FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Moderators: Elvis, DrVolin, Jeff

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Aug 24, 2011 12:06 am

another bill the taxpayer will pick up.........,.
see link for full story
http://www.ticklethewire.com/2011/08/23 ... p-in-1965/

Judge Grants $700,000 in Legal Fees in FBI Mob Frame Up in 1965
By Allan Lengel
ticklethewire.com

Saying the feds acted in “bad faith” during discovery, a federal judge in Boston has ordered the U.S. government to pay about $700,000 in legal fees in a lawsuit that resulted from four men being deliberately framed by the FBI in a 1965 mob slaying.

The legal fees are on top of the $101 million a jury awarded against the government in the lawsuit in 2007. The men and their families sued the government, alleging the FBI framed the four men in the Boston area mob slaying of Edward “Teddy” Deegan.

In her ruling earlier this month on the court fees in the lawsuit, U.S. District Judge Nancy Gertner stated:

“There is no doubt that there was bad faith in connection with the government’s conduct during discovery. The government played a shell game – dumping vast numbers of documents that were so redacted as to be incomprehensible, interposing procedural objections to delay taking any substantive position, repeatedly filing specious objections to discovery, and thenspecious motions for a stay, culminating in the disclosure that trial counsel had no access to the unredacted documents.”

The men who were framed included Peter Limone, Enrico Tameleo, Louis Greco and Joseph Salvati. All but Salvati were sentenced to die in the electric chair, but that was later reduced to a life sentence after Massachusetts did away with the death penalty. Salvati got life.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Aug 24, 2011 12:35 am

see link for full story
http://www.boston.com/Boston/metrodesk/ ... index.html
additional material will be posted to this article re: FBI agents collaboration with the death squads in El Salvador

Suspect in murders of six Jesuit priests in El Salvador accused of immigration fraud
E-mail| Print 08/23/2011 12:54 PM

By David Abel and Mark Arsenault, Globe Staff

Federal officials charged today that the former Salvadoran government minister accused of colluding in the infamous killing of six Jesuit priests in El Salvador 20 years ago engaged in immigration fraud while living in Massachusetts.

Inocente Orlando Montano who has lived in Massachusetts for years under his own name -- most recently in Everett -- is among 20 former military officers charged in fresh indictments from Spain with conspiring to kill the priests, the Globe reported this month.

The international indictments issued in May seek justice for the clergymen, five of them Spaniards; their housekeeper; and her 16-year-old daughter, who were roused at night from their beds on the campus of Central American University in San Salvador and executed by an elite unit of the Salvadoran military.

Most of those accused of the notorious war crime have never faced justice.

Montano was not taken into custody today by federal officials for the Spanish indictments. Instead, he was arrested and appeared in US District Court in Boston on charges of lying on immigration documents he filed with the federal government for the past seven years.

According to a complaint unsealed this afternoon, Montano wrote in federal documents that he never served in the El Salvadoran military when he applied for special protection under federal immigration laws.

In fact, according to the complaint, Montano served in the Salvadoran military from 1963 until 1994 when he retired with the rank of colonel. Immigration agents searched Montano’s Everett apartment two days after the Globe’s story and discovered a 1983 Salvadoran military identification card in his name showing he had the rank of lieutenant colonel.

Prosecutors said they are seeking to detain Montano unless he agrees to electronic monitoring, a requirement his attorney said he is wiling to live with. Montano’s initial appearance in court is expected to resume later this afternoon.

Montano has to be interviewed by federal probation officials. As he left the courtroom today, he ignored a Globe reporter who asked for a comment in Spanish. Montano needed a cane to assist him as he walked.

In 1993, a United Nations “truth commission’’ that investigated the clergy killings named Montano, a former government vice minister of public safety, as one of the top leaders who participated in a meeting to plot the assassination of Father Ignacio Ellacuria, the university’s rector. The government suspected Ellacuria of supporting leftist rebels. The unit dispatched to kill Ellacuria was ordered to leave no witnesses, according to the commission’s report.

The Jesuit massacre on Nov. 16, 1989, made international headlines. Photos of slain priests were shocking even for El Salvador, which at the time was deep into a 12-year civil war riddled with atrocities. About 75,000 people died in the conflict between government forces and the Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front, a collection of rebel groups.

In a June phone interview with a Salvadoran Internet newspaper, Montano said that the indictment “is all based on lies’’ and that the only high-level meetings in which he participated concerned the defense of San Salvador, which was under rebel attack at the time. He told the news site El Faro that he was in Massachusetts and had been living in the same place for the past 10 years.

Montano was located in Everett by The Center for Justice & Accountability, a human rights organization based in San Francisco. In 2008, the center filed suit against the 20 defendants in Spain, which led to the new indictments.



Spanish courts are known for applying the principle in far-reaching international indictments. Augusto Pinochet, the former Chilean dictator, was arrested in 1998 on human rights charges in London, for example, on a warrant issued by a Spanish court. He was not extradited.

Nine members of the Salvadoran military were originally charged in El Salvador in the Jesuit killings. In a 1991 prosecution widely criticized as a sham, only two went to jail, including Colonel Guillermo Alfredo Benavides, who was charged with giving the order to shoot the priests.

The UN truth commission later found “substantial evidence’’ that high-level government officials, including Montano, colluded the day before the killings to order Benavides to kill Father Ellacuria and any witnesses.

Benavides was freed under a 1993 amnesty law, approved after the peace accord that ended the country’s civil war.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Aug 25, 2011 1:23 pm

see link for estimates of how much of your tax dime was spent
http://bostonherald.com/news/columnists ... id=1361219

Just another rotten apple in FBI barrel
Peter Gelzinis By Peter Gelzinis
Thursday, August 25, 2011

The late William Ames Johnson, a highly decorated state trooper and former Green Beret in Vietnam, was not one to invite trouble. But every now and then, trouble found him. And when it did, Billy never backed down.

Back in September of 1987, Billy Johnson intercepted an FBI informant by the name of James “Whitey” Bulger at Logan Airport. The White Man, who was bound for Montreal with a ton of cash, got jammed up at the screening machines.

Billy was the trooper who answered a radio call and detained Whitey up against a terminal wall, while the FBI’s pet gangster peppered him with expletives.

Turns out, that wasn’t the first time Billy Johnson crossed paths with a thug who’d secured the care and protection of the FBI.

Mark Rossetti is Whitey Bulger redux. This reputed Mafia capo and alleged drug dealer, bank robber and extortionist has recently been unmasked as another “prized” FBI informant.

But in July 1979, when Mark Rossetti, Michael Rossetti and three other men jumped out of a car in East Boston and beat Billy Johnson with baseball bats, this capo was little more than an ambitious goon.

Johnson was off duty and driving his wife home from work when his car was cut off by five men who beat him nearly to death.

Billy identified Mark and Michael Rossetti, who were charged with assault and battery with intent to murder . . . and set free on $500 cash bail.

While Mark Rossetti was awaiting trial for the assault on Johnson, he was accused of being poised to enter into a drug deal with Bill Mc-Greal, a state police detective working undercover.

“This guy (Rossetti) was straight out of central casting,” recalled McGreal, who is now retired. “He says to us, ‘If something goes wrong . . . something is gonna go seriously wrong with youse guys.’ ”

Both Rossettis copped a plea in the Johnson beating, halting any future dealings with the undercover cop.

A dozen years later, McGreal would take an FBI special agent to a jail cell where one of McGreal’s informants hoped to trade his freedom by offering up Mark Rossetti.

“I’ll never forget what (the agent) told me,” McGreal said. “He says to me, ‘We decided to pass on Rossetti.’ ”

Much like the Whitey saga, it was a state police investigation that exposed Mark Rossetti’s cozy relationship with the Sons of Hoover.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Aug 31, 2011 6:20 pm

see link for full story
http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/Justice/20 ... r-a-decade

How a Special Ops impersonator duped the FBI for a decade

William Hillar fraudulently posed as a US Army Special Forces veteran and terrorism expert for 12 years, winning lucrative contracts and duping, among others, the FBI.


By Warren Richey, Staff writer / August 30, 2011

A Maryland man was sentenced on Tuesday to 21 months in federal prison and ordered to pay $171,000 in restitution after admitting that he had fraudulently posed for 12 years as a US Army special forces veteran and terrorism expert.

William Hillar used false claims about his background and academic credentials to win teaching and training contracts from 1998 to 2010.

Among the organizations he duped: the Federal Bureau of Investigation Command College, which paid him $17,369 from 2000 to 2010, according to court documents.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Sep 01, 2011 12:22 am

David Burnham, author of A Law Unto Itself: The IRS and the Abuse of Power, tells the Senate of the historical use of the IRS as a political hit squad and the need for investigation and oversight. (background)

See http://civilliberty.about.com/gi/dynami ... urnham.htm for the original article.

PREPARED STATEMENT OF

DAVID BURNHAM

BEFORE THE SENATE FINANCE COMMITTEE

OVERSIGHT HEARING ON THE INTERNAL REVENUE SERVICE

TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 23, 1997

Mr. Chairman and members of the committee, thank you for requesting my testimony. I very much appreciate the opportunity to appear before this distinguished body.

The record clearly demonstrates that the lack of effective oversight of the Internal Revenue Service -- by Congress, the courts, reporters, tax practitioners, and other concerned individuals - has done grievous harm to the American people for many years. While it has become a cliche, it nevertheless remains a basic truth: the price of liberty is eternal vigilance. Because we have routinely failed to hold the IRS accountable for its actions, the agency has too often operated in abusive, sloppy, unresponsive, improperly political and occasionally corrupt ways that are a threat to our society.

The IRS's continuing problems are costly to the nation in two ways. First, a badly managed agency does not collect as much as might be expected of the relatively small, but still significant, portion of the federal taxes owed by noncomplying taxpayers. The second cost is harder to measure, but probably more important. A badly managed agency is unfair: substantial numbers of individual citizens are erratically subject to wrongful actions. Such treatment contributes to the growth of a corrosive public cynicism that undermines public confidence in government in a fundamentally dangerous way.

My belief that strong oversight can have positive impact on government is not theoretical. It is based on direct experience. As a reporter who has investigated large powerful bureaucracies like the New York City Police Department, the National Security Agency, the FBI and the IRS for the last 30 years, I have seen clear and certain examples where public exposure of serious government problems has led to genuine improvements in government operations. We need the New York Police Department, we need the FBI, we need the IRS. But when such powerful organizations are allowed to operate without continuous constructive review, history tells us that almost certainly they will go wrong, sometimes in very serious ways.

The IRS, of course, is the subject of the committee's hearings. More than ten years ago, I began an investigation of that agency that led to the 1989 publication of A Law Unto Itself: The IRS and the Abuse of Power. This book was a unique and highly praised examination of the agency's historic and continuing failure to well serve the American people. To my astonishment, shortly after its publication, Fred Goldberg, the IRS commissioner at the time, told a national television audience that my critique of the agency had got it right.

Perhaps one reason the commissioner did not condemn my book is that it did not heap blame on the Bush Administration alone. My research, in fact, found that the IRS has suffered mishaps and misadventures under almost every president, Republican and Democrat, going back at least to Herbert Hoover. I found authoritative government documents clearing showing numerous multiple abuses:

* Herbert Hoover, irritated by political criticism of his budget- cutting policies by an organization of weapons manufacturers, ordered a secret FBI investigation of the group that was partly based on supposedly confidential tax information.

* Franklin Delano Roosevelt regularly used the IRS as a political hit squad. He ordered the agency to mobilize its enforcement powers against former Treasury Secretary Mellon, Senator Huey Long, the singer Paul Robeson, Republican Representative and neighbor Hamilton Fish, Father Charles Coughlin and many others.

* During President Truman's watch, a massive and long-festering IRS corruption scandal erupted during which hundreds of agency officials and agents were implicated, including one secretary of treasury, one commissioner and one assistant attorney general. A good number were convicted and sent to prison for taking bribes or forced to resign from government service.

* With the full knowledge of President Kennedy and his brother, the IRS Commissioner of that administration established a program to go after "extremist organizations." Although the memos describing the program said the extremists of concern were on both the right and the left, it appears that all of those who lost their tax exempt status in connection with this program were fundamentalist conservatives who had been criticizing the president.

* President Nixon, among other abuses, established within the IRS the SSS --the Special Service Staff--to use tax records to track "dissident groups and individuals." One of the impeachment counts approved by the House Judiciary Committee involved the president's misuse of the IRS.

* During the Reagan years, the IRS forgot the lesson of the Truman era, and cut back on agency efforts to discover and punish corruption. The result was what appears to have been a mini-surge in willingness of IRS officials and agents to use their governmental powers for private gain in cities like Philadelphia, Chicago and Los Angeles.

Although it may not at first be obvious to you, my point here is not that the IRS is inevitably a corrupt and badly-run organization. On the contrary, growing out of the exposure of the problems of both the Truman and Nixon Administrations came periods of serious public concern and genuine reform.

This truth -- that large and powerful organizations desperately need outside review by informed critics -- is one that Congress has often ignored. As the chairman and members of the Senate Finance Committee know, the historical record proves that oversight of the IRS has rarely been a major concern of this committee. It must be acknowledged -- and it should be celebrated -- that the breadth and depth of this hearing on the basic performance of the IRS is unusual, although perhaps not unprecedented. I contend that the record of the House Ways and Means Committee and the Joint Tax Committee and the General Accounting Office is not much better. For Congress, re-writing tax laws and imposing new sanctions to enhance the collection of tax dollars have almost always overwhelmed concerns about the fairness and effectiveness of the IRS.

In America, however, oversight is not a Congressional monopoly. Thanks to the First Amendment of the Constitution, news organizations are free to investigate and publicize the failures of government. But when it comes to the IRS, the media has rivaled Congress in its failure to audit America's largest and in some ways most powerful enforcement agency. More than twenty years ago, two very good reporters from the Philadelphia Inquirer undertook a ground breaking and prizewinning investigation of the IRS. Very recently, the New York Times has assigned David Cay Johnston to focus on the agency and its enforcement activities. Other than that -- and the flurry of IRS reporting after Watergate -- coverage of this agency that touches the lives of almost every American has for many years been largely ignored by both print and television reporters.

In some ways, the lack of effective oversight is not all that surprising. The IRS is a very large and very complicated agency that is not easy to understand. And there are many people -- especially within the beltway -- who truly do not understand that the nitty-gritty of how the government rubs up against individual citizens is more significant in many ways than the grandest and most publicized federal "initiative." A couple of years ago, the senior lobbyist for a major national organization in Washington made the astonishing statement to me that he was only interested in government "policy," not government "enforcement."

This curiously obtuse attitude was a central reason why Susan Long, a professor at Syracuse University, and I decided in 1989 to form the Transactional Records Access Clearinghouse (TRAC). Our basic idea was that if Congressional committees, reporters, public interest groups, scholars and businesses were able to obtain comprehensive information about the day-to-day activities of federal enforcement agencies, they would undertake serious oversight studies. Since that time -- with the support of Syracuse University, the Knight Foundation, the Rockefeller Family Fund and The New York Times Company Foundation and other organizations -- TRAC has obtained internal administrative data tapes from the Justice Department and a number of federal enforcement agencies and provided it to the public in new and innovative ways.

In the spring of 1996, and again in 1997, for example, TRAC created a special site on the World Wide Web that gave viewers all over the nation many thousands of pages of maps, charts, graphs and tables about the civil and criminal enforcement activities of the IRS. The address is http://trac.syr.edu/tracirs For the first time ever, TRAC's site gives taxpayers, reporters, public interest groups, and scholars easy access to comprehensive and authoritative information about how, where and when the IRS is enforcing the law. With this information, it now is possible to examine and question the basic policies of the agency.

* DATA FACTS: From 1980 to 1995, IRS criminal enforcement underwent a dramatic shift in emphasis. In 1980, more than three quarters of all IRS prosecutions were aimed at individuals accused of traditional tax crimes like failure to file or the filing of a fraudulent return. By 1995, less than half of IRS prosecutions involved traditional tax violations, with crimes like money laundering, drugs and currency violations taking their place. From 1988 to 1995, civil audit rates for individual nonbusiness taxpayers with incomes over $100,000 declined by a factor of four.

* POLICY QUESTIONS: The sharp decline in IRS activities against wealthier individuals and traditional forms of tax violations is a striking change in national tax enforcement policy that has gone on under the Reagan, Bush and Clinton administrations. Why were these changes instituted? Was this important shift the product of conscious decisions by top policy makers or an accident? Is there any evidence that the change has resulted in the collection of more revenue? Or less?

* DATA FACTS: Government data show wide variations in the civil and criminal enforcement patterns of the IRS, some of which appear to make very little sense. The taxpayers in Manhattan, Brooklyn and Las Vegas, for example, all have something in common with taxpayers in northern Florida and the comparatively rural areas around the North Carolina cities of Greensboro and Ashville. In 1995, on a per capita basis, they all ranked among the ten most active districts when it came to the prosecution of IRS criminal cases. On the civil side, taxpayers in the IRS's San Francisco district, Mississippi, Idaho and New York City stood the highest chance of being audited. One curious fact about the taxpayers in these very different districts concerned their income. New York had the highest adjusted gross income and Mississippi had the lowest.

* POLICY QUESTIONS: Does the IRS have an effective national program to make sure that areas with the most problem taxpayers have most enforcement resources? Or is the effort in fact a random one involving the relative energy levels of different district managers? Has the combined impact of various forms of IRS enforcement actions -notices, audits, criminal indictments -- ever been studied? Given the high cost of moving IRS staff, has the agency developed a plan to continually use the natural forces of attrition to shift auditors and examiners to areas where they are most needed?

* DATA FACTS: In March 1996, TRAC mounted its first web site on the patterns and trends of IRS criminal enforcement. The information was based on data obtained from the Justice Department under the Freedom of Information Act. Although both the IRS and the Justice Department were given access to the site before it became publicly available, neither raised any questions. When news organizations began to publish articles based on the data, however, spokespersons for both agencies questioned the validity of the government's own information. The curious tactic of impeaching your own material prompted us to separately ask the agencies to meet with us to resolve whatever problems they had with our data analysis. Both refused. At this point, we undertook a new study in which we compared -- where it was possible -- the enforcement information from the Justice Department, the courts and the IRS. This study found that the portrait of criminal tax enforcement painted by the Department and court data were highly consistent. Surprisingly, however, the department and court data patterns were very different than reported by the IRS. In 1995, for example, the IRS claims it sent twice as many persons to prison as was recorded by the department and the courts. This discrepancy -- and several others -- led us to conclude that important information provided the public in the IRS's annual report about its criminal enforcement effort was "substantially misleading and inaccurate."

*POLICY QUESTIONS: Why is the IRS, of all agencies, unable to properly balance the books on what is in fact a low-volume part of its activities? Given the failure of the IRS to account for its criminal enforcement activities -- even with parallel information available from the Justice Department and the courts -- what faith can be placed in its accounting of civil audits? If the IRS enforcement information is in fact seriously flawed, how can Congress judge its basic competence? Has the General Accounting Office ever conducted a detailed audit of IRS enforcement counts published each year in the agency's annual report?

The hard numbers are there. The good questions are there. All that has been lacking are skeptical Congressional Committees, reporters, scholars and tax practitioners willing to invest the time and energy to understand the numbers and to ask questions.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Sep 04, 2011 12:28 pm

http://www.ukprogressive.co.uk/grassley ... ment-20552
Grassley Challenges DOJ, FBI on Anthrax Case

September 4, 2011 3:45 pm

by Greg Gordon, McClatchy Newspapers, Mike Wiser, FRONTLINE, and Stephen Engelberg, ProPublica

This story was co-published with PBS Frontline and McClatchy.

WASHINGTON — A senior Republican senator has asked the Justice Department to explain why its civil lawyers filed court papers questioning prosecutors’ conclusions that an Army researcher mailed the anthrax-laced letters that killed five people in 2001.

In a letter this week to Attorney General Eric Holder and FBI Director Robert Mueller, Sen. Charles Grassley of Iowa said the department’s decision to quickly retract the contradictory filings“has produced a new set of questions regarding this unsolved crime.”

Grassley, who’s among several members of Congress who’ve been outspoken skeptics about the FBI’s conclusion, homed in on a development first reported collaboratively in July by PBS’ “Frontline,” McClatchy and the investigative newsroom ProPublica.

The Justice Department’s civil lawyers said July 15 in a major court filing in the case that Bruce Ivins, a now-deceased Army anthrax researcher whom the FBI has tagged as the killer, lacked access in his lab to the “specialized equipment” needed to dry wet anthrax spores into airborne powder that could be easily inhaled.

After hearing from the FBI and the department’s Criminal Division, the civil attorneys persuaded a federal judge in West Palm Beach, Fla., to permit 10 revisions to their position so it conformed with the FBI’s determination that Ivins did have equipment available to do the job.

Grassley, the ranking Republican on the Senate Judiciary Committee and a longtime FBI critic, said he wanted a briefing to “determine why it appears, at the least, that the right hand and left hand of the (Justice Department) do not know what the other is doing.”

Justice Department spokesman Dean Boyd declined to comment on the letter, but said the department and the FBI “stand behind their findings that Dr. Ivins had the necessary equipment” to prepare the powder needed for the attacks and are confident they “would have proven his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt at a criminal trial.”

The brouhaha developed as department lawyers sought to persuade a federal judge to dismiss an eight-year-old suit by the family of Bob Stevens, a photo editor for American Media Inc., in Boca Raton, Fla., who was the first person who died from the attacks.

The suit accuses the government of negligence, charging that it failed to adequately secure stocks of anthrax, one of the deadliest biological weapons, at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases at Fort Detrick in Frederick, Md.

The anthrax attacks killed five people in New York, Connecticut, Washington, D.C., and Florida, sickened 17 others and forced an estimated 30,000 people to take extended antibiotics therapy as a precaution. The $100 million, eight-year hunt for the perpetrator has been described as the most complex investigation in the FBI’s history.

In his letter, sent Wednesday, Grassley said the Justice Department’s initial filing in the court case “seemingly eliminated” the government’s circumstantial case against Ivins, who committed suicide in 2008 after learning that prosecutors planned to seek his indictment on five counts of capital murder.

Grassley said he found the department’s contradictory filings “particularly troubling” because a National Academy of Sciences panel in February called into question the FBI’s assertion that genetic sequencing had definitively traced the source of the anthrax powder to a flask in Ivins’ lab. He noted that two USAMRIID scientists, in sworn depositions in the suit, disputed the FBI’s conclusion that Ivins could have made the powder in his laboratory.

Grassley also asked for an update on a prolonged investigation into news leaks that publicly identified another former USAMRIID microbiologist as a subject of the FBI investigation. That microbiologist, Stephen Hatfill, ultimately filed a privacy infringement suit against the government and obtained a $5.8 million court settlement.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Sep 04, 2011 10:31 pm

fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 06, 2011 1:35 am

More information showing how FBI agents covered for the Mafia back in the 1930's until current times.
FBI agents allowed the Mafia to infiltrate american unions on behalf of corporations.
In the 1960's FBI agents would turn to the Mafia to assist in the assassinations of President Kennedy and Martin Luther King.

see link for full story
http://www.heraldpalladium.com/articles ... 288374.txt
Life of a mob wife, exposed

John Madill / H-P staff Chriss Lyon with "Al Capone and His American Boys." Lyon, a local historian, helped author William Helmer with research. "There's a good amount of Berrien County reference," she said.

Local historian helps gangster researcher tell tale buried in FBI files for decades
By JULIE SWIDWA - H-P Staff Writer
Published: Tuesday, September 6, 2011 12:25 AM EDT
ST. JOSEPH - In 1934, an attempt to publish Georgette Winkeler's memoir was squelched by the mob. Found buried in FBI files 50 years later, the manuscript is now the focus of a new book, "Al Capone and His American Boys: Memoirs of a Mobster's Wife."

Author William J. Helmer weaves gangster history into the pages of Winkeler's record of her life with a member of Al Capone's Chicago mob. Some of the history centers around the capture of Fred "Killer" Burke, with ties to Berrien County.

Helmer credits local historian Chriss Lyon with much of the account of Burke's capture and the events in Benton Harbor and St. Joseph leading up to it.

"I've been working with him for about three years on this," said Lyon, communications supervisor at the Berrien County 911 Dispatch Center and a local historian and author. She is credited on page 123 of Helmer's book and listed as one of the people to whom he dedicates the book.

"She was a big help in picking up the details related to the car wreck and the capture of Burke. She got all kinds of details," Helmer said in a phone interview from his home in Boerne, Texas, near San Antonio.

Helmer said that while researching the 1929 St. Valentine's Day Massacre, he learned some basic information about Burke's killing of a police officer in St. Joseph, but that Lyon filled in many details.

Burke was a member of Al Capone's gang involved in the massacre, as was August "Gus" Winkeler, Georgette Winkeler's husband. The guns used in the massacre were found at a house Burke owned in Stevensville and are now with the Berrien County Sheriff's Department. Before he was captured, Burke - believed to be one of Capone's hit men in the massacre in Chicago - shot and killed St. Joseph policeman Charles Skelley in 1929 following a traffic accident in St. Joseph. Lyon helped provide details for that section of the book.

"I got acquainted with (Helmer) through a group of people who are all working on stuff related to Al Capone," Lyon said. "He was trying to find information about Georgette, and being a genealogist, I produced information that built my credibility with him."

Helmer stumbled upon Georgette Winkeler's manuscript buried in an FBI file while doing his own research.

He said that after her husband was murdered in 1933, Georgette Winkeler attempted suicide. Then she wrote her memoirs for a book intended to expose the workings of the Chicago syndicate. Her publisher declared the book "too hot" to publish, Helmer said, probably because she names several gangsters and was threatened by the mob.

Helmer said that a frustrated Georgette Winkeler gave her manuscript to the FBI office in Chicago, where he found it buried in a file decades later.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 06, 2011 1:20 pm

see link for full story
http://www.indypendent.org/2011/09/06/i ... ent-469483
I Was a ‘Domestic Terrorist’: Tales from a Post-9/11 America
By Brad Crowder
From the September 6, 2011 issue | Posted in National | Email this article

Editor’s Note: In August 2008, Brad Crowder and David McKay, two young activists from Austin, Texas, traveled to St. Paul, Minnesota, to protest the Republican National Convention. After a trailer full of their supplies and homemade shields were seized by St. Paul police without explanation, the two sought retaliation.

For months an older activist and FBI informant had been goading Brad and David to take stronger action, telling them he was going to St. Paul to “shut the fucker down.” The night of Aug. 31 Crowder and McKay assembled eight Molotov cocktails in the building they were staying in near the convention center. The next day they decided not to use them, but failed to dispose of the devices before leaving for protests.

On the morning of Sept. 2 – the day Sarah Palin was introduced to the world – McKay was awakened by a cop’s rifle pointing at his face. Labeled by officials as “domestic terrorists” and the “Texas Two” by supporters, they found themselves the subject of a high-profile government case meant to justify tens of millions of dollars in security expenses for the convention. Crowder was sentenced to two years in jail and was released last year, while McKay was sentenced to four years.

Brad and David’s story are told in the award-winning new documentary, Better This World, which will air nationwide Sept. 6 on the PBS program POV.

The following is Brad Crowder’s first published account of his experience, an exclusive to The Indypendent newspaper and Truthout.
LOCKED UP: Protesting the 2004 Republican National Convention, Crowder was pepper sprayed, incarcerated and eventually prosecuted as a ‘domestic terrorist.’ (Credit: Ramsey County Sheriff’s office.)
LOCKED UP: Protesting the 2004 Republican National Convention, Crowder was pepper sprayed, incarcerated and eventually prosecuted as a ‘domestic terrorist.’ (Credit: Ramsey County Sheriff’s office.)
It began with the sound of the cold metal ratchet, the pressure gripping my wrists and squeezing all the way up to my heart. A brief, almost flippant sentence uttered by Special Agent Christopher Langert signified my terrifying new reality: “Mr. Crowder, you are under arrest by the FBI.

Five days earlier, I had been arrested by the cops in Minneapolis for “Failure to Disperse from an Unlawful Assembly.” We had been rounded up en masse. I had just seen David surrender to the police and witnessed another cop wield his baton like a bat across the head of a photojournalist. Another comrade, whom I knew from antiracist and antifascist organizing, was with me. Tears were streaming down his face; he was screaming at the police, his voice a poignant mix of rage, indignation and helplessness.

“Noah, come on man, we’ve got to go.” I pressed against his chest, trying to keep him from being separated from the herd to be picked off by black-clad jackals who carried their fangs in their hands and on their belts.

But it was too late, and we had been corralled into a parking lot. The ranks closed ahead of us as we ran, turning to see another line of professional violence block each avenue of freedom. The dark noose quickly began shrinking, choking us off. I had seen protest videos before. I knew what was coming.

“Noah! We gotta get down!” I grabbed him by the shoulder and we went belly down on the asphalt amid the chaos. I looked up at the sky and saw it fill with black. A boot came down on my back, pinning me. I turned my head in a pathetic attempt to escape the spray. A stinging cloud soaked my long, blonde hair, hit the asphalt and splashed across my face and eyes. I felt the oily, peppery stench of capitalism, of the state, clinging to my flesh and burning it.

I managed to look up and see a riot cop barreling toward a videographer. He was backpedaling, camera in one hand, press credentials in the other, pleading, “But I’m press! I’m press!” It seemed naïve: a sweet faith in goodness and reason regardless of the batshit craziness going on all around.

That cop never missed a step, plowing into the journalist with a full head of steam, leaving him splayed across the parking lot and his camera destroyed. Let this be a lesson to those inclined to reason with the state. It contains no reason; it has only command, obedience and violence.

HARD TIME
My hands were zip-tied and I was bundled onto a bus to be taken to Ramsey County Jail. As far as I knew, I was looking at a petty misdemeanor charge that carried a $300 bail. I had been arrested before for a $20 sack of weed and various traffic fines that I had refused to pay due to a combination of poverty, principle and irresponsibility. Jail wasn’t a new experience for me, so I was nervous but relatively light hearted.

That changed two days later, when I heard the door to my unit slam shut. I was in a cell by myself at the time, laying on my bunk and trying to block out the burn of the pepper spray that still soaked my hair and clothes. Ultimately they held me for about five days covered in pepper spray, unable to escape that god-awful burn. My hands were beginning to crack due to my incessant hand washing. I held them to a vent to blow the pepper off. I doused them in milk. Without a change of clothes and a shower, it was all just a practice in desperate futility. I still really fucking resent those assholes for that.

Anyway, I heard the door slam. I saw David being led into the unit by a pair of men who wore their credentials on chains around their necks and clearly shopped at Men’s Warehouse.

David was wearing completely different clothing from the protest. This confused me and I became very scared. What I didn’t know at the time was that the building where David and the rest of us were staying had been raided by the Joint Terrorism Task Force.

I became scared because David and I had made eight Molotov Cocktails the night before the protests began. The firebomb of the poor, they consisted of motor oil and gasoline poured into wine bottles that were duct-taped closed, with cotton tampons rubber-banded to the sealed necks. When the tampon was lit and the bottle thrown, the shattered glass would release the accelerant to be ignited by the flame. We were stupid for making them, but smart for not using them. When we woke up the next day we decided not to use them and to destroy them when we had the chance. What had gone wrong? Something had clearly spiraled out of control, but I had no idea what lay in store for me.

WHO’S THE TERRORIST?
I learned soon enough that our faces were all over the papers, television and the internet. I was now a “domestic terrorist.” They were serious.

I wasn’t allowed a phone call for a week. All my family and friends learned of my fate via the media. My mom saw it on the local Midland news. Two close friends saw my mug shot plastered across the big screen TV at a club in Austin.

I couldn’t process any of it. The term domestic terrorist sounded so melodramatic. I could never build any sort of connection between my identity and the term itself. Hell, as far as it seemed to me, David and I were the only ones terrified.

One of the few good things to happen is that our story was turned into a movie, Better This World. It follows me and David through the surreal process of being in the grip of the American court system, and the Faustian choices that each of us were confronted with at every turn.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Sep 07, 2011 12:01 am

see link for full story
http://www.indystar.com/article/2011090 ... ommunities
Former city-county councilman's trial opens
Sep. 6, 2011 |

Written by
Carrie Ritchie

A jury has heard opening statements in federal court today in the trial of former Indianapolis City-Council Councilman Lincoln Plowman.

The statements gave jurors a preview of what’s to come: five hours of video and audio recordings that allegedly show that Plowman accepted money for helping an FBI agent posing as a developer bring a strip club downtown. Undercover agents involved in the investigation also are supposed to testify.

Plowman faces federal bribery and extortion charges. After beginning this morning, jury selection was completed about 3:15 p.m. today.

Testimony from witnesses will begin Wednesday, and the jury also will see some of the recordings.

Plowman, who also was a major with the Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, is accused of agreeing in 2009 to help an undercover FBI agent bring a strip club Downtown. The alleged tradeoff: $5,000 in cash and a $1,000 campaign contribution.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Sep 14, 2011 9:54 pm

see link for full story
http://www.detnews.com/article/20110914 ... er-attacks
September 14. 2011 2:57PM
Agent: FBI chose not to read Miranda rights over fears of further attacks
Robert Snell/ The Detroit News

Detroit — An FBI agent who helped trace the radicalization of a Nigerian terrorist suspect before he allegedly tried to blow up an airliner over Metro Detroit on Christmas Day 2009 testified Wednesday that fears over further attacks that may have been underway led to no Miranda rights being read to Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab.

Special Agent Timothy Waters testified Wednesday during a pretrial hearing in the terrorism case for Abdulmutallab that news of the attack launched a full-scale effort to thwart any other attacks that might have been taking place.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 17, 2011 12:27 am

see link for full story
http://bostonherald.com/news/columnists ... position=4
Kin: Feds, Whitey past tipping point
Peter Gelzinis By Peter Gelzinis
Friday, September 16, 2011

Patricia Donahue doesn’t believe any of it.

Not the nameless woman in Iceland. Not the toll-free call she supposedly made to the FBI. And not the $2 million check the Sons of Hoover quietly sent her this week for pointing them to Whitey.

“I think it’s all (expletive),” she said yesterday.

Can you blame her?

Pat’s husband, Michael, is one of the 19 people Whitey Bulger stands accused of killing. At the time Whitey allegedly machine-gunned Donahue — who agreed to give Brian Halloran a ride — he was under the care and protection of the FBI as a “top echelon informant.”

For almost two decades, Pat Donahue struggled to raise her sons in silence, before learning of the rancid marriage between Whitey and the feds.

The late U.S. District Court Judge Reginald Lindsay found the arrangement so abhorrent he awarded Pat and her sons $6.4 million in compensation.

A federal appeals court recently overturned the award, saying the Donahues were too late in filing their suit. Apparently, they should have realized earlier that the FBI had become Whitey’s partner in crime.

“Now, I am supposed to believe that these same people who fought us tooth and nail to make sure we wouldn’t get a dime,” Pat said, “gave $2 million to some lady in Iceland? Just like that ... Iceland!

“I’m sorry, but I just don’t believe any of it. I have no faith in the government or the FBI,” she said. “To me, they just want to protect their lies.”

Indeed, the irony here is beyond cruel — and more than a bit suspicious. Two million bucks gets shipped off to a tipster who picked up the phone back in June ... and just happens to be located near the North Pole.

Meanwhile, those who suffered under the reign of Bulger’s terror right here, at the time Whitey was sanctioned by the FBI, get zilch.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 17, 2011 6:22 pm

Epidemic of gagging at FBI headquarters. Lots of mouth to mouth being performed

see link for full vomit

12 September 2011
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-14891439

Ex-FBI interrogator 'gagged' over 9/11 backstory
By Gordon Corera & Steve Swann BBC News


Former FBI agent Ali Soufan says he has not been allowed to tell the truth about 9/11 and events since


A former FBI agent who worked at the heart of America's battle against al-Qaeda has told the BBC he is being prevented from telling the truth as he challenges the back story of 9/11 and what has happened since.



Ali Soufan has not appeared on camera before, but he has now decided to speak out to counter what he sees as a misleading narrative about the last 10 years.

Mr Soufan has direct, first-hand experience of some of the most heated controversies of the past decade: whether 9/11 could have been prevented and whether tactics like the water boarding of al-Qaeda suspects were effective and justified.
Continue reading the main story
Find out more


Born in Lebanon, Mr Soufan came to America as a teenager and joined the FBI in the 1990s. As one of the only Arabic speakers he was assigned to early investigations on al-Qaeda.
'I threw up'

When the 9/11 attacks occurred, he was in Yemen investigating the bombing of the USS Cole.

The day after the attacks, he met a CIA officer at the US embassy in Yemen. The officer passed him an envelope.

Inside was a report detailing links between people Mr Soufan had been investigating for the warship bombing and two of the hijackers - who had been living in the US for months.


People in our government knew that they were here - we were not told”

Ali Soufan Former FBI investigator

Mr Soufan says that written requests for this kind of information had been made three times before without any result.

"I think it was probably the worst feeling I have ever experienced in my life," he told BBC Newsnight in an interview.

"It was a combination of frustration, anger, sadness, betrayal. The only thing I recall is I left the office, went across the hall to the bathroom and I just threw up."

He believes the material would have made a difference.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 17, 2011 6:26 pm

see link for full story

http://www.thewetumpkaherald.com/opinio ... 002e0.html
Will the prosecution fumble again?


Posted: Saturday, September 17, 2011 3:43 pm


The much publicized gambling trial which ended in August will be played out again in January. The first trial ended with the jury finding two defendants innocent and a mistrial being declared for the other seven when the jury could not reach a unanimous verdict.

The jury acquitted two of the original defendants, State Sen. Quinton Ross and lobbyist Bob Geddie. The other defendants are former state senators, Larry Means of Attala and Jim Preuitt of Talladega, lobbyist Tom Coker, former Country Crossings spokesman Jay Walker from Georgia, VictoryLand owner Milton McGregor, State Senator Harri Ann Smith from Slocomb and legislative analyst Ray Crosby.

The seven remaining defendants are accused of participating in a scheme in which casino owners and their lobbyists purportedly bribed state lawmakers to support legislation that if passed by voters would have allowed VictoryLand, Country Crossings and other casinos to stay open and compete with the federally regulated Indian casinos in the state.

During testimony from an FBI agent evidence came to light indicating that this entire investigation was very likely instigated and orchestrated for political purposes. Therefore, any political consequences of this current scenario have already been accomplished.

The revelation that an investigation was ongoing occurred on the eve of a House vote which affected the outcome of that vote.

This trial is an after effect and the results will have no repercussions or effect on current or future Alabama political races.

The clear winners are the Indian gambling facilities. The seven remaining defendants are the losers.

Regardless of whether they are ultimately exonerated, which looks like will probably be the case, their legal defense costs are staggering and most if not all are ruined financially from the costs of defending themselves. Most of the defendants are older and nearing retirement age. Their entire retirement and life savings have been depleted.
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

Re: FBI WATCH MAKING CRUELTY VISIBLE

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 20, 2011 1:56 am

Former Colombian Secret Police Chief Convicted of Murder

by Bill Van Auken


Global Research, September 19, 2011
World Socialist Web Site - 2011-09-17


The former head of Colombia’s secret police was convicted September 14 of homicide and conspiracy in connection with the death squad murder of a popular sociology professor and human rights activist.



Jorge Noguera Cotes, who headed the Department of Administrative Security, or DAS, between 2002 and 2005, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for homicide, conspiracy, disclosure of secret information and destroying or concealing public documents.



All of the charges stem from the close links maintained between the DAS and the right-wing paramilitary militia known as the AUC (Self-Defense Units of Colombia), which carried out the 2004 assassination of Professor Alfredo Correa de Andreis in the northern industrial port city of Barranquilla.



Formed in the 1980s, with the financing and backing of Colombia’s landowners and industrialists, the AUC and similar right-wing paramilitary gangs—often working in close collaboration with the military—were responsible for the bulk of the massacres and assassinations carried out over the last quarter century of civil war. These included the death squad killings of tens of thousands of peasants, workers, left-wing politicians, students and human rights advocates. The AUC and other right-wing paramilitary outfits are also estimated to have controlled some three quarters of the country’s cocaine trade.



The deep involvement of the state and virtually all of its institutions in these crimes became the defining feature of the right-wing presidency of Alvaro Uribe, the closest US ally in Latin America, between 2002 and 2010. During this period Washington, touted Colombia as a success story in its combined “war on drugs” and “global war on terror.”



In the parapolitica scandal that broke out during his second term, scores of Uribe’s closest supporters, including 62 members of Congress and his own cousin and closest political ally, Mario Uribe Escobar, were investigated or jailed on charges of colluding with illegal paramilitary organizations.



The related scandal surrounding the DAS erupted in 2007 with the arrest of Rafael Garcia Torres, chief of the DAS computer department, who was charged with taking bribes from right-wing paramilitary elements as well as drug traffickers to erase their judicial records.



Garcia was a political associate of Noguera, going back to 2002, when the latter ran Uribe’s first election campaign in Colombia’s northern coastal region, and Garcia was credited with developing computer programs that helped fix the elections in the region in favor of Uribe and his supporters. After Uribe tapped Noguera to head the DAS, Garcia was the first person he appointed to a top position in the secret police agency.



Both men had worked in the 2002 election in collaboration with Rodrigo Tovar Pupo, alias “Jorge 40,” a former cattle rancher who became the leader of the Northern Bloc of the AUC, commanding some 4,500 rightist paramilitaries.



After his arrest, Garcia gave testimony about the close relationship between the DAS director and the paramilitary leader, which extended from political collaboration in elections to protection of Tovar Pupo against criminal investigations.



The most lethal relationship, however, involved DAS feeding the death squad leader hit lists of suspected “subversives” and “guerrillas”, which included trade union militants and left-wing political opponents of Uribe’s government.



In the course of their investigation of the case, the prosecutors discovered that computers belonging to Tovar Pupo and his henchmen included lists of hundreds of murder victims that clearly matched lists compiled by the DAS.



Among them was the name of Professor Correa de Andreis, who had earned the wrath of the government and its supporters by leading an investigation into illegal land expropriations against poor peasants who had been displaced by Colombia’s civil war.



DAS arrested the professor in June 2004 on charges of working with the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), but he was soon released for lack of evidence. Two months later he was assassinated by an AUC death squad.



As the 158-page court decision in Noguera’s case states: “Alfredo Correa de Andreis found himself in the middle of two centers of power: one state—the DAS—at whose head stood Jorge Aurelio Noguera Cotes, and the other illegal—the Northern Bloc of the AUC—commanded by Rodrigo Tovar Pupo, alias ‘Jorge 40’. While the first, through its intelligence and judicial police functions fabricated a frameup to make him look like a subversive, the second executed a false guerrilla.”



Uribe issued a response to the sentencing of his former close ally via Twitter. “I appointed Jorge Noguera because of his resume and his family; I trusted in him, if he committed a crime, it pains me and I offer my apologies to the citizenry.”



The “if” in Uribe’s conditional apology cannot be justified on the basis of the evidence, which included some 50 witnesses, many of them DAS employees, as well as computer records that left no room for doubt as to Noguera’s guilt. Rather, it clearly implies that the use of death squad murders and state support for paramilitary bands was a justified and necessary means of rule.



Previously, Uribe had voiced unconditional defense of Noguera, saying he would put his “hands in the fire” for him. After the scandal surrounding the ties between DAS and the paramilitaries first broke, the Colombian president sent the former secret police chief to head the country’s consulate in Milan, Italy.



During his trial, Noguera voiced the sentiment that he was being made a scapegoat in an attempt to protect the former president.



While civil attorneys intervened in the trial to ask the court to approve an investigation of Uribe for his presumed participation in the crimes carried out by Noguera, the judges rejected the petition, claiming that the proceedings had not established a direct order from the president to his secret police chief.



There is little likelihood that Noguera would have conducted his operations with the paramilitaries without the approval of Uribe, who had a reputation for micromanaging his government’s affairs. Moreover, there have been well-founded charges that Uribe himself was involved in the creation of the right-wing paramilitary organization in his home department of Antioquia, when he was governor there in the 1990s.



The crime for which Noguera was convicted, as terrible as it was, is only one of many he is accused of. An investigation is continuing into a wiretapping scandal that involved the DAS bugging of prominent opposition politicians, journalists, human rights groups and even the country’s Supreme Court.



All of Noguera’s successors as DAS chief have been implicated in this massive state spying operation. One of them, Maria del Pilar Hurtado, obtained political asylum in Panama with Uribe’s assistance.



Uribe is himself under investigation by a congressional committee. Colombian law grants ex-presidents impunity for actions taken while in office unless they are indicted and tried by the Congress, something that has never happened in the country’s history.



Uribe’s successor, his defense minister Juan Manuel Santos, took office a little over a year ago and has pushed through legislation that would restructure and rename the DAS. It is by no means clear, however, that the crimes that it committed under the Uribe government have ceased.



It is not only Uribe who is implicated by the crimes of the DAS and the paramilitary death squads, but the US government as well. During Uribe’s eight years in office, Washington poured $6 billion in aid into Colombia, the largest amount for any country in the region. The Obama administration continues to grant Colombia the largest share of US funding, sending over a half a billion last year.



Much of this assistance has gone to the military and security forces, including the DAS. Citing law enforcement documents and interviews with Colombian officials, the Washington Post reported last month, “American cash, equipment and training, supplied to elite units of the Colombian intelligence service over the past decade to help smash cocaine-trafficking rings, were used to carry out spying operations and smear campaigns against Supreme Court justices, Uribe’s political opponents and civil society groups.”



According to the Post report: “Some of those charged or under investigation have described the importance of US intelligence resources and guidance, and say they regularly briefed embassy ‘liaison’ officials on their intelligence gathering activities. ‘We were organized through the American embassy,’ said William Romero, who ran the DAS network of informants and oversaw infiltration of the Supreme Court. Like many of the top DAS officials in jail or facing charges, he received CIA training. Some were given scholarships to complete coursework on intelligence-gathering at American universities.”’



Romero told the Post that the DAS “depended on US supplied computers, wiretapping devices, cameras and mobile phone interception systems, as well as rent for safe houses and petty cash for gasoline.”



The article states that a sub-unit of the DAS, the “Group to Analyze Terrorist Organization Media” was funded and supplied by the US as it “assembled dossiers on labor leaders, broke into their offices and videotaped union activists.” It adds that “the unit’s members regularly met with an embassy official they remembered as ‘Chris Sullivan,’ who one former member of the unit recalled “would go to see how we were advancing” with its activities.



A WikiLeaks cable from 2005 includes a description of Noguera, now convicted of murder, as “pro-US and an honest technocrat.”

Bill Van Auken is a frequent contributor to Global Research. Global Research Articles by Bill Van Auken
fruhmenschen
 
Posts: 5977
Joined: Thu Aug 12, 2010 7:46 pm
Blog: View Blog (0)

PreviousNext

Return to Data & Research Compilations

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 0 guests