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

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

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 07, 2013 3:20 pm

see link for full story
http://www.collapsenet.com/free-resourc ... know-about




10 Chemical Weapons Attacks The U.S. Government Doesn’t Want You To Know About
09/05/2013

A couple of weeks ago I highlighted the fact that declassified documents analyzed by Foreign Policy proved that the U.S. government knew about Saddam Hussein’s egregious use of chemical weapons and in fact we helped him be more effective in their deployment. Well unfortunately that’s just the tip of the American chemical weapons iceberg.

From white phosphorus and depleted uranium (DU) usage in Iraq, to secret radioactive tests in poor black neighborhoods within the U.S. itself (something I previously covered here), the list is pretty horrific. While you might be able to say that this is the reality of war, then what the heck are we doing entering a civil war in a country where chemical weapons are being used that poses no threat to us? Absolutely insane and criminal.

I summarized the Top 10 list here, but I highly suggest also checking out the entire post with pictures from PolicyMic. Summary below:

Washington doesn’t merely lack the legal authority for a military intervention in Syria. It lacks the moral authority. We’re talking about a government with a history of using chemical weapons against innocent people far more prolific and deadly than the mere accusations Assad faces from a trigger-happy Western military-industrial complex, bent on stifling further investigation before striking.

1. The U.S. Military Dumped 20 Million Gallons of Chemicals on Vietnam from 1962 – 1971

Vietnam estimates that as a result of the decade-long chemical attack, 400,000 people were killed or maimed, 500,000 babies have been born with birth defects, and 2 million have suffered from cancer or other illnesses.

2. Israel Attacked Palestinian Civilians with White Phosphorus in 2008 – 2009

White phosphorus is a horrific incendiary chemical weapon that melts human flesh right down to the bone.

In 2009, multiple human rights groups, including Human Rights Watch, Amnesty International, and International Red Cross reported that the Israeli government was attacking civilians in their own country with chemical weapons.

The Israeli military denied the allegations at first, but eventually admitted they were true.

3. Washington Attacked Iraqi Civilians with White Phosphorus in 2004

In 2004, journalists embedded with the U.S. military in Iraq began reporting the use of white phosphorus in Fallujah against Iraqi insurgents. First the military lied and said that it was only using white phosphorus to create smokescreens or illuminate targets. Then it admitted to using the volatile chemical as an incendiary weapon.

4. The CIA Helped Saddam Hussein Massacre Iranians and Kurds with Chemical Weapons in 1988

CIA records now prove that Washington knew Saddam Hussein was using chemical weapons (including sarin, nerve gas, and mustard gas) in the Iran-Iraq War, yet continued to pour intelligence into the hands of the Iraqi military, informing Hussein of Iranian troop movements while knowing that he would be using the information to launch chemical attacks.

5. The Army Tested Chemicals on Residents of Poor, Black St. Louis Neighborhoods in The 1950s

In the early 1950s, the Army set up motorized blowers on top of residential high-rises in low-income, mostly black St. Louis neighborhoods, including areas where as much as 70% of the residents were children under 12. The government told residents that it was experimenting with a smokescreen to protect the city from Russian attacks, but it was actually pumping the air full of hundreds of pounds of finely powdered zinc cadmium sulfide.

6. Police Fired Tear Gas at Occupy Protesters in 2011

The savage violence of the police against Occupy protesters in 2011 was well documented, andincluded the use of tear gas and other chemical irritants. Tear gas is prohibited for use against enemy soldiers in battle by the Chemical Weapons Convention.

7. The FBI Attacked Men, Women, and Children With Tear Gas in Waco in 1993

At the infamous Waco siege of a peaceful community of Seventh Day Adventists, the FBI pumped tear gas into buildings knowing that women, children, and babies were inside. The tear gas was highly flammable and ignited, engulfing the buildings in flames and killing 49 men and women, and 27 children, including babies and toddlers.

8. The U.S. Military Littered Iraq with Toxic Depleted Uranium in 2003

In Iraq, the U.S. military has littered the environment with thousands of tons of munitions made from depleted uranium, a toxic and radioactive nuclear waste product. As a result, more than half of babies born in Fallujah from 2007 – 2010 were born with birth defects. Some of these defects have never been seen before outside of textbooks with photos of babies born near nuclear tests in the Pacific.

9. The U.S. Military Killed Hundreds of Thousands of Japanese Civilians with Napalm from 1944 – 1945

Napalm is a sticky and highly flammable gel which has been used as a weapon of terror by the U.S. military. In 1980, the UN declared the use of napalm on swaths of civilian population a war crime. That’s exactly what the U.S. military did in World War II, dropping enough napalm in one bombing raid on Tokyo to burn 100,000 people to death, injure a million more, and leave a million without homes in the single deadliest air raid of World War II.

10. The U.S. Government Dropped Nuclear Bombs on Two Japanese Cities in 1945

It seems odd that the only regime to ever use one of these weapons of terror on other human beings has busied itself with the pretense of keeping the world safe from dangerous weapons in the hands of dangerous governments.

We have no moral authority. Period.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 07, 2013 10:26 pm

see link for full story
http://dailyjournalonline.com/news/loca ... f887a.html


Veto override of HB 436 could pit officer against officer
Law enforcement agencies statewide decry poorly written, far-reaching gun law changes
September 7, 2013

House Bill 436, also known as the Second Amendment Preservation Act, would make it a class A misdemeanor for a federal agent to enforce federal gun laws among other far-reaching firearm provisos included in legislation vetoed by Gov. Jay Nixon and set for the Sept. 11 override session.

Under the bill, if a person commits a federal firearm offense and is arrested by a federal official — local law enforcement would be under the letter of the law — forced to arrest the federal officer. This could essentially put a local officer or deputy in a position where they would be forced to arrest a FBI/ATF or other agent for doing their job.

"It could possibly pit law enforcement officer against law enforcement officer, whether it be federal, state, municipal or county law enforcement officer. I think the concept behind it is a good idea. I'm an advocate of the Second Amendment and I'm all for the idea behind it. I just think this bill is a little too broad and it needs to be narrowed down to pinpoint the idea behind it," Sheriff Dan Bullock said.

The sheriff also says that while he may not support all of the far-reaching language in the bill, he is a firm believer in the Second Amendment and will uphold the U.S. Constitution despite any effort to strip the citizenry of their right to bear arms.

"I under no circumstances, and I want to really enforce this idea, am in no way going to stand idly by and let federal officers or the federal government or any other factions come into St. Francois County and disarm armed citizens that are not criminals.

"And I don't want anyone to misconstrue this in any way as me being soft on the Second Amendment. I took an oath to uphold the Constitution of the United States. The Second Amendment is near and dear to me and I have every intention of protecting those rights in St. Francois County no matter who comes to disarm the citizens here--legislation or not," Bullock said.

In addition, the law could prevent federal and state or local law enforcement from working together on some cases.

"There are times when we use federal law, because there are no state laws available to go after certain types of crimes. You can usually get more time in a federal situation than what you can in a state situation. We certainly don't want to break ties or cause problems between deputies, the highway patrol, municipal officers and the ATF, the FBI and federal agencies. There are also federal funds that come in that we could lose because of this bill," Bullock said.

Sheriff Bullock noted the recent investigation into the death of Sam Francis, where the case was solved through a joint and far-reaching investigation by federal and local authorities.

"We worked just recently on the tattoo artist case and the FBI, ATF, highway patrol, the sheriff's department and municipal officers worked together on that case and it was solved and it worked very well," said Bullock.

The bill would also allow offenders to sue law enforcement for being arrested on firearm violations.

"There is a possibility that criminals could sue police officers," Bullock said.

The Missouri Sheriffs Association also disagrees with much of the language in the bill. In a press release they said it will essentially "hamstring" sheriffs and their deputies from participating in federal drug and violent gang task forces in the state.

Missouri Attorney General Chris Koster recently sent a letter to general assembly members citing many of the same concerns, which can be read in its entirety at http://ago.mo.gov/HB436_AGLetter_09032012.pdf.

Koster cited the case of Cooper v. Aaron, the 1958 case which essentially desegregated schools in Arkansas. That case stated it is a conflict for a legislator sworn to uphold the constitution to war against it.

On the subject of schools, the establishment of school protection officers is also part of the package. School districts could designate one or more teachers or administrators. Funds to compensate the officer would come from the district.

The school protection officer would be allowed to carry a concealed firearm in any school in the district. They could detain violators of state law until law enforcement arrives. Those detained for school policy violations must be turned over to a school administrator as soon as possible.

Requirement of the position would be requesting the designation in writing to the school superintendent, proof of concealed carry endorsement and a certificate of school protection officer training completion from a program approved by the Director of the Department of Public Safety. The Peace Officer Standards and Training Commission (POST) will establish the standards, hours required and curriculum for the training and instructors.

"I think that is a good part of the legislation. It allows our schools to actually have an officer that can be certified as a police officer on school property. I think that's a good thing," Bullock said.

Another proviso of the legislation makes concealed carry information a closed record under the Sunshine Law.

The Missouri Press Association disagrees with this language according to a recent press release.

During the association's annual convention, they expressed concern over certain provisions in House Bill 436 on Thursday, by officially voting to seek injunctive relief and a court determination on the constitutionality of those provisions if the Governor's veto of this bill is overturned next week during the Missouri General Assembly's veto session in Jefferson City.

The bill contains a new Missouri statute, Section 571.011, which states, in part, "No person or entity shall publish the name, address or other identifying information of any individual who owns a firearm...."

The board, in making this decision, said it believes that language is clearly in opposition to the guarantee in Missouri's Constitution, Article I, Section 8, that states, "That no law shall be passed impairing the freedom of speech, no matter by what means communicated....," in addition to the long history which exists protecting speech in this country under the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution.

"Because of the way this law is worded, any time a name of someone who is a gun owner is published anywhere, online or in print, the publisher could be guilty of a misdemeanor and fined up to $1,000," said Mark Maassen, president of the association. "Local prosecutors, who work hard to protect their communities, are going to prosecute people who had no idea that a person whose name they publish was a gun owner. Some may prosecute, some may not. But it will be a mess."

Maassen speculated that lists of gun owners may need to be created in order to advise members of the public of whose names cannot be published, but pointed out that the publication of that list alone would violate the law. He speculated that election authorities may encounter problems publishing ballots because some elected officials and potential candidates are gun owners.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 10, 2013 9:47 pm

2 reads



Former FBI analyst sentenced to more than three years in prison in child pornography case
September 9- 2 2013


see link for full story

http://www.washingtonpost.com/local/for ... story.html

A former intelligence analyst for the FBI was sentenced to more than three years in prison Monday for possessing child pornography.
Keith Dietterle, 28, was arrested in an undercover sting last November and pleaded guilty in federal court in Washington this spring. Dietterle, a District resident who was assigned to FBI headquarters, admitted sending an undercover officer pornographic images of children and links to graphic videos. Dietterle communicated through a social networking site with the officer, who he thought was the father of a young girl, according to
http://www.cbsatlanta.com/story/2339402 ... estigation
see link for full story

FBI agent who led sex crimes task force under investigation
Sep 10, 2013

Ken Hillman, an FBI special agent who operated the northwest Georgia Crimes Against Children Task Force, is under investigation for alleged misconduct, according to a bureau representative.

The task force, based in Catoosa County, caught more than 150 people from 2007 to 2013 who responded to online offers for sex with children, according to a former task force member.

CBS Atlanta News has learned that Hillman is accused of abusing his authority after being pulled over several times on suspicion of driving under the influence.

Attorney McCracken Poston, who represents several suspects arrested by the task force, said he reported Hillman to the FBI.

Poston provided dash cam video from a police car that he said showed Hillman being pulled over by local police for suspicion of driving under the influence. In the video, it appears Hillman yells to the officer, "I'm FBI. I'm going to a call. I'm sorry."

"Because of his badge and his connections he got out of at least three instances when he should have been investigated for driving under the influence. Maybe more," said Poston.

Poston also reported that Hillman allowed civilians to participate in sensitive sting operations.

Catoosa County millionaire Emerson Russell and his wife Angela Russell reportedly handcuffed suspects and held guns during arrests. Neither are certified law enforcement officers.

According to Poston, Angela Russell also communicated with suspects online to help lure them to Catoosa County. Poston alleged some of those conversations occurred without supervision.

"I think it brings into question current cases in terms of what procedures were being used. What conversations may have been had that we hadn't been given," said Poston.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Thu Sep 12, 2013 1:41 am

couple of yawns maybe 7









see link for full story
http://rt.com/usa/fbi-lawyer-surveillance-judge-732/
Ex-FBI counsel implicated in surveillance abuses nominated to crucial federal bench
Published time: September 11, 2013 22:58
The former top lawyer at the FBI deeply implicated in surveillance abuses revealed before and by Edward Snowden’s leaks was confirmed as a federal judge in a top court for terrorism cases this week.
The US Senate voted 73-24 on Monday in approving Valerie Caproni, Federal Bureau of Investigation general counsel from 2003 to 2011, to the Southern District of New York, one of the country's most important federal courts for terrorism cases.

Caproni has received bipartisan criticism for allowing and defending surveillance abuses both found to be overbroad during her tenure and those not disclosed when she was counsel but later revealed to be inappropriate or illegal. For example, the Snowden leaks showed Caproni mischaracterized the limits of the Patriot Act during her term.

A 2010 report by the Department of Justice revealed the FBI inappropriately used non-judicial subpoenas called “exigent letters” to gather phone numbers of over 5,550 Americans until 2006.

"The FBI broke the law on telephone records privacy and the general counsel's office, headed by Valerie Caproni, sanctioned it and must face consequences," said John Conyers in April 2010 as chairman of the House Judiciary Committee.

Conyers called for Caproni’s firing at the time over the use of the non-judicial subpoenas, according to the Guardian.

"It's not in the Patriot Act. It never has been. And its use, perhaps coincidentally, began in the same month that Ms Valerie Caproni began her work as general counsel," Conyers said in 2010.

Caproni told House lawmakers in 2008 if phone numbers -- acquired from telephone companies by the FBI via the non-judicial subpoenas evidently sanctioned in the Patriot Act -- were not related to a "currently open investigation, and there was no emergency at the time we received the records, the records are removed from our files and destroyed.”

Yet revelations found in documents supplied by Snowden outlined how the National Security Agency stores phone records on all Americans for up five years no matter if they are associated with an open investigation or not. In addition, it’s been found that the NSA has the capability to feed the FBI phone records if there is a "reasonable articulable suspicion" they are related to terrorism.

"Caproni knew that the Bush administration could use or was using the Section 215 provision in the Patriot Act to obtain Americans' phone records on a broad scale, an issue that has recently been documented by the whistleblower material first printed in the Guardian," Lisa Graves, a former deputy assistant attorney general who dealt with Caproni while working on national security issues for the ACLU, told the Guardian.

In 2007, DOJ’s Inspector General Glenn Fine found the FBI was serially abusing National Security Letters -- a demand regarding national security independent of legal subpoenas-- to obtain business records, including "unauthorized collection of telephone or internet email transactional records.” While the larger collection of phone records was still not exposed at the time, Caproni called the inappropriate collection a “colossal failure on our part.”

"Government officials that secretly approved of overbroad surveillance programs the public is only seeing now because of leaks, and whose testimony on the issue obscured rather than revealed these abuses, should be held to account for their actions in a public forum," former FBI agent Mike German told the Guardian.



"She is a woman with impeccable credentials," Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand (D-N.Y.) said on the Senate floor Monday. "This country needs more women like her."




see link for full story
http://mashable.com/2013/09/11/fbi-micr ... -backdoor/

Did the FBI Lean On Microsoft for Access to Its Encryption Software?
September 11, 2013

The NSA is reportedly not the only government agency asking tech companies for help in cracking technology to access user data. Sources say the FBI has a history of requesting digital backdoors, which are generally understood as a hidden vulnerability in a program that would, in theory, let the agency peek into suspects' computers and communications.
In 2005, when Microsoft was about to launch BitLocker, its Windows software to encrypt and lock hard drives, the company approached the NSA, its British counterpart the GCHQ and the FBI, among other government and law-enforcement agencies. Microsoft's goal was twofold: get feedback from the agencies, and sell BitLocker to them.




see link for full story
http://www.heraldtribune.com/article/20 ... e=printart



Lawsuit asks FBI to release Sarasota 9/11 documents
September 10, 2013 at 3:45 p.m.

Twelve years after the 9/11 attacks that included three hijacker pilots trained in Venice, the terrorists' alleged interaction with a high-echelon Saudi family that lived in Sarasota remains shrouded in secrecy.

But Sunshine law and Freedom of Information Act requests filed by an independent South Florida news organization have chipped away at the FBI's position that information related to the family remain secret.

Depending on how a federal judge in Broward County rules, the FBI could, theoretically, be compelled to reveal documents and field notes in the case.

Broward Bulldog editor Dan Christensen and former U.S. Sen. Bob Graham say the documents could shed light on how the locally trained terrorists were managed and supported.

Graham, former Florida governor and a co-chair of the 9/11 Commission, a Congressional body that investigated the attacks, believes the FBI has covered up Saudi support of the terrorists.

Graham also chaired the Senate Intelligence Committee during and after 9/11. He has chimed in on the ongoing federal lawsuit by the Broward Bulldog against the FBI and the Department of Justice, filing a 15-page declaration of the facts as he knows them.

The former senator wants more disclosure about what happened in Sarasota because he feels it may add to a bigger, largely censored subject: Who financed and supported the 9/11 terror attacks?

"It is a big onion, which is being slowly peeled," Graham told the Herald-Tribune. "We are continuing with all the means that are still available to us to get this material into the hands of the public."

"And the FBI is aggressively resisting the release of any additional documents," he said. "The question is, why are they doing this? What interest does the FBI have in denying the existence of its own documents?"

"Beyond that, they have thrown a blanket of national security over virtually everything, and why are they doing that for an event that occurred, soon to be, 12 years ago?"

Larry Berberich -- a man who played a pivotal security role at Sarasota's Prestancia neighorhood, where the Saudis in question lived at the time -- has his own view of what Graham describes as a blanket.

"Some of the local departments knew a hell of a lot about what was going on and were feeding the FBI that information," said Berberich, who was then a Prestancia board member nominally in charge of security and an unpaid security consultant to the sheriff at that time, Bill Balkwill.

Shortly after local law enforcement entered the vacated home of the Saudis in Prestancia, he said, "everything went black."

Berberich told the Herald-Tribune local law enforcement personnel privy to evidence were muzzled.

He declined to elaborate.

The neighbors noticed

At the time of the 9/11 attacks, President George W. Bush was visiting a school in Sarasota.

Then came the revelation that three of the hijackers learned to fly at Venice Airport.

The story about a family of Saudis who suddenly left their home in suburban Sarasota about two weeks before the attacks in New York and Washington, D.C. -- leaving food on the counter, a dirty diaper, three vehicles and an empty safe -- went unreported.

But it did not go unnoticed by neighbors.

The house was owned by Esam Ghazzawi, a well-connected businessman whose family had a long history with Saudi Arabia's royal family.

In the year leading up to 9/11, the Ghazzawi property at 4224 Escondito Circle was home to the patriarch's daughter and son-in-law, Anoud and Abdulaziz al-Hijji. The man was a college student here, and he and his wife had small children.

The couple's Saudi nationality, the trash they left at the curb, and the cars they left in the driveway created a hubbub in the staid gated community. Acting on tips from neighbors, law enforcement swept into the home within weeks after the terror attacks and confiscated boxes of potential evidence.

The incident was forgotten until it showed up in research by authors Anthony Summers and Robbyn Swan, as they were collecting material for their Pulitzer Prize-nominated book, "The Eleventh Day: The Full Story of 9/11."

Summers had interviewed a still-unnamed counterterrorism officer who told him that the FBI knew much more than it was saying about Prestancia.

With the 10th anniversary of 9/11 then approaching, Summers asked Christensen, a former Miami Herald investigative reporter and Broward Bulldog's editor, to help develop the Sarasota angle of the story.

From that interview and others, Summers and Christensen described alleged connections between the terrorists who learned to fly in Venice and the residents of the 3,300-square-foot home in Prestancia.

Just 15 miles separated the neighborhood and Venice Airport, where hijackers trained before piloting two jets into the World Trade Center and a third into a Pennsylvania field after passengers overtook them.

Mohamed Atta and Marwan al-Shehhi took flight lessons at the airport's former Huffman Aviation. Ziad Jarra took flight lessons at the neighboring Florida Flight Training Center.

Atta and al-Shehhi are believed to have flown jets into the twin towers. Jarra is believed to have been the pilot of United Flight 93, which went down in Pennsylvania amid a passenger uprising.

The men knew each other from Germany and were part of what is referred to in 9/11 literature as the "Hamburg cell."

"Phone records and the Prestancia gate records linked the house on Escondito Circle to the hijackers," the Broward Bulldog reported in its 10th anniversary story.

Those findings were published not just on Christensen's Bulldog website, but also in the Herald-Tribune, Miami Herald and the Tampa Bay Times in September 2011.

Within days, the FBI went on the defensive, stating that the agency had followed up on the "referenced Sarasota home and family" and interviewed family members and found no evidence connecting them to hijackers.

"The anonymous 'counterterrorism officer' cited in the article apparently was not an FBI agent and had no access to the facts and circumstances pertaining to the resolution of this lead, otherwise this person would know that this matter was resolved without any nexus to the 9/11 plot," wrote FBI special agent Steven E. Ibison, who was the supervisor of the Tampa field office.

FBI officials in Tampa declined to comment for this story, citing the ongoing litigation.

That does not surprise Tom Julin, a Miami First Amendment attorney who is representing the Broward Bulldog.

"The FBI, I think, went out of its way to discredit the initial reporting that Dan and Tony Summers had done," Julin said.

The FBI's reaction prompted a Freedom of Information quest, which culminated in a lawsuit before federal District Court Judge William L. Zloch, a former University of Notre Dame quarterback appointed to the bench by President Ronald Reagan.

"Basically Dan was saying, 'If you are telling me I am wrong, show me the documents.'"

Gatekeeper's records

While the Saudi family's sudden departure was intriguing, the smoking gun in the Bulldog investigation was the allegation that agents discovered phone records and Prestancia gate records that linked the Escondito Circle house to the hijackers.

Prestancia has two gates, manned by security guards who noted license plate numbers of visitors, asked drivers their names and recorded what home they were visiting.

An FBI document released to Christensen in April suggests the agency did not hold on to the gate-keeper records.

But that seems unlikely, says Berberich, the former Prestancia Homeowners Association director.

Now a Manatee County resident, Berberich then lived in a 12,000-square-foot home overlooking Prestancia's golf course.

With a background in military electronics and top-secret clearances from years ago, it was Berberich who helped Sarasota County law enforcement officials enter the Escondito Circle home. He also instructed Prestancia employees to fully cooperate with federal officials.

On two occasions since, Berberich has gone back to the Prestancia guard shack where the visitor logs were kept, he said.

"You've got records before that time, and records after that time," said Berberich, now 75. "There is a gap at the time in question. So that substantiates that it got turned over to somebody."

In his declaration to the federal court in the Broward Bulldog suit, Berberich described what he and law enforcement officials found in the home. "There was mail on the table, dirty diapers in one of the bathrooms," he said. "All of the toiletries were still in place." "The refrigerator was full of food as if the residents had just gone shopping before leaving."

"We also found a safe in the home had been emptied and it appeared that a computer had been removed," he said.

Berberich said that he had his eyes on the home before the terror attacks.

There were six or seven young men who visited on a regular basis. Vehicles later associated with the hijackers carried them to the gates of the country club community.

Their friendship with al-Hijji got them admitted, Berberich said.

He said he knows that because license plates associated with several vehicles now connected to the terrorists were recorded on numerous occasions by gate guards. The passengers said they were were headed for 4224 Escondito Circle.

"It was common for them to come into Prestancia, two, three in a car," Berberich said. "I mean, more than a person coming in a car, and more than one car coming in."

Strong ties

The Ghazzawi family has a decades-long history of operating at the highest levels of Saudi society, the Herald-Tribune has found.

As King Saud prepared for a state visit with President Dwight Eisenhower, Abbas Ghazzawi, who appears to be Esam Ghazzawi's father, was part of the royal entourage.

In exchange for being able to keep a U.S. military base within Saudi Arabia's borders, President Eisenhower agreed to allow the Saudi government to buy up to $500 million worth of U.S.-made arms.

The deal did not come together overnight, and Abbas Ghazzawi flew to New York, from Madrid, on Jan. 25, 1957, according to passenger lists kept by U.S. officials.

The elder Ghazzawi was accompanied by three other Saudis, including a man who would later serve as Saudi Arabia's ambassador to the U.S., Faisal al-Hegelan.

The Ghazzawi family's ties to America grew stronger years later when, in 1970, 17-year-old Esam Ghazzawi married American Deborah G. Browning.

Esam Ghazzawi's family later established a presence in Southwest Florida, building a home on Longboat Key's Putter Lane.

Esam and Deborah Ghazzawi bought the Prestancia home in September 1995, records show. Five months later, their daughter Anoud married Abdulaziz al-Hijji. He was 19 and she was 17, their Sarasota County marriage license shows.

Al-Hijji attended Manatee Community College, now State College of Florida, and then the University of South Florida, where he received a bachelor's.

Friends

Abdulaziz al-Hijji knew some of the terrorists who were in training at Venice Airport, according to a former friend who provided the information to an FBI agent and a Sarasota County Sheriff's Office detective in 2004.

The informant, a Sarasota cellphone store owner named Wissam Hammoud, made the claim while awaiting trial in the Hillsborough County Jail on federal charges. He is now serving a 21-year sentence in federal prison after pleading guilty in August 2005 to charges of plotting to kill a federal agent and a confidential informant.

Through the U.S. Attorney's Office, Hammoud arranged to be interviewed by Sarasota sheriff's Detective Michael Otis and FBI agent Leo Martinez, who worked in the agency's Fort Myers field office, according to a 2004 investigative report file by the Florida Department of Law Enforcement.

Christensen obtained that document through a Sunshine law request made in late 2011 after the FBI attempted to discredit his story.

Hammoud told investigators that he met Abdulaziz al-Hijji through his own relatives in Sarasota in 1996. Hammoud described al-Hijji as very well schooled in Islam, the FDLE report states.

Hammoud said that Abdulaziz al-Hijji told him that al-Hijji's wife, Anoud, had family that provided her with money, but that her husband received none from his wife.

Hammoud told investigators that he often exercised with Abdulaziz al-Hijji at the Shapes Fitness center near the Prestancia neighborhood, and that the two played soccer together on property surrounding a Sarasota mosque.

Al-Hijji brought a friend to the games who Hammoud claimed was Adnan El Shukrijumah, a man who was federally indicted in 2010 for his alleged role in a terrorist plot to attack New York City's subway system. The FBI is currently offering a $5 million reward for information leading to El Shukrijumah's capture, and he is listed by the FBI as being one of the "most wanted terrorists."

The plot, uncovered in September 2009, was directed by senior Al-Qaeda leadership in Pakistan, and El Shukrijumah is thought to have been part of the group's external operations hierarchy, according to an FBI-issued "Wanted" poster.

In an interview with the London Telegraph in February 2012, al-Hijji emphatically denied any connection to hijackers, stating that he loved America.

Al-Hijji acknowledged knowing Hammoud, but said the name "Shukrajumah" did not ring a bell.

Hammoud told investigators that he helped Abdulaziz and Anoud al-Hijji by clearing the residence on Escondito Circle after they left Sarasota, putting their belongings in storage. He said he was asked to sell one of al-Hijji's vehicles, a Volkswagen Beetle, and send the couple the proceeds.

Hammoud told investigators al-Hijji had gone to work for the Saudi-owned oil company Aramco. After leaving the U.S. in August 2001, al-Hijji went to Saudi Arabia first, and was later transferred to an Aramco office in London, the FDLE 2004 report states.

New pages

It took much longer for the FBI to give Christensen any real information about 9/11 and its potential relationship with Sarasota family.

This spring, with no explanation, the FBI mailed Christensen 31 pages of heavily redacted documents.

One of them, dated April 2002, appears to contradict the FBI's claim that there was no connection between the Prestancia family and hijackers.

The document states, "Further investigation of the (name deleted) family revealed many connections between the (name deleted) and individuals associated with the terrorist attacks on 09/11/2001. More specifically, a (name deleted) family member (name deleted) also known as (name deleted) DOB (date deleted) last known address (address deleted) Florida, was a flight student at Huffman Aviation."

The agency redacted many of the names in the 31 pages released under exemptions that protect people's names in law enforcement records. But it is clear who the subjects are because the documents specifically cite the al-Hijjis' residence on Escondito Circle.

To Christensen, the statement was a breakthrough in his quest for documents.

"It is important because it establishes that there were connections between these people and the hijackers," Christensen said. "It says it very clearly, and it is also at odds with what the FBI has said before."

Graham, the former senator and co-chair of the 9/11 Commission, made his sworn declaration in Broward Bulldog's lawsuit after that document surfaced and referenced it in his own highly detailed report to the court.

"Once the FBI had found 'many connections' between the persons under investigation and individuals associated with the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, the FBI should have taken statements from all persons who knew those persons, should have obtained the gatehouse records of the Prestancia subdivision where 4224 Escondito Circle is located, should have compared the license plates on vehicles that the FBI had reason to believe that the terrorists used with photographs that were taken of license tags that passed through the Prestancia gatehouse, should have obtained financial records showing how homeowners' association fees were paid, and should have created inventories of property taken from the home, at a minimum," Graham wrote the court. "I have further been advised that the request specified that the activities involve apparent visits to that address by some of the decreased 9/11 hijackers."

Graham's 15-page declaration is accompanied by the entire 9/11 Commission report and by the "Joint Inquiry into Intelligence Community Activities before and after the Terrorist Attacks of September 11, 2001," which is the work of the joint Congressional committee that Graham chaired.

Since the Joint Inquiry report was published in 2003, Graham has been trying within two presidential administrations to make public the chapter on how the terrorists were financed and supported.

In a guest editorial published by the Huffington Post in September 2012, Graham was more explicit about the contents of the censored chapter.

"Sadly, those 28 pages represent only a fraction of the evidence of Saudi complicity that our government continues to shield from the public, under a flawed classification program which appears to be part of a systematic effort to protect Saudi Arabia from any real accountability for its actions," Graham wrote.

The search goes on

In June, Judge Zloch denied a request by an assistant U.S. attorney representing the FBI to dismiss the Broward Bulldog's Freedom-of-Information-Act case.

Then Zloch invited Julin, Christensen's attorney, to tell the court exactly how he would recommend that the FBI proceed to do a better search for the materials that were being sought.

Julin's 15-page report asks the agency to use its "Sentinel system" to conduct searches, on top of the antiquated system that the agency used to generate the limited results turned over to the plaintiffs so far.



The Miami lawyer also asked for a manual review of the Tampa files on the case, which are voluminous.

He also asked for a series of test searches that the FBI apparently did not use previously that he said could produce results.

For example, Julin suggested trying the names of the family that owned the home -- the Ghazzawis -- and the names of the house's residents, the al-Hijjis.

He suggested the agency get a little more creative, trying searches like "Prestancia and gatehouse," "Prestancia and Mohamed Atta," "Escondito and Mohamed Atta," "Prestancia and Huffman Aviation," and so on.

The agent in charge of the Sarasota investigation, Gregory Sheffield, has since been reassigned to the FBI's Honolulu field office.

Julin asked that the FBI be compelled to ask Sheffield basic questions about his knowledge of the evidentiary files and where they are, and then to follow up on those leads.

Should Judge Zloch follow Julin's suggestions on how to proceed, there is the potential for opening up thousands, possibly hundreds of thousands, of new documents held in the FBI's Tampa field office, according to one of the responses filed by FBI's representative in the suit, Assistant U.S. Attorney Carole Fernandez.

In August, as part of Fernandez's reasoning for blocking the release of documents, she told the court:

"The FBI's Tampa office alone has more than 15,352 documents (serials) which together contain, potentially, hundreds of thousands of pages of records related to the 9/11 investigation," the federal attorney. "The manual review which plaintiffs are requesting is not reasonable, nor is it warranted."






see link for full story
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2013-09-1 ... wsuit.html

FBI Director James Comey Added to Revised NSA Surveillance Lawsuit


A lawsuit alleging that the National Security Agency violated the constitutional rights of U.S. citizens now includes claims against new FBI Director James Comey, Bloomberg reports.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, which filed the original lawsuit in July, alleges the NSA, with the help of the Justice Department and FBI, surreptitiously collected information about “all telephone calls transiting the networks of all major telecommunication companies.”

Comey was added to the suit as a defendant.
- See more at: http://www.ticklethewire.com/#sthash.WrkJA9zo.dpuf

see link for full story
http://www.cbsatlanta.com/story/2340676 ... ist-attack



FBI war room ready for potential terrorist attack



Sep 11, 2013

Mark Giuliano is the special agent in charge of the FBI's office in Atlanta. Giuliano said there is no specific terrorist threat, at this time, but the FBI is ready just in case.
"We can't afford to let our guard down," said Giuliano.
The walls of the FBI's office contain pictures of those who were responsible for the devastating attack on Sept. 11, 2001, that killed close to 3,000 and injured some 6,000.
Since then, on the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks, the FBI and other federal and local law enforcement agencies set up command centers to monitor and prepare just in case there are additional attacks.
"We are monitoring the information coming in from overseas, in our intelligence community and from our state, local and federal counterparts here to look for threats," said Giuliano.
Angela Tobon is the assistant special agent in charge of the FBI's National Security team.
"We're watching what's going on social wise, social media and listening to our counterparts in other agencies," said Tobon. "We've got agents on standby. If we need to respond to something they are ready to go, SWAT teams, TAC teams, investigative teams or providing assistance to other agencies."
The FBI also assembled a team of analysts.
"Everybody knows today is a heightened alert day and everybody is prepared," said Tobon.
If something were to happen in the Metro Atlanta area, representatives from just about every agency would assemble in what the FBI calls its war room.
Scott Dutton is with the GBI.




Charles Hynes, Scandal-Plagued Brooklyn District Attorney, Faces Verdict At The Polls
09/06/2013
The year was 1990. George H.W. Bush was president. The song "Hold On" by Wilson Phillips was number one on the Billboard chart. And Charles "Joe" Hynes, celebrated for his role as a special prosecutor in a racially charged case in Howard Beach, began his first term as Brooklyn District Attorney.
Bush's presidency came and went; his son's did too. Wilson Phillips went on a 10-year hiatus; then got back together in 2004.
Hynes, all along the way, has done exactly what that top 1990 ballad instructed: He's held on. He's been Brooklyn's top law man for nearly 24 years, making him one of the longest serving district attorneys in New York City history.
But Hynes's once firm grasp on the position could be imperiled. Buffeted by controversial cases, charges of misconduct in his office, and concerns about possibly preferential treatment for Jewish residents of the borough, Hynes is seen by political strategists to be facing a serious challenge from Kenneth Thompson, an African-American former federal prosecutor. On Tuesday, Sept. 10, voters in the Brooklyn Democratic primary could deny Hynes a chance at a seventh term.
Almost all prosecutors who stay in office for lengthy terms wind up facing a familiar array of complaints – about cases lost, creeping arrogance, political gamesmanship. Robert M. Morgenthau, revered by many across his decades as Manhattan's top prosecutor, had his share of critics and embarrassments, the troubled prosecution of five teenagers for the rape of a woman in Central Park among them.
Some of the complaints about Hynes, then, fit that mold: He's been accused of hiring and firing people based on favoritism and political connections and he's been taken to task for some failed or underwhelming prosecutions. Even his once reliable base of support, the borough's Orthodox Jewish community, has seemed to split, some angered that Hynes has made a series of pedophilia cases against people in their ranks, others disappointed that he was late to the issue and overly lenient in his handling of the cases.
But Thompson, who served in the U.S. Attorney's Office for the Eastern District of New York, has focused his criticism on the question of wrongful convictions and possible misconduct by prosecutors over the years in Hynes's office.
On the campaign trail Thompson, for instance, has cited withering criticism from two federal judges over the way one of Hynes's top prosecutors won a wrongful conviction in a high-profile murder case.
In the last several weeks, Thompson has gained endorsements from the Service Employees International Union, the Citizens Union, and several Brooklyn-based representatives in Congress.
Hynes has defended the work of his office, rejecting any claims that he permits or encourages misconduct. He has campaigned on what he asserts are his myriad novel and effective approaches to fighting crime.
Both the district attorney's office and Hynes's campaign did not respond to requests for comment.
Little public polling has been done in the race. Turnout could play a role. And Hynes, whatever his arguable travails, has history on his side.
No incumbent district attorney has lost an election in any of New York's boroughs since 1955. A Brooklyn district attorney hasn't been unseated via the vote since 1911.
Here are some issues that may figure into the election's outcome.
Michael Vecchione
Some of Hynes's campaign woes can be traced to the conduct of Michael Vecchione, the head of Hynes's Rackets Bureau. He's a polarizing figure who has drawn heavy criticism for his conduct in and out of the courtroom.
Two federal judges have lambasted Vecchione for withholding evidence and for his handling of several witnesses in a high-profile murder case.
Now the defendant, a Brooklyn man named Jabbar Collins who spent 16 years in prison, is suing the city for millions as part of a far-reaching wrongful conviction lawsuit. His lawyer, Manhattan-based attorney Joel Rudin, is attempting to make the case that misconduct in Hynes's office is so pervasive that Hynes must have actually condoned it.
Vecchione's career in the district attorney's office spans more than two decades. In 2003, the district attorney's office was forced to vacate the conviction of a man they suspected of being involved in at least three murders when a federal court agreed to hear allegations that Vecchione had withheld evidence in the man's trial.
In 2006, Vecchione tried to prosecute former FBI agent R. Lindley DeVecchio for helping arrange the murders of gangsters on behalf of mob boss Greg Scarpa. Hynes called it "the most stunning example of official corruption [he] had ever seen." But the case fell apart just days into trial when it became clear that Vecchione's chief witness was unstable and had given false testimony.
More recently, The New York Post reported that Vecchione instructed staff not to preserve exculpatory evidence in sex-trafficking cases during a training session in 2012.
Vecchione has denied all charges of misconduct, and he testified under oath that he did not remember the details of what took place at the training session for sex-trafficking cases in 2012.
Hynes has staunchly defended Vecchione, who continues to be one of the highest-paid prosecutors in the office. Earlier this year, Hynes allowed Vecchione to be a featured character in a CBS television show called Brooklyn DA.
ProPublica in 2013 has published a series of articles investigating prosecutorial misconduct and the lack of consequences for prosecutors who commit serious violations of the law. Vecchione was the subject of one of those articles.
Hynes's office did not respond to ProPublica's request for comment on Vecchione's history and its possible impact on Hynes's re-election effort.
50 Possibly Troubled Cases
Last spring, Hynes asked a judge to vacate the conviction of a man his office had mistakenly prosecuted for the murder of a Brooklyn rabbi. Hynes blamed a detective in the case for the wrongful conviction, and ordered his office to review 50 cases involving the detective.
The investigation has obvious implications for the now-retired detective, Louis Scarcella, who has publicly denied he ever did anything wrong. But Hynes's prosecutors had vouched for the detective's work in the cases, using the confessions he had allegedly won or the evidence he had produced to send people to prisons. Two of the prosecutors involved in Scarcella cases have gone on to work as New York State judges; four are now senior officials in the district attorney's office.
Thompson and other critics of Hynes pounced when it became clear that a 12-member panel of lawyers and judges appointed by Hynes to oversee the review of the 50 cases included three people who had donated to Hynes's campaign.
Hynes has said he is convinced of the panel's independence, and that the investigation will go where the evidence takes it.
The New York Times reported Friday that its examination of some of Scarcella's cases showed that prosecutors either ignored warning signs or made missteps of their own.
Hynes told the Times that the investigation so far had not turned up evidence that would require revisiting the propriety of a conviction. But he did not address the paper's findings about the conduct of his prosecutors.
Detaining Witnesses
Hynes's training procedures and office policies have also come under fire.
A Brooklyn man seeking to have his murder conviction overturned has accused Hynes's office of holding a witness against his will until he agreed to testify as prosecutors wanted in the case.
That case, which is now before a federal judge, has fueled an effort by Jabbar Collins's lawyer to establish that Hynes's office routinely detained and coerced witnesses in violation of the law. The accusation, made as part of Collins's lawsuit against Hynes and the city, deals with a powerful legal tool called the material witness order. The orders are supposed to be used only under rare circumstances, usually when prosecutors fear a potential witness might flee instead of testifying in court.
New York law requires that prosecutors bring any material witness straight to court.
But Collins's lawyer, along with several other defense lawyers are seeking to hold prosecutors accountable for abusing the orders, alleging that witnesses were never brought before a judge or provided with a lawyer, as the law requires.
Hynes has denied allegations that his prosecutors failed to abide by the law in their handling of witnesses.
Favoritism
Hynes's hiring and firing decisions have also proven fodder during the campaign, and Thompson has seized on them.
The New York Post reported this summer that Mark Posner, a lawyer in the office's powerful Rackets Bureau, was caught using his office phone to call prostitutes. The Post article said Posner was found out by his own colleagues, who were investigating a local prostitution ring.
Posner is the son of a longtime ally of Hynes, Charles Posner. The elder Posner had served as Hynes's liaison to Brooklyn's Orthodox Jewish community, and Hynes had later recommended him for a judgeship. Posner, who died in 2004, served as a State Supreme Court justice for nearly a decade.
Hynes did not fire Mark Posner after learning of his misconduct. Instead, he suspended him for 10 days and transferred him to the Early Case Assessment Bureau, a low-level desk where prosecutors analyze arrests and make judgments on what charges to pursue.
At the time Posner was caught, Brooklyn DA spokesman Jerry Schmetterer told the Post that Hynes acted as soon as he learned of Posner's conduct by suspending him, ordering him to seek counseling, and demoting him.
Posner didn't immediately respond to a voice message left at his home. And neither Hynes's office nor his campaign responded to questions from ProPublica.
In January 2012, Hynes hired a woman named Angel DiPietro to become an assistant district attorney. It was a hire with a backstory.
Eight years earlier, DiPietro was a witness in the murder case of Mark Fisher, a Fairfield University student-athlete in Prospect Park South. She was with Fisher and friends in Brooklyn the night he was killed. At the time, a spokesman for the police department told the New York Times that DiPietro demonstrated "a lack of full-hearted cooperation." Police Commissioner Ray Kelly himself described DiPietro and seven of her other friends as "uncooperative."
Eventually DiPietro testified at trial and two people she was with that night were found guilty of the murder.
DiPietro's father, a defense attorney in Brooklyn, had been a regular contributor to Hynes's political campaigns, and in the months after DiPietro was hired, he donated another $3,000 to Hynes's 2013 political campaign.
DiPietro, contacted by telephone, referred ProPublica to the spokesman for the district attorney's office. The spokesman did not respond to request for comment.
James DiPietro, Angel's father, did agree to an interview.
"I wish I could've given him more," DiPietro's father said of his donations to Hynes. He said that his daughter was first offered the job in 2010 and fully deserved it on her own merits. And he asserted that his daughter had in fact cooperated fully in the Fisher murder investigation.
Selective Prosecutions
In 1996 Hynes indicted a Brooklyn political gadfly named John O'Hara. The charge was modest: voting from his girlfriend's apartment, which was outside of his own election district. After three separate trials, O'Hara was found guilty, lost his law license, and was sentenced to community service.
O'Hara has always claimed that Hynes went after him because he'd run for city council and assembly seats against some of Hynes's allies.
Thirteen years later, in 2009, a grievance committee bolstered O'Hara's account. It restored his license, saying there were "grave doubts that Mr. O'Hara did anything that justified his criminal prosecution."
In 2012, The New York Times ran a stinging series of articles on how Hynes's office for years handled investigations of accused sexual predators in the Orthodox Jewish communities. The series established that Hynes had allowed many of the accusations to be handled by rabbinical courts rather than prosecuting the cases himself.
Hynes initially defended the way he handled the sex abuse cases, but eventually pledged reforms and began prosecuting them with more vigor.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 13, 2013 1:18 am

Boulder registers wettest 24-hour period, and month, on record
Devastating downpour now ranks as a 100-year flood 
09/12/2013



http://www.dailycamera.com/news/boulder ... nches-fell
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Fri Sep 13, 2013 2:16 pm

Former Head of FBI’s Boston Office Accused of Exploiting Connections to Bureau The former special agent in charge of Boston’s FBI office has been slapped with a federal ethics violation for consulting professionally with a former colleague within a year of service.
Kenneth Kaiser, 57, who became an assistant director at FBI headquarters when he left the Boston office in 2006, met with agents investigating his new company, LocatePlus Holding Corp., in July 2009, the same month he retired.
- See more at: http://www.ticklethewire.com/2013/09/13 ... uRBiY.dpuf
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sat Sep 14, 2013 12:51 am

3 reads-let god sort out the truth
1st read-African american FBI agent teaches students about Martin Luther King non-violence tactics
2nd read taxpayer funded FBI agents found guilty by Memphis jury of assassinating Martin Luther King.
3rd read taxpayer funded FBI agents infiltrate Occupy Movement with plan to assassinate it's leaders

1st read
https://blogs.emory.edu/spiritedthinkin ... nviolence/


If we teach them, students will embrace Kingian nonviolence
By Alex Hill | September 10, 2013


2nd read
http://www.lewrockwell.com/2010/04/jim- ... inmemphis/

The Martin Luther King Conspiracy Exposed in Memphis

By Jim Douglass

April 5, 2010

According to a Memphis jury’s verdict on December 8, 1999, in the wrongful death lawsuit of the King family versus Loyd Jowers "and other unknown co-conspirators," Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated by a conspiracy that included agencies of his own government. Almost 32 years after King’s murder at the Lorraine Motel in Memphis on April 4, 1968, a court extended the circle of responsibility for the assassination beyond the late scapegoat James Earl Ray to the United States government.

I can hardly believe the fact that, apart from the courtroom participants, only Memphis TV reporter Wendell Stacy and I attended from beginning to end this historic three-and-one-half week trial. Because of journalistic neglect scarcely anyone else in this land of ours even knows what went on in it. After critical testimony was given in the trial’s second week before an almost empty gallery, Barbara Reis, U.S. correspondent for the Lisbon daily Publico who was there several days, turned to me and said, "Everything in the U.S. is the trial of the century. O.J. Simpson’s trial was the trial of the century. Clinton’s trial was the trial of the century. But this is the trial of the century, and who’s here?"

What I experienced in that courtroom ranged from inspiration at the courage of the Kings, their lawyer-investigator William F. Pepper, and the witnesses, to amazement at the government’s carefully interwoven plot to kill Dr. King. The seriousness with which U.S. intelligence agencies planned the murder of Martin Luther King Jr. speaks eloquently of the threat Kingian nonviolence represented to the powers that be in the spring of 1968.

In the complaint filed by the King family, "King versus Jowers and Other Unknown Co-Conspirators," the only named defendant, Loyd Jowers, was never their primary concern. As soon became evident in court, the real defendants were the anonymous co-conspirators who stood in the shadows behind Jowers, the former owner of a Memphis bar and grill. The Kings and Pepper were in effect charging U.S. intelligence agencies – particularly the FBI and Army intelligence – with organizing, subcontracting, and covering up the assassination. Such a charge guarantees almost insuperable obstacles to its being argued in a court within the United States. Judicially it is an unwelcome beast.


3rd read
http://www.infowars.com/fbi-planned-to- ... y-leaders/


FBI Planned to Kill Occupy Leaders



Murdering political activists is business as usual for ruthless ruling elite

July 2, 2013
Occupy Wall Street was targeted due its popularity and the threat it posed to the elite and their financial system. Photo: Michael Fleshman

Occupy Wall Street was targeted due its popularity and the threat it posed to the elite and their financial system. Photo: Michael Fleshman

According to journalist David Lindorff, the FBI planned to assassinate the leaders of the now moribund Occupy movement “via suppressed sniper rifles.”

Lindorff cites a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed by the Washington, DC-based Partnership for Civil Justice Fund.

The redacted document obtained from the FBI in Houston states:

An identified [DELETED] as of October planned to engage in sniper attacks against protestors (sic) in Houston, Texas if deemed necessary. An identified [DELETED] had received intelligence that indicated the protesters in New York and Seattle planned similar protests in Houston, Dallas, San Antonio and Austin, Texas. [DELETED] planned to gather intelligence against the leaders of the protest groups and obtain photographs, then formulate a plan to kill the leadership via suppressed sniper rifles.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Sep 15, 2013 12:19 am

see link for full story

http://www.dallasnews.com/news/jfk50/re ... by-fbi.ece

September 13, 2013

Dallas Mexican-Americans remember the JFK years, surveillance by FBI






Albert Orozco still has his American GI Forum hat. Though its members fought for the United States, the organization was spied on by the FBI in the 1960s.

In 1960, Korean War veteran Albert Orozco set out to prove himself with other Mexican-American vets on a new battlefield — politics. They embraced the presidential campaign of John F. Kennedy with Viva Kennedy Clubs and strategic fundraising for poll taxes so the poor could vote.

Orozco was already a leader in a Mexican-American group that played the red, white and blue patriotism card hard — the American GI Forum.

Kennedy won their support with a social justice message, Catholic faith, a Spanish-speaking wife and a family history of fighting anti-Irish discrimination.

Yet, in a strange twist of JFK history, the Dallas chapter was under surveillance by the very government they had served in war.

Orozco is now an 84-year-old retired school principal with thinning silver hair, pole-straight posture and precise speech. He doesn’t let the surveillance eclipse the significance of the activism. By one account, 91 percent of Texas Mexican-Americans voted for JFK — giving the senator a key state in a razor-thin election.

“The clubs saw how important it was to get involved in the voting process,” Orozco said. He and his late wife, Henrietta, co-hosted the first Viva Kennedy meeting in the Old East Dallas home of his mother.

“For the first time, after the efforts of the GI Forum, they saw the results,” he said. “They saw that it does pay to vote.”

Military service filled families with pride and confidence. In Dallas, Orozco and others took on swimming pool segregation, a Catholic Church that kept Mexican-American altar boys from field trips and a downtown bar with a “No Dogs, Negroes or Mexicans” sign.

In Corpus Christi, similar scenes unreeled before Dr. Hector P. Garcia, a Corpus Christi physician and surgeon who had served in the Army during World War II. He founded the Forum after the war. The catalysts for the movement were discrimination against Latino vets, poor treatment at the Veterans Administration, school segregation and an infamous incident over a Texas funeral wake for a soldier.

“They were veterans and not too happy to be treated like second-class citizens,” said his oldest child, Daisy Wanda Garcia, a 67-year-old Austin resident.

GI Forum chapters morphed into Viva Kennedy clubs in the Southwest, California and Illinois. Membership also came from the League of United Latin American Citizens.

“Kennedy was a dark horse,” she said. “It if hadn’t been for the Viva Kennedy clubs delivering all these votes for him, he might not have been elected. It was one of the first concerted attempts by minorities to put in office someone favorable to their cause. It was a nonviolent way to change the destiny of the Mexican-American people.”

The Viva Kennedy Club harvested support in its first rally with posters, stickers and buttons at Orozco’s grocery store, a West Dallas business owned by a relative.

Enchilada dinners in the Little Mexico housing projects and door-to-door solicitations raised money for a get-out-the-vote necessity: payment of poll taxes. Poll taxes were $1.25 per voter, the equivalent of about $10 today.

Inspired to act

On Nov. 22, 1963, Henrietta Orozco left her downtown office at noon to see the Kennedy and his wife, Jacqueline, in their motorcade. Her husband stayed at work, content that his wife would experience the excitement surrounding a couple “she was in love with.”

When she returned to her office, she heard the news. Years later, she’d retell the story of that day to her daughter Diana Orozco-Garrett, who was a toddler in 1963. She told her that many in her office were Republicans and joyful over the shooting, clapping as if they were at a party.

In the Orozco household, admiration ran so deep “we had portraits of Jesus and the Kennedys,” the daughter said.

Soon, the family gathered at Dealey Plaza, laying a wreath near the Texas School Book Depository. For several years, on Nov. 22 they’d repeat the ritual.

JFK’s assassination inspired deep political dedication.

“For my mom, it gave her more reason to be involved and for me, too,” Orozco-Garrett said.

As a child, she watched her mother register voters. As an adult, Orozco-Garrett was a delegate to two Democratic conventions. As an attorney, she worked on voting rights cases. In 1994, she won election as a justice of the peace, serving six years.

She now lives in Santa Fe with her husband, a former Voting Rights Act litigator.

‘Good Americans’

Earlier this year, Orozco-Garrett began researching those Kennedy years. She found documents from the FBI and the Warren Commission on surveillance of the GI Forum of Dallas.

Years earlier, the Mary Ferrell Foundation had amassed material on the JFK murder using the federal Freedom of Information Act. The foundation and its online resources (at maryferrell.org) are named for the Dallas legal secretary who became prominent among assassination experts.

That’s how Orozco-Garrett found her father’s name.

A mole inside the Dallas chapter of the GI Forum had reported to the FBI on the Mexican-American vets. He was William Lowery, a shoe salesman who died in the 1990s.

“They were good Americans and this is who the government was spying on,” Orozco-Garrett said. “They were thought to be subversive groups.”

As Orozco-Garrett pieced together those years, she enlisted help from an old friend and a fellow attorney, Sol Villasana. Up popped the name of his cousin Edmund Villasana, who is now 85. He’d been an early officer of the Dallas GI Forum chapter.

Edmund Villasana, a World War II vet, fumed when denied service at Dallas restaurants.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Sun Sep 15, 2013 9:20 pm

see link for full story

http://news.infoshop.org/article.php?st ... 5124956941


Convicted Sex Offender and Police Informant Attempts to Infiltrate Seattle's Activist Community
Sunday, September 15 2013 @ 06:49 PM CDT
Contributed by: Collin Sick
Views: 39
Spying on You
Robert Childs is a level-three sex offender—convicted of child molestation, rape (twice), and failure to register as a sex offender—who has worked as an FBI and SPD informant. A few days ago, local activists began circulating emails claiming he'd been prowling around the anarchist scene, including community barbecues in the Central District. "He was there to gather information," one activist wrote in an email to The Stranger, "and is famously remembered for asking about the 'leaders' of the black bloc." (The "black bloc" is a tactic, not an organization, and does not have leaders.) Back in March, the Seattle Times mentioned Childs's history as an informant, noting that he was paid over $90,000 to work with the FBI and SPD on investigating 35 year-old Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif.

From
The Stranger

by Brendan Kiley on Tue, Sep 10, 2013
The criminal informant. When he was snooping around the activist scene, he had stubble and long hair.
Robert Childs is a level-three sex offender—convicted of child molestation, rape (twice), and failure to register as a sex offender—who has worked as an FBI and SPD informant. A few days ago, local activists began circulating emails claiming he'd been prowling around the anarchist scene, including community barbecues in the Central District. "He was there to gather information," one activist wrote in an email to The Stranger, "and is famously remembered for asking about the 'leaders' of theblack bloc." (The "black bloc" is a tactic, not an organization, and does not have leaders.)
Back in March, the Seattle Times mentioned Childs's history as an informant, noting that he was paid over $90,000 to work with the FBI and SPD on investigating 35 year-old Abu Khalid Abdul-Latif. (Childs approached them about the project, not vice versa.) Abdul-Latif got 18 years after Childs introduced him to an FBI agent posing as a weapons dealer.
But the investigation was fishy, not just because the suspects had mental-health issues, and not only because they claimed the "terror" plot was really the informant's idea (the prosecution argued the opposite), but because Childs and his SPD handler destroyed hundreds of relevant text messages after they were specifically told not to:

Robart [the US district judge presiding over the case] criticized what he called the “at-best sloppy” destruction of potential evidence by an informant — identified as Robert Childs, a five-time convicted sex offender — and Seattle police Detective Samuel DeJesus, who deleted more than 400 text messages from Childs from his cellphone after he’d been told to preserve them.
As for the use of Childs, who was paid more than $90,000 for his services, Durkan [the US attorney] said, “It’s not the saints who can bring us the sinners.”

Activists say Childs popped up shortly after May Day 2012. "He wanted to do a lot of work to get 'inside,'" one activist wrote in an email to The Stranger, "like he helped fold chairs, offered his car, was real open to helping with anything." He also creeped some people out (here is one example, another account is below), was confronted about it, and then disappeared.
At this point, Childs has not been available for comment. ("Robert Vincent" is the name he was using most recently, and that Facebook page has been taken down. Activists say the email and phone number he originally gave are no longer working.) Whether or not he was specifically assigned by the FBI or SPD to attend the barbecues, the idea that one of their paid informants who had been convicted of rape and child molestation showed up at family-oriented events on false pretenses to fish around for information about political activists is appalling.
But FBI interest in activist communities seems to be the going concern these days—earlier this summer, several climate-change and anti-coal train activists were visited at home by FBI agents. They weren't asked about any crimes, they say, but were asked to identify other activists.
Lizzi Duff, one of those activists visited by the FBI in July, says they (Duff's preferred pronoun) got another visit last Friday after speaking about surveillance at a public forum the night before.
On Thursday, Duff gave a brief talk as part of a larger presentation on state surveillance in the Northwest. During that talk, Duff called the FBI "terrorists," saying their agents are "goons with guns" who pay these home visits specifically to intimidate people and scare them away from getting involved with protests. (Attorneys representing activists who were surveilled by the US Army in Tacoma and Olympia say undercover work and police harassment of known activists "did a great job" of disrupting protest in those cities. "People fled," said attorney Larry Hildes, "people got arrested so many times they gave up activism, people have fought an endless parade of criminal charges when they did not, in fact, do anything illegal.")
The next day (Friday), as Duff was getting off a bus to do some volunteer work at a local health organization, agents showed up again. The agents said they'd heard that Duff had been "saying things" and that they would "continue to investigate." Duff strongly suspects someone at the talk the night before had reported on Duff's criticism of the FBI.
Duff emphasized that that criticism had nothing to do with threats or violence, and was merely a statement of opinion about why the FBI has been prowling around activists communities lately—namely, intimidation.
You might say that standing up in a public forum and saying "the FBI are terrorists" when you know you're on their radar is not a terribly shrewd thing to do. On the other hand, it's perfectly legal. Conservatives (and Lupe Fiasco) have gone so far as to call President Obama a "terrorist."
Did that merit a visit from the FBI? Or an investigation?
Another activist emailed a profile of Robert Childs's arc in the activist scene to The Stranger. The behavior this activist alleges has many of the classic marks of undercover police/informants—they're ostentatiously helpful and kind of clueless, they propose escalating things from normal to criminal (or from a little criminal, such as marching without a permit, to a lot criminal), they have vague explanations about their incomes and personal histories, they use supposed jail time and/or loathing for police to earn cred, and so on. From the activist's email:

Robert Childs first appeared in Seattle organizing spaces at Food For Everyone, a weekly family-friendly community meal and free grocery store in the CD that was organized by some anarchists during spring/summer of 2012. He showed up at some point in June 2012. There had been a fair amount of publicity for this program so it wasn't exactly a secret (but he did show up prior to the article that was published on the Capitol Hill Times blog). Since it was shortly after the infamous events of May Day 2012, we were naturally curious (but not overly hostile at first). This is the story he gave about how he found FFE (to the best of our recollection):
He stated that while he was in prison someone told him about the website Puget Sound Anarchists. He claimed that he saw an event invite for a benefit show for the Wildcat and attended this show (a show like this did take place on May 23rd and he gave a lot of details about it that could have been found on the PSA website). He then claims that people at the show told him about FFE and he decided to check it out.
Honestly, this was all in the first hour we met the guy and we really thought this was hella suspicious. It was too intricate and memorized and frankly pretty convoluted. We filed that away as red flag #1 (didn't take long).
At the time we were doing some organizing for the No New Juvie campaign and that was a common topic of conversation at FFE. He really used his time in prison as a wedge to get himself involved with folks. He admitted to us that he was a registered sex offender after we spotted his ankle monitor. We tried to remain neutral as he told us the stories behind his convictions (underage girls, statutory rape, unfairly incarcerated repeatedly for violations of parole, yada yada yada). We were sympathetic to this part of his story for obvious reasons, namely being a community dedicated to prison abolition. Even so, we knew he was sketchy as hell.
He continued coming to FFE, and ingratiated himself with some of the organizing partners to the point that he showed up for a couple of planning meetings at a personal residence. During one of the meetings he confessed to us that he wasn't allowed to be near schools or parks due to his ankle monitor and he wouldn't be able to do certain things or go certain places without getting into trouble. At this point we just decided to limit his involvement in any organizing projects but we didn't feel we could tell him he was not welcome at any public events.
A couple of days later he placed a really weird and random call to one of the organizers of FFE, asking where and when he should show up for the next meeting. The organizer was confused by this question, and then Childs proceeded to attempt to get the organizer to say their full legal name (first, middle, and last) while on the phone. The organizer hung up and called another organizer immediately. At this point we were completely sketched out but unclear on what to do.
He showed up to the next FFE (this was early in July 2012) and people were discussing the upcoming No New Juvie march that was to take place on July 9th. One of the main organizers for this campaign was there and talking about it to everyone. About an hour into the event this organizer took one of us aside and said "I don't know what is up with new guy but he just asked me if there is going to be a black bloc at the No New Juvie march." At this point the organizers were exasperated and uncomfortable. He was taken aside and challenged on his behavior, including the fact that he was acting like a cop and/or snitch and making people uncomfortable. He was told his presence was not welcomed any longer.
He did attend the No New Juvie march a few days later. (Here is a photo.)
We never saw him or heard from him again until he showed up in the Salish CIRCA clown group. We did not catch on to the fact that he was back in the scene until very recently due to the fact that he gave a fake name the second time around ["Robert Vincent"] and, duh, clown makeup is the perfect disguise.
Other details he told us about his life:
He said he was going to scuba-diving school.
He said no one would rent to him due to his sex-offender status so he purchased a boat.
He said he "made some money" with some guy prior to his last incarceration and that is how he bought the boat.
He explained the holes in his life story as recurring jail sentences due to multiple violations of his parole.

"It's not the saints who can bring us the sinners," US attorney Jenny Durkan said about Childs's previous work as an informant.
What kinds of sinners was "Robert Vincent" trying to find?
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Sep 16, 2013 3:52 pm

see link for full story
http://groundreport.com/what-does-forme ... 800-crash/
What does former FBI agent Robert Hannsen know about Flight 800 crash?
09/16/2013

Russian spy Robert Hanssen.

Robert P. Hannsen was the mole arrested for spying for Russia by a legion of FBI agents who basically swarmed him on February 18, 2001. He spent 22 years as a undercover spy for Russia stealing American secrets and selling them for cash.

He is mentioned prominently in a book called: “The Bureau and the Mole”, by David A. Vise, a Pulitzer prize winning author, who wrote the book on the “Unmasking of Robert Philip Hanssen, the Most Dangerous Double Agent in FBI History.”

It is a great read by the way and I have it as part of my personal library of books in my study.

The book, contains some unusual emails in an Appendix called: “Emails of a spy” , written by Robert Hannsen and send to his mysterious Russian spy master (a man believed by some to be working under “official diplomatic cover” at the Russian Embassy in Washington, D.C.).

One email in particular involves an exchange between the former FBI agent and his Russian spymaster where Hannsen muses over an incident that presumably took place in 1999.

What caught my eye, almost immediately was that story involved Flight 800, where hundreds of people died.

Trans World Airlines Flight 800 (TWA 800), as you remember was a Boeing 747-131 aircraft that exploded and crashed into the Atlantic Ocean near East Moriches, New York, on July 17, 1996, at about 20:31 EDT, 12 minutes after takeoff from John F. Kennedy International Airport, killing all 230 people on board.

It was the second-deadliest U.S. aviation accident after American Airlines Flight 191 until American Airlines Flight 587, which also took off from Kennedy Airport, surpassed it in 2001. It remains the third-deadliest aviation accident to occur in U.S. territory.
TWA 800 was a scheduled international passenger flight from New York to Rome, with a stopover in Paris.

While accident investigators from the National Transportation Safety Board (NTSB) traveled to the scene, arriving the following morning, there was much initial speculation that a terrorist attack was the cause of the crash. Consequently, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) initiated a parallel criminal investigation.

Sixteen months later the FBI announced that no evidence had been found of a criminal act and closed its active investigation (see article: FBI No criminal evidence behind TWA 800 crash http://articles.cnn.com/1997-11-18/us/9 ... 1_bomb-or-… ).

In retrospect this email may have been part of the official FBI investigation into the Flight 800 crash.
Regarding: Questions!
Date Tues, Mar 1999 21:39:17 – 0500
From: Robert P Hanssen
To:

“The problem with genius is that it often borders on insanity. The problem with truth is that it sometimes seems utterly fantastic. I don’t see how the Israelis could have altered our desire to look into [TWA Flight] 800 crash up or down. They didn’t know it wasn’t terrorist related. Nobody did. The flight which left just before it (which was delayed) was an El-Al flight to Israel. Further, the Israelis have no desire to tie up our counter-terrorism resources. Their interest is in having the FBI dedicate 100% of our counter terror resources to the protection of Israel. They just wanted to know if it was terrorist action and if so did it hit the wrong plane and if so who launched it so they could kill them as quickly and publically as possible…Did you know that we grabbed some Israeli students in Newark with walkie talkies hanging around the inbound flight path of the El Al flight? They said they were hired by the Israeli Consulate in NY to look for anything suspicious like someone getting to shoot at the plane. If they saw anything suspicious,, they were to use the radios. The radios were on a secret security channel directly to the El-Al flight to wave it off. This is not stupid. This is careful, Israel, as a nation, hasn’t stayed alive by dumb luck. Israel is thorough. You don’t want to underestimate them. Whenever we do, we get burned. They have a lot of smart people. It isn’t for nothing that God chose them to carry the message. Remember, God is Jewish. He was born of the House of David. He had His choice.”

MANY UNANSWERED QUESTIONS

What interesting is the tidbit about the El-Al flight, and the discussion about if the crash of Flight 800 was terrorism related.

With regard to Israel, it seems they are conducting counterterrorism operations in the United States, using a network of Israelis from universities and colleges, using the cover of “college students” from Newark, N.J.

These covert operations were run out the Israeli Consulate office in New York.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Mon Sep 16, 2013 10:17 pm

see link for full story




http://www.courthousenews.com/2013/09/16/61159.htm


Beaten and Tasered at School for the Deaf, Parents Claim






BRIDGEPORT, Conn. Staff members at the American School for the Deaf chased a student into a construction site where police Tasered the boy without warning, his parents claim in Federal Court.
A.M. is a "profoundly deaf" 12-year-old resident of Bronx, N.Y., who also has attention deficit hyperactivity disorder, according to the complaint in U.S. District Court for the District of Connecticut.
His parents, Audley and Judith Muschette, sued the American School for the Deaf, the town of West Hartford, Conn., two West Hartford police officers and two school employees.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Tue Sep 17, 2013 11:17 am

see link for full story
http://www.wboy.com/story/23445428/stat ... harassment

State Police Arrest FBI Agent Scott Ballock for Harassment
Posted: Sep 16, 2013

West Virginia State Police have arrested a FBI Agent accused of harassment through electronic communication and by phone.
State police said Scott Ballock harassed his estranged wife through emails and text messages between October 2012 and July 2013.
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby Joao » Wed Sep 18, 2013 2:57 am

fruhmenschen, any thoughts on whether all the horrendous abuses such as you've documented could be prevented with better oversight / training / selection / etc., or if this sickening sadism is with us until such a time as "law enforcement" is obsolete and abandoned? Any countries that are worth looking to as examples of how to keep sadism out of police work?
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Re: another day at the hairdresser-I need a perm and wash

Postby fruhmenschen » Wed Sep 18, 2013 12:40 pm

Joao » Wed Sep 18, 2013 2:57 am wrote:fruhmenschen, any thoughts on whether all the horrendous abuses such as you've documented could be prevented with better oversight / training / selection / etc., or if this sickening sadism is with us until such a time as "law enforcement" is obsolete and abandoned? Any countries that are worth looking to as examples of how to keep sadism out of police work?



I tend to view the Universe as I know it, as a classroom in consciousness. Everything, all that is, exists to further consciousness.
absence of consciousness is the void. If we had the internet in 1750 you would be asking me about the horror of slavery.
When the population reaches a threshold of consciousness there is a paradigm shift . I see my use of consciousness is to shift the criminal justice paradigm where everyone realizes their safety depends on their accepting ownership of any criminal justice model that gets created. Right now the inmates run the criminal justice system which is absolutely perfect. We need them to teach us lessons about what happens when you allow the inmates to run the system. If we don't learn the lessons we do not survive as a species.
Of course I operate under the premise that all that is exists in the moment and reality exists based on consciousness shifting
within all that is.
Reincarnation is a relocation of your consciousness. I mention this because everyone, I suspect, gets a chance to experience
being a predator and being a victim. So when I see someone brutalized or I become brutalized, I remind myself of people I have brutalized. Someone once said something about ye who have not brutalized can cast the first stone.The great thing about discovering the universe is based on consciousness is you start looking for mapmakers so you can plan your next...........


I came upon this conversation between Richard Alpert and Timothy Leary a week ago on youtube
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GMn31VvR6xI

Of course everything I just said has a shelf life. In other news this just came in on the whisper stream.



see link for full story
http://www.lohud.com/article/20130917/N ... ck_check=1

FBI agent from Sleepy Hollow asks to await trial in New York
Man faces federal charges in Utah and White Plains
Sep. 17, 2013 |
A former FBI agent from Sleepy Hollow is asking to remain at the Westchester County jail while he awaits trial on two separate federal conspiracy cases against him — one in New York and one in Utah.

Robert Lustyik Jr., 51, who pleaded not guilty to the New York indictment before U.S. District Judge Vincent Briccetti in White Plains on Tuesday has been held in a Utah prison since his bail was revoked in that case in March, and faced a lengthy transport just to appear before Briccetti.

“Seven transfers to get here,” said defense attorney Ray Mansolillo, who noted that the Utah case is not expected to go to trial until at least March before U.S. District Judge Tena Campbell in Salt Lake City.

Prosecutors in White Plains arranged for Lustyik to be transferred here for the arraignment, and will now seek to negotiate with federal marshals, prosecutors and a federal judge in Utah to determine if Lustyik may remain here during preliminary hearings.

Mansolillo said he is willing to waive Lustyik’s presence in the Utah courtroom for hearings there.

Lustyik and childhood friend Johannes Thaler, a 49-year-old former Tarrytown resident, were first charged in the Utah case last year. Federal prosecutors in Salt Lake City alleged that Lustyik and Thaler attempted to thwart a federal investigation into a controversial defense contractor in exchange for lucrative payoffs.

Last month both men and a third man, Rizve Ahmed, 34, of Fairfield County, Conn., were named in a new indictment in New York. In that case, they are accused of accepting $1,000 and seeking tens of thousands more in exchange for an FBI “suspicious activity report” on an unnamed Bangladeshi political figure, according to a 15-page complaint unsealed last month in federal court in White Plains.

Lustyik and Thaler are accused of soliciting the bribes from Ahmed, identified as a rival of the Bangladeshi politician who was the subject of the FBI activity report.
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