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  1. #1
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Cartels’ Bribing of DHS Workers Raises Terrorist Threat

    Cartels’ Bribing of DHS Workers Raises Terrorist Threat

    NewsMax.com

    Mexican cartels are increasingly engaged in the “systematic corruption” of Department of Homeland Security (DHS) workers to expand their smuggling operations — including the trafficking of aliens from terrorism-linked countries.

    “Drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) have become not only more violent and dangerous, but more clever as well. The DTOs have turned to recruiting and corrupting DHS employees,” Charles Edwards, the acting DHS inspector general, told a hearing of a House Oversight and Government Reform subcommittee.

    “A corrupt DHS employee may accept a bribe for allowing what appear to be simply undocumented aliens into the U.S. while unwittingly helping terrorists enter the country.

    Likewise, what seems to be drug contraband could be weapons of mass destruction, such as chemical or biological weapons or bomb-making materials.

    “According to government reports, DTOs are becoming involved increasingly in systematic corruption of DHS employees to further alien and drug smuggling, including the smuggling of aliens from designated special interest countries likely to export terrorism.”

    Special interest countries are nations thought to pose a terrorist threat and include Pakistan, Afghanistan, Iran, Iraq, Yemen, and Somalia, CNS News pointed out in a report on Edwards’ testimony.

    Edwards said border corruption may take the form of cash bribes, sexual favors, and other gratuities in return for U.S. employees allowing contraband or illegal aliens through inspection lanes — “or even protecting and escorting border crossings.”

    He also said DHS employees may be bribed to leak or sell sensitive law enforcement information to smugglers, and provide them with documents such as immigration papers.

    The cartels target employees who may be “going through financial difficulties, gambling, debts, [or] sexual infidelity,” he added.

    Customs and Border Protection (CBP) Commissioner David Aguilar, who testified alongside Edwards, said that 141 CBP employees “have been arrested or indicted for acts of corruption” since October 2004.

    Edwards warned in his written testimony that “while those who turn away from their sworn duties are few, even one corrupt agent or officer who allows harmful goods or people to enter the country puts the nation at risk.”

    Organized gangs in Mexico are also increasingly involved in the theft of petroleum from the nation’s state-run oil company, Pemex, CNS News reported.

    Pemex said on Aug. 10 that the national pipeline systems “are practically taken over by organized crime gangs associated with heavily armed groups.”

    Criminals use devices called “clandestine taps” to steal the oil from the pipelines.

    According to Pemex, more than 1.84 million barrels of oil were stolen from the pipeline system in the first six months of this year, meaning that on average, at least 17,500 gallons of oil were stolen per hour!

    Recieved by e-mail

    source: http://news.newsmax.com/?ZK4DaNSa25H...Inh.SDxrkxfIAZ
    Last edited by AirborneSapper7; 10-03-2012 at 12:47 PM. Reason: update NewsMax source and format
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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    5. Al-Qaida Advertises for Suicide Bombers

    The terrorist organization al-Qaida is running a “job ad” on an Internet forum seeking applicants for short-term employment — as suicide bombers.

    The ad on the Shumukh al-Islam forum, which is accessible only to al-Qaida members, appears under the heading “Area of activity: The planet Earth.”

    Applicants must be Muslim, mentally mature, dedicated, able to listen, and utterly committed to completing their mission, according to the ad.

    While real names are not required, candidates are asked to send details of their nickname or handle, their age, marital status, languages spoken, and a list of passports in their possession, the Hebrew daily Yedioth Ahronoth reported.

    The ad also specifies the targets of the suicide attacks that applicants will be expected to carry out, including “People who fight Islam and Muslims” and enemy “financial, military and media targets.”

    And it states: “Only one person will be in charge. He will gather all of the intelligence, he will prepare the operation — and he will complete the attack.” However, “a military panel” will oversee the bomber’s training and select the target.

    The job description promises only a “very slight chance of being caught.”
    The Yedioth article claimed the ad has elicited several positive responses.
    The Times of Israel observed that the ad indicates al-Qaida is “apparently low on bombers.”
    Last edited by AirborneSapper7; 10-03-2012 at 12:47 PM.
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    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    bttt
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  4. #4
    Senior Member AirborneSapper7's Avatar
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    Senior Member HAPPY2BME's Avatar
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    RELATED ..

    Jailed U.S. Border Agent Scary Inside Look at Drug Cartels

    A Border Patrol agent checks vehicles for illegal immigrants and contraband at a roadside checkpoint in this June 1, 2010 file photo near Sasabe, Ari. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)

    By ANDREA CANNING and CHRISTINA NG
    Sept. 20, 2011

    A corrupt U.S. border agent sitting in a federal prison cell is offering a chilling view of the Mexican drug cartels whose drug shipments he protected for years in return for hefty bribes.
    He is so terrified of the cartel's famous vicious streak that he fears for his own life -- and the lives of his family -- if he is identified as speaking to ABC News. He depicts a dangerously paranoid crime organization that has spies throughout U.S. law enforcement.

    To illustrate the cartel's pervasive reach, he said he got his introduction to them through an American cop. From there the former border patrol agent was convicted of shepherding cartel vehicles loaded with drugs safely over the border. Prosecutors say he profited handsomely, being paid $4,000 per car and $6,000 to escort vans - in addition to a $10,000 retainer fee.

    According to the indictment, the agent's run came to an end after he unknowingly offered his services to other drug dealers-- who were undercover FBI agents. In the sting, the agent assisted the undercover agents in smuggling a huge shipment of cocaine into the U.S. He largely concedes the facts of the case against him, but insists there is more to his story.

    U.S. Border Agents Seduced By Mexican Drug Cartels

    Border Battle: U.S. Agents Targeted? Watch Video



    Agent Killed in Mexico: U.S. Targeted? Watch Video



    Tragedy at the U.S. Border Watch Video


    "First and foremost, I was a USBP agent. But when the threat is real and it's on your own family... it turns into a whole new ball game," he said in a series of emails in which he answered questions put to him by ABC News.

    "Regardless of my crime, I served my country and my community to the best of my abilities (above and beyond)... no one will ever take that away from me," he wrote.

    The disgraced agent said the cartel was more powerful than the U.S. government and overrode his oath as a law enforcement officer.

    "In my opinion they have unlimited power..they have informants of all kinds, good and bad," he said. "They have informants in the city level, county level and, from what they claim, federal."

    "At the time I was just thinking of a possible life and death situation and DEATH had better odds than I had.... Until you are faced with a situation like mine... no one can really say what they could have done."
    He said he first reached out to the cartels because it was a form of security. If he helped the cartels, he could keep his drug-dealing brothers in Mexico safe.

    "Of course I knew I was taking a big risk. It went against everything I believed in and worked hard for," the agent said. "Yes, I was terrified of getting caught, but more terrified of losing my brothers."

    At a softball game, the police officer introduced him to a man who had connections in the part of Mexico where his brothers' lives were being threatened and the guard believed they might be able to help his brothers if he worked with them. He did not know, however, that once he got involved with this dangerous world, it would be impossible to get out.

    He also did not identify which of the Mexican drug cartels he dealt with.

    "At first I was doing it for free because I wanted to get my brother's problems taken care of, but then I got whatever they gave me," he said. "They wouldn't take no for an answer and I had to play along."
    In a world where suspicion could be fatal, the former guard said he had to accept the bribes in order to curb the cartel's paranoia.

    "The money was not something I could say no to...because I had to make them believe that I was doing all I could to be on their good side," he wrote.

    He communicated with the drug trafficking organizations by radio and sometimes in person, which he said was "scary and stressful."

    Trusting no one, he believed he was under constant surveillance and described a situation where he met a woman at a safe house. The meeting came right after he and other officers had been warned that the cartels were using women to try to get agents into Mexico in order to kill them.

    When the first person he met at a safe house was a woman, he was terrified. The cartel told him the woman was there for his "personal enjoyment," but he suspected the real purposed was to get him naked so that they could see that he was not wired.

    He can't stop thinking about what he has done and can't stop worrying about the cartel, even behind bars.

    "I worry a lot because I know [their] method of operation and in what areas [they operate]," the guard wrote. "In other words, I believe that they think that I know too much."

    He isn't just afraid for himself.

    "I worry about my family because they are living in border towns and in Mexico," he said. "I fear for their lives because I believe that those people are just waiting for me to say the wrong thing about them or someone in particular."
    The Mexican drug cartel industry has an estimated worth of more than $15 billion and continues to grow. Violence has escalated in the industry and battles involving automatic weapons and grenades are common. Over 34,000 people have been killed in Mexican drug wars over the past four years.

    In a disturbing trend, new figures show 122 current or former U.S. federal agents and employees of the Customs and Border Protection agency have been arrested or indicted for corruption since October 2004. It's not just for money, some agents are accepting payment from the cartels in the form of sexual favors.
    Just last week, a police officer, a state trooper and three TSA officers in Florida and Connecticut were among 20 arrested for allegedly running an interstate drug ring. "

    "It will get worse before it gets better," the former agent predicted.

    Even though the agent describes prison life as "a terrible experience," he believes he did the best he could for the circumstances he was in.

    "I knew that what I was doing was wrong. But, at the time, I thought I had no other options," he said. "It's easy to find an answer right now, but back then...it was a nightmare."

    source: Corrupt Guard Offers Inside Look at Mexican Drug Cartels - ABC News
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    Senior Member HAPPY2BME's Avatar
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