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FBI's Moussaoui Bungle: Trie, Foster Deja Vu
Newsmax.com ^
| Saturday May 25, 2002
| Carl Limbacher and NewsMax.com Staff
Posted on 05/25/2002 9:41:44 AM PDT by friendly
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To: friendly
FBI's Moussaoui Bungle: Trie, Foster Deja Vu
Looks as though some are really trying to live up to the name "The Feebs".
21
posted on
05/25/2002 12:35:20 PM PDT
by
aruanan
To: friendly
Al Quaida is a serious and well-trained outfit. It is almost axiomatic they would try to penetrate the FBI. If a Boston mobster and a sleazy short can own FBI agents, I bet Al Quiada owns at least five.
22
posted on
05/25/2002 4:59:36 PM PDT
by
eno_
To: eno_
The FBI contains many outstanding and dedicated people. I pray that there are no al Queda moles. I hope you are wrong.
23
posted on
05/25/2002 5:25:59 PM PDT
by
friendly
To: friendly
Consider the duration of this conflict: before 9/11 there was the Cole, before that, EgyptAir 900 where they turned a pilot and had him kill dozens of newly trained Egyptian military officers, and before that the embassy bombings, and those are just the acknowledged ops. Odds are more than one Feeb has been turned by now. We are in a fight for our lives. No moslem should go unexamined if they are in any security role.
24
posted on
05/25/2002 6:38:34 PM PDT
by
eno_
To: eno_
"No moslem should go unexamined if they are in any security role."
I did a search based upon your suggestion and found the following deeply distressing article, as reported by democrat David Schippers on the War Room program on 5/21/02:
Tuesday morning on The War Room, with FBI affidavit in hand, David Schippers reported that a Muslim FBI agent refused to wear a wire when asked to do so for an upcoming meeting with a Saudi president of a large financial institution. "Muslims don't tape Muslims," Mr. Schippers reports the agent as saying.
The Muslim FBI agent was contacted by an accountant for un unnamed middle Eastern financial institution that Mr. Schippers refers to as the "XYZ" Corporation for short. XYZ was being investigated by the FBI for irregularities and possible money laundering. The accountant arranged a meeting between the agent and the president of XYZ, to discuss the investigation. XYZ also happens to have several members of Osama bin Laden's family as employees. When the agent refused to wear a wire to the meeting, it was cancelled by his superiors. Reportedly this is the THIRD TIME that this agent has refused to tape Muslims.
Seeing him as a security risk since the time of his latest refusal, the Muslim agent's superiors and coworkers kept info from him. Guess what? He filed an EEOC suit for being discriminated against because he is a Muslim. Why did he still have a job anyway?
At this time the Muslim agent is now in Saudi Arabia. Can anyone say, "Saudi spy?"
25
posted on
05/25/2002 7:05:35 PM PDT
by
friendly
To: Lexington Green
. . . we have a NO-FAULT GOVERNMENT The common expression over the previous eight years was, "mistakes were made", as I recall.
26
posted on
05/25/2002 9:55:27 PM PDT
by
NJJ
To: friendly
"In one particularly egregious example, key crime scene photos in the Vincent Foster death case"
Losing the photos was not all the tampering that was done. The other document tampering occurred when Patrick Knowlton was interviewed. The FBI purposely altered Patrick's testimony to indicate the Foster car had been at the park, when Patrick has always maintained that Foster's car was not there. The tampering of Patrick's testimony was why he filed his lawsuit against them.
Since Patrick has been tested in the 90th percentile for memory retention, I think I'd sooner believe Patrick's recollection of events.
I do agree that some of the higher-ups in the FBI need to go. They are setting a bad example for the newer officers; most of whom are only there to do a good job.
27
posted on
05/25/2002 11:50:40 PM PDT
by
CyberAnt
To: friendly
And that is only the spy so bumbling that a Google search could catch him. Al Quaida is good enough and, sadly, the FBI is both stupid and corrupted enough that Al Quaida infiltration is nearly certain.
28
posted on
05/26/2002 4:41:18 AM PDT
by
eno_
To: Enterprise
It would appear that if immunity extends to shooting unarmed women in the face, then eliminating evidence, steering or derailing investigations and lying to cover up are minor items, unworthy of the attention of our free press.
29
posted on
05/26/2002 5:47:14 AM PDT
by
VegasAce
To: VegasAce
"It would appear that if immunity extends to shooting unarmed women in the face, then eliminating evidence, steering or derailing investigations and lying to cover up are minor items"
At times it appears now that these are common standard operating procedures. Too bad. We once had an outstanding Government. Now it is a bloated dead pig covered with maggots.
To: friendly
31
posted on
05/27/2002 10:00:18 AM PDT
by
murdoog
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