View Full Version : Mindblowing Corruption At FBI - NSA Whistleblower William Binney Reveals
guayabal
21st February 2018, 07:24
The NSA collects all your private data and can use it to incriminate you. This isn't news for us avalon members but it is still scary to hear this whistleblower.
bGYSuULFzt0
Flash
21st February 2018, 18:10
New video and higlhy important new information was given by Binney regarding the overall non-abiding to the law NSA and the police cooperation with the NSA.
Binney is giving a true actual real-life description of Minority Report (Steven Spielberg) movie. Our judicial system now serves to detect some crime (or potential crime) and it takes future pieces of evidence from the future crime and substituting them when the court case for the arrest comes in front of the judge, all this with full knowledge of the police force and NSA, all this in contradiction with and outside the constitution and the law. to substitute them in court for the judge.
I am dreaming, is it now so far unreal that even local police is involved in lies and deceit on a grand level.
Michelle Marie
21st February 2018, 18:58
Police lie under oath and in written official documents. The judge sides with them ignoring the truth and factual evidence.
I am a direct witness.
MM :hat:
Foxie Loxie
21st February 2018, 21:28
"Parallel construction"....that was a new term for me!! Even Lionel has not caught on to this! :facepalm:
Love how Wm. Binney put it..."the Dept. of Just Us"!! :bigsmile:
Fellow Aspirant
22nd February 2018, 17:20
The NSA collects all your private data and can use it to incriminate you. This isn't news for us avalon members but it is still scary to hear this whistleblower.
bGYSuULFzt0
I wouldn't call this "mind blowing". More like "business as usual". They're just doing their job. Well, one of them, anyway. :cool:
B.
Hervé
22nd February 2018, 19:15
[...]
I am dreaming, is it now so far unreal that even local police is involved in lies and deceit on a grand level.
Daily daymare for many:
Baltimore's police are so corrupt that lawmaker proposes to disband and reorganize entire department (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/baltimore-police-so-corrupt-lawmaker-proposes-scrapping-the-entire-department/)
John Vibes
Free Thought Project (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/baltimore-police-so-corrupt-lawmaker-proposes-scrapping-the-entire-department/)
Fri, 16 Feb 2018 00:00 UTC
https://www.sott.net/image/s22/451635/large/baltimore_cops_fired_696x366.jpg (https://www.sott.net/image/s22/451635/full/baltimore_cops_fired_696x366.jpg)
Baltimore cops have proven to be so corrupt and criminal that even lawmakers are kicking around the idea that firing every single cop is a plausible solution.
After a recent corruption trial exposed just how bad things were at the Baltimore City Police Department, Maryland state delegate Bilal Ali suggested that the whole department should be "disbanded and reorganized from the ground up."
In a proposal that he made this week to Mayor Catherine Pugh and Commissioner-Designate Darryl De Sousa, Ali pointed to the example of Camden, who disbanded their police department just a few years ago.
"In 2013 Camden [New Jersey] disbanded its police department in response to record-breaking levels of violence and an extremely inefficient police budget. Four years later, Camden hit its lowest homicide rate in 30-years," Ali said. (http://baltimore.cbslocal.com/2018/02/14/baltimore-police-disbanding-proposal/)
Meanwhile, this past year the city of Baltimore saw its worst ever homicide rate, with a total of 342 killings.
"I'm aware that considering such enormous action may give City residents reason to pause, but the level of corruption and mismanagement at BPD has created a crisis of public confidence that simply cannot foster the productive relationship between community and police that public safety depends on. We now face a once-in-a-lifetime level of dysfunction that requires us to seriously consider once-in-a-lifetime solutions. Of course, the first step to any solution that the City embraces must be an honest and open dialogue with the public, so that Baltimore residents can inform the policies that will define public safety in the City for years to come. The time for platitudes and vague statements is over. The time for bold action and concrete ideas is now," Ali said.
During a press conference on Wednesday morning, Mayor Pugh quickly disregarded the idea of disbanding the force.
"I'm not disbanding the police department. We're trending downward. I think we're headed in the right direction. We've appointed a new police commissioner, we have a 163-page report by the Department of Justice that requires us to reform the police department, and those are the things that we'll continue to do," she said.
The recent federal probe of the city's Gun Trace Task Force unit exposed some of the worst police corruption in recent memory, including carrying around bags filled with BB guns (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/baltimore-police-fbi-investigate-whitleblower-cops-death/) to plant on people they shot.
The fact that this case could potentially bring down the whole department casts more doubt on the official story of Sean Suiter, the Baltimore Police Officer turned whistleblower who was mysteriously shot and killed (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/baltimore-cop-shot-killed-testify/) just before he was set to testify.
This is the longest that a manhunt for the killer of a Baltimore police officer has gone on without an arrest or viable suspect. Previously, the record was held by a suspect who fled to Oklahoma over 50 years ago, before the introduction of big brother cameras and tracking technology, and he was caught in just five days (https://theintercept.com/2017/11/23/baltimore-police-shooting-lockdown/).
It has now been roughly 3 months since Suiter's murder and there has still been no leads or suspects.
Baltimore police have a reputation for using strong-arm mafioso tactics to intimidate fellow officers out of turning on the gang. As we reported back in 2014 (http://thefreethoughtproject.com/good-cop-dead-rat-car-testifying-officers/), Baltimore Detective Joe Crystal became a target of intimidation for his entire department after testifying against other officers in a misconduct case. Following his testimony, he received threats from other officers and even found a dead rat on his car one day.
==============================================
The whole organized crime tradition started not that long ago from an out of the crypt tale around the Yale campus:
POLICE STATE? How it came about in the US of A (http://projectavalon.net/forum4/showthread.php?26195-POLICE-STATE-How-it-came-about-in-the-US-of-A)
[...]
.... In about 1926, one girl escaped after a two-month long episode of being raped nightly and went to the police. Her wealthy family accompanied her. The Bonesmen, on discovering that, used their powerful contacts to call in the National Guard. The police station was set on fire and burned down with the girl, the family, and the police inside! The young men were told by their Bonesmen elders to be more careful; the locks on the crypt were redone. For a few days after that, the diary entries were morose again—some of the men had had their allowance cut because they had “gotten caught”. There was no moral embarrassment at the deed of enslaving the girl, only at the work their parents had had to go to in order to clean up the problem.
After that, the Bonesmen fathers picked who was allowed to be in charge of the policemen in the neighborhood of Yale and eventually in the whole state, just for good measure. After a Harvard girl of very wealthy parents disappeared into the crypt in about 1932, never to be seen again alive, the fathers extended their coverage to Massachusetts. By the end of WWII, they bragged that they had 24 States sewn up against possible murder reports originating from their activities that included drug running and the stealing of girls to sell into sexual slavery. Because the stealing and selling of American children as sex slaves increased, they needed more men to do the kidnapping and transporting of them. It was also helpful to have a border with another country close by to skip over, if one side got onto you.
[...]
wnlight
22nd February 2018, 23:08
Police lie under oath and in written official documents. The judge sides with them ignoring the truth and factual evidence.
I am a direct witness.
MM :hat:
Yes, we have had the same thing happen in our famiy out in West Texas. There is no hope in a judicial system like that.
Cardillac
23rd February 2018, 15:24
the problem with American policemen is that they are hired only if they have a slightly (at best) under-average IQ-
read an article yrs. ago where a man had applied for law enforement work in the US but his application was rejected because he had a 130 IQ (more than average) and the reason his application was rejected was because he was "too intelligent" and would become too bored too quickly with police work- !!!-
the man supposedly contested this but have no idea what the outcome was- haven't researched it-
I've had my own experiences with "ape-men" American policemen in my last 2 US visits:
1) I was pulled aside in a remote area because I didn't use my directional signal when turning left where there was NO on-comming traffic whatsoever- and was acctually summoned to court because of this; the case was immediately thrown out but I still had to appear in Court-
2) was smoking a cigarette in a remote area (on my way to visit my family after a grueling, 10-hr. trans-Atlantic flight which was LATE in every respect- thank God my luggage made it in time- but my smoking-time back then was greatly impaired :-)))- it was my 1st cigarette of the day- (I've since quit smoking)-
I was searched bodily and car-wise for almost 10 min. just because I looked "suspicious" (was just smoking a cigarette in a fairly remote area in the open)- I managed to "humor" these primates (I'm a good actor) and they eventually left me alone (I was obviously a dissappointment- awww, gosh!) without having planted drug-evidence by them in my car; I was lucky-
Larry
Flash
23rd February 2018, 16:36
I had a few similar experiences, but mostly at the border. However, usually, when a quebecer has a car accident in the US, it is almost never deemed an accident but it is deemed a crime. The trouble ensuing is incredible. This is why I took a 2 millions dolkarsdollars insurance, just because sometimes I drive in the US. No needs for such a large amount in Canada.
However, to be fair, I was wrongly accused of snashing a car in Florida and ssked for cash, and I refused to pay. So the person/thief vandalised her car and accused me. The local sherif saved my butt and refused to first declare an accident, but declared an incident. So when the vandalism accusation came, he gave his report and testified for me. Thanks to him, I can still cross the border.
the problem with American policemen is that they are hired only if they have a slightly (at best) under-average IQ-
read an article yrs. ago where a man had applied for law enforement work in the US but his application was rejected because he had a 130 IQ (more than average) and the reason his application was rejected was because he was "too intelligent" and would become too bored too quickly with police work- !!!-
the man supposedly contested this but have no idea what the outcome was- haven't researched it-
I've had my own experiences with "ape-men" American policemen in my last 2 US visits:
1) I was pulled aside in a remote area because I didn't use my directional signal when turning left where there was NO on-comming traffic whatsoever- and was acctually summoned to court because of this; the case was immediately thrown out but I still had to appear in Court-
2) was smoking a cigarette in a remote area (on my way to visit my family after a grueling, 10-hr. trans-Atlantic flight which was LATE in every respect- thank God my luggage made it in time- but my smoking-time back then was greatly impaired :-)))- it was my 1st cigarette of the day- (I've since quit smoking)-
I was searched bodily and car-wise for almost 10 min. just because I looked "suspicious" (was just smoking a cigarette in a fairly remote area in the open)- I managed to "humor" these primates (I'm a good actor) and they eventually left me alone (I was obviously a dissappointment- awww, gosh!) without having planted drug-evidence by them in my car; I was lucky-
Larry
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