Posted on 10/19/2022 5:51:18 AM PDT by Red Badger
AT A MINUTE before 5 a.m. on April 27, ABC News’ James Gordon Meek fired off a tweet with a single word: “FACTS.”
The network’s national-security investigative producer was responding to former CIA agent Marc Polymeropoulos’ take that the Ukrainian military — with assistance from the U.S. — was thriving against Russian forces.
Polymeropoulos’ tweet — filled with acronyms indecipherable to the layperson, like “TTPs,” “UW,” and “EW” — was itself a reply to a missive from Washington Post Pentagon reporter Dan Lamothe, who noted the wealth of information the U.S. military had gathered about Russian ops by observing their combat strategy in real time. The interchange illustrated the interplay between the national-security community and those who cover it. And no one straddled both worlds quite like Meek, an Emmy-winning deep-dive journalist who also was a former senior counterterrorism adviser and investigator for the House Homeland Security Committee. To his detractors within ABC, Meek was something of a “military fanboy.” But his track record of exclusives was undeniable, breaking the news of foiled terrorist plots in New York City and the Army’s coverup of the fratricidal death of Pfc. Dave Sharrett II in Iraq, a bombshell that earned Meek a face-to-face meeting with President Obama. With nine years at ABC under his belt, a buzzy Hulu documentary poised for Emmy attention, and an upcoming book on the military’s chaotic withdrawal from Afghanistan, the 52-year-old bear of a man seemed to be at the height of his powers and the pinnacle of his profession.
Outside his Arlington, Virginia, apartment, a surreal scene was unfolding, and his storied career was about to come crashing down. Meek’s tweet marked the last time he’s posted on the social media platform. The first thing Meek’s neighbor John Antonelli noticed that morning was the black utility vehicle with blacked out windows blocking traffic in both directions on Columbia Pike. It was just before dawn on that brisk April day, and self-described police-vehicle historian Antonelli was about to grab a coffee at a Starbucks before embarking on his daily three-mile walk. He inched closer to get a better vantage, when he saw an olive-green Lenco BearCat G2, an armored tactical vehicle often employed by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, among other law-enforcement agencies. A few Arlington County cruisers surrounded the jaw-dropping scene, but all of the other vehicles were unmarked, including the BearCat. Antonelli counted at least 10 heavily armed personnel in the group. None bore anything identifying which agency was conducting the raid. After just 10 minutes, the operation inside the Siena Park apartment complex — a six-story, upscale building for D.C. professionals, with rents fetching about $2,000 to $3,000 a month — was over.
“They didn’t stick around. They took off pretty quickly and headed west on Columbia Pike towards Fairfax County,” Antonelli recalls. “Most people seeing that green vehicle would think it’s some kind of tank. But I knew it was the Lenco BearCat. That vehicle is designed to be jumped out of so they can do a raid in that kind of time. It can return fire if they’re being fired upon.”
Multiple sources familiar with the matter say Meek was the target of an FBI raid at the Siena Park apartments, where he had been living on the top floor for more than a decade. An FBI representative told Rolling Stone its agents were present on the morning of April 27 “at the 2300 block of Columbia Pike, Arlington, Virginia, conducting court-authorized law-enforcement activity. The FBI cannot comment further due to an ongoing investigation.”
Meek has been charged with no crime. But independent observers believe the raid is among the first — and quite possibly, the first — to be carried out on a journalist by the Biden administration. A federal magistrate judge in the Virginia Eastern District Court signed off on the search warrant the day before the raid. If the raid was for Meek’s records, U.S. Deputy Attorney General Lisa Monaco would have had to give her blessing; a new policy enacted last year prohibits federal prosecutors from seizing journalists’ documents. Any exception requires the deputy AG’s approval. (Gabe Rottman at the Reporters Committee for Freedom of the Press says, “To my knowledge, there hasn’t been a case [since January 2021].”)
In the raid’s aftermath, Meek, who frequently collaborated with ABC World News Tonight anchor David Muir, has made himself scarce. None of his Siena Park neighbors with whom Rolling Stone spoke have seen him since, with his apartment appearing to be vacant. Siena Park management declined to confirm that their longtime tenant was gone, citing “privacy policies.” Similarly, several ABC News colleagues — who are accustomed to unraveling mysteries and cracking investigative stories — tell Rolling Stone that they have no idea what happened to Meek.
“He fell off the face of the Earth,” says one. “And people asked, but no one knew the answer.”
An ABC representative tells Rolling Stone, “He resigned very abruptly and hasn’t worked for us for months.”
Sources familiar with the matter say federal agents allegedly found classified information on Meek’s laptop during their raid. One investigative journalist who worked with Meek says it would be highly unusual for a reporter or producer to keep any classified information on a computer. “Mr. Meek is unaware of what allegations anonymous sources are making about his possession of classified documents,” his lawyer, Eugene Gorokhov, said in a statement. “If such documents exist, as claimed, this would be within the scope of his long career as an investigative journalist covering government wrongdoing. The allegations in your inquiry are troubling for a different reason: they appear to come from a source inside the government. It is highly inappropriate, and illegal, for individuals in the government to leak information about an ongoing investigation. We hope that the DOJ [Department of Justice] promptly investigates the source of this leak.” It is unclear what story, if any, would have put Meek in the FBI’s crosshairs. Meek worked on extremely sensitive topics — from high-profile terrorists to Americans held abroad to the exploits of Erik Prince, the founder of the infamous military contractor Blackwater. In recent years, some of Meek’s highest-profile reporting delved into a 2017 ambush by ISIS in Niger that left four American Green Berets dead. Meek and ABC then adapted the story into the feature-length documentary 3212 Un-Redacted, which debuted last year on Veteran’s Day on ABC’s sister company Hulu. ADVERTISEMENT A robust Emmy campaign began prior to Meek’s disappearance, with events like a screening and Q&A at the Motion Picture Association in D.C. that the journalist attended with one of his daughters. The story was particularly incendiary because it undermined the Pentagon’s official narrative of what happened on the ground in the African nation, and presented “evidence of a cover-up at the highest levels of the Army,” according to the film’s logline. Adding intrigue, sources say another ABC News investigative journalist, Brian Epstein, also abruptly and inexplicably left the network a few months before Meek. Epstein also worked as a director, producer, and cinematographer on 3212 Un-Redacted (Hulu stopped Emmy campaigning after Meek apparently went AWOL, and the documentary ultimately failed to receive a nomination). Epstein told Rolling Stone, “I’m not commenting on this story,” before abruptly hanging up.
Even stranger, in the months before he vanished, Meek was finishing up work on a book for Simon & Schuster titled Operation Pineapple Express: The Incredible Story of a Group of Americans Who Undertook One Last Mission and Honored a Promise in Afghanistan, which he co-authored with Lt. Col. Scott Mann, a retired Green Beret. Meek even featured a picture of the soon-to-publish book in his bio on social media and frequently tweeted about his involvement. But post-April 27, the book-jacket photo disappeared from his bio, and Simon & Schuster has scrubbed his name from all press materials. The first sentence of the jacket previously read: “In April, ABC News correspondent James Gordon Meek got an urgent call from a Special Forces operator serving overseas.” Now it says: “In April, an urgent call was placed from a Special Forces operator serving overseas.”
Early press materials, available on the Wayback Machine, gushed about Meek’s credentials: “He has covered the rise of Al Qaeda since 1998, from the Millennium Plot to reporting from the ground outside the Pentagon after a hijacked plane hit it on September 11, 2001, to combat embeds with US and Afghan Special Forces in Afghanistan. James has looked terrorists in the eye including 9/11 mastermind Khalid Shaikh Mohammed at Guantánamo, ‘shoe bomber’ Richard Reid and ‘dirty bomber’ Jose Padilla inside the Supermax federal prison, and Zacarias Moussaoui at his trial.”
Simon & Schuster did not respond to a request for comment. Mann, who is solely promoting the book, which published in August and became a New York Times bestseller, says he is unsure of what exactly happened to Meek.
“He contacted me in the spring, and was really distraught, and told me that he had some serious personal issues going on and that he needed to withdraw from the project,” Mann tells Rolling Stone. “As a guy who’s a combat veteran who has seen that kind of strain — I don’t know what it was — I honored it. And he went on his way, and I continued on the project.”
Mann says he hasn’t heard from Meek since.
Both the Obama and Trump administrations were criticized for targeting journalists and their sources. Obama’s Justice Department brought charges under the Espionage Act against a record number of people, from top generals like David Petraeus and James Cartwright to document leakers like Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden. Yahoo News reported last year that in 2017, under Trump, as many as 20 U.S.-based journalists, including a Pulitzer Prize-winning Associated Press reporter, were being tracked by a special Customs and Border Protection unit. But the Biden administration set out to reverse that trend. Biden called the practice of obtaining journalists’ phone records and emails “wrong,” and in July 2021, Attorney General Merrick Garland enacted a new policy that bars federal prosecutors from seizing journalists’ records in leak investigations, with some exceptions, including if reporters are suspected of working for agents of a foreign power or terrorist organizations, as well as situations involving imminent risks such as kidnappings or crimes against children. A Department of Justice press release at the time added, “To further protect members of the news media in a manner that will be enduring, [Garland] asked the Deputy Attorney General to undertake a review process to further explain, develop, and codify the policy announced today into Department regulations.” Given the new policy, the question looms on what grounds the feds would have had room to act on Meek.
No one is more mystified by the strange saga than the people who lived in and around the Siena Park complex. The raid became the talk of the building and the neighborhood businesses, but details remain elusive.
“Obviously, I was trying to figure it out because, ‘Oh, my God, what was happening on my floor?’” says Krystin Poitra, who lived in an apartment adjacent to Meek’s for more than a decade, but has since moved out. “He was often with his two daughters. And he was always really nice. I know he had lived in the building for a significant amount of time because I remember when those daughters were really young; my dog accidentally picked up something in the hallway and it was a Barbie boot. And I knew it’s got to be theirs because they were the only kids on the floor. I went over, and one of the girls answered, and I was like, ‘Does this belong to you guys?’ They’re like, ‘Yeah.’ And then they just kind of shut the door.”
Despite seeing Meek in the elevator and in the parking garage frequently, neighbors didn’t know much about him. He kept to himself, often hanging out on the rooftop alone. The only thing that really stood out was his hulking frame. He was hard to miss at six feet seven. “I couldn’t even tell you what his occupation was,” Poitra adds.
Another resident, who works in law enforcement, says the muscle behind the raid was highly unusual. “The last time I heard about a SWAT team going into an apartment building was the crazy stuff in Navy Yard, and they had weapons and stuff,” the resident says of an operation three days after the Siena Park raid, in which two men were apprehended inside a luxury Navy Yard apartment building and charged with impersonating federal law enforcement. Unlike the Meek case, the Navy Yard raid was well-reported, and authorities said they seized a stockpile of weapons.
An employee at the Citgo station across from Meek’s building, who declined to give his name, witnessed the raid: “I remember coming to work that morning and seeing a lot of police cars out there. Nobody said anything. I didn’t know what was going on.” At ABC News, Meek’s sudden absence has left many of his colleagues perplexed, given that he still had time remaining on his contract. But his background was often shrouded in mystery. Some contemporaries were under the impression that he previously served in the military. One described a picture in his office that was taken in a desert, in which all of the others posing with Meek had their faces blacked out. One co-worker described him as sometimes gruff, but otherwise collaborative. Ben Sherwood, president of ABC News at the time, once lauded his accomplishments in a staff memo, noting Meek’s “vast knowledge of national security issues and skills as a deep-diving reporter.”
Now, Meek appears to be on the wrong side of the national-security apparatus. And no one can say for certain if law-enforcement officers actually removed him from the building. And thus, a riddle was born. Documents pertaining to the case remain sealed. “I just want to know what happened,” says another person who worked on 3212 Un-Redacted. “[Meek’s situation] is making me nervous. I’m just gonna deadbolt my door.”
Real Mac Report @RealMacReport (Oct 20, 2022)
https://twitter.com/RealMacReport/status/1582979898720669696
Tucker Carlson: “ABC News Producer who was working on a book about Biden’s disastrous Afghanistan withdrawal was raided by the FBI and has gone missing.”
That’s one body that’ll never be found....................
Correct, they are now the #Press_titutes !
They do it for the money.
It is not a made up story.
Tucker Carlson ran with it. And several other sources that have credibility.
Well, that is a posiblity.
But there are consequences to trying that.
This Rolling Stone article is clearly done to distance O’Biden from this action. It is out front, trying to keep this from becoming a huge issue. It is a HUGE ISSUE..
He’s most likely hiding out in a foreign country.........................
I doubt it. If the FIB arrested him, he is possibly in safe house or in prison.
He was playing with fire affecting O’Biden’s (deliberate) disastrous exit from Afghanistan.
We have never had a Traitor as President who intends to destroy the USA. But that is what Xi-O’Biden is. Bought Traitors all.
Indeed, it does.
The book is bunk....the soviets of the time would have had no interest in supporting the US government in maintaining such a monstrous lie. Nothing in it for them and they would have called us out on it just we would have on any false space probe landings they sent out. Putin could if he wished to cause trouble just admit that the Soviets were complicit in healping the US maintain secrecy that the moon landings were faked just to mess with us and he would if it were true. Every government worth their salt spies on us and we spy on them....no one really keeps secrets very long or well....what is done well is to spin stories that are leaking the truth out to maintain within a public a sense of a grain of doubt which leads people to want to anchor themselves to whatever seems solid.
A question of doubt raised regarding something that seemed true to so many at the time can be used by governments to get unwanted focus off a subject that is not politically convenient. Governments love paramoia inducing subjects because it can hide behind paranoia in a way so that people can’t figure out the real reasons why may need to rise up to “shoot the bastards”. The governments know that just a whiff of accusation of ill mental health is stigmatizing and causes people to draw away from those so stigmatized. Some people are really crazy as well.
I do think there was more going down with what happened and what they discovered during the missions that went to the moon. If anything, the debunking operations may be designed to stop people asking questions over what was really discovered...to blunt the reasoning process of otherwise curious and intelligent people so that don’t start asking the “right” questions.
The moon shot debunker books in question aren’t asking the “right” questions...if they did, then more such people would find their houses raided and the authors’ public statements put under court ordered seal,or are disappeared or are found dead mysteriously. But surprise, surprise not one moon debunker weith so called “secret knowledge” has ever been raided nor has any other government accused the USA of faking a moon shot.
If you want to read more this is the best web site on this topic:
https://www.aulis.com/investigation.htm
I would encourage you to read the book I linked. The details matter—and there are lots of details to be mastered.
bkmk
I have read books on the subject and articles from this guy and others....I’m not impressed.
The rival governments would not have supported each other on this while threatening to blow each other up for other reasons. Besides if you knew where t look you could see the apollo-soyuz linked capsuls whizzing over head as a single dot and with binoculars. Space probes took shots of the moon just a few years ago and you could see the landing sites on the moon. I saw skylab whizzing by in 1974 on the nights we were told we could see it.
However I do think they’ve been to the moon but haven’t told us “everything” they discovered, or if we were “ordered” to stand down for a while and not go there. There seems to be indications that we may have a secret space program way in advance of anything they have yet admitted. So I’m on the opposite side of the issue as you but just as suspicious!
Russia may be aware or be suspecting of these programs and they are acting up in ways that will force us to reveal our “hidden cards” publicly(which the deep state doesn’t want us to do) in lieu of launching nukes in a vain attempt to protect russia(in Putin’s mind anyway).
At the back of it all is the Spirit of God who is drawing all of the nations in with his big net...thus lots of things to be revealed.
Interesting story about Kubrick...I met in my late teens one of the top special effects guys involved with Kubricks 2001.
He told me that the original road show movie, the one shown in europe was 9 hours long and loaded with subliminal effects that were illegal to be used in America at the time. The American road show was much shorter and then the movie theater versions were shorn to what the movie length is now. You can see some subliminal effects....such as when the Earth to Moon shuttle lands on its platform as the blue danube waltz has reached its climacted end. The shuttle is brought down with the square window forward and the ship’s vents on either sid facing forward ...the pilots appear as
lit up pupils in the center of each port(like glowing eyes) and the ship takes on the appearance of thee Sphinx of Egypt
For about 3-4 seconds as the music ends ...then the scene abruptly shanges to the conference room. Check it out sometime...it will leave you stunned when you see it and it confirmed for me what the special effecst guy told me about Kubrick’s trickery and mastery of light and shadow. It stuns everyone else when I point it out for them.
The 9 hour version had profound effects on those who watched the whole thing...the road show features a 48 speaker multi channel surround track in 1968-69. The effects guy told me that the subliminals were so profound that many saw their own faces in the helmet of Bowman as he flew through hyperspace and some quit their jobs and changed their whole lives because of it. There were some reported suicides.
That is why I believe that Kubric had his brother destroy all master elements of 2001 after his death...he didn’t want this 9 hour version unearthed...he thought it too dangerous.
Please take a look at the link I gave you.
You do not understand the best arguments of the “other side”.
Here are some links to what I believe to be “some of the strongest arguments of the other side” if you want to take a look:
Computer technology in the lunar and command module:
https://www.aulis.com/pascal.htm
Spacesuit technology:
https://www.aulis.com/suits.htm
More Lunar Module technology:
https://www.aulis.com/lm_problem.htm
More Command Module technology:
https://www.aulis.com/handles.htm
“Technology Loss”:
https://www.aulis.com/deception.htm
“Rover Fenders”
https://www.aulis.com/rover_fenders.htm
Van Allen Belts issues:
https://www.aulis.com/orion_vanallens.htm
Brief Discussion on Radiation Issues:
https://www.aulis.com/nasa5.htm
Astronauts: Stars vs No Stars:
https://www.aulis.com/edgar_mitchell.htm
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