Those
guidelines apply only to the law enforcement agencies overseen by the
Justice Department. Within the Treasury Department, undercover agents at
the I.R.S., for example, appear to have far more latitude than do those
at many other agencies. I.R.S. rules say that, with prior approval, “an
undercover employee or cooperating private individual may pose as an
attorney, physician, clergyman or member of the news media.”
Across the
federal government, undercover work has become common enough that
undercover agents sometimes find themselves investigating a supposed
criminal who turns out to be someone from a different agency, law
enforcement officials said. In a few situations, agents have even drawn
their weapons on each other before realizing that both worked for the
federal government.
- From the New York Times article: More Federal Agencies Are Using Undercover Operations
If this article doesn’t
prove to you without a shadow of a doubt what the prosecutorial
priorities of the U.S. federal government are I don’t know what will. I
have been railing for years on this site about how the rule of law is
dead and buried in the USA. How the “justice” system is targeting
average citizens for non crimes, while allowing the large financial
criminals responsible for destroying the global economy to get off on
DPAs, or deferred prosecution agreements originally crafted to deal with
juveniles (see: The U.S. Department of Justice Handles Banker Criminals Like Juvenile Offenders…Literally).
Further proof of this very disturbing trend can be seen in an article published by the New York Times over the weekend. Here are some excerpts:
WASHINGTON — The federal government has significantly expanded undercover operations in recent years, with officers from at least 40 agencies posing as business people, welfare recipients, political protesters and even doctors or ministers to ferret out wrongdoing, records and interviews show.
Wow, impressive. Even more impressive is the continued inability to put a single bank executive behind bars.
At the Supreme Court, small teams of undercover officers dress as students at large demonstrations outside the courthouse and join the protests to look for suspicious activity, according to officials familiar with the practice.
Ah, now we know why no
bankers are in jail. Because dissent from the plebs poses a far greater
threat to the corporate-fascist state.
At the Internal Revenue Service, dozens of undercover agents chase suspected tax evaders worldwide, by posing as tax preparers, accountants drug dealers or yacht buyers and more, court records show.At the Agriculture Department, more than 100 undercover agents pose as food stamp recipients at thousands of neighborhood stores to spot suspicious vendors and fraud, officials said.
I guess I must have missed the section about the hundreds of agents embedded in TBTF banks.
Undercover work, inherently invasive and sometimes dangerous, was once largely the domain of the F.B.I. and a few other law enforcement agencies at the federal level. But outside public view, changes in policies and tactics over the last decade have resulted in undercover teams run by agencies in virtually every corner of the federal government, according to officials, former agents and documents.Some agency officials say such operations give them a powerful new tool to gather evidence in ways that standard law enforcement methods do not offer, leading to more prosecutions.“Done right, undercover work can be a very effective law enforcement method, but it carries serious risks and should only be undertaken with proper training, supervision and oversight,” said Michael German, a former F.B.I. undercover agent who is a fellow at New York University’s law school. “Ultimately it is government deceitfulness and participation in criminal activity, which is only justifiable when it is used to resolve the most serious crimes.”
At least they are focused on the most serious of crimes. You know, like illegal alcohol and cigarette sales.
At convenience stores, for example, undercover agents, sometimes using actual minors as decoys, look for illegal alcohol and cigarette sales, records show. At the Education Department, undercover agents of the Office of Inspector General infiltrate federally funded education programs looking for financial fraud. Medicare investigators sometimes pose as patients to gather evidence against health care providers. Officers at the Small Business Administration, NASA and the Smithsonian do undercover work as well, records show.Mr. Hunker said sending federal and local agents undercover to meet with suspected money launderers “is a more direct approach than getting a tip and going out and doing all the legwork and going into a court mode.”Those guidelines apply only to the law enforcement agencies overseen by the Justice Department. Within the Treasury Department, undercover agents at the I.R.S., for example, appear to have far more latitude than do those at many other agencies. I.R.S. rules say that, with prior approval, “an undercover employee or cooperating private individual may pose as an attorney, physician, clergyman or member of the news media.”
Yes you read that
right, IRS agents “appear to have far more latitude than do those at
many other agencies.” Must be a reward for targeting conservative
political groups.
Oversight, though, can be minimal. A special committee meant to oversee undercover investigations at the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, for instance, did not meet in nearly seven years, according to the Justice Department’s inspector general. That inquiry found that more than $127 million worth of cigarettes purchased by the bureau disappeared in a series of undercover investigations that were aimed at tracing the black-market smuggling of cigarettes.
Well at least someone is getting paid...
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