RSN Fundraising Banner
FB Share
Email This Page
add comment
Politics
Chile: Burying Pinochet Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=56838"><span class="small">Joshua Frens-String, NACLA</span></a>   
Saturday, 31 October 2020 12:24

Frens-String writes: "Just one year after mass protests erupted over a small public transportation fare hike, Chileans voted overwhelmingly Sunday to re-write their country's 1980 constitution. In so doing, voters took an important first step toward burying, once and for all, the most significant political relic of the country's brutal 1973-1990 military dictatorship."

A protest in Chile. (photo: BBC)
A protest in Chile. (photo: BBC)


Chile: Burying Pinochet

By Joshua Frens-String, NACLA

31 October 20


Chileans are determined to reinvent how democracy is practiced, starting with a new constitution.

ust one year after mass protests erupted over a small public transportation fare hike, Chileans voted overwhelmingly Sunday to re-write their country’s 1980 constitution. In so doing, voters took an important first step toward burying, once and for all, the most significant political relic of the country’s brutal 1973-1990 military dictatorship—a document that many activists see as the greatest impediment to progressive social change in the South American country.

With final tally sheets nearly complete, official numbers indicate that nearly 80 percent of Chilean voters approved the proposal for a constitutional rewrite during the October 25 plebiscite. By nearly equal margins, voters expressed their desire that a 155-person citizen-elected, citizen-led convention direct the drafting of a new constitution. This option won out over a “mixed” assembly that would have reserved half of the convention seats for sitting members of Chile’s national congress. That new assembly will be elected during a separate national vote in April 2021.

However, terms agreed to before last Sunday’s vote had already determined that an equal number of men and women will serve on that body. The historic decision will mark the first time anywhere in the world that the drafting of a country’s constitution will be firmly rooted in principles of gender parity. Discussions about how to ensure adequate Indigenous representation on the panel are still being considered.

The soon-to-be elected assembly is expected to deliberate for approximately one year before revealing its proposal to the country during 2022. At that point, voters will cast ballots a third time, expressing their approval or rejection of the newly written charter.

The contents of Chile’s new constitution will be a hotly contested matter in the months to come. But for the roughly 5.9 million Chileans who supported calls for a new constitution, the results of Sunday’s plebiscite signaled a strong rejection of the “guardian” or “protected” democracy that General Augusto Pinochet left the country when he gave up power three decades ago. Although minor modifications have been made to the 1980 constitution over the years, many Chileans view the document as a key obstacle for undoing entrenched inequities. In particular, critics point to the constitution’s role in preventing substantive changes to the country’s neoliberal economic model since the return of formal democracy in 1990.

And in many ways, that’s exactly what Pinochet intended. As Chilean constitutional scholar Fernando Atria has noted, the 1980 constitution, the brainchild of the late, far-right lawyer and Pinochet ideologue Jaime Guzmán, was “drafted with the intention of preventing meaningful systemic change.” By giving power a “democratic form,” but no “democratic content,” Pinochet and his advisers set in place an architecture that would perpetuate their free-market policies long after the dictator himself stepped down.

When Chile Woke Up

As has been discussed on these pages and elsewhere over the last year, the proximate spark that ignited a national movement was the government’s roll-out of a 30-peso (approximately four cents) fare increase on Santiago’s overcrowded metro system. In the wake of that October 2019 decision, young people across the capital took to the street, jumping turnstiles, occupying subway stations, and chanting “evadir, no pagar, otra forma de luchar” (evade, don’t pay, another way to fight). Unrest escalated when Chile’s conservative president, Sebastián Piñera, declared a “state of siege” in the capital, provocatively adding that Chile was “at war.” The order marked the first time since the country’s 17-year military dictatorship that the Chilean armed forces had been called into the streets. Piñera’s words, meanwhile, reminded many of Pinochet himself.

Almost overnight, the government’s actions seemed to transform a primarily youth-led protest movement into a national urban awakening. In the days and weeks that followed, newspaper headlines and protest placards declared that “Chile despertó”—the country had finally “woken up.”

In a flashback to memorable scenes from the 1970s and 1980s, thousands of Chileans took to their balconies and street corners each evening, banging empty pots and pans to express their discontent with the government’s militarized response to the protests. Demonstrations reached a climax on October 25, 2020, when more than a million people flooded the streets of Santiago. Thousands more turned out in cities across Chile in what was perhaps the largest single-day mobilization in the country’s national history.

Santiago’s Plaza Italia, the unofficial boundary between the capital city’s more hardscrabble downtown districts and the well-heeled barrio alto neighborhoods from which Piñera and Chile’s traditional elites hail, became the unofficial epicenter of the so-called estallido social, or social explosion. (Unsurprisingly, the three barrio alto comunas of Vitacura, Las Condes, and Lo Barnechea were the only parts of Greater Santiago to vote against a constitutional rewrite Sunday).

Carrying out what some have described as an “itinerant occupation” of the plaza, activists rechristened the square “Plaza de la Dignidad” as masked youth, calling themselves the primera línea (front line), acted as irregular defenders of the space. Brandishing makeshift shields, these groups, which grew to include devoted fans of some of Chile’s most popular fútbol clubs, confronted a near-daily onslaught by Chile’s heavily militarized national police force. Skirmishes between the two groups would continue well into the usually quiet austral summer months when the Chilean capital can sometimes feel deserted.

Indeed, the regularity of state repression has been a defining feature of the last 12 months in Chile. Hundreds of protestors have been blinded by what many analysts see as the police’s indiscriminate—and often intentional—targeting of peaceful protestors with tear gas canisters and rubber bullets.

Just a few weeks before Sunday’s vote, such violence was put on full public display when a uniformed member of Chile’s national police force, the Carabineros de Chile, hurled a 16-year-old demonstrator off a bridge just outside the Plaza de la Dignidad during a small protest march. While the boy miraculously survived, the incident was just the latest example of the national police’s excessive use of force against demonstrators, as documented and denounced by numerous human rights groups. For many, the lack of accountability when it comes to the actions of state security forces is a stark reminder of the dictatorship’s long shadow.

Rising up to meet the repression of the last year have been ordinary citizens engaged in an unprecedented wave of participatory democracy. In small neighborhood squares in Santiago and around Chile, community residents started gathering shortly after the estallido began to both reflect on the past and plan for the future. Through these assemblies and open town hall meetings, known as cabildos abiertos, Chileans created novel forums for political deliberation and dialogue. According to historian Romina Green-Rioja, an active participant in her own neighborhood’s assembly, such meetings demonstrated to neighbors that they “were not alone” in their “desire to build a new Chile.”

The outbreak of the Covid-19 pandemic in March 2020 put a pause on many of these actions. It also delayed the national plebiscite on the 1980 constitution, which had been originally scheduled for April. But in many ways, the pandemic has only further showcased the severe limitations of the 1980 constitution. “The government wants people to stay at home, but how do they expect us to survive?,” a resident of the Santiago neighborhood of El Bosque recently told The Guardian.

For local organizers who have a driven the debate about a new constitution, the goal now will be to ensure that the representatives they elect in April consider common grievances, including growing concerns over Chile’s non-existent safety net and under-resourced public health system.

The Long Road to Change

In the months since the estallido social began, many have tried to make sense of the seemingly “spontaneous” nature of Chile’s unprecedented protest movement. Indeed, in a country where social and political movements have long prided themselves on their organizational discipline, locating a formal leadership structure among the various actors who have taken part in the estallido has been a perplexing task. As former Chilean student leader Noam Titelman wrote shortly after the initial wave of protest began, Chile was witnessing a “leaderless movement,” something that “is hard to find in the recent history of social movements” in Chile.

But the astonishingly rapid coalescence around a single demand—it took just a few weeks for activists to put forward the writing of a new constitution as the diverse movement’s singular demand—speaks to the effect that years of organizing by a wide range of Chilean social movements has had in transforming the political consciousness of the country.

Chile’s students, most of whom have no direct memory of Pinochet’s Chile, have long been at the forefront. Following the mobilization of high-school students in the early 2000s, Chilean university students initiated more than two years of street demonstrations beginning in 2011. The movement popularized the idea that education be codified as a basic social right of citizenship, rather than a marketized consumer good. Chile’s student movement quickly became a poster child of anti-neoliberal movements around the world, and former movement leaders like Camilo Vallejo, Giorgio Jackson, and Gabriel Boric all assumed political office as elected members of Chile’s national congress in 2014. Their efforts propelled a series of major educational reforms under the second government of Michelle Bachelet (2014-2018), including an historic ban on “for-profit” institutions in primary and higher education.

In more recent years, other groups have picked up where Chile’s students left off, demanding that a new focus on social, cultural, and economic rights be enacted to counter the legacies of Chile’s free-market dictatorship. While Indigenous groups today comprise around 13 percent of the Chile’s total population, the 1980 constitution does not recognize them. They link this fact to the assaults on their ancestral lands and water by extractive industries. Many also point to the current constitution’s failure to protect cultural rights, and the reformed constitutions of neighboring Bolivia and Brazil, some argue, could provide a model for Chile to follow.

Similarly, Chile’s retirees, organized and supported by the No Más AFP coalition, have criticized the country’s privatized pension system, another artifact of the Pinochet era. Analysts maintain that Chile’s seniors are today more economically insecure than their counterparts in any other country in the OECD, the so-called “club of rich nations.” According to one 2015 study, 80 percent of Chilean retirees received less than the country’s minimum wage in retirement benefits. The disconnect between the country’s profit-driven pension system and the needs of the citizenry was evidenced just a few months ago when, amidst the pandemic-induced economic crisis, the government initially balked at pensioners request that they be allowed to take out up to 10 percent of the money invested in personal retirement accounts to meet household budget shortfalls.

Arguably no single movement has been more instrumental in advancing demands for a new constitution in recent years than Chile’s feminist movement. Emerging out of both national and regional movements against gender-based discrimination, sexual violence on university campuses, and ongoing struggles for reproductive rights, Chile’s feminist movement gained international headlines in early 2018 after it led a series of university occupations and marches to raise awareness about women’s rights issues. The movements of that year became known as Chile’s “Feminist May.”

After securing equitable representation on the future constitutional assembly, Chile’s feminists now see the drafting of a new constitution as an avenue through which to put ideas about gender equality and women’s rights into law. According to Chilean feminist activist Gloria Maira, a new constitution that guarantees sexual rights and reproductive rights as basic rights of health, for example, is central to the “deepening of democracy.”

A Movement of Society

It is tempting to see Sunday’s vote and the multiple years of protest that preceded it as a fulfillment of Salvador Allende’s famous last words, that “sooner rather later,” Chile’s “great boulevards” would once again be open for Chileans to “construct a better society.” If for no other reason, the timing of the vote calls to mind the connections between Chile’s radical past and present: it was 50 years ago next week that Chile’s Popular Unity (UP) coalition, under the leadership of Allende, assumed office to begin forging its historic, albeit interrupted, democratic path toward socialism.

But as the Chilean historian Mario Garcés has described, the diversity of movements involved in the last year of protest is perhaps illustrative of an even more profound and democratic process than that which occurred in the early 1970s. In Garcés's words, contemporary Chile is being pushed toward reform by a “movement of society.” This notion, which the historian contrasts with the more traditional notion of a “social movement,” is meant to underscore the popular character of the last year of struggle—and in particular the way in which traditional political organizations and parties have been sidelined in favor of neighborhood groups, social organizations, and students representing a variety of political tendencies.

In other words, while Allende and the UP committed themselves to working within the country’s existing political structures of their era to pursue radical change, Chileans today are determined to reinvent how and where democracy is practiced. The focus on refounding Chile with a new, citizen-drafted is the centerpiece of that process.

In the days to come, Chileans will continue to celebrate the end of an era. But upon burying the most visible legacy of the Pinochet dictatorship, the array of citizen-led movements that have taken the country to this point will no doubt continue what they have been doing for the last year: envisioning what a post-Pinochet democracy could look like. Today the political horizon for change in Chile looks more open than it has in at least five decades.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: Trump and Biden Are Irrelevant in This Election Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=38164"><span class="small">Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, The Hollywood Reporter</span></a>   
Saturday, 31 October 2020 11:50

Abdul-Jabbar writes: "This is the first presidential election in my lifetime in which the candidates are irrelevant. For the first time, an election is not about content of the candidates' character, it's about the content of the voters' character."

Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. (photo: Dan Winters/NYT)
Kareem Abdul-Jabbar. (photo: Dan Winters/NYT)


Trump and Biden Are Irrelevant in This Election

By Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, The Hollywood Reporter

31 October 20

 

his is the first presidential election in my lifetime in which the candidates are irrelevant. For the first time, an election is not about content of the candidates’ character, it’s about the content of the voters’ character. We aren’t selecting a president as much as we are proclaiming to ourselves and the rest of the world what America means: Either we want to be a theme park version of Mayberry in the 1950s, or we want to be a vibrant and vigorous leader in democracy that our founders envisioned. One is a simplistic soundstage illusion made of painted plywood that never existed, the other is a commitment to build a reality that embraces the U.S. Constitution’s values of equality and inclusion.

This election is like a UV light at a crime scene that reveals the blood, fingerprints and fibers hidden from the naked eye. Except in this case, the blue light is illuminating the dangerous subversives who openly undermine the country’s most sacred political and social values. A recent report from the Center for Strategic and International Studies found that 67 percent of terrorist plots and attacks in the U.S. in the first eight months of 2020 were carried out by white supremacists and other right-wing groups. This follows a report by the Department of Homeland Security that violent white supremacy was the “most persistent and lethal threat in the homeland.” And yet, Trump and his Republican talking heads — who not only don’t condemn such groups, but tell them to “stand by” — have instead tried to frighten us about the 15 million to 26 million protestors who took to the streets this year to support the end of racism.

The past four years have indeed been a crime scene in which the America of the U.S. Constitution has been duct-taped to a chair and relentlessly waterboarded by those chanting “Make America Great Again.” To them, Trump is not a real person, he is a cult figure in whom they have blind faith regardless of what he says or does. Evidence is dismissed — including his own recorded admissions of guilt that prove he has disregarded their welfare, health and even their lives. They worship their fantasy idea of Trump: a comic book maverick who doesn’t need to read, listen to experts, adhere to the rules of decency or follow any code of ethics. Instead, he fulfills their vision of America, not as a land of equal opportunity — but as a feeding trough only meant for those big enough and ruthless enough to bully their way to the front and consume all that they can. The rest can fight over whatever crumbs fall to the ground.

If you think that sounds harsh, then you haven’t been paying attention as the Trump Administration has reduced benefits for the poor, dismissed the existence of systemic racism, endangered the free press, and fought to reduce the rights of women, immigrants and the LGBTQ+ community. In Authoritarian Nightmare, authors psychologist Bob Altemeyer and former Nixon lawyer John W. Dean report that about half of Trump supporters agreed with the statement: “Once our government leaders and the authorities condemn the dangerous elements in our society, it will be the duty of every patriotic citizen to help stomp out the rot that is poisoning our country from within,” which Altemeyer and Dean describe as “practically a Nazi cheer.” For daddy-issue loyalists, Trump is an authoritarian ideal for those in need of a stern father figure to tell them what to think and do.

Perhaps the most evil, insidious and even traitorous action by Trump and the Republican politburo is the aggressive suppression of the vote of minorities, the poor, seniors and youth. For over 200 years, Americans have been proud of being a democracy that cherishes each person’s right to have their voice heard at the ballot box. And, though there have been many efforts in our past to exclude specific people — nonwhites, women, immigrants, the poor — the country has always risen to stop these efforts. Not this time. Trump, whose entire family votes by mail, has tried to undermine mail-in voting. During a pandemic. He influenced the U.S. Postal Service to cut back on sorting machines and mail pickups that may result in ballots not arriving in time to be counted. Republican governors have joined in the effort. Texas Gov. Greg Abbott, who should never stand near an American flag again, tried to limit ballot drop boxes to one per county. In one county that means one box for 4.7 million people. Federal Judge Robert Pitman stopped the order, writing, “By limiting ballot return centers to one per county, older and disabled voters living in Texas's largest and most populous counties must travel further distances to more crowded ballot return centers where they would be at an increased risk of being infected by the coronavirus in order to exercise their right to vote and have it counted.” However, the Texas Supreme Court temporarily reinstated the governor’s one-box-per-county order. Our finest hour?

And so it goes across the country. While we argue who won the meaningless debates, voting rights are being ruthlessly suppressed. In the face of this horrific activity, supporting Trump and his morally corrupt cronies like Mitch McConnell and Lindsey Graham is like coming downstairs in the middle of the night to discover them robbing your home. When you confront them, they claim they’re just taking your valuables out for a cleaning and they’ll be worth even more when they bring them back. When they leave, you run after them with more valuables they didn’t find, begging them, “Take these, too!”

I like Joe Biden and I’m going to vote for him. In part, my support is because he’s a decent man who supports progressive policies. I’m also voting for him because he is emblematic of the America I have been fighting for over the past 50 years: one committed to inclusion and equal opportunity. I believe he will reverse the social, economic and moral nosedive this country has been in for four years. He will save lives and save jobs. Most of all, however, his election will send a clear repudiation to those who cling desperately to Trump that the time of arrogant ignorance and greed is over and they should return to their zombie-proof bunkers. It is a new Age of Reason and Enlightenment, and Joe Biden and Kamala Harris will lead us back to our legacy of an America for everyone.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
FOCUS: How Donald Trump Plans to Overthrow American Democracy Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=27902"><span class="small">Sean Wilentz, Rolling Stone</span></a>   
Saturday, 31 October 2020 11:01

Wilentz writes: "Unless we awaken, the American people may well be sleepwalking into an electoral coup d'etat."

Donald Trump. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Donald Trump. (photo: Scott Olson/Getty Images)


How Donald Trump Plans to Overthrow American Democracy

By Sean Wilentz, Rolling Stone

31 October 20


Current polls suggest the president cannot win the election. That doesn’t mean he can’t steal it

nless we awaken, the American people may well be sleepwalking into an electoral coup d’etat.

If their own words are to be believed, Donald Trump and his operatives have been preparing for the election heist for some time. The rough model will be the 2000 Bush V. Gore election, when, by a single vote, the Supreme Court halted the counting of ballots in Florida, thereby stealing the presidency for George W. Bush.

So ludicrous was that court’s stated rationale, based on a tortured reading of the U.S. Constitution’s guarantee of equal protection under the law, that even Justice Antonin Scalia, who wrote the decision, later called it “a piece of shit.” But if today’s court follows the reasoning of Justice Brett Kavanaugh in a recent important vote-tallying case, the result will be worse than that “shit.” According to Kavanaugh, the counting of absentee ballots ought not to be continued too far after Election Day lest the final tally “flip” the results. This is what Trump has been saying — jaw-dropping in its anti-democratic arrogance even from Trump, but even more shocking coming from an associate justice of the Supreme Court. Kavanaugh’s colleague, Justice Elena Kagan, had to point out, as if to a schoolchild: “There are no results to ‘flip’ until all the valid votes are counted.” Well, Mr. Justice Kavanaugh: Duh. Trump and his cronies know that advance and mail-in voting are heavily favoring Biden. Yet if and when the election comes before the court, Kavanaugh will prevail, and Kagan — and the majority of the voters — will be likely on the wrong side of a partisan 6 to 3 decision.

The tricky part, for Trump, is how to manufacture something like the conditions that led to the Supreme Court intervention twenty years ago. One gambit would be for Trump simply to declare victory on Election Night, whether or not he held any kind of lead, to give the impression that the Democrats are trying to overturn the results. But the key will be to disrupt by any means possible the counting of votes in states where the vote is close: enough states to keep either candidate from winning an electoral college majority. This could be done with squads of lawyers deployed in state capitals, jamming up the counting, while other lawyers prepare to delay official state certification of any and all close Biden victories. If need be, it could also be done by shutting down the counting by force. In 2000, the notorious “Brooks Brothers riot” staged by a band of geeky but noisy Republican operatives and staff members was enough to shut down the counting of votes in Florida’s Miami-Dade County at a crucial juncture. After seeing the scenes last spring in Michigan — of armed and highly-organized right-wing paramilitaries shutting down the state legislature to protest Covid-19 restrictions, with some of their number plotting to kidnap and execute the state’s Democratic governor, (now under arrest), all as Trump tweeted: “LIBERATE MICHIGAN” — can anyone, after all of that, doubt that that this time the interference would be much better coordinated and much more violent?

The goal would not be to manufacture an outright Trump electoral victory but only to prevent Biden from being named the official victor in enough states to carry the Electoral College. If Trump succeeds in doing that, he his coup would almost certainly succeed. Under the Constitution, if no candidate for president wins a majority of electoral votes by the assigned date for the Electoral College to cast its votes, this year on December 14th, then the election is decided by the House of Representatives. In that election, the Constitution stipulates, each state is entitled to one vote. Even though the Democrats hold a clear majority in the House overall, the Republicans control more state delegations, meaning that Trump, even if he loses in the popular vote and the Electoral College, would win with 26 out of 50 states. Alternatively, Trump’s phalanx of lawyers could succeed in throwing the election into the courts, which will speed the matter to the Supreme Court. Thanks now to the last-minute addition of Justice Amy Coney Barrett, who was a Republican lawyer-operative working with Kavanaugh in Florida in 2000, the Court will elect Trump, six votes to three. These would be the only votes that count in the 2020 election: six of them.

If the opinion polls hold, with some possible variations in details, this is Trump’s plan, his only hope for holding on to the presidency—and not incidentally, avoiding prosecution for his many crimes. Evidently, he thinks the courts are his best shot. How do we know? He has said so: “I think this will go to the Supreme Court,” he told reporters during the run-up to Barrett’s appointment. “This scam that the Democrats are pulling — it’s a scam — the scam will be before the United States Supreme Court.” At 3 a.m., the Friday before the election, Trump desperately tweeted out a warning to the Court not to give Biden a “ridiculous win.”

Trump cries, “Scam!” but he is the one staging a scam, just more of his big lies told with no shred of evidence. The “scam,” according to Trump, is really democracy itself, which, if heeded, would make Trump a loser next Tuesday, perhaps of historic proportions. But after he loses the election, Trump — having turned the American politics and government as nearly as possible into the tinpot dictatorship of a banana republic — could still steal the presidency.

One way to stop him would be for voters who have not yet voted to do everything they can to insure their ballots count, either by casting their votes in person or doing everything possible to insure they arrive by Tuesday. Amassing the biggest possible margins, even in non-battleground states, would make it harder for Trump to cry foul and interfere. But just as important, we need to wake up and call Trump’s attempted coup d’etat — which is occurring in real time, right before our eyes — exactly what it is, the greatest assault on American democracy since the Southern slaveholders seceded in 1860-61, touching off the Civil War. Those secessionists couldn’t be stopped. It’s still not too late to stop Donald Trump.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
RSN: Final Report Before the 2020 Election Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=63"><span class="small">Marc Ash, Reader Supported News</span></a>   
Saturday, 31 October 2020 08:23

Ash writes: "The polling numbers for Joe Biden are, in a word, excellent heading into election day on November 3rd. Biden is in a very strong position nationally. While the numbers in the critical battleground states are more competitive, Biden still holds a significant and consistent advantage across the board."

Joe Biden, campaigning in Iowa, greets a supporter. (photo: Nati Harnik/AP)
Joe Biden, campaigning in Iowa in 2019, greets a supporter. (photo: Nati Harnik/AP)


Final Report Before the 2020 Election

By Marc Ash, Reader Supported News

31 October 20

 

he polling numbers for Joe Biden are, in a word, excellent heading into election day on November 3rd. Biden is in a very strong position nationally. While the numbers in the critical battleground states are more competitive, Biden still holds a significant and consistent advantage across the board.

In fact, Biden has managed to put in play states like Georgia, Texas, and Arizona that would normally be considered almost unattainable for a Democratic presidential candidate.

The polls in totality are beyond normal polling error margins. Meaning that, if all the votes were counted fairly, Joe Biden would be expected to win handily.

It is, however, already clear that not all the votes will be counted fairly. Measures in several states to erect barriers to voting and vote counting have without a doubt had an impact on the final totals.

As is always the case in US presidential elections, the results from key swing states can have a dramatic effect on the Electoral College outcome. If there is one state that could be the determining state, it would have to be Pennsylvania.

Normally Biden’s polling advantage would indicate a comfortable victory. In the current climate, and with the tactics Trump’s operatives appear willing to employ, Pennsylvania may not just be a battleground, it might be the battleground. Jim Newell for Slate said it best, “No Pressure, Pennsylvania, but the World’s Fate Rests on You.”

Unsurprisingly, The New York Times now follows with a breakdown of tactics the Trump campaign plans to employ in the Keystone State, “Facing Gap in Pennsylvania, Trump Camp Tries to Make Voting Harder.” Those tactics include suppressing mail-in and absentee ballots and intimidation.

For sheer unabashed chicanery, Georgia will likely be second to none. Sitting governor Brian Kemp rose to the office through voter suppression to prevail over his Democratic rival Stacey Abrams, using his position as Secretary of State to great effect.

With all the votes in Georgia counted fairly, Joe Biden would likely win the state. But with Kemp as governor, it would take a landslide for Biden to prevail. Still, if you want to see all-American election theft in action, Georgia is the best bet to put on a great show.

James Carville is actually predicting a qualified Democratic landslide nationally, unless the Republicans “muck” with the election. Election mucking would seem already to be underway.

Our final takeaway before the coming storm is that it is a Republic … if we can keep it. Be prepared.



Marc Ash is the founder and former Executive Director of Truthout, and is now founder and Editor of Reader Supported News.

Reader Supported News is the Publication of Origin for this work. Permission to republish is freely granted with credit and a link back to Reader Supported News.

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
How a CIA Coverup Targeted a Whistle-Blower Print
Written by <a href="index.php?option=com_comprofiler&task=userProfile&user=46386"><span class="small">Ronan Farrow, The New Yorker</span></a>   
Friday, 30 October 2020 12:26

Farrow writes: "When a Justice Department lawyer exposed the agency's secret role in drug cases, leadership in the intelligence community retaliated."

When a Justice Department lawyer exposed the agency's secret role in drug cases, leadership in the intelligence community retaliated. (photo: Reuters)
When a Justice Department lawyer exposed the agency's secret role in drug cases, leadership in the intelligence community retaliated. (photo: Reuters)


How a CIA Coverup Targeted a Whistle-Blower

By Ronan Farrow, The New Yorker

30 October 20


When a Justice Department lawyer exposed the agency’s secret role in drug cases, leadership in the intelligence community retaliated.

efore dawn on January 23, 2019, Mark McConnell arrived at the Key West headquarters of the military and civilian task force that monitors drugs headed to the United States from the Southern Hemisphere. McConnell, a prosecutor at the Department of Justice and a former marine, left his phone in a box designed to block electronic transmissions, and passed through a metal detector and a key-card-protected air lock to enter the building. On the second floor, he punched in the code for his office door, then locked it behind him. On a computer approved for the handling of classified information, he loaded a series of screenshots he had taken, showing entries in a database called Helios, which federal law enforcement uses to track drug smugglers. McConnell e-mailed the images to a classified government hotline for whistle-blowers. Then he printed backup copies and, following government procedures for handling classified information, sealed them in an envelope that he placed in another envelope, marked “SECRET.” He hid the material behind a piece of furniture.

McConnell had uncovered what he described as a “criminal conspiracy” perpetrated by the C.I.A. and the F.B.I. Every year, entries in the Helios database lead to hundreds of drug busts, which lead to prosecutions in American courts. The entries are typically submitted to Helios by the Drug Enforcement Administration, the F.B.I., and a division of the Department of Homeland Security. But McConnell had learned that more than a hundred entries in the database that were labelled as originating from F.B.I. investigations were actually from a secret C.I.A. surveillance program. He realized that C.I.A. officers and F.B.I. agents, in violation of federal law and Department of Justice guidelines, had concealed the information’s origins from federal prosecutors, leaving judges and defense lawyers in the dark. Critics call such concealment “intelligence laundering.” In the nineteen-seventies, after C.I.A. agents were found to have performed experiments with LSD on unwitting Americans and investigated Vietnam War protesters, restrictions were imposed that bar the agency from being involved in domestic law-enforcement activities. Since the country’s founding, judges, jurors, and defendants have generally had the right to know how evidence used in a trial was gathered. “This was undisclosed information, from an agency working internationally with different rules and standards,” Nancy Gertner, a retired federal district judge and a senior lecturer at Harvard Law School, told me. “This should worry Trump voters who talk about a ‘deep state.’ This is the quintessential deep state. This is activities beyond your view, fundamentally affecting what happens in American courts.”

But the scheme benefitted the C.I.A. and the F.B.I.: the former received information obtained during operations, and the latter reported increased arrests and was able to secure additional federal funding as a result. The scope of the scheme was corroborated in hundreds of pages of e-mails, transcripts, and other documents obtained by The New Yorker.

For weeks, C.I.A. officials had been trying to stop McConnell from revealing the agency’s activities. They sent a lawyer to Key West with nondisclosure agreements, but McConnell refused to sign. A day before his early arrival at the office, McConnell had learned of an order to delete the screenshots on his computer. “I knew that I had to get the electronic evidence to outside investigators,” he told me. “There was no doubt about what I needed to do, and there was no doubt retaliation against me would follow.” He worked quickly, not knowing when security officers would arrive. Later that day, they came to McConnell’s office and deleted the images.

A little more than a month later, after C.I.A. officials accused McConnell of “spilling” classified information, the director of the task force suspended him. Soon, the C.I.A. director, Gina Haspel, visited the task force and was briefed on the matter. According to a sworn affidavit that McConnell filed with the Senate Intelligence Committee, and to a source with knowledge of the meeting, Haspel said that there needed to be repercussions for McConnell. (A C.I.A. spokesperson, Timothy Barrett, called the allegation “inaccurate and a gross mischaracterization.”) The military leadership of the task force ignored McConnell’s appeal of his suspension, and discussions about future assignments came to an abrupt halt. Six officials said that they believed the C.I.A. had retaliated against McConnell, leaving him nominally employed but unable to find a new post after decades of public service.

“This was appalling and blatant,” Tom Padden, one of McConnell’s supervisors, who has filed his own whistle-blower complaint, told me. “It was a blatant attempt to silence a career public servant who identified a real issue.” McConnell and other officials accused Patrick Hovakimian, the Associate Deputy Attorney General, of failing to protect McConnell. Hovakimian is President Trump’s nominee to become the general counsel for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and his handling of whistle-blower issues has been a central question in his confirmation process. (A Justice Department spokesperson said that Hovakimian enlisted a department lawyer and other officials “to ensure that any whistle-blower was treated appropriately.”)

Last month, the House Judiciary Committee chairman, Jerrold Nadler, notified Attorney General William Barr and Christopher Wray, the F.B.I. director, that the committee would be investigating McConnell’s allegations and requested records related to his case. Senator Ron Wyden, of Oregon, said that he would be calling on the Senate Intelligence Committee to investigate as well, and told me, “Senior officials should never punish employees who raise concerns about abuse, especially when it concerns secret programs or activities.” McConnell said, “The C.I.A. has corrupted F.B.I. agents to violate basic rules as to how the Department of Justice does criminal prosecutions.”

Mark McConnell, who is sixty-six, was born and raised in Jacksonville, Florida. He was brought up by his grandparents, a paper-mill worker and a homemaker. When McConnell was seven, he took to wearing the garrison cap of his father, a former marine. McConnell was the first in his family to go beyond high school; he counted coins at the Federal Reserve Coin Vault to pay for junior college, which he attended at night. He earned a bachelor’s degree and a law degree from Florida State University before returning to Jacksonville to work as a public defender. Later, he spent six years on active duty in the U.S. Marines. After leaving active duty, in 1995, he worked as a state prosecutor and at the Department of Justice, where for sixteen years he has investigated fraud, corruption, national-security matters, and drug trafficking. McConnell has a salt-and-pepper mustache and speaks in a clipped Southern accent. “He’s of a high moral character,” a law-enforcement official who has worked with him told me. “Matter of fact, he’s so straight it sometimes annoys people.”

In July, 2017, McConnell was assigned to the Joint Interagency Task Force South, in Key West. It comprises people from various parts of the military, law-enforcement agencies including the D.E.A. and the F.B.I., and intelligence agencies including the C.I.A. and the N.S.A. McConnell kept his office sparse—the only sign of his military service was a photograph of the decorated marine Chesty Puller, with the quote “We’re surrounded. That simplifies things.”

Shortly after McConnell began working at the task force, a D.E.A. special agent named William Cambre stopped by his office. Cambre, a Louisiana native who had worked drug cases at the D.E.A. for more than fifteen years, told him that he had discovered troubling entries in the Helios database. They were labelled as having been submitted by the F.B.I., based on unclassified sources and methods, but they contained G.P.S. coördinates that were updated with unusual frequency. The entries were marked “SECRET/NOFORN,” a classification level that prevents disclosure to foreign nationals. Intelligence and law-enforcement officials later told me that the information came from a C.I.A. special-access program, one of the highest categories of classification in the government. The program, which one intelligence official described to me as “inherently extra-sensitive,” involved national-security surveillance. It also captured information that was unrelated to its mission but useful for finding drug traffickers. Cambre told McConnell that the F.B.I. had refused to answer questions about the source of the information, which he believed came from “the Christians”—slang for the C.I.A. “This is what they’re writing in Helios,” Cambre told him. “It’s a lie.” (An F.B.I. spokesperson said that the Bureau reviewed the arrangement with the C.I.A. and considered it “consistent with our internal protocols and legal requirements.”)

Searching Helios, McConnell ultimately found more than a hundred entries that bore the deceptive labelling Cambre had described. An F.B.I. agent estimated that fifty-seven prosecutions had relied on these entries. I was able to identify nineteen resulting criminal convictions. In all of the cases, U.S. Coast Guard cutters, relying on information from Helios, had intercepted small vessels on the open waters of the Pacific. They confiscated bales of cocaine, and arrested men from Ecuador, Colombia, and Mexico, who were taken to the U.S. to face trial. All nineteen pleaded guilty to federal drug charges and are now serving sentences ranging from six to fourteen years. The men, who worked at the lowest level of the drug trade, were poor and uneducated. Antonio Jorge Narvaez Tubay, a fisherman and a construction worker from Guayaquil, Ecuador, was apprehended south of Mexico in February, 2018. A sixty-year-old with four children, he had been struggling to care for his infirm father. “I was so desperate, and I was so poor,” he told the judge in his case.

It was not disclosed in the court proceedings that classified C.I.A. information had led the Coast Guard to the locations of the smugglers. In most of the cases, including Narvaez’s, F.B.I. agents submitted affidavits attributing the arrests to routine patrols. McConnell and other officials said that the affidavits were intentionally misleading, denying prosecutors the information they needed to properly meet discovery obligations, and undermining the resulting convictions. “If I had learned that a law-enforcement agent had not been forthcoming about reliance on classified information in a case that was prosecuted, I would have had a conniption,” David Laufman, a former prosecutor and a senior Department of Justice official, said.

“We always wondered how the fuck they figured out where these fishermen were,” Ricardo Hermida, who represented Narvaez, told me. “It’s a discovery violation. We were operating under misconceptions.” (The Justice Department spokesperson said, “The government believed at the time, and continues to believe after its careful review, that the information underlying this claim was simply not discoverable.”)

Under current law, federal prosecutors can disclose the presence of classified C.I.A. information to judges and request that it be shielded during trials for national-security reasons. Michael V. Hayden, who directed the C.I.A. under Presidents George W. Bush and Barack Obama, cautioned that law enforcement is not allowed to fabricate information, but he insisted that some programs are too sensitive for even limited court consultations, and defended the use of concealed intelligence in domestic trials. “We do that routinely,” he told me. “We know something, but we can’t say it, so we have to say it through someone else. Then we use it in court. It’s not illegal, but it’s complicated.” Other experts questioned that view. Mary McCord, a law professor and a former acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security, said that, when a court refuses to protect sensitive intelligence, “we have to say we’ll just dismiss the case. That’s the way it’s supposed to work. And government officials aren’t supposed to say, ‘We don’t want to deal with that, so we’re just going to lie.’ ”

In August, 2017, McConnell called his supervisor Tom Padden, who was in Washington, D.C. “When I get really pissed,” McConnell told me, “I get monotone, I don’t blink.” He related to Padden what he had found in the Helios database. Padden, sixty and heavyset, with a neatly cropped white beard, served in the Marines for twelve years before becoming a civilian prosecutor. He met McConnell when they were both stationed in Quantico, Virginia, and recruited him for the task force. Padden shared McConnell’s respect for rules. “We are talking about the withholding and misrepresentation of information to prosecutors by agents who are supposedly part of the prosecutorial team. We’ve got discovery problems, ethical problems there,” Padden told me. “You gotta have at least a prosecutorial supervisor in the know.”

In the following months, other officials independently raised concerns about the concealed intelligence. In late February, 2018, Dick Getchell, a federal prosecutor in the Southern District of Florida, e-mailed McConnell, asking to talk about “cases where targeting information does not appear to be LE-sourced” (the abbreviation stands for “law enforcement”). The same day, Getchell e-mailed the F.B.I. about a case resulting from a deceptive database entry. “Please advise as to the nature and substance of the information which FBI Miami provided which resulted in this seizure,” he wrote. Rhonda Squizzero, an F.B.I. special agent, replied that the targeting information had been gathered in an F.B.I. operation called Black Pearl, made up of investigations called World’s End, Calypso, and Wicked Wench—all references to the “Pirates of the Caribbean” film series. She wrote that those investigations had generated “case debriefs and electronic evidence” that pointed to a Mexican crime organization called La Victoria. McConnell and several other sources said that the investigations were a cover and could not be the source of the information. In a subsequent e-mail, Getchell expressed skepticism about La Victoria as well, writing that it was a group that “our office has never heard of.” In fact, there is no evidence that any such organization exists. The F.B.I. spokesperson said that the Bureau takes “a host of precautions to protect both the intelligence we receive and the sources and methods used to gather it. This can include using code names.”

“Everyone in the building knew this was crap,” one law-enforcement official told me. “What they were doing was bullshitting.”

McConnell and Padden also raised their concerns with C.I.A. and F.B.I. officials, who defended the concealment. In February, 2018, they met for three hours with the agency’s senior operative on the task force. (The New Yorker is not publishing the C.I.A. operative’s name, for safety reasons.) The operative argued against disclosing the C.I.A.’s role, either in the database or to prosecutors, saying that the arrangement benefitted both the C.I.A. and the F.B.I. The F.B.I., the C.I.A. operative said, was “a good partner.”

That spring and summer, the C.I.A. operative grew increasingly hostile to McConnell. During a meeting in March, according to McConnell, the operative warned, “If people keep talking about our program, someone is going to need to go to prison.” A month later, a meeting devolved into a shouting match. “If that cocksucker Cambre wants to fuck me in the ass, the least he can do is use some lubricant,” several people familiar with the conversation recalled the operative saying, referring to the D.E.A. agent who had initially raised the matter. “He’s going all ballistic,” McConnell told me, of the operative. “He was just lit.”

In the fall of 2018, McConnell learned that the F.B.I. had secured funds for a sprawling new drug-trafficking investigation called Stranger Tides—another reference to “Pirates of the Caribbean”—based entirely on the concealed C.I.A. intelligence. That November, McConnell notified task-force leadership of his intention to expose the practice, and he created a classified PowerPoint presentation revealing the deceptive database entries. He and Padden showed it, in secure areas, to employees who had the clearance level listed on the database entries. Adam Cohen, another of McConnell’s supervisors, who has specialized in drugs and organized crime at the Department of Justice for twenty years, told McConnell and Padden that their concerns were well founded. (The D.O.J. denied my request to speak to Cohen.) According to McConnell, Getchell, the Florida federal prosecutor, told him after one meeting, “The scales have fallen from my eyes.” (Getchell said that he could not comment for this piece without permission from the Southern District of Florida, which declined to make him available and which called McConnell’s and Padden’s allegations “inaccurate, and / or misleading.”)

Other law-enforcement officials worried that the scheme was undercutting efforts to combat drug smuggling. The disguised C.I.A. information facilitated quick hits on low-level couriers; when these operations succeeded, the F.B.I. used them to apply for limited federal drug-interdiction funds. “These are resources that could be going to criminal investigations that could dismantle an organization, and instead they go to whack-a-mole,” a law-enforcement official said. The official expressed these views to the C.I.A. operative whom McConnell and Padden had met with; the operative responded by offering the law-enforcement official’s own agency a secret intelligence-sharing arrangement. The official did not accept the offer.

Word of the deceptive database entries soon reached Washington, D.C. During meetings in December, 2018, and January, 2019, officials from the F.B.I. and the Department of Justice expressed concern about the scheme. One of them was Associate Deputy Attorney General Andrew Goldsmith, who remarked that it might create “Giglio” issues, a reference to Giglio v. United States, a 1972 Supreme Court ruling that obligates prosecutors to disclose information that might call into question the credibility of law-enforcement officials used as witnesses. (The D.O.J. spokesperson told me that Goldsmith reviewed the matter and “made recommendations to federal law-enforcement officials and prosecutors, which resulted in a careful review of both past cases and current practice.”)

Rather than acknowledge the problem, the C.I.A. had stopped sending classified information to the F.B.I. On January 11, 2019, officials from the C.I.A., the F.B.I., the Department of Justice, and the task force met at the agency’s headquarters in Langley, Virginia. One person who attended recalled that the C.I.A. officials, including the operative on the task force, were “out of their mind upset” about the disclosures and “pressing very hard for there to be some kind of consequences for Mark McConnell.”

In several meetings around that time, Patrick Hovakimian was one of the most senior officials representing the Justice Department. Colleagues described Hovakimian, who was then thirty-five, as politically savvy and adept at cultivating relationships within the intelligence community. Padden was at the meeting where Goldsmith raised concerns. He recalled, “Hovakimian looked like a referee at a tennis match watching the points sail by him.” Padden added, “He went silent.” In the January 11th meeting at the C.I.A., according to one attendee, when C.I.A. officials insisted on sanctioning McConnell, Hovakimian didn’t object. Instead, he emphasized that the D.O.J. should continue to work with the agency. “ ‘They’re an important partner,’ ” the person present at that meeting recalled Hovakimian saying. “I do think it was a turning point, and there was a circling of the wagons after the meeting.”

The C.I.A. operative soon e-mailed colleagues on the task force, directing them to sign nondisclosure agreements. He wrote, “Until we are able to protect this program, including the signing of NDAs by all individuals aware of this program, we cannot in good faith restart this critical data flow.” That day, a C.I.A. lawyer arrived at the task force to supervise the signing of the N.D.A.s. Several officials initially resisted signing. McConnell never signed.

“Everyone just wanted to sweep this under the rug,” one official recalled. The next day, a colleague went to McConnell’s office and said, “I hear they’re trying to wipe the evidence out of Helios.” Rear Admiral Pat DeQuattro, the task force’s director, had issued an order to “clean up” the database, deleting the deceptive entries. He told colleagues that he was acting on an order from the C.I.A. Members of the task force warned that the deletions could be seen as destroying evidence. McConnell’s superior Adam Cohen phoned DeQuattro, and the order was called off.

A week later, Hovakimian’s office directed that McConnell’s PowerPoint presentation be treated as an improper “spillage” of classified information, as C.I.A. officials had urged. (A Justice Department spokesperson noted that the department does not control the task force.) Soon afterward, DeQuattro ordered security to delete McConnell’s presentation from his office computer. McConnell told me that he was thinking, Either I shut up and let this happen, or I make a disclosure. On January 23rd, he arrived early and filed his whistle-blower complaint. Later that day, he said, a security manager oversaw the deletion of the files, attributing the action to a “gentleman’s agreement” with the C.I.A. and warning that further inquiries could jeopardize McConnell’s security clearance.

At the end of the next month, two special agents with the Department of Justice inspector general’s office interviewed McConnell under oath for seven hours, at the task-force offices. While the meeting took place, the C.I.A. operative complained angrily to a colleague about the fact that the investigators were asking questions regarding C.I.A. activities. Soon, the task force’s chief of staff interrupted the interview. The questioning eventually resumed, but McConnell, in his complaint, accused the chief of staff of interfering with a protected disclosure. (Admiral Craig Faller, the commander of the U.S. Southern Command, which oversees the task force, said in a statement, “I am confident that the command fully cooperated with investigators at all levels.”)

Several days later, on March 4th, the chief of staff walked into McConnell’s office with a letter, signed by DeQuattro, suspending him from the task force. The letter attributed the decision to an “inquiry” from the C.I.A. about the “improper disclosure of classified information.” DeQuattro told colleagues the agency had compelled him to make a difficult decision. Several officials disputed the allegation against McConnell. “I think Mark McConnell found them doing something they shouldn’t have been doing,” one said. McConnell handed over his badge and gave the chief of staff a copy of a government document on the rights of whistle-blowers. Security walked him out through the busy office and watched as he left in his car. “Their goal is to humiliate you,” McConnell said. “Hovakimian should have been demanding to know why his prosecutor was walked out for properly giving evidence of wrongdoing. And he didn’t.”

Gina Haspel’s meeting later that month with members of the task force in Key West came amid a decade-long crackdown on government whistle-blowers. In eight years, the Obama Administration charged, under the 1917 Espionage Act, more officials with disclosing classified information than all previous Administrations combined. In four years, the Trump Administration has matched that count. In 2018, Trump tweeted that “leakers are traitors and cowards, and we will find out who they are!” His ire has extended not just to officials who leak to the press but also to those, like McConnell, who file complaints with government investigators. Last December, the President shared on Twitter the rumored name of the intelligence official whose allegation that Trump solicited political favors from Ukraine’s President eventually led to impeachment. Early this year, after Trump was acquitted, Lieutenant Colonel Alexander Vindman, a key witness in the impeachment proceedings, was removed from his position on the National Security Council, and Michael Atkinson, the inspector general to the intelligence community, who had deemed the whistle-blower’s complaint credible, was fired. This summer, Senate Republicans stripped whistle-blower protections from annual defense legislation.

Haspel, a thirty-five-year veteran of the C.I.A., has been a rare survivor in the Trump Administration. Officials credit this to her cordial relationship with Trump and her care in avoiding direct disagreements with him. Trump has praised Haspel for what has been the greatest controversy of her career, her role in running a C.I.A. black site, where she oversaw brutal interrogations that critics have called torture. During the Ukraine whistle-blower saga, when former officials asked that she publicly support the individual behind the complaint, Haspel was characteristically quiet.

In Key West, Haspel made it clear that McConnell should face consequences for his disclosures. McConnell learned this from task-force staff shortly after her visit. In his affidavit to the Senate Intelligence Committee, he wrote, “I understood this to mean that the Director of the CIA had personally ordered unlawful retaliation against me for my whistleblowing activities.” (Barrett, the C.I.A. spokesperson, told me, “No one is more protective of lawful whistle-blowers than Gina Haspel.”)

After McConnell’s departure, he appealed to Admiral Faller, of the Southern Command, to restore his access privileges. Faller told Padden that he would “do the right thing.” But McConnell never received a response. During a subsequent phone call with Padden, Faller attributed the silence to pressure from the C.I.A. “He was having contact from—‘leadership’ was the only term he used—at that agency, expressing concerns that Mark’s appeal couldn’t be approved,” Padden recalled. He added that Faller suggested that the agency had threatened to stop collaborating with the Southern Command if the appeal was granted. (In his statement, Faller said, “At no point was I, or members of the SOUTHCOM staff, pressured by any outside agency to make any decisions related to this matter.”) Dan Meyer, an attorney and a former executive director of the intelligence-community whistle-blowing program, said, “An agency, by going after the source of a complaint, is sending a chilling message all the way through the chain of command.”

Padden and Cohen initially sought to reassign McConnell within the Southern Command. In anticipation, McConnell moved to a Marriott hotel near the command’s headquarters, in Doral, Florida. But the reassignment “never happened, because the agency was pushing back,” Padden said. A similar task force based in Hawaii initially appeared interested in creating a role for McConnell, but, after DeQuattro, the task-force director, called it, talks about an assignment there stopped. McConnell was nominally employed by the Department of Justice, and other law-enforcement agencies periodically turned to him for help and advice. But he was not given a full-time position. “They are absolutely persecuting him,” Padden said.

Others connected to the disclosures also experienced varying degrees of hostility from the intelligence community. Months after McConnell’s removal, Hovakimian and several colleagues at the Justice Department met with F.B.I. and C.I.A. officials, including the agency’s operative on the task force. The C.I.A. officials expressed outrage that Cohen had failed to compel McConnell to sign the N.D.A., and that he had tried to facilitate subsequent assignments. One of the C.I.A. officials said of Cohen, “He has no integrity,” and “We don’t believe anything he says.” One person who was present told me, “In their mind, the right thing was to crucify McConnell and anyone who tried to protect him.”

During the meeting, an agency official asked the Justice Department for a letter immunizing C.I.A. personnel from prosecution related to McConnell’s disclosures. The department denied the request.

That November, the Pentagon inspector general issued a brief letter replying to McConnell’s complaint, stating that he was suspended “at the request of another government agency.” It continued, “We have determined that insufficient evidence exists to warrant investigation” of his allegations. After a year and a half, inspectors for the Department of Justice and the intelligence community have given no response. “The C.I.A. is so goddam powerful,” McConnell’s attorney, Mark Zaid, told me. “People are scared to do the right thing.” Zaid, who also represented the official behind the Ukraine complaint, founded a pro-bono law firm called Whistleblower Aid with the former State Department whistle-blower John Tye. Their focus is unusual and often fraught. Earlier this year, Zaid’s malpractice insurer dropped him, citing his high-profile work.

None of the people implicated in McConnell’s and Padden’s complaints are known to have faced sanction. F.B.I. agents who are accused of making false statements have continued to testify in cases, and some have received promotions. DeQuattro now serves in a senior role at the Coast Guard headquarters, in Washington, D.C.

Zaid called for an investigation into Haspel’s treatment of McConnell. “Her role absolutely requires greater transparency and clarification as to what she knew and when,” he told me. “It raises serious concerns as to her leadership and willingness to protect whistle-blowers.” Tye said, “It’s a terrible example she’s setting. She’s used to being able to hide everything, and I doubt she expected that her role in this would ever come to light.”

During Hovakimian’s confirmation hearing for the position of general counsel for the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, Senator Kamala Harris asked him about the Ukraine whistle-blower, the most controversial such case of the Trump Administration. She repeatedly questioned whether Hovakimian was involved in the decision to delay the transmission of the whistle-blower’s complaint to Congress. “I’m not exactly sure which decision you’re referring to, because I don’t know who made it, if it was even made,” Hovakimian said. He eventually said that the decision was made by the White House’s Office of Legal Counsel, and promised to do everything he could “to insure that whistle-blowers are afforded all the statutory rights to which they’re entitled.” Officials who work with him said that, in McConnell’s case, he made a more pragmatic calculation. “Could Hovakimian have taken a stronger stance? Sure he could have,” a close colleague said. “But he made a judgment call that the relationship with the C.I.A., and our ability to work with them, was more important than the little bit of leverage he could have gotten from Mark. I think he made a business decision.” (A D.O.J. spokesperson said, “Any accusation that Associate Deputy Attorney General Hovakimian’s approach was dictated by a political calculus is completely false.”)

This past February, the Southern District of Florida acquiesced to the C.I.A.’s request that, in cases that resulted from concealed intelligence, prosecutors would not undertake the “prudential searches” typically used to determine whether classified material must be disclosed in court. According to a person familiar with the conversation, Getchell, the prosecutor, objected but was overruled. The C.I.A. then resumed inserting its classified intelligence into the Helios database, labelling it as F.B.I. information. Hovakimian forwarded to colleagues a celebratory e-mail exchange about the resumption of the practice. McConnell and Padden both called the outcome “a whitewash.”

Padden has continued to work at the Department of Justice, where he says that his relations with intelligence officials have become strained. He worries that he might be pressed into early retirement. He and his wife bought a house in Tennessee and have begun moving their belongings there. He said that, after the publication of this article, “I may face blowback, which would render me ineffective in my job.”

McConnell and his wife have moved several times to be near possible assignments, but they’ve never panned out. This January, an official in the Department of Justice inspector general’s office approached McConnell’s attorneys with a message from the C.I.A.: if McConnell apologized and stopped pursuing the matter, the agency would drop its complaint about him. Later that month, after McConnell filed for permission to speak to The New Yorker, the agency made it clear that, if he talked to the press, the deal would be off. Legal experts said that the offer, which McConnell declined, may have broken the law. “That looks to me like an attempt to use a settlement to bypass the regulations,” Meyer, the former head of the intelligence-community whistle-blower program, told me. “That is really bad business. That gets you terminated from your job in the federal government.”

McConnell often wakes up in the middle of the night, reliving his removal from the task force. Taking the C.I.A.’s deal might have allowed him to revive his career in public service. “I knew that caving in to bribes or threats would make me unhappy with myself for the rest of my life,” he said. “Why would I ever acquiesce to that?”

e-max.it: your social media marketing partner
 
<< Start < Prev 301 302 303 304 305 306 307 308 309 310 Next > End >>

Page 306 of 3432

THE NEW STREAMLINED RSN LOGIN PROCESS: Register once, then login and you are ready to comment. All you need is a Username and a Password of your choosing and you are free to comment whenever you like! Welcome to the Reader Supported News community.

RSNRSN