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FBI let innocents get death sentences (to protect mafia links): report
smh.com.au ^
| November 22, 2003
| Fox Butterfield
Posted on 11/21/2003 12:35:02 PM PST by Destro
click here to read article
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60s era Mafia hitmen with FBI links? Gee, that could explain lots of things.....
1
posted on
11/21/2003 12:35:02 PM PST
by
Destro
To: Havoc
bump
2
posted on
11/21/2003 12:35:17 PM PST
by
Destro
(Know your enemy! Help fight Islamic terrorisim by visiting www.johnathangaltfilms.com)
To: Destro
This wouldn't be happening if Bush hadn't stolen the election.
3
posted on
11/21/2003 12:38:19 PM PST
by
js1138
To: Destro
"While the FBI recognises there have been instances of misconduct by a few FBI employees, it also recognises the importance of human source information in terrorism, criminal and counterintelligence investigations."
Sheesh, is that their defense of all their actions now? "We allowed our informants to murder as it was helpful in our terrorist investigation" They shouldn't be selling, and I'm definately not buying.
4
posted on
11/21/2003 12:40:30 PM PST
by
lelio
To: Destro
Hoover was an ethically calloused mandirin but there is another aspect to this horrible tale. For decades JEH had resisted mob infiltation activities. Now maybe this was a result of some gentlemen in NYC owning his race track markers. But Hoover also contended that the only way to take on mob operations was to penetrate them with mobsters the FBI had turned just as the CPUSA was riddled with FBI informants. To turn mobsters would require being complicit in their misdeeds either through turning a blind eye or protecting the moles. This would turn FBI handlers into criminal confederates. So the Director nixed such operations.
Until Bobby kenedy became his boss. Being the Prez brother and confidant Hoover knew he faced a unique threat to his tenure and turf. Bobby rode to fame for his crimebuster image as Senate Racketeering Committee counsel. He elevated jimmy Hoffa into a sort of Stalin of labor figure to inflate the misdeeds of these goons. As AJ he was determined to continue his crusade against the mob as a fool proof tactic for elevating his national stature with an eye on future national elective office. Bobby prssured Hoover relentlessly to use what ever means to get inside the mob so that high profile prosecutions might result. On top of this a gang war started in Boston which eventually encompassed a number of gangster cliques. So Hoover relented around 1962 and directed penetration operations to begin. The first location for these was Boston.
It would be nice if Hoover had not been so morally corrupt and refused to mount such dubious operations. But he was a Washington insider and nothing is more important than power, position and perks. But it was not just J Edgar that set this disgrace up or sustained in the years after 1972.
To: Destro
I'm proud to be an American...most of the time.
6
posted on
11/21/2003 12:52:39 PM PST
by
gcruse
(http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
To: Destro
You know, 10 years ago I would not have believed this.
7
posted on
11/21/2003 12:54:05 PM PST
by
theDentist
(Liberals can sugarcoat sh** all they want. I'm not biting.)
To: gcruse
Instead, four men who had nothing to do with the killing were tried and convicted, with two sentenced to death and two to life in prison. Two of the men died in prison and two had their sentences commuted and were freed after serving 30 years behind bars. Hoover was kept fully informed about this murder and the wrongful convictions, the report said.
There must be special reward for perverts like this, at least I hope there is and it's very,very,very hot.
8
posted on
11/21/2003 1:01:04 PM PST
by
chiefqc
To: Destro
I'd like to hear a little more about the 4 who were wrongly convicted:
Were they paragons of virtue with lily-white records?
Or were they, as is is far more likely, repeat offenders who were regularly getting away with other crimes big and small?
9
posted on
11/21/2003 1:01:28 PM PST
by
Redbob
To: Redbob
Or were they, as is is far more likely, repeat offenders who were regularly getting away with other crimes big and small? I don't know about this particular case, but most wrongful convictions are of "known scumbags" who are guilty enough in any event.
To: chiefqc
More than 20 people were murdered by FBI informants in Boston from 1965, often with the help of FBI agents, it said.
there must be special reward for perverts like this
This goes beyond perversion. This is organized crime
on the part of the US government.
11
posted on
11/21/2003 1:12:16 PM PST
by
gcruse
(http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
To: gcruse
This is organized crime on the part of the US government. So where is our buddy, AGAshcroft, on this one?
12
posted on
11/21/2003 1:59:28 PM PST
by
RJCogburn
("You've bested no one when you've bested a fool"........Texas Ranger LeBoeuf)
To: RJCogburn
Good question.
13
posted on
11/21/2003 2:05:09 PM PST
by
gcruse
(http://gcruse.typepad.com/)
To: Destro
More than 20 people were murdered by FBI informants in Boston from 1965, often with the help of FBI agents, it said. This can't be true! The Democraps were in control and they would never let anything bad happen! /stupid sarcasm
To: Destro
- allowing innocent men to be sentenced to death
- more than 20 people were murdered by FBI informants
- often with the help of FBI agents
- no FBI agent or official has ever been disciplined
.. the report said.
Murder. Conspiracy to murder. And sccomplices after the fact.
15
posted on
11/21/2003 2:14:42 PM PST
by
bvw
Comment #16 Removed by Moderator
To: hopespringseternal
I don't know about this particular case I saw one of them on an interview about a year ago. He was a small time bookie. Spent thirty years in prison for a murder he didn't do.His wife did not divorce him in all that time.
During that period a lot of people were calling for the removal of J.E.H.s name from the F.B.I. building in Washington.
Though Ann Colter says there's no proof that Hoover was a trannie, he spent most of his adult life living with someone named Clyde. Which wouldn't make him a transvetite but it sure smells queer to me.
He seems to have done a lot of good things in his career and a few things that were horrendous.
17
posted on
11/21/2003 2:35:17 PM PST
by
Holly_P
To: RJCogburn
Moving on, of course. The crimes of federal government officials are generally no longer a concern of the Justice Department (except insofar as it may be participating in them, or prosecuting those would expose higher-ups).
To: Destro
BTTT
19
posted on
11/21/2003 3:32:42 PM PST
by
the crow
To: the crow
mayerlanskycubabump.....
20
posted on
11/21/2003 3:47:11 PM PST
by
tracer
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