words in the endnotes and references (much employing truncated abbreviations that are the norm for citations, but keys to the underlying documents). For most readers, endnotes and references are of little interest, which is surely why the narrative is printed in a very readable 11-point font, while the documentation is condensed into a 9-point font. But to a knowing reader, like yours truly, those notes are gold, and they show a level of scholarship that is to be admired.

By way of comparison, Tim Weiner, a former New York Times reporter who has won a Pulitzer Prize and National Book Award, and who has just published Enemies: A History of the FBI, has totally misread this history. Weiner, who appear to have only taken glimpses at some of the same terrain that Holland plows in depth, got it very wrong.

Getting It Wrong About Felt and Watergate

Tim Weiner is a terrific journalist, but he’s not a very good historian—at least regarding the material he has written with which I am personally familiar. He recently posted an except from his new book Enemies on the Huffington Post: “The FBI, Watergate And Deep Throat-What Really Happened When Nixon Fell.” While this except is a small slice of a large book, it is deeply flawed. It reveals a writer who does not really grasp the record, and apparently did not spend the kind of time that Max Holland did to dig into that record. (Journalists ask questions and report, which Weiner does well. Those writing history must examine what others got right and what they got wrong, which Weiner appears not to have made the effort to do.)

Just looking at the Huffington Post excerpt, Weiner made too many mistakes—such as getting dates wrong, and distorting facts—when he compressed information. Much more troubling, however, is the fact that he gets the big things wrong, as well. Based on Weiner’s documentation, it appears that he must have glanced at a few historical documents, primary and secondary, and that he talked to a few people. But he only skimmed the surface. His Watergate material is not good history.

For example, Weiner claims, based on information from former FBI agent Paul Daly, that Mark Felt (and the others) leaked the information “because of the White House obstructing the investigation.” Max Holland, on the other hand, discovered by digging into the record, as can anyone who takes the time, that this was simply not true. The FBI’s investigative record shows that the subject of White House obstruction was discussed in a number of high-level memos by the men who Weiner (via Paul Daly, a person with only twice-removed hearsay) reports were involved in leaking. But all these men agreed that the White House, in fact, had not obstructed the FBI’s investigation.



Another example, and I won’t dwell on it, because it involves me, but Weiner claims that I lied to the FBI in a conversation that he conjured from what he apparently believe to be the record. In fact, the conversation he created is a totally invented exchange that never happened. The documents showing that Weiner got this wrong are in the record. Since the error does not appear malicious, perhaps he thinks that—like most he writes about—I have passed on, so I’ve ignored it. As it happens, Holland looked closely at the documents involved, and got it right.

In addition, Weiner relied on another imaginary exchange. He reports a conversation—purportedly occurring on June 17, 1972—involving FBI supervisory agent Daniel Bledsoe, who was on the FBI’s Major Crimes desk when the arrests occurred at the Watergate. It appears that Weiner found this August 19, 2009 re-created conversation in the oral history assembled by the Society of Former Special Agents of the FBI. Regrettably, however, Bledsoe’s recall of the events that occurred on June 17, 1972, an account that was reconstructed almost four decades after the fact, is riddled with errors. Clearly, Weiner quoted Bledsoe without checking into the veracity of his statements, even when these statements were patently false.

For example, Bledsoe claims that he immediately recognized G. Gordon Liddy as one of the persons arrested at the Watergate, because he had met Liddy a decade earlier when Liddy was an FBI agent. In fact, Liddy was not arrested at the DNC on June 17, 1972 (and was not even a suspect until June 28, 1972). Rather, it appears that Bledsoe has confused Liddy with James McCord, another former FBI agent who was arrested at the Watergate. Bledsoe also recalled a telephone call from John Ehrlichman, “the chief of staff at the White House,” who instructed the FBI “to terminate the investigation of the break-in” by order of the President. In fact, Ehrlichman was not Chief of Staff.

Nor was it likely that Bledsoe told Ehrlichman, “Under the Constitution, the FBI is obligated to initiate an investigation to determine whether there has been a violation of the illegal interception of communication statute.” If Weiner had checked, he would have found no such provision in the Constitution, nor anything even close.

Bledsoe’s memory ends with a claim that he called Mark Felt, who laughed it off. Yet if Ehrlichman had tried to halt the FBI investigation within hours of the arrests at the Watergate, Felt would never have laughed it off, nor failed to make a record of this fact, nor withheld this information from others.

If Bledsoe’s story were true, it would have been (and still is) what Bob Woodward, Felt’s reporter of choice at the Washington Post, would call a “holy shit” story. A top Nixon adviser’s passing an order from the President to turn off the FBI’s investigation within hours of the arrests at the Watergate would be big news anytime. When Max Holland checked out this story, he discovered that none of the prosecutors (neither the Assistant U.S. Attorneys who handled the initial case, nor the lead prosecutor from the Watergate Special Prosecutor’s Office who handled the cover-up) had ever heard of this assertion, nor had the lead FBI agent on the case, who would have been told. This information correcting Bledsoe was available to Weiner for the asking. (The outline of what, in fact, actually did happen with Bledsoe is buried in the 25,000 pages of the FBI’s investigation, and it is a fascinating bit of history, which I will report on in my own work-in-progress. Suffice it to say, Bledsoe did get correct in his oral history that he had made contemporaneous notes, but he got it wrong when he claimed that those notes had vanished.)

Here is a final comparison between Holland and Weiner, when it comes to taking the time and care to get Watergate history right. Both men quote from Nixon’s secretly recorded conversations. Holland prepared his own transcripts, and got them right. Wiener, on the other hand, does not say where he got his information from the Nixon tapes. But he quotes what has long been one of my favorite examples of people who are unfamiliar with Nixon failing to hear what he actually said during his conversations. While the tapes remain difficult to hear and transcribe, their audibility is better today, because the digital versions can be enhanced for listening. Nonetheless, Wiener quotes Nixon from a conversation when he was reacting to information I had learned on October 19, 1972, which unequivocally established that Mark Felt was leaking information. At one point, Nixon said to Haldeman, in Wiener’s (incorrect) version: “You know what I’d do with him [Felt]? Bastard!” In fact, what Nixon really said to Haldeman was much more telling, and interesting. He didn’t say “Bastard!” Rather, he said, “Ambassador.”

In short, Nixon would have done with Felt what he would later do with CIA director Richard Helms, to keep him happy and get him out of the way: make him an ambassador in a foreign land.

Holland’s Excellent Work Ought to Be Deeply Appreciated, but Sadly, It May Not Be

I was delighted that the University Press of Kansas asked me to be one of several readers of Holland’s work. Unfortunately, only a few people will fully understand what Max Holland has accomplished and appreciate how he has unraveled and documented an important and key bit of historical information that helps to explain Watergate history. Indeed, based on the one review of Holland’s book that I have read so far, it is doubtful that reviewers will understand what Holland’s discovery means, and how it fits.

In fact, hereafter no legitimate history of the Nixon presidency or Watergate can be written, nor can anyone truly understand this history, without taking this work fully into account. Holland does not explain the implications of his work, nor have I attempted to do so in this brief analysis, but they are of great significance to understanding this rather sorry chapter of American history. While Holland is scrupulously fair in this account, the family and friends of Mark Felt will not been sending this book out for gifts.

Sophisticated journalists should appreciate this work because it is a glaring example of the reality they know well: Those who leak information almost always have a vested personal interest in doing so. This work shows how a master manipulated the news media, but to an end of which he never could have dreamed or anticipated, and for less than noble motives.

John Dean served as Counsel to the President of the United States from July 1970 to April 1973.

This column originally appeared in Justia‘s Verdict.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Mar 11, 2012 4:03 pm

As eco-terrorism wanes, governments still target activist groups seen as threat

see link for full story

http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/ ... story.html


By Juliet Eilperin, Published: March 10

Ben Kessler, a student at the University of North Texas and an environmental activist, was more than a little surprised that an FBI agent questioned his philosophy professor and acquaintances about his whereabouts and his sign-waving activities aimed at influencing local gas drilling rules.

“It was scary,” said Kessler, who is a national organizer for the nonviolent environmental group Rising Tide North America. He said the agent approached him this past fall and said that the FBI had received an anonymous complaint and were looking into his opposition to hydraulic fracturing, also known as “fracking.” The bureau respected free speech, the agent told him, but was “worried about things being taken to an extreme level.”
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Mar 12, 2012 12:42 am

http://www.allgov.com/Controversies/Vie ... eer_120311
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Judge Orders Justice Dept. to Release Document about FBI Helping Ronald Reagan’s Political Career
A California journalist has won his fight with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to get the Department of Justice to release documents that may show the FBI, although a government entity, was helping advance Ronald Reagan’s political career in the 1970s.

Seth Rosenfeld, who is writing a book about the FBI’s activities in connection with the University of California during the Cold War, filed a Freedom of Information Act request to obtain records pertaining to Reagan’s relationship with the FBI.

It has been previously acknowledged that Reagan did help the FBI as early as the 1940s by spying on suspected communists in the Screen Actors Guild.

Rosenfeld contends that the FBI has a three-page document from January 9, 1975, that may indicate that while Reagan was Governor of California the bureau was helping advance his political career by warning him of potentially embarrassing details about his associates. In one instance, this meant informing Reagan about the relationship between an acquaintance of Reagan’s and the son of an organized crime figure. According to material that has been released, Reagan acknowledged that the association “might well jeopardize any political aspirations [Reagan] might have.”

The document in question also deals with the traffic violations and arrest record of a public figure aligned with Reagan. Rosenfeld argues that the FBI should reveal the name of the public figure in question. U.S. District Judge Edward Chen agreed with Rosenfeld that “the investigation of the subject’s old traffic violations had no conceivable purpose other than to aid Ronald Reagan’s political career by providing advance notice of any issues of potential embarrassment that might affect any future political campaign. The disclosure of this document thus enhances the public’s understanding of whether then FBI used public resources to benefit a private citizen for non-law enforcement purposes.”

The judge granted summary judgment to the journalist and ordered the FBI to release an unredacted copy of the 37-year-old document.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Mar 12, 2012 3:29 pm

see link for full story
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/len-levit ... 39008.html
A Crack in the FBI's Wall of Silence
Posted: 03/12/2012 11:00 am

The New Jersey FBI head who publicly criticized the NYPD's widespread spying on Newark's Muslims had the green light from FBI headquarters for a rare rebuke of NYPD Police Commissioner Ray Kelly, sources said.

Or at least he didn't have a red light.

FBI special agent Michael Ward, who heads the Bureau's Newark office, had cleared his remarks with superiors in Washington the day before he publicly took on the NYPD, sources said.

"They didn't say, 'Don't do it.' They could easily have stopped it," said one of his former Bureau colleagues.

At a news conference last week, Ward said that the NYPD's spying on Muslim businesses and mosques has damaged relations between the FBI and Newark's Muslims, making it more difficult to protect the public.

"There's no correlation between the location of houses of worship and minority-owned businesses and counterterrorism" work, Ward said. By generating distrust, the NYPD operation created "more risk," he said.

Ward's remarks were striking, given the FBI's button-down culture and their decade-long reluctance to mess with Kelly.

Ward's remarks also contrasted with those of FBI Director Robert Mueller, who told a Congressional subcommittee the same day that the Bureau maintained a close working relationship with the NYPD. Mueller also praised Kelly for "a remarkable job of protecting New York" from terrorism.

Some, noting the byzantine world of internal FBI politics, saw the secret hand of Mueller behind Ward's criticisms of the NYPD.

However, a former FBI official said that Ward's remarks "were not Mueller's idea."

In fact, Ward's remarks represent an undercurrent of dissent from Mueller's continual praise of Kelly despite the police commissioner's repeated taunts and criticism of the FBI.

"Many people in the Bureau were happy Ward did this," said his former colleague. "Many people in management at headquarters hold the same view of Kelly and of the NYPD as Ward.

"Mueller has been stroking Kelly all along. Most people in the Bureau do not agree with Mueller's approach. Mueller may not have known what Ward planned to say, but very high ranking people knew of it."

Unlike Jan Fedarcyk, head of the FBI's New York office, Ward has local political cover in challenging the NYPD.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Mar 12, 2012 3:42 pm

see link for full story
http://www.forbes.com/sites/walterpavlo ... -or-enemy/
3/12/2012
U.K.'s Chris Tappin, U.S. Government Informant or Enemy?

When Christopher Tappin was extradited from the U.K. in late February to face charges for attempting to ship Hawk Missile batteries from the U.S. to Iran, government officials here portrayed him as a danger to the community and an enemy of the United States. On March 5th, a bail hearing was held for Tappin in El Paso, TX where U.S. prosecutor Greg McDonald said of the 65 year-old Tappin, “He might have character letters from the golf club but he’s not going to get such glowing letters from those people shot down on planes, who were victims of these weapons. These people are screaming and crying that something be done to stop that sort of shipment.”

But the U.S. government has not always been so frightened of Tappin. On November 2, 2006, the Federal Bureau of Investigations spoke with Christopher Tappin …. not about missiles, but about an investment Tappin made with Thornwater Company, which was later purchased by Sky Capital (Ross Mandell). Mandell and Adam Harrington were both found guilty on July 26, 2011 of charges associated with securities fraud. FBI Agent Kurt Dengler was seeking a search warrant for Sky Capital’s offices at 110 Wall Street and spoke with Tappin, the only investor the FBI spoke to directly, to corroborate information the FBI had obtained from Mario Figueroa, an informant against Mandell who hoped to get a reduced prison sentence on other securities fraud charges he faced in a separate case. Tappin informed the agent that he had invested $225,000 with Mandell based on statements that private placement investments with Mandell’s firm would go public and “make a large profit.” That never happened and Tappin reported Mandell and another investment advisor at Thornwater/Sky Capital to the National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD). That case was resulting in a “Stay” by the New York judge. The information that Tappin gave was a key part of the FBI’s request to enter the offices of Sky Capital, and U.S. Magistrate Judge Douglas F. Eaton agreed by giving permission for the FBI to raid the offices of Sky Capital on November 6, 2006.

However, at the same time that one arm of federal law enforcement is using information from Christopher Tappin to prosecute a case, another arm is investigating him for crimes against the U.S. Tappin, the U.S. government claims, had been in discussions with undercover agents to illegally purchase military batteries, made in the U.S., for Hawk Missiles destined for Iran. Beginning in August 2006, Immigrations and Customs Enforcement (ICE) had information that Tappin was involved in activities that the U.S. considered dangerous to its national security. In fact, ICE claims that Tappin had called undercover agents about Hawk Missile batteries directly on October 2, 2006, a month before Tappin’s call with the FBI on the Sky Capital case. Simultaneously, the U.S. government is citing Tappin for his valuable cooperation in a federal crime (Sky), while at the same time claiming that he is involved in activities of shipping military goods to Iran. So which is Tappin, friend or foe? …. or both?
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Mar 12, 2012 5:00 pm

2 reads
1st read
Maine artist Robert Shetterly has painted over 160 portraits
in a series called AMERICANS WHO TELL THE TRUTH
Each portrait has a quotation from the person painted, written on the canvas.
Thomas Drake recently had his portait painted by Robert Shetterly

http://americanswhotellthetruth.org/pgs ... _drake.php


2nd read
see link for full story
http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/che ... _blog.html
03/12/2012
Prosecution of ex-NSA official Thomas Drake was ‘ill-considered,’ former agency spokesman says
By Ellen Nakashima

A former Justice Department spokesman has acknowledged that the prosecution of former National Security Agency official Thomas Drake was “ill-considered.”


Thomas Drake (Jacquelyn Martin - ASSOCIATED PRESS)

In an exchange with Politico correspondent Josh Gerstein about the department’s prosecutions of alleged leakers, former Department of Justice Director of Public Affairs Matt Miller on Saturday said the Drake case, which ended last year in a misdemeanor plea deal, was unlike other cases because “Drake did seem to be trying to expose actual government waste. I think the outcome of the case probably shows that it was an ill-considered choice for prosecution.”

The plea deal was a major embarrassment for the department, which had showcased Drake’s 2010 indictment as a signal to would-be leakers.

Even after the case blew up, Miller continued to defend the prosecution. “It’s an important principle that people who have access to classified information follow the law and the agreements they have signed to protect that information,” he was quoted as saying in The New York Times. He also said, “The indictment was brought on the merits, and nothing else.”

Today, Miller appears to be taking a different tone.

“This is not just backtracking,” said Jesselyn Radack, one of Drake’s attorneys. “It is complete revisionist history.”

The real solution, Miller asserted in a blog item in Saturday’s Daily Beast, is to expand protections under the Whistleblower Protection Act, as the White House has endorsed, so there are more ways for whistleblowers working in the national security field to report claims and be protected against retaliation.

Drake was one of several sources for a Baltimore Sun article about a $1.2 billion NSA experimental program called Trailblazer to comb through electronic communications for national security threats. Drake alleged that the program did not work, violated Americans’ privacy rights, and that was inferior to a rival program called Thin Thread.

The prosecutor in the Drake case was William Welch, who supervised the botched corruption prosecution of former Alaska Sen. Ted Stevens. Welch is also the prosecutor in a case involving a former CIA officer, Jeffrey Sterling, accused of leaking classified information on reported efforts to sabotage the Iranian nuclear program to New York Times reporter James Risen.
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