Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

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Postby barracuda » Wed Mar 04, 2009 1:00 pm

The Cassandra comparison seems apt - Cassandra's prophetic powers were achieved after the temple snakes licked her ears. Lindauer's ears have obviously been quite close to some serpent's tongues. Has there been any indication as to why the charges were dropped? Parts of this story remind me of Delmart Vreeland.
The most dangerous traps are the ones you set for yourself. - Phillip Marlowe
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Postby compared2what? » Wed Mar 04, 2009 4:08 pm

barracuda wrote:The Cassandra comparison seems apt - Cassandra's prophetic powers were achieved after the temple snakes licked her ears. Lindauer's ears have obviously been quite close to some serpent's tongues. Has there been any indication as to why the charges were dropped? Parts of this story remind me of Delmart Vreeland.


I think, though I may be wrong, that the charges kind of evaporated because she was found unfit to stand trial and Mukasey told the government they couldn't force her to take psychotropics until she became fit against her will.

The charges themselves are actually kind of quirky, too. In that she wasn't charged with espionage or treason or sedition or anything really heavy-duty, for one thing. Just with being an unregistered agent of a foreign government, IIRC. Also, she was indicted with two co-conspirators. And what was odd about that was that the government didn't appear to be contending that she ever conspired with or even knew them.

The indictment that got the details on these issue is available over at The Smoking Gun. I mean the details about the charges and the co-conspirators. I'm not sure why the charges were dropped.
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Postby seemslikeadream » Wed Mar 04, 2009 5:36 pm

http://www.democraticunderground.com/di ... 125x236004

Lindauers Prosecutor - Left Case for Alaska - Palin Truth Squad
Posted by autorank on Wed Mar-04-09 01:43 PM

Ed O'Callaghan was Lindauers prosecutor over several years. He was Asst. U.S. Attorney, Southern District, Manhattan. He was also the architecht of the Sarah Palin Truth Squad in Alaska at McCain's
behest. He left the U.S attorney's office after Lindauer's competency hearing.

His arguments were the basis for the charges against her. It raises serious questions as to the "truth" of the charges and also about the political motivations. After all, Ed was the guy that McCain turned to to put out the most devastating political scandal.

O'Callaghan was working hard against Obama just as he had against Lindauer. But Obama couldn't be
locked up on an Air Force Base. The stakes were much higher though - the presidenchy. Had McCain
won, O'Callaghan could have been Attorney General or, more likely, Deputy A.G.

Fascinating isn't it.



Progressive Alaska
http://progressivealaska.blogspot.com/2 ... palin.html

Saradise Lost - Chapter Sixty-Six -- PALIN TRUTH SQUAD: BURNING BRIDGES IN ALASKA
-- by Shannyn Moore

Image
O'Callaghan's most important client.

I attended Governor Sarah Palin’s press conference this week. I witnessed the “Palin Truth Squad” first hand. It was as “truthy” to politics as the Jeffrey Dahmer Cooking School would be to the culinary arts. It made me nauseous.

With a precarious political atmosphere in Alaska, we are still making our way through indictments, trials, and federal penitentiary sentences; the past two years of bipartisan work and healing thrown under the bus in attempt to win the White House.

National political assassins have invaded Alaska.

They were visible and in full force at the McCain-Palin press conference yesterday. Alaskans don’t roll that way. People get cranky, even nasty at times, over politics and what they think is best for the state. Alaska Lawmakers are sitting in federal prison for selling their votes and it wasn’t this nasty. The McCain-Palin ticket has become a poster child for partisan politics on steroids. On November 5th, the day after this election, the shrapnel of this campaign will be strewn across Alaska. It’s going to take Dr. Phil and a few Barry White albums to get the healing started.

Right off the bat, a full-on assault of character was laid out-Walt Monegan the target. Megan Stapleton, lead off hitter for the Palin Truth Squad was polished, assertive, dramatic, professional, fantastic….and LYING! For all of her assertions of Walt’s “loose cannon” behavior, you would have thought he was tasing Alaska children. A stack of emails from or regarding Monegan, chosen by Palin’s state paid attorney, were released to prove his incompetence.

I asked why, if he was such a terrible employee, was he offered another position in government? How could they risk something so important as the oversight of alcohol in rural Alaska? After all, alcohol is a huge contributor to our domestic violence and rape statistics. Megan’s answer felt like an out of control carnival ride for all the disingenuous spin!

Her co-“truther” is Edward O’Callaghan. He looks and acts like the evil and unstoppable Agent Smith from “The Matrix”. Six weeks ago he left his job as Co-Chief of the Terrorism and National Security Unit of the U.S. Attorney’s office in New York. Does the McCain camp consider a bipartisan group of Alaska Lawmakers to be terrorists?


--------------------------------


Can He Stop ‘Troopergate’?: A McCain lawyer scrambles to block a Palin ethics inquiry

September 16, 2008
http://sarahpalintruthsquad.wordpress.c ... cs-inquiry /

In a Newsweek Web Exclusive published online September 16, 2008, journalist Michael Isikoff investigates how a former top level Justice Department prosecutor, Ed O’Callaghan, is spearheading “an aggressive legal strategy aimed at shutting down a pre-election ethnics investigation into Alaska Governor Sarah Palin. ~ Sarah Palin Truth Squad

Newsweek: http://www.newsweek.com/id/159260
Image
Edward O'Callaghan, left, and Megan Stapleton,
spokespersons with the McCain campaign, answer
questions concerning the firing of former public
safety commissioner Walt Monegan during a news
conference in Anchorage, Alaska Monday Sept. 15,
2008. Lawyers for Alaska Gov. Sarah Palin have
released e-mails detailing what they say is the
real reason she dismissed Walt Monegan, the public
safety commissioner whose firing prompted the
"Troopergate" controversy.

The growing role of Edward O’Callaghan, who until six weeks ago served as co-chief of the terrorism and national security unit of the U.S. attorney’s office in New York, illustrates just how seriously the McCain campaign is taking the so-called “troopergate” inquiry into Palin’s firing last summer of Walt Monegan, Alaska’s Public Safety Commissioner.

O’Callaghan emerged publicly for the first time this week when he told reporters at a McCain campaign press conference, in Anchorage, that Palin is “unlikely to cooperate” with an Alaskan legislative inquiry into Monegan’s firing because it had been “tainted” by politics. That new stand appeared to directly contradict a previous vow, expressed by her official gubernatorial spokesman on July 28, that Palin “will fully cooperate” with an investigation into the matter.

But O’Callaghan (who resigned from the U.S. attorney’s office at the end of July to join the McCain campaign) is doing more than just public relations when it comes to “troopergate.” He told NEWSWEEK that he and another McCain campaign lawyer (whom he declined to identify) are serving as legal “consultants” to Thomas Van Flein, the Anchorage lawyer who at state expense is representing Palin and her office in the inquiry. “We are advising Thomas Van Flein on this matter to the extent that it impacts on the national campaign,” he said. “I’m helping out on legal strategy.” A McCain spokesman said Wednesday that, while Van Flein was originally hired last month by the Alaska Department of Law to represent Palin and her office, that arrangement has been changed over the past week and he is now being paid only by Palin and her husband - not state funds. He has not billed the state for his work, the spokesman said.

The investigation revolves around allegations that Palin fired Monegan, the state’s top cop, because he rebuffed intense pressure from the governor and her aides to dismiss Mike Wooten, a state trooper involved in a messy custody battle with Palin’s sister. Critics, including Monegan himself, have accused Palin of being obsessed over the Wooten matter-sending him repeated e-mails about it-in an attempt to use her public office to settle a private score.
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Postby JackRiddler » Wed Mar 11, 2009 5:37 pm

.

Second part of Collins interview with Lindauer. (Paranoia side-note: Mentions Queen of Hearts, not diamonds.) Harrowing stuff about the workings of the USA PATRIOT Act.

She also says that through her back-channels she stopped Saddam Hussein from making secret financial contributions to the Bush 2000 campaign? Um...


http://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/HL0903/S00130.htm

Susan Lindauer: Secret Charges and The Patriot Act

Tuesday, 10 March 2009, 5:12 pm
Article: Michael Collins


Former Accused Iraqi Agent
Susan Lindauer, Secret Charges and
The Patriot Act in Action


Renegate98 cc

Susan Lindauer Interviewed by Michael Collins

'Voice or no voice, the people can always be brought to the bidding of the leaders. That is easy. All you have to do is to tell them they are being attacked, and denounce the pacifists for lack of patriotism and exposing the country to danger. It works the same in any country." Herman Goering, Interview at Nuremburg Trials, April 14, 1946

"The Patriot Act was used against me in total contradiction to its stated purpose. Or perhaps it was the most logical use of the law, since it establishes a legal framework to crush free thinking and interrupt individual questioning of the government. It is the beginning of all dictatorship in America." Susan Lindauer, March 9, 2009

By Michael Collins

In March, 2004 Susan Lindauer was arrested for allegedly acting as an "unregistered agent" for prewar Iraq. She challenged the government's assertion and sought the right to prove at Trial that she'd been a United States intelligence asset covering Iraq and Libya from the early 1990's through 2003 (see articles).

In an unprecedented judicial ploy that lasted five years, federal prosecutors blocked Ms. Lindauer's rights to trial or any other sort of evidentiary hearings that would test her story. For 11 months, she was confined at Carswell federal prison on a Texas military base and at the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, without a conviction or plea bargain.

During the indictment, she was conveniently gagged from sharing her direct knowledge of Iraqi Pre-War Intelligence, which she gained as a primary asset covering the Iraqi Embassy at the United Nations from August, 1996 onwards. She was also silenced from talking about the advance warning she gave the Office of Counter-Terrorism and U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft's private staff in August, 2001, about possible airplane hijackings and a reprise of the 1993 World Trade Center attack.

But there was more than the Sixth Amendment's "right to a speedy trial" at stake.

Lindauer was one of the first citizens charged under special judicial provisions of the Patriot Act. The exceedingly complex legislation, emerged from the desk of John Yoo just days after the 9/11 attack. It passed the House 357 to 66 and the Senate 98 to 1. The Patriot Act eviscerated long standing Constitutional protections. It fundamentally altered how trials are conducted whenever provisions of the act are invoked in a court of law.

Lindauer's indictment was the one of the first test drives of the Patriot Act for the Bush-Cheney Department of Justice. Her nightmare officially ended five days before the Obama Inauguration, when the prosecution dropped the case "in the interests of justice."

In the current interviews, Susan Lindauer explains how the Patriot Act was used to quash her most fundamental rights of due process, which would otherwise have empowered her to repudiate the indictment and protect her reputation.

United States Department of Justice Criminal Resource Manual (Classified Information Procedures Act and FISA) Summary and original source

Secret Evidence is Slowly Eroding the Adversary System: CIPA and FISA in the Courts. Ellen Yaroshefsky, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law Summary and original source

Susan Lindauer Interviews by Michael Collins

Michael Collins: Not many people know that you were arrested under provisions of the Patriot Act. You were one of the fist U.S. citizens to experience the brutality of this legislation. How did it shape your case and treatment in the Courts?

Susan Lindauer: That's right. Along with Jose Padilla, I will go down in history as one of the first and only non-Arab Americans ever indicted on the Patriot Act during the Bush Administration.

I believe that my case demonstrates why the Patriot Act should be repealed immediately to safeguard our country and our freedom.

I have always opposed war and advocated diplomacy to solve conflicts. The indictment accused me of "acting as an unregistered Iraqi Agent," on the grounds that I delivered a letter forecasting the failure of the Occupation to my cousin, Andy Card, Chief of Staff to President George Bush. That's what used to be known as Freedom of Speech. The letter was not hostile or threatening. In fact, it proved tragically accurate. That did not matter to the Justice Department. Vocalizing opposition to Bush policy was treasonous. End of discussion.

Collins: What happened when you got to court?

Lindauer: Once I got to Court, I discovered that the indictment also contained two "secret charges," gratis of the Patriot Act. My attorney and I were given the dates for the two allegations, saying that I attended meetings with Iraqi officials in October, 1999 and October, 2001, but nothing more to explain what I had allegedly done wrong.

There was nothing unusual about the fact that those meetings had occurred. I visited the Iraqi Embassy at the United Nations about every three weeks for 7 years. My handlers were fully informed, which explains how the government could have been tracking the dates in the first place. They got the dates from me.

"a. On or about October 14, 1999, Susan Lindauer -- met with an officer of the Iraq Intelligence Service (“IIS”) in Manhattan.

"c. In or about October 2001, SUSAN LINDAUER -- accepted a task given to her in Manhattan by an officer of the IIS." USA v. Lindauer. S2 03 Cr. 807 (MBM)

No, the government was claiming that something unusual took place during those specific meetings. Under the Patriot Act, the Prosecution was not required to tell us what those offensive actions were. Nor was the Court allowed to tell us what type of laws might have been violated by those actions.

We were only told that conviction on either of the "secret charges" would get me five years in federal prison.

Collins: Please help readers understand more about "secret evidence." Were you and your lawyer denied access to evidence, because it was considered "secret" or "classified"? How did this work under the Patriot Act?

Lindauer: It's unbelievable, isn't it? As if "secret charges" were not terrible enough, there was also "secret evidence" which could be applied to those "secret charges."

The Prosecution had the right to ask a jury to convict me of those two undisclosed charges without revealing a shred of evidence to support the charges whatsoever. The Patriot Act authorized the prosecutor to ask a jury to "take it on faith" that some unspecified evidence would prove that some unspecified law had been broken.

If a judge so instructed before deliberations, the jury could be required to ignore the lack of presentation of evidence in weighing whether to convict me. The Judge could simply instruct a jury that the Justice Department regarded the evidence as "sufficient" to constitute a crime and that would be "sufficient knowledge" for their review. That kind of instruction practically requires a jury to convict a defendant.

The fundamental question of "guilty beyond reasonable doubt" is shattered. To say the least, it drastically undercuts protections in the jury system of the United States.

Conversely, evidence that might exonerate me, and prove my innocence, could be considered "secret and classified" as well. My attorney and I could be prohibited from knowing of its existence or using it in my defense. Even if that evidence or witness statements tossed out the whole case, and saved me from years in prison, I would not be entitled to know of its existence or present it to the jury.

Collins: This sounds like Franz Kafka's "The Trial" combined with the Queen of Hearts in "Alice in Wonderland." How did you conceptualize your experience at the time?

Lindauer: The outstanding blog, Welcome Back to Pottersville published a headline that I loved: Franz Kafka, Meet Susan Lindauer.

Oh yes, I was floored. I know the Constitution. I cherish it, in fact. I could not believe such a thing would happen to somebody like me, with my education from Smith College and the London School of Economics, and all of my community resources. I mean, if the government could do this to somebody like me, what could they do to somebody who has nothing? It's a frightening thought.

Above all, I despised the Assistant US Attorney, Edward O'Callaghan, who prosecuted my case. Numerous times I correctly told the Court that the FBI had verified my story and Mr. O'Callaghan was falsifying his claims about the availability of witnesses to authenticate my story. He flat out lied about my identity and activities to a senior federal judge. I mean, come on. We interviewed those witnesses, too. We know what they told the FBI.

And so I kept challenging the Court that nobody had to take my word for anything. I challenged the Court to subpoena the witnesses and question them directly under oath. For FIVE YEARS, I told the Court that all questions could be cleared up in ten minutes, with a simple pre-trial evidentiary hearing.

(Part three of this interview focuses on that issue.)

Collins: Back to the "secrecy rules," How did those work in trial preparation?

Lindauer: Within the category of "secret evidence," the law pretends to establish a safeguard for defendants by allowing two levels of secrecy.

Under the main category of secrecy, both the attorney and defendant are prohibited from laying eyes on evidence or witness statements. The Prosecutor always retains the right to deny access on the grounds of national security.

A sub-section of the Patriot Act allows the defense attorney to petition the government for a security clearance in order to review some parts of the "secret evidence." In reality, the process drags out for many months, while most defendants languish in prison waiting for trial. (And because the case involves the Patriot Act, they're frequently detained in solitary confinement.) Getting clearance can take six months to a year, costing the Defense valuable time to review the evidence or plan a rebuttal.

A security clearance does not automatically guarantee access to evidence, however. Depending on their backgrounds, different attorneys qualify for different levels of security clearances. For example, an activist attorney with a history of pro bono cases involving the ACLU or something equally subversive, like Greenpeace, might qualify for a very low security clearance, because their career choices and previous cases might be perceived to threaten the State. So one attorney might have more or less access to secret evidence than another. But you can't know until the security clearance review is completed.

Hope is vain, however. That safeguard is mostly irrelevant and procedural.

To illustrate that point, in five years under indictment, I had two separate attorneys with very different levels of security clearances, including a former federal prosecutor, the outstanding Mr. Brian Shaughnessy of Washington, DC, who regularly handles the most high level and complicated security cases. Neither attorney was ever able to determine what those two "secret charges" were. Neither attorney ever saw the "secret evidence."

More disturbingly, the attorney is strictly prohibited from revealing any part of that "secret evidence" to the Defendant. The Defendant cannot see it or know about it, and therefore cannot provide an effective response to the attorney to rebut it. Thus, ironically, the Patriot Act handicaps the defendant's ability to assist in the preparation of their Defense strategy.

Thus, it renders the Defendant INCOMPETENT TO STAND TRIAL.

Ah, the plot thickens.

Collins: It does in a very major way. What actions could be so serious as to deny your constitutional rights? Did you ever figure out what those "secret charges" might have been? Surely you know what you were doing in October, 1999 and October, 2001.

Lindauer: Oh yeah. And I'll bet your readers think those accusations must be very serious! Wouldn't you think? I must have done something far too horrible for the government to whisper aloud! Wanna bet?

In five years, we could only guess about those two charges. We surmised that in October 1999, I was indicted for blocking the Iraqi Government in Baghdad from making financial campaign contributions to the George W. Bush Presidential Campaign.

That's right. With immediate assistance from my U.S. Intelligence contacts, I stopped Iraq from making illegal campaign contributions to the 2000 Bush Election campaign--at least through my channels.

We have speculated that perhaps Saddam gave money to the Bush Campaign in 2000 through somebody else and some other channel. And the Republicans don't want anybody to know about it. Perhaps I was indicted to stop the Democrats from investigating campaign contribution records.

Consider that Andy Card was warned of Iraq's attempts in two progress reports on March 1, 2001 and December 2, 2001. The Republican leadership that attacked me was very much aware that this question of illegal campaign contributions was hanging out there. And I was indicted for stopping it from happening.

Collins: What about the second "secret charge"?

That was allegedly in October, 2001. We're still in the dark on that one; however, we think it involves my efforts to collect health statistics from Baghdad regarding depleted uranium left behind by the United States in the first Gulf War.

Depleted Uranium has resulted in a spike in Iraqi birth defects and cancer rates from long-term exposure. They say Iraqi children suffer cancer "like the flu," it's so common.

Tragically, exposure to depleted uranium might seriously harm American soldiers and their future unborn children, too! I suspect it will become a major health risk for soldiers who return from repeated tours of duty in Iraq. When they start having families back home, we're going to hear about this.

That's probably all it took to categorize the documents as "secret evidence" and "secret charges." They didn't want my case to raise the profile of that health risk for Americans in Iraq. None of that health information was ever returned to me in discovery.

For knowing something so unpleasant about the government's responsibilities, the Justice Department actually wanted me to serve five years in prison. It's unbelievable.

Collins: It must have been terrifying. The government figuratively tied you to a chair and challenged you to a 15 round boxing match. Did you ever consider pleading guilty to stop the beating?

Lindauer: Never! I'm a helluva boxer myself, Mike! They must have been surprised to find I could go 15 rounds. I'm strong and tenacious to this day!

No, I had my entire legal strategy mapped out in the first couple of hours after my arrest. I could see mistakes in the indictment, and I quickly identified which witnesses and evidence would be necessary to repudiate the whole lot.

My witness list was outstanding. It included international attorneys from the Lockerbie Trial, former Congressional staffers, even a couple of international journalists. One of Scotland's finest Solicitors, Edward MacKechnie, who won acquittal for his Libyan client in the Lockerbie Trial, immediately promised to travel at his own expense to testify for me as to the identity and credentials of Dr. Richard Fuisz, my CIA handler. I have the emails to prove it. His participation was beyond dispute.

There was no question that I had an outstanding defense. What's more, I have outstanding bona fides to go with it. I took perverse satisfaction in knowing that once the jury received witness corroboration of my extensive credentials dealing with Libya and Iraq, Yemen, Egypt, Syria/Hezbollah and Malaysia for 9 years from 1993 to 2002, they would be appalled by the prosecution's arguments to convict me.

Any jury would recognize that I had legitimate reason for participating in the 9/11 investigation as a "first-responder," not to mention that I'm one of the few individuals who openly warned about 9/11 for several months before the attack. I still think a New York jury would have applauded me.

The public just didn't know who I was-- yet-- or the extensive work that put me on the cutting edge of anti-terrorism for so many years.

That would change with witness testimony at trial. It would not be boring.

Collins: What was your reaction to getting arrested in March, 2004?

I was disgusted and perversely amused. At my home, while FBI agents were handcuffing me, I asked what I was charged with. That's a natural question when FBI agents come pounding on your door.

They wouldn't tell me. That's the Patriot Act for you. The arresting FBI agent said that I could read the indictment when I got to Baltimore-- Not Washington D.C. or Greenbelt, Maryland, which are 15 minutes from my home. They processed me in Baltimore, a city that's 45 minutes away and out of the sphere of Washington media. All through the drive, the FBI agent only told me that I would be extradited to New York. I had no idea why I'd been arrested at all.

When I finally got to read the indictment, I was purple with outrage. After 9 years of hard work and devotion to Anti-Terrorism as an Asset for the U.S. government, I was now accused of acting as an "unregistered Iraqi agent" and "conspiracy with the Iraqi Intelligence Service." Oh My!

I told the arresting FBI agent, "This is bullshit. This is political. You want me out of the way so you can lie about Iraq and 9/11 during the (2004) election."

Collins: You were arrested in March 2004, when President Bush was locked in a tight race with John Kerry and appeared to be losing. Do you think presidential campaign politics was involved in your indictment?

Lindauer: There was never any question that it was a cheap, political indictment engineered by ruthless White House staff, including my own cousin, Andy Card, afraid of losing Bush's re-election.

A few weeks before my arrest, I contacted the offices of Senators Trent Lott and John McCain and asked to testify before the new blue-ribbon Presidential Commission on Iraqi Pre-War Intelligence. As part of that testimony, I would have detailed Iraq's efforts to cooperate with the 9/11 investigation, and, before 9/11, our threats to bomb Baghdad in April and May, 2001 if they failed to serve up any fragments of intelligence relating to a new conspiracy involving airplane hijackings. I, personally, bickered with Iraqi diplomats at the United Nations for several months seeking that information. Iraq had nothing to give us.

Under the circumstances, arresting me must have presented an irresistible temptation.

Collins: How so?

Lindauer: They saw that I would be sidelined in legal wrangling until after the November election. I would be gagged from telling the full and accurate story of Iraqi Pre-War Intelligence and the government's advance warnings of a 9/11 style attack. This gave Republicans a significant advantage over the Democrats, shielding them from criticism during their campaigns.

After November, the charges against me would be declared bogus, and the case would be dismissed for lack of merit. I would ultimately win, whereas American voters would have lost an opportunity to make informed decisions about which candidates to support. They would be flying blind just the way politicians wanted.

Collins: What was some of the most devastating information that you would have shared?

Lindauer: Imagine if American voters had known that the 9/11 strike was not a surprise to U.S. Intelligence! Would it have changed any votes if Americans had known the truth? That throughout the summer of 2001, there were extensive discussions about possible airplane hijackings and a reprise of the 1993 World Trade Center attack, specifically?

In August 2001, we thought the attack was "imminent." At the instruction of my CIA handler, Dr. Richard Fuisz, I personally alerted the private staff of U.S. Attorney General John Ashcroft and the Office of Counter-Terrorism at the Justice Department about our fears, asking for their cooperation in issuing an emergency alert throughout all agencies for any fragment of intelligence or suspicious activity that might help us pre-empt a conspiracy to hijack and/or bomb airplanes.

Would any of that have made a difference in the voting booth? Would Americans still think the "War on Terror" was a success? That's the kind of wild card that campaign staff hate during a tight election.

Collins: Do you have any parting words on the Patriot Act?

Lindauer: It strikes me as ironic that the Patriot Act, which Congress passed after 9/11 to empower law enforcement to hunt down terror suspects, was first used to suppress and punish an American citizen who spent a life-time opposing violence in terrorism or war, and who gave advance warning about the 9/11 attack in specific detail.

I'm obviously a very dangerous woman! My indictment provides a classic example of a fearful incumbent -- a dictator -- arresting his political opponents on trumped up charges so that he can remove obstacles to staying in power, and intimidates others into silence when they would otherwise speak against him.

It's what you'd expect from Chile under Pinochet in the 1970s, the El Salvadoran juntas in the 1980s, Egypt today. It's Myanmar and Tibet. And it's what happened to me.

Collins: Part three of this interview explores the intense and chilling abuse Ms. Lindauer suffered when confined to the Carswell federal prison facility housed in the Carswell U.S. Air Force base near Ft. Worth Texas. At the same time, Lindauer will describe how federal law enforcement officials associated with her case manipulated proceedings and falsified reports about her life and activities.

END

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Postby JackRiddler » Wed Mar 11, 2009 10:36 pm

Comments on DU:

http://www.democraticunderground.com/di ... 89x5226935

Autorank is apparently Michael Collins.

I wrote:

From where I sit, I can't tell for sure about the Susan Lindauer story.

1) Would the Bush regime be willing to persecute a mentally ill person who was deluded about this story under the unconstitutional provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act?

Indubitably. They did a lot of that.

2) Would the Bush regime and CIA handlers be willing to persecute a person who told the truth about advance knowlege of 9/11 (regardless of their state of mental health) and portray them as mentally ill in court and in the press?

Only a partisan of the official story would rule that out.

More importantly: Why don't we know more?

3) Because the supposed investigations of September 11th, such as the 9/11 Commission, ruled out the possibility of official foreknowledge of the attacks as inconceivable, in advance of investigation. So this is one of many such stories and indicators of foreknowledge and complicity that was not examined by the cover-up commission.

Just as they refused to acknowledge even the existence of Able Danger and the whistleblowers who described how they located the alleged 9/11 hijack ringleaders more than a year in advance of the events. Just as they refused to even acknowledge many other such bodies of evidence.

---

But I lean to the idea implicitly advanced here, that she was a pawn of psychological warfare, used to muddy the waters. The interesting one to investigate would be Mr. Fuisz.
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby JackRiddler » Fri Dec 31, 2010 1:09 pm

I've taken a new interest in this because of the Khodorkovsky affair in Russia, and rediscovering that he had an early business venture with the apparently very high-level US intel covert operations man, Fuisz.

Lindauer has a book out. The review by Michael Collins, plus comments including from her:

The Hornet’s Nest Kicked Back –
A Review of Susan Lindauer’s Extreme Prejudice


Written by Michael Collins
Daily Journal (Opinion), World News
Dec 21, 2010


Fiction delivers justice that reality rarely approaches. Victims endure suffering and emerge as victors after overcoming incredible challenges. Stieg Larsson’s gripping Millennium Trilogy weaves a story of revenge and triumphs for Lizbeth Salander, locked away in a mental institution and sexually abused for years. When Salander got out and threatened to go public about a high level sexual exploitation ring, the perpetrators sought to lock her up again. In the final installment, The Girl Who Kicked the Hornet’s Nest, Salander found some justice. (Image)

Susan Lindauer’s autobiography, Extreme Prejudice, tells a story with certain broad similarities. In her case, however, the hornet’s nest kicked back with a real vengeance. After over a decade as a U.S intelligence asset, Lindauer was privy to information about pre war Iraq that threatened to serve up a huge embarrassment to the Bush-Cheney regime. She hand delivered a letter to senior Bush administration officials in hopes of averting what she predicted would be the inevitably tragic 2003 US invasion of Iraq. Those officials, unnamed in the indictment, were her second cousin, then White House chief of staff Andy Card, and Colin Powell.

After the invasion failed to find weapons of mass destruction (WMD), Lindauer went to Congress offering to testify about the quality of prewar intelligence. In early 2004, she met with staffers in the offices of Senators John McCain (R-AZ) and Trent Lott (R-MS) in February 2004. Shortly after those visits and other offers to testify in public, Lindauer was indicted on March 11 for serving as an “unregistered agent” for pre war Iraq and promptly arrested. .

The Crime That Wasn’t

And what did Lindauer do as an alleged unregistered foreign agent, a charge the government was never willing to try in open court? According to then US District Court Judge Michael B. Mukasey, who handled the case for a period, the “high-water mark” of government’s case was based entirely on the letter that Lindauer delivered to her second cousin, then White House chief of staff, Andrew Card. Lindauer had written Card on at least ten other occasions since the 2001 Bush Inauguration. She wrote:

“Above all, you must realize that if you go ahead with this invasion, Osama bin Laden will triumph, rising from his grave or seclusion. His network will be swollen with fresh recruits, and other charismatic individuals will seek to build upon his model, multiplying those networks. And the United States will have delivered the death blow to itself. Using your own act of war, Osama and his cohort will irrevocably divide the hearts and minds of the Arab Street from moderate governments in Islamic countries that have been holding back the tide. Power to the people, what we call “democracy,” will secure the rise of fundamentalists.” Susan Lindauer’s last letter to Andrew Card, January 6, 2003 in American Cassandra: Susan Lindauer’s Story, Oct 17, 2007

This letter was based on extensive contacts with Iraqi diplomats at the United Nations in New York and a prewar trip that she took to Iraq with the knowledge of her intelligence handlers.

Before she could stand trial, in 2005, Judge Mukasey accepted the opinions of court appointed experts that Lindauer might be delusional and ordered her locked her up for an extended psychiatric evaluation and observation. She was placed in the Carswell federal prison facility at the very secure Carswell Air Force Base in Ft. Worth, Texas.

Mukasey’s conclusion was contradicted by evidence not considered (see below) covering fourteen months (March 2004-April 2005) of court ordered evaluation and psychological services in Maryland that consistently reported that Lindauer was functioning well and not delusional. The order allowed 120 days, the legal maximum detention period. She was at detained for seven months at Carswell and another four months in a Manhattan lockup.

When Lindauer refused to take strong psychotropic medication as part of her evaluation, Assistant US Attorney Ed O’Callaghan sought a court order from Judge Mukasey to force the medication on her either orally or by injection. Remarkably, it appears that Mukasey was not informed that the professional staff at Carswell had recommended against forced medication. Based on his detailed opinion and order of September 6, 2006 denying the Assistant US Attorney’s request, Mukasey was also not aware of direct evidence from Carswell professional staff that Lindauer’s behavior was well with the normal range, particularly considering the circumstances.

Five years after her indictment, Susan Lindauer never got the trial she repeatedly requested. On September 15, 2009, Assistant US Attorney O’Callaghan convinced US District Court Judge Loretta Preska that Lindauer was not mentally competent to stand trial. Judge Preska dismissed the case at the request of O’Callaghan’s replacement on January 15, 2010. This was done against Lindauer’s wishes and ignored credible witnesses who testified to her role as an intelligence asset.

Lindauer’s second attorney, Brian Shaughnessy, a former federal prosecutor in Judge John J. Sirica’s court and distinguished Washington, DC defense counsel, noted that this was the only case that he’d ever heard of in which prosecutors argued that a defendant was mentally incompetent to stand trial

O’Callaghan went on to serve as legal advisor for then Governor Sarah Palin’s scandal defense team in Alaska. Judge Preska received an appointment from President Bush to the US Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit six days before ruling that Lindauer was incompetent to stand trial. Andy Card pursued a successful career in the private sector. And Colin Powell retained is good name and status despite misleading the United Nations about Iraq’s alleged chemical weapons programs and his active participation in “choreographed” torture sessions for prisoners at Guantanamo Bay and lesser known detention venues.

Despite her efforts and willingness to go public for the benefit of the country, Lindauer was systematically attacked by the federal government and denied her repeated requests for an open trial in federal court. For her, there were no movies or best sellers, no award or promotions, and no happy endings. She was left at the side of the road with only her story and evidence to challenge the charges that the government steadfastly refused to try in open court for over five years.

Lindauer’s case was so strong that her second and final attorney, Brian Shaughnessy, took the extraordinary step of issuing a statement that her claims were supported by the extensive evidence that he reviewed. He said, “I … assure you that Ms. Lindauer’s story is shocking, but true. It’s an important story of this new political age, post-9/11.” Her uncle, attorney Thayer Lindauer, offered an affidavit on his research which confirmed Lindauer’s role as a US intelligence asset.

What Were They Trying to Hide and How Did They Hide It

Lindauer’s career as a US intelligence asset and back channel to Iraq first came to light in 1998. She released an affidavit for the Lockerbie bombing trial recounting information provided to her by the man she described as her CIA handler, Richard Fuisz. The claim was that the bombings were carried out by Syrian operatives, not the accused Libyans. Given Fuisz’s reputed high level intelligence skills, this was a major event covered in the press. Despite the publicity and controversy surrounding the affidavit, Lindauer’s association with Fuisz continued. She was never charged or even reprimanded by the government for her role in the affair.

But when Lindauer was willing to go public with her work on Iraq with Fuisz and another reported intelligence handler, Paul Hoven, she was indicted for giving one letter to Andrew Card, a letter which proved to be very much in line with of the best advice the Bush administration received on the ill conceived, deadly invasion and occupation of Iraq. That was what the administration was so intent on hide hiding.

The information Lindauer would have released, as told in Extreme Prejudice, concerned her work with Fuisz in the months prior to 9/11 in which Fuisz and his team provided early warning about the attacks on the World Trade Center. She would have revealed Iraq’s willingness to turn over terrorists to the FBI and about her contact providing information on al Qaeda’s financial structure and funding.

The vehicle to silence Lindauer was the indictment as an unregistered foreign agent, despite the flimsy basis for the charge. Once indicted, the newly crafted Patriot Act was the clincher. The act allows charges to be levied without specifics listed in an indictment or known to the defendant. In fact, under the act, the defendant’s attorney may not have access to the charges unless certain security requirements are met.

In Lindauer’s case, her attorney had a secret briefing with US intelligence officials. Just as the Patriot Act allows, the occurrence and the content of that meeting were never revealed to Lindauer. Her first attorney, Samuel Talkin, had a met with US intelligence officials shortly after the defense psychologist, Sanford L. Drob, PhD, conducted a two hour interview with Lindauer (report reviewed by the author).. A few days after the Talkin-US intelligence meeting, Drob recommended a defense based on mental incompetence. The meeting between her first attorney’s and US intelligence officials was revealed to Lindauer only years later by her second counsel, Brian Shaughnessy, who obtained the information through pre trial discovery motions.

Psychiatric Set Up and Tear Down

The full spectrum tear down of Lindauer relied heavily on highly selective psychiatric testimony from several court appointed psychiatrists in Manhattan. None of these psychiatrists ever treated Lindauer. They all interviewed her in a forensic setting, which typically drastically limits understanding an examinee’s mental state in politically charged contexts where the examinee is not cooperative. Worse, the forensic experts hired by the state in such contexts often act as “hired guns,” and typically refuse to consider independent substantive evidence that supports the examinee’s claims.

By her report and the author’s review of interview transcripts provided by her attorney, Lindauer was not once cooperative with the court appointed forensic examiners. The dialog between her and psychiatrist Stewart Kleinman, MD, the most influential expert, was caustic and devoid of substantive content. Linder repeatedly stated that she didn’t want to be interviewed by Kleinman.

In essence, the court experts routinely refused to follow up with witnesses Lindauer offered to attest to her role as an intelligence asset and to confirm her activities related to Iraq.

Most telling, the experts, upon whom Judge Mukasey relied for his confinement of Lindauer and his later opinion on forced medication, failed to consider the twelve month record of evaluation and counseling treatment after her arrest. Psychiatrist Dr John S. Kennedy, MD of Maryland concluded that her:

“… thought content was free of hallucinations, delusions, homicidality, or suicidality. She expressed confidence in an acquittal. Judgment and insight were fair. Cognition was grossly intact. … I don not believe there are grounds for a psychosis diagnosis.” March 13, 2004

Lindauer attended 35 hours of counseling sessions between March 2004 and April 2005. You can examine the notes yourself provided by Lindauer and a part of her legal defense documentation.

There is a consistent pattern of assessed psychological stability in every single monthly summary. A frequent theme is expressed over time is that Lindauer, “appears to maintain psychological stability and shows no sign or symptom of mania or psychosis.” Her treatment was concluded on April 7, 2005 with the note, “So far she has shown no signs of mania or depression and any symptoms of psychosis that would require additional intervention.”

This information was not seriously considered or, more likely, completely ignored by the New York court appointed “experts” who labeled her delusional for maintaining her innocence. In addition, never mentioned in court proceedings was important evidence from Carswell psychiatric nursing reports. These reports document a consistent pattern of positive behavior and no signs of hallucinations or delusions during confinement. The Mukasey ruling of September 6, 2006, well referenced with the court expert opinions, makes no mention of Dr. Kennedy’s evaluation, the 35 hours of counseling provided in Maryland, or the Carswell nursing reports. This was highly relevant primary evidence by clinicians familiar with Lindauer’s day to day and week to week behavior over time.

As she tells it convincingly in Extreme Prejudice, Lindauer had to be silenced. First she was defamed publicly as someone who had worked for Iraq. Then she was diminished by the selective analysis by court appointed psychiatrists which further negated her story. Like the current Wikileaks controversy over Julian Assange, the delivery of bad news for those in power in the White House resulted in a figurative order to shoot the messenger.

Extreme Prejudice is memoir, action thriller, and cautionary tale on the risks citizens take when they go too far, know too much, and offer to tell the truth.

END

Disclosure: Lindauer based a chapter of Extreme Prejudice on an unpublished paper I wrote on the relationship between 9/11 and the Iraq war. I received no compensation for this.

Extreme Prejudice by Susan Lindauer

Susan Lindauer’s web site

Articles on the Lindauer case by Michael Collins

Special thanks to Michael Green for his helpful comments

This article may be reproduced in whole or in part with attribution of authorship and a link to this article.



COMMENTS SECTION W/LINDAUER:

12 Responses for “The Hornet’s Nest Kicked Back – A Review of Susan Lindauer’s Extreme Prejudice”
Susan Lindauer says:
December 22, 2010 at 12:52 pm

Many thanks to Michael Collins for an outstanding investigative journalist review of my book! I would add one caveat: I was declared “incompetent” to stand trial on the basis of a single Rorschach Ink Blot test. No joke. The psychiatrist, Dr. Sanford Drob, declared that my desire to “pursue witnesses and leads to refute the allegations” and prove that I worked as an Asset qualified as a “mental defect” that rendered me “unfit.” So long as I sought a trial, I was not qualified to have one. Very scary stuff!
Reply

avahome says:
December 22, 2010 at 1:32 pm

Knowing how Bushco operates, I feel like someone was desperately protecting Susan…..after all, she is alive to tell the tale.
Reply


Marj Creech says:
December 22, 2010 at 8:42 pm

Susan, thanks for your bravery to be steadfast and continue to speak the truth, Michael also. Susan, you had a witch trial: if you didn’t sink in the water by admitting your “guilt,” then you were judged guilty and insane. But like the comment above says, alive. Yay! And sane despite efforts to make you crazy. Long may you both live to shed light on these evildoers!
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Susan Lindauer says:
December 22, 2010 at 10:29 pm

That’s a great image, Marj — I appreciate all of your support. It was a terrifying experience I can assure you.
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dael says:
December 23, 2010 at 7:52 am

Susan, I want to express my appreciation for your bravery and tenacity through all this. No one will know the amount of suffering you have endured. The implications of the decision to go to war were barely confronted and those who dared to do so were either ignored or denigrated. Humanity is in your debt!
Reply


jurassicpork says:
December 23, 2010 at 8:08 am

Seriously, what’s the deal here? Why have I been banned from commenting and why was my first comment removed? I’m trying to write an article that actually links to yours (the ironically-named Daily Censored) and since I asked my first (unposted) question of why I’m being censored, someone else has posted another comment. So I know the moderator is on duty. So what gives? What did I write that was so horrible I had to be censored?
Reply


jurassicpork says:
December 23, 2010 at 8:12 am

And Trent Lott was NOT a Democrat. What is this, Fox News?
Reply


akw says:
December 24, 2010 at 4:45 am

Ex-Congress Aide Accused in Spy Case Is Free on Bail

By ANEMONA HARTOCOLLIS
Published: September 9, 2006

A former journalist and Congressional aide accused of working with Iraqi intelligence before the war was released from prison yesterday after a federal judge ruled that she could not be forced to take antipsychotic medication in an effort to make her competent to stand trial.

The judge, Michael Mukasey of Federal District Court in Manhattan, said he was not convinced that even if she took the medication, the defendant, Susan P. Lindauer, 43, would improve enough to be capable of standing trial.

Judge Mukasey also criticized the strength of the government’s case, saying that the legal standard for forcibly administering medication requires a strong government interest in prosecution, and that the government has not been able to establish that standard in this case. The ruling was a setback for the government’s case against Ms. Lindauer, who was arrested in March 2004 at her home in Takoma Park, Md. An indictment charged that Ms. Lindauer, also known as Symbol Susan, conspired to act as an unregistered agent of the government of Iraq from October 1999 until February 2004, and engaged in illegal financial transactions.

Although he was reluctant to analyze the government’s case before trial, the judge said, “There is no indication that Lindauer ever came close to influencing anyone, or could have.” The indictment, he said, describes an attempt to influence an unnamed government official as unsuccessful.

Investigators said she had tried to influence American policy by presenting herself as an agent of Saddam Hussein’s government in early 2003 to Andrew H. Card Jr., then the White House chief of staff, who was described as a distant relative.

Judge Mukasey said that for Ms. Lindauer to succeed as an agent of the Iraqi government, she would have had to influence other people. But her mental condition makes that highly unlikely, he said.

“The record shows that even lay people recognize that she is seriously disturbed,” Judge Mukasey said in a 35-page ruling issued on Wednesday. He said that a neighbor had suspected her of being mildly schizophrenic.

Prosecutors said she met with Iraqi intelligence officers at places in Baghdad, including Al Rashid Hotel, in 2002, where she accepted $5,000 in cash.

Ms. Lindauer told a television reporter after her arrest that she was innocent, and that she was an antiwar activist.

Ms. Lindauer worked as a journalist in Washington and in the press offices of several liberal Democrats in the House and Senate, although her last such job was in 2002.

At least a half dozen doctors for both the defense and the prosecution have found that Ms. Lindauer suffers from delusions of grandeur and paranoia, which makes her incompetent to stand trial, the judge said. But she refuses to accept the diagnosis or to take medication, he said. One doctor found that Ms. Lindauer had a history of psychotic episodes going back to her childhood, possibly at the age of 7, the judge said. These include her contention that she had gifts of prophecy that allowed her to report 11 bombings before they happened, that she spoke with divine inspiration and that she was an angel.

Among her paranoid delusions, doctors said, were the notion that she was being watched by hidden cameras in her apartment, that the Egyptian government had tried to assassinate her and that men next door had videotaped her under instructions from President Bill Clinton.

At a hearing before Judge Mukasey yesterday, prosecutors offered a backup plan, asking the judge to order Ms. Lindauer to either voluntarily take antipsychotic drugs for 30 days or be held in contempt. Contempt charges could be punished with jail time.

Judge Mukasey declined to rule on the prosecutor’s suggestion, saying that the case was being assigned to another judge and that he would leave that decision to her.

Meanwhile, he ordered Ms. Lindauer to be released under previously determined terms, including on bail of $500,000, on the condition that she receive psychological counseling and that her travel be restricted.

Her lawyer, Sanford Talkin, said she was released from the Metropolitan Correctional Center in Manhattan, where she has been held for the last few weeks.

Before that, she was in a federal prison hospital in Carswell, Tex. He said she would now return to her home in Maryland.

“She can’t go to trial until she’s competent,” Mr. Talkin said. “I think it was a difficult decision, but I think it was the right decision, and I think it was a just decision.”

Ms. Lindauer is a 1985 graduate of Smith College, where she majored in economics, and she received a master’s degree from the London School of Economics.

Her father, John Lindauer, was the Republican nominee for governor of Alaska in 1998.

Judge Mukasey also expressed humanitarian concerns about forcing Ms. Lindauer to take medication, which, he said, “necessarily involves physically restraining defendant so that she can be injected with mind-altering drugs.”

http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/09/nyregion/09spy.html

Reply


Susan Lindauer says:
December 24, 2010 at 7:23 am

To anyone who believes this garbage, I challenge you to read the psych reports in “The Hornets Nest Kicked Back:” It’s bunk.

My case was dirty from the first day. I would like to stop short of accusing Judge Mukasey of corruption in the case. Everybody lied to the Court non-stop, denying confirmation of the 9/11 warnings, for example. Unforgivably, I was denied my right to a competency hearing as guaranteed by federal statute. Witnesses who had known me 15 years stood ready to testify that they’d never observed any sign of mental defect, in my character or behavior. Two years after my release, that’s exactly what they told the Court when I got a new attorney.

For the record, the Psychiatrists in the evaluation cited my faith in God as evidence of delusions– which is nonsense and politically offensive. And the corporate media took no action to investigate my claims of working as an Asset. The New York Times was the most sleazy of all.

It’s an appalling story of how the laziness of the corporate media and the pandering towards neo-conservative philosophy and leadership has seriously damaged our political system and our judicial rights.
Reply


akw says:
December 24, 2010 at 4:48 am

Woman Accused of Iraq Ties Is Ruled Unfit for Trial Again

By BENJAMIN WEISER
Published: September 16, 2008

A federal judge in Manhattan has ruled that Susan P. Lindauer, a former journalist and Congressional aide who was accused of working with Iraqi intelligence before the war, is still mentally incompetent to stand trial.

Ms. Lindauer, who had been declared incompetent for trial by Judge Michael B. Mukasey, now the United States attorney general, tried to persuade a different judge that she was now competent.

But the second judge, Loretta A. Preska of Federal District Court, ruled late Monday that while Ms. Lindauer was “highly intelligent” and “generally capable of functioning at a high level in many ways,” she also was suffering from a mental disease or defect.

As a result, the judge said, Ms. Lindauer was “unable to understand the nature and consequences of the proceedings against her or to assist properly in her defense.”

Ms. Lindauer, 45, pleaded not guilty to the charges against her, which include acting as an unregistered agent of Saddam Hussein’s government and engaging in illegal financial transactions with the Iraqi government.

Ms. Lindauer, who lives in a Washington suburb and remains free on bond, said by phone on Tuesday: “I am disgusted and horrified by the decision. The right to a trial is fundamental in a democracy. I have been fighting for a trial because I am innocent and I believe I have the right to prove my innocence.”

Judge Mukasey had earlier said that Ms. Lindauer was “seriously disturbed” and that even antipsychotic medication might not make her fit to stand trial.

He cited findings that she had paranoia and delusions of grandeur; he also questioned the strength of the government’s case, saying, “There is no indication that Lindauer ever came close to influencing anyone, or could have.”

Judge Preska, in her ruling, said that Ms. Lindauer generally understood the roles of jurors, prosecutors, defense lawyers and judges, but did not seem to have a “rational understanding of the roles” they played in her case.

The judge cited the testimony of a government psychiatrist who said that Ms. Lindauer claimed to have special powers and that she had indicated she once met with Osama bin Laden, who disclosed to her the location of a bomb. The judge said that demonstrated “a lack of connection with reality.”

Judge Preska also cited Ms. Lindauer’s behavior in court last year, when, after being admonished not to speak without first consulting with her lawyer, she stuffed tissues in her mouth. That was “not the response of someone rationally connected to the proceedings,” Judge Preska said.

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/09/17/nyreg ... dauer.html

Reply


Susan Lindauer says:
December 24, 2010 at 7:28 am

Five days before Judge Preska’s decision to declare me incompetent, President Bush nominated her to the Appellate Court– a significant promotion for a Judge. And the New York Times reporter sat through testimony by 2 high caliber witnesses who confirmed my 9/11 warning & told the Court they had never observed any mental illness in all of our years working together. It was a political invention.
Reply


Susan Lindauer says:
December 24, 2010 at 7:35 am

Notably, before Carswell I had a public defender– overworked and underpaid for such a complex case. He signed off, though he had done such a poor job that I had to ask my uncle Ted Lindauer, with 40 years of legal experience, to interview all of my witnesses. After Carswell, a marvelous Washington attorney, Brian Shaughnessy, took over the case. And he swore to Judge Preska that I was entirely capable of assisting him in the preparation of my defense. In his own words, my case was the only time that he knows of a prosecutor arguing for the incompetence of a defendant over the objections of her own attorney.
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby seemslikeadream » Fri Dec 31, 2010 1:27 pm

Thanks Jack

Too many heros too little time

An Intelligence Defense of Julian Assange
Written by Susan Lindauer
Thursday, 09 December 2010 04:02

by Susan Lindauer
If only I'd known Julian Assange, everything would have been different.

Mine was a spook's world of black ops and counter-terrorism. The real stuff—not color coded threats. For a decade I performed as a covert back channel to Libya and Iraq at the United Nations in support of anti-terrorism. My special access made me one of the very few Assets covering Baghdad before the War. Our team started talks for the Lockerbie Trial with Libyan diplomats. We also held preliminary talks to resume the weapons inspections with Iraq's Ambassador, Dr. Saeed Hasan. Once Baghdad agreed to rigorous U.S. conditions for transparency in the inspections, I notified the Security Council myself, and within 72 hours the U. N invited Iraq to attend formal talks to ratify the technical language. By then it was a done deal. Contrary to official reports, Iraq always welcomed the return of weapons inspectors as a necessary step to ending the sanctions. Ordinary people just didn't know it.

My world was "black." Off radar. So deeply secretive that my father, brother, aunts and cousins had no knowledge of my work in Washington. I operated in absolute secrecy.

My bona fides in anti-terrorism were no less outstanding for my lack of public acclaim. I discovered advance intelligence about the bombing of the U.S.S. Cole in Yemen, and the first World Trade Center attack in 1993. My team conducted one of the very first investigations of Osama bin Laden and his cohorts—then known as the Inter-Arab group— six months before the Embassy bombings in Dar es Salaam/Nairobi in 1998.

Most provocatively by far, my team warned about a 9/11 scenario involving airplane hijackings and a strike on the World Trade Center throughout the spring and summer of 2001. My CIA handler responded aggressively, ordering me to threaten Iraqi diplomats with War, in the event they failed to supply intelligence to thwart the attack.

If that wasn't politically dangerous enough, I solicited Iraq's cooperation with the 9/11 investigation—a cause Baghdad embraced enthusiastically. Oh yes, Iraq was one of our best sources on anti-terrorism throughout the '90s. You didn't know that either, did you?

If only I'd known Julian Assange.

A Time for Openness


For all of the political scolding, there comes a time when secrecy becomes its own greatest handicap in the ultimate game to protect global security. Informed consent creates power for the people to make better decisions that impact the welfare of the total community. Just like government leaders require a depth of information to guide them, the people require it, too—so they can provide better instructions to government leaders representing their interests.




Conversely, interrupting that flow of information robs the community of the power to make the wisest possible choices. That's a major drawback of secrecy. There comes a point where secrecy compromises the community's capability to evaluate events and trends, in order to protect its own best interests. Politicians are loath to admit that, not surprisingly. They're most often the ones invoking secrecy as a method of hiding the incompetence of their policies. Lately, that's become a serious problem in Washington, as elected leaders try to dodge voters' questions.

That's not just lip service, tragically. Three examples prove my point most painfully, that a wider breadth of knowledge for the people would have substantially improved their ability to shape government policy, with better outcomes for national security.

Exposing the failure of anti-terrorism policy

The first is obvious: My team's 9/11 warnings.

Of course the intelligence community anticipated the 9/11 attacks! EXTREME PREJUDICE reveals the whole context of the warnings from May, 2001 onwards. It infuriates me that any politician would dare to deny it! Political fraud like that dishonors the community—and the dead.

Worst of all, people know the government lied, and that has festered like a wound in the American heart. People have lost confidence in our leaders' capability to speak truthfully because of 9/11—and that hurts the fabric of our democracy. It particularly offends Americans to recognize that politicians could be so cynical as to demagogue the issue for personal attention, and then use secrecy and intelligence classifications to prevent the electorate from adequately evaluating their leadership performance on anti-terrorism overall.

If government honestly makes mistakes, they could be forgiven. But when the government actively creates a patchwork of deception to thwart public knowledge, though they clearly see they have created a crisis in the psyche of our nation, in my opinion, they have no business occupying positions of leadership at all.

It's serious reason why, despite my life amidst such black secrecy, I would have told Julian Assange everything, so that somebody could give that information to the people honestly. All of America would have rested easier for having that truth.

Not only did the government lie about the 9/11 warnings, in my opinion as a participant, the 9/11 investigation was thwarted at every turn—mostly to conceal offers of assistance from Baghdad. Saddam's government offered a windfall of intelligence on terrorism, including financial records on Al Qaeda figures. And the U.S. refused to take it, amounting to false promises and false leadership on a matter of genuine importance to national security.

If only I had known Julian Assange. The world could have accepted the same documents that Tony Blair and George Bush spurned.

Unhappily, the government's decision to leave that terrorist money in play—mostly from global heroin trafficking—stands out as the single most dangerous decision in the War on Terrorism. That money is being deployed as a weapon in conflicts all over the world today—from Yemen and Indonesia to India, Iraq, Pakistan and Afghanistan.

Yet thanks to our great secrecy laws, the public has lacked the necessary information to challenge that decision to forego Iraq's financial records on Al Qaeda figures. Instead, the American people have bought into the myth of outstanding leadership performance in the fight against terrorism, without ever knowing if it's true.

Here we come to the third and most tragic example of abusive secrecy that I discuss in great depth in EXTREME PREJUDICE. Forced to rely on the government's word of honor before the War, the public failed to discover a range of non-military options dealing with Iraq, which required no deployment of troops, whatsoever.

The corporate media has never reported the existence of our comprehensive peace framework, so even the most sophisticated opinion leaders have no comprehension that the U.S. and Britain could easily have resolved their conflicts with Iraq, without firing a single missile or killing a single Iraqi child.

Oh, politicians in Washington were thoroughly debriefed on all its components, developed in a two year period before the War, and faithfully reported to White House Chief of Staff Andrew Card in 11 progress reports on the success of our back channel. Andy Card happened to be my second cousin. For all of their denials afterwards, members of Congress in both parties understood that the peace option was rock solid to the very last days before the invasion.

If only there'd been a Julian Assange to help me bring this critical and valuable intelligence to the attention of the world community. Empowering the global community with knowledge of the choices and options for peace in the Iraqi conflict would have given the people more power to compel the U.S. and British governments to accept the will of the people. The Middle East would be a different place today.

Unfortunately, there was no Julian Assange. I had to trust in formal channels to raise these points on Capitol Hill. And I quickly saw proof their bad faith. Thirty days after I phoned the offices of Senate leaders, John McCain and Trent Lott, requesting to testify before Congress, I awoke to find FBI agents pounding on my front door, with a warrant for my arrest on the Patriot Act—a frightening arsenal of secret charges, secret evidence, secret grand jury testimony, and secret attorney debriefings.

Because there was no Julian Assange to help expose these major deceptions, I got locked in prison on a Texas military base, while politicians in Washington and London reinvented the story of Pre-War Intelligence—focusing blame onto my shoulders as the "incompetent" Asset who failed to correct mistakes in pre-War assumptions. (I watched it all on prison television).

Because there was no Julian Assange to break the media sound barrier, the world community never learned how this highly developed parallel track to War made the whole war in Iraq wholly avoidable and unnecessary.

In the absence of public knowledge, politicians have manipulated silence and secrecy to their own advantage. They have abused secrecy classifications to prevent the public from discovering their own weakness and policy mistakes.

Without public examination of their actual performance, they have continued to promote policies, which have caused grave harm to American security, and perhaps most ironically of all, undermined the War on Terrorism. Voters have been denied the fundamental right to hold leaders accountable for their actions and decision making, which is critical to the well being of democracy.

And all because Intelligence Assets like me, with 10 years in anti-terrorism, had no Julian Assange to help us bring this vital intelligence to the attention of thinking peoples all over the world—

There was no Julian Assange to help protect American soldiers from easily avoidable battle deployments, triple tours of duty, amputations, head injuries, paralysis, and post traumatic stress disorder.

There was no Julian Assange to expose opportunities for peace that would have saved Iraqi families and children from an onslaught of suicide bombings, sectarian warfare, starvation, and the loss of their future.

There was no Julian Assange to guarantee that non-military options for anti-terrorism would be used to maximum impact for the world community—reducing terrorism and closing down the cash pipeline without water boarding, rendition, Guantanamo, wasteful wars, or seizing Islamic charitable donations.

Without Julian Assange to expose the truth, nobody could stop leaders in Washington and London from lying to all of us pretty much non-stop. Nobody could expose the fraud of using secrecy and the aura of intelligence to undercut national security at all levels.

As a long-time Asset, I believe the world is not better off today because there was no Julian Assange to help me. Global security is weaker not stronger, because the people got thwarted from demanding accountability from our leaders. Public scrutiny is a critical factor in a vibrant democracy. The people lost a fundamental opportunity to possess knowledge of actions taken in our collective name. Indeed, a vital organ to a healthy system of governance has been cut down.

And so perhaps you can understand why I carry such deep regrets, and why I shake my head alarmed over the attacks on Wiki-leaks and Julian Asange by those who pretend to defend national security, those who, in promoting their own self interests, have selfishly undermined the foundation of national security for all countries for the foreseeable future.

If only there'd been a Julian Assange, the world would have been spared so much pain.

If only I had found him, life would have turned out differently for all of us. If only.
Mazars and Deutsche Bank could have ended this nightmare before it started.
They could still get him out of office.
But instead, they want mass death.
Don’t forget that.
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby Nordic » Fri Dec 31, 2010 2:47 pm

:shock:

Well at least she didn't end up like David Kelly.

This is a terrifying story.
"He who wounds the ecosphere literally wounds God" -- Philip K. Dick
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby hohum » Sat Jan 01, 2011 3:10 pm

eek.

William Wagner interviews her....

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PcAvm7Quqek

Anyone come across him before? His stuff fills my inbox, must have hit subscribe at some point.

In his own words...

"father of 7 , dis-abled Viet Nam Veteran. Have CamCorder, Will Travel"
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby D.R. » Sun Jan 02, 2011 2:40 pm

Regarding Dr. Richard Fuisz:

Some of this has already appeared in the Susan Lindauer thread from the past (under my lost log-in "heyjt"), and a cross-over in the Joseph Russionello thread, as I saw Russionello in a Federal court case in Portland.

In 1994 while writing for The Portland Free Press I had mentioned "Congress Financial" in an article about CIA front Evergreen Aviation, an Oregon-based company that recieved a large amount of money to keep them out of Bankruptcy. Congress Financial was tipped off to me by Gary Eitel, my source on C-130 Aircraft who was a Federal whistleblower. Congeress Financial was said to be a CIA front also.
I recieved an unsolicited phone call from the secretary of Dr. Richard Fuisz. He confirmed that Congress Financial was basicly a slush fund for spooks, and few people knew that.
Fuisz spent several evenings with me on the phone and fax machine. I did not have a computer in those days.
He eluded to the fact that in his world travels as a medical inventor, he was at times debriefed by the State Department or other agencies. Before the first Gulf War he had returned to the US and was asked if he was aware of any arms shipments to Iraq. He said that yes, he had toured the Terex truck plant in Motherwell, Scotland and saw huge trucks painted in Desert camo. He asked the plant manager what they were for, and he said they were a joint CIA-British Intel sale to Iraq, to be used as rocket launchers.
When Fuisz revealed his knowledge of this, he ran afoul of US intelligence. He said they hounded him, and put detectives from the "Kroll Agency" on his ass 24-7.
Fuisz told me he took the story to "60 Minutes", and they were very interested until their in-house CIA liason said it crossed the National Security line and wouldn't go to air. He would not allow me to publish the name of the "60 Minutes" CIa council.
He even said he had paid a huge campaign donation to recieve a personal interview on the matter with Bill Clinton. He did have the interview, it remained unresolved.
He sent me (by fax) a picture of the type of Terex truck he saw, and we had an artist re-draw it in more clarity for "The Portland Free Press". Fuisz also spoke at length with our editor, the late Ace Hayes. We went to press with the article. I did not know at the time that some of the British papers had run the story also.

My thoughts about Fuisz:
I knew he was really connected, but I was naive' and had now idea how deep. He had sent us a declassified document about a huge dam and power project in Iraq. It deatiled how it was basicly a death camp for laborers imported from Asia. Perhaps he was hinting it was a strategic military target. I think he also just wanted to sprinkle some documents in front of us to show he was the real deal.
I believe Dr. Fuisz, like other contacts I had in those days, just wanted a good small-press article to come out so he could float it around to other people to steer influence. Our little paper was somewhat of a pawn, but it was also to our favor. I had no idea that Fuisz had been that close to the Agency, I was young and impressed. Neither did I know about his Lockerbie-connection, and that was years before 911. It would have been nice to have Google back then, as everything relied on phone, fax, and trips to libraries and courthouses.
I never had any further contact with Fuisz.

Susan Lindauer:
I would like to talk to her sometime.
At the time I wrote the blurb about Congress Financial, she was probably still an aide to Congressman Ron Wyden. My guess is that she may have passed the info to Fuisz, leading to him calling me in Portland.
Susan may have been an unwitting player, as well as a meddling activist. I was probably that myself, and I met so many others in those heady days.
I heard her interviewed on Thom Hartmann's radio show, and he kept her at arm's length, never allowing her to get into the meat of her story.
I also got a response from a "Susan" (no profile available) thanking me for a blogpost I did on Lockerbie which also contains the information I detailed above.

That about sums it up, hope I did not repeat too much info from before.
D.R.

P.S. Is there a spell check function on this board?
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby StarmanSkye » Mon Jan 03, 2011 7:03 pm

My GawD, the limits of outrage and my disgust at the self-serving antics of a completely sociopathic, evil 'civil' government aka corporatocracy keep expanding; The ideology of 'End justifies means' enables these pretend Patriots to indulge their every reckless, sadistic, morally-destitute Fascist impulse without scruple. Lindauer's tale of Judicial abuse is terrifying and harrowing, a reminder (as if one were needed!) of who the world's leading 'terrorists' really are and how far-more devestating they are to our most cherished ideals. What especially strikes me is how naive Susan Lindauer seemed to be about the dangerous game she was playing, AND who she was being played BY, ie. utterly ruthless political and intel types to whom hypocrisy is just another tool in their bag of tricks to 'win' with. Damn but I prob ought to get and read her book, a true-life 'horror' story that Steven King's best tales can't match.


Following below, a lil' synopsis from Ask Jeeves re: Dr. Fuisz's claims about CIA-authorized Terex truck-sales to augment Iraq's military capability, since affirmed by documents Iraq gave the UN. The needless suffering and unimaginable misery, death and destruction the US admin caused in Iraq, sabotaging its future on such a monstrous charade of WMD that necessitated the silencing of all contradictions that could show their scheming, self-serving duplicity to the public -- I can't find the words to encompass what I feel. I'd read enough to know before the 'war' how desperate Iraqi leaders were to avoid that horror to seriously distrust the bullshit spouted by corporate media shills. This nightmare continues growing more intense.


--quote--
Allegations of arms sale to Iraq
In 1992 American businessman Richard Carl Fuisz reported to the Operations Subcommittee of the House Committee on Agriculture that he witnessed the construction of military vehicles at a Terex owned facility in Scotland in 1987. Fuisz alleged that Terex employees reported that the vehicles were manufactured at the request of the CIA and British Intelligence and were destined for service with the Iraqi military.[6] Terex denied the allegations and in 1992, Terex filed a libel complaint against Fuisz and Seymour M. Hersh, writer of a New York Times article covering Fuisz's allegations. After several investigations, including a 16 month long Federal task force investigation, no legal charges were filed against Terex.[7]

In 2005, Scotland's Sunday Herald reported that documents provided by Iraq to the United Nations named Terex as a company that provided assistance to Iraq's weapons program.[8]

http://uk.ask.com/wiki/Terex
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby D.R. » Mon Jan 03, 2011 9:12 pm

Hmmm...
The House Comittee on Agriculture is the same body that explored the use of C-130 Aircraft by private contractors in CIA operations. The C-130's were supposed to be converted to airtankers for fire suppression by the Forest service.
My contact and Federal whistleblower was a man named Gary Eitel, and I saw some of the case played out in Federal court in Portland, Which is where I met Joseph Russionello.
I wonder if my "Congress Financial" piece may have gotton to Fuisz in 1994 via the Agriculture comittee...
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby StarmanSkye » Mon Jan 03, 2011 11:10 pm

Thanks for the background detail there DR; I recall that bit about the Forest Service C-130s being 'diverted' for CIA smuggling ops. What a blatantly abusive slight-of-hand con that was -- I don't think any of the primary controllers ever faced the music, being an agency protected ops courting nominal 'National Security' privelege.

I also recall something about FS planes being sold for peanuts as 'salvage' under some ruse or other. That was before I learned of far greater systemic frauds and scams made possible by the Security State's monopolistic franchise on arms and drugs profiteering. Traditional organized crime never had such a hermeticly-tidy business model with optimized control of supply AND demand.
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Re:

Postby stickdog99 » Tue Jan 04, 2011 2:28 pm

JackRiddler wrote:Comments on DU:

I wrote:

From where I sit, I can't tell for sure about the Susan Lindauer story.

1) Would the Bush regime be willing to persecute a mentally ill person who was deluded about this story under the unconstitutional provisions of the USA PATRIOT Act?

Indubitably. They did a lot of that.

2) Would the Bush regime and CIA handlers be willing to persecute a person who told the truth about advance knowlege of 9/11 (regardless of their state of mental health) and portray them as mentally ill in court and in the press?

Only a partisan of the official story would rule that out.

More importantly: Why don't we know more?


In reading the NY Times' articles on Lindauer, the Catch-22 aspect of her legal situation is clear and undeniable. If she really were mentally incompetent, why the hell was she being tried under the Patriot Act? Did her "delusions of grandeur" include being such a grandiose threat USA's security that she needed to be locked up for 5 years?

And what of her judge Michael B. Mukasey?

The case that first secured Judge Mukasey a lasting reputation was the 1995 trial of 10 militant Muslims who were convicted of a plot to blow up the United Nations and other landmarks around the city. Following the trial — which lasted the better part of a year — Judge Mukasey sentenced the central defendant, the terrorist-sheik Omar Abdel Rahman and another man, El Sayyid Nosair, to life in prison.

Mukasey has been one of Guiliani's boys since the 1970s. He was the go to judge for holding "terrorist suspects" without charge in the wake of 9/11. He was the judge who said Bush could hold Jose Padilla indefinitely without trial as an enemy combatant. He was the judge for the litigation between developer Larry Silverstein and several insurance companies concerning the compensation due for 9/11's WTC destruction. He became the Bush's Attorney General following the resignation of Alberto Gonzales.
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Re: Former Accused Iraqi Agent Reveals Facts about 9/11

Postby D.R. » Tue Jan 11, 2011 1:26 pm

Here's an interesting updated interview with Susan Lindauer by Kevin Barrett of truthjihad.com -
New info includes that at the time Lindauer was jailed, Dr. Fuisz recieved some 13 million in hush money-
And Lindauer claims she was told by a high level State Dept. person that they witnessed unusual van/janitorial service activity that supports the controlled demolition theory.
Skeptics abound in the comment section:

http://truthjihad.blogspot.com/2011/01/ ... istle.html
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