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Author Hot Off the Funny Papers Press!!!!
Kathleen

2006-05-11, 1:25 pm

From: Kathleen Dickson <kmdickson0308@yahoo.com>
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Subject: NYTimes Article, FBI Corruption Department

Date: Thursday, May 11, 2006 13:12:21 [View Source]

A major JOKE (article below).

The FBI in New Haven are a bunch of belligerent
assholes. I was told to report the Lyme crimes to
them 4 years ago by the USDOJ in DC. FBI could not be
more arrogant and stupid. New Haven FBI is now all
set up to catch porn-watchers, because, like the rest
of Corrrupticut, the only matters we have a penis
matters.

Here is the crime:
http://www.fda.gov/ohrms/dockets/ac...s/3680s2_11.pdf

Yale knew they never had a Lyme vaccine. Later we
learned they could not even read their Western Blots
in ANY vaccinated people. Yet they reported to the
FDA that their vaccine was effective?
http://actionlyme.org/PATENTS_30_APR_06.wmv

We remain stuck with the bogus testing for Lyme,
because of the www.ALDF.com and the commercial
investors they are a front for (Kaiser SmithKline,
etc). This bogus testing misses the vast majority of
cases, and all of the neurologic cases.

FBI are so utterly snotty and arrogant, that they
routinely put you on hold on a dead phone line
indefinitely.

When I talked to Customs in New Haven about a year
ago, they put me on speaker phone, and called other
people into the room as I discussed the Lyme crimes.
They then periodically stopped me, and demanded to
know what I was reading from. I said, "I am not
READING from anything."

Your tax dollars at work.

The corruption in "Lyme disease" is in that Lyme is a
borreliosis- a stealth central nervous system
infection, that only rarely produces a
hypersensitivity reaction in a joint. The information
gained by Mark Klempne at Tufts was that people with
the genetic susceptibility to MS/Lupus/fungal
incompetence (tuberculosis) succumb to the more
serious effects of this disease.

That remains a BigBusiness dot guv secret.
http://actionlyme.org/Klempner-0602.wmv

There is not a word for the appropriate level of
"cynicism" in regards to what Corrupticut did to Lyme
Disease.

I simply give this information now to the UN and
foreign embassies, because of the utter incompetence
of law enforcement and all dot gyv agencies. I told
Russia to never let NIH's Edward McSweegan back into
their country, and why.

Mortimer Zuckerman gets invited to the ALDF's GALA,
but Mark Klempner's HLA DQB1*0602 data is kept a
secret from us?

And the legislators in Hartford and DC don't want to
know ya unless you're some kind of ho. The Abramoff
kind or the Ragaglia kind.

This article is a joke. FBI is a joke. This whole
*country* is a joke. We haven't gotten anything right
since the moon landing.

Kathleen M. Dickson
http://actionlyme.org
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=
=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D=3D
The New York Times
Printer Friendly Format Sponsored By

May 11, 2006
F=2EB.I.'s Focus on Public Corruption Includes 2,000
Investigations
By DAVID JOHNSTON

WASHINGTON, May 10 - A post-9/11 effort by the F.B.I.
to concentrate on public corruption now includes more
than 2,000 investigations under way, highlighted by
the Jack Abramoff lobbying inquiry, the racketeering
and fraud conviction of former Gov. George Ryan of
Illinois, and the multipronged corruption probes after
the guilty plea by Randy Cunningham, a former
Republican House member from San Diego, bureau
officials said.

As one of the Bush administration's least known
anticrime efforts, the F.B.I. initiative has yielded
an unexpectedly rich array of cases. The results
suggest that wrongdoing by public officials at all
levels of government is deeply rooted and widespread.
Several of the highest profile cases in which the
F=2EB.I. played an active role involve Republicans.

Bureau officials believe that the investment in
corruption cases is easily worth the cost. In 2004 and
2005, more than 1,060 government employees were
convicted of corrupt activities, including 177 federal
officials, 158 state officials, 360 local officials
and 365 police officers, according to F.B.I.
statistics. The number of convictions rose 27 percent
from 2004 to 2005.

In a telephone interview on Wednesday, the F.B.I.
director, Robert S. Mueller III, said the bureau was
uniquely positioned to investigate corruption.
Recalling his days as a prosecutor in Boston, he said:
"Having prosecuted public corruption cases, you come
to realize first of all that public corruption tears
the fabric of a democratic society. You lose faith in
public officials, it leads to cynicism, it leads to
distrust in government."

The bureau's corruption effort has forced it to shift
agents from other criminal programs. Violent street
gangs, organized crime and large-scale narcotics
trafficking organizations remain high priorities. But
bureau officials like Chris Swecker, the top criminal
enforcement official, acknowledged that the F.B.I. had
reduced its investigation of single-victim fraud
cases; smaller, localized drug rings; and nonviolent
bank robberies. "We've had to make some very difficult
choices," Mr. Swecker said.

Mr. Mueller is giving his first speech on the bureau's
corruption effort on Thursday in San Diego, which Mr.
Cunningham represented in Congress before he resigned
and pleaded guilty to accepting more than $2 million
for steering military contracts to friends and
supporters.

In the interview, Mr. Mueller said the F.B.I. paid no
attention to whether a public official was a
Republican or a Democrat. "We have traditionally had
the independence to investigate corruption regardless
of political affiliation and no matter how powerful
the official is," he said, adding: "Over the years it
has not made any difference to the F.B.I. People from
both parties have been investigated."

The F.B.I. is starting a Web site,
reportcorruption.fbi.gov, through which people can
send tips on corruption, although not anonymously, to
be reviewed by agents at the bureau's headquarters.

Perhaps the most far-reaching of the cases is the one
involving Mr. Abramoff, the former lobbyist at the
center of a sweeping federal investigation into
whether he improperly influenced decisions in
Congress. He pleaded guilty to corruption related
charges in Washington and Florida earlier this year.

In Illinois, Mr. Ryan was convicted last month of 18
counts of helping to award state business to
supporters and misusing state resources for political
benefit.

Not all high-profile cases involve Republicans. Last
week, a Louisville businessman pleaded guilty in
federal court in Virginia to bribing Representative
William J. Jefferson, Democrat of Louisiana, with more
than $400,000 in payments, stock in his high-tech
company and a share of the profits to promote the
firm's high-tech business ventures in Africa. Mr.
Jefferson has denied ever accepting payments in return
for government service.

Much of the public corruption caseload involves state
and local officials. The F.B.I. has reach into
government operations throughout the United States,
with names like Lively Green, an investigation into
corruption along the southwest border; Wrinkled Robe,
a bribery inquiry that led to several arrests,
including two state judges in Louisiana; Tennessee
Waltz, a sting operation that led to the arrest of
several Tennessee state lawmakers; and Midas Touch, an
investigation of the New Mexico state treasurer's
office.

The agency has long prosecuted public corruption, but
in the 1980's and 1990's, street gangs, drugs and
violent crime had a higher priority. "In the field
offices, corruption wasn't always the highest
priority," Mr. Swecker said. He said top officials in
the bureau's 56 field offices largely set their own
priorities.

"The director recognized the need for greater clarity
and priorities," Mr. Swecker said. "I don't think
anybody recognized the number and quality of cases we
would generate."

In the restructuring of the F.B.I. after the Sept. 11
attacks, as hundreds of agents were shifted from
criminal work to counterterrorism, bureau officials
moved more than 200 agents to corruption as an area in
which the F.B.I. had almost exclusive responsibility
and in which Mr. Mueller and his aides believed the
bureau could have the greatest impact.

"We looked at what we really needed to do that nobody
else does," said James W. Burrus Jr., a senior
official in the criminal division and an architect of
the anticorruption program. "This is 100 percent
ours."

Almost every one of the F.B.I.'s cases has been the
subject of widespread news reports by local news
organizations, and Time magazine has reported on the
national scope of the effort. In some instances, for
example in the cases of Mr. Cunningham and Mr.
Abramoff, reporters appear to have been the first to
uncover some aspects of possible wrongdoing. Agents
regard such articles as tips for which they can claim
success if they succeed in bringing a case.

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dcfnobody

2006-05-11, 6:28 pm

Wait, didn't you agree the moon landing was faked? hahahaha And as
far as jokes, YOU are the biggest joke around. What they put you on
hold for was to stifle the laughter of all those people after they put
you on the speaker phone. Hell, they probably got the janitor in to
get a laugh at that one. And what's with the stupid references to crap
in 1991? Who cares any more? Oops, I forgot, YOU DO. hahahahaha

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