Bloomberg defends NYPD's "right" to go ANYWHERE in search of

C_Carson

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Nov 18, 2010
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916
The NYPD has infiltrated and photographed Muslim businesses and mosques in New Jersey, monitored the Internet postings of Muslim college students across the Northeast and traveled as far away as New Orleans to infiltrate and build files on liberal advocacy groups....New York Mayor Michael Bloomberg has defended the police department's right to go anywhere in the country in search of terrorists without telling local police. And New Jersey Attorney General Jeffrey Chiesa has said he's seen no evidence that the NYPD's efforts violated his state's laws.

http://news.yahoo.com/confused-911-call ... 32106.html

Bloomberg's cronies, coming soon to a coffee house near you!!!
 

fiundagner

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Jul 21, 2011
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Is anyone surprised by this? NYPD has a history of going outside its jurisdiction and performing illegal-ish actions in pursuit of its greater good. Some years ago they knowingly sent out groups of officers to make straw purchases nationwide using false identities and not one of them was prosecuted for it that I am aware of. So the NYPD officers can commit felonies and get away with it. Until NYPD gets smacked down, hard and repeatedly, they will continue to break the law with impunity.
 

C_Carson

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Nov 18, 2010
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916
I'm certainly not surprised, but some folks out there are, and the more of us that expose these folks to such hard truths, the better.

I've posted this story on all the forums I'm a member of, in the hopes others will do the same, and make such knowledge immediately viral to those who may still yet be unaware.
 

John Canuck

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Aug 3, 2011
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832
Clowns. Each every one of them. I wonder what happens when some of his goon squad gets caught spying on the wrong people and are dealt with, since they aren't on official duty and all.
 

fiundagner

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Jul 21, 2011
Messages
210
I just found out that the NYPD is only following the example set by our own NSA

http://rt.com/usa/news/nsa-whistleblowe ... drake-978/

The TSA, DHS and countless other security agencies have been established to keep America safe from terrorist attacks in post-9/11 America. How far beyond that does the feds? reach really go, though?
The attacks September 11, 2001, were instrumental in enabling the US government to establish counterterrorism agencies to prevent future tragedies. Some officials say that they haven?t stopped there, though, and are spying on everyone in America ? all in the name of national security.
Testimonies delivered in recent weeks by former employees of the National Security Agency suggest that the US government is granting itself surveillance powers far beyond what most Americans consider the proper role of the federal government.
In an interview broadcast on Current TV?s ?Viewpoint? program on Monday, former NSA Technical Director William Binney commented on the government?s policy of blanket surveillance, alongside colleagues Thomas Drake and Kirk Wiebe, the agency's respective former Senior Official and Senior Analyst.
The interview comes on the heels of a series of speeches given by Binney, who has quickly become better known for his whistleblowing than his work with the NSA. In their latest appearance this week, though, the three former staffers suggested that America?s spy program is much more dangerous than it seems.
In an interview with ?Viewpoint? host Eliot Spitzer, Drake said there was a ?key decision made shortly after 9/11, which began to rapidly turn the United States of America into the equivalent of a foreign nation for dragnet blanket electronic surveillance.?
These powers have previously defended by claims of national security necessity, but Drake says that it doesn?t stop there. He warns that the government is giving itself the power to gather intel on every American that could be used in future prosecutions unrelated to terrorism.
?When you open up the Pandora?s Box of just getting access to incredible amounts of data, for people that have no reason to be put under suspicion, no reason to have done anything wrong, and just collect all that for potential future use or even current use, it opens up a real danger ? and to what else what they could use that data for, particularly when it?s all being hidden behind the mantle of national security,? Drake said.
Although Drake?s accusations seem astounding, they corroborate allegations made by Binney only a week earlier. Speaking at the Hackers On Planet Earth conference in New York City earlier this month, Binney addressed a room of thousands about the NSA?s domestic spying efforts. But in a candid interview with journalist Geoff Shively during HOPE, the ex-NSA official candidly revealed the full extent of the surveillance program.
?Domestically, they're pulling together all the data about virtually every U.S. citizen in the country and assembling that information, building communities that you have relationships with, and knowledge about you; what your activities are; what you're doing. So the government is accumulating that kind of information about every individual person and it's a very dangerous process,? Binney said.
Drake and Binney?s statements follow the revelation that law enforcement officers collected cell phone records on 1.3 million Americans in 2011. More news articles are emerging every day suggesting that the surveillance of Americans ? off-the-radar and under wraps ? is growing at an exponential rate.
 
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