FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Apr 02, 2012 1:24 am

Local lawyer's pursuit of federal conspiracy hits screen
by Stephen Dark
see link for full story
http://www.cityweekly.net/utah/blog-24- ... creen.html


2012-03-29 -

Jesse Trentadue will be attending a special 7 p.m. screening tonight of the documentary A Noble Lie at Brewvies. For Trentadue, the film, which looks at events surrounding the devastating Oklahoma City bombing, only "hits the tip of the iceberg."

That iceberg is comprised not only of the events surrounding his brother Kenny's alleged murder at the hands of interrogators in prison after Trentadue believes he was mistakenly identified as one of the Oklahoma bombers, but also killings and covert operations linked to PATCON, which, Trentadue says, stands for Patriot Conspiracy. It refers to alleged undercover operations by FBI agents pretending to be white supremacists infiltrating militia groups.


A Noble Lie, Trentadue says, refers to the lie "the government tells its people to protect itself or for the good of the people." He's been fighting that lie for almost 17 years. This summer, that fight continues with a new hearing in Salt Lake City U.S. District Court before Judge Clark Waddoups. Trentadue has been pressuring the FBI to produce two videotapes from the bombing, which he believes prove that others were involved in the attack.


Trentadue says he worked with a reporter at Newsweek to expose PATCON, which he stumbled across through FOIA requests to the FBI regarding his brother's death, only for the published piece to have any references to PATCON cut out. A website called Sipsey Street Irregulars features both the published article and what it claims to be the parts referring to PATCON that ended up on the cutting room floor here.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Apr 03, 2012 3:13 pm

This Week on Honesty Without Fear
Posted on April 3, 2012 by Lindsey Williams
http://www.whistleblowersblog.org/2012/ ... hout-fear/
Tune in today at 1:00pm EDT to Honesty Without Fear on Progressive Radio Network.

In the first half hour, Jane Turner interviews Rosemary Dew, a 13-year veteran FBI agent and author of "No Backup: My Life as a Female FBI Special Agent." Ms. Dew worked undercover against criminals, spies and terrorists, earning eight commendations. Despite her achievements, she was subjected to severe discrimination and sexual harassment. Ms. Dew and Jane explore how the climate at the FBI not only taints the experience of the FBI's few female agents, but also leads directly to some of the bureau's most harmful failures.

In the second segment, Lindsey Williams and Dr. Aaron Westrick discuss his experience blowing the whistle on defective bulletproof vests. As a research director for one of America’s largest body armor companies, Dr. Westrick was the first official to oppose the sale of Zylon bulletproof vests. Listen to his story of how industry put profits above the lives of law enforcement officers.

You can take action to protect whistleblowers by signing the petition.

Submit Your Question to be asked on air during the show or call in to 1-888-874-4888.

Missed last week's episode?? You can listen to the podcast.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Apr 03, 2012 11:43 pm

see link for full story
http://sfappeal.com/news/2012/04/supes- ... ssible.php

Supes Approve SFPD/FBI Ordinance, Veto From Mayor Lee Possible

by Bay City News

April 3, 2012
A proposal to require San Francisco police to adhere to local and state laws when they assist in federal counterterrorism investigations was given final approval by the Board of Supervisors today but faces a possible veto by Mayor Ed Lee.

The legislation focuses on how the Police Department collaborates with the FBI and its local Joint Terrorism Task Force while collecting intelligence in potential terrorism cases.

Under a 2007 memorandum of understanding with San Francisco police, the FBI authorizes a variety of intelligence gathering activities not allowed by state or city laws, such as the surveillance of someone who is not suspected of any criminal activity.

Supervisor Jane Kim, who authorized the ordinance approved today, said that it "would ensure our community, once and for all, that we're protecting their civil rights" by codifying into law that police officers must follow the local and state laws.

She said the ordinance was important to the community and cited the dozens of people who came out to a March 1 committee hearing on the issue to tell emotional stories of racial profiling and discrimination.




The board would need eight votes to override a mayoral veto. Supervisors Scott Wiener, Malia Cohen, Carmen Chu, Sean Elsbernd and Mark Farrell were the five board members who opposed the proposal.

Before the vote, Kim addressed criticisms of the legislation, including that some considered it redundant and that supervisors should not codify Police Department general orders.

"Why do those philosophical arguments carry more weight than the safety, trust and civil rights of our citizens?" Kim said.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 04, 2012 8:50 am

I guess the book reviewer never heard about the civil trial
held in 1999 at Memphis Tennessee where the Martin Luther King
family sued a man named Jowers in Civil Court because the Assistant Attorney General Eric Holder refused to reopen the King Assassination
based on new evidence the King family had uncovered.
The new evidence showed that FBI agents were the principal architects behind the assassination of Dr King.
The King family used the Civil Trial to enter their evidence into a public
record for future generations to examine. The trial transcript is put up at the MLK website.
The jury agreed with the evidence presented by the King family and members of the jury held a press conference after the trial saying it was a clear case of the FBI assassinating Dr. King.
The trial attorney for the King family, William Pepper has authored two books detailing the trial evidence..
The books are :
ORDERS TO KILL
and ACT OF STATE:THE EXECUTION OF MARTIN LUTHER KING
There was a media blackout of the trial.
To find out more GOOGLE
james douglass mlk rockwell
The question that always needs to be asked is " if you are the law enforcement agency investigating the crime you just committed can you get away with the crime"?

More propaganda from the taxpayer funded crime family called the FBI, eh?


Did the Klan Kill MLK? A New Book Argues Wide Conspiracy
Apr 4, 2012 4:45 AM EDT
http://www.thedailybeast.com/articles/2 ... iracy.html
Many think that the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. is a closed case, but The Awful Grace of God contends that James Earl Ray may have been part of a wide conspiracy. By R.M. Schneiderman.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Apr 05, 2012 12:05 am

Judge rules against FBI in case of civil rights informant
http://www.ajc.com/news/judge-rules-aga ... 07053.html

For the AJC

MEMPHIS — A federal judge has declined to reverse an order directing the FBI to produce an index of records of informant Ernest Withers, a civil rights-era Memphis photographer.


Withers, who died in 2007, was known as "the civil rights photographer" for iconic images of the late Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.

According to The Commercial Appeal, U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson of Washington ruled Wednesday against an FBI request. The paper said Withers' file is now subject to release under the Freedom of Information Act.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Apr 05, 2012 3:38 pm

Angela Clemente is the forensic investigator who uncovered the explosives cache in the home of convicted Oklahoma City bomber Terry Nichols; Clemente also single handed uncovering the evidence in the case of New York FBI agent Lyndley Devecchio who was charged with murder three years ago in a case that had more fixes in it than an episode of THIS OLD HOUSE.

see http://www.cashill.com/twa800/trials_an ... emente.htm

As a reward for her efforts 5'1" Clemente was given a severe beating by DeVeccio's FBI Crime Family. see

http://www.cashill.com/twa800/indictmentFBI.htm




Angela is still hoping to bring FBI agent DeVecchio to justice. She sent me this story in today's news.

Sent: Thursday, April 5, 2012 12:38 PM

Angela has a file to share with you on SkyDrive. To view it, click the link below.

https://skydrive.live.com/view.aspx/Doc ... e&app=Word
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Apr 08, 2012 10:22 pm

William Hague orders 'body in a bag' spy evidence to be heard in secret
see link for full story
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article ... ecret.html

By Kirsty Walker
8 April 2012


Codebreaker: William Hague has ordered that key evidence in the inquest into the macabre death of MI6 officer Gareth Williams (pictured) must be heard in secret

Codebreaker: William Hague has ordered that key evidence in the inquest into the macabre death of MI6 officer Gareth Williams (pictured) must be heard in secret

William Hague has ordered that key evidence in the inquest into the macabre death of an MI6 officer must be heard in secret.

The Foreign Secretary has signed an order to prevent the disclosure of details about the spy’s work with both the British and U.S. secret services.

The body of Gareth Williams, 31, was found in a padlocked sports bag in the bath of his flat 20 months ago.

He was a codebreaker for GCHQ, the government listening station, on secondment to MI6 and had worked closely with the American security services.

There have been claims that he was murdered by another country’s spies.

But Mr Hague, who has responsibility for MI6, has signed a public interest immunity certificate authorising the withholding of details about Mr Williams’s secret work and joint operations with the Americans.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Apr 09, 2012 1:15 pm

see link for full story
http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/7 ... nt-Arrest/

Texas FBI agent sentenced in NY to a year in prison after having sex with source and lying

April 09, 2012

NEW YORK A former Texas FBI agent has been sentenced in New York to a year and a day in prison. He was convicted of making false statements about a confidential source after having an intimate relationship with her.
Authorities said Busby had a sexual relationship with the woman in 2008 and 2009 after she became a confidential source. She had been arrested on identity theft and related charges.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 11, 2012 1:18 am

see link for full story
http://www.rgj.com/article/20120410/NEW ... unt-by-FBI


American Indians questioned about Nevada bear hunt by FBI
Apr. 10, 2012
Jeff DeLong


Controversy over Nevada’s black bear hunt took a new twist Tuesday, with American Indians opposed to the hunt saying they’ve been questioned over the matter by the FBI.

Representatives of the American Indian Movement who spoke out against killing Nevada’s bears on religious grounds last month are claiming their rights were violated by questioning by an agent of the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force.

“It’s a civil rights violation. We did nothing wrong,” said Lisa Bonta, a member of the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony and a founding member of AIM’s newly formed Northern Nevada chapter.

Bonta said she and her husband Johnny were questioned April 2 at her Reno apartment by George Cholico, a Washoe County detective attached to the FBI’s terrorism task force in Reno.

Cholico declined to discuss the matter with the Reno Gazette-Journal, referring questions to the FBI’s Las Vegas office. FBI spokesman Patrick Turner said in an e-mail statement that the bureau was investigating a citizens complaint, “conducted an assessment and determined no further investigation was warranted at this time.”

The American Indians say they are looking at their legal options after Bonta’s questioning and the questioning of another, Northern Paiute Daniel Thayer, at his workplace the following day. Another, AIM chapter president Raquel Arthur, said she observed agents watching her home around the same time but was not questioned.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 11, 2012 1:32 am

see link for full story
http://www.salon.com/2012/04/09/journal ... singleton/

Monday, Apr 9, 2012
Obama targets journalists
By Glenn Greenwald

[Glenn Greenwald is on vacation this week and three writers will be filling in for him]

By Jesselyn Radack



For two years I have been writing about the criminalization of whistleblowing, or as Glenn Greenwald has put it more aptly, the “war on whistleblowers.” I’m an attorney with the Government Accountability Project, the nation’s leading whistleblower organization.

How did I get into this line of work? Because I myself was a whistleblower when I worked as a Legal Advisor at the Justice Department and blew the whistle when my advice not to interrogate “American Taliban” John Walker Lindh without an attorney (and, parenthetically, not to torture him) was ignored and then “disappeared” from the file in contravention of a federal court discovery order. After I blew the whistle, the Justice Department retaliated against me by, among other things, placing me under criminal investigation, referring me to the state bars in which I’m licensed as a lawyer based on a secret report to which I did not have access, and putting me on the “No-Fly” List. (The D.C. Bar charges are still pending 8½ years later.) I write about the experience in my new book TRAITOR: The Whistleblower and the American Taliban. Glenn Greenwald, for whom I am substituting here, wrote an eloquent foreword for the book.

While the Bush administration treated whistleblowers unmercifully, the Obama administration has been far worse. It is actually prosecuting them, and doing so under the Espionage Act — one of the most serious charges that can be leveled against an American. The Espionage Act is an archaic World War I-era law meant to go after spies, not whistleblowers. Strangely, using it to target the media and sources is the brainchild of neo-conservative Gabriel Schoenfeld, who would have sources who disclose information to reporters, journalists who then write about it for newspapers, the newspapers that publish the information and the publisher itself all be held criminally liable.

Everyone wants to know why Obama, with his pledge to “protect whistleblowers,” would do this. After all, Obama’s transition agenda recognized that “[o]ften the best source of information about waste, fraud, and abuse in government is an existing government employee committed to public integrity and willing to speak out. Such acts of courage and patriotism, which can sometimes save lives and often save taxpayer dollars, should be encouraged rather than stifled.” That’s not just a broken promise, it’s a complete reversal.

At first I thought Obama’s war on whistleblowers was meant to appease the intelligence establishment, which saw him as weak. I soon recognized this assault as a devious way to create bad precedent for going after journalists. All the Espionage Act cases involve allegations that the government employee “leaked” information (or retained information for the purpose of leaking it) to journalists.

The government’s spectacularly failed case against NSA whistleblower Tom Drake claimed that he allegedly retained allegedly classified information for the purpose of leaking it to Siobhan Gorman, then with the Baltimore Sun. It turned out that he disclosed unclassified information about a failed and wasteful (multi-billion dollar) NSA spy program that compromised Americans’ privacy. FBI translator Shamai Liebowitz pleaded guilty to leaking information to a blogger. Leibowitz made his disclosure because of an all-too-real fear that Israel might strike nuclear facilities in Iran, a move he saw as potentially disastrous. State Department arms expert Steven Kim is accused of leaking to Fox News that North Korea was planning to respond to a U.N. Security Council resolution by setting off another nuclear test — surely of public interest to China and South Korea. And, of course, Army Private Bradley Manning is accused of leaking to WikiLeaks.

In the most extreme proof yet that the war on whistleblowers is also a war on journalists, Glenn Greenwald’s explosive piece last night detailed Department of Homeland Security (DHS) repeatedly detaining and interrogating Oscar- and Emmy-nominated documentarian Laura Poitras, who has filmed three of my NSA clients for the third installment of her War on Terror trilogy. Not surprisingly, her latest film will be about the government’s ever-expanding secret domestic surveillance, NSA treating our nation like a foreign country for spying purposes, and the war on whistleblowers.

In yet other examples, for the Espionage Act prosecution of former CIA officer Jeffrey Sterling, the government has subpoenaed New York Times journalist James Risen three times to testify about whether Sterling was his source. The issue is on appeal in the 4th Circuit from a lower court ruling that Risen had a “qualified reporter’s privilege” not to do so. Going after the media is also evidenced by last week’s Indictment of CIA officer John Kiriakou, which is laced with thinly-veiled references to “Journalist A” (Matthew Cole of ABC News) and “Journalist B” (Scott Shane of the New York Times). “Journalist C” (Richard Esposito of ABC News), mentioned in the charges, mysteriously disappeared from the indictment.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 11, 2012 2:07 am

FBI whistle-blower trying to get book published
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Posted April 10, 2012 10:16 p.m.


WASHINGTON (WLS) - A lawyer for FBI whistle-blower Sibel Edmonds said Tuesday the bureau's prepublication review office has adopted overly expansive restrictions that are preventing Edmonds from publishing a book about her life at the FBI.

see link for full story

http://www.wlsam.com/Article.asp?id=2432915&spid=
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 11, 2012 12:32 pm

This Internet provider pledges to put your privacy first. Always.
see link for full story

http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-57412 ... st-always/
Step aside, AT&T and Verizon. A new privacy-protecting Internet service and telephone provider still in the planning stages could become the ACLU's dream and the FBI's worst nightmare.
Declan McCullagh
by Declan McCullagh April 11, 2012

Nicholas Merrill is planning to revolutionize online privacy with a concept as simple as it is ingenious: a telecommunications provider designed from its inception to shield its customers from surveillance.

Merrill, 39, who previously ran a New York-based Internet provider, told CNET that he's raising funds to launch a national "non-profit telecommunications provider dedicated to privacy, using ubiquitous encryption" that will sell mobile phone service and, for as little as $20 a month, Internet connectivity.

The ISP would not merely employ every technological means at its disposal, including encryption and limited logging, to protect its customers. It would also -- and in practice this is likely more important -- challenge government surveillance demands of dubious legality or constitutionality.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 11, 2012 6:45 pm

see link for full story
http://www.theatlanticwire.com/national ... fbi/51027/
What J. Edgar Hoover Did to a New York Times Critic of the FBI
Reuters



John R. Bohrer, Capital New York

In the early 1970s, the Federal Bureau of Investigation considered it pertinent biographical information that The New York Times' Tom Wicker suffered from “mental halitosis.” Since this is not, strictly speaking, a medical condition, they qualified the classification with “apparently.”

Internal documents obtained by Capital New York through the Freedom of Information Act reveal that the bureau began keeping tabs on Wicker, who died last November, after he published a wide-ranging article for the New York Times Magazine asking, “What Have They Done Since They Shot Dillinger?”

The 1969 article took the F.B.I. to task for expending its resources on bank robberies and sensational murders that garnered them publicity while doing little to no work investigating criminal syndicates and the nuanced financial crimes of much more consequence to the national public interest. Wicker laid the blame at the feet of the man who embodied the bureau—its one and only director, J. Edgar Hoover—for being a practiced P.R. man more than a crime fighter, too concerned with bureaucratic protocol, too slow on civil rights, and too long in the job to right the bureau’s course.

With that article, the F.B.I. began a file on a man they had ignored as “a screwball” despite his having been the Washington bureau chief for the most influential newspaper in the country. It would contain rumors from an unknown third-hand source, a hunt for ulterior motives, and the director’s general disdain. In short, Wicker’s file provides a case study of the personal terms in which the bureau dealt with critical journalists in the final years of Hoover’s reign.

ON MARCH 30, 1970, A LETTER REACHED HOOVER at his desk in F.B.I. headquarters. It had been expedited in its delivery via the director’s “Special Correspondents List,” from a retired special agent named Leon A. Francisco. Francisco felt it his duty to report a conversation he’d had with “an acquaintance of mine here in Washington, Connecticut … a professional writer,” in which he learned that Wicker had received a $60,000 advance—approximately $350,000 today—to write a book “which will attack you and the Bureau.”

“The book is to come out within about six months, and, presumably, will be along the scurrilous lines of Wicker’s New York Times Magazine article of December 28, 1969,” Francisco wrote. His writer friend did not know the name of the publisher, only that his source was reliable and that “a $60,000.00 advance is an unusually large one.”

In an accompanying memo, assistant director for the Criminal Records division Thomas E. Bishop noted that a review of bureau files showed “previous cordial relations” with the professional writer—whose identity was not released as it might constitute an invasion of privacy—“whom we have assisted in connection with his writing.” As for his recommendation on Wicker, Bishop wrote, “This matter is being followed by the Crime Records Division with a view toward obtaining an advance copy of Wicker’s forthcoming book.”

This was not the first they’d heard of a Wicker book. An earlier F.B.I. memo recorded that on the morning of February 9, 1970, Wicker’s research assistant—name redacted—called to request an interview with someone knowledgeable at the bureau to discuss items for a possible book. Wicker, the caller said, “wanted to get the “other side,” that is “both sides,” of the various matters discussed by Wicker concerning the Director and the F.B.I. in the magazine article.”

The caller, who identified himself as “regularly employed as a reporter for Congressional Quarterly,” was likely Dupre Jones, who had managed the Times’ Washington research library and assisted Wicker on his 1968 book, JFK and LBJ. Jones passed away in January.

In fact, another bureau memo indicates that Wicker did his due diligence: His secretary phoned the director’s office five weeks in advance of the article’s publication. Hoover declined to speak with him then, too.

ON NOVEMBER 19, 1970, THE TIMES PRINTED A WICKER column titled “Calvin Coolidge’s Revenge,” after Hoover’s latest broadside against his critics. Wicker playfully mocked the director’s hypersensitivity, but noted “this kind of thing stops being funny when it is realized that the F.B.I. is a police agency” with a mountain of personal dossiers on American citizens. He concluded that no president would dare fire him or even simply “tell the old boy to shut up.”

Hoover had the article duplicated for nearly every high-ranking bureau member listed on his interoffice stationery, including a note, in excellent penmanship: “This jerk has mental halitosis,” with his powerful “H” struck beneath.

The column appeared just as Hoover received an update from Special Agent Francisco, with more news from the professional writer. “[Name redacted] informed me yesterday that the publishing of the book had been held up for reasons not known to him, but that now his agent has advised him that the book is being prepared for publication on an unknown date by Random House.”

The publisher identified, they now had leverage. Milton A. Jones, a top aide in the Crime Records division, wrote in a memo, “As you are aware, Random House published Don Whitehead’s 'The F.B.I. Story,' as well as a young reader’s edition of this work, and 'J. Edgar Hoover on Communism,' and has indicated an interest in publishing a book by the Director on the New Left movement.”

Jones also dug up some pertinent information on Wicker at the request of Clyde Tolson, Hoover’s faithful Number Two. The memo included a brief sketch of Wicker’s early life, career, and his relationship with the F.B.I.

“The Bureau has never conducted an investigation concerning Wicker,” the final memo said. “Files do reflect that he was characterized by at least one associate as a 'screwball.' In 1957, he reportedly went over Great Falls in the Potomac River and received considerable publicity.” Wicker, then a correspondent for the Winston-Salem Journal, capsized in his canoe and became one of two people known to have survived the 76-foot plunge and its multiple drops over massive, craggy rocks.

More to the point of Jones’ memo was determining the source of Wicker’s discontent with the F.B.I. It reported that Wicker had taken his son and a group of boys on a tour of bureau headquarters in 1967, and that the journalist had once been invited to a party for a Communist leader held at the Cuban mission to the United Nations (it could not be confirmed whether he attended). The memo catalogued his criticisms of Hoover going back five years, taking offense at a 1968 column that suggested President-elect Nixon could have gotten dovish presidential candidate Eugene McCarthy to join his administration if he had named McCarthy director of the F.B.I. and Hoover ambassador to the United Nations.

Yet finding no outwardly symptoms for his criticisms, Jones pointed the finger at two familiar culprits: the Kennedys and the Times.

“A review of [Bureau files] fails to indicate any obvious reasons for Wicker’s antagonism towards the F.B.I. Would appear he is strongly entrenched in the Kennedy political camp and the longtime antipathy of 'The New York Times' is well known.”

It continued, “Wicker wrote the introduction to [name redacted’s] current book and probably wrote most of the book for [redacted].” This almost certainly refers to John Osborne’s first annual installment of The Nixon Watch, which had just been published.

And, as with many small insults the director bothered to write, Hoover’s diagnosis became F.B.I. dogma. Regarding the “Coolidge’s Revenge” piece, the memo on Wicker to the bureau files would read, “In connection with this column the Director commented that Wicker is apparently suffering from mental halitosis.”

"MENTAL HALITOSIS" WAS A FAVORITE INSULT OF HOOVER'S, one he used many times over the years. That it was directed at Wicker was originally reported by Anthony Summers in his 1993 book Official and Confidential: The Secret Life of J. Edgar Hoover, along with other instances of the Director’s hyperbolic media commentary. Drew Pearson was “a jackal” and Jimmy Wechsler “a rat,” while Walter Lippmann was the “coyote of the press” and Art Buchwald a “sick alleged humorist.” Hoover did worse to others, maliciously divulging secrets, like telling the White House that columnist Joe Alsop was gay.

More slights toward Wicker would follow and be filed away for reference. Hoover distributed a 1971 William F. Buckley, Jr., column that accused Wicker of selective reporting on the prison death of Black Panther George Jackson. “This clearly portrays Wicker’s bias + tendency to angle the real facts. H.” He had this to say about a 1971 Wicker article in the Boston Globe: “The usual Wicker lies interspersed with innumerable “faceless informers.” H.” (Along with that clipping, the name of the paper’s editor was attached.)

In the meantime, the F.B.I.’s concerns over a Wicker book had been put to rest. A December 11, 1970 memo from Bishop relayed a conversation he had had with someone—name redacted—at Random House, who “emphatically stated that Random House was not in the process of publishing any book written by Wicker and would not under any circumstances publish a book by him that would be critical of the Bureau or the Director.” (Though Wicker may have explored the idea, his high-dollar book advance was nothing but a rumor.)

The redacted Random House employee “stated that he would like Mr. Hoover to know that he considers the Director a “friend” and would never publish any book critical of him.” Furthermore, the source “stated that he saw Wicker a week or so ago at a cocktail party, at which time Wicker told him he was very busy with his normal duties for the “New York Times” and that he has no time to write any books.” Yet, the Random House source couldn’t rule out whether Wicker might be collecting material for a future publication.

WICKER'S FILE TOOK A TURN IN TONE after Hoover’s death in May of 1972. The article clippings with reassuring letters from Hoover loyalists around the country stopped. Wicker continued to make mentions of the bureau in his reporting, but with Hoover gone, it had stopped paying attention.

Then in June 1974, Wicker called F.B.I. headquarters to request some interviews for a follow-up to his 1969 Times magazine piece. An internal memo said, “He intends that the current article … to be a comparison of the Bureau today with what it was at the time of the previous article.”

The memo revisited the Wicker file compiled in the Hoover years and then made these observations: “Although experience demands that we be guarded in our approach to Mr. Wicker, his requests afford us an excellent opportunity to demonstrate the professional validity of the “open stance” policy with the media and to present our side of many crucial issues to a major news outlet.”

Two weeks later, a date was set for Wicker to interview the F.B.I. director.

The article never ran.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 11, 2012 7:14 pm

see link for full story
http://www.sfbg.com/politics/2012/04/11 ... ment-58493
Lee veto protects the SFPD's ability to spy on you
04.11.12 - 2:46 pm | Steven T. Jones |


Mayor Ed Lee yesterday vetoed legislation that would have banned San Francisco Police Department officers working with the FBI from conducting covert surveillance on law-abiding citizens. Not terrorists, not criminals, not foreign spies, but people like you (well, people like you who are Muslim, protesters, visitors to certain websites, or people who otherwise have caught the attention of the FBI) who are not even suspected of criminal activity.

While Lee says he will support a so-called “consensus ordinance” introduced yesterday by Sup. Jane Kim, the sponsor of the vetoed measure, his veto letter makes clear that he wants San Francisco to reserve the right to spy on whoever the FBI wants to, echoing post-9/11 fear-mongering and right-wing bait-and-switch tactics while still trying to placate civil libertarians with his rhetoric.

“This ordinance intends to amend the Administrative code to require the San Francisco Police Department to either terminate a counterterrorism Memorandum of Understanding with the Federal Bureau of Investigation or materially restrict the interaction between the two law enforcement bodies,” his veto letter begins.

That MOU with the FBI is the one that the SFPD secretly entered into back in 2007 (which was exposed last year by the American Civil Liberties Union after a long public records court battle) that placed SFPD officers under FBI control without recognizing state and local privacy and civil rights restrictions. The resulting scandal caused the SFPD to apologize and work with the Police Commission on a general order clarifying that local officers must obey those restrictions, which Lee, Police Chief Greg Suhr, and some supervisors have maintained is good enough.

But six members of the Board of Supervisors didn't agree with this “trust us” approach, noting that future chiefs and Police Commissioners can change the policy at any time, and saying protecting the privacy and civil rights of city residents and visitors is an important enough issue to be formally codified in local law.

John Crew, the police practices expert for the ACLU, has said that the only reason to oppose the ordinance is if officials want to reserve the right to spy on law-abiding citizens, and Lee seemed to signal as much by writing “the restrictions it places on our Police Department overly constrain their ability to protect our City from very real threats.” And he enumerated those “threats” by equating those being spied on for their political beliefs or because of their ethnicity with terrorists who want to blow us up.

“Recently, the United States Department of Homeland Security raised San Francisco's risk rating – we are now considered the fourth-highest terrorism target risk in the nation along with cities like New York and Washington, DC. Protecting San Franciscans is the most important responsibility I have as Mayor. This goal, however, does not justify a trampling of constitutionally protected principles, and we have a government structure in place to ensure this dichotomy never materializes,” Lee wrote.

See what he did there? There was nothing in this measure that limited the FBI or SFPD's ability to monitor suspected terrorists, which they're already free to broadly define, particularly since 9/11 and the USA Patriot Act and other police state changes, including the very creation of the Orwellian-named Department of Homeland Security. But civil libertarians have been trying to hold the line and prevent the FBI – which has a long and sordid history of spying on law-abiding citizens and using that intel for political sabotage – from going after anyone who looks different or criticizes this country's leaders or policies.

It's great that Lee, who was a civil rights attorney decades ago, gives lip service to that concern and says he's willing to work with the Coalition for a Safe San Francisco on legislation that would allow a hearing by the Police Commission of any future JOAs with the FBI after it's been signed. But Kim's statement that, “It's a compromise that essentially will accomplish the same thing” just isn't true, as the activists who pushed this tell us. The vetoed measure was already a compromise, with Kim making many amendments at the request of Suhr and repeatedly delaying final consideration of the measure so any other concerns could be addressed.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Apr 12, 2012 11:32 am

2 reads
1st read

Report: UC pepper spraying could have been prevented

Nanette Asimov

Thursday, April 12, 2012
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.c ... 1O1S0T.DTL

2nd read


for the uneducated and the uneducable

high school dropout can't find work so he joins the Marines to Semper Fi
and collect some money.
High school dropout is sent to Paris Island to be all he can be. He is trained to kill women and children and a occasional freedom fighter trying to protect his wife from being raped by Mr Semper Fi.
High school dropout ships out to invade Iraq for USEmpire and US oil companies.
American oil companies are struggling with the problem of Peak Oil.
Peak oil means we no longer have a infinite supply of oil.Maybe you saw the documentary film END OF SUBURBIA see
http://www.endofsuburbia.com/previews.htm

high school drop out didn't because his high school teachers were too busy DUMBING him down
see
http://www.johntaylorgatto.com/bookstor ... nblum1.htm

High School dropout manages to kill a couple hundred women and children while throwing in a occasional rape. Mr Sempi Fi has now been transformed into Mr serial killer.
Mr high school dropout/serial killer now begins to experience extreme depression from his actions. Mental Wealth workers call it Post Traumatic
Stress Syndrome. But the only people who experience traumatic stress in Iraq are the Iraqi women being raped by Semper Fi's before they shot and killed them.
Good thing serial killer/high school dropout has never read the research
of Ian Stevenson MD whose groundbreaking study of 3,000 children who remember previous lives provides the science for the existence of reincarnation. see
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/obituar ... enson.html

What this means for high school dropout is that he will be coming back
again for another life . Of course so will the people he murdered , so for practical purposes he has another couple hundred lives he has to live getting "wacked" by the life forms he semper fi'd.

The difference this time is the raped and murdered have had some time to ponder while they wait for him to pass over, how they will "do" Mr Semper Fi- the high school drop out serial killer.

Mr high school dropout comes back from Iraq out of work unless he re-enlists. There are not to many job openings for serial killers until he lands a job working with his be all you can be buddies at the UC police department or the FBI.
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