Daily Archives: August 28, 2009

The Secret History of Hurricane Katrina

blackwater_mercenaries

Blackwater mercenaries stride through New Orleans

There was nothing natural about the disaster that befell New Orleans in Katrina’s aftermath.

Mother Jones | Aug 28, 2009

By James Ridgeway

Confronted with images of corpses floating in the blackened floodwaters or baking in the sun on abandoned highways, there aren’t too many people left who see what happened following Hurricane Katrina as a purely “natural” disaster. The dominant narratives that have emerged, in the four years since the storm, are of a gross human tragedy, compounded by social inequities and government ineptitude—a crisis subsequently exploited in every way possible for political and financial gain.

But there’s an even harsher truth, one some New Orleans residents learned in the very first days but which is only beginning to become clear to the rest of us: What took place in this devastated American city was no less than a war, in which victims whose only crimes were poverty and blackness were treated as enemies of the state.

It started immediately after the storm and flood hit, when civilian aid was scarce—but private security forces already had boots on the ground. Some, like Blackwater (which has since redubbed itself Xe), were under federal contract, while a host of others answered to wealthy residents and businessmen who had departed well before Katrina and needed help protecting their property from the suffering masses left behind. According Jeremy Scahill’s reporting in The Nation, Blackwater set up an HQ in downtown New Orleans. Armed as they would be in Iraq, with automatic rifles, guns strapped to legs, and pockets overflowing with ammo, Blackwater contractors drove around in SUVs and unmarked cars with no license plates.

“When asked what authority they were operating under,” Scahill reported, “one guy said, ‘We’re on contract with the Department of Homeland Security.’ Then, pointing to one of his comrades, he said, ‘He was even deputized by the governor of the state of Louisiana. We can make arrests and use lethal force if we deem it necessary.’ The man then held up the gold Louisiana law enforcement badge he wore around his neck.”

The Blackwater operators described their mission in New Orleans as “securing neighborhoods,” as if they were talking about Sadr City. When National Guard troops descended on the city, the Army Times described their role as fighting “the insurgency in the city.” Brigadier Gen. Gary Jones, who commanded the Louisiana National Guard’s Joint Task Force, told the paper, “This place is going to look like Little Somalia. We’re going to go out and take this city back. This will be a combat operation to get this city under control.”

Ten days after the storm, the New York Times reported that although the city was calm with no signs of looting (though it acknowledged this had taken place previously), “New Orleans has turned into an armed camp, patrolled by thousands of local, state, and federal law enforcement officers, as well as National Guard troops and active-duty soldiers.” The local police superintendent ordered all weapons, including legally registered firearms, confiscated from civilians. But as the Times noted, that order didn’t “apply to hundreds of security guards hired by businesses and some wealthy individuals to protect property…[who] openly carry M-16′s and other assault rifles.” Scahill spoke to Michael Montgomery, the chief of security for one wealthy businessman who said his men came under fire from “black gangbangers” near the Ninth Ward. Armed with AR-15s and Glocks, Montgomery and his men “unleashed a barrage of bullets in the general direction of the alleged shooters on the overpass. ‘After that, all I heard was moaning and screaming, and the shooting stopped. That was it. Enough said.’”

Malik Rahim, a Vietnam veteran and longtime community activist, was one of the organizers of the Common Ground Collective, which quickly began dispensing basic aid and medical care in the first days after the hurricane. But far from aiding the relief workers, Rahim told me this week, the police and troops who began patrolling the streets treated them as criminals or “insurgents.” African American men caught outside also ran the risk of crossing paths with roving vigilante patrols who shot at will, he says. In this dangerous environment, Common Ground began to rely on white volunteers to move through a city that had simply become too perilous for blacks.

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Cops investigating cops is a conflict: commissioner

Richmond News | Aug 12, 2009

by Nelson Bennett

If the RCMP will not change the way they investigate themselves, the B.C. solicitor- general should strike a new provincial police force and end its contract with the RCMP, says the lawyer representing the mother of Robert Dziekanski.

“You can’t have a police force that’s not responsive to the population,” says Walter Kosteckyj, who feels the provinces and government of Canada have abrogated their responsibility with respect to the RCMP.

“The RCMP has been left to their own devices,” he said.

Kosteckyj was responding to a report released Tuesday by Paul Kennedy, the commissioner for the RCMP’s Public Complaints Commission.

A number of high-profile deaths involving the RCMP — notably Dziekanski’s in October 2007, and the in-custody death of Ian Bush — have resulted in mounting public pressure to change the way the RCMP conduct internal investigations.

In the Dziekanski case, the four Richmond Mounties were interviewed by RCMP members with the Integrated Homicide Investigation Team (IHIT), which is made up of both RCMP and municipal forces.

Under the model being proposed by Kennedy, IHIT could still do such an internal investigation, but the investigators themselves should not be members of the RCMP.

“There should be no RCMP involvement in investigations involving deaths,” Kennedy concludes in his report.

There is an inherent conflict of interest when the RCMP investigates itself, Kennedy concludes in his report.

Given the nature of criminal investigations, however, Kennedy says police need to be involved when the RCMP are themselves under investigation for alleged criminal action. But in serious cases — like the Tasering of Dziekanski by Richmond RCMP — he recommends investigations be done by external police agencies.

“We are not saying the RCMP should never investigate itself, but we are saying in certain cases it should not,” Kennedy said at a press conference Tuesday at the release of his report, Police Investigating Police.

In November 2007, Kennedy launched a review of RCMP internal investigations.

Kennedy studied 28 cases in which the RCMP investigated itself. The Dziekanski case was not one of them, although it is specifically highlighted in Kennedy’s report as a prime example of the public perception that cops investigating cops is an inherent conflict of interest.

Overall, the conduct of the RCMP members conducting internal investigations was beyond reproach. However, Kennedy concluded that the very nature of such investigations posed problems.

In 25 per cent of the cases reviewed, the investigating officers personally knew the officers they were investigating, and often it was a single officer doing the investigation.

In a third of the cases, the officer being investigated was superior in rank to the investigating officer, “thereby creating the potential for intimidation.”

Kennedy said RCMP investigators looking into the actions of a fellow Mountie are told to approach it like any other crime.

“We disagree strongly with this principle,” Kennedy said at a press conference Tuesday.

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Related

Taser inquiry lawyers troubled by RCMP email

“‘The guys would suggest they think of it as family and thinking of it as family while at the same time they are supposedly investigating whether their officers may have misconducted themselves, that surprises me,” Rosenbloom said.

Medical examiner rules young man’s Taser death a police homicide

Tarrant County medical examiner rules young man’s Taser death a homicide

The homicide ruling does not necessarily mean that anyone will be charged with a crime.

Star Telegram | Aug 27, 2009

By ELIZABETH ZAVALA and MITCH MITCHELL

FORT WORTH — FORT WORTH — The Tarrant County medical examiner ruled Thursday that the death of a mentally ill man in April who was shocked twice by a Taser stun gun wielded by a Fort Worth police officer was a homicide.

It was the fourth time that a person shocked by a Taser has died in Fort Worth police custody since the department started using the devices in 2001, according to the Police Department.

But the death of Michael Patrick Jacobs Jr., 24, is the first that Medical Examiner Nizam Peerwani has ruled to be a homicide.

Jacobs was pronounced dead about noon April 18, an hour after he was hit by the Taser. His parents had called 911 because he was causing a disturbance at their east Fort Worth home, police have reported.

According to Peerwani’s report, an officer shot Jacobs twice with the Taser, once for 49 seconds and another time for five seconds. An autopsy found no drugs, no system abnormalities and no electrolyte imbalances in Jacobs’ body, Peerwani wrote.

Jacobs died of “sudden death during neuromuscular incapacitation due to application” of the Taser, Peerwani wrote.

Tasers deliver a 50,000-volt shock that can temporarily immobilize a person.

Fort Worth police have not identified any of the officers present.

Police Chief Jeff Halstead said that with the release of Peerwani’s ruling, the department can complete an internal investigation. That report will be turned over to the Tarrant County district attorney’s office in anticipation of a grand jury review, Halstead said.

District Attorney Joe Shannon said his office will review reports from police and Peerwani and present a case to a grand jury to determine what, if any, charge the officer might face. The grand jury likely will also hear testimony from witnesses.

Shannon emphasized that the homicide ruling does not necessarily mean that anyone will be charged with a crime.

“The word homicide does not mean crime,” he said. “It just means that the death involved another person.”

Charges involving death typically range from criminally negligent homicide to murder, but there are many other possibilities, Shannon said.

“There are probably 20 possibilities that could come out of this,” Shannon said. “I don’t know if it will be any.”

Extending condolences

At a hastily called news conference late Thursday afternoon, Halstead said: “First and foremost we wanted to extend our condolences to the family of Michael Jacobs. We know that this has been a very long road for them.”

Since Fort Worth police began using Tasers in 2001, officers have discharged the weapon in 1,360 cases, Halstead said. Of those, four people died. In three cases, Peerwani ruled that the deaths were accidental and listed cocaine intoxication as the cause of death. Jacobs’ was the first homicide.

Nationwide, several Taser-related deaths have been ruled homicides since the first ruling in Chicago in 2005. In Texas, medical examiners ruled homicides in a Waco case in 2005 and a San Antonio case in 2007.

Danville police kill dog with Taser

On June 8, a Danville officer fired a single gunshot that killed an 11-year-old miniature dachshund that was growling at him.

Times Dispatch | Aug 28, 2009

DANVILLE — For the second time in less than three months, Danville police have killed a dog.

Police issued a news release saying a pit bull attacking other dogs died after officers used a Taser on it Wednesday. The dog’s owner was charged with four counts of having an unlicensed dog and three counts of having an unvaccinated dog.

On June 8, a Danville officer fired a single gunshot that killed an 11-year-old miniature dachshund that was growling at him. Police Chief Philip A. Broadfoot initially said the officer had acted in accordance with department policy, but the chief later fired the officer after saying an investigation did not support the officer’s version of events that preceded the shooting.

In the latest case, the police news release said officers responding to a call about a dog chasing people found a pit bull running loose and learned that the owner had already pepper-sprayed it.

Officers chained the dog behind its owner’s house with three other pit bulls. But the pit bull got loose and attacked one of the other chained dogs, according to the release.

Police used pepper spray to stop the attack, and the dog ran away and attacked another one of the chained dogs. The family member couldn’t separate the dogs, and police used a Taser on both of them, the release said.

The chained dog recovered, but the attacking dog died within seconds, according to the release.

The Danville Area Humane Society seized two of the chained pit bulls. A family member took the third chained dog to receive treatment for its wounds.

Coroner rules Michael Jackson death a homicide

michael jackson blood freemasonry

AP | Aug. 28, 2009

LOS ANGELES (AP) — The Los Angeles County coroner says Michael Jackson’s death was a homicide primarily caused by two drugs.

In a statement released Friday, the coroner said the cause of death was acute intoxication from the anesthetic propofol. Other sedatives contributed to the death, most notably lorazepam.

The coroner did not release Jackson’s full autopsy report, citing an ongoing security hold at the request of Los Angeles authorities.

Related

Michael Jackson’s Dial-a-Dope Live-in Celebrity M.D. a Freemason

Undated handout photo provided by Stradley, Chernoff & Alford LLP, legal firm, on July 29, 2009 shows late US pop star Michael Jackson's doctor Conrad Murray. Murray is more than 770,000 dollars in debt and his luxury resort home in Las Vegas faces foreclosure, court documents filed in Nevada have revealed. (AFP/STRADLEY, CHERNOFF & ALFORD LLP/File)

Undated handout photo provided by Stradley, Chernoff & Alford LLP, legal firm, on July 29, 2009 shows late US pop star Michael Jackson's doctor Conrad Murray. Murray is more than 770,000 dollars in debt and his luxury resort home in Las Vegas faces foreclosure, court documents filed in Nevada have revealed. (AFP/STRADLEY, CHERNOFF & ALFORD LLP/File)

Dr. Conrad Murray, the pop star’s personal physician, told police he gave Jackson propofol the morning of June 25 after a series of sedatives failed to help Jackson sleep. Murray is the target of what police term a manslaughter investigation.

The 50-year-old Jackson died June 25 in Los Angeles.

A search warrant affidavit unsealed Monday in Houston includes a detailed account of what Murray told investigators.

According to the document, Murray said he’d been treating Jackson for insomnia for about six weeks with 50 milligrams of propofol every night via an intravenous drip. But he said he feared Jackson was forming an addiction to the anesthetic, which is normally used in hospitals only, and was attempting to wean his patient by lowering the dose to 25 milligrams and adding the sedatives lorazepam and midazolam.

That combination succeeded in helping Jackson sleep two days prior to his death, so the next day, Murray told detectives he cut off the propofol — and Jackson fell asleep with just the two sedatives.

Then around 1:30 a.m. on June 25, starting with a 10-milligram tab of Valium, Murray said he tried a series of drugs instead of propofol to make Jackson sleep. The injections included two milligrams of lorazepam around 2 a.m., two milligrams of midazolam around 3 a.m., and repeats of each at 5 a.m. and 7:30 a.m. respectively.

But they didn’t work.

Murray told detectives that around 10:40 a.m. he gave in to Jackson’s “repeated demands/requests” for propofol, which the singer referred to as his “milk.” He administered 25 milligrams of the white-colored liquid, — a relatively small dose — and finally, Jackson fell asleep.

Murray remained with the sedated Jackson for about 10 minutes, then left for the bathroom. No more than two minutes later, he returned — and found Jackson had stopped breathing.

“There’s no surprise there” that death could result from such a combination, said Dr. David Zvara, anesthesia chairman at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

“All those drugs act in synergy with each other,” Zvara said. Adding propofol on top of all the other sedatives “tipped the balance.”

The Lost Symbol: Dan Brown’s Pentagram City

washington pentagram

Dan Brown’s new book features a hidden Washington—does the city’s design conceal strange secrets?

Dan Brown’s new book—set in Washington—is expected to feature another secret society with an elaborate history and illustrious membership: the Freemasons.


Washingtonian | Aug 26, 2009

By Sophie Gilbert

Conspiracy theorists are awaiting Dan Brown’s new book, The Lost Symbol. Building on his super-bestsellers The Da Vinci Code and Angels and Demons, about conspiratorial elements of the Catholic Church, Brown’s latest—set in Washington—is expected to feature another secret society with an elaborate history and illustrious membership: the Freemasons.

As a May 2006 Washingtonian article explored, the Washington area has a deep, rich history with the Masons. (To read the article, go to washingtonian.com/masons.) As the new book’s release approaches, Brown fans have been looking for hints to the plot—and some have been released on The Lost Symbol’s Twitter feed. Here’s what might come up in the novel:

1. Washington traffic is bad for a reason.

You don’t need to burn shoe leather looking for Masonic symbols in the nation’s capital—all you need are Google Maps and a Sharpie marker. It’s no secret that George Washington was a Freemason, but what about Pierre L’Enfant, the architect of DC? The layout of the city’s streets and landmarks seems to suggest as much—triangles and pentagrams abound.

Occult theorists have speculated that the six points of Dupont Circle, Logan Circle, Scott Circle, Washington Circle, Mount Vernon Square, and the White House form a pentagram (the five points of the outer star and one vertex of the pentagon inside it); the coordinates of the six places were recently posted as a clue on Twitter. Dupont, Scott, and Washington circles all have six major streets leading into them, encoding the satanic number 666 into the city’s structure.

That may sound sinister, but the pentagram is an ancient symbol occurring in the three major religions as well as a prominent Masonic feature. In the 2006 article, authors Paul Dickson and Thomas B. Allen also noted that the four points of the White House, the Capitol, and the Lincoln and Jefferson memorials form a diamond when linked on a map—the shape of the Masonic logo.

2. That pyramid on the $1 bill isn’t just a picture.

Speculation mounted when the Lost Symbol Twitter feed posted a clue: “29.979093, 31.133891.” If you put those coordinates into Google Maps, they point to the Great Pyramid of Giza, prompting guesses that pyramids will play a role in the novel. The pyramid symbol dates back thousands of years, implying not only order and symmetry but also divine unity. The pyramid on the dollar bill (also referred to in The Da Vinci Code) is a Masonic symbol for the all-seeing eye of God, which dates back to Egyptian mythology but also appears in Christianity as the Eye of Providence.

Symbologists have noted that the dollar’s pyramid has 13 steps, while the Latin script underneath reads novus ordo seclorum, or “new order of the ages.” Conspiracy theorists have long believed that the term refers to an organization of globalists seeking to rule the world, and they’ve linked this belief to Freemasonry.

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Have you heard about the company that runs Britain?

It inspects schools, trains our armed forces, helps protect our borders, maintains our nuclear weapons, runs our trains and operates our prisons.

Telegraph | Aug 26, 2009

By Graham Ruddick

Most of the public will never have heard of Serco, a FTSE 100 company that does all of the above and more.

Led by South African Chris Hyman, Serco is also making money doing it and today underlined it is proving one of the recession winners. Profits in the first six months of the year – one of the toughest the UK economy has faced for decades – jumped 33pc to £83.4m.

However, Serco’s journey into the DNA of Britain’s public infrastructure, like those of rival support services companies Capita and Interserve, began before the recession arrived.

All have benefited from the growing culture of outsourcing services under Labour, and Serco expects this trend to continue as the gaping hole in the public finances forces the Government to cut back.

Serco has secured a record number of contracts in 2009 so far, worth £4bn, as its revenues climbed 30pc to £1.95bn.

The deals includes a contract to design, build and operate Boris Johnson’s cycle hire scheme for London and to operate two new prisons at Belmarsh in London and Maghull in Liverpool.

These come on top of Serco’s existing services, which include operating London’s Docklands Light Railway, running the Northern Rail and Merseyrail train networks, providing the Ministry of Defence with air surveillance and control systems, and delivering infrastructure and intelligence to the UK Border Agency.

To complete the list, Serco also has a six-year contract with Ofsted to run inspections in the Midlands at schools and further education colleges. In defence, the company is battling to win the rights to run the Army’s recruitment programme and already helps to train armed forces about using Britain’s fleet of aircraft, such as the Chinook and Apache helicopters.

In partnership with Lockheed Martin and Jacobs Engineering, Serco also manages the Atomic Weapons Establishment, which provides and maintains Britain’s atomic warheads.

Revenues from civil government work increased 49pc in the period and a bullish Serco expects this trend to continue, giving it even more control of Britain’s infrastructure. The company estimates that local authorities have endured a £4bn deficit in income for over the last two years as a result of the recession and that, by 2012 it will have revenues of £5bn.

In the results, Mr Hyman says: “The financial crisis and subsequent economic slowdown means that governments around the world are contending with increasing demand for high quality services whilst also facing a sharp deterioration in public finances. They continue to experience growing demand for quality services from their citizens.

“We believe this is also leading to a greater acceptance of innovative ways of achieving these changes, a broader range of markets to be addressed, and an increase in the size and term of change programmes in order to achieve the scale of efficiencies required.

Not surprisingly, the shares rose 4pc following the results.

British Secretary of State forced to reveal relationship with the Rothschilds

Mandelson Jacob Rothschild in Corfu

Lord Rothschild and Lord Mandelson stroll together on Corfu

Evening Standard | Aug 27, 2009

Mandelson to list Corfu hospitality in Lords register

by Paul Waugh

Lord Mandelson faced fresh questions over his Corfu holiday today amid claims of conflicts of interest with his ministerial duties.

The Business Secretary met music industry tycoon David Geffen and Colonel Gaddafi’s son during his stay at Lord Rothschild’s villa this month.

Lord Mandelson has decided to declare in the Lords Register of Interests the hospitality he received from the millionaire financier and his son Nat, the Standard has learned.

His spokesman said: “Lord Mandelson’s stay with Lord Rothschild was discussed with his Permanent Secretary beforehand and has been registered with the House of Lords.”

The register will be published in the next few weeks.

But the Tories are demanding to know whether the peer complied with the Ministerial Code which forbids the “perception” of conflicts between private interests and public duties.

Lord Mandelson’s department this week unveiled a tougher than expected crackdown on internet pirates, a move that will benefit Mr Geffen, one of America’s most powerful record and film industry executives.

With the Lockerbie bomber Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi released last week, the peer has also been under pressure over his meeting with Seif Muammar Gaddafi on the Greek island. The Megrahi case was raised by Mr Gaddafi, but the minister insists he said the matter rested with the Scottish authorities.

Lord Mandelson has denied that either encounter influenced government policy. Downing Street did not confirm whether Lord Mandelson had informed Gordon Brown of the meeting with Mr Gaddafi, but a spokesman said: “What is important was that Lord Mandelson had been clear on the nature of that meeting and the conversation about Mr Megrahi.”

Conservative MP Douglas Carswell said today: “It is far from clear whether Lord Mandelson informed Downing Street of his activities at the beginning of August.”

Whitehall sources said that Lord Mandelson had not been aware before his trip that either Mr Geffen or Mr Gaddafi would be present.

Minister’s key meetings on holiday

* The Business Secretary discussed the Lockerbie bomber with Colonel Gaddafi’s son Saif at the Rothschilds’ villa in Corfu this month. A spokesman denied the peer was involved in Abdelbaset Ali al-Megrahi’s release.

* Lord Mandelson dined at the villa on 7 August with David Geffen, an American film boss and critic of illegal internet file sharing. Lord Mandelson’s department is tightening rules on internet piracy but a spokesman denied that file sharing was discussed.

* Last summer, the peer met Russian aluminium tycoon Oleg Deripaska at the Rothschilds’. His spokesman denied that he was involved in tariff decisions which could have benefited Mr Deripaska.

French MPs propose banning Bisphenol A in food applications

plasteurope.com | Aug 27, 2009

Nine members of the French parliament have proposed a ban on the polycarbonate feedstock bisphenol A in food containers.

If the legislation passes, France would become the first European country to outlaw BPA.

The country’s food safety authority, AFSSA, is currently re-examining its previous approval, and the French non-governmental organisation “Antidote Europe” has urged the European Parliament to restrict use of the substance in products for children.

Some beverage bottlers in France are said to have already switched from polycarbonate to polypropylene.

Killer Gets 14 Years for Jesuit Slaying

“The probe found that Orekhov’s criminal intent to kill Betancourt emerged when he was in a state of alcoholic intoxication, on the grounds of hostile personal relations after the victim tried to seduce the Russian into engaging in sexual intercourse,” the prosecutors said in a statement.

Moscow Times | Aug 25, 2009

The Moscow City Court sentenced the killer of a Roman Catholic priest to 14 years in a maximum-security prison Tuesday, Interfax reported.

Mikhail Orekhov was found guilty of killing Victor Betancourt, 42, a Jesuit priest from Ecuador, in November 2008 in an apartment where Betancourt lived in central Moscow.

Prosecutors had sought a 15-year sentence.

Orekhov also had been accused of killing Russia’s top Jesuit, Russian citizen Otto Messmer, 47, in the apartment, but a jury cleared him of the charge.

Prosecutors said Orekhov was drunk when he attacked Betancourt and was acting after the priest made inappropriate sexual advances.

“The probe found that Orekhov’s criminal intent to kill Betancourt emerged when he was in a state of alcoholic intoxication, on the grounds of hostile personal relations after the victim tried to seduce the Russian into engaging in sexual intercourse,” the prosecutors said in a statement.

Catholic officials have dismissed the allegation that Betancourt might have acted inappropriately.

No additional information was immediately released from the closed-door trial.