“One of the things that is really telling in this story is that the DEA bizarrely didn’t seem to think that there was really anything wrong in what they were doing. I think they got blindsided by the reaction. It’s similar to the completely clueless statement by Michele Leonhart when talking about the perjury of supersnitch Andrew Chambers. They have gotten so used to considering themselves above the law, that they actually forgot that’s where they went. Lying it’s just what you do to get the job done. Re-creating an evidence trail from scratch is just part of the standard red tape that you go through to complete a drug arrest.”
http://www.drugwarrant.com/2013/08/intelligence-laundering/
Related posts:
Sheldon Richman: The Surveillance State Lives
Jim Rogers on the Goldstein show 14 May 2013
New $15 Million Bitcoin VC Fund Seeks Edge with Regulatory, Security Skills
Eric Margolis: Spying Run Amok
Pot Legalization Is Coming
This One Group of Bankers Can Help You Predict the Markets
Edward Snowden: Dialectic Piñata
Why Cops Bust Down Doors of Medical Pot Growers, But Ignore Men Who Keep Naked Girls on Leashes
Statist Media Courtesan: All Rights are "Infringe"-able
Jacob Hornberger: The Big Obstacle to Peace in Korea
The Brutality of “Border Security”
It’s Time to Focus on the "School" in "School Shooting"
The Tenuous Nature of Borderless Money
Not Speedy + Not Public = Not Legal
Jimmy Carter’s forgotten history lesson