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To: RobertJames,BlueDogDemo,LSJohn,Judge Parker,archy,golitely,Inspector Harry Callahan,Fred Mertz
You want facts, the truth? As the FBI says: "We need no stinking facts!".***

Of course, who is going to make the FBI accountable for their sloppiness and corruption? No one in Congress will, no one at DOJ will and GW Bush will not. They like it the way it is.

***Sounds similar to the famous movie line from the corrupt Mexican Federales : "Badges?, We need no stinking badges!"

10 posted on 09/08/2001 11:34:13 AM PDT by OKCSubmariner
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To: Plummz,Uncle Bill
Please see reply #10
11 posted on 09/08/2001 11:34:56 AM PDT by OKCSubmariner
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To: OKCSubmariner
Attorneys challenge use of informants in Kopp case http://www.buffalonews.com/editorial/20010909/1000109.asp

Two paid informants helped the FBI in the investigation that led to the capture earlier this year of James C. Kopp, accused of killing Dr. Barnett A. Slepian.

The role of the informants was revealed last week by lawyers representing a New York City couple accused of helping Kopp to elude authorities for 21/2 years.

The identities of the informants remains a secret, but the attorneys said one of them was an acquaintance of Loretta C. Marra, who with her husband, Dennis J. Malvasi, is charged with assisting Kopp.

Bruce A. Barket, Marra's lead attorney, says he is outraged by the behavior of the informant initially recruited to gather evidence for the FBI.

"They paid someone who was a friend of Loretta. The informant rifled through her personal property in her home," Barket said. "It's typical of the things you'd expect an overreaching FBI to do. When the stakes are high, people are pushed, and the rules get broken."

FBI Special Agent Paul M. Moskal declined to comment on the criticisms.

"It would be inappropriate for the FBI to respond to any allegations now that this matter is before the court. Any comment would undercut the authority of the judicial system," Moskal said.

With information from the informant, the FBI obtained court orders permitting wiretaps and searches of the couple's home in the East New York section of Brooklyn.

Authorities said they learned through electronic surveillance that Marra and Malvasi were making arrangements to bring Kopp back from France and intended to let him secretly live with them.

The government's strongest evidence against Marra and Malvasi was gleaned from those wiretaps, which should be thrown out of court, according to Barket, a Garden City, Long Island, lawyer, who has enlisted the help of Buffalo attorney Joseph M. LaTona.

LaTona says government agents misled federal judges when filing incomplete applications seeking electronic eavesdropping on Marra and Malvasi, who, like Kopp, radically oppose abortion.

The information obtained through those wiretaps ultimately led authorities to Ireland and later France, where Kopp was apprehended in March, ending a worldwide manhunt for the fugitive in the 1998 murder of Slepian, an Amherst obstetrician who also performed abortions.

"FBI agents deliberately withheld relevant information from the eavesdropping applications," said LaTona, who plans to file a request Wednesday in U.S. District Court for a hearing to argue against allowing use of the wiretaps.

Federal agents, LaTona alleged, failed to state in the initial applications that a confidential informant was being paid to assist them in collecting evidence and that a second paid informant also was working for the FBI.

Had the judges who authorized the first two of seven warrants to conduct electronic surveillance known that the initial confidential informant, described in legal papers as "CS-1," was receiving money, LaTona believes the courts would have urged agents to try other more conventional means of investigation.

"For example, the judges could have directed the agents to offer more money to CS-1 to wear a wire. The agents claimed that CS-1 refused to wear a wire fearing an alleged FBI regulation would mandate the release of his identity," LaTona said, adding:

"That's a bogus excuse, and if the judges had been told CS-1 was a paid informant they would have realized CS-1 was capable of doing more than the agents claimed. He was for hire."

The 1968 federal Crime Control and Safe Streets Act, LaTona said, limits electronic surveillance by requiring that police make full use of more routine investigative techniques before resorting to wiretapping.

"Congress recognized the importance of strictly limiting the enormous invasion of privacy that electronic surveillance entails," LaTona said.

Through electronic surveillance of Marra and Malvasi, agents were able to capture the couple' conversations in their bedroom and to monitor their e-mail contact with Kopp.

LaTona maintains that an informant wearing a wire, which is a concealed recording or transmitting device, is far less intrusive than bugging a married couple's bedroom with a listening device.

"Because when you engage in a conversation with someone face to face, we assume the risk that person may divulge a confidence, but in the privacy of your own home in your own bedroom, there is an expectation that a conversation with your spouse will be private," he said.

If LaTona is granted a suppression hearing, he says he hopes to put CS-1 on the stand to question him. The lawyer also wants FBI financial records released showing how much both informants were paid.

Without information from the wiretaps, Barket said, prosecutors have no case against the couple.

Marra and her husband remain incarcerated in local jails. In July, U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara denied Marra's request to be released on $1 million bail. Barket is appealing that decision.

No bail has been set for Malvasi.

Kopp remains jailed in France, where he is fighting extradition to the United States. He has been charged with the sniper slaying of Slepian, who was shot Oct. 23, 1998, through a kitchen window of his home as he was warming a bowl of soup after returning from a prayer service for his deceased father.

(Note: The reporter never mentioned the fact that James Kopp has said He was innocent. He didn't say he was not guilty. He said he was innocent. In one of his quoted remarks to reporters covering his extradition hearing he asked them to find out who killed Dr. Slepian.)

23 posted on 09/09/2001 7:09:17 AM PDT by victim soul
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