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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/7/2015 5:01:38 PM

Islamic State expelled from Iraq town Al-Baghdadi: US

AFP

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Iraqi Forces Clear Islamic State Fighters From Town Near Key Base

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Washington (AFP) - Iraqi government forces and allied tribal militia have retaken the town of Al-Baghdadi, from where jihadists had threatened to attack an airbase housing US troops, the US military said Friday.

Fighters from the Islamic State group had taken Al-Baghdadi, a small town on the Euphrates River in western Iraq, in February, posing a threat to a nearby base where American forces train their Iraqi counterparts.

A statement from the headquarters of the US-led coalition conducting air strikes in Iraq and Syria against jihadist targets said it had ordered 26 air strikes around the town since February 22.

"Iraqi security forces and tribal fighters from the Anbar region have successfully cleared Al-Baghdadi of ISIL (IS), retaking both the police station and three Euphrates River bridges," it said.

US ground forces were not directly employed in the battle, but "the coalition supported the operation with surveillance assets and advise and assist teams" attached to Iraqi headquarters units.

Iraqi and Kurdish forces, supported by Sunni tribes and Shiite militias, have begun to push back IS forces from a swathe of territory the jihadists seized last year in their quest to build an Islamist "caliphate."

The Islamic State group is widely reviled for it brutal tactics -- including mass rapes, murders and kidnaps -- but concerns have also been raised over sectarian killings by Shiite pro-government forces in recaptured Sunni areas.

On February 13, as Al-Baghdadi was falling to IS fighters, suicide bombers attacked Iraqi forces protecting the nearby Al-Asad air base, where a small contingent of US troops works with Iraqi allies.

No Americans were hurt in the assault but their relative proximity to the fighting increased fears that US ground troops could find themselves drawn into the conflict.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/7/2015 5:11:42 PM

Ferguson grand juror pushes back in battle to discuss Darren Wilson case

Jason Sickles, Yahoo
Yahoo News

Ferguson police Officer Darren Wilson (Getty/Facebook)

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Ferguson, Mo., police Officer Darren Wilson had reason to fear unarmed teen Michael Brown when he fatally shot him last August — it’s now the conclusion of both state and federal authorities.

But just two days after the Justice Department released findings of its probe, a grand juror from the St. Louis County investigation continues to advance a legal battle with prosecutor Robert McCulloch, perhaps calling into question Wilson’s innocence.

On Friday the unidentified juror filed a 21-page memorandum arguing why U.S. District Judge Rodney Sippel shouldn’t dismiss their lawsuit against McCulloch.

The juror — one of 12 to sit on the secret panel — alleges McCulloch publicly misrepresented that “all grand jurors believed that there was no support for any charges,” according to the federal lawsuit. The juror contends McCulloch’s team gave jurors instructions in a “muddled and untimely” manner and presented the evidence in a way that insinuated that the dead teen, not the officer, was the wrongdoer.

[Related: Holder says U.S. will dismantle Ferguson Police Department if needed]

After hearing three months of testimony, it was announced in late November that the grand jury declined to indict Wilson in the racially charged case. The vote did not have to be unanimous. In Missouri, a consensus of nine is needed to rule.

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Michael Brown Jr. is seen in an undated photo from Facebook.

Michael Brown Jr. is seen in an undated photo from Facebook.

Grand jurors take an oath or secrecy and are ordered to keep the panel’s deliberations and votes private. Under Missouri law, it’s a misdemeanor for a grand juror to disclose evidence or information about witnesses who appear before them.

“This case is about Doe’s First Amendment rights,” the lawyers wrote in Friday’s filing. “The claim that a citizen with information on a matter of public concern should be permitted to challenge the government’s narrative without going to jail is a cognizable First Amendment claim.”

Brown, who was black, was unarmed when he was fatally shot during a confrontation on Aug. 9, 2014, with Wilson, who is white. The shooting and lack of charges sparked days of violent unrest in the suburban St. Louis community and weeks of protests around the country. Wilson resigned from the police department a few days after the grand jury declined to indict him.

When a grand jury doesn’t recommend charges, the testimony and evidence presented to a panel is typically kept private. But with the international attention and controversy surrounding the Ferguson case, McCulloch made the unique move to discuss in detail why the officer was cleared. He also turned over all evidence — though some of it was heavily redacted — to the public.

“McCulloch speaks freely and purportedly openly about the very content about which Doe wishes to speak, just from a different viewpoint,” Doe’s lawyers write. “McCulloch has maintained exclusive control of the content and viewpoint disclosed to the public.”

[Related: Obama says he supports decision not to charge Officer Wilson]

On Friday Doe’s attorneys also raised the argument that the Supreme Court has held state officials may not thwart the rights of citizens to publish legitimate public information.

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St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch didn't let protesters deter him during a speech at St. Louis University law school last month. (AP/Huy Ma...

St. Louis County Prosecutor Robert McCulloch didn't let protesters deter him during a speech at St. Louis University …

“For example, one question of significant public importance is whether the grand jury investigating Wilson did not return an indictment because McCulloch’s office misled the grand jury about the law,” Doe’s attorneys write. “McCulloch has given his view of the grand jurors’ thoughts. The twelve who know the answer are silenced by the challenged laws.”

Last month McCulloch’s defense team filed a motion requesting that Judge Sippel dismiss Doe’s suit because it would “threaten the continued health and sound functioning of Missouri’s grand jury system. Given the important state issues raised in this case, the court should abstain from exercising its jurisdiction over plaintiff’s claims.”

McCulloch, the county’s chief top prosecuting attorney for 24 years, encountered heavy criticism for refusing to charge Wilson himself or appoint an outside prosecutor.

When the DOJ cleared Wilson as well, some wondered if McCulloch himself might have experienced a sense of acquittal.

“I never felt incriminated, so there is no reason to feel vindicated,” McCulloch told reporters Wednesday.

Jason Sickles is a reporter for Yahoo. Follow him on Twitter (@jasonsickles).

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/7/2015 5:41:15 PM

Holder says would break up Ferguson police if 'necessary'

Reuters

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Ferguson Police Chief Mum on Federal Report


WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder said on Friday the Justice Department would use its full authority to demand police reforms in Ferguson, Missouri, including possibly going so far as dismantling the department accused of racial bias.

"We are prepared to use all the power that we have ... to ensure that the situation changes there," Holder told reporters.

Asked if that included dismantling the Ferguson Police Department, Holder said, "If that's what's necessary, we're prepared to do that."

Civil rights lawyers have previously said the county could absorb the functions of the Ferguson Police Department.

The Justice Department issued a report this week that found that police in Ferguson overwhelmingly arrested and issued traffic citations to black residents, creating a "toxic" environment with its policing practices.

That culture of distrust erupted in August, when white Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson fatally shot 18-year-old Michael Brown, who was black and unarmed. The incident triggered months of protest and a national debate about race and police behavior.

Holder also said President Barack Obama's task force on policing will issue guidelines to address jailing citizens who owe money to the city, a practice used in Ferguson. But he noted that the federal government does not have the authority to demand such a change of local governments.

Ferguson city officials will meet with the Justice Department in about two weeks to begin negotiating an agreement on reforms, Ferguson Mayor James Knowles said.

If the two parties cannot reach a consensus, the Justice Department can sue and force reform.

Knowles said on Friday that the city would not settle with the Justice Department if the negotiations do not lead to "mutual satisfaction."

"There are a lot of things in that report that are very troubling and need to be addressed, but there are also things that are an overreach," Knowles said.

(Reporting by Julia Edwards; Additional reporting by Carey Gillam in Kansas City; Writing by Emily Stephenson; Editing by Sandra Maler and Lisa Shumaker)

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/7/2015 6:21:18 PM

US woman kidnapped in central Nigeria is free: police

AFP

This undated photo shows American Phyllis Sortor, a missionary with the Free Methodist Church, who was kidnapped by gunmen in Emiworo village, Nigeria (AFP Photo/)

Lokoja (Nigeria) (AFP) - An American woman kidnapped by masked gunmen in central Nigeria last month was released on Friday and handed over to US government officials, police told AFP.

Phyllis Sortor, a missionary with the Free Methodist Church, was seized on February 23 in the village of Emiworo in Kogi state.

"She has been rescued and given to the American authorities," Kogi state police spokesman Collins Sola Adebayo said, adding that no ransom was paid "as far as police are concerned."

An AFP journalist at the handover in the state capital Lokoja said the 71-year-old Sortor appeared unharmed with no visible signs of abuse.

Kogi's police chief Adeyemi Ogunjemilusi said she was dropped by her captors in the bushlands outside the village of Eru and "raised an alarm which attracted the villagers."

Police deployed to the area and brought Sortor to Lokoja.

Her church confirmed the release but declined to provide details on the circumstances.

"As a matter of sound policy, and to help protect the many, many people who helped secure Phyllis' freedom, we will have no comment concerning the efforts that were undertaken to secure her release," Bishop David Kendall said in a statement.

US embassy officials in Abuja were not immediately available to comment.

Sortor had spent years living in Africa, including Mozambique -- where she spent much of her childhood -- later working in Rwanda and, since 2005, Nigeria, Kendall said

Her work in Kogi was focused primarily on educational development and conflict resolution between nomadic herdsmen and farming communities who frequently clash in central Nigeria's Middle Belt region, the church statement further said.

Foreign nationals have often been kidnapped in Nigeria by local gangs who typically release hostages following a ransom payment.

Such abductions are especially common in the southern, oil-producing Niger Delta, where expatriates working with large oil companies have been a frequent target.

A number of foreigners have also been kidnapped in the north of the country, but those attacks claimed by Boko Haram or the associated Islamist group Ansaru are considered a different phenomenon, and not necessarily motivated by a desire for ransom.

Boko Haram has been blamed for previous attacks in Kogi, including two raids targeting the same prison in 2012 and 2014.

Nigeria's Islamists groups have in the past publicly claimed the abduction of expatriates and the lack of such a claim following Sortor's kidnapping led many to believe that Boko Haram and its affiliates were not involved.

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
3/7/2015 7:49:16 PM

CIA director announces sweeping reorganization of spy agency

Associated Press

Central Intelligence Agency Director John Brennan, pictured here during a press conference at CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia on December 11, 2014, has proposed changes to ramp up cyber threat capability and integration between departments (AFP Photo/Jim Watson)


WASHINGTON (AP) — Director John Brennan has ordered a sweeping reorganization of the CIA, an overhaul designed to make its leaders more accountable and close espionage gaps amid widespread concerns about the spy agency's limited insights into a series of major global developments.

Brennan announced the restructuring to the CIA workforce on Friday, including a new directorate devoted to boosting the CIA's computer hacking skills. He said the move comes after nine agency officers spent three months analyzing its management structure, including what deputy CIA director David Cohen called "pain points," organizational areas where the CIA's bureaucracy does not work efficiently.

Briefing reporters with Cohen at CIA headquarters this week, Brennan said the changes are necessary to address intelligence gaps that the CIA is not covering. He lamented that there is often no single person he can hold accountable for the spying mission in any given part of the world.

"There are a lot of areas that I would like to have better insight to, better information about, better access to," Brennan said. "Safe havens, denied areas. Whether because we don't even have a diplomatic presence in a country, or because there are parts of countries that have been overrun and taken over by terrorist groups and others."

The changes come against a backdrop of evidence that the CIA's focus on hunting and killing terrorists since the Sept. 11 attacks has led to an erosion of the espionage and analytic capabilities the agency built during the Cold War. The CIA, along with other U.S. intelligence agencies, wrongly assessed the presence of weapons of mass destruction in Iraq in 2002 and failed to anticipate the rapid collapse of Middle East governments during the Arab Spring in 2011, among other shortcomings.

The agency's greatest public success of recent years — the 10-year effort to locate and kill Osama bin Laden in 2011 — may have taken longer than it should have, according to evidence made public in the recent Senate report on CIA interrogations. Internal CIA surveys have cited bad management and bureaucratic frustration as factors in driving talent away from the agency.

Under Brennan's reorganization, the CIA would break down the wall between the operations and analytical arms, a system that typically has required the case officers who recruit spies and run covert operations to work for different bosses, in different offices, than analysts who interpret the intelligence and write briefing papers for the president and other policymakers.

The new plan would blend practitioners of those separate disciplines into 10 centers devoted to various subjects or areas of the world. There are a handful of such centers at the moment, including the Counter Terrorism Center, where analysts and operators have worked side by side for the last decade targeting al-Qaida with espionage and drone strikes.

Under the new plan, each center would be run by an assistant director who would be responsible for the entire intelligence mission within that jurisdiction, including covert operations, spying, analysis, liaison with foreign partners and logistics.

The system of CIA stations, headed by a CIA station chief, will remain in place, Brennan said. Most stations are in U.S. embassies, and various CIA case officers in embassies may be working on different missions for different centers.

The changes do not require congressional approval and will be undertaken within the CIA's current budget, CIA officials said.

Critics of a blended approach have raised concerns that combining analysts with operators could compromise the objectivity of the analysts, who are tasked with coldly interpreting intelligence in which they have no stake. It may be harder for an analyst to cast doubt on a source recruited by a case officer he knows personally, the theory goes.

The head of the CIA's operation arm retired abruptly in January after voicing concerns about the plan, say two former CIA officials who know him but spoke on condition of anonymity because they weren't authorized to discuss internal agency matters. Brennan said the undercover officer's decision "was not a result of this," but he did not dispute that the officer had opposed some of the changes.

"Any time we've put analysts and operators together, the result has been a more powerful product," said John McLaughlin, a former CIA analyst who became acting director, and who advised Brennan on the restructuring.

Brennan is retaining the old structure of CIA directorates. But he is changing some names, including restoring the old moniker "Directorate of Operations," to the spying arm, the name it had before being rebadged the National Clandestine Service in 2005. For analysts, what used to be called the Directorate of Intelligence will be renamed the Directorate of Analysis. Two others, the directorates of support and science and technology, remain.

The directorates will manage human resources and set tradecraft standards, Brennan said, while the centers carry out the intelligence missions.

In another evolution, Brennan is creating a fifth directorate, the Directorate of Digital Innovation, which will focus on the new world of computer networks that has changed the way espionage is conducted. Brennan avoided the term "cyber," a word used by the National Security Agency, the country's premier digital spying service. The CIA's mission of human spying now almost always has a digital component —even something so simple as backgrounding a potential asset by hacking into databases — and Brennan said the agency needs to intensify its focus on it.

The CIA will also significantly boost its leadership training and talent development efforts, which have been compared unfavorably to the military, Brennan said.

The reorganization is already drawing fire from some quarters. Paul Pillar, a former CIA analyst who famously dissented from the case for war in Iraq, expressed concern that the costs of the changes would outweigh the benefits.

"I worry that this plan may be another instance of the all-too-common pattern, among senior managers in both governmental and private sector organizations, to try to leave a personal mark by reorganizing the place," he said in an email.


"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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