Source: RT
The FBI wants the encryption keys to the iPhone, yet has a poor
track record since September 11, 2001 of protecting Constitutional
rights
After an inexplicable and
terrible crime was committed in December, leaving 14 dead and 22 injured
in California, the public was informed that an act of terror had been
committed. We were told that the culprits were a San Bernardino County
Health Department employee and his wife who were killed after they fled
the scene.
“Going postal” at places of work or even inside US
high schools and colleges is a rare, but not unknown event. In an
interesting twist, the FBI now claims that in order to build its case
against the dead couple, it needs to drive a 16-wheel “Mack”
truck through the Constitution and has asked Apple to unlock the
husband’s iPhone and provide Apple’s encryption key for that phone. The
request is precedent-setting and has sparked controversy in the US. The
implications are global for anyone who has an encrypted iPhone and for
phone companies now considering providing encryption as a privacy
guarantee and selling point for their customers.
Violence at US schools dates back to the 1800s and is not a rare occurrence. A Wikipedia compilation shows hundreds of instances of killings at school between students or students and administrators. Wikipedia lists over 100 school shootings just since 2010, alone! Columbine just happens to be the one that we all remember. Unfortunately, workplace or school violence is nothing new in the United States. A disgruntled stock day trader in my hometown of Atlanta went berserk at two brokerage houses, killing 12 and injuring a dozen people; after leaving a note of explanation, he committed suicide. Eric Rudolph, called a terrorist by then-US Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez for his anti-abortion bombing of the Atlanta Olympics, killing one and injuring 111, sits in prison today after an extensive manhunt in which he was captured alive.
The same can be said for Dylann Roof, who killed nine Black worshipers in a South Carolina church in a bid to begin a race war. Roof, who left a paper trail of screeds, faced an assortment of charges from state and federal authorities, but not terrorism. During his arrest, police took him to Burger King to get a hamburger because he was hungry.
Was there ever any serious consideration of the possibility that this was an act of going postal?
Even before 9/11, criminal behavior inside the FBI forensics lab had become public. Tainting Evidence, by John Kelly and Philip Wearne describes in excruciating detail how the FBI intentionally tainted the evidence in order to “get its man.” It chronicles FBI malpractice, use of flawed science, doctored lab reports, and false testimony. Since 1998 when the book was published, the FBI has endured subsequent scandals, finally admitting flaws in its hair analysis procedures, going back decades. Some of the FBI’s victims were put to death or died in prison—on flawed evidence. Dr. Fred Whitehurst, FBI whistleblower in the 1990s, claims that the FBI was still doing the same thing in 2015.
It is this FBI that wants to investigate the contents of the iPhone of Syed Rizwan Farook, alleged perpetrator of the San Bernardino killings. The request from the FBI to Apple is precedent setting for Apple to unlock encryption keys in the phone. Both Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, were killed by police in their SUV after leaving the crime scene.
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Going Postal
"Going postal” is a term that refers to an employee who becomes so angry (usually because of stressful workplace conditions) that he becomes violent and shows up at the office with gun in hand bent on killing a specific person or just anyone. This happened first and most frequently at US post offices, hence the name. Mark Ames, author of “Going Postal,” found that the phenomenon occurred because of workplace abuse that the worker could no longer endure.Violence at US schools dates back to the 1800s and is not a rare occurrence. A Wikipedia compilation shows hundreds of instances of killings at school between students or students and administrators. Wikipedia lists over 100 school shootings just since 2010, alone! Columbine just happens to be the one that we all remember. Unfortunately, workplace or school violence is nothing new in the United States. A disgruntled stock day trader in my hometown of Atlanta went berserk at two brokerage houses, killing 12 and injuring a dozen people; after leaving a note of explanation, he committed suicide. Eric Rudolph, called a terrorist by then-US Attorney General Alberto Gonzalez for his anti-abortion bombing of the Atlanta Olympics, killing one and injuring 111, sits in prison today after an extensive manhunt in which he was captured alive.
The same can be said for Dylann Roof, who killed nine Black worshipers in a South Carolina church in a bid to begin a race war. Roof, who left a paper trail of screeds, faced an assortment of charges from state and federal authorities, but not terrorism. During his arrest, police took him to Burger King to get a hamburger because he was hungry.
Was there ever any serious consideration of the possibility that this was an act of going postal?
The FBI, Terror Plots, and San Bernardino
The Justice Department announced that San Bernardino killings would be investigated as terrorism. This is no surprise because any crime committed in the US by Muslims, or by Muslims who had no intention of committing a crime until being paid (or otherwise enticed) to do by the FBI, itself, will be labeled terrorism. That is the sad state of affairs in the US today. The Heritage Foundation claims that the FBI has used laws that decimate the Constitution to thwart 39 terror plots since September 11, 2001. But, after taking a closer look in their report entitled, "Inventing Terrorists,” Project Salam found that most of the preemptive prosecutions of “plots” were actually instigated, or even paid for, by the FBI. This has led many in the US to become deeply suspicious of FBI tactics in the domestic war against “homegrown” terrorists - as former Congresswoman Jane Harman’s breathtaking, far-reaching, Constitution-crushing bill came under discussion.Even before 9/11, criminal behavior inside the FBI forensics lab had become public. Tainting Evidence, by John Kelly and Philip Wearne describes in excruciating detail how the FBI intentionally tainted the evidence in order to “get its man.” It chronicles FBI malpractice, use of flawed science, doctored lab reports, and false testimony. Since 1998 when the book was published, the FBI has endured subsequent scandals, finally admitting flaws in its hair analysis procedures, going back decades. Some of the FBI’s victims were put to death or died in prison—on flawed evidence. Dr. Fred Whitehurst, FBI whistleblower in the 1990s, claims that the FBI was still doing the same thing in 2015.
It is this FBI that wants to investigate the contents of the iPhone of Syed Rizwan Farook, alleged perpetrator of the San Bernardino killings. The request from the FBI to Apple is precedent setting for Apple to unlock encryption keys in the phone. Both Farook and his wife, Tashfeen Malik, were killed by police in their SUV after leaving the crime scene.
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