FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Aug 12, 2011 4:20 pm

see link for full story
http://www.nwcn.com/home/?fId=127598028 ... main=10222
Judge rules on Miranda rights motion, delays backpack bomb trial

Posted on August 12, 2011 at 11:01 AM


SPOKANE -- The judge in the trial of the accused Backpack Bomber says F.B.I. agents clearly violated laws in the arrest of Kevin Harpham. Agents told the court they waited two hours before reading Harpham his Miranda rights in an effort to gain his trust.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Aug 14, 2011 2:14 pm

see link for full story



http://www.desmoinesregister.com/articl ... ry-by-FBI-
Basu: Hung out to dry by the FBI?
12:30 AM, Aug. 13, 2011


Since December, a Des Moines man has been in the Hardin County jail awaiting deportation to India.

That’s despite the fact that he entered the United States legally; is a lawful permanent U.S. resident and has been married 14 years to an American woman; that the 2001 crime for which he is being removed was supposed to have been expunged from his record; and that he says he worked for seven years as an informant for the U.S. government in its war on terror.

He says FBI agents promised him U.S. citizenship in return, but now have turned their backs on him.

Arvinder Singh, 42, says that since 2003, he supplied the FBI in Des Moines information on possible Muslim extremists who preached hatred of the United States. He says he assumed a fake identity and religion, wore wiretaps and infiltrated meetings at his own risk.

His story is supported by his wife, Alice, who says she was on a first name basis with at least three FBI agents who came to their house regularly, along with Des Moines police officers and once a CIA agent. She offered descriptions and recounted conversations she had with them and says she served them soft drinks.

Singh’s lawyer, Michael Said, backs his claims, saying he has spoken to two of the agents Singh worked with. A relative with whom Singh owned a liquor store also says he had knowledge of Singh’s work with the FBI.

If this is true, then Singh is a victim of duplicity by agents who used him and then, as his lawyer puts it, “threw to the wolves.”

An FBI spokeswoman in Omaha said she could not comment on Singh’s assertions. Sandra Breault said the agency doesn’t publicly disclose if someone was ever an informant. But she said FBI policies prevent promising anyone either immunity from prosecution or anything else regarding their immigration status in exchange for cooperation.

But Singh’s lawyer, an immigration specialist, says FBI agents have offered similar deals to other clients he’s had and then reneged on them, too.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Aug 15, 2011 4:34 pm

see link for full story
http://www.nydailynews.com/news/politic ... y_con.html

Business associate of Staten Island Rep. Michael Grimm is convicted felon Carlos Luquis

BY Benjamin Lesser
DAILY NEWS STAFF WRITER

Sunday, August 14th 2011, 4:00 AM


A business associate of law-and-order Rep. Michael Grimm is a convicted felon who served time for his role in a $2 million scam, the Daily News has learned.

Carlos Luquis identified himself on his business card as a "director" of Austin Refuel, a Texas-based company Grimm has co-owned since 2008.

Grimm, a Staten Island Republican, and Luquis share a law enforcement background, having worked for years as FBI agents, including a stint together in the New York office.

During his campaign for office last year, Grimm emphasized his exploits in the FBI and presented himself as a big supporter of law enforcement.

Luquis left the FBI in 2003 and became head of security for the Electric Reliability Council of Texas, a company that manages the flow of electricity in the Lone Star State.

Eighteen months later, Luquis and five others were indicted on charges of setting up bogus companies to bill ERCOT $2 million for jobs that were never done.

Luquis was convicted of two of six counts in 2006.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Aug 17, 2011 11:25 pm

see link for full story

http://www.mainjustice.com/2011/08/17/s ... r-suspect/


WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 17, 2011

Statements Thrown Out After Miranda Rights Not Read to Alleged Terror Suspect
By Channing Turner | August 17, 2011 12:21 pm


Statements made by a man suspected of attempting to bomb a Martin Luther King, Jr., Day parade in Spokane, Wash., won’t be used in court because FBI agents failed to advise him of his Miranda rights after his arrest, Talking Points Memo reported.

Keven Harpham, who has ties to white supremacist groups, was subjected to “the functional equivalent of interrogation” for several hours before being told his rights, wrote District Judge Justin Quackenbush of the Eastern District of Washington in a ruling last week.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Aug 18, 2011 1:46 am

see link for full story
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/ho ... 39757.html
Terror suspect accuses British forces of abuse

By Richard Hall

Thursday, 18 August 2011


A terrorism suspect is pursuing legal action against the British Government after alleging that he was abused by British and American interrogators during his detention in Uganda.

Lawyers representing Kenyan businessman Omar Awadh Omar say he was detained in Nairobi on 17 September last year, before being forcibly deported to Uganda and charged with offences relating to the July 2010 Kampala bombings.

During his detention, Mr Awadh claims to have been subjected to "cruel and unlawful treatment" by MI5, FBI and Ugandan agents.

A claim being brought in the High Court alleges that a British intelligence officer stamped on Mr Awadh's bare feet, and that an American who identified himself as an FBI agent punched, threatened and sexually humiliated him.

Mr Awadh's British solicitor, Tessa Gregory of Public Interest Lawyers, told The Guardian: "The Coalition Government promised to end torture under its watch but that promise has already been broken and many uncomfortable questions now fall to be answered."
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Aug 19, 2011 11:27 am

see link for full story

http://washingtonexaminer.com/local/cri ... ed-pg-teen
Ex-FBI agent indicted in crash that killed P.G. teen
By: Emily Babay | Examiner Staff Writer | Follow her: @emilybabay | 08/18/11 8:05 PM

A former FBI agent has been indicted in a February crash that killed an 18-year-old boy in Brandywine.



A Prince George's County grand jury returned a nine-count indictment against 37-year-old Adrian Johnson. Charges against him include motor vehicle manslaughter, homicide by motor vehicle, driving under the influence and reckless driving.

Prosecutors allege that Johnson was drunk and speeding when he collided with 18-year-old Lawrence Garner Jr.'s Hyundai Sonata on the 10600 block of North Keys Road on Feb. 7. The crash killed Garner and critically injured another young man.

Johnson, of Brandywine, was off-duty and driving his person vehicle at the time of the crash.

FBI spokesman Paul Bresson said in an email that Johnson was dismissed from the agency shortly after the incident. At the time, Johnson had been with the agency for six years and was preparing for an assignment of protecting the FBI director or U.S. attorney general.

The collision happened when Johnson, who was traveling north on North Keys Drive at about 10 p.m., drove into oncoming traffic, according to Prince George's County police.

His 2002 Mitsubishi Montero struck Garner's vehicle head-on, police said.

Garner was taken to a hospital, where he was pronounced dead. A passenger, 19-year-old Robert Mitchell II, suffered life-threatening injuries, but survived.

Johnson was driving 54 mph in the 40 mph zone, the indictment says. After the crash, his blood-alcohol level was more than three times the legal limit of .08, the county State's Attorney's Office said.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Aug 19, 2011 2:47 pm

FBI supervisor Lori bailey was also convicted of DUI on the Dallas Texas freeway while driving in the wrong direction. google lori bailey fbi dui convicted
FBI agent David Farrall murdered two college students driving DUI on the Florida Freeway while driving in the wrong direction google fbi hall of shame
You can also google david farrall fbi convicted dui

see link for full story
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/819829/posts
(FBI Agent) Farrall gets 90 days in wrong-way case
Miami Herald ^ | January 09, 2003 | Noah Bierman and Natalie P. McNeal

Posted on Thursday, January 09, 2003 4:08:16 PM by freeeee

`Not once did this man even get up here and accept responsibility for his actions. I think that's telling.' -- MICHAEL HOROWITZ, who prosecuted David Farrall

A judge told David Farrall that law enforcement officers need to uphold a higher standard than the rest of the community. Then he sentenced the former FBI agent to 90 days in jail in one of the most notorious DUI cases in South Florida history.

Florence Thompson, whose two sons died in a wrong-way crash with Farrall three years ago, shrieked ''yes!'' when she saw bailiffs clapping handcuffs on the agent for the first time. Still, she remained angry Farrall didn't face a more severe punishment.

Farrall cocked his head, looking stunned, as he awaited fingerprinting. First-time DUI offenders typically serve less than a month in jail and often leave the courthouse without serving a day.

He could have faced 30 years in prison if a jury had convicted him of DUI manslaughter in November. But jurors cleared the former agent of the most serious charges -- convicting him only of six misdemeanors. That left Wednesday's sentencing hearing a battle over days, rather than years.

Farrall crashed with Lauderhill brothers Maurice Williams, 23, and Craig Chambers, 19, on Nov. 23, 1999, near I-95's Atlantic Boulevard exit. The two brothers, who had come from choir practice, died in the mangled wreckage. Farrall, who had been drinking and watching Monday Night Football, survived.

The case drew enormous community attention because the brothers had initially been blamed for the crash before Florida Highway Patrol reversed its findings. Protesters claimed bias against young black men in favor of a white law enforcement officer.

Bruce Udolf capitalized on the botched investigation to win his client's acquittal. That fueled community anger further. Protests included courthouse marches and traffic slowdowns along I-95.

Farrall's six misdemeanor convictions included two charges of DUI, two charges of driving with an unlawful blood-alcohol level and two charges of reckless driving.

Wednesday, Broward Circuit Judge Marc Gold only considered the four charges related to drinking. Combined, they carried a maximum of six months in jail.

He has yet to decide whether to grant a new trial on the reckless driving charges that could add three more months to the sentence. Gold will grant a new trial on those charges if he believes a late-emerging defense witness, who claims to have seen the crash but got many of the details wrong.

Gold agreed most first-time DUI offenders receive less jail time than Farrall.

''As a law enforcement officer, he has an even greater responsibility. He sets standards by his conduct,'' Gold said.

Farrall will also serve 12 months probation and 50 hours of community service. He'll have his license suspended for one year, attend DUI school and pay a $250 fine.

Prosecutor Michael Horowitz, buoyed by community outrage, asked for the maximum six months and 500 hours of community service.

Gold reserved ruling on another special request: that Farrall pay $126,975.67 prosecutors spent on outside investigators.

''Not once did this man even get up here and accept responsibility for his actions,'' Horowitz said, with his finger pointed at Farrall. ``I think that's telling.''

Defense attorney Bruce Udolf shot back: ''Whatever he would say to give condolences would only be cynically dismissed by those who despise him.''

He said Farrall didn't speak Wednesday because he, along with the FHP and FBI, are facing two lawsuits seeking $150 million.

Udolf continued to paint Farrall as a victim who lost his job, family, friends and credibility throughout the three-year ordeal. He called the demand for $126,000 an example of ''showboating'' by losing prosecutors and said his client couldn't afford to pay it.

''This would have to be the most expensive DUI prosecution in the history of man,'' he said.

Community organizers had promised to take action if Farrall was not sentenced to jail time Wednesday. When the three-hour hearing ended, they instead turned their attention to supporting the victims.

''Ninety days is nothing, but at least there is some satisfaction that he will spend 90 days in jail,'' said the Rev. Dennis Grant, who spoke at the hearing and held his arm around Thompson as she left the courtroom.

Thompson sounded exhausted from the three-year ordeal as she watched her sobbing daughter hug a close family friend.

''He should have gotten 30 years, but of course, the jury messed up along with the Florida Highway Patrol,'' Thompson said. ``There is no satisfaction no matter what.''

Caption: "Former FBI agent David Farrall sits handcuffed at the Broward County Courthouse in Fort Lauderdale. Farrall was sentenced to 90 days in jail after being found guilty of six DUI-related misdemeanors in the deaths of brothers Maurice Williams and Craig Chambers on Nov. 23, 1999. He could have faced 30 years in prison if a jury had convicted him of DUI manslaughter in November." LOU TOMAN/Pool Photo

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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Aug 19, 2011 5:09 pm

two reads you figure out the spin
see links for full spin
http://weblogs.baltimoresun.com/sports/ ... terps.html
August 19, 2011
Edsall invites FBI agent to talk to Terps

Maryland invited an FBI agent to speak to players about making sure they steer clear of bookmakers and others who could do the program harm, head coach Randy Edsall said today.

The agent addressed the team on Thursday.

“It’s just about being proactive,” Edsall said.

He said the message was “how they have to be careful of who they’re associating with.”
The informal talk follows the disclosure by Yahoo! Sports earlier this week that a former Miami booster provided impermissible benefits to at least 72 athletes from 2002 through 2010. The booster, Nevin Shapiro, is in prison for his role in a Ponzi scheme.

Coaches use a variety of measures to try to keep players out of trouble. Edsall's predecessor, Ralph Friedgen, was known to dispatch assistants to monitor local bars. His coaches also conducted periodic evening dormitory checks

Edsall said the timing of the FBI agent’s talk wasn’t related to the Miami situation.

“That was something I had planned … so they understand the position they’re in,” the coach said.

Miami is Maryland’s opening opponent at Byrd Stadium on Sept. 5.


2nd read

FBI brawl costs Bears duo $50,000
Lineman broke jaw of teammate
Dec. 10, 2005. The heavyweight punch-up between Bears offensive linemen Olin Kreutz and Fred Miller at an FBI shooting range in Chicago will cost them $50,000 each. After a barbecue and drinks at at the range, roughhousing between Miller and Kreutz escalated to a full-blown brawl.It ended when Miller hit Kreutz in the head with a five-pound weight, breaking his jaw and opening a cut that required 13 stitches. The FBI is still investigating the incident at the FBI facility, which is off-limits to civilians.

3rd read

connect the dots to FBI agents using the Mafia to assassinate President Kennedy and Martin Luther King



The History Channel made a 9 part series called THE MEN WHO KILLED KENNEDY. The last segment was called THE GUILTY MEN
The History Channel aired this segment a few times and it proved to be the most popular show in the 9 part series.
The History Channel pulled this show off the air and refuse to sell it.
It details the evidence for the FBI assassinating President Kennedy. You can watch this program on youtube
Google the guilty men jfk youtube
Watch the 45 minute version or click here to watch it
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jgNfQYpS1gQ

In 1999 the Martin Luther King family sued one of the assassins of Martin Luther King in civil court. They did this because the department of justice would not reopen the investigation after the Martin Luther King family uncovered evidence that the FBI, CIA, and Memphis police had assassinated Dr King. The King family also wanted to enter their evidence into a public record so it could be accessed.The jury returned a verdict in favor of the King family and juror members held a press conference saying it was a clear cut case of the FBI assassinating Dr King. There was a media blackout of the trial. Details of the trial can be viewed here or by reading the book called ACT OF STATE THE EXECUTION OF Martin Luther King
written by the trial attorney William Pepper.
http://www.lewrockwell.com/spl2/mlk-con ... posed.html
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Aug 20, 2011 12:54 am

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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Aug 20, 2011 12:20 pm

The role of the Mormon Church within the FBI has yet to be clearly defined.
I do know that one of the most evil living FBI agents is a Mormon named Oliver Buck Revell
whose name has been associated with the Kennedy assassination, the Lockerbie Plane bombing, Waco,
OKC bombing and the targeting of CISPES.
I sometimes hear the two most common religions amongst FBI agents are Catholics and Mormons.
For more about Revell see
http://aangirfan.blogspot.com/2009/08/m ... rs-to.html
http://alexconstantine.blogspot.com/200 ... evell.html
http://ajweberman.com/noduleX2-OLIVER%2 ... REVELL.htm
http://books.google.com/books?id=ymANim ... &q&f=false

see link for full story
http://www.heraldextra.com/lifestyles/a ... 3c5ae.html
Eugene Foss Olsen


Daily Herald | Posted: Saturday, August 20, 2011 1:50 am | No Comments Posted


1916 ~ 2011

Eugene Foss Olsen, 94, beloved father, grandfather and great-grandfather died Thurs August 18, 2011, at his home in Orem, UT. He was born Nov 8, 1916 in Coalville, UT to Daniel Foss Olsen and Esther Lybbert Olsen. Eugene married Rae Stephens Jones Oct. 14, 1942 in the Salt Lake Temple.

Eugene worked as a Special Agent of the FBI. In 2002 he and his wife moved to Orem, UT.

Eugene served faithfully in his many callings in the LDS church. Some of his callings included President of the Spanish Branch in San Diego, Stake Patriarch of the San Diego East Stake, Mission President of the West Mexican Mission from 1967-71, Regional Representative in the Andes area of So America from 1979-1982, and as the first temple president of the Santiago Chile Temple from 1982-1985.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Aug 20, 2011 7:06 pm

see link for full story
http://www.sacbee.com/2011/08/03/380497 ... rnias.html

Sirhan Sirhan file now available at California State Archives
Wednesday, Aug. 3, 2011
Calling all crime buffs and political historians.

The California State Archives is now keeper of a collection of evidence, tapes and photographs from the investigation into Robert F. Kennedy's assassination in Los Angeles.

A candidate for the Democratic presidential nomination in 1968, the New York senator won the California primary on June 4, beating Minnesota Sen. Eugene McCarthy.

After midnight, Kennedy gave a victory speech at the Ambassador Hotel. Shortly afterward, he was shot. He survived about 26 hours before he died.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Aug 22, 2011 2:06 pm

see link for full story
http://www.boston.com/news/local/massac ... _bungling/

Kevin Cullen
Where’s the outrage over FBI bungling?
By Kevin Cullen
Globe Columnist / August 21, 2011


About 20 years ago, some ATF agents went looking for Mark Rossetti, to lock him up.


Rossetti was a career criminal and ran with a violent band of thugs out of East Boston who used guns the way painters use brushes and carpenters use saws: tools of the trade.

The Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives agents had a warrant for Rossetti on a gun charge, but every time they came close to arresting him, he somehow caught wind and eluded them.

After the ATF men finally caught Rossetti, they complained that an FBI agent named Mike Buckley was too cozy with Rossetti and didn’t want them to lock him up.

I’d say those ATF men had a legitimate beef, because according to some records I’ve come across, it turns out Mike Buckley was Rossetti’s handler back then.

Rossetti - violent thug, convicted armed robber, suspected murderer - worked for the FBI for something like 20 years. He wasn’t closed out as an FBI informant until last year, after the State Police locked him up on charges of running a violent loan-sharking and heroin ring.

The FBI made a big deal of saying it didn’t close out Rossetti sooner because the Staties had asked it not to, lest his sudden change of status tip him off that a law enforcement agency less well-disposed to him was on his case.

Left out of that statement was any admission that the FBI was wrong to recruit Rossetti in the first place, given his demonstrated penchant for guns and violence, or to maintain him as an informant when others in law enforcement suspected him of murder. Also left out was any mention that the FBI lied to the State Police when the Staties asked whether Rossetti was an FBI informant before launching the investigation that culminated with his arrest last year.

We don’t know exactly how long the FBI was paying Rossetti for information, if the FBI knew he was a suspect in at least a half-dozen killings, and how they could possibly justify using a guy with Rossetti’s record and reputation, because the FBI won’t say.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Aug 22, 2011 3:44 pm

two reads-one with FBI spin- you sort it out


see links for full stories

1st read
http://blogs.ajc.com/political-insider- ... m_galloway
Your morning jolt: New FBI unit takes aim at corrupt state judges, lawmakers in Georgia

9:01 am August 22, 2011, by jgalloway

A unique way to greet the return of the Legislature to the state Capitol this morning, from Greg Bluestein and the Associated Press:

The FBI has assembled a new squad to investigate corruption among judges and legislators in Georgia, though the top federal agent in the state is being tightlipped about what cases are developing.

Brian Lamkin, who heads the FBI office in Georgia, [said] he decided to form the team after months of reviews and a look at the bureau’s long-term priorities.

Georgia’s FBI office has long used a single squad that handled the brunt of corruption cases, from law enforcement officials to government officials. But Lamkin set up a special team to look into wrongdoing by police and other law enforcement officers and landed string of recent corruption charges. That team will still check out officers while the second new corruption squad will have a different goal, he said.

2nd read

Vol. 2 No. 11 (November, 1992) pp. 187-188

CLOAK AND GAVEL: FBI WIRETAPS, BUGS, INFORMERS, AND THE SUPREME COURT by Alexander Charns. Champaign, Illinois: University of Illinois, 1992. 206 pp. Cloth $24.95.

Reviewed by David M. O'Brien, Department of Government and Foreign Affairs, University of Virginia.

This engaging and often disturbing book sheds new light on the illegal and unethical activities of the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), along with some Supreme Court justices' highly questionable associations and unethical collaboration with the bureau. Based primarily on FBI files, Alexander Charns, a practicing attorney, begins by recounting his eight year-long litigation battle to force the bureau to release under the Freedom of Information Act its files on the Supreme Court and individual justices. In addition, Charns draws on several of the justices' papers at the Library of Congress and, notably, obtained access to Justice Abe Fortas's papers, which are located at Yale University and closed to the public until the year 2000.

The obsession of FBI director J. Edgar Hoover with combating Communism and Left-wing "subversives" through infiltration, wiretapping, and bugging has been well documented elsewhere. But, the extent to which Hoover directed his campaign at the Court has not received much attention. That, of course, has been largely because the FBI's files have remained secret. And that is where Charns's persistence and research makes a genuine contribution. His story of the FBI and federal judges' collaboration remains far from complete, to be sure, due to the bureau's secret filing systems, destruction of records, and censorship of materials that have been made available. Yet, Charns reveals that Hoover made it a practice to try to curry favor with some justices, to promote or cut short the careers of others, and to otherwise influence the federal judiciary. Moreover, between 1945 and 1974 at least twelve justices were overheard in more than 100 wiretapped conversations and Charns establishes some highly inappropriate connections between Hoover and members of the Supreme Court and the federal judiciary.

Not surprisingly, as with much of the Washington community Hoover sought covert access to and influence in the Court. And as the Warren Court moved in more liberal directions when dealing with alleged Communists in the 1950s and then the rights of the accused in the 1960s, Hoover became increasingly concerned. Hoover persuaded Court employees to inform FBI agents about the Court's deliberations, for example, in the case of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg. Later, he directed an investigation of Earl Warren and maintained files on Justice William 0. Douglas, among other justices, that included material obtained through unauthorized wiretaps. On the basis the latter material, according to Charns, Hoover may have dissuaded President Harry Truman from elevating Justice Douglas to chief justice in 1946. But, on this score Charns's evidence appears weak and circumstantial. And the competing influences and pressures on Truman when naming his friend Fred Vinson to the Court's center chair are greater and more complex that Charns concedes. In illuminating detail, however, Charns recounts how almost two decades later Hoover armed Representative Gerald R. Ford with his file on Douglas prior to Ford's bungled attempt to impeach the justice in the House of Representatives.

More revealing and disturbing is Charns's reconstruction of events in 1966 when Hoover managed to persuade Justice Abe Fortas, whom he once considered a "sniveling liberal," to keep FBI agents abreast of the Court's deliberations in a pending case. The case involved the bureau's unauthorized bugging of the hotel room of Washington lobbyist Fred Black, a close friend of Bobby Baker, who -- like Justice Fortas -- was one of President Lyndon Johnson's intimate associates. Although Justice Fortas recused himself from the case, this story of judicial impropriety comprises the heart of Charns's book and adds another chapter to the volumes already written about Justice Fortas's indiscretions and improper activities on and off the bench.

Page 188 follows:

Admittedly, as a relentless foe of the FBI and advocate-turned-author, Charns occasionally gets carried away. The significance of the FBI's assisting various justices in making travel arrangements, running background checks on potential law clerks and judicial fellows, or helping Chief Justice Warren Burger bring Oriental rugs back to the United States from England in 1985, for instance, appears highly debatable.

Still, Charns makes a strong case for his claim that "An FBI report on a nominee's background should be viewed with as much skepticism as reports submitted by other interest groups." (p. 130) He does so by revealing Hoover's directives in the 1950s to FBI field offices to identify potential judicial nominees who appear friendly to the bureau, and which turned up the likes of Potter Stewart and Warren E. Burger. Charns also highlights the importance of the FBI's uneven reports on judicial nominees and their selective use by the bureau, as well as the FBI's occasional memos to Department of Justice attorneys suggesting that they forum shop in order to have cases heard by judges known to be sympathetic to the bureau.

Finally, and even more disturbing than Justice Fortas's indiscretions and some other revelations, is the evidence Charns unearths concerning Chief Justice Burger's links with the FBI and federal Judge Edward Tamm (a former FBI assistant director) and their efforts to recruit former FBI agents as court administrators. Alas, Charns does not fully explore these connections or what he terms Chief Justice Burger's "hidden political agenda" (p. 124) in pushing reforms in the area of judicial administration. But, his book is the place for others to begin. And his documentation of the unethical and at times illegal activities of those within the FBI and the federal judiciary underscores his concluding recommendations that the working papers of both the bureau and the justices ought to be made public after a reasonable period of time. Unfortunately, Charns's book may well contribute to precisely the opposite result: former justices destroying or censoring papers before making their collections available as public records, just as has been the FBI's practice.
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Aug 22, 2011 8:24 pm

This is part 1 of a 6 part series in Mother Jones
Click link to view other 5 parts
http://motherjones.com/politics/2011/08 ... informants
The Informants
The FBI has built a massive network of spies to prevent another domestic attack. But are they busting terrorist plots—or leading them?

—By Trevor Aaronson

September/October 2011 Issue



James Cromitie was a man of bluster and bigotry. He made up wild stories about his supposed exploits, like the one about firing gas bombs into police precincts using a flare gun, and he ranted about Jews. "The worst brother in the whole Islamic world is better than 10 billion Yahudi," he once said.

A 45-year-old Walmart stocker who'd adopted the name Abdul Rahman after converting to Islam during a prison stint for selling cocaine, Cromitie had lots of worries—convincing his wife he wasn't sleeping around, keeping up with the rent, finding a decent job despite his felony record. But he dreamed of making his mark. He confided as much in a middle-aged Pakistani he knew as Maqsood.

"I'm gonna run into something real big," he'd say. "I just feel it, I'm telling you. I feel it."

Maqsood and Cromitie had met at a mosque in Newburgh, a struggling former Air Force town about an hour north of New York City. They struck up a friendship, talking for hours about the world's problems and how the Jews were to blame.

It was all talk until November 2008, when Maqsood pressed his new friend.

"Do you think you are a better recruiter or a better action man?" Maqsood asked.

"I'm both," Cromitie bragged.

"My people would be very happy to know that, brother. Honestly."

"Who's your people?" Cromitie asked.

"Jaish-e-Mohammad."
Crunch the Numbers
We analyzed the prosecutions of 508 alleged domestic terrorists. View them by affiliation or state, or play with the full data set.

Maqsood said he was an agent for the Pakistani terror group, tasked with assembling a team to wage jihad in the United States. He asked Cromitie what he would attack if he had the means. A bridge, Cromitie said.

"But bridges are too hard to be hit," Maqsood pleaded, "because they're made of steel."

"Of course they're made of steel," Cromitie replied. "But the same way they can be put up, they can be brought down."

Maqsood coaxed Cromitie toward a more realistic plan. The Mumbai attacks were all over the news, and he pointed out how those gunmen targeted hotels, cafés, and a Jewish community center.

"With your intelligence, I know you can manipulate someone," Cromitie told his friend. "But not me, because I'm intelligent." The pair settled on a plot to bomb synagogues in the Bronx, and then fire Stinger missiles at airplanes taking off from Stewart International Airport in the southern Hudson Valley. Maqsood would provide all the explosives and weapons, even the vehicles. "We have two missiles, okay?" he offered. "Two Stingers, rocket missiles."

Maqsood was an undercover operative; that much was true. But not for Jaish-e-Mohammad. His real name was Shahed Hussain, and he was a paid informant for the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Ever since 9/11, counterterrorism has been the FBI's No. 1 priority, consuming the lion's share of its budget—$3.3 billion, compared to $2.6 billion for organized crime—and much of the attention of field agents and a massive, nationwide network of informants. After years of emphasizing informant recruiting as a key task for its agents, the bureau now maintains a roster of 15,000 spies—many of them tasked, as Hussain was, with infiltrating Muslim communities in the United States. In addition, for every informant officially listed in the bureau's records, there are as many as three unofficial ones, according to one former high-level FBI official, known in bureau parlance as "hip pockets."
The bureau now maintains a roster of 15,000 spies, some paid as much as $100,000 per case, many of them tasked with infiltrating Muslim communities in the United States.

The informants could be doctors, clerks, imams. Some might not even consider themselves informants. But the FBI regularly taps all of them as part of a domestic intelligence apparatus whose only historical peer might be COINTELPRO, the program the bureau ran from the '50s to the '70s to discredit and marginalize organizations ranging from the Ku Klux Klan to civil-rights and protest groups.

Throughout the FBI’s history, informant numbers have been closely guarded secrets. Periodically, however, the bureau has released those figures. A Senate oversight committee in 1975 found the FBI had 1,500 informants. In 1980, officials disclosed there were 2,800. Six years later, following the FBI’s push into drugs and organized crime, the number of bureau informants ballooned to 6,000, the Los Angeles Times reported in 1986. And according to the FBI, the number grew significantly after 9/11. In its fiscal year 2008 budget authorization request, the FBI disclosed that it it had been been working under a November 2004 presidential directive demanding an increase in "human source development and management," and that it needed $12.7 million for a program to keep tabs on its spy network and create software to track and manage informants.

The bureau's strategy has changed significantly from the days when officials feared another coordinated, internationally financed attack from an Al Qaeda sleeper cell. Today, counterterrorism experts believe groups like Al Qaeda, battered by the war in Afghanistan and the efforts of the global intelligence community, have shifted to a franchise model, using the internet to encourage sympathizers to carry out attacks in their name. The main domestic threat, as the FBI sees it, is a lone wolf.

The bureau's answer has been a strategy known variously as "preemption," "prevention," and "disruption"—identifying and neutralizing potential lone wolves before they move toward action. To that end, FBI agents and informants target not just active jihadists, but tens of thousands of law-abiding people, seeking to identify those disgruntled few who might participate in a plot given the means and the opportunity. And then, in case after case, the government provides the plot, the means, and the opportunity.

Here's how it works: Informants report to their handlers on people who have, say, made statements sympathizing with terrorists. Those names are then cross-referenced with existing intelligence data, such as immigration and criminal records. FBI agents may then assign an undercover operative to approach the target by posing as a radical. Sometimes the operative will propose a plot, provide explosives, even lead the target in a fake oath to Al Qaeda. Once enough incriminating information has been gathered, there's an arrest—and a press conference announcing another foiled plot.

If this sounds vaguely familiar, it's because such sting operations are a fixture in the headlines. Remember the Washington Metro bombing plot? The New York subway plot? The guys who planned to blow up the Sears Tower? The teenager seeking to bomb a Portland Christmas tree lighting? Each of those plots, and dozens more across the nation, was led by an FBI asset.

Over the past year, Mother Jones and the Investigative Reporting Program at the University of California-Berkeley have examined prosecutions of 508 defendants in terrorism-related cases, as defined by the Department of Justice. Our investigation found:

Nearly half the prosecutions involved the use of informants, many of them incentivized by money (operatives can be paid as much as $100,000 per assignment) or the need to work off criminal or immigration violations. (For more on the details of those 508 cases, see our charts page and searchable database.)
Sting operations resulted in prosecutions against 158 defendants. Of that total, 49 defendants participated in plots led by an agent provocateur—an FBI operative instigating terrorist action.
With three exceptions, all of the high-profile domestic terror plots of the last decade were actually FBI stings. (The exceptions are Najibullah Zazi, who came close to bombing the New York City subway system in September 2009; Hesham Mohamed Hadayet, an Egyptian who opened fire on the El-Al ticket counter at the Los Angeles airport; and failed Times Square bomber Faisal Shahzad.)
In many sting cases, key encounters between the informant and the target were not recorded—making it hard for defendants claiming entrapment to prove their case.
Terrorism-related charges are so difficult to beat in court, even when the evidence is thin, that defendants often don't risk a trial.

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"The problem with the cases we're talking about is that defendants would not have done anything if not kicked in the ass by government agents," says Martin Stolar, a lawyer who represented a man caught in a 2004 sting involving New York's Herald Square subway station. "They're creating crimes to solve crimes so they can claim a victory in the war on terror." In the FBI's defense, supporters argue that the bureau will only pursue a case when the target clearly is willing to participate in violent action. "If you're doing a sting right, you're offering the target multiple chances to back out," says Peter Ahearn, a retired FBI special agent who directed the Western New York Joint Terrorism Task Force and oversaw the investigation of the Lackawanna Six, an alleged terror cell near Buffalo, New York. "Real people don't say, 'Yeah, let's go bomb that place.' Real people call the cops."
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Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Aug 22, 2011 9:08 pm

see link for full story
http://www.silive.com/news/index.ssf/20 ... x-fbi.html
Questions surface over ex-FBI agent, Grimm
August 21, 2011
STATEN ISLAND, N.Y. -- A convicted felon who worked with GOP Rep. Michael Grimm's energy company was also "intimately" involved in the congressman's House campaign last year and was well known by top Grimm supporters like former Borough President Guy Molinari, the Advance has learned.

In an e-mail, a source describing themself as a "disgruntled campaign supporter" said that the felon, Carlos Luquis, was frequently seen driving then-candidate Grimm to campaign events in Brooklyn and Staten Island, and working at Grimm's Island headquarters in New Dorp.

Luquis is a Navy vet and like Grimm, is a former FBI agent. The two served together in the bureau's New York office.

In a reference to Grimm's energy business, the source said that Grimm "regularly" introduced Luquis to people as his "partner, and he was very tight-lipped about who he was and where he was from."
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