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Non-Lethal Weapons & Surveillance

This will be part journal and part informational. I would like the public to know about non-lethal weapons and the testing that is being done on nonconsensual citizens in this country. These weapons are not classified and anyone can find information.
27 marzo

 

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    FBI Provided Inaccurate Data for Surveillance Warrants
    By John Solomon
    The Washington Post

    Tuesday 27 March 2007

    FBI agents repeatedly provided inaccurate information to win secret court approval of surveillance warrants in terrorism and espionage cases, prompting officials to tighten controls on the way the bureau uses that powerful anti-terrorism tool, according to Justice Department and FBI officials.

    The errors were pervasive enough that the chief judge of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, Colleen Kollar-Kotelly, wrote the Justice Department in December 2005 to complain. She raised the possibility of requiring counterterrorism agents to swear in her courtroom that the information they were providing was accurate, a procedure that could have slowed such investigations drastically.

    A internal FBI review in early 2006 of some of the more than 2,000 surveillance warrants the bureau obtains each year confirmed that dozens of inaccuracies had been provided to the court. The errors ranged from innocuous lapses, such as the wrong description of family relationships, to more serious problems, such as citing information from informants who were no longer active, officials said.

    The FBI contends that none of the mistakes were serious enough to reverse judges' findings that there was probable cause to issue a surveillance warrant. But officials said the errors were significant enough to prompt reforms bureau-wide.

    "It is clear to everybody this is a serious matter. This is something that has to happen quickly. We have to have the confidence of the American people that we are using these tools appropriately," said Kenneth Wainstein, the Justice Department's new assistant attorney general for national security.

    The department's acknowledgment of the problems with the FISA court applications comes nearly two weeks after a blistering inspector general's report revealed widespread violations of the use of "national security" and "exigent circumstances" letters, which allow FBI agents to collect phone, e-mail and Internet records from telecommunications companies without review by a judge. The problems included failing to document relevant evidence, claiming emergencies that did not exist and failing to show that phone records requests were connected to authorized investigations.

    In the use of both national security letters and the FISA warrant applications, officials acknowledged that the problems resulted from agents' haste or sloppiness - or both - and that there was inadequate supervision.

    "We've oftentimes been better at setting the rules than we have been at establishing the internal controls and audits necessary to enforce them," FBI Assistant Director John Miller said.

    FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III is scheduled to appear before the Senate Judiciary Committee today to answer questions about the use of national security letters. Congress will receive its annual report on FISA warrants next month.

    Experts said Congress, the courts and the Justice Department share the blame for not conducting more aggressive oversight of FBI agents.

    "It is a little too easy to blame the FBI, because the FBI gets away with this stuff when the other institutions of government fail to do their jobs," said Marc Rotenberg, president of the Electronic Privacy Information Center, which monitors civil liberties issues.

    Records show that the FISA court approves almost every application for the warrants, which give agents broad powers to electronically monitor and surveil people who they allege are connected to terrorism or espionage cases. The number of requests rose from 886 in 1999 to 2,074 in 2005. The court did not reject a single application in 2005 but "modified" 61, according to a Justice Department report to Congress.

    Senior Justice officials said they have begun a comprehensive review of all terrorism-fighting tools and their compliance with the law. That will be followed by regular audits and training to ensure that agents do not lapse into shortcuts that can cause unintended legal consequences.

    Wainstein noted that before his division was created last year, the Justice Department could not systematically check FBI compliance with rules in all types of national security investigations. He acknowledged, for instance, that the department was told of 26 potential violations that the FBI had disclosed in its use of national security letters but did not focus on them.

    Earlier this year, President Bush agreed to allow the FISA court to review surveillance requests from the National Security Agency after a battle with civil liberties groups and some lawmakers over the legality of that agency's spying effort, in which some suspects were overseas.

    Last year's problems involving the FISA court, however, involved the issuance of secret warrants that authorized FBI agents to conduct surveillance inside the United States.

    Shortly before the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, the FISA court complained that there were inaccuracies in 75 warrants that the court had approved going back several years. The FBI responded by instituting new policies to better ensure that the information agents provided in warrant applications was accurate and could be verified if questioned.

    But audits conducted beginning in 2003 showed an increasing number of errors and corrections in applications. On Dec. 12, 2005, the court sent a letter of complaint that raised the idea of agents being compelled to swear to the accuracy of information.

    Justice and the FBI are reviewing about 10 percent of the 60,000 ongoing terrorism investigation files in search of problems. "We are learning to live in a different environment, and now we are aware and working on problems, and I think we are creating a lot of fixes," said Jane Horvath, the Justice Department's first chief privacy and civil liberties officer.

    FBI officials said they expect the audit of national security letters for 2006 to show the same problems as those identified in the current audit, which covered 2003 through 2005.

    "You are never going to be at a zero error rate because this is a human endeavor," Wainstein said. "Therefore it is subject to error on occasion. But we're going to do everything we can to minimize them."

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24 marzo

Things are looking up

Often times the many people that write or call me are sodiscouraged  about being targets of nonconsensual weapons testing and surveillance. I tell them that we are gaining ground everytime one of Bush's top men or women get called to testify about what their part in the activities of the illegal activities that are taking place in Washington. Lately it has been Attorney General Gonzales on the hot seat. He should be ont he hot seat along with the Director of Homeland Security and the FBI. The reason for this is the people in this country are promised privacy, legal recourse and a fair trial when they violate the law. The victims of this technology are basically under house arrest with voyuers as their guards. They like the women in prison are sometimes raped and sexually assaulted. They are subjected to pain and many have white tiny scars all over their bodies. We also may be part of a biochemical research study along with the weapons testing. We certainly are under the Active-Denial weapons technology and the pain beams are used as a means to punish us when we try to get the word out to the public or senators.
 
I remember the first time I saw Eleanor White's website before I knew I was a target and my first thought was "This lady belongs in a mental hospital". Often thta is the reaction to our complaints. Why? Because the people using this technology are protected by the heads of the government agencies using it. This is the Department of Defense, National Security, FBI, CIA, Homeland Security and other intelligence agencies. If we were charged and able to get to court the public would see how ridiculous some of the allegations about the people under surveillance are. There seems to be a lot of blacks, homosexual and lesbians along with whistle-blowers in this technology. Former FBI agents have come forward to support those under surveillance.
 
If you think that you are safer when you hear a news announcement about the FBI having 80,000 people under surveillance then think about this. Are you safer if these people are activist, whistle-blowers and not terrorist. The patriot Act should be repaeled and we stop the atmosphere of fear and terror and get on with our lives. I am glad to see that major news networks have stopped using the banner at the bottom of the page that has been yellow for over six years. It is time to move on.
 
There should be no Bill that authorizes any changes to our Constitution based on the "War on Terror" or the "War on Drugs". These are not wars. Isn't it strange that the phrase "The war on drugs" was phrased by Bush Sr. and "The war on terror" by Bush Jr. Let us all do what needs to be done to keep America safe but let's be safe from oppression as well and let's not leave the legacy behind for our children and grandchildren that it is okay to allow agents to peep in your bedroom and bath, okay to use technology to remotely question people when they sleep, okay to punish citizens without a trial and most of all okay to tet people in this country without their knowledge or consent. The Nuerenburg Code states the first thing people being tested should have is "what they are testing and how long and permission to be tested. We want military technology to go forward but space weapons cause cancer and are dangerous in the hands of people that can't restrain themselves and also people that are not monitored. The weapons that are used on us could become a part of your life also in the future becuas ethis is why they are subjecting us to these chemiocals and technology. Has anyone under surveillance in the UNited States been charged with a crime? Yet, many people when they try to get on a plane have been denied that access because they are labeled as terrorist. I wonder who they were protesting against?
25 enero

What my perps say

Last night they told me that Mike G was not involved. They sexually assaulted me about 5 minutes ago 3:53pm and I posted some pictures. I tried to post on my other website but they stopped me. The use of these weapons on citizens should be investigated by Congress as the MKultra Program was investigated. The CIA and FBI have overstepped their boundrys by raping and sodomizing with this weapon.
24 enero

I tried to put a video on this space but it must have upset someone who thinks that our 1st ammendment rights are in their hands.  For those that are in disbelief that V2K is not real or that these weapons do not play with your mind I recommend Dr. Nick Begich's book on non-lethal weapons and this pschtronic weapondry.
26 diciembre

Christmas

I hope everyone had a great holiday. For those of us that are targeted with nonlethal weapons we have had more of the same abuse. The targets get burned, rashes, v2k, unexplained illnesses and a constant barage of threats. Christmas to the people that operate the technology is not like ours. They go home after abusing the citizens of this country, go to church, eat a good meal and brag about their jobs. Their jobs entail raping and sodomizing citizens in this country, causing mental stress and trying to alter their activities. The targets often are homeless because the technology has made them homeless. The targets often do not have the support of their families because the technology has made them appear mentally ill. Go back and read the MKultra papers and you will find that it has never stopped. The CIA and the FBI has continued with the Cointelpro operations designed to discredit many Americans just so that they can make them nonconsensual test subjects. This year we would like everyone's help by writing to your senators and asking them to investigate the nonconsensual nonlethal weapons testing that is under the disguise of surveillance. We ask that you tell them that there should be criteria for any surveillance. This surveillance does not belong here in this country. The perpetrators watch the victims in their bathrooms and bedrooms enjoying the views and sometimes getting off on them. Go to Senator Conyer's website and email him that you would like an investigation into these illegal practices. I like many other victims are told that if we tell about this system that we will be harmed. While I believe that this is an empty threat there are many victims scared when they get threatened. We have computer problems when we write letters to congress. Phone problems and fax problems.
 

Midnight Lady

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I have been a target of non-lethal weapons testing for five years. I am among some very elite company. Many of the victims are whistle-blowers and prior government workers.
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