another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Jan 04, 2014 2:13 am

SEE LINK FOR FULL STORY

http://www.ajc.com/news/news/crime-law/ ... ing/ncbm9/

Friday, Jan. 3, 2014
No new arrests in bad-police sting
More Atlanta coverage

Deadline looms in APS test-cheating case
Off-duty Atlanta officer arrested for DUI
Athens police officer allegedly assaulted daughter with broom

Nearly a year ago, federal agents unveiled a sting operation that embarrassed police departments across metro Atlanta. It accused officers of using their badges and guns to protect cocaine transactions for a street gang.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Jan 06, 2014 3:51 am

see link for full story
http://www.seattlepi.com/lifestyle/blog ... 114688.php

Book Review: 'Subversives: The FBI's War on Student Radicals, and Reagan's Rise to Power' by Seth Rosenfeld
Saturday, January 4, 2014


Seth Rosenfeld is a true investigative reporter. He spent 30 years filing multiple lawsuits to obtain the documents that illustrate just how much of a rogue agency the FBI under J. Edgar Hoover was and the part that Ronald Reagan played in helping the agency destroy the careers of many innocent people, condone violence, and ignite protest on a massive scale in the 1960's, beginning in Berkeley and spreading throughout the country.

subversives

To tell this story, Rosenfeld filed multiple lawsuits that ultimately forced the FBI to release over 250,000 pages of files. These documents proved what many of us who were alive in the 60's already knew: the FBI was ruthless, often vicious, and above the law. What we probably did not know was the part that Ronald Reagan played and how much it benefited him personally and politically to betray his own union as a mole for the agency.

The main characters through which this story are told are J. Edgar Hoover, Clark Kerr, the president of University of California- Berkeley in the 60's, Mario Savio, the student activist who led the Free Speech Movement at Berkeley, and Reagan, whose alliance with the FBI began in the 1940s and lasted at least until 1972, when Hoover died.

The part of this story which was most shocking to this reporter had to do with the FBI's use of political information and power to boost the political career of Ronald Reagan in ways that were clearly immoral as well as illegal. For others, it may be the exposure of prominent characters in protest organizations such as The Black Panthers as moles for the FBI or any of the many instances of extreme misconduct that the FBI got by with as revealed by their own documents.

Even for those of us who already know that our government has often done bad things when they thought they had good enough reason, this book is going to be shocking and eye-opening. Rosenfeld is to be commended for his perseverance in researching this book despite all odds and for bringing the truth about Hoover's FBI, Reagan, and the war against student activism to the public.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby MacCruiskeen » Mon Jan 06, 2014 10:13 am

fruhmenschen wrote:Blogging is not behaviour. Behaviour is truth.


fruhmenschen wrote:Do we need a George Orwell ap?


fruhmenschen wrote:Time for yet another shave and yet another haircut and yet another dump on the board


Three in a row.

Three in a row.

Three in a row. Day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after dayafter day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after day after fucking day.

You just keep blatantly misusing this board by bumping your own nonsensically-titled threads at random with completely random droppings.

To put the cherry on the turd, you also have a user-name drawn from an alleged FBI programme that is clearly a crock of shit and a piece of deliberate disinformation. (As if the FBI hadn't committed enough real crimes worth publicising and discussing.) This has been pointed out to you. Here. Long ago. You never responded and you don't give a damn.

Nordic was wondering a couple of days ago why this place is turning into a Ghost Town. Questions, questions... Certainly it doesn't help that this is fast becoming a place I'm embarrassed to direct anyone else to.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Jan 07, 2014 4:56 pm

see link for replacement scrotum
http://www.scsun-news.com/silver_city-news/ci_24856780


Border Patrol Agent Accused of Breaking into Elderly Woman’s Home Before Being Tasered


An inebriated U.S. Border Patrol agent is accused of breaking into the home of an elderly woman in New Mexico before being Tasered by police, the Silver City Sun-News reports.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Jan 10, 2014 5:31 am

see link for full story
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2014/0 ... cy-report/

Telecom Believed to Be at Center of Government Court Fight Files Surveillance Transparency Report

01.09.14

Credo CEO Michael Kieschnick, whose company is believed to be at the heart of a historic legal battle over the secrecy of government surveillance.

Credo CEO Michael Kieschnick, whose company is believed to be at the heart of a historic legal battle over the secrecy of government surveillance. Image: Credo

A small telecom believed to be at the center of a historic court battle over government surveillance published its first transparency report on Thursday, noting that it had received 16 government requests for customer data in 2013. But the report may be most significant for what it doesn’t say.

Credo Mobile, the first telecom to release a transparency report, received just 15 requests for customer data pursuant to subpoena, summons or court order and one emergency request for data. But the most significant part of the report may be the government requests it doesn’t list.

A press release accompanying the report notes that it may be incomplete because legal restrictions prevent companies like Credo from disclosing certain kinds of government requests for customer data, such as those requested with a so-called National Security Letter or NSL.

“[D]ue to existing U.S. surveillance statutes that Credo is on the record opposing, such as the USA PATRIOT Act and the FISA Amendments Act, this report and those of other service providers may fall short of full transparency,” the note reads.

The report and statement are significant because Credo is believed to be the anonymous plaintiff at the heart of a historic legal battle over NSLs — a fight that began before documents leaked by Edward Snowden revealed the extent of the government’s sweeping surveillance programs. That legal battle resulted in a court ruling last year saying that NSLs, and the mandatory gag orders that accompany them, are unconstitutional.
Credo transparency report identifying the 16 requests, including one emergency request, that the telecom received from government entities for customer data.

The Credo transparency report identifying 16 requests, including one emergency request, that the telecom received from government entities for customer data.

By law, gag orders can be imposed on telecom companies prohibiting them from disclosing requests for customer information that are issued under an NSL or under Section 215 of the PATRIOT Act. The gag order also prohibits companies from disclosing whether they have complied with the order or challenged it in court.

Last year, after one telecom challenged the NSL it received, U.S. District Judge Susan Illston in San Francisco ruled ultra-secret National Security letters are an unconstitutional impingement on free speech, and ordered the government to stop issuing NSLs, a stunning defeat for the Obama administration’s surveillance practices. She also ordered the government to cease enforcing the gag provision in any other cases. However, she stayed her order for 90 days to give the government a chance to appeal to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which it did.

The telecom, which is not identified in court documents but is believed to be Credo, received an NSL in 2011 from the FBI. The company took the extraordinary and rare step of challenging the underlying authority of the NSL, as well as the legitimacy of the gag order accompanying it. Both challenges are allowed under a federal law that governs NSLs, a power greatly expanded under the Patriot Act that allows the government to get detailed information on Americans’ finances and communications without judicial oversight. The FBI has issued hundreds of thousands of NSLs over the years and has been reprimanded for abusing them, though few requests have been challenged by the recipients.

After the telecom challenged the NSL, the Justice Department made the extraordinary move of suing the company, arguing in court documents that the company was violating the law by challenging its authority. That stunned the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which is representing the anonymous telecom.

“It’s a huge deal to say you are in violation of federal law having to do with a national security investigation,” EFF’s Matt Zimmerman told WIRED at the time. “That is extraordinarily aggressive from my standpoint. They’re saying you are violating the law by challenging our authority here.”

In her ruling, Judge Illston said the NSL nondisclosure provisions “significantly infringe on speech regarding controversial government powers.” She noted that the telecom had been “adamant about its desire to speak publicly about the fact that it received the NSL at issue to further inform the ongoing public debate” on the government’s use of the letters. Illaston also said the review process for challenging an order violated the separation of powers. Because the gag order provisions cannot be separated from the rest of the statute, Illston ruled that the entire statute was unconstitutional.

The judge found that although the government made a strong argument for prohibiting the recipients of NSLs from disclosing to the target of an investigation or the public the specific information being sought by an NSL, the government did not provide compelling argument that the mere fact of disclosing that an NSL was received harmed national security interests. A blanket prohibition on disclosure, she found, was overly broad and “creates too large a danger that speech is being unnecessarily restricted.” She noted that 97 percent of the more than 200,000 NSLs that have been issued by the government were issued with nondisclosure orders.

Although the telecom was not identified in court documents that were released publicly, the Wall Street Journal used details that were revealed in them to narrow the likely plaintiffs to Credo in a story published in 2012. The company’s CEO, Michael Kieschnick, didn’t confirm or deny his company was the unidentified recipient of the NSL, but did release a statement following Illston’s ruling.

“This ruling is the most significant court victory for our constitutional rights since the dark day when George W. Bush signed the Patriot Act,” Kieschnick said. “This decision is notable for its clarity and depth. From this day forward, the U.S. government’s unconstitutional practice of using National Security Letters to obtain private information without court oversight and its denial of the First Amendment rights of National Security Letter recipients have finally been stopped by our courts.”

The redacted documents don’t indicate the exact information the government was seeking from the telecom, and EFF won’t disclose the details. But by way of general explanation, Zimmerman said at the time that the NSL statute allows the government to compel an ISP or website to hand over information about someone who posted anonymously to a message board or to compel a phone company to hand over “calling circle” information — that is, information about who has communicated with someone by phone.

An FBI agent could give a telecom a name or a phone number, for example, and ask for the numbers and identities of anyone who has communicated with that person. “They’re asking for association information – who do you hang out with, who do you communicate with, [in order] to get information about previously unknown people.

“That’s the fatal flaw with this [law],” Zimmerman told WIRED last year. “Once the FBI is able to do this snooping, to find out who Americans are communicating with and associating with, there’s no remedy that makes them whole after the fact. So there needs to be some process in place so the court has the ability ahead of time to step in [on behalf of Americans].”

The company said in its statement Thursday that it supports the full repeal of the USA PATRIOT Act and the FISA Amendments Act and is working to pass Rep. Rush Holt’s Surveillance State Repeal Act.

“Credo, which supports the repeal of the USA PATRIOT Act and FISA Amendments Act, a plea bargain or clemency for Edward Snowden, and an end to the retroactive immunity granted to protect telecom companies from facing charges for colluding with the NSA in the illegal wiretapping of Americans, is releasing the report to increase transparency around governmental requests for customer information,” the company said in a statement.

Credo’s transparency report follows in the tradition begun by Google and other internet service providers to release transparency reports about the number of government requests they receive for customer data. Google and other companies have been battling the government to be able to release more information than their transparency reports currently cover. Late last year, Verizon and AT&T announced that they would be releasing a transparency report in 2014 — their first.

But Credo took a swipe at its fellow telecoms in its statement on Thursday, saying that it had opposed the immunity granted by Congress to telecoms like Verizon and AT&T after previous revelations that the companies cooperated with the Bush administration’s illegal wiretapping program without trying to fight it.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Jan 11, 2014 2:58 am

see link for full story
www.counterpunch.org/2014/01/10/an-agen ... y-mailbox/

January 10-12, 2014
The FBI's Hidden Agenda
An Agent in Every Mailbox
by MALCOLM L. RIGSBY

Forty years ago Senator Frank Church of Idaho during Senate committee hearings on investigation of the FBI and CIA and their misuse of power at home and abroad stated “We have seen today the dark side of those activities, where many Americans, who were not even suspected of crime, were not only spied upon, but they were harassed, they were discredited, and, at times, endangered.” (1)

A few years earlier on March 8, 1971, a group of eight individuals successfully broke into the FBI field office in Media, Pennsylvania where they took numerous files. These files contained documents implicitly involving the FBI and its director, J. Edgar Hoover in a secret program which came to be known as COINTELPRO, standing for Counterintelligence Program. Even with the power of the FBI the burglars have successfully remained free and only this week have their identities become known.

In her new book, The Burglary: The Discovery of J. Edgar Hoover’s Secret FBI, Betty Medsger reveals the narrative stories of the Media break-in and gives insight into the political times of yesteryear and today in light of privacy and national security. Among the files removed from the Media field office were documents directing personnel to initiate surveillance “in every place where people would gather – churches, classrooms, stores down the street, just everything.” Illustrative of the impact of the directive to spy on Americans is the statement “make the people think there is an FBI agent behind every mailbox”. (2) Although the burglars who identified themselves as the Citizens’ Commission to Investigate the FBI delivered documents to several news outlets and key individuals only The Washington Post published documents, refusing to comply with White House demands not publish the documents.

In considering our current concerns with surveillance and the publication of the Snowden documents, should the fear of terrorism be offset with our government’s capability to employ digital surveillance to spy on people without proper due process and equal protection? Should citizens of the U.S. as well as of other countries fear the “unknown” associated with the long arm of law enforcement? Moreover, what should we as civilians draw from COINTELPRO compared with today’s NSA, much less the continuing existence of the FBI and CIA?

Perhaps key to the analysis is whether those who have been labeled criminal and whistleblower by the government are truly the beacons of freedom and knowledge that the citizenry requires in order to rein in the government as the servant of the society? In consideration of these questions is a pivotal observation. Sometimes government must keep secrets and sometimes it must lie to the citizenry. Contrary to popular sentiment this is often necessary in order to keep a peaceable society. Humans after all have a very basic instinct in reacting to fear with anger, hate, and reprisal. These qualities while sometimes positively driven by need for patriotism contrastingly if allowed to arise as purely behavioral responses may be very destructive to the unity and safety of the nation.

Having said this and no doubt distanced several readers let me comment that only in dire circumstances should government directly and purposefully lie in response to public inquiry about its activities involving the citizens of the nation. Citizens of this nation are to be protected by the government, but the government is always accountable to the people and must respond to inquiry. This does not obviate the government’s decision to decline to answer in order to protect the nation, but this is not carte Blanc sanction establishing a bill of secrecy.

Our constitution provides fundamental protections. Two of these protections have been interpreted as privacy and free movement. The Fourth, Fifth, Sixth, Eighth and Fourteenth Amendments listed in the Bill of Rights charge the government with a duty to assure not only Due Process but also Equal Protection to each citizen.

In instances where government is a party to a citizen’s potential loss of life or liberty in movement citizens must be afforded fair opportunity to protect themselves. When government shrugs its shoulders and neglects to intercede to protect the citizen or purposefully involves itself in denial of Due Process and/ or Equal Protection of the citizen then citizens must take unusual steps to correct the deficiency of government.

Where capable of implementing legal process should be employed, but where that fails or is barred, the citizen has the right to challenge government extra-legally. The cases of the Citizens Commission to Investigate the FBI and Edward Snowden are examples of citizens forcing government to acknowledge its hidden agendas.

Malcolm L. Rigsby J.D., Ph.D. is assistant professor of Sociology and Coordinator of Criminal Justice at Henderson State University, Arkansas. His recent study involves religious conversion in prison comparing Islamic and Christian converts and transforming sociality.

NOTES

(1) AARC. 2014. AARC the Assassination Archives and Research Center. Volume 6: Federal Bureau of Investigation. Silver Spring, MD. Retrieved January 8, 2014 (http://www.aarclibrary.org/publib/conte ... s_vol6.htm).

(2) Democracy Now. 2014. ”It Was Time to Do More Than Protest”: Activists Admit to 1971FBI Burglary That Exposed COINTELPRO”. Democracy Now. Retrieved (http://www.democracynow.org/2014/1/8/it ... to_do_more).
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Mar 31, 2014 1:28 am

see link for full story
http://www.pressherald.com/life/Filmmak ... lose_.html

March 31
Filmmaker set to visit Maine puzzled by silence of those who saw 9/11 terrorists up close
At least 10 people in the Portland area encountered Mohamed Atta and his partner the night before the attacks, but only one is willing to be interviewed.


A producer for the National Geographic Channel is coming to Portland this week hoping to interview people who encountered Mohamed Atta and Abdulaziz Alomari, the al-Qaida terrorists who spent about 12 hours in Portland before joining the terrorist attack on Sept. 11, 2001.


But there’s one problem with the project: There’s hardly anyone in Portland to interview.

With the exception of one retired ticket agent who lives in Scarborough, nobody else will come forward to talk about any encounters with the terrorists, said Erik Nelson, president of Creative Differences, a Los Angeles production company that is producing the film for National Geographic.

“We have one guy,” he said. “But where is everybody else? It’s like they dropped off the face of the Earth.”

The Portland footage will be part of a two-hour documentary focusing on the 24 hours prior to the moment the first plane crashed into the North Tower at the World Trade Center in New York City. It will air in September.

At least 10 people in the Portland area saw the two terrorists up close between 5:37 p.m. on Sept. 10, when they checked into the Comfort Inn at 90 Maine Mall Road in South Portland, and 6 a.m. on Sept. 11, when they departed Portland on US Airways en route to Boston, Nelson said.

After checking into the hotel, Atta and Alomari were seen or photographed at four businesses in South Portland: Pizza Hut, a KeyBank drive-up ATM machine, an ATM machine at an Uno Pizzeria & Grill, and at the Jetport gas station. The pair also spent nearly 20 minutes shopping at Walmart on Payne Road in Scarborough, according to a chronology pieced together by the FBI.

According to media accounts at the time, employees at Walmart and Pizza Hut were instructed by the FBI not to comment on what the men bought or ordered.

Robert Erickson, who is producing the documentary and will be traveling to Portland on Wednesday, said he had hoped to interview Laura Wale, who in 2001 was the manager of the Comfort Inn. Wale is now living out of state, and declined to talk.

He also wants to interview Lynda Eaton, Wale’s co-worker at the Comfort Inn. In 2011, Eaton ran a clothing store in Portland, but Erickson says he now can’t find her anywhere on the Internet.

Erickson said he’s also been unsuccessful in tracking down any of the passengers or the two pilots who flew with the terrorists from Portland to Boston on US Airways Flight 5930, a small commuter plane that carried about 10 passengers that morning.

He has interviewed several reporters who covered the story in Portland in 2001, and also spoke with city officials, including Michael Chitwood, who was Portland police chief at the time.

Similar roadblocks have stymied his efforts in Boston as well, he said.

Erickson said he has filed a request with the FBI through the federal Freedom of Information Act seeking the names of people who encountered the terrorists, such as the maid who cleaned their room at the Comfort Inn and the employees at Walmart, but has not received any response.

“The case is getting more mysterious,” Erickson said. “After 13 years, the FBI still has everyone scared into silence?”

Aaron Steps, a supervisory special agent in the FBI’s Portland office, said the agency never comments on third-party public records requests and that federal privacy laws prevent the agency from releasing the names of people who are witnesses or who have not been indicted.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 02, 2014 3:18 am

http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in- ... 2ad90da239
BY AL KAMEN
April 1 at 4:24 pm
The Senate on Tuesday confirmed
career federal prosecutor John Carlin, who had been chief of staff to former FBI director Robert S. Mueller and more recently acting assistant Attorney General for National Security was confirmed 99-1 to be assistant Attorney General for National Security.
The one “no” vote was Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.), whose spokeswoman e-mailed that Heller was “concerned with comments made by Mr. Carlin indicating that he believes the NSA’s bulk data collection program is a lawful practice.” Heller believes the program “violates Americans’ privacy rights and could not in good conscience support this nominee.”
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby MacCruiskeen » Wed Apr 02, 2014 3:28 am

Image
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby justdrew » Wed Apr 02, 2014 10:08 am

fruhmenschen » 01 Apr 2014 23:18 wrote:http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/in-the-loop/wp/2014/04/01/lu-confirmed-for-labor-2-whitaker-for-colombia/?tid=hpModule_308f7142-9199-11e2-bdea-e32ad90da239
BY AL KAMEN
April 1 at 4:24 pm
The Senate on Tuesday confirmed
career federal prosecutor John Carlin, who had been chief of staff to former FBI director Robert S. Mueller and more recently acting assistant Attorney General for National Security was confirmed 99-1 to be assistant Attorney General for National Security.
The one “no” vote was Sen. Dean Heller (R-Nev.), whose spokeswoman e-mailed that Heller was “concerned with comments made by Mr. Carlin indicating that he believes the NSA’s bulk data collection program is a lawful practice.” Heller believes the program “violates Americans’ privacy rights and could not in good conscience support this nominee.”


:thumbsup welcome back, thanks for keeping us up to date on the FBI watch.
By 1964 there were 1.5 million mobile phone users in the US
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby MacCruiskeen » Wed Apr 02, 2014 10:30 am

no thanks at all for burying that really attention-worthy 9/11 article in one of your half-dozen personal vanity-threads spread across this board.

apologies for going off-topic

back on-topic:

Image
"Ich kann gar nicht so viel fressen, wie ich kotzen möchte." - Max Liebermann,, Berlin, 1933

"Science is the belief in the ignorance of experts." - Richard Feynman, NYC, 1966

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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 02, 2014 12:13 pm

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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Apr 02, 2014 10:41 pm

Understanding how taxpayer funded FBI agents control the FBI Brand while controlling the corporate owned/run media.


Because of the groundbreaking work of Salt Lake City attorney Jesse Trentadue and Forensic Investigator Angela Clemente we now know
a little more about the secret FBI Sensitive Informant/Top Echelon Informant programs. Yes that is plural.
see http://bobmccarty.com/2013/12/03/fbis-s ... -the-news/

Also see http://www.leagle.com/decision/In%20FDCO%2020140129A01




Taxpayer funded FBI agents have placed informants in low level to upper level management positions in radio,television and print media.
In place for over 60 years these informants provide the eyes and ears for the FBI Rapid Response Team set up to neutralize any negative press about the death squad activities of FBI agents.

This team has been successful in keeping the evidence out of the media of the FBI 's assassination of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King.
More recently the FBI has managed to cover up it's role in creating the 1993 1st World Trade Center bombing; Oklahoma City bombing; 911; Boston Marathon bombing; Omargh bombing in Ireland and the Mumbai Terrorist Attack in India .FBI agents also took the lead role in the coverup of the Lockerbie Plane bombing and the explosion of TWA Flight 800 over Long Island.

Some examples of the FBI control of media had the History Channel stop showing and selling it's documentary about the the FBI role in assassinating President Kennedy called THE GUILTY MEN see http://www.maryferrell.org/wiki/index.p ... ed_Kennedy

FBI agents created a media blackout of the 1999 trial in Memphis where a jury declared FBI agents had assassinated Martin Luther King see
http://archive.lewrockwell.com/spl2/mlk ... posed.html

The FBI has used your tax dime to hire broadcast journalists to maintain the FBI Brand 24/7.

Here is an example.

Dallas FBI Supervisor Lori Bailey was pulled over DUI driving the wrong way on the freeway.Nothing happened to her and the charges
were dropped. see http://www.ticklethewire.com/2009/09/11 ... guilty-to/


Prior to this event she had entrapped environmentalists in a group called Earth First to bomb power lines in the Arizona Desert
in FBI Operation Thermicon. http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/O ... 788970.php


In today's news FBI supervisor Lori Bailey is featured by the FBI Press Managers.........

see link for full story
http://eastfieldnews.com/2014/04/02/ext ... ng-flames/

EXTINGUISHING FLAMES
02 APR 2014

Tami Kayea is a battalion chief with the Dallas Fire-Rescue Department.



Kayea was one of five women who spoke at Eastfield’s “Women of Courage” event on March 18, which was part of the college’s celebration of Women’s History Month.

The event also featured Eastfield student and U.S. Army Sgt. Krystal Lacey-Fuller, retired FBI agent Lori E. Bailey and two police officers from the TLC reality series, “Police Women of Dallas,” Police Sgt. Tracy Jones and police officer Yvette Gonzalez.
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