Showing posts with label 4th amendment. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 4th amendment. Show all posts

Friday, January 11, 2013

New World Next Week: Episode139 - Globalist Crisis, Obama's New Cabinet, Frisky Business

NewWorldNextWeek.com: Episode139 -
Globalist Crisis, Obama's New Cabinet, Frisky Business

Episode139 - Globalist Crisis, Obama's New Cabinet, Frisky BusinessWelcome back to another great year of New World Next Week - the video series from Corbett Report and Media Monarchy that covers some of the most important developments in open source intelligence news. This week:

Story #1: World Economic Forum's Report Says Financial, Climate Crises Raise Global Risks
World Economic Forum's Global Risks Report 2013
What's Threatening Our World?

Story #2: Obama's Picks For Defense, CIA Signal New Security Era
CIA Nominee Resumé Highlights Include Obama "Kill List" and Bush Torture Program
Flashback: Operation Betrayus - From Benghazi To Brennan

Story #3: Police Stop-and-Frisk Program In Bronx Is Ruled Unconstitutional
NYCLU: Stop-and-Frisk Campaign
Wikipedia: New York City Stop-And-Frisk Program

Bonus: WikiLeaker Bradley Manning Awarded 112-Day Prison Credit for Military’s Abuse

Episode139 - Globalist Crisis, Obama's New Cabinet, Frisky BusinessVisit NewWorldNextWeek.com to get previous episodes in various formats to download, burn and share. And as always, stay up-to-date by subscribing to the feeds from Corbett Report here and Media Monarchy here. Thank you.

Previous: Episode138 - Fiscal False Flag, Space Oil, Healthy Trends

Thursday, May 19, 2011

5/19 newspurge: praise the lord & pass the ammunition

biowars/envirohealth:
gates says vaccine investment offers best returns*

cdc warns public to prepare for 'zombie apocalypse'*
worst allergy season ever? prove it!*
will the US destroy its smallpox stockpile?*
first dead crow signals start of west nile virus season*
cellphones contributing to death of honey bees*
zhirinovsky says secret weather weapons can kill millions*
video: texas pols knew agency hid amount of radiation in drinking water*
radioactive water dumped into pacific due to 'strong request' from US*
mississippi river flooding: residents build diy dams to saves houses*

drugwar:
scotus eviscerates 4th amendment over marijuana smell*

supreme court ok's warrantless house search*

history/mystery:
video: bidding begins in unabomber online auction*

fbi investigating unabomber in '82 tylenol deaths*
mystery of the helicopter that landed at scene of dr kelly's death after his body was found*
german grandchildren of nazis delve into past*
maryland first state to demand holocaust records of companies bidding for contracts*
video: nazi war crimes trial highlights hungary's dark past*

media/memes:
video: lars von trier announces "i'm a nazi" at cannes*
scientology is officially recruiting at cannes*
oprah's scientology ties: big show moments with the church's hollywood elite*
tel aviv lawyer charged with paying mob in scientology bomb plot*
lindsay lohan's photo tweet: "this is the freemason stalker that has been threatening to kill me"*
lindsay lohan's photo tweet: 'this is the freemason stalker that has been threatening to kill me'johnny depp, queen elizabeth are cousins*
zsa zsa gabor in coma & unresponsive*
twilight language: planking in america?*

murder/mayhem:
twilight language: evil clowns 2011*
as summer approaches, odd behavior onboard*

oregon oddities:
oregon woman wins quest to pack heat & smoke dope*

oregon's electric car charging network is behind schedule*

wv worry:
the truth about upper big branch mine -

deadliest US mine disaster in decades due to safety failures*
washington pace not fast enough for manchin*
tomblin win is a barometer for manchin*
former deputy charged with sexual assault*
this week in the civil war: west virginia, a state born of war*

Thursday, April 23, 2009

4/23 newspurge

police state international:
combat support battalion deployed to 'maintain public order' at boston marathon*
combat support battalion deployed to 'maintain public order' at boston marathonanimal rights activist on fbi 'most wanted terrorists' list*
video: cop arrests abc news reporter for filming traffic accident*
hr1913: local law enforcement hate crimes prevention act of 2009, the end of free speech?*
US security boss clarifies comments about border*
illegal immigrants detained, then freed to work*
maddow compares sovereignty movt to confederacy*
veterans a focus of fbi extremist probe*
'operation vigilant eagle': another attack on the sovereignty movt*
police state pillow fight:
feathery fracas lands vermont man in court*
drill tests airport readiness in youngstown, ohio*
chicago students send the cia packing*
spying on americans: 'business as usual' under obama*
celente: 'america lives in a fascist state'*
alan keyes: govt will stage terror, declare martial law*
fox launches infowars clone website in
attempt to cannibalize the patriot movt*
shiny new 'internal security' police cars*
court debates strip search of student*
cash-strapped cities try private guards over police*
scotus strikes a blow for the 4th amendment*
crisis as a means to building a global totalitarian state*
shanghai cooperation organization [russia/china] to form single emergency situations center*
canada cops can 'take all your stuff'*
9 men arrested over suspected terror plot released to UK borders agency*
central asia holds military drill*
rudd to announce civilian corps*
children tracked by sat nav to stop bad behaviour*
suspected somali pirate arrives in US to face charges*

obamessiah & the apostles of war
obama’s 1st 100 days: worse than even we predicted*
obama & chavez shake hands at summit*
change you have been told to believe in:
a closer examination of obama’s foreign policy*
obama laments not being able to ban 'assault weapons'*
key witness in obama passport fraud case murdered*
obama & the dem 'leadership' oppose a torture probe*

9/11 updates
schumer supports a new 9/11 investigation?*
former 9/11 commission vice chairman makes bizarre comments
about intelligence failures before attacks*
port authority of ny/nj:
records for reported wtc renovation work destroyed on 9/11*
giuliani has connection to pedophile priest*

econocrash
freddie mac cfo david kellerman found dead from apparent suicide in virginia*
freddie mac official found dead in apparent suicide*
missouri & nevada bank failures 24 & 25 in '09*
tower of basel: secretive plans for the issuing of a global currency*
bank lending keeps dropping*
gm & chrysler get extra $5.5b in loans*
gm to shut plants for up to 9 weeks this summer*
israel's own madoff arrested*
US initial jobless claims rose to 640k last week*
video: homeowners wreck property in final act of vengeance*

drugwar
video: ron paul: the national drug war has failed*
california med-marijuana laws are moving pot into mainstream*
video: cocaine highways: post-nafta, most drugs cross US borders in trucks*
more humans than drugs trafficked in europe*
video: sen webb says marijuana legalization should be considered*

Thursday, January 29, 2009

police state int'l: borders, biometrics & stupor bowl security

US/mexico border fence almost complete
US/mexico border fence almost completefrom ap: The fence along the U.S.-Mexico border is mostly finished. Customs and Border Protection spokesman Lloyd Easterling says that 601 miles of the project had been completed as of a week ago. Easterling says 69 miles of the fence still must be built to meet the goal set during the Bush administration. In December, then President-elect Barack Obama said he wanted to evaluate border security operations before he considers whether to finish building the fence under his administration. Easterling said the Obama White House has not told Homeland Security to stop building the fence.

military pushing the biometrics agenda
from ap: On the front lines in Iraq, U.S. troops can scan someone's eye or finger to try to determine if he is a potential enemy or has been connected to a terror attack. At military bases on U.S. soil, it's not that easy. The use of biometrics _ ranging from simple fingerprints to more advanced retinal and facial scans _ has thrived in Iraq, where soldiers carry handheld devices that enable them to link to databases filled with hundreds of thousands of identities. But in Colorado, military bases just 20 miles or so apart have different identification requirements and access procedures for personnel or contractors trying to get onto the property. The gaps raise security concerns and worries of another attempted massacre scheme, like the one foiled at Fort Dix in New Jersey in 2007. "Interestingly, we are probably further forward in using biometrics outside our country in some of the combat environments than we are inside our country," Air Force Gen. Gene Renuart, commander of U.S. Northern Command, said Tuesday. "We've got to find a way to fix that." Speaking at a biometrics conference, Renuart said the military services and law enforcement agencies around the country all carry different ID badges, and many are embedded with different information. And in some cases those agencies, he said, also have different computer databases that don't communicate well.

general wants to scan more US irises & fingerprints
general wants to scan more US irises & fingerprintsfrom danger room: Air Force Gen. Victor Renuart, the Pentagon's homeland security commander, thinks one of the tools the military uses to combat insurgents in Iraq - the collection of biometric data - is needed here at home. The Associated Press has this alarming intriguing quote from Renuart, who spoke Tuesday at a defense industry conference in northern Virginia: "Interestingly, we are probably further forward in using biometrics outside our country in some of the combat environments than we are inside our country," said the general. "We’ve got to find a way to fix that." Tuesday's conference was devoted to discussion of implementation of HSPD-24, a homeland security directive signed by President George W. Bush in 2008. The directive is supposed to harmonize the way federal agencies and the military collect, store, analyze - and share - biometric data. As it stands, the directive instructs the Attorney General to work with the Secretaries of State, Defense, and Homeland Security and the Director of National Intelligence and the Director of the Office of Science and Technology to create an action plan for implementing HSPD-24 by this June. The new administration may be reviewing a number of Bush directives, but now might be a really good time to read up on the military's use of biometric technology. Noah reported extensively on the use of biometrics to deny freedom of movement to insurgents in Anbar province; he also noted the privacy and human-rights implications. For good measure, go read this fascinating transcript of this bloggers' roundtable from 2007 with Lt. Col. John Velliquette, then the chief of biometrics collection in Iraq. In the conference Tuesday, Renuart seemed to be talking largely about security badges for military bases. But as anyone who's been on the receiving end of the U.S. military's biometric identification process knows, it's an intrusive process. More importantly, deciding who has access to the databases - and how that info will be shared - will continue to be a major concern for the government and for privacy advocates.

scotus says passenger can be frisked
from ap: The Supreme Court ruled Monday that police officers have leeway to frisk a passenger in a car stopped for a traffic violation even if nothing indicates the passenger has committed a crime or is about to do so. The court on Monday unanimously overruled an Arizona appeals court that threw out evidence found during such an encounter. The case involved a 2002 pat-down search of an Eloy, Ariz., man by an Oro Valley police officer, who found a gun and marijuana. The justices accepted Arizona's argument that traffic stops are inherently dangerous for police and that pat-downs are permissible when an officer has a reasonable suspicion that the passenger may be armed and dangerous. The pat-down is allowed if the police "harbor reasonable suspicion that a person subjected to the frisk is armed, and therefore dangerous to the safety of the police and public," Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg said. The case is Arizona v. Johnson, 07-1122.

'behavior detection' experts to boost stuper bowl security
'behavior detection' experts to boost stuper bowl securityfrom tampa tribune: If an officer asks if you need help on Super Bowl Sunday, he might be more than just gracious. For the first time, the Transportation Security Administration's "Behavior Detection Officers" are enhancing security at the championship event by watching people for combinations of suspicious behavior. "They're trained to do exactly that – pick people out of a crowd," Gary Milano, federal security director for the TSA's Tampa office, said today. These officers don't have the power to arrest but are uniformed behavioral experts, Milano said. The TSA and the U.S. Secret Service trained about 70 Tampa police officers and Hillsborough County sheriff's deputies working the event in their techniques. Milano described them as "telltale signs of people about to engage in wrongdoing" based on the Israeli security system. Each behavior, such as profuse sweating, could be innocent on its own but raises eyebrows when coupled with other behaviors, Milano said. He declined to elaborate.

new orleans terror drills from jan27 to feb8
from katc: The New Orleans Police Department is warning residents not to panic if they see helicopters flying around the city after dark. The department will be hosting military training in and around the city between Jan. 27 and Feb. 8. The training includes the use of military helicopters flying after dark throughout the city. Police say they want residents of New Orleans and outlying areas to know it's a training event. The activities, authorities say, have been carefully planned and are safe.

flashbacks: black helicopters over portland for dod terror drills & black helicopters over denver for terror drills

Monday, June 02, 2008

badcops, $oldiers, drugs & crime

2 miami officers charged in fbi corruption probe
from ap: Two veteran police officers were charged Friday with providing protection for purported shipments of cocaine and stolen goods in what was actually an undercover FBI operation. Officer Geovani Nunez and Detective Jorge Hernandez are accused in court documents of helping protect shipments of what they thought were stolen televisions and computers and at least 12 kilograms of cocaine - sometimes by using their police cars to escort trucks.


soldiers caught in robbery scheme
from atlanta journal-constitution: Four U.S. Army Soldiers who were caught planning a commando-style armed robbery of a purported drug stash house are preparing to plead guilty for their roles in the incident, according to court records and lawyers for the servicemen. The four Soldiers from the Camp Frank D. Merrill mountain training facility in Dahlonega initially were charged with drug conspiracy and weapon offenses after being arrested in January. If convicted, they each faced mandatory minimum prison sentences of at least 15 years.

corruption among chicago cops
from reuters: A former Chicago police officer charged with being part of a ring that falsely arrested and stole from drug dealers has detailed how the operation led to a plot to kill two colleagues, according to interview excerpts released on Friday.

border agents worked on the dark side
border agents worked on the dark sidefrom blue ridge now: The Villarreal investigation is among scores of corruption cases in recent years that have alarmed officials in the Homeland Security Department just as it is hiring thousands of border agents to stem the flow of illegal immigration. The pattern has become familiar: Customs officers wave in vehicles filled with illegal immigrants, drugs or other contraband. A Border Patrol agent acts as a scout for smugglers. Trusted officers fall prey to temptation and begin taking bribes.

minnesota cops can take blood without warrant
from star tribune: When authorities have reason to believe that a drunken driver has caused a serious or fatal accident they have a right to draw the driver's blood to test its alcohol content without their consent and without a search warrant, the Minnesota Supreme Court ruled Friday State of Minnesota vs. Janet Sue Shriner (220kb PDF). The ruling was greeted with relief by law enforcers.
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