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	<title>Roswell UFOs &#187; FBI</title>
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		<title>@PID: QE 2.75+</title>
		<link>http://www.roswellufos.com/archives/pid-qe-275/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roswellufos.com/archives/pid-qe-275/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jan 2008 14:43:07 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RoswellUFOs.com</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Air Force]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FBI]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Roswell]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[[The following is a teletype message from the Dallas, TX, FBI office to the Cincinati, OH, FBI office regarding the event at Roswell. The "xx" means it was scratched out, "??" means I couldn't read it. The following material is from: _The Roswell Report: A Historical Perspective_, George M. Eberhart editor, 1991 the J. Allen [...]<p>a</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[The following is a teletype message from the Dallas, TX, FBI office to<br />
the Cincinati, OH, FBI office regarding the event at <span class="genmed"><u>Roswell</u></span>.  The "xx"<br />
means it was scratched out, "??" means I couldn't read it.  The<br />
following material is from: _The <span class="genmed"><u>Roswell</u></span> Report: A Historical<br />
Perspective_, George M. Eberhart editor, 1991 the J. Allen Hynek Center<br />
for UFO Studies. ISBN 0-929343-59-X.]</p>
<p>&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8212;&#8211;</p>
<p>FBI DALLAS              7-8-47          6-17 PM</p>
<p>DIRECTOR AND SAC, CINCINNATI            URGENT</p>
<p>FLYING DISC, INFORMATION CONCERNING.   MAJOR CURTAN, HEADQUARTERS</p>
<p>EIGHTH <span class="genmed"><u>Air Force</u></span>, TELEPHONICALLY ADVISED THIS OFFICE THAT AN OBJECT</p>
<p>PURPORTING TO BE A FLYING DISC WAS RE COVERED NEAR <span class="genmed"><u>Roswell</u></span>, NEW</p>
<p>MEXICO, THIS DATE.   THE DISC IS HEXAGONAL IN SHAPE AND WAS SUSPENDED</p>
<p>FROM A BALLON BY A CABLE, WHICH BALLON WAS APPROXIMATELY TWENTY</p>
<p>FEET IN DIAMETER.   MAJOR CURTAN FURTHER ADVISED THAT THE OBJECT FOUND</p>
<p>RESEMBLES A HIGH ALTITUDE WEATHER BALLOON WITH A RADAR</p>
<p>REFLECTOR, BUT THAT TELEPHONIC CONVERSATION BETWEEN THEIR OFFICE</p>
<p>AND WRIGHT FIELD HAD NOT xxxxxxxxxx BORNE OUT THIS BELIEF.   DISC AND</p>
<p>BALLOON BEING TRANSPORTED TO WRIGHT FIELD BY SPECIAL PLANE FOR EXAMIN</p>
<p>INFORMATION PROVIDED THIS OFFICE BECAUSE OF NATIONAL INTEREST IN CASE</p>
<p>xxxx AND FACT THAT NATIONAL BROADCASTING COMPANY, ASSOCIATED PRESS, A</p>
<p>OTHERS ATTEMPTING TO BREAK STORY OF LOCATION OF DISC TODAY.   MAJOR</p>
<p>CURTAN ADVISED WOULD REQUEST WRIGHT FIELD TO ADVISE CINCINNATI</p>
<p>OFFICE RESULTS OF EXAMINATION.  NO FURTHER INVESTIGATION BEING</p>
<p>CONDUCTED.</p>
<p>WYLY</p>
<p>END</p>
<p>CXXXX ACK IN ORDER</p>
<p>WA  ?? FBI CI MJW</p>
<p>BPI  HS</p>
<p>S-32 PM O</p>
<p>O-22 PM OM FBI WASH DC   VH</p>
<p>a</p>
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		<item>
		<title>BUGS, TAPS AND INFILTRATORS: WHAT TO DO ABOUT POLITICAL SPYI</title>
		<link>http://www.roswellufos.com/archives/bugs-taps-and-infiltrators-what-to-do-about-political-spyi/</link>
		<comments>http://www.roswellufos.com/archives/bugs-taps-and-infiltrators-what-to-do-about-political-spyi/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Sun, 13 Jan 2008 14:38:13 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>RoswellUFOs.com</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[CIA]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[FBI]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[by Linda Lotz American Friends Service Committee Organizations involved in controversial issues &#8212; particularly those who encourage or assist members to commit civil disobedience &#8212; should be alert to the possibility of surveillance and disruption by police or federal agencies. During the last three decades, many individuals and organizations were spied upon, wiretapped, their personal [...]<p>a</p>
]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>by Linda Lotz<br />
American Friends Service Committee</p>
<p>Organizations involved in controversial issues &#8212; particularly those who<br />
encourage or assist members to commit civil disobedience &#8212; should be alert to<br />
the possibility of surveillance and disruption by police or federal agencies.</p>
<p>During the last three decades, many individuals and organizations were spied<br />
upon, wiretapped, their personal lives dirupted in an effort to draw them away<br />
from their political work, and their organizations infiltrated. Hundreds of<br />
thousands of pages of evidence from agencies such as the FBI and <span class="genmed"><u>CIA</u></span> were<br />
obtained by Congressional inquiries headed by Senator Frank Church and<br />
Representative Otis Pike, others were obtained through use of the Freedom of<br />
Information Act and as a result of lawsuits seeking damages for First<br />
Amendment violations.</p>
<p>Despite the public outcry to these revelations, the apparatus remains in place,<br />
and federal agencies have been given increased powers by the Reagan<br />
Administration.</p>
<p>Good organizers should be acquainted with this sordid part of American history,<br />
and with the signs that may indicate their group is the target of an<br />
investigation.</p>
<p>HOWEVER, DO NOT LET PARANOIA IMMOBILIZE YOU. The results of paranoia and<br />
overreaction to evidence of surveillance can be just as disruptive to an<br />
organization as an actual infiltrator or disruption campaign.</p>
<p>This document is a brief outline of what to look for &#8212; and what to do if you<br />
think your group is the subject of an investigation. This is meant to suggest<br />
possible actions, and is not intended to provide legal advice.</p>
<p>POSSIBLE EVIDENCE OF <span class="genmed"><u>government</u></span> SPYING</p>
<p>|| OBVIOUS SURVEILLANCE</p>
<p>Look for:</p>
<p>* Visits by police or federal agents to politically involved individuals,<br />
landlords, employers, family members or business associates. These visits may<br />
be to ask for information, to encourage or create possibility of eviction or<br />
termination of employment, or to create pressure for the person to stop his or<br />
her political involvement.</p>
<p>* Uniformed or plainclothes officers taking pictures of people entering your<br />
office or participating in your activities. Just before and during<br />
demonstrations and other public events, check the area including windows and<br />
rooftops for photographers. (Credentialling press can help to separate the<br />
media from the spies.)</p>
<p>* People who seem out of place. If they come to your office or attend your<br />
events, greet them as potential members. Try to determine if they are really<br />
interested in your issues &#8212; or just your members!</p>
<p>* People writing down license plate numbers of cars and other vehicles in<br />
the vicinity of your meetings and rallies.</p>
<p>Despite local legislation and several court orders limiting policy spying<br />
activities, these investigatory practices have been generally found to be<br />
legal unless significant &#8220;chilling&#8221; of constitutional rights can be proved.</p>
<p>|| TELEPHONE PROBLEMS:</p>
<p>Electronic surveillance equipment is now so sophisticated that you should not<br />
be able to tell if your telephone converstaions are being monitored.  Clicks,<br />
whirrs, and other noises probably indicate a problem in the telephone line or<br />
other equipment.</p>
<p>For example, the National Security Agency has the technology to monitor<br />
microwave communications traffic, and to isolate all calls to or from a<br />
particular line, or to listen for key words that activate a tape recording<br />
device. Laser beams and &#8220;spike&#8221; microphones can detect sound waves hitting<br />
walls and window panes, and then transmit those waves for recording. In these<br />
cases, there is little chance that the subject would be able to find out about<br />
the surveillance.</p>
<p>Among the possible signs you may find are:</p>
<p>* Hearing a tape recording of a conversation you, or someone else in your<br />
home or office, have recently held.</p>
<p>* Hearing people talking about your activities when you try to use the<br />
telephone.</p>
<p>* Losing service several days before major events.</p>
<p><span class="genmed"><u>government</u></span> use of electronic surveillance is governed by two laws, the Omnibus<br />
Crime Control and Safe Streets Act and the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance<br />
Act. Warrants for such surveillance can be obtained if there is evidence of a<br />
federal crime, such as murder, drug trafficking, or crimes characteristic of<br />
organized crime, or for the purpose of gathering foreign intelligence<br />
information available within the U.S. In the latter case, an &#8220;agent of a<br />
foreign power&#8221; can be defined as a representative of a foriegn <span class="genmed"><u>government</u></span>,<br />
from a faction or opposition group, or foreign based political groups.</p>
<p>|| MAIL PROBLEMS:</p>
<p>Because of traditional difficulties with the US Postal Service, some problems<br />
with mail delivery will occur, such as a machine catching an end of an envelope<br />
and tearing it, or a bag getting lost and delaying delivery.</p>
<p>However, a pattern of problems may occur because of political intelligence<br />
gathering:</p>
<p>* Envelopes may have been opened prior to reaching their destination;<br />
contents were removed and/or switched with other mail. Remember that the glue<br />
on envelopes doesn&#8217;t work as well when volume or bulk mailings are involved.</p>
<p>* Mail may arrive late, on a regular basis different from others in your<br />
neighborhood.</p>
<p>* Mail may never arrive.</p>
<p>There are currently two kinds of surveillance permitted with regards to mail:<br />
the mail cover, and opening of mail. The simplest, and least intrusive form is<br />
the &#8220;mail cover&#8221; in which postal employees simply list any information that can<br />
be obtained from the envelope, or opening second, third or fourth class mail.<br />
Opening of first class mail requires a warrant unless it is believed to hold<br />
drugs &#8230;. More leeway is given for opening first class international mail.</p>
<p>|| BURGLARIES:</p>
<p>A common practice during the FBI&#8217;s Counter-Intelligence Program (COINTELPRO)<br />
was the use of surreptitious entries or &#8220;black bag jobs.&#8221; Bureau agents were<br />
given special training in burglary, key reproduction, etc. for use in entering<br />
homes and offices. In some cases, keys could be obtained from &#8220;loyal American&#8221;<br />
landlords or building owners.</p>
<p>Typical indicators are:</p>
<p>* Files, including membership and financial reports, are rifled, copied or<br />
stolen.</p>
<p>* Items of obvious financial value are left untouched.</p>
<p>* Equipment vital to the organization may be broken or stolen, such as<br />
typewriters, printing machinery, and computers.</p>
<p>* Signs of a political motive are left, such as putting a membership list or<br />
a poster from an important event in an obvious place.</p>
<p>Although warrantless domestic security searches are in violation of the Fourth<br />
Amendment, and any evidence obtained this way cannot be used in criminal<br />
proceedings, the Reagan Administration and most recent Presidents (excepting<br />
Carter) have asserted the inherent authority to conduct searches against those<br />
viewed as agents of a foreign power.</p>
<p>|| INFORMERS AND INFILTRATORS:</p>
<p>Information about an organization or individual can also be obtined by placing<br />
an informer or infiltrator. This person may be a police officer, employee of a<br />
federal agency, someone who has been charged or convicted of criminal activity<br />
and has agreed to &#8220;help&#8221; instead of serve time, or anyone from the public.</p>
<p>Once someone joins an organization for the purposes of gathering information,<br />
the line between data gathering and participation blurs. Two types of<br />
infiltrators result &#8212; those who are under &#8220;deep cover&#8221; and adapt to the<br />
lifestyle of the people they are infiltrating, and agents provocateurs.<br />
Deep-cover infiltrators may maintain their cover for many years, and an<br />
organization may never know who these people are. Agents provocateurs are more<br />
visible, because they will deliberately attempt to disrupt or lead the group<br />
into illegal activites. They often become involved just as an event or crisis<br />
is occurring, and leave town or drop out after the organizing slows down.</p>
<p>An agent may:</p>
<p>* Volunteer for tasks which provide access to important meetings and papers<br />
such as financial records, membership lists, minutes and confidential files.</p>
<p>* Not follow through or complete tasks, or else do them poorly despite an<br />
obvious ability to do good work.</p>
<p>* Cause problems for a group such as commiting it to activities or expenses<br />
without following proper channels, or urge the group to plan activities that<br />
divide group unity.</p>
<p>* Seem to create or be in the middle of personal or political difference that<br />
slow the work of the group.</p>
<p>* Seek the public spotlight, in the name of your group, and then make<br />
comments or present an image different from the rest of the group.</p>
<p>* Urge the use of violence or breaking the law, and provide information and<br />
resources to enable such ventures.</p>
<p>* Have no obvious source of income over a period of time, or have more money<br />
available than his or her job should pay.</p>
<p>* Charge other people with being agents (a process called snitch-jackets),<br />
thereby diverting attention from him or herself, and draining the group&#8217;s<br />
energy from other work.</p>
<p>THESE ARE NOT THE ONLY SIGNS, NOR IS A PERSON WHO FITS SEVERAL OF THESE<br />
CATEGORIES NECESSARILY AN AGENT.  BE EXTREMELY CAUTIONS AND DO NOT CALL ANOTHER<br />
PERSON AN AGENT WITHOUT HAVING SUBSTANTIAL EVIDENCE.</p>
<p>Courts have consistently found that an invividual who provides information,<br />
even if it is incriminating, to an informer has not had his or her<br />
Constitutional rights violated. This includes the use of tape recorders or<br />
electronic transmitters as well.</p>
<p>Lawsuits in Los Angeles, Chicago and elsewhere, alleging infiltration of lawful<br />
political groups, have resulted in court orders limiting the use of police<br />
informers and infiltrators. However, this does not affect activities of federal<br />
agencies.</p>
<p>|| IF YOU FIND EVIDENCE OF SURVEILLANCE:</p>
<p>* Hold a meeting to discuss spying and harassment</p>
<p>* Determine if any of your members have experienced any harassment or noticed<br />
any surveillance activities that appear to be directed at the organization&#8217;s<br />
activities. Carefully record all the details of these and see if any patterns<br />
develop.</p>
<p>* Review past suspicious activities or difficulties in your group. Have one<br />
or several people been involved in many of these events? List other possible<br />
&#8220;evidence&#8221; of infiltration.</p>
<p>* Develop internal policy on how the group should respond to any possible<br />
surveillance or suspicious actions. Decide who should be the contact person(s),<br />
what information should be recorded, what process to follow during any event or<br />
demonstration if disruption tactics are used.</p>
<p>* Consider holding a public meeting to discuss spying in your community and<br />
around the country.  Schedule a speaker or film discussing political<br />
surveillance.</p>
<p>* Make sure to protect important documents or computer disks, by keeping a<br />
second copy in a separate, secret location. Use fireproof, locked cabinets if<br />
possible.</p>
<p>* Implement a sign-in policy for your office and/or meetings. This is helpful<br />
for your organizing, developing a mailing list, and can provide evidence that<br />
an infiltrator or informer was at your meeting.  Appoint a contact for spying<br />
concerns.  This contact person or committee should implement the policy<br />
developed above and should be given authority to act, to get others to respond<br />
should any problems occur.</p>
<p>The contact should:</p>
<p>* Seek someone familiar with surveillance history and law, such as the local<br />
chapter of the National Lawyers Guild, the American Civil Liberties Union, the<br />
National Conference of Black Lawyers or the American Friends Service Committee.<br />
Brief them about your evidence and suspicions. They will be able to make<br />
suggestions about actions to take, as well as organizing and legal contacts.</p>
<p>* Maintain a file of all suspected or confirmed experiences of surveillance<br />
and disruption. Include: date, place, time, who was present, a complete<br />
description of everything that happened, and any comments explaining the<br />
context of the event or showing what impact the event had on the individual or<br />
organization. If this is put in deposition form and signed, it can be used as<br />
evidence in court.</p>
<p>* Under the Freedom of Information Act and the Privacy Act, request any files<br />
on the organization from federal agencies such as the FBI, <span class="genmed"><u>CIA</u></span>, Immigration and<br />
Naturalization, Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms, etc. File similar<br />
requests with local and state law enforcement agencies, if your state freedom<br />
of information act applies.</p>
<p>|| PREPARE FOR MAJOR DEMONSTRATIONS AND EVENTS:</p>
<p>* Plan ahead; brief your legal workers on appropriate state and federal<br />
statutes on police and federal officials spying. Discuss whether photographing<br />
with still or video cameras is anticipated and decide if you want to challenge<br />
it.</p>
<p>* If you anticipate surveillance, brief reporters who are expected to cover<br />
the event, and provide them with materials about past surveillance by your<br />
city&#8217;s police in the past, and/or against other activitists throughout the<br />
country.</p>
<p>* Tell the participants when surveillance is anticipated and discuss what<br />
the group&#8217;s response will be. Also, decide how to handle provocateurs, police<br />
violence, etc. and incorporate this into any affinity group, marshall or other<br />
training.</p>
<p>|| DURING THE EVENT:</p>
<p>* Carefully monitor the crowd, looking for surveillance or possible<br />
disruption tactics. Photograph any suspicious or questionable activities.</p>
<p>* Approach police officer(s) seen engaging in questionable activities.<br />
Consider having a legal worker and/or press person monitor their actions.</p>
<p>|| IF YOU SUSPECT SOMEONE IS AN INFILTRATOR:</p>
<p>* Try to obtain information about his or her background: where s/he attended<br />
high school and college; place of employment, and other pieces of history.<br />
Attempt to verify this information.</p>
<p>* Check public records which include employment; this can include voter<br />
registation, mortgages or other debt filings, etc.</p>
<p>* Check listings of police academy graduates, if available.</p>
<p>|| ONCE YOU OBTAIN EVIDENCE THAT SOMEONE IS AN INFILTRATOR:</p>
<p>* Confront him or her in a protected setting, such as a small meeting with<br />
several other key members of your group (and an attorney if available).<br />
Present the evidence and ask for the person&#8217;s response.</p>
<p>* You should plan how to inform your members about the infiltration,<br />
gathering information about what the person did while a part of the group and<br />
determining any additional impact s/he may have had.</p>
<p>* You should consider contacting the press with evidence of the infiltration.</p>
<p>|| IF YOU CAN ONLY GATHER CIRCUMSTANTIAL EVIDENCE, BUT ARE CONCERNED THAT THE<br />
PERSON IS DISRUPTING THE GROUP:</p>
<p>* Hold a strategy session with key leadership as to how to handle the<br />
troublesome person.</p>
<p>* Confront the troublemaker, and lay out why the person is disrupting the<br />
organization. Set guidelines for further involvement and carefully monitor the<br />
person&#8217;s activities. If the problems continue, consider asking the person to<br />
leave the organization.</p>
<p>* If sufficient evidence is then gathered which indicates s/he is an<br />
infiltrator, confront the person with the information in front of witnesses<br />
and carefully watch reactions.</p>
<p>* Request an investigation or make a formal complaint</p>
<p>* Report telephone difficulties to your local and long distance carriers.<br />
Ask for a check on the lines to assure that the equipment is working properly.<br />
Ask them to do a sweep/check to see if any wiretap equipment is attached<br />
(Sometimes repair staff can be very helpful in this way.) If you can afford it,<br />
request a sweep of your phone and office or home from a private security firm.<br />
Remember this will only be good at the time that the sweep is done.</p>
<p>* File a formal complaint with the US Postal Service, specifying the problems<br />
you have been experiencing, specific dates, and other details. If mail has<br />
failed to arrive, ask the Post Office to trace the envelope or package.</p>
<p>* Request a formal inquiry by the police, if you have been the subject of<br />
surveillance or infiltration.  Describe any offending actions by police<br />
officers and ask a variety of questions. If an activity was photographed, ask<br />
what will be done with the pictures.  Set a time when you expect a reply from<br />
the police chief. Inform members of the City Council and the press of your<br />
request.</p>
<p>* If you are not pleased with the results of the police chief&#8217;s reply, file<br />
a complaint with the Police Board or other administrative body. Demand a full<br />
investigation. Work with investigators to insure that all witnesses are<br />
contacted. Monitor the investigation and respond publicy to the conclusions.</p>
<p>* Initiate a lawsuit if applicable federal or local statutes have been<br />
violated. Before embarking on a lawsuit, remember that most suits take many<br />
years to complete and require tremendous amounts of organizers&#8217; and legal<br />
workers&#8217; energy and money.</p>
<p>* Always notify the press when you have a good story; keep interested<br />
reporters updated on any new developments. They may be aware of other police<br />
abuses, or be able to obtain further evidence of police practices. Press<br />
coverage of spying activities is very important, because publicity-conscious<br />
politicians and police chiefs will be held accountable for questionable<br />
practices.</p>
<p>Prepared by:<br />
Linda Lotz<br />
American Friends Service Committee<br />
980 North Fair Oaks Avenue<br />
Pasadena, CA 91103</p>
<p>a</p>
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