Policing by Consent

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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Apr 14, 2016 9:21 pm

couple of reads

let god sort out the truth

these are the people running your
criminal justice system


1.


http://www.sltrib.com/news/3778734-155/ ... oking-of-a

Investigation into alleged choking of a man by Beaver County sheriff remains mystery

April 14 2016

The Utah attorney general's office Thursday again argued that records surrounding allegations that Beaver County Sheriff Cameron Noel choked a potential witness following a May 2014 homicide should not be released to The Salt Lake Tribune.

Blaine Ferguson, assistant attorney general, told the Utah State Records Committee that documents relating to the immediate aftermath of the homicide of Reginald Searcy, 45, in Beaver were protected because an FBI investigation of Noel was ongoing. Releasing the information could interfere with the two-year-old case, Ferguson said.

"The attorney general's office has demonstrated the [protected] classification is justified," Ferguson said, citing a letter to the committee by FBI Agent Michelle W. Pickins that said releasing the records would "jeopardize the integrity" of the ongoing civil rights investigation of Noel.

Searcy was stabbed to death by his wife, Dorothy Louise Searcy, 44, at Beaver's Country Inn Motel. Her son, then-28-year-old Timothy Scott Wilson, was with his fiancée in a nearby room. When officers arrived, Wilson became agitated, according to documents. After Wilson was placed in handcuffs, according to witness accounts, Noel placed two hands around the man's neck and choked him



2.
Ex FBI agent child porn collector 'not a danger' to school
Seattle man gets $1,000 fine, isn't banned from home across from Ballard school

http://www.seattlepi.com/local/crime/ar ... 236986.php


Friday, April 8, 2016

A Seattle child pornography collector with ties to the FBI won’t go to prison and may be able to return to his home across from a Ballard-area elementary school.

Cybersecurity consultant Brian Haller was spared prison Friday after he was caught with 600 photos and videos picturing the sexual exploitation of children as young as 9. Haller, 40, asked that he be allowed to return to his home across the street from West Woodland Elementary School in the Ballard area of Seattle

Haller was caught with child pornography showing children aged 9 to 14. A psychologist hired by Haller suggested children at the school -- where students range in age from 5 to 12 – could be protected so long as Haller covered his front windows and stayed inside during school hours



Prior to his arrest in July, Haller , a former FBI agent, led the Seattle chapter of an FBI-private sector group tasked with fighting computer crime and cyberterrorism. As a volunteer, Haller had access to a secure FBI online platform and email system, though he is not alleged to have used either to collect child porn.



Usually, Haller’s crimes would carry a four or five-year prison term. Instead, federal prosecutors asked that Haller be spared even jail.
.

Usually, a defendant like Haller would face four to five years in federal prison. Had he been prosecuted in Washington state court, the standard sentence for his crime was a year in prison



Haller moved to Seattle in 2001, going to work for a multi-billion-dollar government contractor Booz Allen Hamilton. A Booz Allen spokeswoman said Haller resigned from the company in 2011.

On Playpen, Haller was a “newbie” known as “jbeldar.” In his first nine days on the site, he spent seven hours surfing it.



An FBI special agent noted in court papers that Haller’s collection included a 40-minute video showing the sexual exploitation of an 11-year-old girl.

As stomach-turning as his videos were, far worse were moving through Playpen. Investigators note Haller passed close to one such video showing a mother sexually assaulting her young daughter; other members of the site are accused of trading rape videos of drugged or bound children.




3.



The F.B.I. Deemed Agents Faultless in 150 Shootings - The New York Times
http://www.nytimes.com/.../in-150-shoot ... less.htm...
Jun 18, 2013 - In most of the shootings, the F.B.I.'s internal investigation was the only official ... the records show, deemed the shooting to have been justified. .... the bureau's image goes down the toilet if it doesn't investigate itself properly.”.
The FBI's Nearly Unbelievable Record of "Justified" Shootings - Slate
http://www.slate.com/.../ibragim_todash ... njustifi...
Jun 19, 2013 - We're still waiting for the FBI to finish its internal investigation into exactly what ... The FBI's Nearly Unbelievable Record of "Justified" Shootings .... gay people, these scholars also found themselves on the defensive about their ...
The FBI's License to Kill: Agents Have Been Deemed "Justified" in Every Shooting Since 1993 | Democracy Now!
http://www.democracynow.org/2013/6/21/t ... ill_agents
Jun 21, 2013 - "The F.B.I. Deemed Agents Faultless in 150 Shootings. ... Information Act lawsuit to obtain the internal records of FBI shooting reviews—every ... happened; they defer to the Federal Bureau of Investigation to investigate itself.
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Apr 23, 2016 12:02 am

see Dirk Gibson's research paper on the FBI
https://books.google.com/books?id=VnQdu ... bi&f=false
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Apr 25, 2016 1:56 am

http://www.thesullenbell.com/2016/04/24 ... struction/

attraction destruction

Barack Obama ended opium eradication efforts in Afghanistan in 2009, effectively green lighting Afghan opium production and the Afghan heroin trade. By 2010, all US efforts to eradicate Afghan opium ceased. It has been US policy to allow Afghan opium growing and the heroin trade since. US heroin deaths tripled from 3,036 in 2010 to 10,574 in 2014 as a result.

{**} https://www.youtube.com/music audio {**}

Vanda Felbab-Brown at the Brookings Institution, a liberal think tank that often writes reports supporting the Obama Administration, penned “No Easy Exit: Drugs and Counternarcotics Strategies in Afghanistan” in advance of the April 2016 UN Summit on Drugs (UNGASS). No way out for Uncle Sam is more like it. The report is notable for what it omits, which is any mention of the heroin epidemic, the deadliest illicit drug epidemic in history, or any of the tens of thousands of Americans killed by heroin since Obama took office.

The Bush Administration had an Afghan opium eradication program in effect, carried out by DynCorp. Obama didn’t renew DynCorp’s eradication contracts, effectively ending all US efforts to eradicate opium. (Afghan government eradication efforts in 2014, resulted in 1.1% of the Afghan opium crop being eradicated. The NY Times reported that the Afghan government will no longer eradicate opium crops as of 2016.) Heroin is made from opium.

Ms. Felbab-Brown might as well have said “let them eat cake” to the tens of thousands of Americans killed by heroin since 2009, the millions now hooked on heroin and the tens of millions living in terror because of loved ones now hooked on this deadly poison.

US policy changed to permit opium growing and the heroin trade during Obama’s first year in office, as a way to minimize US troop casualties in Afghanistan. And to maximize US civilian casualties in the US from heroin.

The CIA defines blowback as the ‘consequences at home of operations overseas.’

Since ending eradication efforts, US heroin deaths shot up from 3,036 (2010) to 5,925 (2012) to 10,574 in 2014. The heroin death toll continues to shoot up as does the number of heroin users, from the 1,500,000 US heroin users in 2010 to 4,500,000 users in 2015. As heroin deaths under Obama tripled, so has heroin usage.

There were 7,600 hectares of Afghan opium poppies when the War in Afghanistan began in 2001. (1 hectare = 2.5 US acres.) In 2009, there were 123,000 hectares. By 2014, Afghan poppy fields spread to 224,000 hectares resulting in a bumper crop of 6,400 tons of opium, enough to make 640,000 kilograms of heroin, thanks to Obama. Opium yields far greater profit than foods like wheat or corn, so opium production will continue to rise without serious eradication efforts.

Afghanistan is by far the number one producer of opium and heroin. Total worldwide opium production was 7,554 tons in 2014, of which 85% came from Afghanistan. The remaining 1,154 tons are primarily from Myanmar, Laos, Mexico, Thailand and Vietnam.

Mexico produced 162 tons of opium in 2014, enough to make 16,200 kilograms of heroin. An average heroin addict takes 0.15 kg of heroin a year, meaning Mexican heroin could only supply 108,000 heroin addicts. Heroin from Mexico cannot supply even 10% of US heroin demand.

Yet the DEA claims most heroin in the US is from Mexico. I asked Barbara Carreno and Russell Baer at the DEA questions like how such a mathematical impossibility was told by the DEA. They dodged many questions, claiming only 4% of heroin is from Afghanistan and the rest is mostly from Mexico. Carreno and Baer acknowledged 90% of heroin in Canada is from Afghanistan, but wouldn’t acknowledge that the USA has a border with Canada, only with Mexico.

We’re getting hit with the largest ever illicit drug epidemic in American history and the DEA is asleep at the wheel.

USA’s now #1 for heroin use. US heroin demand is 415,000 kilograms a year. The whole world, except Afghanistan, could only produce 115,400 kilograms of heroin (2014), not enough for even a third of the mushrooming US demand. Most heroin in the US is coming from US-occupied Afghanistan, there is no other mathematical possibility. There is no other physical possibility.

Carreno and Baer stated “we are a small press office with many queries to answer, and your line of questioning is expanding. I’m sorry to have to say that we will not able to assist you further.” I filed a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request for information about what the DEA has been doing (if anything) about Afghan opium and heroin.

I also asked the DEA people if they know how bad the heroin epidemic’s gotten or have any sense of urgency about it, they dodged these questions too. An American now gets killed every 32 minutes by heroin. Carreno and Baer seemed like they couldn’t care less and they don’t feel like answering most questions asked.

Perhaps the DEA people would answer questions (or plead the 5th) at Congressional Hearings.

Basic math shows that Mexico cannot produce enough heroin for even 1/10th of US demand. Besides 4,500,000 American heroin users (2,500,000 addicts and 2,000,000 casual users) and 10,000+ US heroin deaths a year, are the tens of millions of loved ones and neighbors living through hell because of this biggest ever drug epidemic in history.

One New Yorker summed it up “with heroin addicts on every block now, it’s like a zombie invasion.” One small American town has 190 HIV+ people due to IV narcotics use. The War in Afghanistan is the longest ever war in US history and the “collateral damage” of Americans being killed by Afghan heroin is shooting up.

Afghanistan has been known as the Graveyard of the Empires since Alexander the Great. Afghan heroin may yet destroy the American Empire. Since Obama green lighted Afghan opium and heroin, crime’s been shooting up in many places like Baltimore, considered to be ground zero for the heroin epidemic and the canary in the coal mine for the rest of the nation.

False narratives have proliferated recently about the heroin epidemic. One such narrative is ‘the Mexicans did it.’ Mexico, producing enough opium for 16.2 tons of heroin (2014), has enough for only 4% of current US heroin demand. The Mexicans didn’t do th
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Apr 25, 2016 8:36 pm

Police Family Violence Fact Sheet

http://womenandpolicing.com/violenceFS.asp#notes

Two studies have found that at least 40% of police officer families experience domestic violence, (1, 2) in contrast to 10% of families in the general population.(3) A third study of older and more experienced officers found a rate of 24% (4), indicating that domestic violence is 2-4 times more common among police families than American families in general. A police department that has domestic violence offenders among its ranks will not effectively serve and protect victims in the community.5, 6, 7, 8 Moreover, when officers know of domestic violence committed by their colleagues and seek to protect them by covering it up, they expose the department to civil liability.7

Unique Vulnerability | Failure of Departmental Policies | "Exceedingly Light Discipline" | Performance Evaluations Not Affected | The LAPD Investigation | Legislative Response | Lack of Enforcement Undermines Law's Effectiveness | Resources | Footnotes
Unique Vulnerability

Domestic violence is always a terrible crime, but victims of a police officer are particularly vulnerable because the officer who is abusing them:

has a gun,
knows the location of battered women's shelters, and
knows how to manipulate the system to avoid penalty and/or shift blame to the victim.5, 6

Victims often fear calling the police, because they know the case will be handled by officers who are colleagues and/or friends of their abuser. Victims of police family violence typically fear that the responding officers will side with their abuser and fail to properly investigate or document the crime.5, 7
Failure of Departmental Policies

These suspicions are well founded, as most departments across the country typically handle cases of police family violence informally, often without an official report, investigation, or even check of the victim's safety.5, 8, 9 This "informal" method is often in direct contradiction to legislative mandates and departmental policies regarding the appropriate response to domestic violence crimes. Moreover, a 1994 nationwide survey of 123 police departments documented that almost half (45%) had no specific policy for dealing with officer-involved domestic violence. In that same study:

The most common discipline imposed for a sustained allegation of domestic violence was counseling.
Only 19% of the departments indicated that officers would be terminated after a second sustained allegation of domestic violence.9
A recent study of the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department found inconsistent policies and practices for officers accused of domestic violence, regarding arrests, seizure of firearms, and Employee Assistance treatment.10 There is no reason to believe that the D.C. Metropolitan Police Department is unique in this; rather, this inconsistency is typical for police agencies responding to domestic violence committed by its own members.

Although the International Association of Chiefs of Police have prepared a model policy on police officer-involved domestic violence, there is no evidence that police departments across the country are doing anything other than simply including the policy in their manuals.
Violent Police Officers Receive "Exceedingly Light Discipline"

The reality is that even officers who are found guilty of domestic violence are unlikely to be fired, arrested, or referred for prosecution, raising concern that those who are tasked with enforcing the law cannot effectively police themselves.5, 6, 7 For example:

In 1998-1999, 23 domestic violence complaints were filed against Boston police employees, but none resulted in criminal prosecution.6
The San Diego City Attorney typically prosecutes 92% of the domestic violence cases that are referred, but only 42% of the cases involving a police officer as the perpetrator are prosecuted.11
Between 1990 and 1997, the Los Angles Police Department investigated 227 cases of alleged domestic violence by officers, of which 91 were sustained. Of these 91 allegations that were sustained by the department, only 4 resulted in a criminal conviction. That means that the LAPD itself determined in 91 cases that an officer had committed domestic violence, but only 4 were convicted on a criminal charge. Moreover, of these 4 officers who were convicted on a criminal charge of domestic violence, one was suspended for only 15 days and another had his conviction expunged.12

In fact, an in-depth investigation of the Los Angeles Police Department conducted by the Office of the Inspector General concluded that the discipline imposed on officers found guilty of domestic violence "was exceedingly light when the facts of each incident were examined" (p. i).12
Performance Evaluations Not Affected; Violent Officers Often Promoted

The study of the Los Angeles Police Department further examined the 91 cases in which an allegation of domestic violence was sustained against an officer.

Over three-fourths of the time, this sustained allegation was not mentioned in the officer's performance evaluation.
Twenty-six of these officers (29%) were promoted, including six who were promoted within two years of the incident.

The report concluded that "employees with sustained allegations were neither barred from moving to desired positions nor transferred out of assignments that were inconsistent with the sustained allegation" (p. iii).12
The LAPD Investigation

In 1997, the Los Angeles Office of the Inspector General conducted an investigation of the LAPD after a legal consultant named Bob Mullally leaked shocking LAPD personnel files to the press. These files documented scores of violent domestic crimes committed by LAPD officers. Mullally was so shocked by the LAPD's mishandling of this police family violence that he decided to violate the civil protective order in the case he was working on and turn the files over to the media, in the hopes of creating change in the LAPD.

Rather than reviewing the problem or recommending improvements, the LAPD sued Mullally for leaking the information.
In 2002, after multiple appeals, Mullally was sentenced to 45 days in federal prison. None of the police officers he exposed were ever prosecuted for their crimes, and many continue to serve as gun-carrying LAPD officers.
Even the prosecutor in the case stated on record that this sentence was "extreme" for a violation of a civil protective order.
Mullally is the first person in United States history to ever serve a jail term for this type of violation. He served his time in 2003, 6 years after he exposed the files.

The National Center for Women & Policing and the Feminist Majority Foundation have been actively involved in this case, which was featured in 2000 in a 60 Minutes segment with Mike Wallace. For m
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun May 01, 2016 4:40 pm

Dan Berrigan dies at 94


http://www.nytimes.com/2016/05/01/nyreg ... .html?_r=0




we took his brother Phil Berrigan
on tour of New England colleges
to celebrate the anniversary of
the Bill of Rights.
Also part of the tour was attorney
Linda Backiel and Joe Deom with Mohawk
Nation Elder Lorraine Johnson
see
Defense Lawyer Is Jailed Over Client Confidentiality –

http://www.nytimes.com/1991/02/15/us/de ... ality.html

Feb 15, 1991 – “I can’t be turned into a witness for the prosecution,”
said Ms. Backiel, a criminal defense lawyer who has practiced in New
York, Philadelphia and, most recently, Puerto Rico. … But Ronald H.
Levine, the Assistant United States Attorney in Philadelphia who is
the prosecutor in the …

I later spent a week in DC with Phil
videotaping his pouring blood
on the Pentagon and Guatamalan
Embassy spending one night in
the DC homeless shelter, the largest
such facility in the United States.
Phil’s friends who joined him from
around the country also padlocked
the doors shut at the. World Bank
at 8 am during a work week.
see

http://www.jonahhouse.org/

Joe Deom was part of a armed
standoff with the Canadian Mounties
trying to stop a golf course from
being built on a Mohawk burial
ground.



Link du jour


http://www.amazon.com/Where-Reincarnati ... 0275951898



dceaglecam.org

!

Bonus interview

JANUARY 31, 2014
In Search of Ward Churchill
by JOSHUA FRANK


http://www.counterpunch.org/2014/01/31/ ... churchill/

It has been nearly nine years since Ward Churchill was the talk of Fox
News and the target of a concerted campaign to remove him from his
teaching post at the University of Colorado. Well, as many of you
know, they were successful. No longer living in Colorado, Ward is
still defending himself and his scholarship. I recently caught up with
Ward to see why we haven’t heard much from him in recent years and if
the right-wing (and liberal) assault on his character had finally
forced him into retreat. – JF





The FBI Octupus Watch
Showing the FBI Tentacles in real time

http://www.santafenewmexican.com/news/l ... a2751.html

EX-FBI agent to head New Mexico
 Law Enforcement Academy
Santa Fe New Mexican-Apr 29, 2016


FBI hosts 16th annual Citizens Academy
WATE 6 On Your Side-May 1 2016


http://wate.com/2016/04/30/fbi-hosts-16 ... s-academy/

“What we really hope they gain is an understanding of the FBI and they
basically become our ambassadors out in the community,” Ed
Reinhold ...


FBI Bureau of Propaganda Watch


http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/04 ... tives.html


An exclusive look inside FBI's leadership academy for law ...
Fox News-Apr 29, 2016
Famously known as the training grounds for incoming special agents,
the FBI's sprawling academy in Quantico, Virginia also plays host
to ...

1.

http://www.newsweek.com/supreme-court-a ... ant-454278




Supreme Court Allows FBI to Hack Any Computer Anywhere With a ...
Newsweek-May 1 2016
Thanks to a Supreme Court decision on Thursday, law enforcement
agencies including the FBI may end up with broad powers to hack
any ...



2.


https://www.yahoo.com/tech/rubber-stamp ... 31279.html


Rubber stamp?’ FBI and NSA requests never denied by secret court

Bruce Brown
Digital Trends
May 1, 2016

You likely don’t know much about the U.S. Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court. Though it keeps a low profile, this is the court
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and National Security Agency go to
when they want permission to put someone under surveillance. And they
don’t get turned down, <a rel="nofollow"
href="http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cybersecurity-surveillance-idUSKCN0XR009">according
to Reuters</a>, citing a Justice Department memo. In 2015 the court
received and approved 1,457 requests from the FBI and NSA. There were
a bit fewer requests in 2014, but all of those were approved as
well.</p> <p>The surveillance requests are for email or telephone
intercepts. If granted, which is apparently always, they generally are
carried out with the assistance of Internet telecommunications service
providers.</p> <p><strong>Related:</strong> <a rel="nofollow"
href='http://www.digitaltrends.com/movies/snowden-first-trailer/'>The
NSA gets exposed in first trailer for Oliver Stone’s Snowden</a></p>
<p>The Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court was founded in 1978 to
hear requests by law enforcement and intelligence agencies to conduct
surveillance on foreign suspects present in the U.S. It stands to
reason that if you’re spying on spies, it’s better not to ask for
permission in open court and leave a public paper trail.</p> <p>The
secretive court was set up to scrutinize the requests in secret, in
order to ensure compliance with applicable civil rights requirements.
That all makes sense. That every single request is essentially
approved, however, seems at least curious if not a bit off. The
government response about its perfect record of approvals is that the
FBI and NSA are very careful when applying for surveillance and that
the court at times modifies the requests. In 2014, 19 requests were
modified, in 2015, 80 were altered.</p> <p>The Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court hears more than surveillance requests. The FBI can
also file National Security Letters (NSLs), asking Internet and
telecommunications providers for customer information on foreign
residents and U.S. citizens. Some NSLs ask for subscriber names,
addresses, and billing information only, while others also request
browsing history. The majority of information requests also come with
a gag order, prohibiting the companies from informing customers of the
requests. No information was provided showing the number of NSLs that
were approved or denied.</p>
More
You likely don’t know much about the U.S. Foreign Intelligence
Surveillance Court. Though it keeps a low profile, this is the court
the Federal Bureau of Investigation and National Security Agency go to
when they want permission to put someone under surveillance. And they
don’t get turned down, according to Reuters, citing a Justice
Department memo. In 2015 the court received and approved 1,457
requests from the FBI and NSA. There were a bit fewer r
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon May 09, 2016 7:12 pm

2 stories



FBI control of the media



1.

Thursday On CoastLine: Larry Bonney
May 9 2016

http://whqr.org/post/thursday-coastline-larry-bonney

On the next CoastLine, he was one of J. Edgar Hoover’s G-Men.  We’ll talk with former FBI Agent and Hostage Rescue Team Leader, Larry Bonney – who will share his history with the Bureau spanning 13 FBI Directors.

He will take us through 30 years of sleuthing and take-downs -- from drug lords to cult leaders, and the dawn of international terrorism.

Listen for CoastLine Thursday at 12:06 on HQR News 91 3 FM. You can ask a question any time by emailing coastline@whqr.org. Follow us on Twitter at coastlinehqr.





2.
http://eric.ed.gov/?id=EJ544189

A Quantitative Description of FBI Public Relations.
Gibson, Dirk C.
Public Relations Review, v23 n1 p11-30 Spr 1997
States that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) had the most successful media relations program of all government agencies from the 1930s to the 1980s. Uses quantitative analysis to show why those media efforts were successful. Identifies themes that typified the verbal component of FBI publicity and the broad spectrum of mass communication channels that were tapped. (PA)
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue May 17, 2016 9:20 pm

I'd love it if you could circulate the following link. The FBI is trying to exempt itself from the Privacy Act, with respect to its biometric database. The public comment period ends June 6. There are only 6 comments so far so a push from likeminded people could really send a strong message.

https://www.regulations.gov/#!documentD ... _0001-0170 
 
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu May 26, 2016 5:34 pm

HIT & RUN BLOG
FBI Trying to Sneak In Ability to Access Emails Without Court Order
An attempt to secretly expand what can be gathered with National Security Letters
May. 26, 2016 4:55 pm


http://reason.com/blog/2016/05/26/fbi-t ... -to-access



Right now Congress is attempting to hammer out rules that would eliminate an old loophole that permits the government and law enforcement to get access to Americans' old emails with a simple court subpoena instead of a warrant.

But at the same time, the FBI is trying to write up special new rules that would let them use a National Security Letter (NSL) to get access to email records without any sort of court order.

NSLs are secret orders that allow the government under the PATRIOT Act to not just demand data from Internet and telecom companies about specific users but also to legally gag these companies from communicating any information about their existence. Currently, NSLs can get all sorts of information and metadata (like phone records) that way, but not emails. The 2017 Intelligence Authorization Act would change the rules. Senate Intelligence Committee leaders Richard Burr (R-N.C.) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.), originators of proposed encryption legislation that would utterly destroy everybody's cybersecurity, put out a statement in support of the legislation, which passed a committee vote.


There was one dissenter, Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) who has been the primary voice in that committee against unwarranted surveillance. CNet takes note of his response and warning:

But Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.), the lone dissenting voice on the 15-member Senate committee, vowed to work on reversing the "dangerous provisions."

"This bill takes a hatchet to important protections for Americans' liberty," he said in a statement. "This bill would mean more government surveillance of Americans, less due process and less independent oversight of US intelligence agencies. Worse, neither the intelligence agencies, nor the bill's sponsors have shown any evidence that these changes would do anything to make Americans more secure."

Jenna McLaughlin at The Intercept has more about the FBI's lengthy efforts to try to use NSLs to secretly access email communications here.

Note that the FBI is now taking some hits by judges over its insistence on secrecy. Yesterday a federal judge tossed out evidence the FBI had collected in a child pornography case because they refused to reveal to the defense the tools that they had used to exploit Tor to track pedophiles, even if that information was kept
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun May 29, 2016 3:35 pm

Copwatch




http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/2652 ... oss-the-us




Organized "Cop Watch" Groups Across the US
Thursday, 02 October 2014 10:13





When communities attempt to police the police, they often get, well... policed.

In several states, organized groups that use police scanners and knowledge of checkpoints to collectively monitor police activities by legally and peacefully filming cops on duty have said they've experienced retaliation, including unjustified detainment and arrests as well as police intimidation.

The groups operate under many decentralized organizations, most notably CopWatch and Cop Block, and have proliferated across the United States in the last decade - and especially in the aftermath of the events that continue to unfold in Ferguson, Missouri, after officer Darren Wilson fatally shot unarmed, black teenager Michael Brown.

Many such groups have begun proactively patrolling their communities with cameras at various times during the week, rather than reactively turning on their cameras when police enter into their neighborhoods or when they happen to be around police activity.

Across the nation, local police departments are responding to organized cop watching patrols by targeting perceived leaders, making arrests, threatening arrests, yanking cameras out of hands and even labeling particular groups "domestic extremist" organizations and part of the sovereign citizens movement - the activities of which the FBI classifies as domestic terrorism.

Courts across the nation at all levels have upheld the right to film police activity. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and photographer's assocications have taken many similar incidents to court, consistently winning cases over the years. The Supreme Court has ruled police can't search an individual's cellphone data without a warrant. Police also can't legally delete an individual's photos or video images under any circumstances.

"Yet, a continuing stream of these incidents (often driven by police who have been fed 'nonsense' about links between photography and terrorism) makes it
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue May 31, 2016 11:15 pm

1.

Deal in cops' whistleblower case means Emanuel won't testify on code of silence


http://my.chicagotribune.com/#section/- ... -87396149/
Chicago police
1:25 pm, May 31, 2016
With a trial just minutes away, the Emanuel administration announced a $2 million settlement in a lawsuit brought by two Chicago police officers who alleged they were blackballed by the department for blowing the whistle on corruption, keeping the mayor from having to testify about the code of silence.

The explosive civil rights lawsuit filed by Officers Shannon Spalding and Daniel Echeverria against the city and top department brass had threatened to expose an ugly side to the police code of silence that allegedly put at risk the lives of cops willing to uncover corruption within their ranks.

The city's top attorney, Corporation Counsel Steven Patton, said the decision to settle the case had nothing to do with the fact that the judge had ordered Mayor Rahm Emanuel to testify about what he knew about the code of silence in light of his acknowledgment of its existence in a highly publicized speech to the City Council days after the court-ordered release of the video of the Laquan McDonald shooting.

Patton told reporters the settlement was hammered out over the weekend after attorneys for the officers approached them with a settlement offer that was "substantially lower" than what they had previously demanded. The payout, which needs to be approved by the City Council, includes about $1 million in legal fees, so each officer would wind up splitting about $500,000, he said.

The trial had been scheduled to


2.
Tuesday, May 31, 2016Last Update: 6:40 AM PT
Gitmo Redactions Confound Defense Counsel
By TIM RYAN 


http://www.courthousenews.com/2016/05/3 ... ounsel.htm

 
     GUANTANAMO BAY NAVAL BASE, Cuba (CN) — Defense attorneys for an accused 9/11 financier complained about how prosecutorial redactions impede their work.
     Kicking off pretrial proceedings Monday, Ammar al Baluchi's attorney Col. James Connell accused the government of scrambling discovery productions to make it harder on his team to match up documents.
     Al Baluchi, who is also known as Ali abd al Aziz Ali, is accused of helping to finance the 9/11 attacks and arranging travel to the United States for some of the hijackers. He, along with alleged plot mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammad and three other alleged co-conspirators, faces the death penalty if convicted.
     The case has dragged on for years. These latest proceedings mark the third attempt to try the five men. The case was briefly set to be tried in U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York before being sent back to a military commission in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, in 2011.
     Al Baluchi's defense team says the government has improperly redacted hundreds of documents, depriving it of hundreds of thousands of pieces of information that could potentially be valuable to his defense.
     Such evidence is known as Brady material after the landmark Supreme Court case Brady v. Maryland, which compels prosecutors to turn favorable evidence over to the defense.
     Since the government has blacked out serial numbers of documents in al Baluchi's case, as well as names and numbers of potential witnesses, the defense claims it has been prevented from compiling information that could help their case.
     In a motion from March 2014, al Baluchi's team said the government turned over multiple sets of FBI documents but that it had removed serial numbers and scrambled the pages to leave the lawyers unable to match them with other documents they have received.
     Not having serial numbers also left the defense unable to compile a spreadsheet that could show holes in the government's production or find references to the documents found in other reports like the 9/11 commission.
     "The government's


3.


http://www.ktrh.com/articles/houston-ne ... -14763268/


Senate Bill Allows FBI to Snoop Emails



 

Posted May 31st, 2016 @ 4:44am by iHeartMedia's Nik Rajkovic
The FBI is pushing legislation giving it warrentless power to check emails, and the bill already passed the Senate Intelligence Committee.

The 2017 Intelligence Authorization Act would extend current FBI powers authorized under the Patriot Act, forcing telecoms to hand over email and phone records of terror suspects.

“It is a warrantless search because it is not signed by a third-party judge, where an agent has to provide probable cause in the form of an affidavit, its an administrative subpoena basically,” says former FBI counter-terrorism agent Jim Conway, president of Global Intel Strategies.



4.



http://prospect.org/article/abuses-border

Abuses on the Border

JOSHUA HOLLAND MAY 31, 2016
Donald Trump says he plans to build a wall along the U.S.-Mexico border, but civil liberties advocates say the border is already over-policed, with reports of abuses and even fatal shootings in Southwestern communities.


AP Photo/Eric Gay
In this Tuesday, September 15, 2015, photo U.S. Customs and Border Patrol agents patrol along the border fence in Hidalgo, Texas.

Amanda Rodríguez Varela, who lives in Ciudad Juarez just south of El Paso, Texas, is fearful that her husband will find out that officials at the U.S. Customs and Border Protection agency (CBP) have concluded that she’s a prostitute.

The 51-year-old wife and mother’s ordeal began last September, when CBP officers grilled her as she crossed the border from Juarez to El Paso to shop at Walmart. “I don’t know why they decided I was a prostitute,” Varela told the Prospect in Spanish. “It seemed very arbitrary.”

As Varela tells it, CBP agents called her a puta, or whore, and asked her if she had syphilis or gonorrhea. After about an hour, the officials let her cross, but a month later, she was detained once again. This time, she faced almost ten grueling hours of detention and interrogation. The agents fingerprinted her and searched her body, she says. An officer named Quintanas (she only remembers his last name) mocked her work as a women’s rights advocate.

“I was just crying and praying,” Varela recalled recently during an interview. “They left me in a room for hours with just a little bottle of water. I was afraid I was going to go to prison. I was so scared that I didn’t even think




5.



What Happened When the FBI Investigated Foreclosure Fraud in Florida
By David Dayen

May 31, 2016
 
https://www.vice.com/read/what-happened ... in-florida


Six years ago, FBI agents in Jacksonville, Florida, wrote a memo to their bosses in Washington, DC, that could have unraveled the largest consumer fraud in American history. It went to the heart of the shady mortgage industry that precipitated the financial crisis, and the case promised to involve nearly every major bank in the country, honing in on the despicable practice of using bogus documents to illegally kick people out of their homes.



But despite impaneling a grand jury, calling in dozens of agents and forensic examiners, doing 75 interviews, issuing hundreds of subpoenas, and reviewing millions of documents, the criminal investigation resulted in just one conviction. And that convict—Lorraine Brown, CEO of the third-party company DocX that facilitated the fraud scheme—was sent to prison for duping the banks.


Thanks to a Freedom of Information Act request, VICE has obtained some 600 pages of documents from the Jacksonville FBI field office showing how agents conducted a sprawling investigation. (The Jacksonville case is also featured in my new book, Chain of Title.) The documents suggest the feds gained a detailed understanding of how and why the mortgage industry enlisted third-party companies to create false documents they presented to courts, as detailed in the 2012 National Mortgage Settlement, for which the big banks paid billions in civil fines. The banks' conduct is described in the settlement documents as "unlawful," and the Jacksonville FBI had it nailed almost two years earlier.

In these case files, you can see the seeds of an alternative history, one where dedicated law enforcement officials take on some of the country's most powerful financial institutions with criminal prosecutions.


So why didn't they?


"Given everything I see here, you'd have thought there would be many more convictions," said Timothy Crino, a now-retired FBI forensic accountant who reviewed case file documents. "If I was the case agent, I would be devastated."


At the center of the FBI investigation were the documents required to turn ordinary mortgages into mortgage-backed securities (MBS). During the housing bubble, banks bought up mortgages and packaged thousands of them at a time into MBS; this was known as securitization. The mortgages were transferred through a series of intermediaries into a trust, and the trust paid out investors with the revenue stream from homeowners' monthly payments.

In the end, of course, an upswing in the number of homeowner defaults led the MBS market to collapse disastrously, nearly taking down the worldwide financial system along with it. But there was another problem. In order to legally foreclose on homeowners, the financial institutions doing the foreclosing must produce documents proving the mortgages were properly transferred from their originators through intermediaries and on to the trusts, detailing every step along that chain.

"If evidence collected shows intent to defraud investors by the real estate trusts, this matter has the potential to be a top ten Corporate Fraud case." —FBI Criminal Investigative Division memo, June 2010

This is common sense: If you accuse someone of stealing your car, you have to establish that you actually owned it in the first place.


This chain of ownership was at the heart of the FBI investigation, according to a "request for resource enhancement" sent on May 25, 2010, from the Jacksonville office to Sharon Ormsby, then chief of the FBI Financial Crimes Section in Washington. (Ormsby no longer works for the bureau, and an attempt to contact her through the Society of Retired Special Agents of the FBI was unsuccessful.)


"The fraud in this matter was the result of negligence in the process of creating Mortgage Backed Securities (MBS)," the memo reads.


The Jacksonville FBI agents cite three reasons why the banks didn't properly transfer the mortgages. First, the sheer volume—millions of loans—would have made it too time-consuming to file each transfer in county courts in advance. Second, it would have been too costly, as each transfer triggers a recording fee of somewhere between $35 to $50. And finally, "during a booming market, the trusts did not recognize the need to secure the loans," because they didn't believe it would ever be called into question in the courts.


The Jacksonville FBI memo claims the trusts committed fraud by reporting to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), the credit rating agencies, and investors that they had clear title to the properties when they actually didn't. And agents present evidence that mortgage-servicing companies and their law firms hired third-party outfits to falsify the mortgage documents needed



6.




A belated reckoning

Posted on May 31, 2016 by Farah Jamil in Latest, National

http://aaj.tv/2016/05/a-belated-reckoning/

WEB DESK: An Argentinian federal court has sentenced the country’s last military dictator, 88-year-old General Reynaldo Bignone, to 20 years imprisonment for kidnapping and ‘disappearing’ more than 100 people during the 1976-1983 dictatorship.

Of this period, Bignone was himself holding absolute power in 1982-1983. The General is already serving life sentences for multiple human rights violations during that dark period. In the landmark trial, 14 other former military officers were sentenced to between eight and 25 years imprisonment for criminal association, kidnapping and torture. Many of them are also serving prison sentences already.

They include one Uruguayan former Colonel, Manuel Cordero Piacentini, who tortured prisoners inside Automotores Orletti, the Buenos Aires repair shop where many captured leftists were ‘interrogated’ under orders from their home countries. One other defendant was convicted on charges separate from the larger case, involving a different set of victims.

Two other accused were absolved of similar charges against them. The unprecedented court verdict after a trial lasting three years in which the four-member judges’ bench received testimony from about 370 witnesses, ruled that Operation Condor was a criminal conspiracy to kidnap and forcibly disappear people across international borders. The covert operation was launched in the 1970s by six South American military dictatorships that used their secret police and intelligence networks in a co-ordinated effort to track down and eliminate their opponents abroad.

Most of those disappeared, tortured and killed were leftists who had sought refuge from brutal repression at home in neighbouring countries and further abroad. The sentences are seen as a milestone because they mark the first time a court has proved that Operation Condor was an international criminal conspiracy by the US-backed regimes in Chile, Argentina, Bolivia, Brazil, Paraguay and Uruguay.

The investigation into the affair was launched in the 1990s when an amnesty law still protected many of the accused. Argentina’s Supreme Court overturned the amnesty in 2005 at the urging of then President Nestor Kirchner. It has taken 40 years after Operation Condor was formally founded and 16 years since the judicial investigation began to deliver justice to some of the victims of Latin America’s past military dictatorships. During this protracted process, several defendants either died or were removed from the judicial process.

Their victims reflected conflicted and bitter feelings about the verdict. Since the bodies of many victims have never been found, Argentine prosecutors argued that the crime of covering up their deaths continues to date and therefore statutory time limits do not apply. A key piece of evidence in the case was a declassified FBI agent’s cable sent in 1976 that described in detail the conspiracy to share intelligence and eliminate leftists across South America. Operation Condor, which started in 1968 and was officially implemented in 1975 by the right-wing dictatorships of the Southern Cone of South America.

Augusto Pinochet of Chile was the most brutal military dictator among them, who had come to power through a bloody US-backed coup in
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Jun 10, 2016 2:09 am

http://www.nydailynews.com/autos/news/a ... -1.2666328

The Los Angeles Police Department will add a collection of 100 BMW i3 electric vehicles to its fleet.
(UWE FISCHER)
BMW and its i3 electric car have beaten out Tesla Motors for the right to don the Los Angeles Police Department shield. Looking to purchase a fleet of EVs for community outreach and police business, the LAPD tried out both the i3 and Tesla Model Slast year and opted to contract with BMW.

While the Model S can accelerate quicker and reach higher speeds, the i3 won where it really counts: the price tag. At just $42,000 apiece, the i3 is a little more than a third of the price of a Model S P90D, and that difference really adds up in a 100-car fleet. The BMW EVs also features a 150-mile gasoline range extender to quell the police department’s concerns about use during a power outage.
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Jun 15, 2016 10:14 pm

Bonus Read



http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nationa ... -1.2675021

Suicides by cops under investigation are troubling




NEWS Wednesday, June 15, 2016, 2:40 PM



Last month, NYPD Inspector Michael Ameri, after several visits from the FBI over an ever-widening corruption scandal, got into his car, parked it near a local golf course, and took his own life.

During a single month in 2012, four different NYPD officers killed themselves.

We can’t know why exactly why Michael Ameri took his life. As the FBI probe deepened, it appears he panicked. Peers and others within the department have struggled to make sense of it.

In isolation, that's understandable, but what Michael Ameri did by taking his own life in the middle of an investigation seems to be an increasing occurrence.

Just last week an NYPD officer accused of sexually assaulting his 13-year-old niece killed himself.

This past April, a Philadelphia Police lieutenant, Vincent Testa, killed himself just a day before he was scheduled to meet with investigators over a theft investigation.

Oakland, Calif., Officer Brendan O'Brien took his own life last year. In a suicide note, he mentioned a series of officers involved with a sexual misconduct scandal that is now engulfing the entire Oakland Police Department. The police chief and several officers have now resigned over the scandal, and it increasingly appears O'Brien was also having sex with a minor. Not only that, but there was an idea he killed his own wife a year earlier, in a death first ruled suspicious, but then later deemed a suicide.


The scene of the suicide of NYPD Sgt. Joel Doseau: his childhood home in Brooklyn.
(BYRON SMITH/FOR NEW YORK DAILY NEWS)
In May of 2015, after being indicted on 40 different counts of molesting a young girl he seduced online, NYPD Officer Joel Doseau, age 43, killed himself in his childhood home.

Veteran Illinois Lt. Charles Gliniewicz, under investigation for stealing and laundering money from a youth program, staged his own suicide to look like he was killed by local men so that his family would collect the full life insurance benefits. For days on end, as a manhunt ensued, the Black Lives Matter Movement was actually blamed for his murder by popular conservatives.

An Arlington, Tex., officer who was under investigation killed himself.

The same was true for a state trooper in Massachusetts.

The bigger they are: Churning NYPD scandal snares top cops
Missing Brooklyn mom found ‘doing her thing’ on street corner
NYPD Inspector Michael Ameri laid to rest after suicide
Judge allows NYPD lieutenant promotions amid cheating scandal
NYPD captain who went home when cops were shot gets demotion
NYPD plans 20 more gang takedown raids over next two months
Brock Turner 'creeped out' other women prior to 2015 rape
And an officer in Chicago.

And Detroit.

And Houston.


NYPD Deputy Inspector Michael Ameri committed suicide in May amid an FBI probe into the department’s ethics.
And Florida.

And New Mexico.

This list, could go on and on and on. With their backs against wall, faced with the possibility of doing jail time, many officers choose to take






1.

http://ticklethewire.com/2016/06/15/sen ... terrorism/



Senator: FBI Is Down 6,000 Agents Despite Increasing Threats of Terrorism

Sen. Lindsey Graham

By Steve Neavling
ticklethewire.com

Budget cuts have left the FBI with too few agents to properly address the terrorism threat, Sen. Lindsey Graham said.

“The FBI has lost 6,000 agents due to budget cuts. The Army is going to be at 1940 levels – the Navy at 1950 levels. I want to restore our defense cuts and our intelligence cuts so we can fight a war we can afford to win,” he told the FOX Business Network’s Stuart Varney.

On Monday, House Democrats supported legislation that would give the FBI authority to rejec


2.

http://m.gazette.com/fbi-agent-accused- ... eed/361696




FBI agent accused of using influence to gain football tickets
June 15, 2016 at 2:13 pm


FBI agent accused of using influence to gain football tickets
Maria Biery
An FBI agent stands accused of using his position to get all-access passes to a professional football game, according to a Justice Department report.
The passes allowed the agent and two of his friends to access the field for a short period of time.
The Justice Department Office of the Inspector General states that this act was "in violation of FBI ethical guidelines" and a "misuse of position".
In order to defend his actions, the FBI agent noted that he wanted to provide a memorable experience to a friend with a terminal illness.

The agent is also accused, however, of soliciting gifts from subordinates who traveled overseas and making "unprofessional and disparaging comments" about his fellow





3.
http://detroit.cbslocal.com/2016/06/15/ ... positions/



FBI Looking To Hire Hundreds Of New Agents, Thousands For Other Positions
June 15, 2016 12:45 PM


– Looking for a job? The FBI is hiring.

The federal agency has a plan to recruit 740 agents throughout this year, according to Felix A. Rivera, Assistant Agent in Charge in Detroit. They’re also looking to hire 240 intel analysts and more than 2,000 professional staff employees.

Rivera told WWJ’s Zahra Huber they’re looking for candidates wh


4.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc ... -1.2672659

Off-duty NYPD sergeant probed for pulling gun in confrontation - NY Daily ...
New York Daily News › nyc-crime › off-...
- Off-duty cop pulls gun on a bicyclist in apparent fender-bender. An off-duty sergeant was videotaped ...



5.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc ... -1.2674501



NYC Crime Bronx Brooklyn Manhattan Queens Education Obituaries
NYPD traffic agent wanted for groping woman twice arrested
BY JOHN ANNESE
NEW YORK DAILY NEWS Wednesday, June 15, 2016, 7:15 A



6.


http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nationa ... -1.2675579

U.S. World Politics
Fla. sheriff shoots self after jail release on child porn charges



Wednesday, June 15, 2016, 8:44 PM

A 17-year veteran Florida sheriff shot himself on Wednesday, just hours after being released from jail on child pornography charges.

Sgt. Kreg Costa, 43, of the Broward County Sheriff's Office, shot himself at his Sunrise home at around 5:30 p.m. and called 911 around the same time. He was found outside of the home and is listed in grave condition, a spokesperson for the Sheriff's officetold the Sun-Sentinel.

Costa, a father of five, was arrested on June 9 for perusing child pornography for several hours during his midnight shift. He was released from jail on Wednesday on $250,000 bail after being held for six nights on 29 charges related to child porn and illicit sex.


7.

Crime U.S. World Politics
Police officer caught in undercover sting of sexual predator

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/nationa ... -1.2674921

Updated: Wednesday, June 15, 2016, 1:39 PM

Christopher Dunkes is a Montgomery County police officer.
(POLICE HANDOUT)
Police in Virginia went undercover to catch predators online — and they caught a cop.

Montgomery County Police Officer Christopher Dunkes, 27, was one of seven people arrested this month as part of a perv sting by Prince William County police, authorities said.

The creeper cop fell for a Craigslist ad by an undercover officer posting as a 15-year-old, according
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Jun 19, 2016 12:21 am

Link du jour



http://www.occurrencesforeigndomestic.c ... breaks-it/


1.


http://www.cato.org/blog/funding-fbi

JUNE 17, 2016 11:17AM
Funding the FBI
By CHRIS EDWARDS SHARE
On Fox News last night, Megyn Kelly agreed with her guest James Kallstrom that the FBI needs a larger budget. The horrific attack in Orlando has raised the issue of whether the FBI has sufficient resources to investigate potential terrorists.

I don’t know how large the FBI budget should be. The agency does fill a lot of crucial roles, including tackling never-ending corruption in federal, state, and local governments.

But I do know that the FBI has not been starved; its budget has grown rapidly. The chart, from DownsizingGovernment.org, shows that FBI spending in constant 2016 dollars has more than tripled since 1990, from $2.7 billion to $9.1 billion. 


2.




see link for full story


http://www.occurrencesforeigndomestic.c ... tonishing/



Astonishing
June 18, 2016UncategorizedBernie Sanders’ national address, Clinton collusion, CyberWar, Foreign Service versus Assad, Homeland Security guidance on active shooter scenarios, Israel at the UN, Obama’s migrants, Orlando, Pete Rose, precedent
astonishing

June 17-19, 2016 — FBI caught scripting Orlando shooting case

(in: WMR GENERAL ARCHIVES June 2016)

Jun 17, 2016

Mateen was more than known to the FBI and CIA.

http://www.waynemadsenreport.com/articles/20160617

[requires subscription]

incog99 (Oceanside) “Wayne’s latest report is jaw dropping.”

[&&]{**}[##]

music:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eEZKQHq ... 7N_U_g8mtt

http://www.dreamtheater.net/theastonishing

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Astonishing

[&&]{**}[##]

CIA connections with the families of Omar Mateen and the Tsarnayev brothers

VOLTAIRE NETWORK | 17 JUNE 2016

http://www.voltairenet.org/article192381.html

[&&]{**}[##]

Ford Foundation, a philanthropic facade for the CIA

by Paul Labarique

Between 1947 and 1966 the Ford Foundation played a key role in the network of US interference in Europe through the subvention of magazines, scientific programs and non-communist left-wing organizations. The largest philanthropic organization in the world was in fact providing a respectful facade for CIA financial and contact operations. This role was even more possible by the fact that the same persons designed and directed both organizations. Below you will find the first part of our research on the cultural aspects of the Atlantic interventionism.

VOLTAIRE NETWORK | 5 APRIL 2004



full article here:

http://www.voltairenet.org/article30039.html

[&&]{**}[##]

Reflections on the Use of Greenscreen

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=19YlwQPYEjk

[&&]{**}[##]

https://desertpeace.wordpress.com/2016/ ... o-masacre/

[&&]{**}[##]

Homeland Security Guidance Documents

from http://cryptome.org/:

Active Shooter Complex Attach Resources

June 17, 2016

https://cryptome.org/2016/06/Active_Sho ... ources.pdf

Active Shooter Study Quick Reference Guide

June 17, 2016

https://cryptome.org/2016/06/Active_Sho ... erence.pdf

Survival in Active Shooter and Mass Casualty

June 17, 2016

https://cryptome.org/2016/06/Hartford_C ... endium.pdf

First Responder Guidance Active Shooter Incidents

June 17, 2016

https://cryptome.org/2016/06/First_Resp ... idance.pdf

[&&]{**}[##]


http://fox13now.com/2016/06/16/fbi-in-s ... o-attacks/


FBI in Salt Lake City discusses
current threats in wake of Orlando attacks
POSTED 9:32 PM, JUNE 16, 2016,
SALT LAKE CITY -- The FBI office in Salt Lake City has been flooded with calls since the weekend's attack in Orlando.

Eric Barnhart, the special agent in charge of the FBI’s Salt Lake City office, confirms their biggest threat is homegrown violent extremists.

"That is our greatest concern," he said. "We've described it as searching for needles in a haystack of needles."

Barnhart admits there are several people under investigation in this region, which includes Utah, Idaho, and Montana, but says there's no reason to be alarmed.

"We have no actionable plans or intent or any indications that anything is imminent," Barnhart said.

Many have raised conce




3.

http://www.theregister.co.uk/2016/06/17 ... officials/
Security
FBI's iPhone paid-for hack should be barred, say ex-govt officials
Cybersecurity bods argue for formalizing zero-day disclosure rules
10 10
17 Jun 2016 at 19:29,
The FBI's purchase of a hack to get into the San Bernardino shooter's iPhone should have been barred.

That's according to a new paper from two former US government cybersecurity officials, Ari Schwartz and Rob Knake.

In their paper [PDF] they dig into the current vulnerability equities process (VEP), disclosed in 2014, which the US government uses to decide whether to disclose critical securit



4.


http://www.sfexaminer.com/judge-allows- ... -boy-case/







5.


http://www.commondreams.org/views/2016/ ... n-sentence
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Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
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Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Jun 22, 2016 10:06 pm

Link du jour



http://farsight.org


http://tpcp-canada.blogspot.ca/

http://www.courthousenews.com/2016/06/21/dirty-coal.htm



Heat is Online

http://touch.latimes.com/#section/2426/ ... lated=true


122 degrees: Palm Springs breaks record — and it could get hotter

Coping with the heat wave in Southern California

June 20, 2016, 6:46 p.m.
Every so often someone walks into the Palm Springs Visitors Center raring to burn through hiking trails like they're British adventurer and TV personality Bear Grylls.

For those people, Ceej Juarez, who provides information about hiking trails in the Agua Caliente Indian reservation, has to be a voice of reason.  And that is never as important a job as it was on Monday, when a torrid heat wave sent temperatures to 122 degrees in the resor


Bonus Read



http://m.democracynow.org/stories/16326



WED JUN 22, 2016
Meet the FBI Informant Who Organized Neo-Nazi Gathering Attended by Jo Cox Murder Suspect in 2000



We turn now to look at Thomas Mair, the British man who killed British parliamentarian Jo Cox last week. Mair reportedly yelled out "Britain First" during the attack—a reference to the far-right, anti-immigrant political party of the same name which is pushing for Britain to leave the EU in tomorrow’s Brexit referendum. In court on Friday, Mair gave his name as "Death to traitors, freedom for Britain." Cox was a vocal advocate for Britain to remain in the European Union. More information is coming to light about Mair’s ties to neo-Nazi groups in the United States and Britain. Meanwhile, a former paid FBI informant named Todd Blodgett has revealed he met Thomas Mair at a neo-Nazi gathering that the informant set up in London in 2000. Joining us now is Todd Blodgett, who once worked with several leaders of the far right, including Willis Carto, who founded the Liberty Lobby, and William Pierce, leader of the neo-Nazi National Alliance.

AMY GOODMAN: We move on to our next segment now, the story of the assassination of a British Labour leader. Juan?

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Well, we turn now to Britain, which is continuing to mourn last week’s murder of parliamentarian Jo Cox. She was stabbed and shot last week in her district after meeting with constituents. Her murderer, Thomas Mair, reportedly yelled out "Britain First" during the attack—a reference to the far-right, anti-immigrant political party of the same name which is pushing for Britain to leave the EU in tomorrow’s Brexit referendum. Cox was a vocal advocate for Britain to remain in the European Union.

More information is coming to light about Mair’s ties to neo-Nazi groups in the United States and Britain. The Southern Poverty Law Center here in the U.S. has revealed Mair is a longtime supporter of the neo-Nazi National Alliance. Documents released by the center show Mair has spent over $500 buying periodicals and other items from the group, including a manual that contained information on how to build a pistol. In addition, The Daily Telegraph is reporting Mair subscribed to S.A. Patriot, a South African magazine published by White Rhino Club, a pro-apartheid group.

AMY GOODMAN: Meanwhile, a former paid FBI informant named Todd Blodgett has revealed he met Thomas Mair at a neo-Nazi gathering that the informant set up in London in 2000. Beginning in the mid-'90s, Blodgett worked with several leaders of the far right, including Willis Carto, who founded the Liberty Lobby, and William Pierce, leader of the neo-Nazi National Alliance. Blodgett was also a co-owner of Resistance Records, the world's largest neo-Nazi music label. Todd Blodgett is joining us now from his home in Iowa.

Todd Blodgett, welcome to Democracy Now! Tell us what you know about this man, Thomas Mair, who killed Jo Cox.

TODD BLODGETT: Yes, thank you. I met Tommy—he was known as Tommy when I met him in about May of 2000. I had just begun working as a paid FBI informant in March of that year. William Pierce, who was the main guy with Resistance Records, but also my co-owner, wanted to convene a meeting in London, because there was a Leeds chapter and another chapter of the National Alliance. And the purpose of the meeting was to promote Resistance Records, let people know that William Pierce was the—was the new owner of it—he bought it from Willis Carto—and also to gain readerdom, gain more customers and get distributors for Resistance Records. And Mair was one of the people invited to the meeting. There were about maybe 17 or 18 people at that meeting. And it took place just off of the Strand in London in the spring of 2000. And as I said, he attended the meeting along with Stevie Cartwright, Richard Barnbrook, Nick Griffin, who was sort of like the David Duke of England at that time, and several other people who were either members of the National Alliance or supporters of the NA.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Now, why were you at that meeting representing Mr. Pierce?

TODD BLODGETT: Well, of course, Pierce did not know that I had agreed to work for the bureau at that point. And he wanted to go over to England—

AMY GOODMAN: For the FBI.

TODD BLODGETT: For—yeah, for the FBI, that’s correct. He, himself, wanted to go, but he was precluded by law from being able to go there, due to the fact that he couldn’t get in. I mean, his views kept him out of—out of England, so he sent me in his stead, because he and I were the co-owners of Resistance Records at that time. And when I began with the FBI, I told them about what Pierce wanted to do. And right away, they said, "Well, we’re going to accompany you." So, the day before I arrived in London, two FBI agents, an IRS agent and a JTTF agent—that would be the Joint Terrorism Task Force—flew in ahead of me, and they had me meet with the two people, two guys, from the MI5. They gave me a cellphone to use when I was there and that kind of thing. So, that’s how it all worked out.

AMY GOODMAN: Why did you decide to work for the FBI? I mean, were you a neo-Nazi true believer?

TODD BLODGETT: I was never a true believer. I was never a Holocaust denier. I’m not a bigot or a racist or anything. I was basically—I guess the best way to say it is I was—I was greedy. I was an opportunistic profiteer. I didn’t look at the consequences to myself or to others of what I was doing. And I never wanted to be a Resistance Records shareholder, but Willis Carto of Liberty Lobby owed me money. And when he went bankrupt, he—when Liberty Lobby went bankrupt, they gave me stock in Resistance Records in lieu of that, and that’s how I became a co-owner.

What had happened with regard to Pierce was, is that after the deal was signed with Pierce and he gave me a consulting contract he insisted I take as part of my stock sale—he wouldn’t buy the shares without it—we went to a place called the University Club of D.C. The Washington Post got a hold of the article, and it caused a big uproar there, and I was expelled from the club. I was given the option to resign or be expelled. I was expelled. And basically, that’s when the FBI caught notice of this, and the agents came to my office in downtown D.C., and they said, "Look, we’re not after you, but we know you’ve worked with all these people—Willis Carto, Pierce, David Duke—all the head honchos among the racist right, as a profiteer. Will you help us?" And that’s when I agreed to—I agreed to go on as a paid informant.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: Now, this meeting that occurred in 2000 in—I think it was in Leeds in England, these were some of the top neo-Nazi or white supremacist leaders in England. What kind of interaction did you have with Thomas Mair? And what impression did you take away from him at that meeting?

TODD BLODGETT: Well, first of all, the meeting was actually in downtown London, not Leeds, but there were several people from the Leeds chapter at this meeting. And I—as far as Thomas Mair, I would say that most people describe him—he was kind of like a working-class guy, but very well read. I mean, he was discussing a book or two that he had read by David Irving, the Holocaust-denying pseudohistorian, who I also monitored. He would probably—I guess the best way to describe him is just nondescript, well mannered. When you go to a meeting like this, any kind of gathering, the guys—they’re always all guys—there’s a lot of bravado, a lot of macho, a lot of braggadocio going on. People talk about who they beat up last week and how they took on six guys and kicked their butt. They brag about their womanizing. Mair was none of those. He didn’t do any of that. He got—he came by himself. He actually left by himself. As he got there, he was respected by the people that were there. He knew some. They knew him by name. He was not an outgoing guy. If you were to ask me at the end of that meeting, say, a wall of guys there, who would have been the least likely to even start a fistfight, I would have said Tommy Mair.

AMY GOODMAN: According to British media reports, Thomas Mair, or Tommy Mair, as you call him, was a subscriber to the pro-apartheid magazine, South African Patriot in Exile.

TODD BLODGETT: I read that.

AMY GOODMAN: This week, the Southern Poverty Law Center published two letters that Mair wrote to editors of the magazine. In 1999, Thomas Mair wrote, quote, "I was glad you strongly condemned 'collaborators' in the White South African population. In my opinion the greatest enemy of the old Apartheid system was not the African National Congress and the Black masses but White liberals and traitors." And then, in a 1991 letter to the publication, Mair wrote, quote, "The nationalist movement in the U.K. also continues to fight on against the odds. ... Despite everything I still have faith that the White Race will prevail, both in Britain and in South Africa, but I fear that it’s going to be a very long and very bloody struggle." Those the words of Thomas Mair. Todd Blodgett, what was your reaction when you heard who was the man who murdered the Labour MP, Jo Cox?

TODD BLODGETT: When I first saw his picture, and I recognized him right off, when I first heard his name, I remembered it, you know, my first reaction was, gosh, I mean, this is—aside from the fact it’s a horrible thing, I thought, you know, this wasn’t the kind of guy I would have picked out to do that. I would have thought someone like Stevie Cartwright or someone would be more likely to do that. They were the more—you know, the more brutal types. But then I realized a lot of people that I monitored, which included a guy named Wade Page, who did a similar thing—he went into a—I think it was a Hindu temple in Wisconsin, and killed a bunch of people about three years ago—sometimes it’s those very kind of guys that are the most lethal, which is why Tommy Mair and people like him represent such a huge challenge to MI5 and the FBI and other law enforcement, because they can be dormant for many years. They can be on the radar, then they go off the radar. They’re the kind that—you know, they’re not the kind that—Tommy Mair was not the kind of guy you’d pick out to start a fight in a bar. He was not like a tough kind of guy. He didn’t pose as a tough guy. He just basically was a nondescript kind of guy. And I thought, you know, obviously he is not—his hatred has not changed. He just found an outlet for it, and he finally decided to try to go out in a blaze of glory. And that’s—that was my reaction.

JUAN GONZÁLEZ: And, Todd Blodgett, you did this undercover work for the FBI, but yet you’ve also been public since then about your activities. Are there any concerns on your part of your own personal safety as a result of the work you did to uncover the activities of some of thes white supremacist groups?

TODD BLODGETT: There are—I do have some concerns. I live in Texas, as well as in Iowa. And I’ve had strangers walk up to me in bars in Texas and call me—I won’t say this name, these words, on the air, but, you know, they’ll use the N-word, they’ll use derogatory names for Jewish people, and they’ll say I’m a blankety-blank lover or a race traitor, that kind of thing. So there’s always that concern. But I will say this—I want to get this out: I have a concealed-carry permit that’s good in 37 states, and I can legally—I am legally armed. I’m armed right now. And so, if they want to try to make a fight with me, they might take me out, but I’m going to take them with me.

AMY GOODMAN: The presidential election right now, the support that Donald Trump has gotten from, for example, David Duke—right?—the former Klan leader—

TODD BLODGETT: Right.

AMY GOODMAN: —white supremacist, your thoughts on white supremacists in this country, Klan support of Donald Trump?

TODD BLODGETT: I think it’s very tragic. I mean, anyone has a right to support who they want to. But I worked for Reagan for many years, and when Reagan was endorsed by the KKK in the fall of 1980, his response was a great response. He said, "Look, just because they like my philosophy doesn’t mean I buy theirs." Trump kind of stumbled over that thing. I don’t think Donald Trump is a white supremacist, but I’m very disturbed by the fact that he’s got support from them, and I’m also disturbed by the comment he made about the judge. I can’t think of—Judge Curiel, I think his name is. But he made a—he made a stupid reference to the fact that he’s of Hispanic descent, which is totally irrelevant to the case. I worked with David Duke. I monitored him for the FBI. I’ve done—you know, I monitored all these people. They’re, without exception, a bunch of sociopaths. They’re just bad people. And most of their supporters tend to be bad people, too. So I don’t want to see that kind of thing being any part of the Republican Party. I’m still a Republican. I was for Jeb Bush for the nomination; before that, for Dr. Carson. But I don’t want to see that part—I want this flushed out of the party.

AMY GOODMAN: What is it about Donald Trump, you think, that attracts white supremacists, neo-Nazis?

TODD BLODGETT: I think it is because they recognize, in their world, to their way of thinking, demographics are destiny. That was one thing that William P




1.


http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyp ... -1.2680294

Three high-ranking officers in the NYPD acted as “cops on call” for two deep-pocketed de Blasio donors — as long as their “elves” plied them with gifts and bankrolled a highflying lifestyle that included hookers, free hotels and expensive meals.

Deputy Chief Michael Harrington, Deputy Inspector James Grant an



2.


Monday, June 20, 2016Last Update: 2:19 PM PT
Chicago Cop Rightly Fired After Woman's Suicide



http://www.courthousenews.com/2016/06/2 ... uicide.htm


A Chicago police officer was properly fired for spending time with a domestic-violence victim who later picked up his gun and killed herself, the Illinois Appellate Court ruled.
     Sgt. Steven Lesner responded to a domestic violence call from Catherine Weiland and her boyfriend at North Side restaurant in February 2009.
     Two other officers responded to the call and removed the boyfriend. Lesner then offered Weiland a ride home in his police car.
     On the way back to her apartment, Weiland asked Lesner to stop and buy her a bottle of wine. He agreed.
     Lesner stayed at Weiland's apartment for 40 minutes, talking to her brother and father, who lived in separate units in the same building.
     He agreed to drive them back to the restaurant to retrieve Weiland's car. Lesner also gave Weiland a card with his personal cell-phone number.
     She used it to call Lesner and invite him back to her apartment for a drink after his shift. Lesner put his duty firearm in his locker and strapped his auxiliary firearm to his ankle.
     Lesner bought beer for himself and more wine for Weiland before returning to her apartment. While they were watching television, Lesner had his feet on a table and took off the gun when he thought Weiland was not looking, because "it looks kind of stupid."
     When Lesner went to use the restroom, Weiland picked up his gun and shot herself in the head.
     An investigation revealed



3.

http://www.oregonlive.com/oregon-stando ... ct_to.html


Federal prosecutors object to providing Oregon standoff defendants details on law enforcement response



4.


http://www.wnd.com/2016/06/twa-800-if-y ... something/
TWA 800: IF YOU SAW SOMETHING, SAY SOMETHING
Exclusive: Jack Cashill seeks more testimony about downing of plane over Long Island

JACK CASHILL

This July marks the 20th anniversary of the shoot down of TWA Flight 800 off the coast of Long Island. As such, it may well represent the last opportunity for those with inside information to come forward.

In the last week or two, as I have started to promote my new book on this subject, “TWA 800: The Crash, the Cover-Up, and the Conspiracy,” I have heard from a number of people with stories to tell. If you know something or know someone who does, please email me at jcashill@aol.com.



Although most have given me permission to use their names, some have preferred that I not. To equalize things, I will refer to each of my correspondents only by a first name pseudonym.

Sam, the air safety chairman for the Airline Pilot’s Association, arrived at the crash scene on the first day. “From the get-go the FBI was all over us, no notebooks, no cameras, no nothing,” said Sam.

This was unprecedented. Sam worked through the National Transportation Safety Board. The NTSB was supposed to be in charge of the investigation. Under orders from the Clinton Justice Department, the FBI seized control on Day 1.

Sam soon identified a part of the plane that showed obvious damage from an external explosion. He had it tested it for explosive residue on site. It tested positive.

The next day he asked what happened to the p


5.


http://lakeexpo.com/news/top_stories/af ... l?mode=jqm

After complaints, Missouri sheriff removes disparaging photos of Obama, Clinton from office wall


When Scott Bringhurst went to the Gasconade County, Mo., sheriff's office last week



6.
http://www.mo4ch.com/creating-terrorist ... t-attacks/

Creating terrorists: The FBI's dark history of provoking violent attacks

The FBI's conduct with Orlando massacre shooter Omar Mateen is under fire, .... This was even stated by the FBI in 2010, when an agent told Ferdaus' father ...


7.

http://www.rightwingwatch.org/content/j ... on-jihadis
John Guandolo: Black Lives Matter Working 'In Conjunction' With 'Jihadis'
SUBMITTED BY Nabi Dressler on Wednesday, 6/22/2016 9:48 am
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5742
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: Policing by Consent

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Jun 25, 2016 1:37 pm

1.

http://www.westernjournalism.com/fbi-co ... gay-lover/


FBI Contradicts Account Of ‘Miguel’ — Mateen’s Alleged Gay Lover

June 24, 2016 at 3:53pm


In the initial aftermath of the Orlando attack earlier this month, all
that was known was that a 29 year-old man, Omar Mateen, killed 49
people at gay nightclub and had been heard pledging allegiance to
ISIS.

Rumors soon surfaced that Mateen himself was gay, with a man even
coming forward claiming to be Mateen’s gay lover. Univision, who
brought the report, kept the identity of the man private and gave him
the name “Miguel” as an alias. Miguel publicly denounced the notion
that the shooting was an act of terrorism. Instead, he said that it
was a display of revenge following Mateen’s discovery that he was HIV
positive.

Despite these recent claims, so far the FBI has not found any evidence
to support this notion.


After several men also surfaced last week claiming they had been
contacted by Mateen via various gay dating apps, the FBI began a full
investigation into the matter. Many of the men who came forward also
claimed that Mateen had been a regular at the Pulse nightclub where
the shooting took place.

However, according to a senior federal law enforcement source, after
multiple interviews and reviewing evidence collected from Mateen’s
phone, the FBI has not found any concrete evidence



2.

http://www.thesullenbell.com/2016/06/23 ... lobal-war/
neoliberal global war
June 23, 2016 Uncategorized agro-tech, Big Oil, Big Pharma, bio-tech,
Chussodovsky, covert intel ops, economic destabilization, famine,
GlobalResearch, media, military ops, new world order, poverty, Wall
Street
neoliberal global war

The text below is an English summary of Prof. Michel Chossudovsky’s
Presentation, National Autonomous University of Nicaragua, May 17,
2016. This presentation took place following the granting of a Doctor
Honoris Causa in Humanities to Professor Chossudovsky by the National
Autonomous University of Nicaragua (UNAN)

The original source of this article is Global Research

Copyright © Prof Michel Chossudovsky, Global Research, 2016

Neoliberalism and The Globalization of War. America’s Hegemonic
Project

By Prof Michel Chossudovsky
Global Research, June 16, 2016

The world is at a dangerous crossroads. The United States and its
allies have launched a military adventure which threatens the future
of humanity. Major military and covert intelligence operations are
being undertaken simultaneously



3.

DEA agents told: One strike, you’re out if soliciting prostitutes

In an effort to rein in sexual misconduct by its agents, the Drug
Enforcement Administration has instituted a one-strike policy against
those who solicit prostitutes while either on or off duty
Report
http://m.washingtontimes.com/news/2016/ ... t-if-soli/



4.

Chris Voss Founder and CEO of the Black Swan Group
Big Think-

http://bigthink.com/videos/chris-voss-g ... gotiations

Chris Voss, CEO of the Black Swan Group LTD, and former FBI
Investigator, is an ... the FBI Agents Association Award for
Distinguished and Exemplary Service.



3.

http://www.chattanoogan.com/2016/6/24/3 ... -Says.aspx


Bradley Commissioner Dan Rawls Says He Has Turned Over Allegations Of
Illegal Conduct Against Sheriff Eric Watson
Friday, June 24, 2016
Bradley County Commissioner Dan Rawls said he has turned over to
authorities what he said are multiple instances of alleged illegal
conduct by Bradley County Sheriff Eric Watson.

He said the gave the evidence to District Attorney Steve Crump, the
TBI and the FBI.

Commissioner Rawls said, "And there is still more there. The more you
uncover the more you become appalled."

He said some of the allegations include the disposition of a sheriff's
van, the activity of his wife, Tenille, as a bonding agent, the
sheriff's alleged involvement with a woman who has had several
arrests, and alleged threats toward him made by the sheriff.


Commissioner Rawls said he began to become suspicious after examining
some transactions in the sheriff's department that came before the
commission finance committee.

He said the van that was sold was purchased in excess of $130,000. He
said various high-tech equipment was added to it. He said it was sold
for $20,000 to a bounty hunter in Nashville identified as a friend of
the sheriff's.

Commissioner Rawls said, "At first there was no bill of sale. Then one
was produced that did not have a date on it."

He said local bonding officials were told that Ms. Watson would not be
operating in Bradley County, but in adjacent counties. He said, "That
did not turn out to be the case."

The commissioner said he checked the records and found that for three
recent months Ms. Watson wrote more bonds than several agents did for
the next highest firm. He said, "People at the jail have to be
steering cases her way."
Commissioner Rawls said, "For the sheriff's wife to be in the bonding
business is a flagrant conflict of interest."

Regarding the one who he said was closely tied to the sheriff, he said
she was placed in jail on no bond. Then, he said, she got out on a low
bond after a call from the sheriff's office saying she was working as
a confidential informant.

Commissioner Rawls said, "I was told by someone on the command staff
that she never was a confidential informant and never will be."

The commissioner said he was able to obtain over 100 messages between
Sheriff Watson and the woman. He said the communication included a
number of suggestive remarks.

He said the woman sent the sheriff a photo of herself without a shirt
and wearing a red bra.

He said one discussed them ta


4.

https://www.mintpressnews.com/fbi-reque ... me/217723/
FBI Request To Tech Companies Made Public For First Time
Mintpress News (blog)-Jun 24, 2016
FBI Request To Tech Companies Made Public For First Time ... to get,”
said Michael German, a fellow at the Brennan Center for Justice and
former FBI agent.







FBI's Secret Surveillance Tech Budget Is 'Hundreds of Millions'
The Intercept-

https://theintercept.com/2016/06/25/fbi ... -millions/

The FBI has “hundreds of millions of dollars” to spend on developing
technology for use in both national security and domestic law
enforcement investigations ...



5.

http://www.policechiefmagazine.org/maga ... e_id=52005



New Members - Police Chief Magazine
www.policechiefmagazine.org › magazine
Grant, Robert D. Special Agent in Charge, FBI, 219 S Dearborn St Rm
905 60604 . Kelly ... Hammond ... Louisiana Lafayette Hundley, Randal
Chief of Police, Lafayette Police Dept, 900 E University Ave
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5742
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

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