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  1. #2126
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    Why Police From Different States Invaded a Standing Rock Camp -- and Other Questions




    On Thursday, scores of law enforcement officers from seven different states showed up with riot gear, armored vehicles, and military weaponry to clear away Standing Rock's newest camp, the "1851 Treaty Camp." The camp stands directly in the path of the Dakota Access pipeline. Tipis and sweat lodges were destroyed. Vehicles were set ablaze. More than 140 protesters were arrested.

    The county sheriff is claiming the water protectors were violent and that police were stopping a riot. But hours of live video feed from people caught in the confrontation showed instead a military-style assault on unarmed people: police beating people with batons, police with assault rifles, chemical mace, guns firing rubber bullets and beanbag rounds, tasers.

    Law enforcement from at least six other states have been involved in the assaults in North Dakota.And Morton County's sheriff claims the federal government's refusal to provide manpower and financial assistance factored into the call for help from other states.

    The troops from other states (Wisconsin, Indiana, South Dakota, Minnesota, Wyoming, and Nebraska) are sent here through the Emergency Management Assistance Compact, which was designed for natural disaster situations.

    Elders and children have been bitten by DAPL private security attack dogs, pepper-sprayed, shot with rubber bullets, and beaten by police. Often elders are in ceremonial dress and actively praying when arrested -- drumming, singing, burning sage. One member of the International Indigenous Youth Council suffered a broken wrist from a strike with a police baton, and just a few days later an officer saw the cast and intentionally twisted her wrist to reinjure her.

    Journalists are often targeted during confrontations because they possess and disseminate evidence of police brutality and human rights violations. Medics are also targeted because they make it possible for protectors to continue fighting the Dakota Access pipeline on the frontlines.

    These are recognized combat tactics, and if it were actually a war, clear violations of Geneva Convention humanitarian rules. Clearly identifiable medics have been shot in the back with less-lethal ammunition while attending to patients. On Thursday, several people saw police use batons to hit two medics who were sitting on the back of a vehicle, slowly retreating from the police line. They also pulled the driver out of the car while it was moving, and it continued into the crowd.

    http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/38203-why-police-from-different-states-invaded-a-standing-rock-camp-and-other-questions

    Militarized-police-state America is ed and un able, unless all y'all have evidence to the contrary.

    The BigOil division of the corporatocracy depends on the taxpayer-funded goons to criminalize, brutalize dissent.





  2. #2127
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    It’s still happening: NYPD plainclothes cop stops and frisks black teen for standing on sidewalk

    Jonathan Franks shared a video to his Twitter account on Wednesday afternoon of a young black male being stopped and frisked in Midtown Manhattan by two New York police officers in plain clothes.

    The tweet read, “Welcome to being black in Midtown Manhattan… @NYPDnews I was there – no reasonable su ion…” The video shows a boy on the street-side standing as an officer searches his pants pockets.

    What’s especially important, as Franks notes, is there was no reasonable su ion.


    http://www.rawstory.com/2016/11/its-...e+Raw+Story%29



  3. #2128
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    Police pepper-spray black students peacefully protesting David Duke

    “No Duke, no KKK, no fascist USA.”

    Students at the historically black college Dillard University came out in force Wednesday night to protest a Louisiana Senate debate featuring former Ku Klux Klan Grand Wizard David Duke.

    About 75 people, mostly Dillard students, gathered at the door to the mostly empty building where the debate was being staged, demanding to be let it.

    “Let black excellence through,” the protesters chanted.

    Campus police did eventually open the door to the building — but only to mace the students trying to push their way inside.Students scattered, eyes watering and noses running.

    “They sprayed us directly in the face with it. I was covered on my shirt, my arms, my face,” Hannah Galloway, a white student from University of New Orleans, told reporters. “They’re bodyslamming people, they pulled girls’ hair.

    A few minutes later, protesters said, the police opened the door again and sprayed students who were simply standing at the door.

    Prior to the pepper-spraying, at least one student, Brielle Kennedy, was handcuffed and taken away by campus police.

    “She’s strong, a leader, she won’t back down,” another Dillard student, Brunisha Jones, said of Kennedy. “She stands for black people, black pride.”

    https://thinkprogress.org/police-pep...31e#.mr1pf66y0


    No surprise, it's Louisiana.

  4. #2129
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    Slave state news

    Ex-detective describes sheriff’s view of black community: ‘They needed to be treated like animals’




    A Louisiana sheriff routinely encouraged his narcotics squad to rough up black residents “to let them know it was our streets,” according to a former detective’s testimony.

    “When people ran, we punished them for running,”

    Narcotics agents viewed the community they served with disdain and were encouraged to treat them harshly,

    “They were animals,” the former officer testified, “and they needed to be treated like animals.”

    Comeaux testified that drunken off-duty narcotics agents were lightly punished for beating up two young black men for no reason — which other officers called “n****r knockin.'”

    The sheriff was angry the officers had been caught — which required a report — and both former agents said the incident, which became legendary within the department, sent a clear message about violence.

    “It taught me that I didn’t have to follow the rules, that is was okay to step out of line because I wouldn’t get in trouble for it,”

    Comeaux testified that the sheriff watched him and two other deputies beat an inmate 20 to 30 and forced him to stimulate oral sex in the jail chapel, out of the view of surveillance cameras,

    The sheriff was caught on tape threatening to shoot a federal prosecutor between his “Jewish eyes,”

    http://www.rawstory.com/2016/11/ex-d...-like-animals/





  5. #2130
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    SA cop fired for attempting to feed fecal sandwich to homeless person


    http://www.mysanantonio.com/news/loc...h-10593479.php

  6. #2131
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    Las Vegas PD Continues To Use Faulty $2 Drug Field Tests Because Convictions Matter More Than Justice

    The War on Drugs has never really been about eradicating illegal drugs. It's been about putting up numbers: seizures, busts, indictments, convictions. A steady flow of illegal drugs into the country ensures a steady flow of tax dollars into hundreds of government agencies. Officials talk a lot about taking down cartels, but they spend more time grabbing cash from travelers and anything they can from someone who's got nothing more on them than quan ies that could be generously called "personal use."
    Making law enforcement's Drug War "efforts" easier and a whole lot cheaper are field drug tests: notoriously unreliable chemical tails that are worth every cent of $2/per they pay for them. In an earlier story about these tests, two New York Times journalists detailed Amy Albritton's experience. Albritton spent three weeks in jail after a false positive from a field drug test determined that the caffeine-and-aspirin "crumb" (roughly the size of a "grain of salt" according to the lab test) was crack cocaine. For $2, Albritton lost most of her life. She served her short sentence -- one she only obtained by pleading guilty -- and now faces a future where her permanent record shows she's a convicted felon.

    ProPublica is also tackling the issue of cheap, unreliable field tests -- ones deemed just reliable enough to cost people their lives.
    The Las Vegas Police Department's own crime lab found the field tests used by officers to be so inaccurate they actually lobbied to have their use discontinued.

    In a 2014 report that Las Vegas police submitted to the U.S. Department of Justice under the terms of a federal grant, the lab detailed how the kits produced false positives. Legal substances sometimes create the same colors as illegal drugs. Officers conducting the tests, lab officials acknowledged, misinterpreted results. New technology was available — and clearly needed to protect against wrongful convictions.

    The lab's opinion didn't matter. Cops and prosecutors loved the field tests. It ensured a steady flow of busts and convictions.

    Yet to this day, the kits remain in everyday use in Las Vegas. In 2015, the police department made some 5,000 arrests for drug offenses, and the local courts churned out 4,600 drug convictions, nearly three-quarters of them relying on field test results, according to an analysis of police and court data. Indeed, the department has expanded the use of the kits, adding heroin to the list of illegal drugs the tests can be used to detect.

    And while the drug lab that bats cleanup for field tests found them unreliable, these findings have never been passed on to the people who matter: judges. Not that it appears to matter. ProPublica brought its findings to the chief judge of the Las Vegas District Court only to receive a shrug in response.

    “These are tests that have been accepted for years,” said Bonaventure, who became a judge in 2004. “They’re not being challenged.”

    In other words, the police have told me they're reliable so they must be reliable. Otherwise, why would so many people plead guilty to possession?

    Perhaps it's because someone pleading out to avoid a longer prison sentence is engaged in arbitrage -- weighing the potential years they could be facing if their bid fails against a quicker in-and-out local jail sentence that makes the immediate future look a bit brighter than the alternative.

    Phil Kohn, chief of the Las Vegas public defender’s office, acknowledged that the prospect of serious prison time has the effect of strong-arming pleas.


    “If you’re wondering why the public defender is pleading these cases, it’s because the alternative is horrific,” Kohn said.

    In Las Vegas, only eight of the 4,633 drug convictions were the result of a trial. The rest were plea deals. And that's where the reliance of faulty field tests turns into the blackest of human comedies. If someone pleads guilty, the evidence that possibly isn't simply vanishes.

    While DOJ standards for the last 40 years have called for qualified labs to re-examine all field test results, the agency has made no effort to insist that happens or to install other protections against mistakes and the wrongful convictions that could result.


    And the destruction of field tests after guilty pleas is hardly limited to Las Vegas.

    In some jurisdictions, defendants accepting guilty pleas agree as a term of the arrangement that the evidence against them will be destroyed.

    In others, the alleged evidence is simply discarded over time. In a 2013 federal survey of local and state crime labs, 62 percent reported that police agencies don’t submit suspected drugs when a defendant pleads guilty early on in the process.

    To make matters worse, ProPublica found public defenders haven't done much to challenge the use of unreliable fields tests. A 2000 report covering the Las Vegas public defender's office showed some lawyers hadn't filed a motion to suppress "in over five years."

    While the quality of representation has gotten better over the years, follow-up reports still found a dearth of aggressive defense. Of course, like almost every other public defender's office in the US, Las Vegas's is overworked and underfunded, with each attorney saddled with 200+ active cases at any given time.


    https://www.techdirt.com/articles/20...-justice.shtml



  7. #2132
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    six states have sent goons to oppose BigOil's protestors



    America The Beautiful

  8. #2133
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    Mother horrified by photo of St. Louis cop giving ‘thumbs up’ next to her son’s body




    http://www.rawstory.com/2016/11/moth...e+Raw+Story%29

    just another dead knitter, thumbs up and smiling

  9. #2134
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    Fort Worth woman claims DPS trooper ripped her nipple ring




    Two Fort Worth women are considering a lawsuit after a Texas trooper allegedly ripped a nipple piercing in one woman's breast, according to Dallas TV station KXAS.

    The trooper - identified by arrest records at Michael Tice - is on administrative duty pending an investigation, according to a Department of Public Safety spokesman.

    The problems started when Tayler Myers, 18, and Courtney Palacios, 19, got pulled over for speeding as they were heading home from a Houston concert Monday.


    The trooper who stopped them near Waco said he found a pill in vehicle and collared the women and their two male friends for drug possession, the TV station reported.


    When the women - who said they knew nothing about the pill - were booked in the Falls County Jail, the trooper told them to take out their piercings.

    "And then we told him, 'Well, where do we go to take out our nipple rings?'" Myers told KXAS. "And he was like, 'You are going to have to do it right here, in the open'."

    They both took out their right piercings, but had trouble with the left side.

    So the trooper allegedly picked up a pair of pliers and decided to lend a hand.


    "He came up to me and he got really close to it, and he was just staring," Palacios recounted.


    "He's like, 'I think it unscrews from the left side.' So then, without gloves or anything – and I could see dirt under his nails, it was extremely disgusting – he gets on there and he tries to twist it and he starts shaking from trying so hard and he ends up pulling it and ripping it and it starts bleeding."


    Palacios shrieked in pain and the trooper backed away.


    "It was extremely uncomfortable and uncalled for and I don't think he should have been anywhere near me," she said.


    In the end, they never managed to get the piercing out.


    A female employee helped remove Myers' piercing, but she still described the trooper's actions as "not right."


    Afterward, the pierced pair found a Fort Worth lawyer to take their case.


    "He has violated every policy and procedure known to police work," said attorney Curtis Fortinberry.


    "That is just absolutely mind-boggling that he would do this."


    http://m.sfgate.com/news/article/For...t-10597100.php

    isolated case, just another bad apple in army of police angels



  10. #2135
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    Tampa DA charges disabled mother for stealing, despite video evidence that she was framed

    Tampa's head prosecutor spent ten months prosecuting a shoplifting case, despite clear video evidence that proved the defendant was framed. Hillsborough County State Attorney Mark Ober’s office wasted time and tax-payer money prosecuting a 57-year-old disabled mother for stealing $29 of flea medicine—allegedly because Ober didn't want to upset the local Walmart.

    In early 2014, Vicki Carll was walking out of a Tampa Walmart when she "two men grabbed her, manhandled her and dragged her back into the store," according to WTSP. From their report:

    At the time Carll says she was baffled. “I didn't know what was happening, I thought I was being mugged, actually, because I had $500 in my hand and I didn't know what was going on, I had no idea.”


    It turned out Carll was being arrested for shoplifting. The security guard who was waiting on a bench next to the exit said she stole flea medication worth $29.

    According to a civil suit Carll filed against Walmart early this week, Carll had examined the flea medication while in the store, but put it back on the shelf once she realized it was the wrong kind. She hadn't realized that a "floor walker," a pseudo security-guard whose job is to identify shoplifters, had been following her around the store. Carll says that the floor walker, Arismendy Rosario, picked up the flea medication, planted the evidence, and then waited for her to leave the store.

    From WTSP:

    [Carll's Attorney Barry] Cohen claims this was an elaborate plan by the security guard to frame his client. In a lawsuit filed Monday afternoon, Cohen points out

    the security tape shows the guard, who just started that day, dumped something on the floor from a box and then seconds later accused Carll of stealing that item.

    According to Cohen, a veteran attorney, “I've never seen a case I can think about where the bad guy, in this case the Walmart employee, was actually caught on video planting the evidence."


    http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016...she-was-framed

  11. #2136
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    Mapping Reveals Rising Use of Social Media Monitoring Tools by Cities Nationwide

    local governments and police are using social media monitoring products to probe posts on sites such as Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, Youtube, Google+, and Vine for information on protests, potential threats, breaking news, and more.

    according to a 2015 survey by the International Association of Police Chiefs, 96.4% percent of law enforcement agencies surveyed used social media in some capacity, including over half for listening or monitoring and three-quarters for intelligence gathering purposes.

    News articles indicate that software is used to compile evidence for criminal investigations, shorten emergency response times, alert police to potential threats, detect trends in activity, and analyze sentiment levels in postings.

    the technology can also be used to monitor political and social justice movements, posing risks to First Amendment-protected activity.

    public safety agencies have used software that pulls in a wealth of information, including social media data, to assign individuals "threat levels." Some companies allow law enforcement to create "undercover accounts," or "targeted friend requests" that law enforcement believes the subject will accept – including "accounts depicting 'attractive women'" or accounts purporting to be from an actual friend or acquaintance.

    Police have also made it clear that they know the iden y of protestors at times, such as when a police officer called activist Ashley Yates
    by her twitter handle BROWNblaze at a New York protest.

    http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/3...ies-nationwide

    Have, or would, ST admins cough up real names if cops asked?



  12. #2137
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    freedom of assembly, freedom of speech

    Proposed bill turns protesting into a felony

    A Republican Washington state senator who supported Donald Trump is proposing a bill that would slap an “economic terrorism” label on protest activities already prohibited by law and dramatically intensify their penalties.

    The proposed bill would allow police to charge protesters who “block transportation and commerce, cause property damage, threaten jobs and put public safety at risk” with a class C felony.

    if you think that you’re not at risk because you don’t get out and protest, think again …

    The Republican state senator said similar charges would apply to those who “fund, organize, sponsor” such protests, and the bill would force such individuals to “pay res ution up to triple the amount of economic damage” done.

    The bill would make it possible to charge anyone who ever participated in a protest, or anyone who ever funded an organization that was involved in a protest, on the vaguest hint of “impeding business” or affecting “public safety.”



    Yes, blocking traffic—either of vehicles or customers—is already a crime, but it’s one that’s rarely enforced and which results in relatively minor charges.

    In Washington state, intentionally interfering with or obstructing pedestrian or vehicle traffic can result in a misdemeanor punishable by a fine of up to $1,000 and/or imprisonment of up to 90 days.

    Under Ericksen’s proposal to make these activities a class C felony, the same activity could result in five years in prison, a $10,000 fine or both.


    http://www.dailykos.com/story/2016/11/17/1600850/-Proposed-bill-turns-protesting-into-a-felony?detail=email&link_id=1&can_id=4217e8eb109c6 8bd0c2e4143dd2d8c15&source=email-proposed-bill-turns-protesting-into-a-felony&email_referrer=proposed-bill-turns-protesting-into-a-felony&email_subject=proposed-bill-turns-protesting-into-a-felony

  13. #2138
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    ICE Bans Lawyers From Bringing Crayons Into South Texas Lockup For Asylum Seeking Women and Children

    crayons are now off limits inside the facility’s visitation rooms because of “crayons which RAICES staff/volunteers have given children which have caused property damage to the contractor.”

    the crayon ban hints at a larger problem.

    “Even before the ban on crayons, we have faced and continue to face significant impediments to working with traumatized women and children in the visitation area,”

    RAICES staffers say they've long used coloring materials as a healthy distraction for these kids while attorneys and parents iron out asylum claims in these visitation-room meetings.

    The kids have a small play area available to them – a nine-by-five-foot mat, basically – but attorneys say private prison staff are usually so mean to the children that many refuse to leave their mother's side. In their letter to ICE officials protesting the recent crayon ban, the attorneys say the children are often "reprimanded by GEO staff, sometimes harshly."


    http://www.sacurrent.com/the-daily/a...n-and-children

    For-profit sickos bullying immigrant kids.



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  15. #2140
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    Study: Texas Prison System Routinely Ignores Sexual Assault and Rape

    None of the sexual assault and rape cases reported by inmates in Texas prisons have been appropriately followed up on, according to a new survey of Texas prisoners.

    Instead, the vast majority of inmates who have reported abuse have been retaliated against for filing a complaint in the first place.

    "We've known this has been going on behind bars for years, but this report helps quantify it."

    The majority of reported assaults came from the Estelle Unit, a prison ten miles from Huntsville.

    Nearly 60 percent of inmates surveyed had reported that their sexual abuser was a prison staff member.

    In 2014 alone, 766 allegations of
    staff-on-inmate sexual abuse incidents were reported to TDCJ.

    http://www.sacurrent.com/the-daily/a...sault-and-rape



  16. #2141
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  17. #2142
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    Looks like a hockey stick since Obama took office
    I guess all the anti-police rhetoric from this administration, its supporters and the media in the last eight years has only deepened the sane majority's respect for our law enforcement.

  18. #2143
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    SAPD officer just assassinated. Witnesses say a black guy pulled up behind him while on a routine traffic stop, walked up and shot him in the head, then shot him again.

  19. #2144
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    SAPD officer just assassinated. Witnesses say a black guy pulled up behind him while on a routine traffic stop, walked up and shot him in the head, then shot him again.
    that's what criminals are supposed to do, that's why they are criminals.

    Cops aren't supposed to slaughter blacks, that's why the cops are criminals.

    and of course, y'all ignore the cops Shutzstaffel


    The troubling rise of SWAT teams


    SWAT team use has ed from around 3,000 strikes per year in 1980 to

    as many as 80,000 raids a year now.

    A battering ram or other forced-entry device is used in two-thirds of these raids,

    http://theweek.com/articles/531458/troubling-rise-swat-teams

    That's 200+ Shutzstaffel raids PER DAY.

    and then the cops STEAL $100Ms from innocent citizens with civil forfeiture.


    Last edited by boutons_deux; 11-20-2016 at 03:54 PM.

  20. #2145
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    SAPD officer just assassinated. Witnesses say a black guy pulled up behind him while on a routine traffic stop, walked up and shot him in the head, then shot him again.
    Smh

    http://www.kens5.com/news/local/sapd...n-sa/354247590

  21. #2146
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    anti-police rhetoric from this administration
    Pussy.

  22. #2147
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    Body cam catches officer's comments: 'mouthy little b*tches' and bullets in the head

    "Mouthy little es, oh my ing God," the officer says.

    "If I can get away with it I would have put a bullet in the center of each one of their heads."

    http://www.dailykos.com/stories/2016/11/21/1602520/-Body-cam-catches-officer-s-comments-mouthy-little-b-ches-and-bullets-in-the-head?detail=email&link_id=3&can_id=4217e8eb109c68b d0c2e4143dd2d8c15&source=email-msnbc-host-joe-scarborough-has-been-advising-trump-behind-the-scenes&email_referrer=msnbc-host-joe-scarborough-has-been-advising-trump-behind-the-scenes&email_subject=msnbc-host-joe-scarborough-has-been-advising-trump-behind-the-scenes

    Police working hard to win the approval of their victims!



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    See for yourself a glimpse of police brutality at Standing Rock.

    Law enforcement at the Standing Rock Sioux encampment blasted 400 Dakota Access protesters with tear gas, rubber bullets, and water cannons Sunday night as temperatures dipped below freezing.

    At least 167 protesters were injured, and some were left unconscious or bleeding.
    Nexus Media was there to capture the aftermath.

    http://grist.org/briefly/see-for-yourself-a-glimpse-of-police-brutality-at-standing-rock/

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    TigerSwan Security, Linked to Blackwater, Now Coordinates Intel for Dakota Access

    We speak with Intercept co-founder Jeremy Scahill, who has spent years reporting on private security contractors such as the private security firm TigerSwan, which has links to the now-defunct mercenary firm Blackwater and is in charge of coordinating intelligence for the Dakota Access pipeline company.

    He discusses the company’s track record as more than 100 Native Americans and allies fighting the $3.8 billion Dakota Access pipeline have been injured by police in North Dakota.

    Many were attacked with rubber bullets, tear gas, mace canisters and water cannons in freezing temperatures.

    The attack began after the water protectors attempted to clear access to a public bridge, which has been blocked by authorities using military equipment chained to concrete barriers.

    TigerSwan, was founded by a Delta Force operative named James Reese and has done voluminous amounts of covert and overt work for the U.S. military in Iraq, in Afghanistan and elsewhere around the world.

    And, you know, you realize that you have this

    convergence of all that has been so wrong in the post-9/11 world,

    with these big environment-destroying companies,

    the stripping even further of indigenous rights,

    private security forces,

    the brutality against protesters,

    the paramilitarization of law enforcement.


    https://www.democracynow.org/2016/11/21/jeremy_scahill_tigerswan_security_linked_to



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    As Rule 41 Quietly Passes, Trump to Inherit Expanded Hacking Powers

    Changes to rule allow FBI agents to remotely hack into computers that are outside of the judicial district where warrant was issued

    The amendments (pdf) to Rule 41 of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure now allow intelligence agents to get warrants to hack into computers that are outside of the judicial district where the warrant was issued, if the target is using anonymity or encryption software like virtual private networks (VPNs), Tor browsing, or other protection tools.

    "So," the digital rights group Fight for the Future said this week, "if the FBI wants to hack you but they don't have evidence that passes muster with your local federal judge, they will be able to take their case to a more lenient (or more naïve) judge located anywhere in the country."

    "By sitting here and doing nothing, the Senate has given consent to this expansion of government hacking and surveillance,"

    "Without a debate or any new law, the rights of every American—and basic privacy of people around the world—have been narrowed."

    "The government is attempting to use a process designed for procedural changes to expand its investigatory powers," EFF activism director Rainey Reitman said at the time.

    "Make no mistake: these changes to Rule 41 will result in a dramatic increase in government hacking."

    http://www.commondreams.org/news/201...hacking-powers

    Can anybody find what Congressperson(s) actually wrote Rule 41?



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