Deleted photo sparks fears DEA hiring mercenaries

phr

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Deleted photo sparks fears DEA hiring mercenaries
Muriel Kane
The Raw Story
8.4.08



When a California medical marijuana dispensary, Organica Collective, was raided last Thursday by agents of the Federal Drug Enforcement Agency and local police, the Los Angeles Times ran a dramatic story on the incident, accompanied by a set of photographs showing the raid and its aftermath.

According to the Times, witnesses described the DEA agents as "removing computers, medicine and money, and using a steel cylinder battering ram to get into the upstairs bedrooms." When they left four hours later, all that remained was "trash, counters strewn with open and empty glass jars, piles of receipts thrown on the ground, upturned couch cushions, bits of marijuana on the edges of counters and an ATM with its doors torn open and emptied. ... An outdoor vegetable garden had plants uprooted, along with marijuana plants removed by the agents."

However, one particular photograph from the Times story has drawn more attention than anything else. That picture, which has now been widely reproduced at blogs, shows a long-haired man, wearing a Blackwater tshirt and with a pistol at his belt, passing a box marked "DEA Evidence" to other agents participating in the raid.

Blackwater, a private mercenary army often employed by the US government for security services and by local police forces for training, has drawn widespread criticism for its shoot-em-up tactics in Iraq and has recently aroused suspicion by its establishment of a private intelligence service and its growing role in global drug enforcement.

A medical marijuana website may have been the first to draw attention to the picture, noting, "We’re used to the DEA calling in help from various federal agencies and local law enforcement. But I guess none of their usual buddies were available yesterday because from the picture below, which appeared in the LA Times today, it looks like they had to resort to calling in Blackwater."

The next day, Tim King of Salem-News.com gave wider distribution to the story, writing, "Are members of a disputed mercenary killer group now working with the DEA? A photo from the LA Times shows proof of one of two things; either Blackwater members are now working for the Bush White House's Drug Enforcement Agency, or this semi-illegitimate band of rogue federal cops have worse discipline than any of us ever imagined."

The photo has since been taken down by the Times, but it has continued to circulate online. Although there has been no previous suggestion of a Blackwater role in domestic drug enforcement, the single picture was sufficient enough to set off furious discussion at both left-wing and libertarian message boards and blogs.

At Democratic Underground, posters generally acknowledged there was no proof of Blackwater involvement and some pointed out that tshirts of the sort shown in the photograph are available online.

However, others found the idea possible, citing Sen. John McCain's recent call for an Iraq-style approach to urban crime. One poster even claimed, "They were also used in raids in Humboldt County last month against the growers....Operation Southern Sweep. Can't find any news stories about it, but some people I know have said they were using Blackwater as well as DEA agents."

At Boing Boing, however, a more skeptical commenter suggested, "I'm willing to bet he's DEA. Blackwater probably wouldn't hire someone who looked that scuzzy, but DEA agents frequently look like dirtbags. Would YOU sell dope to someone who looked like a federal agent?"

Link!
 
The more I look into this story, the more it really scares me... That the DEA's response to a court ruling being violence and scare tactics, the use of armed mercenaries in place of federal agents, just the notion that the federal government thinks they can get away with a completely illegitimate violent act that violates citizens' legal and constitutional rights like this and they most likely will. It's really fucked up.
 
this is really fucking spooky, how long til the day the pot boils over & shit hits the fan? You dont hire a fucking PMC (Private Military corporation) to do business with the DEA, something is seriously wrong. These are the people they mite go to 2 when the chip etc. dont fly and they would like to start massacring USA civilians.

blackwater is notorious in the middle east for merking kids children etc.
 
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wonder if it's true. he could just have been wearing a random t-shirt.

definitely calls for an investigation though.
 
At the very least, the DEA is getting free t-shirts.

Highly inappropriate. :|
 
Some guy at my rehab was in blackwater. He said some FUCKED UP things go on at blackwater. FUCKED UP THINGS. I also asked him how having a habit while killing people was.

I said "what if you couldn't score that day?"

He laughed and said "you could ALWAYS score in afganistan"

hehe, ooo yea, duh
 
phrozen said:
However, others found the idea possible, citing Sen. John McCain's recent call for an Iraq-style approach to urban crime. One poster even claimed, "They were also used in raids in Humboldt County last month against the growers....Operation Southern Sweep. Can't find any news stories about it, but some people I know have said they were using Blackwater as well as DEA agents."


Link!

This is chilling ~ "Iraq-style approach to urban crime."
I live near Humboldt, ugh, im speechless. 8o

I actually have a 'blackwater' t-shirt, but its from the blackwater cafe in stockton ~ wonder if I hang it above my door with the blood of an innocent nation smeared on it, they'll pass by my house...

----------------
Now playing: Beatfreakz - Somebodys Watching Me (Hi Tack Remix)
via FoxyTunes
 
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ATF said:
...wonder if I hang it above my door with the blood of an innocent nation smeared on it, they'll pass by my house...
They'll probably ask if you want a job... :\
 
This is an article from our local paper (Blackwater located near me) about a Federal raid on Blackwater headquarters. Sorry the link did not transfer for story.

Will

FROM NEW AND OBSERVER (RALEIGH, NC)

ATF seizes weapons from Blackwater
Investigation concerns how they were obtained

The U.S. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives seized nearly two dozen automatic rifles from Blackwater Worldwide this week, apparently part of an investigation into whether the private security contractor obtained them illegally.
ATF agents confiscated the guns Tuesday, two days after a story in The News & Observer raised questions about Blackwater's deal to buy 34 guns for the Camden County Sheriff's Office -- nearly two automatic weapons for each of the department's 19 deputies.

Camden County Sheriff Tony Perry said Blackwater kept 22 of the guns at its Moyock headquarters, which is thought to be the world's largest private firearms training facility. It used the guns to train law enforcement officers and members of the military, and also may have used them to train foreign troops in anti-terrorism maneuvers financed by the State Department, officials said.

Half the guns were Romanian-made AK-47 assault rifles, and the others were Bushmaster XM15 E2S rifles, according to contracts between Blackwater and the Sheriff's Office. None of the deputies, though, was qualified to use AK-47s.

Generally, only government agencies, including local law enforcement, can own automatic weapons, according to federal law. Many police departments and sheriff's offices buy them for SWAT teams. The AK-47, however, is regarded as a poor choice for police work, in part because it's too powerful.

When an automatic weapon is properly registered to someone in the National Firearms Registration and Transfer Record, it's illegal for someone else to receive or possess it. The 34 guns are registered to the Camden County sheriff.

Blackwater President Gary Jackson, in a meeting with N&O editors and reporters last week, said the deal with Camden was legal. The company also issued a statement Thursday defending the gun deal.

"Some of the same ATF agents involved in the current inquiry have long been aware of this arrangement as a result of visits to our facility and audits of our firearms programs at Blackwater's request," Blackwater spokeswoman Anne Tyrrell wrote in an e-mail release. "As a company that is fully licensed to sell, provide training on, or even manufacture weapons -- including machine guns -- we have worked closely with the ATF to ensure we are in compliance with all applicable federal firearms laws. We look forward to cooperating with the government to resolve this allegation."

Perry, the Camden County sheriff, said last week that he couldn't remember who had suggested the deal with his office and that he was cooperating with the ATF on the case.

He was traveling Thursday and couldn't be reached for comment on the confiscations.

The Raleigh ATF office referred questions about the case Thursday to the U.S. Attorney's Office. A spokeswoman there declined to comment, saying that she could not confirm or deny any investigation that might be pending.

Tyrrell said the ATF agents came to the company's headquarters Tuesday and took all the Camden County rifles stored there without giving an explanation.

"They came and asked to speak to someone from our legal department and asked to see the Camden County locker," she said in a telephone interview. "Our lawyer gave them access, and they took the weapons."

Jackson, the Blackwater president, signed two agreements in 2005 with Maj. Jon Worthington of the Sheriff's Office, who also has moonlighted at Blackwater as a firearms instructor, according to Perry. One was for the AK-47s, the other for the Bushmasters.

Blackwater paid for the guns, and the terms said the Sheriff's Office would have unlimited access to the rifles "for training and qualification, and state of emergency use."

The deal could be illegal, a law professor at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill said last week in an interview. When one person fills out the federal firearms registration form to get a weapon for someone else's use, that can be an illegal "straw purchase," said Richard Myers, adding that he had prosecuted several such deals while working as a federal prosecutor.


Edit: Snowbear added story link: http://www.newsobserver.com/917/story/1122205.html
 
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I was really surprised when ATF raided Blackwater. From what I can determine they have done a remarkable good job at a dirty job (mercenary work worldwide). Taking a couple of dozen machine guns from a private army hardly seems worth the effort.

I am not defending Blackwater, but they are only doing what our government is paying them to do. I guess the fact that they are doing it well and at a HUGE profit draws a lot of fire.

Will
 
Why in the hell would anyone with even half a brain not vehemently oppose even the very notion of private military corporations existing in the first place. Its scary enough that our governments are armed.
 
An outdoor vegetable garden had plants uprooted, along with marijuana plants removed by the agents
LOL, the agents couldn't tell a cannabis plant from a tomato.
 
^^^^ Haven't you heard of the gardener-terrorist infiltration?
 
btw, DEA are required to wear shirts identifying them as such when they do raids. these are definitely Blackwater scum. :p
 
Why in the hell would anyone with even half a brain not vehemently oppose even the very notion of private military corporations existing in the first place. Its scary enough that our governments are armed.
mmhhmm
 
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