Oklahoma City Bombing; The Suppressed Truth by Jon Rappoport

Oklahoma City Bombing; The Suppressed Truth by Jon Rappoport

Author:Jon Rappoport [Rappoport, Jon]
Language: eng
Format: epub
Published: 0101-01-01T00:00:00+00:00


THE SIXTH IMAGE

Finally, as of June 30, the Iraqi-McVeigh story is getting out through a few local TV stations. Seattle apparently has picked it up. New York has it. According to one report from a source in OK City, the FBI refused to question the Iraqi soldier spotted by witnesses in the bar with McVeigh. Why? Is the FBI trying to downplay this possible scenario? Is the limit of its serious inquiry "Patriots and people so connected?"

On February 9th of this year, Bill Clinton signed Executive Order 12949. It expanded the powers of a little-known federal court called FISA, named after the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act of 1978. This secret, yes, secret court, can give the green light to the Justice Dept, to carry out physical searches with no public warrant, without ever letting the target know he HAS been searched, and without ever presenting a list of items taken in the search.

According to Executive Order 12949, the person whose property is invaded does not have to be suspected of a crime. His belongings can be tossed because he is a member of a group, or has helped a group, which is labeled by the Dept, of Justice as being a threat to national security.

To top it off, any evidence obtained in this kind of invasion can be used in a criminal trial, not merely for intelligence purposes. That is the new wrinkle.

Presumably, the sort of group a person would belong to that would trigger federal intrusion is a foreign organization. But in light of the OK City bombing, we can expect to see attempts to redefine national security. New groups, including Patriots, and those who help them, would be targeted. Especially since some Patriots, to distance themselves from the control of the federal government, technically reclassify themselves as resident aliens.

"Of course we can ransack your house. After all, you sent a fifty-dollar contribution to the Militia of Montana. You also received their analysis of corruption in the tax system."

"Sorry. Had to ask."

"Of course we can ransack your home. After all, you sent a hundred dollars to the Get the CIA Out of Guatemala Fund."

"Of course we can ransack your home. You sent twenty dollars to the Committee for the Study of Power in Transnational Corporations."

Executive Order 12949 rips a huge hole in the 4th Amendment to the Constitution-which, by the way, states:

"The right of the people to be secure in their persons, houses, papers, and effects against unreasonable searches and seizures, shall not be violated, and no Warrants shall issue, but upon probable cause, supported by oath or affirmation, and particularly describing the places to be searched, and the persons or things to be seized."

The practice which has been used to defend the Fourth Amendment is called the exclusionary rule. It throws out, from a trial, any evidence obtained in an illegal search.

However, since the beginning of Reagan's second term in office, a loophole has been used to travel through the exclusionary rule. Called "good faith," it asserts that



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