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Racist Suspect Watch


free your mind!

Cress Welsing: The Definition of Racism White Supremacy

Dr. Blynd: The Definition of Racism

Anon: What is Racism/White Supremacy?

Dr. Bobby Wright: The Psychopathic Racial Personality

The Cress Theory of Color-Confrontation and Racism (White Supremacy)

What is the First Step in Counter Racism?

Genocide: a system of white survival

The Creation of the Negro

The Mysteries of Melanin

'Racism is a behavioral system for survival'

Fear of annihilation drives white racism

Dr. Blynd: The Definition of Caucasian

Where are all the Black Jurors? 

The War Against Black Males: Black on Black Violence Caused by White Supremacy/Racism

Brazen Police Officers and the Forfeiture of Freedom

White Domination, Black Criminality

Fear of a Colored Planet Fuels Racism: Global White Population Shrinking, Less than 10%

Race is Not Real but Racism is

The True Size of Africa

What is a Nigger? 

MLK and Imaginary Freedom: Chains, Plantations, Segregation, No Longer Necessary ['Our Condition is Getting Worse']

Chomsky on "Reserving the Right to Bomb Niggers." 

A Goal of the Media is to Make White Dominance and Control Over Everything Seem Natural

"TV is reversing the evolution of the human brain." Propaganda: How You Are Being Mind Controlled And Don't Know It.

Spike Lee's Mike Tyson and Don King

"Zapsters" - Keeping what real? "Non-white People are Actors. The Most Unrealistic People on the Planet"

Black Power in a White Supremacy System

Neely Fuller Jr.: "If you don't understand racism/white supremacy, everything else that you think you understand will only confuse you"

The Image and the Christian Concept of God as a White Man

'In order for this system to work, We have to feel most free and independent when we are most enslaved, in fact we have to take our enslavement as the ultimate sign of freedom'

Why do White Americans need to criminalize significant segments of the African American population?

Who Told You that you were Black or Latino or Hispanic or Asian? White People Did

Malcolm X: "We Have a Common Enemy"

Links

Deeper than Atlantis
Friday
Nov152013

Serving Life for This? White Judge says Federal Mandatory Minimums are "a waste of tax dollars and of human lives"

NyTimes

Judge Nikolas Kristof:

Judge So you’re a judge, and Sharanda P. Jones comes before you for sentencing for conspiracy to distribute crack cocaine.

She’s a 32-year-old mom with a 9-year-old daughter and no prior arrests, but she has been caught up in a drug sweep that has led to 105 arrests in her Texas town. Everyone arrested is black.

There are no drugs found on Jones, but her supposed co-conspirators testify against her in exchange for reduced sentences. The whole case is dubious, but she has been convicted. What’s your sentence?

You have little choice. Given the presumptions of the case, she gets a mandatory minimum sentence of life without the possibility of parole. Jump to today and already Jones has spent 14 years in prison and is expected to die behind bars — for a first offense.

At a time when America has been slashing preschool programs, we have also been spending vast sums to incarcerate thousands of nonviolent offenders in life sentences without any possibility of parole. These cases underscore that our mass incarceration experiment has resulted in monstrous injustice and waste — a waste of tax dollars and of human lives.

Judges and prison officials are rebelling at the injustice of our justice system. Here’s what Judge James R. Spencer, a federal district judge, said when sentencing a former F.B.I. informant to life without parole for selling crack cocaine to support his own addiction: “A life sentence for what you have done in this case is ridiculous; it is a travesty.”

But federal law on mandatory minimums left Judge Spencer no leeway. He added: “I don’t agree with it, either. And I want the world and the record to be clear on that. This is just silly.”

Here are some other nonviolent offenders serving life sentences without the possibility of parole:

Friday
Nov152013

Use of Arrest or Conviction Records in Hiring Decisions 

Law.com

Last year, the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) issued “Enforcement Guidance on the Consideration of Arrest and Conviction Records in Employment Decisions Under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.” This Guidance consolidated and superseded prior policy statements regarding this issue and provides recommendations for employers, offering data that decisions based on criminal history frequently have a disparate impact on black and Hispanic job applicants.

THE EEOC’S GUIDANCE IN ACTION

Just over a year later, the EEOC filed lawsuits against BMW in South Carolina and against Dollar General in Illinois, accusing both companies of using criminal background screening practices that resulted in discrimination against black applicants. Even though the commission has since suffered stinging losses in court, employers everywhere would still be well advised to exercise caution in their use of criminal background checks in the hiring process.

The complaint against BMW alleged that its policy automatically excluded individuals with convictions for certain crimes, without regard to the type of conviction or how much time passed since the conviction. According to the EEOC, the “gross disparity” in the rates at which black (80 percent) and non-black (20 percent) employees lost their jobs as a result of BMW’s criminal background checks was “statistically significant.”

Similarly, the EEOC alleged that Dollar General’s hiring matrix, which disqualified job candidates with convictions for specific crimes, did not consider (among other factors) the age of the offender, whether a nexus existed between the crime and actual job duties, or the time or events that transpired since the conviction. Again, the EEOC found that the “gross disparity” in the rates at which black (10 percent) and non-black (7 percent) candidates were rejected (a mere 3 percent ) to be “statistically significant.”

These and similar lawsuits have brought an onslaught of criticism against the EEOC from attorneys general of multiple states. Courts, too, are closely examining the EEOC’s claims. For example, the EEOC alleged that staffing agency Peoplemark Inc. had a companywide policy that denied employment opportunities to applicants with felony records. But Peoplemark had no such policy, and the EEOC’s failure to promptly dismiss its case upon learning this critical fact fueled a Michigan federal court’s order (recently affirmed by the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit) directing the EEOC to pay Peoplemark more than $750,000 in legal fees, experts’ fees and other costs incurred fighting the agency’s claim.

Friday
Nov152013

The President Bows Down to fake outrage

Esquire

So the president, in the interest of finding a "middle ground" on his health-care that is approximately as real as are the Elvish lands, has decided to allow people to keep their moth-eaten, useless -- but cheap! -- health-care coverage for a year. This, of course, is meant to "head off" a general stampede by the Democratic chickenshit caucus. It is also meant to show that the president is conscious of the concerns of a Republican opposition that will now proceed to demand a delay in the individual mandate, tort reform, and the removal of one of the As in the president's surname.

Obama delivered a message to Americans who have complained about receiving cancellation notices: "I heard you loud and clear." He continued: "Already people who have plans that predate the Affordable Care Act can keep those plans if they haven't changed. That was already in the law. Today we're going to extend that principle both to people whose plans have changed since the law took effect and people who bought plans since the law took effect."

Translation From The Presidential Weaselspeak: OK, keep that lemon of a plan you're so fond of, but please, shut yer gob about it now. Also, pray that you don't need any medical procedure more complicated than a Band Aid for the next year, because that's all you're covered for. But... cheap!

There are two fundamental dynamics at play here. The first is that, by and large, on this issue, the general public has evinced a fairly lethal combination of stupidity, timidity, and laziness. There's more than enough evidence that most people didn't background themselves sufficiently on their options, and that therefore they were easily scared by Big Scary Letters from the insurance companies, and that therefore they decided it was easier to keep their Get-Sick-And-Die plans than shop around for better ones. None of these were helped by the botched website, but they were all very basic to the subsequent panic over If-You-Like-Your-Plan-Keep-It, which is what scared all the Democrats into bailing out.

Monday
Nov112013

With Career on the line Richie Incognito Wants to Talk (he did not mean "nigger" the Riley Cooper way)

CBSSports and Anon

"In the absence of white supremacy, there would be no need for niggers."

In an interview with Fox Sports' Jay Glazer that aired Sunday morning, suspended Dolphins guard Richie Incognito said his controversy with tackle Jonathan Martin was not a bullying issue but instead was an accepted part of the team's locker room culture.

To prove that, Incognito said Martin sent him a shocking text message a week before "all this went down" that declared Martin would murder Incognito's family.

Yet Incognito also said he regretted using racial epithets against Martin.

"All this stuff coming out, it speaks to the culture of our locker room, it speaks to the culture of our closeness, it speaks to the culture of our brotherhood," Incognito told Glazer.

"And the racism, the bad words, that's what I regret most, but that's a product of the environment and that's what we use all the time."

Here's what we learned from the interview:

  • To give proper context to the way they communicate, Incognito said that a week before "all this went down", Martin texted him the message, "I will murder your whole f'ing family."
  • "Did I think Jonathan would murder my family? Not one bit," Incognito said. "I knew it was coming from a brother, coming from a friend, coming from a teammate. That puts into context how we communicate with each other."
  • Also this on Incognito's racially-tinged message: "I did not intend to hurt him. I was going for, 'Hey, I haven't seen my buddy. I want to shock him.' When the words aren't put in that context, I understand why a lot of eyebrows get raised. But people don't know how Jon and I communicate with each other.
  • Incognito was surprised at Martin's actions. "Jon never showed signs that football was getting to him, that the locker room was getting to him," Incognito said.
  • He allowed Glazer to look at his phone after the interview, and Glazer said that, in the past year, the two have shared 1,142 text messages with each other, many of which shared the same kind of vulgarities.
  • A day after Thursday's Dolphins game, Incognito said the two communicated via text and Martin said the allegations against Incognito weren't coming from him. One text message from Martin read: "Wassup man? the world gone crazy. LOL. i'm good tho. Congrats on the win."
  • As for what Incognito would say if Martin -- who Incognito refered to as his best friend on the team -- was sitting next to him. "I'd give him a big hug.We've all been through so much," Incognito said. "I'd be like, 'Dude, what's going on? Why didn't you come to me?' If he were to say that you took it way too far, that you hurt me, I would apologize and I would aplogize to his family. I never meant it that way."
  • As for whether Incognito is racist: "I'm not a racist. To judge me by that one word is wrong. [But] it's never acceptable for me to use that word, even if it's friend to friend on a voice mail." On the other hand, Incognito also said the n-word is used in the locker room, including by Martin. "My actions were coming from a place of love," Incognito said. "No matter how bad or vulgar it sounds, that's how we communicate. That's how our friendship was."
  • Incognito apparently claims he didn't do anything wrong and that he was Martin's most ardent defender. “This isn't an issue about bullying,” Incognito said. “This is an issue of my and Jon's relationship. You can ask anyone in the Miami Dolphins locker room who had Jon Martin's back the absolute most and they will undoubtedly tell you me."

Whether he really believes that, the NFL will do its best to investigate the entire episode. As CBS Sports' Jason La Canfora reports, the investigation, led by well-known attorney Ted Wells, already has begun.

Sunday
Nov102013

Hundreds Rally Against the Racist R-Word at Mall of America Field 

IndianCountry

Hundreds of protesters rallied outside the Mall of America Field last night ahead of the "Redskins" Vikings NFL game.

“We call this a walk, not a march, and this is a walk to raise the consciousness of people with regard to racism in sports,” said Alan Yelsey, who identified himself as an organizer for the American Indian Movement. “We’re certainly trying to change the name of the Washington team. That’s the focus,” he told The Washington Post

The protesters held signs like “racism honors no one” and “human beings are not mascots” and chanted, “Hey, hey, ho, ho, little red Sambo has got to go” and demanded that the Washington NFL team change its name. The Star Tribune reported that 700 demonstrators were part of last night’s movement to change the racial slur which was led by American Indian Movement founder Clyde Bellecourt.

 

Read more at http://indiancountrytodaymedianetwork.com/2013/11/08/hundreds-rally-against-racist-r-word-mall-america-field-152143

Sunday
Nov102013

L.A. County Inmates Awarded $740,000 For Suffering Fractured Bones, Seizures From Deputy Abuse

LAist

L.A. County inmates who sustained severe injuries including seizures and fractured skulls from an altercation with deputies in 2008, were awarded $740,000 in general damages. The trial which spanned five weeks ended yesterday when the jury found 27 deputies liable for using excessive force on prisoners, according to KABC.

In August 2008, deputies allegedly ordered the inmates to leave their cells at Men's Central Jail so they could sweep them for drugs and weapons; however, the inmates refused, and violence ensued. KPCC reported that that the inmates were actually protesting the conditions in prison and allegedly used pieces of porcelain from broken sinks and toilets to hurl at the deputies. Also, the inmates' lawsuit claimed the deputies were using excessive force as retaliation for the death of Deputy Juan Escalante that same month when he was shot by gang members, reported The Los Angeles Times.

The plaintiffs claimed that the deputies beat them and used Tasers on them while they were unconscious, and 19 were rushed to the hospital after having seizures and broken bones, including fractured eye sockets.

The officers testified they were afraid the prisoners had weapons. KPCC reported:

“The inmates in the 3100 and 3300 units are the most violent in the L.A. County Jail system,” testified Sgt. Matt Onhemus, one of the defendants in the case.

 

The five inmates awarded the damages will receive $90,000 to $200,000 each. KPCC had reported it would be a total of $840,000 instead of the $740,000 other outlets reported.

Sunday
Nov102013

Hundreds rally statewide against police brutality in wake of Lopez death

KTVU

Hundreds of protesters gathered in Santa Rosa and in cities throughout the Bay Area and the state Saturday to protest the police killing of 13-year-old Andy Lopez in Sonoma County last month as well as what they say is an epidemic of police brutality.

The protests in Santa Rosa, San Francisco, Oakland, Sacramento Los Angeles and elsewhere were part of a "National Day of Action for Andy Lopez" organized by the Answer Coalition and the California Statewide Coalition Against Police Brutality.

Andy was walking and holding a toy AK-47 rifle in rural Sonoma County the afternoon of Oct. 22 when county sheriff's deputies on patrol in the area spotted him and yelled for him to drop the weapon, according to the sheriff's office.

When the boy turned toward the deputies, Deputy Erick Gelhaus, 48, shot him seven times, according to authorities.

Andy's family has filed a civil rights lawsuit against Gelhaus and the county.

The killing has sparked outrage within the community, state and nationwide, with many decrying the incident as a tragic example of police brutality that protesters say often targets low-income black and Latino citizens.

Saturday
Nov092013

L.A. pays $1.5 million to Black Cop in racial harassment case

LAtimes

The Los Angeles City Council signed off this week on a $1.5-million payment to a black police officer who said he repeatedly experienced racial harassment and a hostile work environment while working for the Police Department.

Earl Wright, an LAPD officer since 1989, sued the city two years ago, saying he was repeatedly humiliated by co-workers who carried out racial pranks and made derogatory remarks.

The council's payment comes at a time when city leaders are reexamining workplace training for city employees. Council President Herb Wesson and Councilwoman Nury Martinez have called for a dramatic expansion in the number of city workers who take sexual harassment training. That training also offers information on issues surrounding race and ethnicity, a high-level official in the personnel department said.

Martinez said she offered the proposal, in part, as a response to two lawsuits: One alleges that Councilman Jose Huizar engaged in sexual harassment. The other accuses John Lee, chief of staff to Councilman Mitchell Englander, of making inappropriate sexual jokes and comments. Both Englander and Huizar have called the allegations in the respective lawsuits false.

Saturday
Nov092013

White Philadelphia Cop calls Black Teens 'Takers' [White Supremacy is created for the "Welfare" of Whites & Limits Non-Whites]

NBCPhili

This is the Facebook post at the center of the controversy, posted by Officer Michael Smerker last weekend.

"I don't understand why all black teenagers in West Philly (and I assume all over Philly as well) are instantly handed an access card (welfare card) and a cell phone with minutes as soon as they are teenagers,” he wrote. “It doesn't make sense!!! It gives them reason not to get a job. All it's doing is breeding laziness. Welfare was never supposed to be a career choice. I don't care to have my hard earned tax money given away to healthy teenagers who can get a job like I did when I was a teen."

Smerker took the status down three hours after posting it after receiving some negative feedback from other Facebook users. However, a screenshot was taken and NBC10 obtained a copy.

Saturday
Nov092013

Welcome to the United Police States of America

BlackListedNews

No longer is it unusual to hear about incidents in which police shoot unarmed individuals first and ask questions later. What is unusual is our lack of outrage, the relative disinterest of our elected representatives, the media’s abysmal failure to ask questions and demand answers, and our growing acceptance of the status quo in the United Police States of America-a status quo in which “we the people” are powerless in the face of the heavy-handed tactics employed by the government and its armed agents.

However, as I document in my book A Government of Wolves: The Emerging American Police State, it’s all part of the larger police state continuum. Thus, with each tragic shooting that is shrugged off or covered up, each piece of legislation passed that criminalizes otherwise legal activities, every surveillance drone that takes to the skies, every phone call, email or text that is spied on, and every transaction that is monitored, the government’s stranglehold over our lives grows stronger.

We have been silent about too many things for too long, not the least of which is the deadly tendency on the part of police to resort to lethal force. However, as Martin Luther King Jr. reminded us, “There comes a time when silence is betrayal.”

For the sake of 13-year-old Andy Lopez, we can be silent no more. The Santa Rosa teen was shot dead after two sheriff’s deputies saw him carrying a toy BB gun in public. Lopez was about 20 feet away from the deputies, his back turned to them, when the officers took cover behind their car and ordered him to drop the “weapon.” When Lopez turned around, toy gun in his hand, one of the officers-a 24-year veteran of the force-shot him seven times. The time span between the deputies calling in a suspicious person sighting and shooting Lopez was a mere ten seconds. The young boy died at the scene. Clearly, no attempt was made to use less lethal force.

Saturday
Nov092013

Las Vegas Installs “Intellistreets” Light Fixtures Capable Of Video Recording

BlackListedNews

The Las Vegas Public Works Department has begun testing a newly installed street light system around City Hall with wide-ranging capabilities including audio and video recording.

Saturday
Nov092013

US Soldiers Participate in Torture of Afghan Detainees

BlackListedNews

The Rolling Stone‘s Matthieu Aikins, who reported on alleged U.S. war crimes of torture, executions, and disappearances in Afghanistan, has posted another short piece and a video depicting U.S. soldiers standing by as Afghan forces whip a detainee.

Aikins:

The scene depicted in the video, and similar allegations of torture that were made to Rolling Stone in the investigation, fit with a general pattern of recurring abuse in U.S. and Afghan custody that has been documented by the UNCongress, and human rights groups in Afghanistan since 2001. While the main detention facilities in Afghanistan have technically been transferred to Afghan control, American military units are allowed to hold detainees for “tactical questioning” for up to two weeks. On an isolated firebase occupied by a tightly-knit special forces team, that means the detainees are at the mercy of their enemies. “If an ODA member was killed or critically injured then I can see tactical questioning getting way out of hand,” the former Green Beret tells me. For special forces and the interpreters, there is little sympathy for the men who want kill them. “Unless you’ve been in combat and had people who want to shoot you in the face, you can’t understand what it’s like,” one special forces officer told me. “There’s a reason that they say that war is hell. Because it is hell.”

An even bigger problem is U.S. complicity in the abusive methods used by its Afghan allies. As one military intelligence soldier told me in Kandahar in 2011, they would often take a “smoke break” when interrogating recalcitrant detainees, stepping outside and leaving the prisoner alone with Afghan police or soldiers. And despite over a decade and billions of dollars spent training the Afghan security forces, torture and abuse remain endemic in Afghan prisons. As I reported in the investigation, ISAF has halted transferring detainees to some of the worst locations, but the CIA has not — a discrepancy that led to a temporary breakdown in joint military operations under the OMEGA program last year.

The UN has repeatedly found there to be rampant torture in Afghan prisons, but U.S. complicity in the abuse is pretty well known too. An Afghan commission last year accused the U.S. military of abuse of Afghan prisoners, including holding them in freezing cold cells, forced nudity, extended isolation, and other physical abuse, in addition to being held without due process. See here for a round-up of recent torture issues in Afghanistan.

Saturday
Nov092013

Detroit asks bankruptcy judge to approve $350 million debt plan 

JURIST

The city of Detroit on Tuesday asked [motion, PDF] Judge Steven Rhodes to approve a plan where the city will borrow $350 million in order to pay down interest rates and improve city services. The loan was approved by Barclays PLC [corporate website] but requires judicial approval under Chapter 9 of the Bankruptcy Code [11 USC § 9 text]. The $350 million would be separated into different categories of bonds. One category, "swap termination bonds," would be used specifically to pay down debts, while the other, "quality of life bonds," would be reinvested into city services. The city argues that post-petition financing under 11 USC § 364(c) [text] represents "sound business judgement" and should therefore meet the standard required to seek the financing. The filing claims the city will save nearly $50 million by pursuing this course of action with Barclays. A hearing on the matter has not yet been set.

Detroit's bankruptcy filing has been controversial both practically and academically. JURIST guest columnists Patrick Brady and Igor Shleypak [JURIST op-eds] have written, respectively, on how Detroit's pension holders have been fighting for their rights in the case and how Detroit's actions may pave the way for other cities to file under Chapter 9. In July Rhodes allowed [JURIST report] Detroit's case to continue, claiming his federal bankruptcy court had exclusive jurisdiction. This put a stay on proceedings that just days earlier declared [JURIST report] the case unconstitutional. Detroit originally filed [text, PDF] its bankruptcy petition earlier that month.

Saturday
Nov092013

Military judge orders submission of Guantanamo reports 

JURIST

A military judge on Wednesday ordered the US government to submit reports on Guantanamo Bay [JURIST backgrounder] prison conditions and removed restrictions on communications between lawyers and detainees in a case involving five Guantanamo prisoners related to the 9/11 [JURIST backgrounder] terrorist attack. Army Col. James Pohl [Miami Herald backgrounder] will review more than 10 years' worth of reports by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) [official website], the only human rights group that has had access to the base since it opened. Pohl will then decide whether the reports can be accessed by prosecutors or defense counsel in the case. The ICRC has objected to releasing its confidential records, but according to James Connell, an attorney for accused Ali Abd al-Aziz Ali, the ICRC reports are the only historical record of the prisoners' time at the Guantanamo and may provide important insight into its extremely harsh conditions. Pohl also enabled defense lawyers for the first time to communicate by with the five 9/11 suspects they represent. Now Pohl, instead of prison guards, will be in charge of controlling mail.

Controversy continues to surround Guantanamo military trials. Last month Pohl refused to suspend [JURIST report] the pretrial hearings. In February Pohl ordered the removal [JURIST report] of any monitoring system that censors the public broadcast of the 9/11 military commission hearings. He noted that only he and the court security officer have the authority to turn on or off the light that would make the courtroom closed to public. The order came a day after the DOD released an excerpt of the transcript from the missing few minutes based on another order issued earlier that week. In the same month, Pohl denied [JURIST report] a defense motion requesting a finding that the US constitution was "presumed to apply" in the proceedings and that the prosecution must bear the burden of proving that any particular provision did not apply. In January a US military judge upheld [JURIST report] a request to censor 9/11 conspirators' testimony. In September last year a judge for the US District Court for the District of Columbia rejected [JURIST report] new restrictions on lawyers representing Guantanamo Bay detainees who have had their habeas corpus challenges denied or dismissed. The DOD announced in 2011 that it had sworn charges against the five men [JURIST report] accused in the 9/11 attacks. In April 2011 US Attorney General Eric Holder announced that Khalid Sheikh Mohammed [JURIST news archive] and the four others would be tried by a military commission [JURIST report] after the Obama administration abandoned attempts to have the 9/11 suspects tried in civilian courts.

Saturday
Nov092013

In U.S., Voter Registration Lags Among Hispanics and Asians [when Texas flips = GOP is done]

Gallup

Hispanics and Asians lag behind whites and blacks in voter registration, with half of Hispanics and 60% of Asians registered. Both groups are politically Democratic, particularly those who are registered.

Saturday
Nov092013

No Morsel Too Minuscule for All-Consuming N.S.A.

NYT

The National Security Agency nonetheless went to work in advance and intercepted Mr. Ban’s talking points for the meeting, a feat the agency later reported as an “operational highlight” in a weekly internal brag sheet. It is hard to imagine what edge this could have given Mr. Obama in a friendly chat, if he even saw the N.S.A.’s modest scoop. (The White House won’t say.)

But it was emblematic of an agency that for decades has operated on the principle that any eavesdropping that can be done on a foreign target of any conceivable interest — now or in the future — should be done. After all, American intelligence officials reasoned, who’s going to find out?

From thousands of classified documents, the National Security Agency emerges as an electronic omnivore of staggering capabilities, eavesdropping and hacking its way around the world to strip governments and other targets of their secrets, all the while enforcing the utmost secrecy about its own operations. It spies routinely on friends as well as foes, as has become obvious in recent weeks; the agency’s official mission list includes using its surveillance powers to achieve “diplomatic advantage” over such allies as France and Germany and “economic advantage” over Japan and Brazil, among other countries.

Mr. Obama found himself in September standing uncomfortably beside the president of Brazil, Dilma Rousseff, who was furious at being named as a target of N.S.A. eavesdropping. Since then, there has been a parade of such protests, from the European Union, Mexico, France, Germany and Spain. Chagrined American officials joke that soon there will be complaints from foreign leaders feeling slighted because the agency had not targeted them.

James R. Clapper Jr., the director of national intelligence, has repeatedly dismissed such objections as brazen hypocrisy from countries that do their own share of spying. But in a recent interview, he acknowledged that the scale of eavesdropping by the N.S.A., with 35,000 workers and $10.8 billion a year, sets it apart. “There’s no question that from a capability standpoint we probably dwarf everybody on the planet, just about, with perhaps the exception of Russia and China,” he said.

Since Edward J. Snowden began releasing the agency’s documents in June, the unrelenting stream of disclosures has opened the most extended debate on the agency’s mission since its creation in 1952. The scrutiny has ignited a crisis of purpose and legitimacy for the N.S.A., the nation’s largest intelligence agency, and the White House has ordered a review of both its domestic and its foreign intelligence collection. While much of the focus has been on whether the agency violates Americans’ privacy, an issue under examination by Congress and two review panels, the anger expressed around the world about American surveillance has prompted far broader questions.

If secrecy can no longer be taken for granted, when does the political risk of eavesdropping overseas outweigh its intelligence benefits? Should foreign citizens, many of whom now rely on American companies for email and Internet services, have any privacy protections from the N.S.A.? Will the American Internet giants’ collaboration with the agency, voluntary or otherwise, damage them in international markets? And are the agency’s clandestine efforts to weaken encryption making the Internet less secure for everyone?

Matthew M. Aid, an intelligence historian and author of a 2009 book on the N.S.A., said there is no precedent for the hostile questions coming at the agency from all directions.

“From N.S.A.’s point of view, it’s a disaster,” Mr. Aid said. “Every new disclosure reinforces the notion that the agency needs to be reined in. There are political consequences, and there will be operational consequences.”

A review of classified agency documents obtained by Mr. Snowden and shared with The New York Times by The Guardian, offers a rich sampling of the agency’s global operations and culture. (At the agency’s request, The Times is withholding some details that officials said could compromise intelligence operations.) The N.S.A. seems to be listening everywhere in the world, gathering every stray electron that might add, however minutely, to the United States government’s knowledge of the world. To some Americans, that may be a comfort. To others, and to people overseas, that may suggest an agency out of control.

The C.I.A. dispatches undercover officers overseas to gather intelligence today roughly the same way spies operated in biblical times. But the N.S.A., born when the long-distance call was a bit exotic, has seen its potential targets explode in number with the advent of personal computers, the Internet and cellphones. Today’s N.S.A. is the Amazon of intelligence agencies, as different from the 1950s agency as that online behemoth is from a mom-and-pop bookstore. It sucks the contents from fiber-optic cables, sits on telephone switches and Internet hubs, digitally burglarizes laptops and plants bugs on smartphones around the globe.

Mr. Obama and top intelligence officials have defended the agency’s role in preventing terrorist attacks. But as the documents make clear, the focus on counterterrorism is a misleadingly narrow sales pitch for an agency with an almost unlimited agenda. Its scale and aggressiveness are breathtaking.

The agency’s Dishfire database — nothing happens without a code word at the N.S.A. — stores years of text messages from around the world, just in case. Its Tracfin collection accumulates gigabytes of credit card purchases. The fellow pretending to send a text message at an Internet cafe in Jordan may be using an N.S.A. technique code-named Polarbreeze to tap into nearby computers. The Russian businessman who is socially active on the web might just become food for Snacks, the acronym-mad agency’s Social Network Analysis Collaboration Knowledge Services, which figures out the personnel hierarchies of organizations from texts.

The spy agency’s station in Texas intercepted 478 emails while helping to foil a jihadist plot to kill a Swedish artist who had drawn pictures of the Prophet Muhammad. N.S.A. analysts delivered to authorities at Kennedy International Airport the names and flight numbers of workers dispatched by a Chinese human smuggling ring.

The agency’s eavesdropping gear, aboard a Defense Department plane flying 60,000 feet over Colombia, fed the location and plans of FARC rebels to the Colombian Army. In the Orlandocard operation, N.S.A. technicians set up what they called a “honeypot” computer on the web that attracted visits from 77,413 foreign computers and planted spyware on more than 1,000 that the agency deemed of potential future interest.

The Global Phone Book

No investment seems too great if it adds to the agency’s global phone book. After mounting a major eavesdropping effort focused on a climate change conference in Bali in 2007, agency analysts stationed in Australia’s outback were especially thrilled by one catch: the cellphone number of Bali’s police chief.

“Our mission,” says the agency’s current five-year plan, which has not been officially scheduled for declassification until 2032, “is to answer questions about threatening activities that others mean to keep hidden.”

The aspirations are grandiose: to “utterly master” foreign intelligence carried on communications networks. The language is corporate: “Our business processes need to promote data-driven decision-making.” But the tone is also strikingly moralistic for a government bureaucracy. Perhaps to counter any notion that eavesdropping is a shady enterprise, signals intelligence, or Sigint, the term of art for electronic intercepts, is presented as the noblest of callings.

“Sigint professionals must hold the moral high ground, even as terrorists or dictators seek to exploit our freedoms,” the plan declares. “Some of our adversaries will say or do anything to advance their cause; we will not.”

The N.S.A. documents taken by Mr. Snowden and shared with The Times, numbering in the thousands and mostly dating from 2007 to 2012, are part of a collection of about 50,000 items that focus mainly on its British counterpart, Government Communications Headquarters or G.C.H.Q.

While far from comprehensive, the documents give a sense of the agency’s reach and abilities, from the Navy ships snapping up radio transmissions as they cruise off the coast of China, to the satellite dishes at Fort Meade in Maryland ingesting worldwide banking transactions, to the rooftops of 80 American embassies and consulates around the world from which the agency’s Special Collection Service aims its antennas.

The agency and its many defenders among senior government officials who have relied on its top secret reports say it is crucial to American security and status in the world, pointing to terrorist plots disrupted, nuclear proliferation tracked and diplomats kept informed.

But the documents released by Mr. Snowden sometimes also seem to underscore the limits of what even the most intensive intelligence collection can achieve by itself. Blanket N.S.A. eavesdropping in Afghanistan, described in the documents as covering government offices and the hide-outs of second-tier Taliban militants alike, has failed to produce a clear victory against a low-tech enemy. The agency kept track as Syria amassed its arsenal of chemical weapons — but that knowledge did nothing to prevent the gruesome slaughter outside Damascus in August.

The documents are skewed toward celebration of the agency’s self-described successes, as underlings brag in PowerPoints to their bosses about their triumphs and the managers lay out grand plans. But they do not entirely omit the agency’s flubs and foibles: flood tides of intelligence gathered at huge cost that goes unexamined; intercepts that cannot be read for lack of language skills; and computers that — even at the N.S.A. — go haywire in all the usual ways.

Mapping Message Trails

In May 2009, analysts at the agency learned that Iran’s supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, was to make a rare trip to Kurdistan Province in the country’s mountainous northwest. The agency immediately organized a high-tech espionage mission, part of a continuing project focused on Ayatollah Khamenei called Operation Dreadnought.

Saturday
Nov092013

D.C. to Pay $6.2M to Settle D.C. Jail Class Action - wrongfully strip searching inmates/holding inmates past their release date

LegalTimes

The District of Columbia has agreed to pay $6.2 million to settle allegations the city had a practice of holding inmates at the D.C. Jail past their release date and of wrongfully strip searching inmates who were supposed to be released.

The settlement, if approved, would end nearly eight years of litigation. U.S. District Senior Judge Royce Lamberth found in 2011 the city violated inmates' constitutional rights, although not during the whole time period the plaintiffs alleged. Absent a settlement, the case would go to trial over how much the city owed in damages.

Lawyers for the city and the class today asked Lamberth to give preliminary approval to the settlement. Class members will have an opportunity to file objections before any final deal.

The lawsuit claimed the D.C. Department of Corrections had a practice of failing to release inmates when their prison time expired and of strip searching inmates who were supposed to be released but were instead returned to the jail for processing.

Under the proposed settlement, class members with valid claims against the city for over-detention or strip searches would receive a share of $2.9 million. The city agreed to pay $475,000 to improve inmate processing at the D.C. Jail and nearly $2.5 million in plaintiffs' legal fees and costs. The remaining settlement funds would be used to pay for class administration and separate payments for the lead plaintiffs.

If Lamberth approves the settlement, the city will have paid more than $18 million to resolve claims of over-detention and unconstitutional strip searches at the D.C. Jail. In 2006, Lamberth approved a $12 million settlement for alleged violations of inmates' rights between 2002 and 2005.

Saturday
Nov092013

‘It’s a crime what’s happening at Fukushima’

Rt

It is beyond tragic that people resettling near Fukushima have to figure out how bad the contamination there is, with Japan’s government allowing it to happen, Kevin Kamps, a nuclear waste specialist from the Beyond Nuclear organization, told RT.

RT: According to experts, Reactor #4 was so damaged in the 2011 catastrophe that any major earthquake could now result in its collapse. How real is that risk – and what could the consequences be if they don't get these rods out?

Kevin Kamps: Yes, it’s been a strange race against time, that’s taken 2 1/2 years now, because they had to rebuild the infrastructure of the unit 4 building which was so badly destroyed by the explosion. Now they are ready to go with infrastructure and a crane to lift these hundred ton loads of radiated nuclear fuel assemblies out of the pool down to the ground and try to get them into a ground level pool. It’s a very risky operation, as your reporter reported, because the fuel itself could be bent, it could be damaged, it could be corroded. They used salt water at one point to cool the nuclear waste in this pool, which could have corroded the assemblies. They could break apart; they could crumble when they go to try to remove them. Even the director of the nuclear regulation authority of Japan has warned that this process should not be rushed; they should not try to force these assemblies out of their storage channels. But they have to get them out before a bigger earthquake takes the building down, the cooling water would drain away, and the waste with them will catch on fire. There is no radiological containment around the pool and if this waste would catch fire it could be 10 times worse than Chernobyl. That’s how much radioactivity is stored in that pool. Just in terms of the radioactive cesium content.

RT: People are ready resettling near Fukushima. How safe is it for them?

KK: Well, that’s a great tragedy that the Japanese government is allowing this to happen. To within the closest 12.4 miles of the devastated nuclear power plant obviously the landscape is contaminated, the food supplies are contaminated. As your reporter said, it’s up to individual private citizens to try to figure out how bad the contamination is. The environmental groups are trying to help them. So, it’s beyond tragic, it’s a crime what’s happening at Fukushima Daiichi. 

RT: The chief of the Fukushima power plant has called the process of removing fuel rods the official start of the decommissioning. Does that mean that Tepco is now in control of the situation?

KK: There were petitions delivered [Friday] signed by 1,500 people from around the world to the United Nations, calling on the UN to send the best  scientists and engineers of the world to Fukushima Daiichi. It’s absurd that Tokyo Electric is in charge of this globally significant extracting of the fuel from the pool. If something goes wrong, this could be a global catastrophe that dwarfs what has happened on Fukushima Daiichi thus far. Tokyo Electric has shown its true colors time and time again, its incompetence and its dishonesty, so it’s very frightening that Tokyo Electric is in charge of this. 

Friday
Nov012013

Video Shown to Jury Shows Cops Questioning White Man after Beating him Unconscious: LA County Sheriff Found Personally Liable for Punitive Damages in Excessive Force Case 

KTLA

 

Friday
Nov012013

Cops in bankrupt Detroit forced to buy own uniforms

BlackListedNews

The president of the Detroit Police Officers Association told a local CBS affiliate that city cops are going to have to empty out their own wallets if they want to remain fully equipped while on the job.