Click here to view this media [h/t Heather ] Meet Tom Luna, Idaho’s Republican Superintendent of of Public Education, architect of the gutting of Idaho public schools, massive teacher layoffs, and union-buster. Tom Luna is an interesting character. He’s a good, solid Republican, 2-year veteran of the Bush Administration’s Department of Education, and doesn’t really have any educational qualifications for the office he now holds. No, seriously. He doesn’t. “> Here’s his resume´ in a nutshell: Education: Classes at Boise State and Ricks College, Bachelor of Art (2002) in Weights and Measures from Thomas Edison State College, a non-accredited on-line degree factory supposedly based in New Jersey. Also, he owns a scale company whose largest account is an Idaho corporation owned by Frank Vandersloot — Melaleuca. Remember that name. I’ll be talking about him later. Tom Luna’s Amazing Fundraising Abilities Now, Tom Luna had one of the best-financed 2010 re-election campaigns I’ve seen for an office that oversees about 280,000 students. (For perspective, California employs more teachers than Idaho’s total number of students.) But to get Tom Luna elected in a Republican state in 2010 when the Tea Party was full of hubris and madness, donors gave $212,000 to his campaign , of which $132,000 was spent as of November 18, 2010. This is not counting PACs, or independent expenditures. That’s direct campaign donations. With the exception of the Governor and Lieutenant Governor, no other candidate for state office came anywhere near the campaign donations that Luna received. Those donors didn’t give because they were feeling generous and loved Tom Luna. They loved Tom Luna’s plans for the state’s public education system, though. If Luna’s “Students Come First” proposal passes the Legislature, online education will be mandated in Idaho and a laptop will be available to every high school student. That means 115 school districts, with 82,000 high school students, will be in the market for computers, software and online courses. Well, lookee there. And look at who Tom Luna’s top 2010 donors were: K12 Inc. of Virginia , an online company with 81,000 students and operator of the Idaho Virtual Academy. In Idaho, IVA enrolls 2,930 students and received $12.8 million from the state in fiscal 2010. K12, its employees and major stockholders spent about $44,000 supporting Luna; $25,000 of that was funneled to an Idaho interest group for independent advertising on Luna’s behalf. I should also mention that K12, Inc was started by Bill Bennett , Education Secretary under Ronald Reagan. Yes, *that* Bill Bennett. – Apollo Group of Phoenix , the parent company of the University of Phoenix, an online university with more than 400,000 students. Luna’s plan would allow high school students to earn college credits at state expense once they complete high school requirements. Apollo Group gave Luna $5,500. – Executives of Scantron Corp ., a Minnesota-based leader in testing technology that is aggressively expanding into online education. Scantron employees and family contributed $7,450. Other corporate education contributors: Apangea Learning, Inc. (online math courses) $1,000; Education Networks of America (educational video/network technology) $5,500; Madison Education Group (education consulting and advocacy) $5,000, and yes, Frank Vandersloot, who not only picked up the tab for thousands in independent expenditures, but also donated $10,000 to Luna’s campaign. But don’t take my word for it. Here’s a whole huge list with all the tentacles listed. For-profit educators, GOP privatization organizations, marry at the IBCEE Frank Vandersloot is a wealthy affiliate marketer in Idaho who is also connected with the Education Alliance of Idaho , an affiliate of the Idaho Business Coalition for Education Excellence (IBCEE), a non-profit organization (which hasn’t filed any Federal disclosure forms that I can find) comprised of CEOs and company presidents. The Education Alliance membership is comprised of the following: Members include J.A. and Kathryn Albertson Foundation and representatives from the Idaho Education Association, Idaho Association of School Administrators, Idaho School Boards Association, Idaho Parent Teacher Association, Idaho Digital Learning Academy, State Board of Education, State Department of Education and the State Division of Professional- Technical Education. According to the ” fact sheet (PDF) ” they publish it has a mission: The Education Alliance of Idaho is a coalition of key stakeholders in the Idaho education system. The core purpose of the Education Alliance is one of advocacy and advice. The Education Alliance does not have authority in statute, nor does it control policymakers. Instead, the organization’s influence on the future of the education system in Idaho comes from that of its members. Indeed. In 2005 ( the only annual report (PDF) I could find ), the JA and Kathryn Albertson Foundation funded 20 charter schools, including the Idaho Distance Education Academy, the Idaho Virtual Academy and INSPIRE Charter school, all online schools. The foundation has also given a large grant (in connection with the Micron Foundation, another Luna donor) to the Boise school District for the first ” brick-and-mortar web enabled elementary schools using K12 Inc. curriculum.” But it’s not only the Albertson grocery family. Others participate in the “influence on the future of the education system in Idaho.” Others, like Bill Hansen, co-founder of Big Luna Donor Madison Education Group and now President and CEO of Scantron have some influence, too. Hansen was an adviser to the 2008 Romney campaign, too. And Michael Milken, who owns 24% of K12, Inc. I’ve given you all of this detail on Idaho because it’s a small enough state that the money flow really stands out like a sore thumb. Despite Luna’s insistence that he’s not beholden to those who bought his re-election, his “reform proposals” say otherwise. But it’s not just Idaho. It’s Michigan . It’s Pennsylvania . It’s Arizona . Florida . Ohio . Indiana . The names are different but the model’s the same. In Michigan, it’s the DeVos family who funds charter schools and “influences policy”. The corporate education firms have different names but the goal is the same: To break unions, get rid of as many teachers as possible, and force students into online learning courses which teach to a test but don’t necessarily educate students. This particular model assumes students are commodities with identical learning styles and abilities. Profit centers, amortized over 12 years. Cronyism Strikes Deep Idaho’s high school students understand what’s at stake. It’s why they walked out in support of their teachers earlier this month. And some of Idaho’s citizens get it too . In fact, one retired secretary is beginning a recall effort against Luna. Her reasons echo the same reasons Wisconsin and Michigan citizens have for undertaking their own recall efforts. Berto has attended protests against Luna’s three big education reform bills with “Stop the Lunacy” and “Save Our Schools” signs. Despite overwhelming public testimony against the plan backed by Luna and GOP Gov. Butch Otter, two of the three bills are expected to get final legislative approval in the House Tuesday. The third bill is stalled in the Senate. Berto disputes Luna’s claim of a mandate for change — including larger class sizes, required online classes and a computer for every high school student — because neither he nor Otter mentioned the ideas in the 2010 campaign. I would only say this to Mrs. Berto: Follow the money during the campaign and it will tell you what they’re really planning to do after they’re elected. Luna’s campaign was so heavily and well-financed that it was clear from early on that the goal was exactly what they’ve now done. Tom Luna lives the GOP creed: Cronies Come First .
Continue reading …Click here to view this media We warned this was coming : On Friday, Glenn Beck devoted his entire hour to promoting the conspiracy theories of G. Edward Griffin, a John Bircher and 9/11 truther whose book, The Creature from Jekyll Island , attacks the Federal Reserve as a nefarious cabal intent on enslaving and destroying America. It was quite a performance: Among other things we learned from Griffin was that he believes there is no actual gold at Fort Knox (maybe Goldfinger rendered it radioactive, eh?) and that there is a real inflation rate of around 20 percent right now. Well, as we explained already : Beck, as we all know, has previously demonstrated a fondness for the Birch Society, and this is consistent with that: Griffin, after all, was a close personal friend and longtime associate of Birch Society founder Robert Welch, and wrote a popular Birch book published in 1964, The Fearful Master: A Second Look at the United Nations. The Creature from Jekyll Island is in many ways a compendium of previous works claiming that the Federal Reserve is a fundamentally illegitimate — and therefore deeply nefarious — organization. Most of these theories were deeply anti-Semitic in nature, since they depicted the Fed’s bankers as part of a Jewish cabal intent on destroying white American society. What sets Griffin’s work apart is that — like most Birch texts, which assiduously avoided anti-Semitism — he manages to scrub out the anti-Semitic elements while keeping the paranoid conspiracist elements intact. Since its publication in 1994, Griffin’s book has become a popular text for a large number of right-wing extremists, particularly tax protesters and Patriot movement believers. Griffin himself was involved in organizing a gathering on Jekyll Island last year that the Southern Poverty Law Center credits with helping revive the militia movement . It has been debunked thoroughly, of course — probably most notably by historian Gerry Rough, whose three-part series on the origins of the Fed, “Another Twist on the Jacksonian Bank War,” pretty thoroughly reveal just how fraudulent Griffin’s text really is. You can read it here: Part 1, Part 2, and Part 3. [Rough has debunked Griffin further in other essays as well: here, here, and here. ] Media Matters has more background on Griffin : Griffin, in addition to spinning conspiracy theories about the Fed, is also a 9-11 truther and has written extensively about the U.S. government’s “facilitation” of the attacks. In April 2008, Griffin appeared on the radio program of conspiracist Alex Jones and claimed that he predicted just days after 9-11 that “the FBI and the intelligence agencies of the federal government had advance knowledge of this attack but did nothing to stop it,” and that he was proven right. He also is — or, at least, was — a member of the ultra-right wing John Birch Society. He wrote a 1970 pamphlet entitled “This is the John Birch Society: An Invitation to Join,” and a 1975 book entitled The Life and Words of Robert Welch: Founder of the John Birch Society. Another terrific debunking of far-right Federal Reserve theories generally, including Griffin’s texts, was provided by Edward Flaherty at Public Eye. From the first part : Following the near catastrophic financial disaster of 1907, the movement for banking reform picked up steam among Wall Street bankers, Republicans, and eastern Democrats. However, much of the country was still distrustful of bankers and of banking in general, especially after 1907. After two decades of minority status, Democrats regained control of Congress in 1910 and were able to block several Republican attempts at reform, even though they recognized the need for some kind of currency and banking changes. In 1912 Woodrow Wilson won the Democratic party’s nomination for President, and in his populist-friendly acceptance speech he warned against the “money trusts,” and advised that “a concentration of the control of credit … may at any time become infinitely dangerous to free enterprise.”3 Also in 1910, Senator Nelson Aldrich, Frank Vanderlip of National City (today know as Citibank), Henry Davison of Morgan Bank, and Paul Warburg of the Kuhn, Loeb Investment House met secretly at Jeckyll Island, a resort island off the coast of Georgia, to discuss and formulate banking reform, including plans for a form of central banking. The meeting was held in secret because the participants knew that any plan they generated would be rejected automatically in the House of Representatives if it were associated with Wall Street. Because it was secret and because it involved Wall Street, the Jekyll Island affair has always been a favorite source of conspiracy theories. However, the movement toward significant banking and monetary reform was well-known.3 It is hardly surprising that given the real possibility of substantial reform, the banking industry would want some sort of input into the nature of the reforms. The Aldrich Plan which the secret meeting produced was even defeated in the House, so even if the Jekyll Island affair was a genuine conspiracy, it clearly failed. The Aldrich Plan called for a system of fifteen regional central banks, called National Reserve Associations, whose actions would be coordinated by a national board of commercial bankers. The Reserve Association would make emergency loans to member banks, create money to provide an elastic currency that could be exchanged equally for demand deposits, and would act as a fiscal agent for the federal government. Although it was defeated, the Aldrich Plan served as an outline for the bill that eventually was adopted. 5 The problem with the Aldrich Plan was that the regional banks would be controlled individually and nationally by bankers, a prospect that did not sit well with the populist Democratic party or with Wilson. As the debate began to take shape in the spring of 1913, Congressman Arsene Pujo provided good evidence that the nation’s credit markets were under the tight control of a handful of banks – the “money trusts” against which Wilson warned.1 Wilson and the Democrats wanted a reform measure which would decentralize control away from the money trusts. The legislation that eventually emerged was the Federal Reserve Act, also known at the time as the Currency Bill, or the Owen-Glass Act. The bill called for a system of eight to twelve mostly autonomous regional Reserve Banks that would be owned by the banks in their region and whose actions would be coordinated by a Federal Reserve Board appointed by the President. The Board’s members originally included the Secretary of the Treasury, the Comptroller of the Currency, and other officials appointed by the President to represent public interests. The proposed Federal Reserve System would therefore be privately owned, but publicly controlled. Wilson signed the bill on December 23, 1913 and the Federal Reserve System was born.6 Conspiracy theorists have long viewed the Federal Reserve Act as a means of giving control of the banking system to the money trusts, when in reality the intent and effect was to wrestle control away from them. History clearly demonstrates that in the decades prior to the Federal Reserve Act the decisions of a few large New York banks had, at times, enormous repercussions for banks throughout the country and the economy in general. Following the return to central banking, at least some measure of control was removed from them and placed with the Federal Reserve. Ben Dimiero at Media Matters observes: Among many, many other bizarre conspiracies, Griffin has written a book alleging that cancer can be cured by the B-17 vitamin, but this has been covered up due to “the hidden economic and power agenda of those who dominate the medical establishment.” Oh, and according to Griffin’s website, Glenn Beck’s dismissal of birthers is evidence that Beck’s “role as a controlled opposition leader is becoming more obvious.” Yet as you can see, Beck practically scrapes at Griffin’s feet, treating each of his words as golden nuggets of truth: Click here to view this media Click here to view this media Griffin is a clever hoaxter, in large part because he’s able to tap into the circular far-right informational bubble, wherein conspiracy theorists cite each other endlessly as “evidence” of their own outlandish ideas. Gerry Rough has an interesting essay explaining how this works : What happens with conspiracy theories is that author “A” will write a passage in his text, place a footnote or endnote as a reference source for the passage, then move on with the conspiratorial narrative. This is no different than any other work of non-fiction: this is merely standard operating procedure. Author “B” on the other hand, will assume that the passage is correct, cite the same passage, and never bother to check to see if the passage had anything at all to do with a verifiable conspiracy. It is here where conspiracy theories are patently different than other works of non-fiction. *At no point ever* do conspiracy theorists verify the authenticity of the original passage, nor is there any attempt to verify context. So, if a passage turns out to be fabricated or grossly distorted, precisely as *all three examples* in part 3 of this debate, no conspiracy theorist will ever likely have knowledge of it. In other words, they breathe their own exhaust and convince each other it’s fresh air. And as Rough explains, Griffin is noted for playing a key role in this circle-jerk by giving other conspiracy theorists “authoritative” quotations that in fact are bogus in nature: This is much more likely the scenario that happened with Flynn’s research. In point of fact, G. Edward Griffin, a well known author and editor of John Birch Society publications, deliberately lied about the passage in question, then Flynn simply passed on the lie all too willingly while citing Griffin as the original source. In the case of Griffin’s research, there are no other options: Griffin did not cite another author as the source for the passage that his text quoted. In failing to do so, the ultimate responsibility for lying stops at the desk of Griffin alone. But lets not let Flynn and other conspiracy theorists off the hook so easily either. All who write this conspiracy theory nonsense had at one point a responsibility to verify any given passage in question. They willingly shunned that public responsibility and aided a lie by way of omission. If this were an intellectual crime it would be likely classified as criminal negligence. And then when you have a popular TV host with an audience of millions treating this kind of fraud as a factual representation of history … well, it’s no wonder people can’t pass a damned citizenship exam.
Continue reading …Outrage au Parlement : cachoteries, hypocrisie et ingérence au sein du gouvernement Harper Fall of the Harper Conservatives (Bored on the Corner) Stephen Harper gets my vote / by buskerjames LeDaro: Stephen Harper : Bye bye Stephen Harper : Bye bye. “Harper Government” falls. No confidence vote by the opposition passes. About time to say bye bye to Harper. Labels: “Harper Government”, Defeated. // posted by LeDaro @ 3:20 PM. Comments: Post a Comment … In Brief: Stephen Harper , Conservative Party | iPolitics iPolitics is serious about the business of government. In-depth, Informative, Insightful, Influential. STATEMENT BY PRIME MINISTER STEPHEN HARPER | Voice of Toronto The global economy is still fragile. Canadaâ ™s recovery has been strong, but it needs to remain our focus. Thatâ ™s why, the economy has been,… Spring 2011 and Stephen Harper's Federal Election… « The Editor … The vote on the motion to dismiss the Government of Canada is on the agenda for 1:30 p.m. in Ottawa and the government could have fallen by 2:00 p.m. They say that if it is the case, Stephen Harper will go to the Governor General … Pushed to the Left and Loving It: Stephen Harper Has Gone Full … And just as Greg Weston failed to predict the outcome of that election, he also failed to understand just how vindictive Stephen Harper is. Weston was fired from Sun Media for exposing the “fake lake” story in the lead up to the G-20. … danmckim says: Time to give Stephen Harper a majority for the opposition's careless and expensive decision!
Continue reading …What if they had a civil war and no one watched? At least 52 civilians were killed last week in the Ivory Coast’s escalating crisis, but no one in the media seems to care, Time observes. The 5-month-old conflict has been pushed out of the headlines by the disasters elsewhere….
Continue reading …Click here to view this media Unbelievable. The Republicans in Wisconsin decided to ignore a judge’s restraining order and published the bill limiting collective bargaining rights anyway. Lawrence O’Donnell discussed the latest turn of events with the AFL-CIO’s Richard Trumka. Here’s more from the Milwaukee Wisconsin Journal Sentinel — Collective bargaining bill published despite restraining order : In a stunning twist, controversial legislation limiting collective bargaining for public workers was published on Friday despite a judge’s hold on the measure, sparking a dispute over whether it takes effect Saturday. The legislation was published Friday to the Legislature’s website with a footnote that acknowledges the restraining order by a Dane County judge. But the posting says state law “requires the Legislative Reference Bureau to publish every act within 10 working days after its date of enactment.” The measure sparked massive protests at the Capitol and lawsuits by opponents because it would eliminate the ability of most public workers to bargain over anything but wages. The restraining order was issued against Democratic Secretary of State Doug La Follette. But the bill was published by the reference bureau, which was not named in the restraining order. Laws normally take effect a day after they are published, and a top GOP lawmaker said that meant it will become law Saturday. But the nonpartisan legislative official who published the law disagreed. “I think this is a ministerial act that forwards it to the secretary of state,” said Stephen Miller, director of the Legislative Reference Bureau. “I don’t think this act makes it become effective. My understanding is that the secretary of state has to publish it in the (official state) newspaper for it to become effective.” Walker signed the bill March 11. Under state law, it must be published within 10 working days, which was Friday. The law has not been printed in the Wisconsin State Journal, the official state newspaper, as other laws are. Late Friday, State Journal publisher Bill Johnston said in an email that the notice for the law had been scheduled to run but had been canceled. He did not elaborate. Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau) claimed it didn’t matter that it hasn’t appeared in the paper. “It’s published,” Fitzgerald said. “It’s law. That’s what I contend.” Fitzgerald and Miller met Friday. Miller said Fitzgerald asked him to publish the law and, after reading the statutes, Miller agreed that he could do so. He said he has never had something similar happen with the publication of a law during his 12 years running the reference bureau. After the restraining order was issued on March 18, La Follette sent a letter that same day to the reference bureau rescinding earlier instructions to publish the bill on Friday. “I further instruct you to remove all reference to March 25, 2011, as the publication date and not to proceed with publication until I contact you with a new publication date,” his letter said. Walker’s top cabinet official, Administration Secretary Mike Huebsch, gave only a brief statement reacting to Friday’s news. “Today the administration was notified that the LRB published the budget-repair bill as required by law,” he said. “The administration will carry out the law as required.” More there so go read the rest.
Continue reading …Two ideas for making the most out of the humble spring onion: a sharp soup with an Iranian twist, and a flavour-packed Tunisian street snack, brik Spring onion soup I recently started using a wonderful product from Iran called kashk. Kash, or kishk, signifies different things throughout the Middle East, Turkey and Greece, but is often used to name food stuffs produced by the process of fermentation and then drying of yoghurt or curdled milk, turning them into a powder that can later be reconstituted. Iranian kashk is used to bulk up soups and stews, and gives them a wonderfully deep and sharp aroma, a bit like feta but in runny form. I get my kashk from specialist Iranian shops, a few of which I’m lucky to have found dotted around London. But don’t worry if you can’t get hold of kashk – a mixture of crème fraîche and grated parmesan (or other mature cheese) makes a perfectly good substitute. Serves four. 700g spring onions (a large variety with a thick bulb, if possible) 40g unsalted butter 50ml olive oil, plus extra to finish 2 whole medium garlic heads, cloves peeled and halved lengthways 3 bay leaves 300g frozen peas 1 medium courgette, diced 1.3 litres vegetable stock 80g parsley leaves, roughly chopped 60g kashk (or crème fraîche/parmesan mix) 20g mint leaves, roughly chopped Grated zest of ½ lemon Salt and black pepper Cut the white of the spring onions into 1.5cm-long slices and the green into 2.5cm-long segments. Melt the butter in a large saucepan, add the oil, white spring onion slices, halved garlic cloves and some salt and pepper, and sauté on moderate heat for 10-15 minutes, until the vegetables are soft. Add the green spring onion segments and the bay leaves, cook for about 10 minutes, add the peas and courgette, and cook for another five minutes. Remove half the vegetables from the pan and set aside. Cover the remaining vegetables with the stock, bring to a boil and simmer for three minutes. Remove the bay leaves, add the parsley and blitz in a
Continue reading …Mark Kennedy, the first infiltrator to be exposed, says he may sue Scotland Yard for causing post-traumatic stress disorder A sixth police officer has been unmasked as an undercover spy in the protest movement as it emerged that Mark Kennedy, who spent seven years posing as an environmental activist, is considering suing Scotland Yard. In an interview with the Guardian Weekend magazine , Kennedy, who went “rogue” and offered to help environmental campaigners accused of planning to break into a power station, says he has suffered severe post-traumatic stress disorder and has been suicidal. His lawyers have been instructed to consider legal action against the police. The latest officer was reported to have been embedded in an anti-capitalist group for four years under the fake name of Simon Wellings. Newsnight on BBC2 reported that his true identity was discovered through a police blunder. Wellings inadvertently phoned a campaigner with the Globalise Resistance anti-capitalist group on his mobile phone while discussing photographs of demonstrators with another officer at a police station. The call was recorded on the campaigner’s answerphone and Wellings is heard being pressed to identify protesters at demonstrations, according to Newsnight. He is recorded saying: “She’s Hanna’s girlfriend – very overt lesbian – last time I saw her, hair about that long, it was blonde, week before it was black.” The infiltration of police spies became controversial after the identification of Kennedy and four others who had posed as members of a variety of political groups including environmental, anti-racist and anti-globalisation campaigns. The infiltration is the subject of four official investigations after police chiefs and ministers admitted the undercover operations had gone “badly wrong”. Kennedy believes that other undercover officers have been similarly ostracised. “The way the police handled the whole extraction .. is absolutely thoughtless from a psychological point of view and from a safety point of view.” He argues that the damage caused by such undercover work is too great, and that the police should rely more on electronic rather than human intelligence. Wellings pretended to be an activist with the group between 2001 and 2005. He always seemed to have enough money to go to many demonstrations in London, New York, Paris, Seville and other cities. Guy Taylor, a member, told Newsnight: “He didn’t have much of a backstory. We never met any of his friends or his family.” He volunteered to be the group’s photographer and took “plenty of photographs”. Wellings vanished after being rumbled by the other activists. The accidental phone call also highlights the role of police units which take photographs of protesters to be stored in secret databases such as Scotland Yard’s CO11 public order branch. The other police officer is heard on the tape pressing Wellings to put names to the photographs, according to Newsnight. “Thing is we’ve got the CO11s. They’re like – who are these people ? Do you know who they are ?” Last night the Metropolitan police said:”The use of undercover officers is a valuable tactic in the fight against crime and disorder to keep people and communities safe. “Their use is highly regulated and governed in law through the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) and must be necessary, proportionate and lawful. “The deployment of undercover officers is also overseen by the Surveillance Commissioner who must be satisfied by their use.” Mark Kennedy Activism Protest Police Simon Hattenstone Rob Evans Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Mark Kennedy, the first infiltrator to be exposed, says he may sue Scotland Yard for causing post-traumatic stress disorder A sixth police officer has been unmasked as an undercover spy in the protest movement as it emerged that Mark Kennedy, who spent seven years posing as an environmental activist, is considering suing Scotland Yard. In an interview with the Guardian Weekend magazine , Kennedy, who went “rogue” and offered to help environmental campaigners accused of planning to break into a power station, says he has suffered severe post-traumatic stress disorder and has been suicidal. His lawyers have been instructed to consider legal action against the police. The latest officer was reported to have been embedded in an anti-capitalist group for four years under the fake name of Simon Wellings. Newsnight on BBC2 reported that his true identity was discovered through a police blunder. Wellings inadvertently phoned a campaigner with the Globalise Resistance anti-capitalist group on his mobile phone while discussing photographs of demonstrators with another officer at a police station. The call was recorded on the campaigner’s answerphone and Wellings is heard being pressed to identify protesters at demonstrations, according to Newsnight. He is recorded saying: “She’s Hanna’s girlfriend – very overt lesbian – last time I saw her, hair about that long, it was blonde, week before it was black.” The infiltration of police spies became controversial after the identification of Kennedy and four others who had posed as members of a variety of political groups including environmental, anti-racist and anti-globalisation campaigns. The infiltration is the subject of four official investigations after police chiefs and ministers admitted the undercover operations had gone “badly wrong”. Kennedy believes that other undercover officers have been similarly ostracised. “The way the police handled the whole extraction .. is absolutely thoughtless from a psychological point of view and from a safety point of view.” He argues that the damage caused by such undercover work is too great, and that the police should rely more on electronic rather than human intelligence. Wellings pretended to be an activist with the group between 2001 and 2005. He always seemed to have enough money to go to many demonstrations in London, New York, Paris, Seville and other cities. Guy Taylor, a member, told Newsnight: “He didn’t have much of a backstory. We never met any of his friends or his family.” He volunteered to be the group’s photographer and took “plenty of photographs”. Wellings vanished after being rumbled by the other activists. The accidental phone call also highlights the role of police units which take photographs of protesters to be stored in secret databases such as Scotland Yard’s CO11 public order branch. The other police officer is heard on the tape pressing Wellings to put names to the photographs, according to Newsnight. “Thing is we’ve got the CO11s. They’re like – who are these people ? Do you know who they are ?” Last night the Metropolitan police said:”The use of undercover officers is a valuable tactic in the fight against crime and disorder to keep people and communities safe. “Their use is highly regulated and governed in law through the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act (RIPA) and must be necessary, proportionate and lawful. “The deployment of undercover officers is also overseen by the Surveillance Commissioner who must be satisfied by their use.” Mark Kennedy Activism Protest Police Simon Hattenstone Rob Evans Paul Lewis guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Forces looks at possible links to unsolved crimes after suspect leads officers to Gloucestershire field Police investigating the murder of 22-year-old Sian O’Callaghan admitted they were “stepping into the unknown” as they searched a field for a second body. Officers said the excavation of the farmer’s field in Gloucestershire was likely to be a painstaking process that could take several days. Detective Superintendent Steve Fulcher, who is leading the inquiry, said: “Until that has been completed we will not know what we are dealing with.” Detectives from around the country are liaising with Wiltshire police over possible links to unsolved crimes or missing people from their region. They are known to include Avon and Somerset officers investigating the murder of Melanie Hall, who vanished from a Bath nightclub in 1996. Police have also spoken to organisations that help publicise cases of missing people. O’Callaghan went missing after leaving a nightclub in Swindon early last Saturday. She was found near Uffington in Oxfordshire, 12 miles east of Swindon, on Thursday after a man arrested on suspicion of her kidnap led police to the site. Fulcher said her body was undergoing a postmortem examination. The man also led the officers to the farmer’s field at Eastleach, Gloucestershire, about 15 miles north of Swindon. Police would not give details about the possible identity of any body at Eastleach. They said only that it was thought to be that of an adult and they believed the case went back “several years”. Fulcher said there was only one outstanding missing person in the Wiltshire force’s jurisdiction from that time, whom he did not name. Police later clarified that this did not mean that this was the person possibly buried in the field. Sources also pointed out that they could not be sure that there was a body at the site. Local murder cases in which no body has been found include that of college worker Linda Razzell, 41, who vanished from Swindon in 2002. Her husband, Glyn, was convicted of her killing but protests his innocence. Razzell’s family said police had not been in touch. The body of retired teacher Kate Prout has never been found after she went missing from a Gloucestershire farm in 2007. Her husband, Adrian, was found guilty of her murder last year but also insists he is innocent. The only Wiltshire person listed as missing on the Missing People website is a 53-year-old man called Anthony Fryer, who vanished from Swindon in 2005. Though Hall’s body was found in 2009, sources at Avon and Somerset police confirmed that detectives involved in the case were looking at any possible links with her murder. The force already works with Wiltshire police in a major crime investigation unit called Brunel, so both forces would be involved in the O’Callaghan investigation as a matter of course. Detective Superintendent Mike Courtiour, of Avon and Somerset police, is the head of Brunel and the lead on Melanie Hall. A source said: “He would naturally be looking at the possibility of any links.” At a press conference Fulcher outlined events leading to the arrest of the man now in custody on suspicion of kidnapping and murdering O’Callaghan. He described how CCTV footage and analysis of O’Callaghan’s mobile phone indicated that she had left the Suju nightclub at 2.52am last Saturday and 32 minutes later was in Savernake forest, near Marlborough, around 12 miles south of Swindon. CCTV footage also established that a green Toyota Avensis was near the club at the relevant time. Further analysis enabled officers to identify the registration of the vehicle. “I believed that it was likely that Sian had been abducted and taken away in this vehicle,” said Fulcher. He said police had concentrated on searching the forest and finding the Avensis and the driver. A man – named locally as taxi driver Chris Halliwell – was arrested in an Asda car park in Swindon on Thursday and a green Toyota Avensis towed away. He was initially arrested on suspicion of kidnap. But Fulcher said: “He led me to two locations, one near Uffington, where we discovered the body of a woman who we believe is Sian, and also to another location where we believe that a second body may be.” Fulcher said he believed O’Callaghan’s body had been moved to the spot where it was found. A house in Swindon continued to be searched and officers removed items including two spades. The suspect was being held at Gablecross police station near Swindon. He was taken to the town’s magistrates court, where police asked for extra time to question him. A police spokeswoman said: “A 24-hour extension of detention was granted and the man remains in custody at Gablecross police station.” Crime Steven Morris guardian.co.uk
Continue reading …Click here to view this media How sad is it when even your former chief of staff says they won’t vote for you if you decide to run for president? Apparently that’s the case with Minnesota wingnut Rep. Michele Bachmann who just announced that she’s forming a presidential exploratory committee by this summer. Let the dragging of the field of Republican primary candidates even further to the right (if that’s even humanly possible) begin! Bachmann’s Former Chief Of Staff: I’m Voting For Tim Pawlenty : Thrilling tea partiers and liberals alike, CNN reported today that right-wing Rep. Michele Bachmann (R-MN) will form a presidential exploratory committee by July. Boasting a pseudo-firm grasp on U.S. history , policy priorities , and reality , Bachmann hopes to secure America’s vote of confidence come 2012. Unfortunately, she’s already lost one vote : her most recent chief of staff’s. Serving as her fifth Chief of Staff before resigning last summer, Ron Carey said he intends to vote for Tim Pawlenty in the GOP race for President because “electability is a very, very high attribute you have to have”. Go read the rest of their post and Ed Schultz did a mash-up of some of Bachmann’s greatest hits in the video above.
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