FBI Authorized Informants To Break The Law 22,800 Times In 4 Years (dailydot.com) 106
blottsie quotes a report from the Daily Dot: Over a four-year period, the FBI authorized informants to break the law more than 22,800 times, according to newly reviewed documents. Official records obtained by the Daily Dot under the Freedom of Information Act show the Federal Bureau of Investigation gave informants permission at least 5,649 times in 2013 to engage in activity that would otherwise be considered a crime. In 2014, authorization was given 5,577 times, the records show. USA Today previously revealed confidential informants engaged in "otherwise illegal activity," as the bureau calls it, 5,658 times in 2011. The figure was at 5,939 the year before, according to documents acquired by the Huffington Post. In total, records obtained by reporters confirm the FBI authorized at least 22,823 crimes between 2011 and 2014. Unfortunately, many of those crimes can have serious and unintended consequences. One of the examples mentioned in the Daily Dot's report was of an FBI informant who "was responsible for facilitating the 2011 breach of Stratfor in one of the most high-profile cyberattacks of the last decade. While a handful of informants ultimately brought down the principal hacker responsible, the sting also caused Stratfor, an American intelligence firm, millions of dollars in damages and left and estimated 700,000 credit card holders vulnerable to fraud."
How does that work? (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:How does that work? (Score:5, Informative)
No it is an authority which is specifically given to various arms of law enforcement. The level of the crime to be authorised changes who must sign off on it. Authorization of violent crimes are not allowed by field agents and serious offenses must first be approved by federal prosecutors.
The obvious example is allowing a street corner drug dealer to keep dealing in order to catch their supplier.
Re:How does that work? (Score:4, Funny)
No it is an authority which is specifically given to various arms of law enforcement. The level of the crime to be authorised changes who must sign off on it. Authorization of violent crimes are not allowed by field agents and serious offenses must first be approved by federal prosecutors.
The obvious example is allowing a street corner drug dealer to keep dealing in order to catch their supplier.
For example, field agents signed off on 21,823 of the 22,823 crimes, which were for pizza delivery drivers to break traffic laws in DC in order to get pizza to the FBI building faster. Fortunately the traffic in DC is so messed up already that nobody noticed.
The pizza drivers would call before delivery and give the code phrase "I inform you that this pizza is awesome," thereby becoming FBI informants who could be authorized to break the law.
Re:How does that work? (Score:4, Interesting)
I would bet, victims of those crimes, who forced a constitutional challenge to those criminals activities could force some really severe penalties on the government. You might say you can, and write crap laws that say you can but legally can you really purposefully create victims of citizens, criminally fuck people over, to what, advance your career. Somehow that doesn't quite ring true as being legal, regardless of the anti-constitutional lies their lawyers and corrupt politicians spread.
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I would bet, victims of those crimes ...
Most of these crimes don't have victims.
I might ask, then why are they crimes.
Re: How does that work? (Score:1)
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All Authoritarians should automatically be caught up in every authoritarian law they pass. Perhaps that would make more rethink what laws they pass.
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Jaywalking
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If you jaywalk in front of a car, they may have to slam on their brakes, or could swerve into a car to avoid you, and if they actually manage to hit and kill you, they could forever be psychologically damaged.
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I jaywalk, but not stupidly. I'm not going to risk my life on the chance that any particular driver is being alert. Therefore, my jaywalking is victimless. (Not that it's much of a crime, though. I think it's at most a petty misdemeanor, which doesn't qualify as a "crime" in this state.)
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Something tells me that that particular legal question has been asked many many many times and the legal standing is known. Informants and allowing crimes to pass un-punished in exchange for catching bigger crimes is hardly a new concept.
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At this point I fear it would take an extremely egregious act for anyone in authority to get a meaningful sentence and actually stay in jail for it, like being caught on multiple angles of video outside a burning domestic abuse shelter full of women/children laughing maniacally with a cigar in your mouth, an empty can of gas in one hand and a lighter in the other.
Something tells me that even then, because the footage wasn't officially police sanctioned video, he would be put on administrative leave with pay.
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There is literally nothing these bastards can do that will get them sent to prison.
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I'd say having all those women and children laughing in the video would suggest that your antics are mere cheeky and endearing shenanigans and therefore not really worth prosecuting.
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I would bet, victims of those crimes, who forced a constitutional challenge to those criminals activities could force some really severe penalties on the government.
Force?! Force the world's most powerful government/military to do something? I don't think you understand how power works.
You might say you can, and write crap laws that say you can but legally can you really purposefully create victims of citizens, criminally fuck people over, to what, advance your career.
Since they are currently and routinely doing precisely that then the answer to your question is "yes". And you can't do squat about it.
Somehow that doesn't quite ring true as being legal, regardless of the anti-constitutional lies their lawyers and corrupt politicians spread.
1. What makes you think that your opinion of legality is important or should be listened to?
2. They both make and enforce the law. They decide what is legal. Not because it's fair, nor because you think it's right or fair. They get to do such things bec
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By who exactly? It still sounds like selective enforcement to me. A federal prosecutor signing off on the commission of a crime would be making themselves an accomplice subject to prosecution. Prosecutors can choose which crimes to prosecute based on the probability of successful prosecution but are not themselves immune to the law and have no authority which allows them to encourage or participate in crime. There is no s
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Law enforcement members are covered by the doctrine of qualified immunity.
The supreme court has previously made this ruling: [o]ur decisions have recognized immunity defenses of two kinds. For officials whose special functions or constitutional status requires complete protection from suit, we have recognized the defense of “absolute immunity.” The absolute immunity of legislators, in their legislative functions, and of judges, in their judicial functions, now is well settled. Our decisions also
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There is certainly nothing in the Constitution that would allow such, with the possible exception of a treaty. Without a grant of power and chain of authority from the Cons
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Did you read the link that I gave you? It specifically covers the sanctioning of otherwise illegal activity and given that is part of their legislative function the qualified immunity would extend to those orders.
Also the constitution hardly outlines all the powers that are available to the government. You may not like it but there is a huge load of case law which supports the practice and it is written into the acts outlining the FBI powers.
Part 1.
Otherwise illegal activity by an FBI agent or employee in
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That is EXACTLY what the Constitution does. If the people via the Constitution does not grant the power, the government does not have it. It even spells that out in the bill of rights, all powers not granted to the government by the Constitution are reserved to the states and the people. The Constitution provides that the Supreme Court will interpret the powers granted and it is rulings in that capacity which can all
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I think you are getting into the semantics of what is legal and what isn't there. I get it that you feel that the constitution should be the basis of all laws and powers of the government but it isn't and hasn't been for a long time. Laws and legislation are passed by the government because they have the power to pass them and enforce them, and while there is always the risk of civil uprising that is no different then if the rule causing an issue was written into the constitution.
Most other countries don'
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Other countries have little bearing on the legal system of the United States. In the United States the people fought a rebellion to take power, that power is reserved to the people, a small grant of power was given by the people to establish a centr
WTF FBI, LOL? (Score:3)
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/. readers who are lawyers cops, & prosecutors reading this, please jump in and correct my erroneous assumptions now...
How about ones who read the article?
You must be new here.
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If they are reporting publicly that they do it, you can be pretty sure it's legal.
The Attorney General wrote the rules, which are available online, as stated in the article.
https://www.justice.gov/sites/... [justice.gov]
Re:How does that work? (Score:4, Informative)
That is how it works in a police-state: Even if the police rapes, pillages and murders wholesale, they get at most an inquiry that finds they did nothing wrong. Actual "rule of law" says the law applies to everybody and the police are held to an even higher standard. These days, many of them are thugs with no accountability at all.
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Well, if you look at how many policemen get away with "unauthorized" rape and murder, you may want to rethink that.
Fuck Stratfor. (Score:1)
Reap what you sow.
Were these actions necessary? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Were these actions necessary? (Score:5, Insightful)
You are right that it will be a combination of both. But if your aim is, for example, to bust a drug cartel then sticking every street dealer you find in prison will make that extremely difficult if not impossible.
The real issues come about when law enforcement ends up working too closely with a particular person turning a blind eye to their activities to target others. James Bulger is a prime example of this.
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Would it? I wounder. I mean people deal drugs to make money, they do it because they think its a better opportunity than they have else where. If it was widely know that you will be caught, tried, and convicted for dealing and quickly maybe people would not do it.
How long will the cartel last if they can't move product. In dependent of whether its a good thing or not we have eyes basically everywhere now. Combined with a little social media and telephone metadata analysis we could probably collar all b
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Look at how many people are serving time in the US for minor drug drug charges. I don't think those people went into it thinking they would get caught but evidence mounts up pretty quickly that people are caught and in large numbers.
No a bigger issue is that for a lot of people the risk of prison isn't enough of a disincentive because their current situation is so utterly shit.
Also you need to keep in mind that the FBI / DEA etc are finite in resources. They simply cannot have an officer on every corner.
Re: Were these actions necessary? (Score:1, Insightful)
Do as i say, not as i do.
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I could be wrong but I have a feeling that the number is this large because they have dozens of informants in ongoing investigations engaging in illegal activities so it could be at any given time the FBI has 15 informants on a daily basis allowed to engage in illegal activity.
Doesn't seem so outlandish in that context. They do investigate a lot of crimes that take a lot of investigative work do to the sophistication of the persons and or groups involved in the crimes.
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One thing I read posted the informant count at 15000
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I'd be interested to read that. I can't imagine that would be active informants, maybe just people 'on the books' who have or may inform?
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https://www.rt.com/usa/fbi-cri... [rt.com]
Describes them as informants on the payroll. I don't have a link to their source.
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Capitalism is more important than "democracy"
Indeed. Capitalism without democracy is common. Democracy without capitalism is rare.
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No issues around evidence that is tainted or flowed from gov/mil illegal action, all search warrants are ready, all interviews and comments got witness by two or more federal law enforcement officials.
Methods, effortless and constant decryption, years of beacon tra
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It's becoming increasingly difficult to tell law enforcement from the criminals. As a regular old boring middle aged white guy, I fear my own government more than any gang member or terrorist.
Re:Migration of criminals (Score:5, Insightful)
p Otherwise we could end up with the DEA smuggling drugs for the Sinaloa drug cartel, the ATF selling guns to violent criminals, or the FBI smuggling child porn.
Hmmm so Silk Road [usatoday.com], Fast and Furious [judicialwatch.org] and Playpen [usatoday.com].
Who watches the watchers?
Late to the party (Score:2)
Where is the "SLASHDOT IS FBI" guy? I figured he'd be all over this story.
Maybe he's thinking about going back to being the "cows say moo" guy.
TLDR; THEY LIVE (you bet your ass They do!) (Score:1)
I don't know where "he" is but i would recommend according to sources on the net to be on the look out for shape shifting aliens disguised as humans, who, like the hybrid humans+aliens, must consume human flesh to maintain their human appearance.
human flesh is being found more and more in common food today,
there exists a certain barrier in normal, everyday thought which hides the reality of these creatures and their hybrids along with the smell and taste of human flesh in common food as well as the scent of
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But always trust a mason jar.
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Where is the "SLASHDOT IS FBI" guy? I figured he'd be all over this story.
He was killed by our Robotic Overlords.
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You are probably just being funny, but the FBI does have a habit of looking the other way when a person with money or power breaks the law. The sad part is that if Hillary becomes President, she will never have to pay for her crimes.
Gives quite an incentive to commit as many crimes as necessary to become president doesn't it?
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You are probably just being funny, but the FBI does have a habit of looking the other way when a person with money or power breaks the law. The sad part is that if Hillary becomes President, she will never have to pay for her crimes.
That's only true if she dies in office. Hillary is widely disliked and the GOP can nurse a grudge. The only way they'll back off is if their own panties have plenty of stains.
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An example that gets very frequently brought up on Slashdot is how Capone was taken down by the IRS. Most people do not understand that it was because the FBI was looking the other way.
Geeze, that's more than 15 times a day (Score:2)
The comparison of this number to assorted lude and crude innuendo and various "your mom" jokes is left as an exercise for the reader.
Cut out the middle man (Score:2)
Re:Cut out the middle man (Score:5, Interesting)
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wait - you think murdering "suspects" would make the world a better place ? This from a community so up in arms over privacy violations because it's wrong, but apparently you don't give two fucks about any due process ?
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Everyone is flooding the internet with bait and the FBI has to respond to it all only to discover its all from the US gov, mil as part of domestic missions to keep budgets and make great over time.
Great for the growth and funding of each agency but the FBI then has to work out what is a crime or just another US agency creating a legend around some other mil/gov bac
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That happened in East Germany a lot. So many people got an offer to turn and become informants that peace protest groups and church groups got filled with ever more informants.
Add in a layer of more traditional police like undercover work and even soon smaller groups had a few informants mostly generating gossip on each other to induce the ability to get deeper into a network or find another nations help.
It was hard work
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Because the cops have already discovered that once they start shooting suspects, in America, the people start shooting back. This is the purpose of the second amendment.
Why not just plead ignorance of the law? (Score:1)
https://thinkprogress.org/supreme-court-says-ignorance-of-the-law-is-an-excuse-if-youre-a-cop-d8bdb99987f1#.e57rxa83d
"... the state argued that the cops had made a “reasonable” mistake when they pulled over Heien for having one tail light, and thus were not precluded from using the evidence that came out of that stop. This assertion is controversial in and of itself. After all, police already have such vast leeway to make traffic stops that Fourth Amendment scholar Orin Kerr recently quipped,
More about entrapment, less about informants (Score:5, Insightful)
It's perfectly reasonable for law enforcement to allow some informants to commit certain crimes while attempting to shut down a larger organization. Simply reporting the number of times that this happens says nothing one way or the other about whether the FBI is doing a good job at making use of this power.
Personally, I'm much more worried about the times that the FBI and other law enforcement agencies engage in sting operations where they use such informants to urge people to commit legal activity and then arrest them for it. Some fraction of these informants may well be doing just this sort of thing, but the report of merely the number of informants doesn't say anything about that. Here [wikipedia.org] is one example of such entrapment. Quoted from the above page:
Can I give you a 5 score for Misleading? (Score:2)
necessary (Score:2)
Stratfor is a bad example (Score:2)
By authorizing and inducing the hack of Stratfor we came to know about many things [freejeremy.net] private companies and the government are doing (of course they are not going to answer for their crimes). They should encourage more people to commit crimes like invading and damaging companies like this.
Of course the rest of the FBI's entrapment activities [theintercept.com] is just for the worst of your country (and of the world with the "war on terror").
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If nothing else it's making the tinfoil types think that the only thing powerful enough to mess about with "the establishment" is the government itself.
"otherwise illegal activity" (Score:2)
What is the word "otherwise" there for? It simply is illegal activity.
Thomas Hobbes (Score:1)