Media Cover Up: U.S. Government Invokes National Security to Conceal Deal Cut with Mexican Drug Cartel
Tuesday, 4. October 2011
Mainstream Media Assists Government in Cloaking Evidence of an Ugly Duplicity in the So-Called Drug War
On Saturday, October 1, 2011, investigative journalist Bill Conroy of the Narcosphere reported scandalous and highly troubling new developments in the criminal case against accused Mexican narco-trafficker Jesus Vicente Zambada Niebla. The breaking story unravels the U.S. governments ugly national-security interests in the drug war by exposing a quid pro quo deal between the US government and the most powerful international narco-trafficking organization on the planet- the Sinaloa Cartel, and the US governments recent attempt to cover this up by filing a motion in the case seeking to invoke the Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA), a measure designed to assure national security information does not become public during court proceedings.
Zambada Niebla, son of one of the leaders of the Sinaloa Cartel, arguably the most powerful international narco-trafficking organization on the planet, argues in his criminal case, now pending in federal court in Chicago, that he and the leadership of Mexicos Sinaloa drug-trafficking organization, were, in effect, working for the U.S. government for years by providing US agents with intelligence about rival drug organizations.
In exchange for that cooperation, Zambada Niebla contends, the US government granted the leadership of the Sinaloa Cartel immunity from prosecution for their criminal activities including the narco-trafficking charges he now faces in Chicago.
The government, in court pleadings filed last month, denies that claim but at the same time has filed a motion in the case seeking to invoke the Classified Information Procedures Act (CIPA), a measure designed to assure national security information does not become public during court proceedings.
CIPA, enacted 30 years ago, is designed to keep a lid on public disclosure in criminal cases of classified materials, such as details associated with clandestine FBI or CIA operations. In this case, however, the invocation appears to be for the purpose of covering up a scandalous and shady quid pro quo deal between the US government and a drug cartel. Not only that, the Niebla case also threatens to further expose another US government scandal:
It is important to note again that most of the weapons allowed to cross from the US unimpeded into Mexico by ATFs Fast and Furious were going to the Sinaloa “Cartel,” according to a report issued in July by Issa and Grassley.
So, given Zambada Niebla’s claim ithat some of the [Fast and Furious] weapons were deliberately allowed by the FBI and other government representatives to end up in the hands of the Sinaloa “Cartel, it seems his attorneys may want to pose some serious questions to witnesses suspected of having knowledge of that alleged act, including DEAs Roberts, as well as the special agent in charge of the FBIs New Mexico operations, Carol K.O. Lee and the U.S. Attorney for New Mexico, Kenneth J. Gonzales.
Such a prospect cant be very uplifting for the prosecution in Zambada Nieblas case and might explain, in part, why there is an effort afoot by the US law-enforcement and intelligence officials to cloak the revelations, the evidence, that might surface in the case under the seal of national security.
Prosecutors on Monday, Oct. 3, filed a motion in federal court in Chicago rebutting the accused Mexican narco-traffickers argument that he has been denied access to critical evidence in preparing his defense:
In their pleadings, prosecutors again affirm the governments position that there was no immunity deal offered to the accused narco-trafficker or to the leadership of the Sinaloa drug-trafficking organization. The pleadings filed by the prosecution do not address directly why the government is seeking to invoke national-security procedures for Zambada Nieblas case
Mondays filing by prosecutors confirms that Zambada Nieblas case does raise national security issues that require, according to those prosecutors, that special procedures be established by the court under a 30-year-old law known as the Classified Information Procedures Act to assure that classified materials do not become public during the court proceedings.
There seems to be another equally troubling and scandalous angle to this story: the US medias synchronized and orchestrated black out of this massive scandal, most likely at the behest of the US government:
To date, the US mainstream media has been completely silent on the US governments effort to invoke CIPA in the Zambada Niebla case; so, kind readers, Narco News is the only authentic news publication providing you with the scoop.
Conroys final sentence succinctly sums up the reality in the US governments so-called War on Drugs:
The future of the for-profit prohibition industry and the drug-war pretense that props it up could well depend on assuring that the public remains in the dark
I am going to add my own little sentence to Conroys: …and the US media has been playing its role exceptionally well in this assurance project.
I am going to ask our readers to treat this Boiling Frogs Post update as a Code Red Alert for US Media Cover Up, and take the following actions: [See article link]
Bill Conroy's article:
US Government Accused of Seeking to Conceal Deal Cut With Sinaloa Cartel