Check out Sheila Casey's blog for additional anthrax info not covered in the article: about the anthrax cover-up, the railroading of Dr. Bruce Ivins, and other assorted evils of our criminal government.
DOJ
Brexit, Britain, BAE, Saudi Arabia, The 28 Pages, and The Military Industrial Complex
- 28 pages
- 9/11
- Al Yamamah
- Anglo-Saudi
- arms deal
- BAE
- BAE Systems
- Brexit
- bribes
- Britain
- British Empire
- British Saudi money trail
- Corruption
- Cover-Up
- David Cameron
- declassification
- DOJ
- European Union
- FBI
- FBI stonewalling
- JASTA
- Justice Against Sponsors of Terrorism bill
- kickbacks
- Margaret Thatcher
- military industrial complex
- Obama
- offshore funds
- pentagon
- prime minister
- Prince Bandar bin Sultan
- Prince Mohammad
- Prince Mohammad bin Salman
- Prince Turki bin Nasser
- Saudi Arabia
- Senator Bob Graham
- The Keys to the Kingdom
- Tony Blair
- uk
- United Kingdom
- Vision 2030
- wasta
- weapons
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Prince Bandar bin Sultan of “The 28 Pages” and the UK’s Margaret Thatcher involved in “…(the UK’s) biggest, most lucrative arms deal in history….”
~~~ The United Kingdom’s largest ever export contract and largest ever arms deal. ~~~
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Wci-kFyhhns
(Larger image) - http://photos2.meetupstatic.com/photos/event/3/c/2/d/highres_451335405.jpeg
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- TomT's blog
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DOJ Refuses to Disclose How it Tracks Citizens Using GPS
"Following the pattern set by the National Security Agency (NSA), the Justice Department last week refused to disclose how, when, and how often the federal government uses GPS to track vehicles.
As a result of a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) petition filed last July, on January 16 the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) received two internal Justice Department memos setting out the department’s policies regarding tracking of citizens using GPS technology.
At least that’s what the documents purported to reveal. In reality, the pair of memos sent to the ACLU by the DOJ were largely blacked out, leaving all but the barest of background information completely redacted.
As is customary among the participants in the government project to place every American under constant surveillance and make every citizen a suspect, Justice Department attorneys argue that the information requested by the ACLU in the FOIA petition could be used to help criminals escape capture by law enforcement.
The ACLU isn’t convinced, however.
- Adam Coate's blog
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