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Showing posts with label Tauscher. Show all posts

Former F.B.I. Agent Sues, Claiming Retaliation Over Misgivings in Anthrax Case

 

By SCOTT SHANEAPRIL 8, 2015
  WASHINGTON — When Bruce E. Ivins, an Army microbiologist, took a fatal overdose of Tylenol in 2008, the government declared that he had been responsible for the anthrax letter attacks of 2001, which killed five people and set off a nationwide panic, and closed the case.
Now, a former senior F.B.I. agent who ran the anthrax investigation for four years says that the bureau gathered “a staggering amount of exculpatory evidence” regarding Dr. Ivins that remains secret. The former agent, Richard L. Lambert, who spent 24 years at the F.B.I., says he believes it is possible that Dr. Ivins was the anthrax mailer, but he does not think prosecutors could have convicted him had he lived to face criminal charges.
In a lawsuit filed in federal court in Tennessee last Thursday, Mr. Lambert accused the bureau of trying “to railroad the prosecution of Ivins” and, after his suicide, creating “an elaborate perception management campaign” to bolster its claim that he was guilty. Mr. Lambert’s lawsuit accuses the bureau and the Justice Department of forcing his dismissal from a job as senior counterintelligence officer at the Energy Department’s lab in Oak Ridge, Tenn., in retaliation for his dissent on the anthrax case.
The anthrax letters were mailed to United States senators and news organizations in the weeks after the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, causing a huge and costly disruption in the postal system and the federal government. Members of Congress and Supreme Court justices were forced from their offices while technicians in biohazard suits cleaned up the lethal anthrax powder. Decontamination costs nationwide exceeded $1 billion. At least 17 people were sickened, in addition to the five who died.
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The bureau’s investigation, one of the longest-running and most technically complex inquiries in its history, has long been seen as troubled. Investigators initially lacked the forensic skills to analyze bioterrorist attacks. For several years, agents focused on a former Army scientist and physician, Dr. Steven J. Hatfill, who was subsequently cleared and given a $4.6 million settlement to resolve a lawsuit. Reviews by the National Academy of Sciences and the Government Accountability Office faulted aspects of the F.B.I.’s scientific work on the case.
Photo

The late Bruce Ivins in 2003, when he was a microbiologist at Fort Detrick, Md.CreditSam Yu/Frederick News Post, via Assocaited Press
Mr. Lambert, who was himself criticized for pursuing Dr. Hatfill for so long, has now offered, in his lawsuit and in an interview, an insider’s view of what hampered the investigation.
“This case was hailed at the time as the most important case in the history of the F.B.I.,” Mr. Lambert said. “But it was difficult for me to get experienced investigators assigned to it.”
He said that the effort was understaffed and plagued by turnover, and that 12 of 20 agents assigned to the case had no prior investigative experience. Senior bureau microbiologists were not made available, and two Ph.D. microbiologists who were put on the case were then removed for an 18-month Arabic language program in Israel. Fear of leaks led top officials to order the extreme compartmentalization of information, with investigators often unable to compare notes and share findings with colleagues, he said.
Mr. Lambert said he outlined the problems in a formal complaint in 2006 to the F.B.I.’s deputy director. Some of his accusations were later included in a report on the anthrax case by the CBS News program “60 Minutes,” infuriating bureau leaders.
The F.B.I., which rarely comments on pending litigation, did not respond to requests for comment on Mr. Lambert’s claims.
Although the lethal letters contained notes expressing jihadist views, investigators came to believe the mailer was an insider in the government’s biodefense labs. They eventually matched the anthrax powder to a flask in Dr. Ivins’s lab at Fort Detrick in Maryland and began intense scrutiny of his life and work.
Photo

The police in Frederick, Md., spoke with a woman they identified as Diane Ivins, the wife of Bruce E. Ivins, 62, at the couple's home in Frederick, Md., in 2008. CreditRob Carr/Associated Press
They discovered electronic records that showed he had spent an unusual amount of time at night in his high-security lab in the periods before the two mailings of the anthrax letters. They found that he had a pattern of sending letters and packages from remote locations under assumed names. They uncovered emails in which he described serious mental problems.
The investigators documented Dr. Ivins’s obsession with a national sorority that had an office near the Princeton, N.J., mailbox where the letters were mailed. They detected what they believed to be coded messages directed at colleagues, hidden in the notes in the letters.
As prosecutors prepared to charge him with the five murders in July 2008, Dr. Ivins, 62, took his own life at home in Frederick, Md. Days later, at a news conference, Jeffrey A. Taylor, then the United States attorney for the District of Columbia, said the authorities believed “that based on the evidence we had collected, we could prove his guilt to a jury beyond a reasonable doubt.”

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But Mr. Lambert says the bureau also gathered a large amount of evidence pointing away from Dr. Ivins’s guilt that was never shared with the public or the news media. Had the case come to trial, he said, “I absolutely do not think they could have proved his guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.” He declined to be specific, saying that most of the information was protected by the Privacy Act and was unlikely to become public unless Congress carried out its own inquiry.
After retiring from the F.B.I. in 2012, Mr. Lambert joined the Energy Department. But an F.B.I. ethics lawyer ruled that because Mr. Lambert had to work with F.B.I. agents in his new job, he was violating a conflict-of-interest law that forbade former federal employees from contacting previous colleagues for a year after they had left their government jobs.
That ruling led to his dismissal, Mr. Lambert said, and he has not been able to find work despite applying for more than 70 jobs. His lawsuit asserts that several other former F.B.I. agents were able to take identical intelligence jobs with the Energy Department and that he was singled out for mistreatment.





























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ARSON: Fire engulfs GE industrial park in Louisville, Kentucky

Quick Facts 

Rapid Payment
Hard To Prove
Fast Track Rebuild

 

Fire engulfs GE industrial park in Louisville, Kentucky

By Karan Olson and Greg Botelho, CNN


Updated 10:43 AM ET, Fri April 3, 2015


newday kentucky four alarm fire_00005429
Four-alarm fire at Louisville GE building 01:17

Story highlights

  • Fire breaks out at the General Electric Appliance Park in Louisville, Kentucky
  • City official: No is believed to be injured or trapped
(CNN)A mammoth fire broke out Friday morning in a Kentucky industrial park, sending plumes of thick smoke over the area as authorities worked to contain the damage.
The blaze began shortly before 7 a.m. at the General Electric Appliance Park in Louisville, according to Mike Weimer from the city's emergency management agency. He said that there were no reports of anyone injured or trapped.
Video showed both smoke and bright orange flames. Firefighters took up positions around the affected buildings, spraying water from the periphery.
Weimer told CNN that authorities didn't know what had caused the fire, which had gone to at least four alarms.
According to a GE website, its facility in the Louisville Appliance Park is "revitalizing manufacturing in the United States." The park is large, such that 34 football fields could fit in one of its warehouses in the facility.

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Domestic Terrorism in the East Bay 11th Congressional District

By Pete Bennett 
May 20th 2014


Walnut Creek CA:  On July 20th 2011 my car was totaled in Lafayette CA by persons suspected to have connections with Contra Costa County Narcotics Taskforce (CNET Scandal) who is connected to Gary Vinson Collins who is the now deceased Danville Building Inspector who is now deceased.

For brevity
Bennett has endured during 2004

  • June ~ 1996 Ford Explorer ABS System sabotaged 
  • July ~ Forced to close cabinet shop over shop equipment vandalism 
  • Aug~ Arson victim in August,
  • Sept ~ Town of Danville Sponsored mugging in
  • Oct ~ Right after assault Chris Butler arrives, 
  • San Ramon Police officer Lombardi aims weapon at Bennett, then Danville start the ticket campaign that Judge Golub eventually converts to $15,000 in fines, then there was the Nov 2004 Pipeline Explosion then I meet Alicia Driscoll, then my next door neighbor is allegedly hurt in a school bus accident on Lilac Drive Walnut Creek then my sons and I were targeted in a high speed maneuver known as a swoop and squat.


There is no brevity to my story it's an insane story but in June 2005 Alicia Driscoll died in a murder suicide, an investigation personally feel is flawed as the Alicia I'd see at McDonald's was loving mom and given Judith Williams lived a few doors away in killed her son on Mt. Diablo it doesn't look quite right.

CONGRESSMAN DeSaulnier and the Rusty Bolts Installers 

The bigger question leads back to why this blog exists as the November 9th 2004 pipeline explosion leads back to Alicia Driscoll whose is connected to Joe Driscoll who worked for Mountain Cascade then later I find Ellen Sabudaquaria died shortly later who is the most important witness seeing two men running from the tunnel on fire. To date I cannot her name anywhere on legal proceedings.

She is probably one of the most important first person witnesses to an early example of domestic terrorism.
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