-Caveat Lector-

http://www.boston.com/dailyglobe2/157/oped/Trusting_the_FBI+.shtml

Trusting the FBI

By Marie Cocco, 6/6/2002

WASHINGTONOF ALL THE ways we know the FBI bungled the case of Sept. 11
before it happened, failure to snoop on people at prayer wasn't one of them.

The inability to ''connect the dots'' did not stem from a lack of dots.
There was no shortage of FBI agents searching for dots, nor was there a
civil liberties straitjacket that prevented them from finding dots in the
first place.

''The issues are fundamentally ones of integrity and go to the heart of the
FBI's law enforcement mission and mandate,'' wrote Coleen Rowley, the senior
agent in Minneapolis who blew the whistle on headquarters' incompetence
after the higher-ups had been alerted early on that Zacarias Moussaoui - now
charged as the ''20th hijacker'' - was quite possibly a terrorist. The
emphasis is Rowley's own.

Fiction is often less believable than the true-life bill of particulars that
damns this agency. The FBI's Washington chieftains squelched efforts in
Minneapolis to pursue Moussaoui, though agents there had been drawn to his
threatening behavior at flight school and told by the French of his
terrorist ties. The higher-ups ignored an earlier memo from Phoenix, warning
that Osama bin Laden or other groups could be sending terrorists to flight
schools to place them as pilots. Still another agent had similar suspicions
about student pilots in Oklahoma.

Connect these dots. They do not produce a picture of a law-enforcement
agency hamstrung by silly rules meant to protect citizens' privacy or First
Amendment rights when they are at church or on the Internet or at the
library or even the ATM. Draw the lines and connect these dots and what
emerges is a portrait of incompetence and a culture of coverup.

Now we are told this should be rewarded with vastly expanded surveillance
power.

FBI gumshoes are to spy on Americans as they go about their daily lives. The
surveillance could take place at church or synagogue or, more likely, in
mosques. The spies might be in the library or at a political rally or a
sporting event. No hint of criminality or criminal connections would be
required. Field offices could snoop without approval from those headquarters
types, with their bureaucratic instinct to cover behinds.

Attorney General John Ashcroft and FBI Director Robert Mueller insist that
this is needed now to make up for the bureau's own failures. And maybe they
are right that in these times, we need a domestic intelligence agency. But
why would we want it to be the FBI?

The bureau has a history of mistakes and malfeasance. These are followed,
usually, by refusal to make amends. There is a reason that Waco, Ruby Ridge,
Wen Ho Lee, Richard Jewell, and Robert Hanssen are metaphors for FBI
mess-ups: No matter how many botched cases come to light, there is evidence
of another stuffed somewhere in a desk drawer.

Always there are pledges to reform. Never are they kept. Why would we expect
something different now?

There is also the problem of John Ashcroft. He is no William Brennan. Other
than what he believes is a God-given right to own guns, this attorney
general has never met a constitutional principle he won't trample.

Since Sept. 11, his Justice Department has rounded up hundreds of immigrant
''detainees'' but charged exactly one person - Moussaoui - with crimes
connected to the attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. It
fights in federal and state courts to keep all proceedings against the
detainees secret, though judges have already ruled against such wholesale
secrecy.

The Justice Department still holds an unknown number of people who've
already had their immigration cases settled - and await deportation -
without revealing what new charge, if any, they face. It battles to keep an
American-born individual taken prisoner in Afghanistan from seeing a lawyer,
though it admits that Yasser Esam Hamdi was born in Baton Rouge, La., and is
likely a US citizen. Nonetheless, Ashcroft's men claim that an unspecified
''national security'' risk trumps Hamdi's Sixth Amendment right to counsel.

These are frightening times. Our freedoms were perverted into weapons used
against us. We may have to preserve liberty by restricting it a bit. But if
we are still to call ourselves a democracy, this cannot be done by fiat
handed down by those who've already failed.

------------------------
"In little more than a year we have gone from enjoying peace
and the most prosperous economy in our history, to a nation
plunged into war, recession and fear. This is a nation being
transformed before our very eyes."

http://www.truthout.com

Steve Wingate, Webmaster
ANOMALOUS IMAGES AND UFO FILES
http://www.anomalous-images.com

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