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ELVIS
01-15-2011, 10:29 AM
January 14, 2011 (http://www.infowars.com/fbi-targets-critics-of-government-with-home-visits-after-arizona-shootings/)

We can add another victim to the Tucson tragedy – the right to criticize government without fear of getting a knock on your door from the feds. Despite the fact that shooter Jared Loughner was not politically motivated, the FBI is now compiling a list of Americans deemed a potential threat because they criticized their representative – and targeting them with home visits.

An Ozark man who ran a blog last year critical of Republican Congressman Billy Long was shocked to see an FBI agent turn up on his doorstep asking questions. The agent was accompanied by Green County Sheriff Jim Arnott, who had stepped outside of his jurisdiction to become involved in this act of political repression directed against Clay Bowler, a resident of Christian County.

The FBI agent wanted to know if Bowler was a threat to Long because he had used an Internet blog to highlight claims of cronyism and corruption involving the Congressman before the southwest Missouri election in November, in which Long defeated Democrat Scott Eckersley to replace outgoing Rep. Roy Blunt.

The most heated confrontation Bowler had with Long was when he asked him a question about political donations Long had made. The video clip of the incident shows Bowler calmly asking Long a question as the Congressman walks away. He ran a website called “Long is wrong” in an attempt to prevent Long from being elected last year. The website has since been discontinued and Bowler hasn’t had any contact with Long since September.

Even the FBI agent who visited Bowler had to agree that his actions represented no kind of threat whatsoever.

“I’m not a threat to Billy Long,” Bowler said Thursday. “I find the whole thought very funny, because I’m such an advocate for constitutional rights that I would never do anything that would put in jeopardy those constitutional rights like the Second Amendment.”

In the aftermath of the Tucson tragedy, the father of Christina Green, the 9-year-old girl killed in the massacre, pleaded with the nation that his daughter’s death should not be exploited as a justification to crush constitutional rights. In addition, it has been confirmed in triplicate that shooter Jared Loughner was not motivated by politics. Earlier this week one of his closest high school friends told ABC News that Loughner, “Did not watch TV. He disliked the news. He didn’t listen to political radio. He didn’t take sides. He wasn’t on the left. He wasn’t on the right.”

Green County Sheriff Jim Arnott’s justification that it’s best to “err on the side of caution” in targeting critics of government with home visits has no place in a free country. Perhaps Arnott would feel more at home in the former East Germany or the Soviet Union.

“Arnott confirmed to KSPR News that Bowler isn’t the only local person who’s been scrutinized in the wake of last weekend’s shooting of Rep. Gabrielle Gifford (D-AZ) during a meet-and-greet with constituents in Tucson, Ariz,” states the report, affirming that the authorities are compiling new lists of Americans who are now considered to be potentially violent threats for the crime of asking their own public servants uncomfortable questions. Separately it was reported that the FBI was preparing to visit other bloggers in the area.

Targeting anyone who exercises their First Amendment right to redress their grievances against local representatives who are paid to serve them with home visits accompanied by FBI agents only has one outcome – it chills free speech and discourages other Americans from speaking out against the government. These tactics also have the impact of making asking questions of elected officials, the lifeblood of a free society, seem somehow abnormal or suspicious.

Once again, vultures are still busy circling around last weekend’s tragedy, using it as a vehicle through which to advance their own authoritarian and anti-American agendas of political repression.

Dissent is the highest form of patriotism, and any move to imply that asking questions of public officials or engaging in criticism of government is somehow suspicious or indicative of a violent individual is a damning indictment of everything America is supposed to stand for. Circumstances like these should only encourage Americans to become more vocal in their dissent while they still have any semblance of free speech left at all.


:elvis:

Kristy
01-15-2011, 10:53 AM
Even the FBI agent who visited Bowler had to agree that his actions represented no kind of threat whatsoever.

Chances are high the F.B.I. already knew this before visiting Bowler. Seems that after every tragedy officials over react to a situation in order to side with caution - or what they deem as being caution. I can remember after Columbine has the local police started to question every high school kid who happened to wear a tench coat. To label this a "witch hunt" is extreme.

Blaze
01-15-2011, 06:35 PM
You know, E.... If your "man" was experiencing or witnessing corruption or fraud he should have filed reports that would have actually made a difference instead of just pissing into a paper bag. If you know about corruption and other criminal acts and do not report them, you are an accomplice. And in my opinion should be held accountable for not opening a file with a accountability agency.

By his not filing reports he appeared as a nutter, moreover, is a nutter that is just harassing people with libel. He CHOOSE to not report the CRIMES. His actions are can be liken to to blackmailing a person and shaking them down. Or profiting off the THEFT of their good name..... I do not know these folks. They could be as corrupt as all get out, however, your "man" did NOT file any complaints.



Man charged with death threats to U.S. regulators


By Jonathan Stempel and Edith Honan – Fri Jan 14, 5:13 pm ET

CENTRAL ISLIP, N.Y./NEW YORK (Reuters) – A New York money manager with a long history of legal battles with the government has been charged with threatening to kill 47 U.S. officials, including the nation's top securities and commodities regulators.

Vincent McCrudden, 49, last month allegedly posted online an "execution list" naming officials, including Securities and Exchange Commission Chairman Mary Schapiro and Commodity Futures Trading Commission Chairman Gary Gensler.

Federal prosecutors said the threat came shortly after the CFTC brought an enforcement action accusing the former commodities trader and two of his companies with operating unregistered investments.

McCrudden threatened officials in emails and web postings at the SEC, CFTC, the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority and the National Futures Association, authorities said.

"Go buy a gun, and lets get to work in taking back our country from these criminals," McCrudden allegedly wrote, in a statement calling for the four regulators to be abolished. "I will be the first one to lead by example."

The arrest comes amid heightened concern for the safety of public officials after last Saturday's mass shooting of Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords and others in Tucson, Arizona. Six people died, including federal judge John Roll.

"This is a crime of violence," Assistant U.S. Attorney Christopher Caffarone said at a Friday afternoon hearing in the federal court in Central Islip, New York, located east of New York City.
McCrudden, looking haggard and dressed in blue jeans and a black fleece sweatshirt, was denied bail at the hearing. He did not enter a plea.

"The allegations in this complaint are incredibly frightening and intimidating to any public official," U.S. Magistrate Judge E. Thomas Boyle said at the hearing.

Boyle called the content of McCrudden's alleged emails and postings "a real threat, as far as this court is concerned."

LAWYER SAYS DEFENDANT NOT GUILTY

McCrudden has worked on Wall Street for more than 20 years, specializing in commodities, derivatives and foreign exchange, according to his biography on the website of his company, Alnbri Management LLC.

The biography also said he has "spent the past 13 years and counting combating a colluded Government attempt to discredit and harass Mr. McCrudden through repeated bogus procedures."
McCrudden also was an amateur boxer and played professional soccer in the now-defunct North American Soccer League, the biography said.

The government said McCrudden, of Dix Hills, New York, has been living for the last few months in Singapore.

He was arrested on Thursday at Newark-Liberty International Airport and faces counts of transmitting death threats. Each is punishable by up to five years in prison.

"Threats of death and violence against federal officials and employees for executing their duties are simply unacceptable," Lanny Breuer, assistant attorney general of the Department of Justice's criminal division, said in a statement.

Bruce Barket, a lawyer for McCrudden who described himself as a long-time friend, told the judge his client was "a frustrated litigant who has a penchant for vulgarity." The lawyer also said McCrudden does not own a gun.

"He is at times ill-mannered and short-tempered and not very articulate in terms of expressing himself," Barket said in an earlier telephone interview. "But the idea that he was actually threatening somebody is ludicrous."

McCrudden is divorced with two children and "came back" to the country to answer the charges, the lawyer added.

Four of the defendant's eight siblings appeared at Friday's hearing to support him.

"Our family absolutely loves our brother," his sister Kathy Warszycki said. "He will not and has never hurt anyone."

The complaint is dated December 21, 2010, but was not unsealed until Friday.

Arnold Weiner, a former federal prosecutor who represents defendants in white-collar crime cases, said the Tucson shooting may have spurred efforts to arrest McCrudden faster.

"There are threats that the prosecutors tend not to be sensitive about and then very soon after there is an assassination, and there's a great uptick in arrests and prosecutions," Weiner said.

DEFENDANT SAID TO THREATEN REVENGE

McCrudden was also charged in 2002 with 15 counts of felony mail fraud relating to his alleged preparation of financial statements that inflated the value of various investments, but was acquitted by a jury, court records show.

According to FINRA records, his employment history also includes a dismissal from the firm Hedge Fund Capital Partners LLC after he made "numerous threatening, abusive, harassing, coercive, intimidating and/or vulgar communications to his member firm employees."

FINRA disciplinary proceedings for that action ended on November 17. Two days later, prosecutors said, McCrudden emailed an oversight group that reviews FINRA activity, threatening "revenge" for enforcement actions against him.

And in a separate email, McCrudden is said to have threatened Gensler specifically, telling a CFTC lawyer: "You can tell that fucking corrupt piece of Goldman Sachs shit (G.G.) I am coming after him as well."

Gensler worked for 18 years at Goldman Sachs Group Inc, where he became co-head of finance, according to his official biography.

The SEC, the CFTC and FINRA declined to comment.

"We get threatening emails all the time," including some that contain death threats, said a CFTC official who spoke on condition of anonymity.

NFA Chief Executive Dan Roth said the group denied an application by McCrudden in 2005 to become a commodity pool operator, citing the defendant's statements under oath that he misled clients about his trading activities.

The case is U.S. v. McCrudden, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of New York, No. 10-01503.


http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20110114/us_nm/us_regulators_threats

Nitro Express
01-15-2011, 06:43 PM
The FBI loves the internet. It makes investigations easier. Everyone spills their guts on the internet and those are traceable to an IP address and an account. Now investigations can be done sitting at a computer instead of spending the money to put agents in the field which is expensive and you never have enough agents.