FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 09, 2014 11:34 pm

FBI agent assaulted in Pasay road mishap
By Maricar B. Brizuela |Philippine Daily Inquirer
2:15 am | Wednesday, September 10th, 2014


http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/636634/fbi ... oad-mishap

An agent of the US Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) was allegedly assaulted by a group of armed men following a minor vehicular accident on Roxas Boulevard in Pasay City on Monday night, the police said.

Pasay City police chief Senior Supt. Melchor Reyes said Lamont Siler was dragged out of his vehicle at gunpoint and took a punch after his car’s side mirror got into contact with and left scratches on a sport utility vehicle (SUV). The alleged incident happened near the Cultural Center of the Philippines (CCP) complex around 7 p.m.

Reyes said it was reported to the Pasay police by US Embassy Manila Special Investigator Voltaire Gomez, who went to the station later that night and confirmed that Siler was an FBI special agent currently on assignment in the country.

Quoting Gomez, Reyes said that after the mishap, Siler’s car was blocked by two
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 09, 2014 11:38 pm

http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/loca ... ?track=rss




Court: Medrano co-defendant was entrapped by Feds



Trials and ArbitrationCourts and the JudiciaryCrimeFBIZachary Fardon

Just hours after hearing oral arguments, a federal appeals court in Chicago abruptly ruled that federal authorities had entrapped a Nebraska pharmaceutical company owner arrested in a sting involving former Ald. Ambrosio Medrano and ordered him released immediately.

James Barta had been in prison for eight months when the 7th Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals announced its decision in a brief order posted Monday afternoon. The court said it will issue a full opinion later.

Barta, 72, who was serving a 21-month sentence , was released from the federal prison in Duluth, Minn., on Tuesday afternoon and headed home to Nebraska, said his attorney, Joseph J. Duffy, who spoke to Barta by phone.

Duffy said it was highly unusual for an entrapment argument to prevail in federal court and even more remarkable for a ruling to come so swiftly. He said it was the first time in his more than 35 years as an attorney in Chicago that he was aware of a 7th Circuit panel ordering the release of a prisoner on the same day it heard arguments.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 09, 2014 11:54 pm

Witness: Freeh forced 3 drivers off road before wreck
September 9 2014

see link for full story


http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nati ... topstories



Former FBI director Louis Freeh.

BURLINGTON, Vt. — An out-of-control SUV driven by former FBI Director Louis Freeh almost struck head-on three motorists, who were forced to take evasive action to avoid crashing in southern Vermont, according to one of the drivers.

The driver, Van Coleman, gave a written statement to a Windsor County deputy sheriff, who was the first police officer on the scene of the Aug. 25 crash of Freeh's vehicle. Deputy Sheriff Justin Hoyt said he gave the eyewitness report to state police.

A motorcyclist and two cars needed to swerve into the left lane when Freeh's vehicle crossed the center line on Vermont 12 in Barnard and headed at the trio at a high rate of speed, Coleman told the Burlington Free Press.

Freeh "was doing about 60 to 65 miles per hour and was on the left side of the road," Coleman said. The speed limit was 50 mph.

Coleman said the northbound motorcyclist, who was first in line, moved to the left to avoid the SUV coming in the wrong lane. Another car also swerved left before Coleman followed suit in his Honda, he said.

Freeh eventually drove off the road, struck a tree and was left with serious injuries.

The three Vermont State Police news releases from spokeswoman Stephanie Dasaro about the crash never mentioned the former chief federal law enforcement officer almost struck three motor vehicles.

"I did not have that level of detail about the incident to include in the press release," Dasaro said Tuesday.

Public Safety Commissioner Keith Flynn said state police leaders never told him about the close calls before the 12:15 p.m. crash.

"This is the first I have heard about that," Flynn said when reached Tuesday in Michigan, where he is attending a conference. He said he would ask for an explanation.

USATODAY

Vermont police: No charges for ex-FBI director in crash

State police were criticized for trying to keep the crash under wraps for 24 hours. A video crew for Fox44/ABC 22 in Colchester and a photographer from a local weekly newspaper in Woodstock were at the scene, but they were told a news release would be issued the following day.

Instead, FBI sources in Washington told NBC News that Freeh had been in a Vermont crash. The Vermont State Police issued a news release more than eight hours after the wreck and only after multiple calls by local and national media.

State police have theorized that Freeh fell asleep.

"His head was down, so I thought he had fallen asleep," Coleman, the witness, said as he reflected on what he saw before Freeh crashed.

"I think he was totally out. He made no attempt to stop," said Coleman, who spoke initially to the News & Citizen newspaper, a weekly in Morristown.

Freeh, 64, of Wilmington, Del., has not responded to a Burlington Free Press request for an interview.

State police say Freeh claims he has no recollection of crashing in Barnard, where he and his wife, Marilyn, have a vacation home.

Coleman said he didn't recognize Freeh, but said the Delaware license plate had an indication that the vehicle was related to law enforcement.

The SUV hit a mailbox, some shrubs and slammed into an old maple tree, Coleman said. He said he went to the SUV to help.

"It was quite intense. It was pretty well smashed in the front," Coleman said. "I was the first one to him."

Coleman said he was unable to free Freeh, who was wearing a seat belt, from the wreckage. Freeh was unable to move, Coleman said, and had sustained serious injuries to his legs, which were wedged under the steering section.

"He had a head wound on his left temple," Coleman said. "He did finally begin to moan."

Coleman said because of the way Freeh was jammed into the demolished vehicle, he was unable to see the lower half of Freeh's body.

Coleman said there was no cellphone service in the area. He drove to a house down the road and asked a woman to call 911.

He said the Windsor County deputy sheriff was the first police officer to arrive at the scene, and later White River Valley Ambulance arrived.

Coleman estimated that Freeh was in the crushed SUV for about an hour. He said the Barnard Volunteer Fire Department and Barnard First Response had to cut the roof off the SUV to help extricate Freeh from the vehicle.

Rescue workers then wheeled Freeh to a waiting helicopter that landed on Vermont 12. He was airlifted to Dartmouth-Hitchcock Medical Center in Lebanon, N.H., where he was admitted under armed guard.

The hospital has declined to comment on Freeh or say whether he remains there.

Hoyt, the veteran sheriff's deputy, was on duty in Windsor County and was headed to Barnard for a patrol. Hoyt confirmed that Coleman was among those to witness the crash.

Hoyt told the Burlington Free Press that he was on Vermont 12 when he saw on his police cruiser computer that there was a crash and that state troopers were responding. He said a minute later he came across the scene.

Hoyt confirmed Coleman wrote out a statement about the crash. The deputy said he gave Coleman's statement to investigating State Trooper Mark Harvey after state police arrived.

Attempts to reach Harvey on Tuesday were unsuccessful.

Capt. Ray Keefe, commander of the state police in southeastern Vermont, was in Massachusetts on Tuesday and said he would check the police report when he returns to Vermont.

State police have said previously that they would seek no charges against Freeh and would not issue him a traffic ticket. The plan was to issue a written warning.

State police said they believe drugs and alcohol played no role in the crash, but troopers noted they had no information to request a blood test.

The FBI in Washington has been mum since the crash. The bureau issued a one-sentence statement from the current director, James Comey, saying "the thoughts and prayers of the entire FBI" were with Freeh and his family.

The FBI in Washington has said FBI in Boston is handling media inquiries, but that office has said it will provide no further comment or information.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Sep 10, 2014 9:40 pm

see link for full story

http://www.sacbee.com/2014/09/10/669623 ... tment.html

Misconduct at Justice Department isn’t always prosecuted

Published: Wednesday, Sep. 10, 2014 - 1:49 pm
Last Modified: Wednesday, Sep. 10, 2014 - 2:29 pm

WASHINGTON -- Dozens of Justice Department officials, ranging from FBI special agents and prison wardens to high-level federal prosecutors, have escaped prosecution

or firing in recent years despite findings of misconduct by the department’s own internal watchdog.

Most of the names of the investigated officials, even the highest-ranking, remain under wraps. But documents McClatchy obtained under the Freedom of Information Act reveal for the first time a startling array of alleged transgressions uncovered by the department’s inspector general.

These include:

– Investigators concluded an assistant U.S. attorney “lacked candor” when interviewed by FBI agents investigating her husband’s “embezzlement activity.” The prosecutor also “made misleading and contradictory” statements to other investigators who were asking about her husband’s criminal activities. She was “verbally admonished” this year, but the Justice Department opted not to prosecute.

– A U.S. attorney violated federal laws and regulations by accepting a partially paid trip to a foreign country by a nonprofit organization, according to investigators. The unnamed presidential appointee was given a written admonishment and he was ordered to reimburse the organization. Prosecution was declined.

– Two FBI supervisory special agents accepted free tickets to the NBA All-Star Game and gave them to family members. One agent “lied under oath” about his actions, and was found to have misused government resources to “engage in extramarital affairs with three women.” That agent resigned after the bureau proposed his dismissal and the other was suspended for three days. Neither was prosecuted.

– An FBI assistant special agent in charge sexually harassed female subordinates, retaliated against a female special agent who refused to have a relationship with him and used his FBI-issued BlackBerry to pursue romantic relationships with 17 FBI employees, nine of whom were direct subordinates, as well as 29 other women. In January, the FBI told the inspector general it had issued an undisclosed disciplinary action. No charges were brought. In a statement to McClatchy, the FBI said it couldn’t comment on an “ongoing personnel matter.”

The records, which cover the period from January 2010 to March 2014, detail some 80 cases, only a few of which appear to have been previously made public. The accused officials work for agencies that include the Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Marshals Service and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.

In at least 27 cases, the inspector general identified evidence of possible criminal wrongdoing but no one was prosecuted.

These previously undisclosed cases, and dozens of others like them reviewed by McClatchy, reveal more than an underside to federal law enforcement. The cases underscore how much discretion federal prosecutors have in deciding whether to press charges, and they raise questions about when and why this discretion is applied.

“I think it’s fair to ask why some of these cases weren’t prosecuted,” Justice Department Inspector General Michael E. Horowitz said in an interview. “That’s clearly a concern we have: To make sure there are not two standards of justice at the Department of Justice.”

However, he said it’s understandable in many cases that criminal charges aren’t filed. His office presents a case for prosecution in every instance where there’s “credible evidence that could support elements of a crime, even when it’s weak.”


The reports come, however, amid an overall decline in public corruption prosecutions during the Obama administration. So far this year, records obtained by the nonpartisan Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse at Syracuse University show that 34 percent of investigators’ referrals of public corruption allegations were accepted for prosecution.

During the George W. Bush presidency, records show, 41.6 percent of the official corruption referrals resulted in prosecution.

Gauging the reasons behind an individual prosecutor’s decision-making is nearly impossible, because the Justice Department and inspector general’s office won’t release most of the names or discuss the details of the cases.

Justice Department records show that federal prosecutors nationwide declined a total of 25,629 criminal matters during fiscal year 2013. The reasons most commonly reported included weak or insufficient evidence and lack of criminal intent.

Peter Carr, a Justice Department spokesman, said prosecutors followed federal rules when deciding whether to initiate or decline charges in a case.

Carr pointed to the U.S Attorney’s Manual, which says, “Federal law enforcement resources and federal judicial resources are not sufficient to permit prosecution of every alleged offense over which federal jurisdiction exists.”

“Public corruption cases are very fact-specific, and statistics fluctuate routinely year by year,” Carr said Tuesday. “The decision to bring a case involves a number of factors, all covered by the Principles of Federal Prosecution, which may include the seriousness of the allegation, the admissible evidence and whether there is a substantial federal interest in pursuing charges.”

The inspector general’s summary of unprosecuted cases was provided to Republican Sens. Charles Grassley of Iowa and Tom Coburn of Oklahoma, and independently obtained by McClatchy through a FOIA request.

Grassley said he agreed that not all cases warranted prosecution. However, he called for more transparency in the decisions “because of the obvious appearance of a conflict of interest.”

“The public needs to be reassured that the department doesn’t have one standard for its own employees and another standard for everybody else,” he said.

Other cases federal prosecutors declined that were cited in the documents obtained by McClatchy include:

– Allegations against an unnamed prosecutor who was recused from involvement with a criminal investigation because of a personal relationship with a criminal target. The inspector general, however, concluded the prosecutor had disclosed information about the investigation and the wiretap to her spouse, “who subsequently disclosed it to the target.” The prosecutor initially denied revealing the information to her spouse, but subsequently acknowledged that she might have “said something” about the investigation. The prosecutor retired last November.

The husband of former Assistant U.S. Attorney Paula Burnett in New Mexico was convicted last September of leaking details of an investigation to Mexican drug cartel members. Burnett retired late last year, according to news accounts. The inspector general and the U.S. attorney’s office in New Mexico wouldn’t confirm whether it was the same case. Burnett declined to comment.

– The inspector general’s review found $211,000 in questionable purchases at a district U.S. marshals’ office, including “ceremonial and promotional” items previously banned by headquarters, personal or other wasteful items. The investigators concluded that the marshal and the chief deputy marshal had misspent funds, knowingly misused the government purchase card program and violated public service laws. Disciplinary action was still pending this year.

– Investigators concluded that an immigration judge had solicited attorneys to purchase jewelry from her, borrowed money from a lawyer and interpreter, and failed to recuse herself from cases that involved lawyers representing her relatives in criminal matters. The Executive Office for Immigration Review, which oversees immigration judges, “proposed disciplinary action” in January. Spokeswoman Kathryn Mattingly said her office “does not comment on personnel matters.”

Several cases also involve prosecutors misusing their positions, including one who’d sent emails on behalf of her boyfriend, disclosed sensitive information to him without authorization, used government databases to conduct legal research for him, gave him access to government computer accounts and sent a gift to an attorney to get her boyfriend legal assistance. In December 2011, she received a letter of suspension for 14 days.

In the interview, Horowitz wouldn’t comment on specific cases but he added that he’s personally appealed to U.S. attorneys to consider prosecution in some instances.

“I pick up the phone and call them,” said Horowitz, a former longtime federal prosecutor who handled corruption cases in New York.

Horowitz’s role is not to make the prosecution decisions, but to ensure that prosecutors get the information they need .

“There are some where I might have pulled the trigger. But I’m not a prosecutor anymore so I respect the discretion not to. I can’t think of any case where a decision was made not to prosecute that I thought was unreasonable,” he said.

Some of the misconduct cases may not be pursued because they involve “low-dollar” waste or abuse, Horowitz said. Or cases may be seen as too tough to prosecute, sometimes for the wrong reasons, he added, such as the sexual abuse of prisoners. Prosecutors can view prisoners as unsympathetic witnesses.

Before Horowitz took over in 2012, the inspector general’s office disagreed with a federal prosecutor who didn’t want to file charges. In that case, a correctional officer had accepted $1,300 from an undercover agent in exchange for agreeing to smuggle tobacco into a correctional facility. After prosecutors from the federal district based in Houston declined to pursue criminal charges, a local district attorney took the case. The officer later pleaded guilty to bribery, was sentenced to probation and was fined $2,000.

Earl Devaney, a former inspector general for the Department of Interior, said a decision not to pursue criminal charges didn’t necessarily mean investigators or prosecutors were pulling their punches.

“There are always a lot of good reasons to not prosecute,” he said. “Also, you can have a thousand little crappy cases that just make you look good and just one case that has enormous impact.”

Devaney nonetheless added that he’d found the Justice Department’s public integrity unit, which is set up to prosecute cases of high-level corruption, to be “risk adverse” in the past. He worked with it as part of a federal task force that investigated superlobbyist Jack Abramoff and his influence peddling.

Sometimes, alleged misconduct by prosecutors and investigators might be handled less aggressively because of concern that it would taint criminal cases, Devaney said. At trial, defense attorneys are permitted to learn of serious misconduct of the agents and prosecutors involved in their cases.

According to the most recent report by the office, the Justice Department’s inspector general received nearly 5,900 allegations of misconduct, opened 195 investigations and was involved in 32 arrests and 38 convictions from October through March.

This year, for instance, a former federal correctional officer in Missouri was sentenced for trying to hire an inmate to murder his wife’s ex-husband.

However, the Justice Department’s inspector general doesn’t break down details on prosecutions. As a result, McClatchy couldn’t determine the prosecution rate for the office’s cases.

At least one other inspector general does report such statistics. The Interior Department Inspector General’s Office opened 742 cases in the year that ended March 31. During the same period, the office reported referring 44 cases for possible prosecution. Nineteen cases were declined.

During the same year, the Department of Homeland Security opened 551 investigations, referred 322 for prosecution and had 196 declined.

Horowitz is one of some 72 federal inspectors general, spanning myriad federal agencies. They are auditors, in part, scrutinizing government agencies in hopes of rooting out waste and inefficiencies. In fiscal 2013, for instance, the inspectors general identified $44.9 billion in funds that could be “put to better use.”

Inspectors general also investigate criminal allegations. In fiscal 2013, their work led to 6,705 successful criminal prosecutions.

The agencies make the calls on disciplinary action.

In the Justice Department cases, Devaney said he was struck by instances of weak punishment.

“An oral admonishment is not a deterrent,” Devaney said.

One case was triggered by a complaint by Grassley about FBI Assistant Director Stephen Kelly. Kelly, who managed the bureau’s Office of Congressional Affairs, told Grassley’s staff that the FBI knew that the senator planned to attend the wedding of a “subject” of an FBI investigation, according to the inspector general’s report.

“He assured Senator Grassley that he was not a focus of the FBI investigation,” the documents say.

“The OIG concluded that Kelly did not have the authority to disclose nonpublic information about an ongoing criminal investigation to Senator Grassley or his staff, and in doing so exhibited poor judgment,” the report states.

Grassley’s office said the senator never planned to attend the wedding and was invited by the son of the target of the investigation. The target was Russell Wasendorf Sr., founder of Peregrine Financial Group Inc., who pleaded guilty to embezzling more than $100 million from customers.

“Senator Grassley and the staff member who spoke with Mr. Kelly both thought the disclosure was inappropriate, and could have been intimidating to somebody who hasn’t dealt with the FBI like Senator Grassley and his staff have,” said Grassley spokeswoman Beth Levine.

This year, the FBI concluded that the allegation Kelly had violated internal policy was “unsubstantiated” and gave him “nondisciplinary counseling.”

“FBI concluded that Kelly’s disclosure of nonpublic information derived from an ongoing investigation was improper, for which he received nondisciplinary counseling,” the bureau said in a statement. “The FBI’s Office of Congressional Affairs must be afforded some measure of latitude and flexibility in dealing with members of Congress. As this instance did not result in harm to the ongoing investigation, and was done with good intentions, the matter did not constitute official misconduct.”
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 12, 2014 10:58 pm

Porn conviction tossed over military’s surveillance role
Posted on Friday, September 12 at 5:41pm | By Bob Egelko


http://blog.sfgate.com/crime/2014/09/12 ... ance-role/

Michael Dreyer, who lives near Seattle, was convicted and sentenced to 18 years in prison in 2012 for possessing and distributing child pornography that police said they found on his computer. On Friday, a federal appeals court overturned his convictions because of the unlikely — and illegal — source of the investigation.

The U.S. Navy. To be specific, an agent of the Naval Criminal Investigative Service in Georgia who had a high-powered software program and used it in 2010 to search computers throughout the state of Washington for evidence of child pornography. When the program picked up two child porn images and a video, the agent contacted the FBI, which tracked down Dreyer’s name and address. The naval office then got in touch with local police, who obtained a search warrant. The Department of Homeland Security later got a federal search warrant, and Dreyer was charged in federal court.

When the search was challenged, the Justice Department said a military investigation was justified because there are military bases in the greater Seattle area, and it’s a crime for members of the armed forces to distribute child pornography. But the Ninth U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals in San Francisco said the computer surveillance didn’t target military bases or personnel but extended across an entire state, resulting in prosecution of someone with no current military connection.

Those actions, the three-judge panel said, violated the Posse Comitatus Act, the 1878 law that prohibits the U.S. military from taking part in civilian law enforcement activities.

Congress has authorized a few exceptions, such as the now-familiar transfer of military equipment to local law enforcement, and the possibility of military assistance to police in emergencies involving weapons of mass destruction. But none of those exceptions covers “direct active involvement in civilian enforcement of the child pornography laws,” the court said. And by a 2-1 vote, the court said the computer search was so extensive, and the government’s arguments in defense of the search were so sweeping, that the incriminating evidence had to be suppressed — a remedy that the law reserves for exceptional cases.

“The government is arguing vehemently that the military may monitor for criminal activity all the computers anywhere in any state with a military base or installation,” Judge Marsha Berzon wrote in the majority opinion. Judging from the evidence in this case, she said, it has become “a routine practice” for the Navy to hack into every civilian computer in a state, search for evidence of child pornography, and turn it over to the police if the computer owner has no relation to the military.

Using the Justice Department’s rationale, Berzon said, naval agents could routinely stop suspected drunken drivers in downtown Seattle “on the off-chance that a driver is a member of the military,” and then give the police department any information it happened to collect on civilians. The department’s claim of such broad authority, Berzon said, shows “a profound lack of regard for the important limitations on the role of the military in our civilian society.”

The liberal Berzon was joined by Judge Andrew Kleinfeld, a conservative with libertarian leanings. Another conservative, Judge Diarmuid O’Scannlain, dissented from the portion of the ruling that overturned Dreyer’s conviction, calling it “a breathtaking assertion of judicial power … for the benefit of a convicted child pornographer.”

Defense lawyer Erik Levin said Dreyer, who remains in prison for now, is in his 60s and has no record of violence. He said the naval office in Georgia has conducted statewide surveillance in other states as well.

“This is, literally, the militarization of the police,” Levin said. “They have enough funding that they can go out and stray from the core mission of national security and get into local law enforcement.”

Here’s a link to the ruling, which contains much more about the Posse Comitatus Act and how it applies: http://cdn.ca9.uscourts.gov/datastore/o ... -30077.pdf.


http://observer.com/2014/09/house-major ... rimm-site/
House Majority PAC Launches Anti-Grimm Site
By Will Bredderman | 09/12/14 3:30pm
TheGrimmFile.com depict Michael Grimm as a wanted criminal (Screengrab: TheGrimmFile.com).

TheGrimmFile.com depicts Michael Grimm as a wanted criminal (Screengrab: TheGrimmFile.com).

The pro-Democrat House Majority Political Action Committee launched a new site earlier this week called TheGrimmFile.com targeting embattled Staten Island Congressman Michael Grimm.

The independent spending group–which, though officially unaffiliated with the Democratic Party, seeks to turn the House of Representatives blue through investing in advertising–depicts the indicted Republican representative as a wanted criminal, outlining his 20-count federal indictment for allegedly hiring illegal immigrants at a restaurant he owned prior to his 2010 election and allegedly lying about it to investigators.

“Michael Grimm doesn’t have a criminal record. He has a rap sheet,” the site reads.

The site features a black-and-white photo styled like a mug shot, alludes to the congressman’s nickname “Mikey Suits,” given to him when he was a Federal Bureau of Investigations agent infiltrating the mafia and links to the FBI press release announcing his indictment. The page advises “IF SEEN: DON’T RE-ELECT.”

The House Majority PAC said TheGrimmFile.com is one piece of a massive effort to flip the district, which covers all of Staten Island and parts of southern Brooklyn.

“This part of House Majority PAC’s six-figure online advertising buy aimed at helping the voters of the 11th district understand the magnitude of the federal indictments Michael Grimm is facing. By providing easy access to the FBI’s website, voters can see just how little regard Grimm has for the law he vowed to uphold,” said spokesman Matt Thornton
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Sep 14, 2014 11:52 pm

see link for full story

http://www.cdapress.com/columns/syd_alb ... l?mode=jqm
Idaho's tragedy at Ruby Ridge

September 14. 2014

On Aug. 21, 1992, gunshots echoed through the woods at Ruby Ridge, a few miles northwest of Bonners Ferry. The shootout was between deputy U.S. marshals and the Randy and Vicki Weaver family that lived in a cabin in the woods to home-school their kids and escape what they believed was a corrupted world, while waiting for the apocalypse.
Mobile_LesSchwab_Instory

When the shooting stopped, Weaver's 14-year-old son Sammy and his dog Striker were dead - Sammy shot in the back by Deputy U.S. Marshal William Francis Degan. The next day, Randy Weaver was wounded and his wife Vicki also dead. So too was Deputy Degan.

It was one of the ugliest events in recent Idaho history.

Weaver, 44, was a former factory worker in Iowa and a U.S. Army Green Beret. Wishing to start a new life away from civilization, the Weavers moved to North Idaho in 1983 and bought 20 acres in the Selkirk Mountains forest and started building their cabin home, plus a guest cabin, to quietly raise their two children. But despite the remote location, they couldn't avoid trouble.

In a business dispute with neighbor Terry Kinnison, Weaver won a resulting lawsuit. In retaliation, Kinnison sent letters to the FBI, Secret Service and county sheriff claiming that Weaver was threatening to kill the President, the Pope and Idaho Gov. John V. Evans. He also claimed Weaver had a large cache of weapons, and was a member of the racist Aryan Nation, operating an hour's drive south in Hayden.

The libelous attacks brought in law enforcement authorities, triggering the tragic events that followed.

Unsurprisingly, the feds and local law enforcement jumped on the accusations immediately. The Weavers spent hours meeting with authorities, denying all of it.

They denied the threats, the weapons charge and membership in the Aryan Nation. Investigators, however, discovered that he did associate with Frank Kumnick, who knew members of the Aryans.

The trail of events that led to the Ruby Ridge shootout started in July 1986, when Kumnick invited Weaver to a meeting of the Aryan Nation and introduced him to Kenneth Fadeley, a member who was a Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) informant. They met several times over the next three years.

Then in 1989, the ATF accused Weaver of selling Fadeley two sawed-off shotguns, with barrels shorter than allowed by law. Weaver said the agents sawed them off shorter, not him. The ATF then tried to recruit him as an informant to avoid prosecution, but Weaver refused. The agency retaliated by filing false charges accusing him of being a bank robber with criminal convictions. That December, a federal grand jury indicted him for making and possessing - but not for selling - illegal weapons.

Weaver was known for his distrust of government and events were confirming he had reason to.

He was arrested and told his trial would start on Feb. 19, 1991. Then began a series of bureaucratic paperwork and court scheduling snafus, plus an inability to communicate with Weaver was leading the family inexorably to Aug. 21, 1992. A warrant for his arrest was issued and the marshals called to bring him in.

Weaver wouldn't make that easy, holing up in his cabin and the matter dragged on for over a year. He believed there was a conspiracy against him, and threatened to resist with force any attempt to arrest him. The conflicting signals he was receiving from government agencies convinced him he could not get a fair trial. When vehicles approached, the Weavers would be armed and in the surrounding woods until they determined the visitor.

At first, authorities were able to communicate with him through intermediaries but then that stopped. The Marshals Service planned an attack, setting up surveillance cameras, with armed agents hiding in the woods.

Then on April 18, Geraldo Rivera reporting for the "Now It Can Be Told" TV show flew over the property in a helicopter, and Weaver was later accused of shooting at it. There was no evidence of this, and even Richard Weiss the helicopter pilot repeatedly denied it. That didn't stop Marshals Service's Wayne "Duke" Smith and FBI's Richard Rogers from using the alleged shooting as a justification for issuing rules of engagement (ROE) instructions to their agents.

U.S. Attorney Ron Howen joined in the accusations, despite the lack of proof.

Agents were told to use military rules of engagement, different to FBI standard deadly force policy. Later, several snipers testified that they considered those orders to be a green light to "shoot on sight."

Matters remained tense for the next four months, with neither side giving an inch. Then on Aug. 21, the feds made their move. Like a final scene in a military action movie, marshals dressed in camouflage, with night-vision goggles and M16 rifles moved in to set up an observation post near the cabin.

They threw two rocks at the cabin to test the pet dogs' reaction. Thinking it was possibly game to shoot because they were running out of meat, Weaver's friend Kevin Harris, 24, and 14-year-old son Samuel Weaver along with their dog Striker came out to investigate.

The marshals pulled back about 500 yards westward to a Y in the trail and hid. Soon, Sammy, Harris and Striker came along, while Randy Weaver took a separate trail. The rest of the family stayed home.

At the Y, they encountered the marshals and the shootout erupted. Harris returned fire and killed Deputy U.S. Marshal Degan. It's unclear who fired first, but Deputy Art Roderick shot and killed Striker and Sammy was shot in the back and killed while retreating.

A total of 19 rounds were fired in the battle at the Y. Later, Randy and Vicki returned to retrieve their son's body and placed it in the guest cabin.

The following day, as Randy, 16-year-old daughter Sara and Harris were visiting Sammy's body, Randy was shot in the back by FBI sniper Lon Horiuchi, but survived - the bullet passing through his right armpit. Though wounded, Weaver along with Sara and Harris ran back toward the main cabin. Vicki was standing by the door holding her 10-month-old baby Elisheba. Horiuchi then fired a second bullet, which passed through Vicki's head, killing her and then hitting Harris in the chest.

The standoff lasted another 12 days, with hundreds of federal agents surrounding the cabin. Finally the Weavers surrendered.

Randy Weaver was acquitted of all charges except for failing to appear in court, and was sentenced to 18 months in prison and fined $10,000. Harris was acquitted of all charges.

Public outrage broke out across the nation over the violent actions at Ruby Ridge by the federal law enforcement agencies.

When the long legal process ended, Randy Weaver was awarded $100,000 and his three daughters $1 million each. The Weavers returned to Iowa, and Harris filed a civil suit and won $380,000.

FBI sniper Horiuchi was charged with manslaughter but never stood trial.

The Senate Subcommittee on Terrorism, Technology and Government Information held hearing from Sept. 6-Oct. 19, 1995. At the hearings, FBI Director Louis Freeh admitted that, "law enforcement overreacted at Ruby Ridge," calling the federal actions as "synonymous with the exaggerated application of federal law enforcement." Fourteen FBI agents received minor punishment (Eight months later, the same government agencies plus others - and including some of the same personnel at Ruby Ridge - were at Waco, Texas, in another shootout, though facing an entirely different situation).

In 1993, Kevin Harris was indicted for first-degree murder in the death of Deputy Marshal Degan but acquitted, the court declaring that he was acting in self-defense. Four years later - just before the statute of limitations ran out - a zealous Boundary County prosecutor filed a murder charge against him, but the charge was tossed out on grounds of double-jeopardy, having already been acquitted in the earlier trial.

Randy Weaver and daughter Sara had their say about the tragedy, writing a paperback book, The Federal Siege at Ruby Ridge.

This sad episode of Idaho history was about a family that wanted to be left alone but were thrust back into a world they sought to escape by a vindictive neighbor and zealous government agents who wouldn't follow the rules.

Syd Albright is a writer/journalist/biographer living in Post Falls. Contact him at silverflix@roadrunner.com.

The negotiators...

One report says, "Many of the people used by the marshals as third party go-betweens on the Weaver case - Bill and Judy Grider, Alan Jeppeson, Richard Butler - were evaluated by the marshals as more radical than the Weavers themselves." Butler, co-inventor of the tubeless tire, was leader of the white supremacist Aryan Nation.

Celebrities part of the story...

Two well-known personalities were part of this saga: Bo Gritz who ran as vice president with U.S. presidential candidate David Duke, formerly Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan, helped negotiate an end to the standoff. Trial Lawyer Hall of Famer Gary Spence was Weaver's defense attorney, attacking the government's witnesses and evidence without offering a defense. He never lost a criminal case either as a prosecutor or a defense attorney.

Government shenanigans...

Weaver Trial Report: FBI tampered with evidence, and crime scene photos given to the defense were phony reenactments, and though the prosecutor knew this, he failed to inform the defense.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Sep 15, 2014 12:38 am

see link for full story



First federal unit set up to correct wrongful convictions


http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/u-s ... ion-cases/


September 14, 2014 at 2:31 PM EDT

The U.S. Attorney’s Office in Washington has set up the first federal unit to identify and investigate cases that ended in wrongful convictions, Reuters reports.

“This new unit will work to uncover historical injustices and to make sure that we are doing everything in our power to prevent such tragedies in the future,” U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. told The Washington Post before the formal announcement on Friday.

The creation of the Conviction Integrity Unit came after the U.S. Attorney’s Office spent four years reviewing more than 2,000 cases involving FBI analysis of fiber and hair evidence. The review has already garnered a handful of exonerations for individuals convicted of crimes committed in the 1980s.

Last week, Henry Lee McCollum, 50, and Leon Brown, 46, were declared innocent after serving thirty years for the 1983 rape and murder of an 11-year-old girl in North Carolina. McCollum, who was on death row, and Brown, who was serving a life sentence, were freed after DNA evidence linked another man to the crime, the New York Times reports.

In July, Kevin Martin, 50, who was convicted of the 1982 killing of a woman in Washington D.C. was exonerated based on DNA evidence. The U.S. Attorney’s Office challenged original forensic evidence of hair that linked Martin to the crime, according to the Washington Post.

The first of the exonerations from the U.S. Attorney’s reevaluation and new DNA evidence came in 2009 for Donald Gates. Gates was convicted of the 1981 rape and murder of a Georgetown University student based in part on hair evidence.

The results of the U.S. Attorney’s Office review are being shared with the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, a nonprofit dedicated to correcting and preventing wrongful convictions in D.C., Maryland and Virginia. The organization is located at George Washington University Law School in Washington, D.C.

All four men had served well beyond the average sentence typical of DNA exonerees, according to the Mid-Atlantic Innocence Project, which notes the average sentence served is 13.6 years.

One of the most publicized cases of wrongful conviction and exoneration in recent years is the case of Antron McCray, Kevin Richardson, Yusef Salaam, Raymond Santana Jr. and Kharey Wise, otherwise known as the Central Park Five, in 2002. The five black and Latino men were convicted as youths of the beating and raping of a female jogger in Central Park in 1989.

On Sept. 5, the men were awarded $41 million in a settlement, roughly $1 million for each year of their imprisonment.

The federal government, 29 states an
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 16, 2014 9:23 pm

another FBI plausible denial moment miracle

Thousands Of FBI Documents About Civil Rights Era Destroyed By Flooding

http://io9.com/thousands-of-fbi-documen ... 1635448055
Thousands Of FBI Documents About Civil Rights Era Destroyed By Flooding

This month marks the 50th anniversary of the launch of COINTELPRO, a major FBI operation to "expose, disrupt and otherwise neutralize" hate organizations, including the Ku Klux Klan. It's just been revealed that many crucial questions about that period will remain forever unanswered, due to archival neglect.

Writing at the blog of the National Security Archive, Trevor Griffey— a lecturer in U.S. history and labor studies at the University of Washington—says that he learned about the loss of the documents when the FBI responded to a FOIA request. Hundreds of thousands of pages were destroyed last year during a hurricane, when the FBI archives in Alexandria, Virginia were flooded.

Among the losses: somewhere between one-fifth and one-third of the FBI's 62,000-page Birmingham, Alabama field office file on the United Klans of America, as well as documents on a Klan chapter created by the FBI to produce a rivalry with an authentic Klan group.

Griffey says those documents could have answered some significant historical questions:

To what degree were FBI agents and undercover informants in the Klan complicit in hate speech and hate crimes in the 1960s? What effect did FBI repression of the Klan during the 1960s have on the history of the right and on American politics more generally? These and other questions related to the history of the FBI's COINTELPRO against the Klan deserve further investigation.

And, Griffey adds, thousands of other historically significant files were destroyed:

Forty-one volumes (likely over 8,000 pages) from the FBI's main headquarters file on the National Negro Labor Council— one of the most important civil rights organizations of the early 1950s, which was driven out of existence by anti-communist pressure.
Twenty-four volumes (almost 5,000 pages) from the FBI's Chicago field office file on Claude Lightfoot, a prominent black communist for almost 60 years.
Nineteen volumes (almost 4,000 pages) from the FBI's Memphis field office file on the Nation of Islam.
Eight volumes (roughly 1,500 pages) from the FBI's massive Detroit field office general file on civil rights issues from the 1940s through the mid-1960s.

Griffey wonders whether news of this flooding will expose other weaknesses in the FBI's records management practices:

A more important question, however, is: why are these archives in the possession of the FBI at all? Why does the FBI continue to retain millions of pages of historically significant files, many of which are over 50 years old, that have no relevance to its contemporary law enforcement mission? Why have these files not already been transferred to the National Archives?

Many of the historically significant files destroyed in the Virginia flooding included a series of files that were supposed to have been transferred to the National Archives during George W. Bush's second term....Almost ten years later, these files should not still be in the FBI's possession.

Other files of major significance to the study of racial justice, the left, and U.S. foreign policy— particularly the FBI's 105 series files, which include hundreds of thousands of pages of files on the Black Panther Party— remain in the FBI's possession and decades away from ever being declassified or transferred to the National Archives.

These and other historically significant files that sit in secret FBI warehouses are vulnerable to more than just flooding. Decades-old standards for determining historical significance that tend to treat local history as unimportant, combined with wide latitude granted to FBI records management staff, have resulted in tragic and reckless destruction of many historically significant files
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Sep 17, 2014 12:19 am

Family members condemn FBI for jailing, killing loved ones
By Jessica Schwartz |
September 15, 2014


http://www.fightbacknews.org/2014/9/15/ ... loved-ones


Read more articles in In-Justice System
Enter a descriptive sentence about the photo here.
Tracy Molm, of the Committee Against FBI Repression speaking in Tampa. (FightBack!News/Staff)

Tampa, FL - 70 people gathered at the First United Church of Tampa, Sept. 13, to hear speakers on FBI repression of Arab, Muslim and anti-war activists in the U.S. Topics discussed included entrapment, preemptive prosecution and solitary confinement. Over 80,000 people are currently under solitary confinement, a reality for many political prisoners in the U.S.

The speakers were Nahla Al-Arian, wife of Dr. Sami Al-Arian; Hatem Fariz; Al-Arian’s co-defendant, who was imprisoned in a Communication Management Unit; Avni Osmakac, brother of Sami Osmakac; Tracy Molm of the Committee to Stop FBI Repression and one of the anti-war 23; and Elena Teyer, mother-in-law of Ibragim Todashev.

Nahla Al-Arian spoke about her husband’s case. Dr. Sami Al-Arian, a Palestinian-American professor lost his job at University of South Florida after comments he made on the Bill O’Reilly show following 9/11. He was later imprisoned and then put under house arrest for supposedly working with the Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The reality was that Dr. Al-Arian was giving humanitarian aid to Palestine and was vocally critical of Israel. Due to an agreement with the government, Nahla and Sami Al-Arian will be deported to another country, which has proved difficult given his case and their Palestinian background.

Nahla Al-Arian said, “They just wanted us to disappear.”

Hatem Fariz was a co-defendant with Dr. Al-Arian and endured living in a Communication Management Unit, or CMU. Fariz spent four years in a CMU in Terre Haute, Indiana. Fariz described the deplorable conditions he lived under in the CMU, including waiting over a month to see a doctor, being allotted only two 15-minute phone calls a month, and two hour-long visits a month, which only included immediate family.

“We didn’t send money to kill people. We sent money to feed people”, said Hatem Fariz.

Avni Osmakac is the older brother of Sami Osmakac, an Albanian man who was coerced by the FBI to buy fake weapons for attacks in the Tampa Bay area. Sami Osmakac was put into solitary confinement even before his trial began. Osmakac began showing signs of mental illness in 2010, and started going to mosques for answers, where he met an informant that would entrap him in illegal activity, recorded him making threats, while keeping thousands of other recordings secret for ‘national security’ purposes.

Sami Osmakac sentencing will occur in November at the Sam Gibbons Federal Courthouse in Tampa. On Sept. 15 at Genaro Coffee in St. Petersburg, there will be a film screening of Informant, where Avni Osmakac will also be speaking.

Tracy Molm, one of the 23 anti-war and international solidarity activists subpoenaed by a grand jury, also spoke. The activists had their homes raided and belongings seized in a witch hunt that attempted to silence dissent against the government’s foreign policies. Molm spoke about the connection between their case and Rasmea Odeh, the Palestinian-American activist from Chicago who will be going on trial in November for supposed immigration fraud, based on a 20 year old application where she allegedly omitted an arrest she had in Israel over 40 years ago. While imprisoned in Israel, Rasmea was tortured into a confession.

Despite the struggles endured as a result of her activism, Molm encouraged attendees to use activism to speak out against repression. “The thing that got us into this situation will be getting us out of it,” she said.

Elena Teyer spoke about the murder by the FBI of her late son-in-law, Ibragim Todashev, in Orlando last year. He was questioned by the FBI because of a supposed connection he had with the suspected Boston bombers, all of whom were Chechen-American. He was forced into writing a confession by the FBI and when he attempted to refuse and leave his apartment, they shot him seven times, including once at point-blank range in the head. The FBI initially claimed that Todashev attacked the agents with a weapon, but were inconsistent about the type of weapon and he was later found to be unarmed. According to the autopsy report, three of the shots went through his left arm into his body, which indicated that he arm was close to his body and therefore could not have been trying to attack the officers.

“Don’t let them abuse your rights,” Teyer urged the crowd.

The event was sponsored by Friends of Human Rights and Committee to Stop FBI Repression, who are both part of the National Coalition to Protect Civil Freedoms.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Sep 17, 2014 12:48 am

http://www.courthousenews.com/2014/09/16/71429.htm




Petraeus' Pal Cleared to Sue the FBI
By RYAN ABBOTT

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WASHINGTON (CN) - A federal judge refused to dismiss privacy claims against the FBI filed by Tampa socialite Jill Kelley and her husband, whose connections to top military officials and concerns over threatening emails exposed Gen. David Petraeus' extramarital affair and railroaded his career.
Gilberte Jill Kelley and her husband Scott, a doctor, claimed last year that they had gone to the FBI for help in May 2012 after receiving threatening emails from an anonymous source. The messages disparaged Jill Kelley and referred to planned events involving the Kelleys and senior intelligence and defense officials, including Gen. John Allen.
The couple turned the over emails to the FBI, and asked the bureau to respect their privacy, but according to their complaint, government officials snooped through their email accounts, launching "an unprofessional, frivolous and scurrilous investigation into Mrs. Kelley's private relationships and affiliations that had no bearing on any pending criminal investigation or other legitimate concern to the FBI."
The FBI traced the emails to Paula Broadwell, Petraeus' biographer and mistress, then leaked Kelley's name to the press, the couple said, leading to Petraeus' resignation and "Saturday Night Live" skits pinning Kelley as his mistress.
U.S. District Judge Amy Jackson dismissed most of the Kelleys' claims against the FBI, but allowed their Privacy Act violations claim to proceed.
"The amended complaint is a long, overwrought, and argumentative document, and its 225 paragraphs are full of indignation while being thin on facts," U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson wrote. "But the Court finds that plaintiffs have set forth sufficient factual allegations to withstand the motion to dismiss Count 1 to the extent that it asserts unlawful disclosure of information to the media because there are sufficient facts presented in the amended complaint to satisfy plaintiffs' burden to state a plausible Privacy Act claim."
According to the Kelleys, the FBI discovered that Broadwell was the anonymous stalker, but kept the information to itself, and instead investigated the Kelleys, leaking false information to the press that accused Jill Kelly of having an affair with Gen. Allen.
"Eventually, plaintiffs will need to come forward with specific information linking the alleged disclosures to defendants FBI and DOD [Department of Defense], as opposed to 'unnamed' government sources, but they have met their burden at this time to allege sufficient facts to support a plausible inference that the disclosures came from defendants and were intentional and willful, as well as sufficient facts to support an inference that whoever disclosed the information actually retrieved it from a protected Privacy Act system of records," the judge wrote.
Jackson spent the bulk of her 76-page ruling dismissing the Kelleys' other 11 claims, for failure to state a claim, dismissing other Privacy Act claims regarding the bureau's methods of storing records, as well as counts for defamation and false light.
Jackson also dismissed their claims under the Stored Communications Act, and the Fourth and Fifth Amendment for lack of jurisdiction.
The Kelleys claimed they discovered that the FBI knew Broadwell to be the source of the threatening emails on Nov. 9, 2012, the same day Petraeus resigned from the CIA amid reports of his affair.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 19, 2014 1:19 am

see link for full story



http://m.wlky.com/news/fbi-employee-acc ... e/28137196


FBI employee accused of assaulting wife.

Sep 18 2014

An employee with the Louisville FBI is charged with assaulting his wife.

According to arrest records, Michael Jones became physically violent during an argument at the couple's home and tried to keep her from leaving the home.

He's charged with fourth-degree assault and unlawful imprisonment.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 19, 2014 3:37 pm

http://triblive.com/mobile/6827362-96/raid-brien-family


Botched FBI raid in Bellevue stings feds for $100K
By Brian Bowling Staff Reporter
Friday, Sept. 19, 2014, 3:09 p.m.



The federal government has apparently agreed to pay $100,000 to settle a Bellevue family's lawsuit over a botched 2011 FBI-led raid on their home, according to court documents filed Friday.

Led by FBI Special Agent Karen Springmeyer, about a dozen officers used a battering ram to enter the rented Orchard Street home where Gary Adams and his family lived on March 3, 2011. The police were looking for a suspect who hadn't lived at that address for nearly two years, the lawsuit says.

Tim O'Brien, the family's lawyer, filed a motion Friday asking U.S. District Judge Nora Barry Fischer to approve the share of the settlement that would be set aside in interest bearing accounts for five minor children who were present when the raid occurred.

The children would receive a total of $9,500. O'Brien would receive $46,250 for attorney's fees and legal costs and the remaining $44,250 would be divided among the six adults who were in the house during the raid, the motion says.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 19, 2014 9:48 pm

see link for full story



Former FBI agent says NFL lead investigator shouldn't be heading domestic violence probes



http://www.10news.com/news/former-fbi-a ... s-09192014


Sep 19, 2014


A San Diego woman says the NFL's lead investigator is the last man who should be heading the domestic violence investigations.

On police dashcam video from 2006 in Austin, Texas, a string of drunken curses can be heard as Dree Ann Cellemme is cuffed and later ticketed for public intoxication during a night that remains a blur.

For the off-duty FBI agent, this happened less than a year after a drunken episode at an FBI holiday party.

Team 10 investigator Michael Chen asked, "When you look at that video, what do you see?"

"I see someone who was clearly having an emotional breakdown and in need of alcohol counseling and intervention," said Cellemme.

Days later, she sought treatment and remains sober to this day.

She says her FBI career did not fare as well because of something she cannot remember yelling at officers in Austin.

"I'm going to tell everyone you raped me," yelled Cellemme out the window that night as she was cuffed in a patrol car.

She was put on indefinite suspension without pay – which lasted a year – before she was fired.

Cellemme showed Team 10 an email revealing the man making the decisions was the FBI's then-assistant HR director John Raucci.

"It's the old adage: boys will be boys, but girls always need to act like ladies, and at that moment, I didn't fit the image of what a lady was supposed to look like," said Cellemme.

She filed a federal complaint, and in a just-released decision, a judge concluded her indefinite suspension was discriminatory and based on her sex.

In Cellemme's legal arguments, she had pointed out numerous cases of male agents involved with DUIs and serious alcohol offenses getting short suspensions and keeping their jobs.

"In one case, an agent was stopped in a vehicle with three prostitutes while he was intoxicated, and he only received a 17-day suspension after accusing police of stealing his money – even filing a complaint," said Cellemme.

Years later, Raucci is now with the NFL, heading their investigations and likely including the domestic violence probes.

"I don't think he's the right man for the job," said Cellemme.

She believes he is biased against women and should not be the one looking into their accusations.

"You can't have someone with those prejudices investigating these sensitive issues," said Cellemme.

Cellemme will receive damages, but a judge said the FBI did not have to reinstate her. In the ruling from an administrative law judge, it was determined the termination was not discrimination because the male agents that were given leniency in their cases had seniority, a viable factor in weighing job status.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 19, 2014 10:28 pm

http://www.nola.com/politics/index.ssf/ ... boxer.html



Controversial FBI agent in Jefferson case generates controversy in Arizona

Former FBI agent John Guandolo is back in the news. Guandolo was an FBI agent assigned to the corruption investigation of then-Rep. William Jefferson, D-New Orleans, who resigned from the agency after disclosure he had sex with the key government informant in the case.
william jefferson.jpgWith his wife Andrea by hisA side, former U.S. Representative William Jefferson listens to his attorney Robert Trout address the media outside the United States District Courthouse in Alexandria, Virginia after Jefferson was convicted on 11 of 16 counts in his corruption and bribery trial on Wednesday, August 5, 2009. Jefferson is serving his sentence at Oakdale federal prison. Manuel Torres, NOLA.com | The Times-Picayune.

The latest news reports come out of Arizona where his training session for law enforcement on Islamic terrorism drew complaints. The ACLU of Arizona, along with local Muslim leaders, complained that Guandolo is guilty of anti-Muslim bias, which "is highly offensive, disparages the faith of millions of Americans, and inevitably leads to biased policing that targets individuals and communities based on religion and ethnicity, and not on criminal acts or evidence of wrongdoing."

On his website, Guandolo says the Muslim Brotherhood has "achieved information superiority in their effort to overthrow the United States of America and reduce the American people under the tyranny of Islamic Law (a.k.a. 'The Sharia')."

After word of his affair with the FBI informant in the Jefferson was revealed, Guandolo apologized and left the agency. But the disclosure forced prosecutors to opt against calling the informant, Virginia businesswoman Lori Mody, as a witness. Instead, the lead FBI agent in the case testified about the video and audio tapes that captured some of the meetings between Jefferson and Mody.

The jury, which convicted Jefferson of 11 of the 16 corruption counts against him, didn't learn about the affair until after the trial. Jefferson, 67, is serving the remainder of his 13-year sentence at the Oakdale Federal Detention Center, slated for release on Aug. 30, 2023.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 23, 2014 9:52 pm

http://rt.com/usa/189996-fbi-fcc-nda-stingray/

September 23, 2014 17:48


Not only are local police departments across the United States increasingly relying on so-called StingRay devices to conduct surveillance on cell phone users, but cops are being forced to keep quiet about the operations, new documents reveal.

Recent reports have indicated that law enforcement agencies from coast to coast have been turning to IMSI-catcher devices, like the StingRay sold by Florida’s Harris Corporation, to trick ordinary mobile phones into communicating device-specific International Mobile Subscriber Identity information to phony cell towers — a tactic that takes the approximate geolocation data of all the devices within range and records it for investigators. Recently, the Tallahassee Police Department in the state of Florida was found to have used their own “cell site simulator” at least 200 times to collect phone data without once asking for a warrant during a three-year span, and details about the use of StingRays by other law enforcement groups continue to emerge on the regular.

But while the merits of whether or not law enforcement officers should legally be able to collect sensitive cell information by masquerading as telecommunication towers remains ripe for debate — and continues for certain to be an issue of contention among civil liberties advocates — newly released documents raise even further questions about how cops use StingRays and other IMSI-catchers to gather great chunks of data concerning the whereabouts of not just criminal suspects, but seemingly anyone in a given vicinity that happens to have a phone in their hand or pocket.

Relentless pleas for details about use of IMSI-catchers by the Tacoma Police Department in Washington state paid off recently when the investigative news site Muckrock obtained a six-page document after following up for several months on a Freedom of Information Act request placed with the TPD.

According to the document, police in Tacoma were forced to sign a non-disclosure agreement, or NDA, with the Federal Bureau of Investigation before they could begin conducting surveillance on cell users with a Harris-sold StingRay.

Although the majority of the December 2012 document is redacted, a paragraph from FBI special agent Laura Laughlin to Police of Chief Donald Ramsdell reveals that Tacoma officers were told they couldn’t discuss their use of IMSI-catchers with anyone.

“We have been advised by Harris Corporation of the Tacoma Police Department’s request for acquisition of certain wireless collection equipment/technology manufactured by Harris Corporation,” the FBI letter reads in part. “Consistent with the conditions on the equipment authorization granted to Harris Corporation by the Federal Communications Commission (FCC), state and local law enforcement agencies must coordinate with the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) to complete this non-disclosure agreement prior to the acquisition and use of the equipment/technology authorized by the FCC authorization.”

Muckrock first obtained documents in August referring to the NDA between the Tacoma PD and the US Department of Justice, but Shawn Musgrave wrote for the site this week that the agreement itself — albeit a highly redacted one — were only provided last Friday.

“The Tacoma document provides key insight into the close cooperation among the FBI, Harris Corporation and the Federal Communications Commission to bar StingRay details from public release,” Musgrave wrote.

“The fact that the FBI received notification from Harris that TPD was interested in a StingRay reveals a surprising level of coordination between a private corporation and a federal law enforcement agency,” Musgrave continued. “The agreement also makes clear that completing the NDA is compulsory by order of the FCC.”

Alan Butler, an appellate advocacy counsel for the Washington, DC-based Electronic Privacy Information Center, or EPIC, was quick to comment to Muckrock about the information revealed by the FOIA request.

“What is so fascinating about the beginning paragraph of the NDA you received,” Butler said, “is that it makes clear that Harris, the FCC and the FBI are working together to facilitate the proliferation of these devices among state and local law enforcement agencies.”

“It’s not clear to me why the FCC would have an interest in requiring law enforcement agencies to sign NDA’s with the FBI, unless they were concerned that the spread of this technology could harm users of American communications networks,” added Butler, whose group has previously filed multiple FOIA requests and legal complaints on its own with the FBI over the use of IMSI-catchers.

And Matt Cagle, an attorney who specialized in surveillance an serves as a police fellow for the American Civil Liberties Union’s Northern California office, tweeted that it’s “alarming” to see that the FCC — a public agency — “is conditioning certification of cell spy tech” without informing the public.
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