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CIA6/22/2007
CIA news release CIA to Air Decades of Its Dirty Laundry
Assassination Attempts Among Abuses Detailed
By Karen DeYoung and Walter Pincus
Washington Post Staff Writers Friday, June 22, 2007; Page A01 The CIA will declassify hundreds of pages of long-secret records detailing some of the intelligence agency's worst illegal abuses -- the so-called "family jewels" documenting a quarter-century of overseas assassination attempts, domestic spying, kidnapping and infiltration of leftist groups from the 1950s to the 1970s, CIA Director Michael V. Hayden said yesterday. The documents, to be publicly released next week, also include accounts of break-ins and theft, the agency's opening of private mail to and from China and the Soviet Union, wiretaps and surveillance of journalists, and a series of "unwitting" tests on U.S. civilians, including the use of drugs. SEE RELATED STORIES BELOW !~~~ GANDALF ;-) <ZZZZZZZZZZZZZ#~~~~ As a reporter I discovered two rings in operation that after working through Dixie, began to drift up here on high plains, an odd lot they both were, for one was selling cocaine and buying guns. The other was of Cuban connection with, well wait, I will touch on that later. The gun buyers were not, lets us say, the usual for drug traffickers for this area. Time soon revealed that this organization was of the CIA, buying guns for the Contra affair (see below) and by shear stupidity the DEA decided to do their cocaine deal here with the unknown to them CIA agent. They picked Lubbock where the people are conservative and naive and a sure conviction with a long sentence seemed to be of their design. Not seeing the hook, the deal with the Contra went down. As Chris Alexander and I worked this story, the suspect disappeared from jail. The attorney for KLBK TV ch 13 filed a freedom of information we would like an explanation request and the response letter was blacked out with a heavy black marker: Contra free and no free information. I invite you to delve into the CIA story below and know. Getting back to the Cubans, their cocaine was far better than that of the CIA, which makes me think the Colombians were ripping them off. The General in charge of the Cuban operation was executed by Cuba's Castor oil Castro and the agents that operated up here all escaped: although DEA did get close once. As for the guns the CIA took to central America, when they got there they realized everybody had to have different ammunition: it was an idiots idea and another fiasco for the CIA. For Reporters Without Boarders; and hear their report on my audio stream: Gandalf
To hear: E. Howard Hunt's deathbed confession: (CIA involvement in the JFK shooting) on THE SOULUTION... Now playing on the Windows Media Player (to the upper right) slide the SEEK selector to ET: (RETURNING SOON) ... into the show "Secret Messages"
Kennedy Lone Gunman Theory Challenged
By David Morgan Reuters WASHINGTON (May 18) - Bullet analysis used to justify the lone assassin theory behind President John F. Kennedy's assassination is based on flawed evidence, according to a team of researchers including a former top FBI scientist. Writing in the Annals of Applied Statistics, the researchers urged a reexamination of bullet fragments from the 1963 shooting in Dallas to confirm the number of bullets that struck Kennedy. Official investigations during the 1960s concluded that Kennedy was hit by two bullets fired by Lee Harvey Oswald. But the researchers, including former FBI lab metallurgist William Tobin, said new chemical and statistical analyses of bullets from the same batch used by Oswald suggest that more than two bullets could have struck the president. "Evidence used to rule out a second assassin is fundamentally flawed," the researchers said in their article. "If the assassination (bullet) fragments are derived from three or more separate bullets, then a second assassin is likely. The Kennedy assassination set off a whirlwind of theories about who killed the 46-year-old president. The President's Commission on the Assassination of President Kennedy, known unofficially as the Warren Commission, concluded in 1964 that Lee Harvey Oswald, acting alone, fired three shots, one of which missed the president's car. There have been many challenges to its conclusions over the years. The House of Representatives Select Committee on Assassinations concluded that Oswald was probably part of a conspiracy that could have included a second gunman who fired but missed Kennedy. The panel's supporting evidence was a bullet analysis that said fragments collected from the site were too similar to be from more than two slugs. But the latest report found that many bullets from the same batch used by Oswald had a similar composition. "Further, we found that one of the thirty bullets analyzed in our study also compositionally matched one of the fragments from the assassination," the article said. "This finding means that the bullet fragments from the assassination that match could have come from three or more separate bullets." The CIA -- a Terrorist Organization
Agency uses same tactics it claims to be fighting By Claudia Nelson 05/14/07 "ICH" -- -- T he United States Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) can be considered a terrorist organization according to both international and American definitions of terrorism. Since September 2001, U.S. President George W. Bush announced that he would use all his resources to fight terrorist organizations and declared a war on terror, which he legally cannot do, since according to the United States Constitution only the Congress can declare war, and it must be declared on a specific source. Terrorism is a general term used to describe violence or other harmful acts carried out for achieving political ends. Most definitions of terrorism include only those acts which are intended to create fear or "terror," are perpetrated for an ideological goal (as opposed to an attack by a "madman"), and deliberately target "non-combatants." According to the United States Federal Criminal Code, Chapter 113B of Part I of Title 18, terrorism is defined as “activities that involve violent ... or life-threatening acts ... that are a violation of the criminal laws of the United States or of any State and ... appear to be intended (i) to intimidate or coerce a civilian population; (ii) to influence the policy of a government by intimidation or coercion; or (iii) to affect the conduct of a government by mass destruction, assassination, or kidnapping; and ... (C) occur primarily within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States ... [or] ... (C) occur primarily outside the territorial jurisdiction of the United States." The U.S. Congress created the Central Intelligence Agency in 1947 with the passing of the National Security Act. The official duty of the Central Intelligence Agency is to serve as an intelligence gathering agency. The headquarters of the Central Intelligence Agency is located in Langley, Virginia, and was designated as the "George Bush Center for Intelligence” by the Clinton Administration. Former President George Herbert Walker Bush was Director of Central Intelligence from Jan. 30 1976 to Jan. 20 1977. In reality, the CIA does not only gather information but consistently targets and engages in covert operations, psychological operations, and acts of terrorism both domestically and internationally. CIA past operations and activities Operation Phoenix was an assassination program conducted by the CIA during the Vietnam conflict. Its objective was to eliminate Vietnamese who might oppose the U.S but also to terrorize the entire population of South Vietnam and to suppress opposition to the occupying U.S. forces. Over 20,000 Vietnamese were murdered, often at random. During the 1980s the CIA used profits from its cocaine smuggling activities to finance the Contras in Nicaragua who were responsible for the murders of tens of thousands of civilians, and it attempted to disrupt the country's economy, in order to destabilize the legitimate Sandinista government. For this, the U.S. was condemned in the World Court for "unlawful use of force," and it rejected a U.N. security council resolution calling upon it to observe international law. We must note that George Bush Sr. was vice president at the time . On Sept. 11, 1973, the CIA planned and organized the military coup d'etat in Chile which overthrew the legitimately elected government of Salvador Allende and brought to power the regime of General Augusto Pinochet. This regime abducted, tortured and killed thousands of Chilean citizens in an attempt to suppress opposition. It appears that Henry Kissinger, National Security Advisor and Secretary of State in the Nixon and Ford administrations, was closely involved diplomatically with the Southern Cone governments at the time and well-aware of Operation Condor . The first cooperation agreements were signed between the CIA and anti-Castro groups, and fascist movements such as the Triple A set up in Argentina by Jose Lopez Rega ("personal secretary" of Juan and Isabel Peron), and Rodolfo Almiron. The post-junta truth commission found that the Argentine military had "disappeared" at least 10,000 Argentines in the so-called "dirty war" against "subversion" and "terrorists" between 1976 and 1983; human rights groups in Argentina put the number at closer to 30,000. We must note that George Bush Sr, was head of the CIA at the time it began and vice president at the time it ended. Operation CHAOS was the most vicious aggressive domestic surveillence operation conducted on American antiwar groups and activists like Abbie Hoffman, whose objectives were to:
Brain Chemistry Today and The Future Man Made One Dysfunctional signaling by the neurotransmitter serotonin (5-HT) is associated with psychiatric illnesses such as anxiety disorders and depression. These conditions may reflect abnormal signaling at synapses in the adult brain or changes that have occurred during brain development, when serotonin is present and influences pathfinding by thalamocortical neurons. Bonnin et al. provide mechanistic insight into how changes in serotonin signals can disrupt axon migration. In cultured explants from the dorsal thalamus of mice, axons are normally attracted to HEK-293 cells that have been engineered to express the axon guidance protein netrin-1. But when the explants were treated with serotonin, the axons reversed their response and were repelled from cells producing netrin-1. This response was caused by decreased synthesis of the second messenger cAMP in the serotonin-stimulated dorsal thalamus neurons. Pharmacological inhibition of the cAMP-dependent protein kinase could reproduce the effect of serotonin, whereas activation of the kinase blocked the serotonin effect. To show the importance of this effect in vivo, the authors used targeted electroporation in developing mouse embryos, thereby causing the cells of the dorsal thalamus to express either more serotonin receptors (to enhance signaling) or fewer receptors (to limit signaling). Increasing and decreasing serotonin signaling produced opposite effects, and both manipulations caused abnormal migration trajectories of the thalamus axons. Thus, the authors propose that developmental abnormalities in serotonin signaling--either too much or too little--may alter the circuitry of thalamocortical axons and may contribute to mental health disorders. -- LBR
Nat. Neurosci. 10, 588 (2007). Quantum Storage and Repetition
COLLUSION NOTHINGS CHANGED
Twice in the last two weeks I have had dealings with the LPD. Nothing has changed. For starters: fire the chief of police. Claude Jones was in narcotics when the "task force" planted an unknown to this day QUANTITY of cocaine in my car and home. He was the man in charge, locally, when LPD shot SWAT LPD Kevin Cox. (see pictures to RIGHT) For those of you in the Monterey Class of 1963, This would be Roy Cox's cousin that the idiots killed. I talked to Bill Hubbard after the shooting and I will not repeat what he said, but the man is quick and his words rang of truth. The alarm company has a record of the home intrusion that precluded my framing too. The officer working as Travis Ware's hit man among others was a LPD officer (to be announced) and is working with Jones at this time. Jones is fully aware of what I am telling you. We had a phone conversation covering said subject when he got his promotion. On the matter of the swat shooting and the infidelity among that ilk one sees that a house cleaning is in order. SWAT pulled guns on customers of the United on 50th and Q a short time prior to that tragic senseless killing. I interviewed a witness that reported staring down the weapon of a swat team member with his finger on the trigger. Subsequent interview with the store assistant manger told me that yes swat pointed full automatic weapons at customers in his parking lot with fingers on the triggers. I reported it to all the local media and they failed you on this story. The justification for such hideous intimidating actions was a DEA cocaine deal that was only a baggy of baking powder; the sucker was selling to those that had pressured him into a sale. To get them off his back he had gone into the store and purchased the baggies and powder. Fiasco it was: uncorrected these actions by SWAT eventually led to the killing of one Good West Texas lawman. GANDALF
Source:Lubbock KLBK : A Lubbock police officer has found herself on the wrong side of the law, after accusations that she abused her teenage daughter. The investigation started a few weeks ago when police say child protective services sent them a complaint of possible injury to a child in the home of 32-year old Kimberly Diaz."What we have here is criminal charges brought against an officer" says Lubbock Police Chief Claude Jones.Those charges date back to April of 2005 when court documents say Diaz bit her then thirteen year old daughter. But the alleged abuse didn`t stop there."Certainly we hope that police officers don`t get involved in something like this but evidently it has at this point” says Jones.Court documents go on to say that Diaz threw liquid on her daughter in June of 2006 and hit her in March of 2007 causing bodily harm. That`s when child protective services sent a complaint to the police department.
"It`s a shock and an embarrassment for the whole department but I think we did the right thing" says Jones.Police immediately began their investigation and Diaz was arrested on Tuesday night."We`ve certainly taken care of it and we`re dedicated to our public to give them the best officers we can" says Chief Jones.Diaz faces felony charges of injury to a child. She also faces one count of tampering with a witness after police say Diaz told her daughter to keep quiet about the alleged abuse."When officers have responsibility they are held accountable and so am I, so we do what we can do to make sure we`re right" says Jones.Diaz is suspended from the Lubbock Police Department without pay. Her children are currently in the care of Child Protective Services. Three Lubbock PD Officers are being Accused of Using Excessive Force Three Lubbock police officers are being accused of using excessive force during an arrest that happened last April. Bacilio Martinez claims the officers tackled and then tased him without cause. And now Martinez is seeking compensation for his medical expenses, pain and suffering, and legal costs. Martinez says he was walking down 53rd Street last April, when officer Jamison Ward pulled his service pistol on him. According to Ward's attorney, Martinez matched a suspect description in a domestic dispute. Martinez allegedly raised his hands, but then another officer allegedly tackled him to the ground. The suit claims Martinez struck his head on the pavement when LPD officer Jonathan Tutino allegedly tackled him. While being escorted to officer Kody Nesbitt's patrol car, Martinez claims Nesbitt tased him in the side. Martinez says he was wearing handcuffs, and that the action made him fall into the car, where Nesbitt allegedly continued tasing him. A short time later they took him to the hospital, that's where officer Nesbitt apparently left his chest microphone on. It recorded a conversation with a nurse at University Medical Center where he requested to the nurse to inflict pain on Martinez. Nesbitt's microphone also caught another conversation, allegedly between himself and an LPD lieutenant, "I'm going to assume that you all whipped his a** for his conduct." Allegedly Nesbitt responded, "Yes."As for the three officers, they have consented to move this case into federal court, but a judge must still accept that request. Martinez's attorney tells us he had not been notified of any official change. There has been three taser-related lawsuits in Lubbock over the past two years. |
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