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The Forgotten Man - 45 Min Documentary (via journeymanpictures) #BradleyManning

Watch Full Film Here: http://vodsite.journeyman.tv/store?p=4487

Second only to Julian Assange, Bradley Manning is the most important figure in the Wikileaks controversy; his is alleged to have handed over hundreds of thousands of secret US war files and diplomatic cables. But, while the world watches Assange’s trial with baited breath, Manning is already wasting away in solitary confinement; this is the story of his daring intelligence heist. We hear the only recording of Bradley Manning’s voice and we listen to the logs of alleged conversations with the man who ultimately betrayed him.
Manning, a US army private, claims that he released the cables because, “I was actively involved in something I was completely against”. That is according to the Internet chat room logs that are the basis for his imprisonment. Manning’s exact relationship with Wikileaks remains unclear and the source that uncovered him to the US government has been called into question.
That source is Adrian Lamo. In an extraordinary interview he reveals how he came to know Bradley Manning, claiming the young soldier openly confessed to him his role in the WikiLeaks scandal. “I’m a high profile source … and I’ve developed a relationship with Assange”. Yet one of Lamo’s old friends Kevin Mitnick is suspicious of his evidence and his motives, “I call into question the authenticity of the chat logs, because I know his (Lamo) personality”.

Manning’s alleged emphasis on his relationship with Assange takes on greater importance as we explore the disputes that have erupted inside WikiLeaks. A former insider tells how he held deep reservations about Julian Assange’s determination to keep releasing material that might compromise his source. Yet when these accusations are put to the WikiLeaks boss he maintains to have not known Manning’s identity, “I never heard the name Bradley Manning before I saw media reports”.
There is little doubt America wants to punish Julian Assange and he, for his part, seems determined to persevere with his battle against the superpower. But to bring a case against him vital questions must be answered: How did Private Bradley Manning steal the classified material? How did he relay it to WikiLeaks? Did he do this of his own accord or did Julian Assange conspire with him to take the information? It all becomes even murkier when you take into account that the informant is an attention-seeking hacker of questionable morals.
Meanwhile Bradley Manning is wasting away in jail. David House is one of the few civilians allowed to visit him. He describes the young soldier’s mental deterioration and his struggle to deal with long hours of confinement, “…the US Government is just trying to put immense pressure on him in order to get him to crack open”.

Source: youtube.com

    • #Documentary
    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Cover-Up
  • 2 years ago
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Bradley Manning Now "Catatonic"; Obama ENOUGH! :: www.uruknet.info :: informazione dal medio oriente :: information from middle east :: [vs-1]

As Obama’s crime of the destruction of Bradley Manning continues to unfold before our very eyes, Manning friend David House now tells us that over 8 months in isolation with movement and sleep restrictions placed on him have been having their intended effect.  House has told MSNBC that by the end of January Manning appeared “catatonic”  and that he had “severe problems communicating,” with it having taken House nearly 45 minutes on a recent visit to engage in any meaningful way (video below.)  House said Manning’s demeanor was as “if he had just woken up and didn’t know what was going on around him.”   Manning was “utterly exhausted physically and mentally…it was difficult to have any kind of social engagement.”

Also, a full month after Congressman Dennis Kucinich formally requested a visit, the Army has stalled on the request.

All for the crime of reporting war crimes and criminal behavior even among the highest-ranking military officials in Iraq.  

In 2005, General Peter Pace, Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said: “It is absolutely the responsibility of every U.S. service member [in Iraq], if they see inhumane treatment being conducted, to try to stop it.”

Chase Mader writes in HuffPo that soon after deployment to Iraq, Manning:

“soon found himself helping the Iraqi authorities detain civilians for distributing “anti-Iraqi literature” — which turned out to be an investigative report into financial corruption in their own government entitled “Where does the money go?”  The penalty for this “crime” in Iraq was not a slap on the wrist. Imprisonment and torture, as well as systematic abuse of prisoners, are widespread in the new Iraq. From the military’s own Sigacts (Significant Actions) reports, we have a multitude of credible accounts of Iraqi police and soldiers shooting prisoners, beating them to death, pulling out fingernails or teeth, cutting off fingers, burning with acid, torturing with electric shocks or the use of suffocation, and various kinds of sexual abuse including sodomization with gun barrels and forcing prisoners to perform sexual acts on guards and each other…

Like any good soldier, Manning immediately took these concerns up the chain of command.  And how did his superiors respond?  His commanding officer told him to “shut up” and get back to rounding up more prisoners for the Iraqi Federal Police to treat however they cared to…”

Manning also found a video and an official report on American air strikes on the village of Granai in Afghanistan’s Farah Province (also known as “the Granai massacre”). According to the Afghan government, 140 civilians, including women and a large number of children, died in those strikes.  

War crimes?  What war crimes?  This is the point of view of the Pentagon as it destroys Bradley Manning.  

On the Haditha killings (found to be “collateral damage” by the Army despite an American officer’s unearthing and handing up the chain of command a video showing close up bullet wounds) a recent Counterpunch article by Medea Benjamin and Charles Davis recounts:

” Consider what happened to the U.S. soldiers who, over a period of hours – not minutes – went house to house in the Iraqi town of Haditha and executed 24 men, women and children in retaliation for a roadside bombing.  I watched them shoot my grandfather, first in the chest and then in the head,” said one of the two surviving eyewitnesses to the massacre, nine-year-old Eman Waleed. “Then they killed my granny.” Almost five years later, not one of the men involved in the incident is behind bars. And despite an Army investigation revealing that statements made by the chain of command “suggest that Iraqi civilian lives are not as important as U.S. lives,” with the murder of brown-skinned innocents considered “just the cost of doing business,” none of their superiors are behind bars either.”

Massacres of civilians in retaliation for IEDs seems to have been standard fare in Iraq. Ethan McCord says his unit was ordered to engage in “360 rotational” fireand “kill every mother&* in the street” in the event of an IED. The officer who gave the order was Col. Ralph Kauzlarich, “the lost Kauz” who is featured in David Finkel’s book “The Good Soldiers.” Col. K is also the executive officer who led the first investigation into the death of Pat Tillman.

Josh Stieber, a McCord unit-mate who also witnessed the order, said the logic was to get residents to be “pro-active” in preventing the planting of roadside bombs. Brass knew that the people in the houses nearest probably saw it planted and didn’t say anything.

Stieber on Antiwarradio.com:

“Yeah, it was an order that came from Kauzlarich himself, and it had the philosophy that, you know, as Finkel does describe in the book, that we were under pretty constant threat, and what he leaves out is the response to that threat. But the philosophy was that if each time one of these roadside bombs went off where you don’t know who set it … the way we were told to respond was to open fire on anyone in the area, with the philosophy that that would intimidate them, to be proactive in stopping people from making these bombs …”

Now nine Afghan children have been killed after what the Army says was mistaken identity after a nearby rocket attack on American forces.  These boys could have been the boys some on this site got to know well in the New Year’s Global Call for Peace (they weren’t, but they were just as precious.)

Defense Secretary Robert Gates once said people like Bradley Manning have “blood on their hands” for releasing documents which might identify Afghan informants.  But look down Robert, and don’t flinch.  They are dripping.

Commander-in-Chief Obama, order Bradley Manning released!

The White House
Phone Numbers
Comments: 202-456-1111
Switchboard: 202-456-1414
FAX: 202-456-2461
Webform for email: www.whitehouse.gov/contact

You can also comment on the WH FaceBook page.  

Also demand your congressman speak up and castigate this administration for the treatment of Bradley Manning, leave a voicemail if it is after-hours (24/7):
Capitol switchboard: 202-224-3121

January 3: Psychologists for Social Responsibility write an open letter highlighting the severely deleterious effects on the psychological well-being

January 24: Amnesty International called on US authorities “to alleviate the harsh pre-trial detention conditions of Bradley Manning”

    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Tyranny
    • #Military Industrial Complex
  • 2 years ago
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MOAR #ANONYMOUS OPS: DO WANT - #Revolution #BradleyManning #OperationPayback

So I havn’t posted in a few days, that means there’s a lot more to talk about concerning the internet activist group anonymous, their operations, and of course the corresponding real life issues… To begin we have the introduction a new op, I’ll let the picture speak for itself

Operation Emma_A (#opemmaa)

A simple one here, the concerted effort to, according to the channel topic in channel #opemmaa to “Recruit awesome Girls!”. The topic also encouraging users tofollow user Emma_A on twitter. Looks like she’s been tweeting about anonymous and is also a friend of Barret Brown it seems. Emma A and this op going against one of the most longstanding rules of the internet. For those unfamiliar…

Point your attention to rule 30, “there are no women on the internet”. Rules were made to be broken?

Introducing Operation Twitterstorm (#optwitterstorm)

An important feature of twitter is the ability for users to post or “tweet” using specific hashtags (# plus any phrase). Different hashtags for different topics become popular and the most popular topics are listed on the front page as trending. Some hashtags that have become popular recently are #Jan25 for tweets relating to egypt, #Feb17, #Libya and the like. There has been a concerted effort in the past to introduce new hashtags to twitter to bring attention to topics, i.e. #freemanning.
Anonymous has started Operation Twitterstorm (in channel #optwitterstorm) to make a concerted twitter effort. Some instructions being given to participants in #optwitterstorm:

Welcome to @OpTwitterStorm
For obvious reasons, @Libya is a very popular topic on Twitter atm.
Twitter is an amazing tool for a lot of things, one of which is recruiting.
If we can get @Anonymous and @OpLibya to trend alongside @Libya, it will lead to more people becoming aware of what Anonymous is, what we do, and why we do it.
Twitter is something we should utilize as much as possible.

The objective for Operation TwitterStorm is simple, recruit as many people as possible by flooding Twitter as much as possible.
No spamming, tweet useful information which is going to be of use to people, make sure you include #Anonymous #OpLibya and #Libya in your tweets.
If each and every Anon tweets a message, and we retweet each others messages, we can create a never-ending “chain” of thousands of Tweets.

Twitter prides itself on free speech. It has been an invaluable tool for movements, e.g. with protesters in places like Egypt and Tunisia using twitter to organize and spread information and with its use as a communications system at protests like the G20. It isn’t all puppies and rainbows on twitter, with the US government requesting information on people who followed the Wikileaks account on the site. Twitter’s response being to fight the gag order on the subpoena and notify user’s of its existence. Something few other companies have done in Twitter’s situation.

How Someone From Anonymous Might Participate in this Operation

This operation seems to be in its early stages. Saw some talk in the channel of a program being developed in python to facilitate this “twitterstorm”. Regardless of whether this materializes, I can assume participants will use the same techniques used in other anonymous twitter operations. That is, getting behind a proxy, and using disposable email sites like this one or this one to register for and use a twitter account relatively anonymously. In the past I have also seen the use of tools like splitweet or tweetdeck to tweet with multiple twitter accounts at one time.

Supporting Accused Wikileaks Whistleblower Bradley Manning with Operation Manning (#opmanning)

To rehash old news, Bradley Manning, the suspect for the huge Wikileak of classified US government documents is still in trouble. His extremely poor treatment in custody has been widely documented. Anonymous participants in #opmanning are doing multiple things at the moment, one of which is encourage people to go to the support rally for Manning on March 20th in Quantico Virginia. More info:

From the Rally Organizers:

In Support Of “Rally for Bradley!”
Quantico VA. Sunday, March 20

On March 20, 2011, there will be a rally at the Quantico Marine Base in Virginia to support accused WikiLeaks whistle-blower Army Pfc. Bradley Manning. Supporters will gather for a 2pm rally at the town of Triangle (intersection of Main Street and Route 1), then march to the gates of Quantico. Bradley has been held at the Quantico brig in solitary-like conditions for six months without any meaningful exercise. We stand for truth, government transparency, and an end to our occupation wars… we stand with Bradley!

Event endorsed by the Bradley Manning Support Network, Veterans for Peace, Courage to Resist, CodePink, and many other groups.

The day before, on Saturday, March 19th, in Washington DC, supporters of Bradley’s will be joining the noon rally at Lafayette Park and march on the White House to “Resist the War Machine!”

Supporters of Bradley Manning and participants in what people are calling “opbradical” have taken to finding and publicizing the personal information of Bradley Manning’s jailers. (This getting more publicity and with it bringing the possibility of mroe repression?) The benefit of this? I’ll let you decide, but it seems to be common sense… How are they doing on this effort? Well at the time of this post here is some information I found that is being distributed to participants in opbradical…

Info on Geoffrey Morrel

Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs, and Press Secretary of the Department of Defense (since ’07)
-Born November 1968 (42)
-Formerly a reporter for the American Broadcasting Company
-Bachelor’s: Georgetown (1991)
-Master’s: Columbia (1992)
Morrell began his reporting career in 1992 at KATV-TV in Little Rock, Arkansas, covering the presidential campaign of Bill Clinton. In 1994, he took a job as a reporter atWSET-TV in Roanoke, Virginia, and in 1995, Morrell joined KSAZ-TV in Phoenix as a TV news reporter. In 1996, Morrell joined WBBM-TV in Chicago in the same capacity.[2]
Morrell left WBBM-TV in early 2000 when his contract expired and joined ABC News, working in both the network’s Chicago and Washington, D.C. bureaus.
In 2007, Morrell resigned from ABC after seven years with the network to be appointed the Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs.
Pentagon spokesman. Likes to make shit up. Not very good at it. See piece below and then dox. Past, present. Home number. Etc.
http://www.salon.com/news/opinion/glenn_greenwald/2011/03/04/morrell/index.html

Info on Denise Barnes

Possible phone number of Commanding Officer Denise Barnes:
Commanding Officer: 3747 (703) 784-2718
(If 703 area code doesn’t work, it may be 540 or 571)
E-Mail: bamessgtdenisev@lejeune.usmc.mil – has been e-mailed, with messaged cc’d to press. Brig Commander. Responsible for stripping Manning of clothing. Absolute priority target.
http://www.ncjrs.gov/pdffiles1/pr/191660.pdf
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_S2NbJIwrsZc/SvwVSPNWHkI/AAAAAAAAH8I/qGA5bwrhqeM

More info on Quantico

COMMANDING OFFICER (703)784-6870
BRIG SUPERVISOR (703)784-6873
BRIG 1ST SGT (703)784-4241
OPERATIONS CHIEF (703)432-6153
SPECIAL QUARTERS (703)432-6156
COMPANY GUNNY (703)432-6154
PROGRAMS CHIEF (703)432-6155
TRAINING CHIEF (703)432-6141
SENIOR COUNSELOR (703)432-6158
COUNSELOR #1 (703)784-6862
ADMIN #1 (703)784-2718/2719
ADMIN #2 (703)432-6152
VALUABLES (703)432-6143
CONTROL CENTER (703)432-6157
WORKSHOP (703)784-2058
MEDICAL (703)432-6151
CCU (703)784-2040
MESSDECK (703)784-6869

BRIG MAILING ADDRESS:
3247 Elrod Avenue
Quantico, VA 22134

Quantico Base Commander
Colonel Daniel Choike
3250 Catlin Avenue, Quantico VA 22134
+1-703-432-0289 (Media Officer phone)
Quantico Brig Commanding Officer
CWO2 Denise Barnes
3247 Elrod Avenue, Quantico VA 22134

Bonus Info on Snitch and Manning’s informer Adrian Lamo

http://twitter.com/6 <—— Lamo’s Twitter
http://www.facebook.com/felon <——- Lamo’s (Supposed) Facebook
http://foursquare.com/6 <——- Lamo’s Foursquare
Eamils:

* adrian@aol.com

* adrian@adrian.org

* adrian@2600.com

That’s about it for now. For those who are interested, I’m working on putting together all the interviews I’ve done with members of anonymous into one post/pdf file. I’ll try to put it out in a few days.

P.S. a message to all the cops, haterz, fascists, counter-revolutionaries and the like…

    • #Anonymous
    • #Operation Payback
    • #Bradley Manning
  • 2 years ago
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FreeBradley.org * Be An Army Of One For #BradleyManning



PFC Bradley Manning is a 23-year-old US Army soldier accused of leaking classified information while serving as an intelligence analyst in Iraq. Manning has been in custody since May of 2010, and is currently facing multiple charges, including one that potentially carries the death penalty, “aiding the enemy.”

Specifically, Manning is suspected of leaking the “Collateral Murder” video to the whistleblower web site WikiLeaks, which shows a US helicopter killing unarmed Iraqi civilians and Reuters journalists. He has also been charged with leaking classified Department of State cables, and is considered a person of interest in WikiLeaks’ “Afghan War Diary”.

The case has garnered much public debate, both supporters and detractors. Daniel Ellsberg, who released the infamous Pentagon Papers in 1971, has been quoted as saying, “If [Manning] has done what he is alleged to have done, I congratulate him.” On the other side, a Republican US congressman has been calling for Manning to be executed if found guilty, and he has been smeared by anti-gay groups like the Family Research Council as proof that allowing gays to serve in the military undermines America’s safety.

As of March 2011, Manning remains in solitary confinement at a military brig in Quantico, Virginia. He has been cut off from his family and friends, unable to even receive letters from his supporters around the world. Any prison is a frightening, lonely place- and Manning likely has a long ordeal ahead of him.

Whether ultimately found innocent or convicted of his charges, Bradley Manning is a brave young man who needs our support, and deserves to be freed. If he’s innocent of all charges, he’s a casualty in the Obama administration’s war on whistleblowers, and if convicted, he’s a hero for exposing war crimes and the true civilian costs of our wars in the Middle East.

This project was initiated by someone who has over a decade of experience with prisoner support and watching activist legal cases unfold, and the site has gained interest and input from other experienced organizers and activists. This site was set up specifically to provide people with real, tangible, individual ways in which they can personally get involved in helping Bradley Manning. This site is about getting active and creating a real, widespread movement of solidarity. No need to wait around for a protest to happen in your city- be the change you want to see!

If you would like to get in touch with this support site, email freebradley at freebradley dot org. If you would like to keep up on any important developments or be notified of new ways in which you can help, follow @FREEBRADLEYorg on Twitter.

If you would like to make a donation to the printing of “Free Bradley” stickers, you can send concealed cash or blank money orders to: FreeBradley.org, PO Box 20144, Seattle WA 98102. Every cent received will go directly to this outreach campaign, no “operational overhead” for a nonprofit foundation, no paid staff, no credit card processing fees. Plus, your donation to FreeBradley.org is anonymous, if that’s a concern for you. If more money is collected than gets spent on campaign materials, it will be donated directly to Bradley Manning’s prison commissary fund, directly to his attorney (if he ends up retaining paid counsel), or directly to Bradley himself if he is found innocent of his charges.

    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Cover-Up
  • 2 years ago
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US probes hacker threat over #WikiLeaks soldier #Anonymous #BradleyManning

The hacker group Anonymous is reportedly seeking to disrupt activities at the Quantico, Virginia base

Enlarge

The image of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is seen on the whistleblowing website. The Pentagon said Tuesday it had requested an investigation into a hack group’s reported threat against a military base that is being used to hold a US soldier suspected of giving documents to WikiLeaks.

The Pentagon said Tuesday it had requested an investigation into a hacker group’s reported cyber threat against a military base that is being used to hold a US soldier suspected of giving documents to WikiLeaks.

Pentagon spokesman Colonel David Lapan said the probe was requested after news that the hacker group called Anonymous was seeking to disrupt online activities at the Quantico, Virginia, base where Private Bradley Manning is incarcerated.

“The base at Quantico, including the brig, are aware of that and they have made law enforcement agencies aware of that as well,” Lapan said.

The Financial Times reported that hackers known as “Anonymous,” which had claimed credit for attacks supporting WikiLeaks in recent months, was seeking to disrupt communications at the US Marine base.

Manning, 23, has been held at the prison since July under a maximum security regimen because authorities say his escape would pose a risk to national security.

The army private faces numerous charges of stealing classified files and is suspected as the source of a trove of secret documents published on the WikiLeaks website in recent months, which have infuriated and embarrassed US officials.

US military authorities brought additional charges against Manning last week, accusing him of illegally downloading vast numbers of secret government files and “aiding the enemy.”

His defense lawyers have filed a legal complaint over the conditions of his detention at Quantico, which include a “prevention of injury” watch, which his lawyer said includes being forced to sleep naked.

His supporters say the regimen is inhumane and has been deemed unnecessary by psychiatric experts.

The WikiLeaks website has yet to disclose its source for the US military and diplomatic documents published in recent months, but suspicion has focused on Manning, who worked as a low-ranking army intelligence analyst in Iraq.

Manning was arrested in May and authorities have yet to say when he will be put on trial. If found guilty, Manning faces up to 52 years in prison.

In December, the loose-knit group of hackers known as Anonymous staged cyber attacks on the websites of Visa, Mastercard, PayPal and others accusing them of withdrawing services to WikiLeaks.

    • #FREE
    • #Bradley Manning
    • #Torture
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Anonymous
    • #Feds
    • #Spying
    • #Coercion
  • 2 years ago
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#Anonymous Hackers Target Alleged WikiLeaker #BradleyManning’s Jailers

The emblem of hacker group Anonymous and Bradley Manning (right)

-

As army private Bradley Manning suffers for his alleged megaleak of secret documents to WikiLeaks, one group of hackers seems determined to make sure that others feel his pain.

Over the weekend, the loose hacker collective Anonymous declared that it will go on the offensive against those who are currently detaining Manning in a Quantico military brig, keeping him in solitary confinement and forcing him to strip nightly and stand at attention naked each morning.

In a crowdsourced document used to coordinate the group’s actions, Anonymous hackers name Department of Defense Press Secretary Geoff Morell and chief warrant officer Denise Barnes as targets and call on members to dig up personal information on both, including phone numbers, personal histories and home addresses. The goal of the operation, for now, is to “dox” the two officials, the typical Anonymous method of publishing personal information of victims and using it for mass harassment.

“Targets established,” reads the document, before naming Morell and Barnes. “We’re in the ruining business. And business is good.”

The group, which is calling its attack “Operation Bradical,” also lists demands as follows:

“Manning must be given sheets, blankets, any religious texts he desires, adequate reading material, clothes, and a ball. One week. Otherwise, we continue to dox and ruin those responsible for keeeping him naked, without bedding, without any of the basic amenities that were provided even to captured Nazis in WWII.”

One member of Anonymous, who tells me he’s not associated with the action, says that doxing will likely include “ruin life tactics” such as “ordering them pizza, sending them thousands of boxes, reporting them to police for drug abuse, sex offenders list, tricking their ISPs into canceling the Internet, messing with their social security numbers, false flag, fax harassment, phone harassment, email bombing, subscriptions to magazines, diapers, tampons.”

Nasty as they may be, those tactics seem relatively harmless in comparison to the attack that Anonymous recently launched against the security firm HBGary Federal in retaliation for one executive’s threats to unmask leaders of the hacker group. HBGary Federal chief executive Aaron Barr had his email archive hacked and published online along with that of his colleagues. HBGary Federal’s website was defaced and Barr’s Twitter account hijacked. After a series of scandals were revealed in the company’s published emails including a plan to launch cyberattacks and misinformation campaigns against WikiLeaks, Barr resigned last week.

Anonymous spokesperson Barrett Brown told the Tech Herald that harassment of Quantico officials will be just the first step in a “media war” against those detaining Manning. “Manning is an absolute hero,” Brown told the news site. “If this means me going to fucking prison, then that’s fine.”

Last week Manning was hit with 22 charges for his alleged role in a massive leak of classified information to WikiLeaks, including a charge of “aiding the enemy” that can carry a penalty of death. Since those charges were filed, Manning has been forced to strip naked nightly in a tactic that Quantico officials say is legal and aims to prevent suicide attempts, but others claim is designed to degrade and punish the young private. According to Manning’s lawyer David Coombs, Quantico officials have declined to state their full reasons for Manning’s stripping publicly to avoid “a violation of PFC Manning’s privacy.”

“The Brig’s treatment of PFC Manning is shameful,”  Coombs wrote in a statement Saturday. “It is made even more so by the Brig hiding behind concerns for ‘[PFC] Manning’s privacy.’  There is no justification, and there can be no justification, for treating a detainee in this degrading and humiliating manner.”

    • #Anonymous
    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Hackers
    • #Hacking
  • 2 years ago
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'\x3ciframe width=\x22500\x22 height=\x22404\x22 src=\x22http://www.youtube.com/embed/LF8qWezhntA?wmode=transparent\x26autohide=1\x26egm=0\x26hd=1\x26iv_load_policy=3\x26modestbranding=1\x26rel=0\x26showinfo=0\x26showsearch=0\x22 frameborder=\x220\x22 allowfullscreen\x3e\x3c/iframe\x3e'

Marine Corps Admits To Torturous Treatment Of PFC Bradley Manning (via MOXNEWSd0tCOM) #MIC

March 07, 2011 MSNBC
http://MOXNews.com

Source: youtube.com

    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Tyranny
    • #Military Industrial Complex
    • #NWO
  • 2 years ago
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#Anonymous plans defense for #BradleyManning

Anonymous plans defense for Bradley Manning - promises a media war

Anonymous plans defense for Bradley Manning - promises a media war

Given his treatment while in confinement, as well as the list of new charges against him, Bradley Manning has gained another set of champions to his dilemma. Anonymous has promised to avenge Manning, and wage a media war with the U.S. military.

The Tech Herald has spoken to one of those involved for a rundown of current events.

“Manning is an absolute hero. If this means me going to fucking prison, then that’s fine,” said Barrett Brown earlier today in an interview.

Brown, best described as a self-styled spokesperson for Anonymous, who enjoys some support from the loosely associative group, but some detraction as well, is well-known to us in the media.

He comes from a military family, and has a deep respect for the fighting troops he said. Yet, Manning’s treatment while in custody at the Quantico Brig has Brown and others working with him outraged.

Earlier today, Brown said that Manning must be given clothes, sheets, blankets, and access to books within the week, adding that Anonymous’ plans for those responsible for his conditions will play out in the public soon.

On the evenings of March 2 and March 3, Bradley Manning was forced to strip naked, remaining under observation in this condition within his cell for seven hours each night. The following mornings, still without any clothing, Manning was forced to stand at attention outside his cell as the Duty Brig Supervisor (DBS) arrived. Manning was later given his clothes.

“This type of degrading treatment is inexcusable and without justification. It is an embarrassment to our military justice system and should not be tolerated…No other detainee at the Brig is forced to endure this type of isolation and humiliation,” commented David Coombs, the lawyer representing Manning, who was once a Lieutenant Colonel in the U.S. Army.

The type of treatment given Manning is something that is a bit of an open secret. It’s used to break the will of the detainee and make them dependent on the interrogator, or the persons holding them. While an effective means of non-lethal coercion, it is frowned upon due to the damaging impact on a detainee’s mental health.

Such acts of isolation and embarrassment, or personal humiliation, have led to suicide attempts and extreme depression. Examples of this type of treatment were well established, as events at Guantanamo Bay prison were made public.

Anonymous’ outrage started after it was learned that Manning was to be charged with 22 additional counts, one of which could carry the death penalty. However, the military has said that the death penalty is off the table.

Manning was initially charged with 12 counts of illegally downloading and sharing a military operations video, as well as diplomatic documents and cables.

The new charges against him, added this week, include aiding the enemy, theft of public property or records, computer fraud, transmitting defense information in violation of the Espionage Act, and wrongfully causing intelligence to be published on the internet knowing it would be accessible to the enemy.

1 | 2

    • #Anonymous
    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Operation Payback
    • #NWO
    • #Military Industrial Complex
  • 2 years ago
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The Truth Behind Quantico Brig's Decision to Strip PFC Manning

The Brig has stripped PFC Manning of all of his clothing for the past three nights, and they intend to continue this practice indefinitely.  Each night, Brig guards force PFC Manning to relinquish all of his clothing.  He then lies in a cold jail cell naked until the following morning, when he is required to endure the humiliation of standing naked at attention for the morning roll call.  According to Marine spokesperson, First Lieutenant Brian Villiard, the decision to strip him naked every night is for PFC Manning’s own protection.  Villiard stated that it would be “inappropriate” to explain what prompted these actions ”because to discuss the details would be a violation of PFC Manning’s privacy.”

The defense communicated with both PFC Manning and the Brig forensic psychiatrist and learned more about the decision to strip PFC Manning of his clothing every night.  On Wednesday March 2, 2011, PFC Manning was told that his Article 138 complaint requesting that he be removed from Maximum custody and Prevention of Injury (POI) Watch had been denied by the Quantico commander, Colonel Daniel J. Choike.  Understandably frustrated by this decision after enduring over seven months of unduly harsh confinement conditions, PFC Manning inquired of the Brig operations officer what he needed to do in order to be downgraded from Maximum custody and POI.  As even Pentagon Press Secretary Geoff Morrell has stated, PFC Manning has been nothing short of “exemplary” as a detainee.  Additionally, Brig forensic psychiatrists have consistently maintained that there is no mental health justification for the POI Watch imposed on PFC Manning.  In response to PFC Manning’s question, he was told that there was nothing he could do to downgrade his detainee status and that the Brig simply considered him a risk of self-harm.  PFC Manning then remarked that the POI restrictions were “absurd” and sarcastically stated that if he wanted to harm himself, he could conceivably do so with the elastic waistband of his underwear or with his flip-flops. 

Without consulting any Brig mental health provider, Chief Warrant Officer Denise Barnes used PFC’s Manning’s sarcastic quip as justification to increase the restrictions imposed upon him under the guise of being concerned that PFC Manning was a suicide risk.  PFC Manning was not, however, placed under the designation of Suicide Risk Watch.  This is because Suicide Risk Watch would have required a Brig mental health provider’s recommendation, which the Brig commander did not have.  In response to this specific incident, the Brig psychiatrist assessed PFC Manning as “low risk and requiring only routine outpatient followup [with] no need for … closer clinical observation.”  In particular, he indicated that PFC Manning’s statement about the waist band of his underwear was in no way prompted by “a psychiatric condition.” 

While the commander needed the Brig psychiatrist’s recommendation to place PFC Manning on Suicide Risk Watch, no such recommendation was needed in order to increase his restrictions under POI Watch.  The conditions of POI Watch require only psychiatric input, but ultimately remain the decision of the commander. 

Given these circumstances, the decision to strip PFC Manning of his clothing every night for an indefinite period of time is clearly punitive in nature.  There is no mental health justification for the decision.  There is no basis in logic for this decision.  PFC Manning is under 24 hour surveillance, with guards never being more than a few feet away from his cell.  PFC Manning is permitted to have his underwear and clothing during the day, with no apparent concern that he will harm himself during this time period.  Moreover, if Brig officials were genuinely concerned about PFC Manning using either his underwear or flip-flops to harm himself (despite the recommendation of the Brig’s psychiatrist) they could undoubtedly provide him with clothing that would not, in their view, present a risk of self-harm.  Indeed, Brig officials have provided him other items such as tear-resistant blankets and a mattress with a built-in pillow due to their purported concerns. 

The Brig’s treatment of PFC Manning is shameful.  It is made even more so by the Brig hiding behind concerns for “[PFC] Manning’s privacy.”  There is no justification, and there can be no justification, for treating a detainee in this degrading and humiliating manner.

    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #NWO
    • #Military Industrial Complex
    • #Systems of Control
    • #Tyranny
    • #Torture
  • 2 years ago
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Soldier in Leaks Case Will Be Made to Sleep Naked Nightly #BradleyManning #WikiLeaks #CableGate

Pfc. Bradley E. Manning, the Army intelligence analyst accused of leaking government files to WikiLeaks, will be stripped of his clothing every night as a “precautionary measure” to prevent him from injuring himself, an official at the Marine brig at Quantico, Va., said on Friday.

Bradleymanning.Org/European Pressphoto Agency

Pfc. Bradley E. Manning

Related

  • Soldier in Leaks Case Was Jailed Naked, Lawyer Says (March 4, 2011)

Private Manning will also be required to stand outside his cell naked during a morning inspection, after which his clothing will be returned to him, said a Marine spokesman, First Lt. Brian Villiard.

“Because of recent circumstances, the underwear was taken away from him as a precaution to ensure that he did not injure himself,” Lieutenant Villiard said. “The brig commander has a duty and responsibility to ensure the safety and well-being of the detainees and to make sure that they are able to stand trial.”

Private Manning is a maximum-security detainee under “prevention of injury watch,” a special set of restrictions — a step his supporters, who contend that he is not suicidal, have said is unjustified. He has not been elevated to the more restrictive “suicide watch” conditions.

Lieutenant Villiard said the new rule on clothing, which would continue indefinitely, had been imposed by the brig commander, Chief Warrant Officer Denise Barnes. He said that he was not allowed to explain what prompted it “because to discuss the details would be a violation of Manning’s privacy.”

In recent months, Private Manning’s supporters have criticized his treatment as unduly harsh, contending that he is being pressured to agree to implicate Julian Assange, the WikiLeaks co-founder, as a conspirator in the leaking of diplomatic and military files. Lieutenant Villiard denied that the new conditions were intended to “pressure or punish” Private Manning.

Private Manning’s lawyer, David E. Coombs, first complained in a blog posting on Thursday that his client had been stripped the previous night, and wrote on Friday that it had happened again. He criticized the measure as an unjustified “humiliation” of his client.

“There can be no conceivable justification for requiring a soldier to surrender all his clothing, remain naked in his cell for seven hours, and then stand at attention the subsequent morning,” he wrote. “This treatment is even more degrading considering that Pfc. Manning is being monitored — both by direct observation and by video — at all times.”

Mr. Coombs contended that stripping his client was medically unjustified.

“If a person is at risk of self-harm, then you get them treatment, you get them to a mental health professional and address the issue — you don’t strip them,” he said, adding in a separate telephone interview, “There is no excuse, no justification to having a soldier stand at attention naked. There can be no mental health reason for that.”

Lieutenant Villiard, who says Private Manning is permitted to have two blankets at night, says detainees are awakened each morning and immediately come out of their cells. Private Manning cannot be given his underwear back before then, he said, because that would require waking him up ahead of time.

    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Tyranny
    • #NWO
    • #Systems of Control
  • 2 years ago
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drinkthe-koolaid:

whenitstrikesme:

drinkthe-koolaid:

whenitstrikesme:

elledark:

Ratcheting the breaking of Bradley Manning up a notch
Bradley Manning, the 22-year-old U.S. Army Private accused of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks, has been imprisoned at the U.S. Marine brig in Quantico, Virginia for nearly a year under conditions that constitute cruel and inhumane treatment and, by the standards of many nations, even torture. He has recently been charged with 22 offences and could face the death penalty.Why&#160;? Well Bradley Manning is a whistle-blower. Through his leaks we know about a civilian massacre the army covered up in Iraq and the numerous lies it has told about civilian deaths in Afghanistan. The cumulative effect of the leaked logs is to paint a realistic picture of both of these illegal and immoral wars that is totally at odds with the happy-clappy government spin. There is no evidence and no serious suggestion that anything leaked by Wikileaks has in any way compromised American security or put lives at risk. Anyone who argues to the contrary must produce specific and credible proof or be ignored. At a time when 60% of the American public oppose the disastrous Afghan ‘war’ Manning is an American hero who has performed a service for his country.How is his country repaying his principled action&#160;? For 23 hours a day this young man is totally isolated in his cell.  There he is barred even from exercising and is under constant surveillance to enforce those restrictions.  For reasons that appear completely punitive, he is denied the most basic amenities, including even a pillow or sheets for his bed (he is not and never has been on suicide watch).  In the one hour a day he is let out of his tiny cell he is barred from accessing any news or current events programs. He is made to take drugs, allegedly to counteract the mentally damaging mental effects of long-term solitary confinement.They have now ratcheted up his torment. According to the latest reports he is being forced to strip naked for 7 hours stretches and also to stand naked outside his cell while he is ‘inspected’.  By the time his trial comes around the chances are they will have succeeded in their aims and he will be broken in mind and spirit.  Why are we seeing this blatant continuation of some of the worst aspects of the Bush regime when Obama campaigned on the need to strengthen protection for whistle-blowers&#160;? How does he reconcile this with his conscience&#160;? Doesn’t the hypocrisy make him gag&#160;?Seriously, if this was happening under a right-wing fascist regime like George W Bush then decent Americans would be up in arms. So why the hesitancy to loudly and unequivocally slam Obama for doing exactly the things that were so despised about Bush&#160;? I know in Americas two-party faux-democracy Obama may seem to represent the least-worst alternative, the acceptable face of corporate control, and I know a lot of liberals had much hope and faith invested in him but come on .. to give him a pass on this is craven and self-delusional. This is utterly despicable and exactly the kind of abuse Obama was expected to end.It doesn’t matter that Bush was 100% awful and Obama is perhaps only 90% awful. Its not about degrees of awfulness its about right and wrong and this is equally wrong whoever is doing it. Right now its Obama. The buck stops there. No excuses, he must be held accountable.

Bradley Manning is not a hero.  I’m certainly no conservative and I’m not Hawkish, nor do I hope he gets the death penalty.  But you cannot pretend that all he did was leak the helicopter tape. He allegedly passed hundreds of thousands of unredacted classified documents to unauthorized persons.
Wikileaks did do some diligence to mitigate damage when they leaked many of those documents, but that does not in any way change Manning’s crime.
I’m not commenting on the humanity of how he’s being treated in prison, by the by.

How are we supposed to have an open democracy if people are punished for telling the truth? If anyone has put our soldiers in danger, it’s the politicians who have been systematically tearing apart the Middle East for decades now, not some 22 year old soldier. Get your facts straight.

That’s all irrelevant to my point. You’re talking politics, not facts. Bradley Manning was a soldier with access to classified documents. Based on the allegations (none of which have been proven yet, but no one really seems to be disputing with any fervor) he knowingly and recklessly stole and distributed a cache that may have been in excess of 200,000 classified files and handed them over to individuals who were not authorized to see them.  These documents were in no way limited to the helicopter video or the embarrassing state department cables. They included matters of real national security (such as the listing of infrastructure sites deemed to be the most vulnerable to attack — which wikileaks partially redacted). 
You could make the whistleblower argument if he was careful and passed along only meritorious documentation; however, that’s not what he’s believed to have done.  You may well know more than me about the case, as I haven’t followed it as closely as perhaps I should and please correct me if any of the alleged facts I set forth above are incorrect. That said, you cannot ignore the fact that this guy stole and transferred to unauthorized persons for the purpose of widespread dissemination on the Internet classified documents (some of which dealt with national securities, some of which embarrassed the state department, and some of which showed that we are committing what might be called war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan and through rendition).
You might find merit what he did in outing the wrongs committed by our military, but please explain to me (1) the merit of the state department cables from a whistleblower and (2) how leaking unrelated information regarding national security is not a crime.  It is.  It’s that simple.*
* All with the caveat that what is alleged to have been done by Manning actually was done by him.

If what I said is politics and not facts then that argument also applies to what you said. The core difference we have here is: what does the government have a right to keep secret from it’s citizens? In my opnion, if my government is committing war crimes then I have a right to know. Theoretically, our government is supposed to govern with our permission. I do not give my government permission to kill innocent people. The fact that this was classified was not to protect anyone, but rather to keep us in the dark. If Bradley Manning’s actions directly put anyone in danger we can talk about that all you want, but unfortunately that is pretty much impossible to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.
The only people in any danger are those who make millions from the Military/Industrial Complex, and even they are only in financial danger. Call it politics all you want, but those are facts.
Pop-upView Separately

drinkthe-koolaid:

whenitstrikesme:

drinkthe-koolaid:

whenitstrikesme:

elledark:

Ratcheting the breaking of Bradley Manning up a notch

Bradley Manning, the 22-year-old U.S. Army Private accused of leaking classified documents to WikiLeaks, has been imprisoned at the U.S. Marine brig in Quantico, Virginia for nearly a year under conditions that constitute cruel and inhumane treatment and, by the standards of many nations, even torture. He has recently been charged with 22 offences and could face the death penalty.

Why ? Well Bradley Manning is a whistle-blower. Through his leaks we know about a civilian massacre the army covered up in Iraq and the numerous lies it has told about civilian deaths in Afghanistan. The cumulative effect of the leaked logs is to paint a realistic picture of both of these illegal and immoral wars that is totally at odds with the happy-clappy government spin.

There is no evidence and no serious suggestion that anything leaked by Wikileaks has in any way compromised American security or put lives at risk. Anyone who argues to the contrary must produce specific and credible proof or be ignored. At a time when 60% of the American public oppose the disastrous Afghan ‘war’ Manning is an American hero who has performed a service for his country.

How is his country repaying his principled action ? For 23 hours a day this young man is totally isolated in his cell.  There he is barred even from exercising and is under constant surveillance to enforce those restrictions.  For reasons that appear completely punitive, he is denied the most basic amenities, including even a pillow or sheets for his bed (he is not and never has been on suicide watch).  In the one hour a day he is let out of his tiny cell he is barred from accessing any news or current events programs. He is made to take drugs, allegedly to counteract the mentally damaging mental effects of long-term solitary confinement.

They have now ratcheted up his torment. According to the latest reports he is being forced to strip naked for 7 hours stretches and also to stand naked outside his cell while he is ‘inspected’.  By the time his trial comes around the chances are they will have succeeded in their aims and he will be broken in mind and spirit.  Why are we seeing this blatant continuation of some of the worst aspects of the Bush regime when Obama campaigned on the need to strengthen protection for whistle-blowers ? How does he reconcile this with his conscience ? Doesn’t the hypocrisy make him gag ?

Seriously, if this was happening under a right-wing fascist regime like George W Bush then decent Americans would be up in arms. So why the hesitancy to loudly and unequivocally slam Obama for doing exactly the things that were so despised about Bush ? I know in Americas two-party faux-democracy Obama may seem to represent the least-worst alternative, the acceptable face of corporate control, and I know a lot of liberals had much hope and faith invested in him but come on .. to give him a pass on this is craven and self-delusional. This is utterly despicable and exactly the kind of abuse Obama was expected to end.

It doesn’t matter that Bush was 100% awful and Obama is perhaps only 90% awful. Its not about degrees of awfulness its about right and wrong and this is equally wrong whoever is doing it.

Right now its Obama. The buck stops there. No excuses, he must be held accountable.

Bradley Manning is not a hero.  I’m certainly no conservative and I’m not Hawkish, nor do I hope he gets the death penalty.  But you cannot pretend that all he did was leak the helicopter tape. He allegedly passed hundreds of thousands of unredacted classified documents to unauthorized persons.

Wikileaks did do some diligence to mitigate damage when they leaked many of those documents, but that does not in any way change Manning’s crime.

I’m not commenting on the humanity of how he’s being treated in prison, by the by.

How are we supposed to have an open democracy if people are punished for telling the truth? If anyone has put our soldiers in danger, it’s the politicians who have been systematically tearing apart the Middle East for decades now, not some 22 year old soldier. Get your facts straight.

That’s all irrelevant to my point. You’re talking politics, not facts. Bradley Manning was a soldier with access to classified documents. Based on the allegations (none of which have been proven yet, but no one really seems to be disputing with any fervor) he knowingly and recklessly stole and distributed a cache that may have been in excess of 200,000 classified files and handed them over to individuals who were not authorized to see them.  These documents were in no way limited to the helicopter video or the embarrassing state department cables. They included matters of real national security (such as the listing of infrastructure sites deemed to be the most vulnerable to attack — which wikileaks partially redacted). 

You could make the whistleblower argument if he was careful and passed along only meritorious documentation; however, that’s not what he’s believed to have done.  You may well know more than me about the case, as I haven’t followed it as closely as perhaps I should and please correct me if any of the alleged facts I set forth above are incorrect. That said, you cannot ignore the fact that this guy stole and transferred to unauthorized persons for the purpose of widespread dissemination on the Internet classified documents (some of which dealt with national securities, some of which embarrassed the state department, and some of which showed that we are committing what might be called war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan and through rendition).

You might find merit what he did in outing the wrongs committed by our military, but please explain to me (1) the merit of the state department cables from a whistleblower and (2) how leaking unrelated information regarding national security is not a crime.  It is.  It’s that simple.*

* All with the caveat that what is alleged to have been done by Manning actually was done by him.

If what I said is politics and not facts then that argument also applies to what you said. The core difference we have here is: what does the government have a right to keep secret from it’s citizens? In my opnion, if my government is committing war crimes then I have a right to know. Theoretically, our government is supposed to govern with our permission. I do not give my government permission to kill innocent people. The fact that this was classified was not to protect anyone, but rather to keep us in the dark. If Bradley Manning’s actions directly put anyone in danger we can talk about that all you want, but unfortunately that is pretty much impossible to prove beyond a reasonable doubt.

The only people in any danger are those who make millions from the Military/Industrial Complex, and even they are only in financial danger. Call it politics all you want, but those are facts.

(via )

Source: elledark

    • #bradley manning
    • #torture
    • #cover-up
    • #tyranny
    • #wikileaks
  • 2 years ago > elledark
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#Anonymous Will Avenge #Manning

The decision to charge Bradley Manning with a capital offense in addition to other charges is a provocation and Anonymous is set to respond accordingly. Thus it is that we have begun #opbradley at irc.anonops.in in order to supplement our work at #oppalantir and #anonleaks. We have gone through additional e-mails via our server at anonleaks.ru and discovered the full extent of Palantir’s involvement in the degenerate campaigns fielded by HBGary on behalf of their mercantile client Bank of America, which itself will be facing certain other troubles soon. But today is about Palantir, which “cut off ties” with HBGary at the beginning of the scandal and has since tried to explain away the fact that not one, but two employees told HBGary CEO Aaron Barr that the top execs, including Karp, had  signed off on this possibly criminal campaign to destroy Wikileaks and the venerable journalist Glenn Greenwald. Today is the day we begin to attack Palantir in earnest - not by their methods, but by ours.

(Note: Some people have asked for background on all of this. See my Guardian op-ed from a little while back. Be sure to listen to the recording between myself and Aaron Barr, who lies his ass off. And take note of how polite I am! Lol.)

This diary will be updated throughout the day as events warrant. For now, I will note that several media will be running with the Palantir story soon and that meanwhile we have provided relevant evidence to all comers. Much of that evidence is posted below. We ask that those who care about restoring decency and transparency to this crippled republic assist us in spreading the word about the crimes of those individuals - not just the “corporations,” but the people themselves, many of whom are now scrambling away from the press.

As we explained yesterday, Palantir must be destroyed. Here is more info regarding why. As a bonus, we are also providing info that has been assembled by a diligent Kosack on the relationship between discredited criminal firm HBGary and the U.S. military’s OSD. We have names, numbers, e-mails, trails, timelines, and the collective work ethic of a thousand Anons, as well as the ear of the media. This will continue until such time as Manning’s capital charge is taken off the table. We will apply pressure in the right spots and we will do so in the public eye, and in such a way as that anyone may observe our discussions on our IRC servers, as per usual. And we now have the lawyers to back up our position.

Our Palantir file is being finished at this moment. Here’s a preview.

Katherine Crotty; Jeremy Glesner; Aaron Marshall; Eli Bingham confirmed involved. E-mail links to follow.

Here’s a fun little connection between Palantir and BoA’s law firm, Hunton & Williams, which not only saw but clearly provided input into the proposal in direct contradiction to the lies that have been told to the opposite effect.

http://hbgary.anonleaks.ch/…

We have more, of course, and these will be posted here. See yesterday’s diary for what we had before last night’s big haul, lol.

Speaking of that law firm, Mr. John Woods has failed to return our calls. And speaking of Mr. Woods, here’s the info we’re comfortable providing on him at this point.

High School: Lynnfield High School ‘86 (small)
        BA: Colby College 1990
        JD: University of Virginia 1995
                Contribute approx. $250 in ‘08
        Political Donations: Gave money to John McCain
Father owns Noland Company
                  Annual Revenue $100-$500M
        A Runner.  Member of GRIPLA.ORG (Greater Richmond Intellectual Property  Law Association.  Has a blackberry and has installed the Facebook app  for blackberry.

That took ten minutes. We have more. We always have more.

We will return to destroying Palantir in just a bit; updates coming soon.

And just to anticipate objections:

We are Anonymous.
We are legion.
We do not forget.
We do not forgive.
Bradley must live.

Update One

Ha! I’m so silly, I forgot to post this info about the OSD! Someone bonk me over the head or something, lol!

ACRONYM CHEAT SHEET
OSD Office of Sect. Of Defense
OGC Office for Gov’t Commerce
DOJ Department of Justice
USG United States Gov’t
DNI Director of National Intellegence

OSD’s OGC linked HBGary to FBI, DOJ - Updated

At FDL, emptywheel wrote about Arron Barr’s email of Fri, Feb 4, in which Barr bragged about his meetings, planned for Mon Feb 7, with OSD and FBI, and of his having been contacted by USG and DNI. < http://emptywheel.firedoglake.com/…. >

A series of emails dated Thurs Feb 3 show that Farallon’s Peterson contacted OSD’s Wenchel, who checked with her OGC then passed information to FBI and DOJ.

The email exchanges, titled ‘Special Topic,’ can be found (with some replication within threads) at:

‘SPECIAL TOPIC’

http://hbgary.anonleaks.ch/….

http://hbgary.anonleaks.ch/….

http://hbgary.anonleaks.ch/….

‘INFO PASS COMPLETE’

Wenchel’s email confirming contact with FBI/DOJ (Subject: Info pass complete’) can be found at:

http://hbgary.anonleaks.ch/…. .  Wenchel writes: “Sent from OSD OGC to DoJ/FBI” [this must be viewed as plain-text to see the message]

THESE DETAILS REQUIRE MORE THOROUGH RESEARCH, but the approximate sequence of the Feb 3 messages is:

1. Feb 3 - Farallon’s Peterson to OSD’s Cheryl Davis (apparently assisting Wenchel) saying that he (Peterson) had informed Wenchel of the ‘Special Topic’ on Feb 2;

2.  OSD’s Davis replies to Peterson, saying that Wenchel has spoken with OGC and that when OGC and Wenchel have made contact, OSD will let Peterson know;

3. Peterson gives Aaron Barr’s email to Wenchel/Davis, so they can communicate directly;

4. OSD’s Wenchel writes Farallon’s Peterson and Owen, with cc to Aaron Barr, saying:

“ … there is interest in making contact by the people who are working the issue on behalf of the government, will pass the info on to them and give you any feedback I get the next time we meet.”;

5. Aaron Barr forwards the emails to HBGary’s Ted Vera, Greg Hoglund, Penny Leavy, and Karen Burke;

6. Wenchel writes ‘Info pass complete,’ saying “Sent from OSD OGC to DoJ/FBI”.  This email sent to Peterson, Owen and Barr.

This researcher does not know if more thorough research into the HBGary emails will reveal clues about what information Farallon’s Peterson communicated to OSD’s Wenchel on Feb 2.  The Feb 3 emails seem to make it clear that OSD’s Wenchel forwarded the information to OSD’s OGC, which then sent the information to FBI and DOJ.  It would appear that Barr’s Feb 4 contacts from USG agencies, and the meetings with FBI/OSD planned for Mon Feb 7, were the direct result of the Feb 2-3 communications between Farallon’s Peterson and OSD’s Wenchel, with OSD’s OGC making the connection to FBI and DOJ.

Update:  

**Feb 1 2011 — Farallon’s Peterson met with “senate staff and USDP (Under Secretary of Defense for Policy) < http://anonleaks.okhin.fr/…. >; on Feb 2 Peterson gave info to DOD’s OSD person, Wenchel (see above);

**On Fri (Jan 31 or Feb 4, dates unclear), Barr met with several Booz Allen Hamilton personnel, inc Bill Wamsley, in BAH’s offices; on Feb 5, Barr wrote Wamsley (and other BAH staff), saying “Meeting with Govies next week”. < http://anonleaks.okhin.fr/…. >

So, updated sequence is:  

**Feb 1, Peterson meets with ‘senate staff & USDP’;

**Feb 2, Peterson gives HBG info to OSD’s Wenchel (ref in Feb 3 email);

**Feb 3, email exchanges in which Wenchel gives HBG info to OSD’s Office of General Counsel, and OSD’s OGC passes the info to FBI/DOJ, who are apparently ‘the people who are working the issue on behalf of the government’;

**Feb 4 (per emptywheel, link above) Barr writes that he has been contacted that day by OSD’s Wenchel, FBI, USG, and DNI, and that he has a meeting planned with OSD/FBI for Mon Mar 7 2001.

So, apparently Farallon’s Peterson did more than just give the HBG info to OSD’s Wenchel on Feb 2.  Peterson’s Feb 1 meeting with ‘senate staff and and Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (USDP)’ suggest strongly that Peterson was directed to deliver the info to Wenchel, who moved it to OSD’s OGC, who sent it to FBI/DOJ, leading to the Feb 4 contacts between Barr and OSD, FBI, USG (does he mean DOJ here? or another USG agency?) and DNI, during which the Barr/FBI/OSD meeting was planned for Mar 7.

The presence of Wenchel (from DOD’s Cybersecurity section, OSD), the OSD’s Office of General Counsel, and now of the Under Secretary of Defense for Policy (USDP) puts The Pentagon/DOD right smack in the middle of the conspiracy.

[Note: I think emptywheel has more about Farallon.  For info on the truly terrible rootkit Farallon developed in conjunction with HBGary, see

< http://crowdleaks.org/…. >.]

    • #Bradley Manning
    • #WikiLeaks
    • #Cable Gate
    • #Anonymous
  • 2 years ago
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Bradley Manning could face death: For what? #BradleyManning #WikiLeaks #CableGate

Bradley Manning could face death:  for what? AP Photo, File

(updated below - Update II)

The U.S. Army yesterday announced that it has filed 22 additional charges against Bradley Manning, the Private accused of being the source for hundreds of thousands of documents (as well as this still-striking video) published over the last year by WikiLeaks. Most of the charges add little to the ones already filed, but the most serious new charge is for “aiding the enemy,” a capital offense under Article 104 of the Uniform Code of Military Justice. Although military prosecutors stated that they intend to seek life imprisonment rather than the death penalty for this alleged crime, the military tribunal is still empowered to sentence Manning to death if convicted.

Article 104 — which, like all provisions of the UCMJ, applies only to members of the military — is incredibly broad. Under 104(b) — almost certainly the provision to be applied — a person is guilty if he “gives intelligence to or communicates or corresponds with or holds any intercourse with the enemy, either directly or indirectly” (emphasis added), and, if convicted, “shall suffer death or such other punishment as a court-martial or military commission may direct.” The charge sheet filed by the Army is quite vague and neither indicates what specifically Manning did to violate this provision nor the identity of the “enemy” to whom he is alleged to have given intelligence. There are, as international law professor Kevin Jon Heller notes, only two possibilities, and both are disturbing in their own way.

In light of the implicit allegation that Manning transmitted this material to WikiLeaks, it is quite possible that WikiLeaks is the “enemy” referenced by Article 104, i.e., that the U.S. military now openly decrees (as opposed to secretly declaring) that the whistle-blowing group is an “enemy” of the U.S. More likely, the Army will contend that by transmitting classified documents to WikiLeaks for intended publication, Manning “indirectly” furnished those documents to Al Qaeda and the Taliban by enabling those groups to learn their contents. That would mean that it is a capital offense not only to furnish intelligence specifically and intentionally to actual enemies — the way that, say, Aldrich Ames and Robert Hanssen were convicted of passing intelligence to the Soviet Union — but also to act as a whistle-blower by leaking classified information to a newspaper with the intent that it be published to the world. Logically, if one can “aid the enemy” even by leaking to WikiLeaks, then one can also be guilty of this crime by leaking to The New York Times.

The dangers of such a theory are obvious. Indeed, even the military itself recognizes those dangers, as the Military Judges’ Handbook specifically requires that if this theory is used — that one has “aided the enemy” through “indirect” transmission via leaks to a newspaper — then it must be proven that the “communication was intended to reach the enemy.” None of the other ways of violating this provision contain an intent element; recognizing how extreme it is to prosecute someone for “aiding the enemy” who does nothing more than leak to a media outlet, this is the only means of violating Article 104 that imposes an intent requirement.

But does anyone actually believe that Manning’s intent was to ensure receipt of this material by the Taliban, as opposed to exposing for the public what he believed to be serious American wrongdoing and to trigger reforms? Indeed, in the purported chat logs between Manning and government informant Adrian Lamo, Lamo asked Manning why he didn’t sell this information to a foreign government and get rich off it, and this is how Manning replied:

because it’s public data… . it belongs in the public domain -information should be free - it belongs in the public domain - because another state would just take advantage of the information… try and get some edge - if its out in the open … it should be a public good

This prosecution theory would convert acts of whistle-blowing into a hanging offense.

Worse still, whatever Manning’s behavior was in terms of “aiding the enemy,” that exact same behavior was engaged in by The New York Times, The Guardian, and numerous other newspapers that published these classified documents and thus enabled the Taliban, Al Qaeda and all the other Enemies Du Jour to access them. As Professor Heller put it:

If Manning has aided the enemy, so has any media organization that published the information he allegedly stole. Nothing in Article 104 requires proof that the defendant illegally acquired the information that aided the enemy. As a result, if the mere act of ensuring that harmful information is published on the internet qualifies either as indirectly “giving intelligence to the enemy” (if the military can prove an enemy actually accessed the information) or as indirectly “communicating with the enemy” (because any reasonable person knows that enemies can access information on the internet), there is no relevant factual difference between Manning and a media organization that published the relevant information.

As Heller notes, since the UCMJ applies only to members of the military, newspapers (or WikiLeaks) couldn’t actually be charged under Article 104; still, “there is still something profoundly disturbing about the prospect of convicting Manning and sentencing him to life imprisonment [GG: or the death penalty] for doing exactly what media organizations did, as well.” It’s true that members of the military have legal duties that others do not have — including the duty not to leak classified information — but this incredibly expansive interpretation of what it means to “aid the enemy” dangerously encompasses all sorts of legitimate press and speech activities, especially when combined with the Obama administration’s escalating war on whistle-blowing and the journalists who expose government secrets. This is yet another step in infecting the law with doctrines of Endless War and its accompanying mentality.

* * * *

The Manning controversy tracks almost perfectly the one from 40 years ago involving Daniel Ellberg’s leak of thousands of pages of the Top Secret Pentagon Papers. Not even Manning’s most ardent defenders deny that he broke the law if he was actually the leaker (just as nobody denies that Ellsberg broke the law).

Nonetheless, the notion that Daniel Ellberg’s leak was noble and justified has become consecrated orthodoxy among most Democrats, progressives and even among the American media — because it’s very easy to cheer on challenges to authority and political power from four decades earlier, when the targets of the whistle-blowing no longer wield power. Yet even though Manning’s actions are so similar to Ellsberg’s both in intent and effect — as Ellsberg himself has repeatedly stated — the reaction to Manning is radically different: both because Manning’s actions challenge the policy of current authorities who actually wield power now and because it’s a Democratic President prosecuting him. That Ellsberg is viewed as a hero while Manning is viewed as a death-deserving villain makes no logical sense.

It’s at least intellectually coherent (though quite misguided) to see both Ellsberg and Manning as criminal demons who deserve to be locked away forever (the same things said now to condemn Manning were said back then about Ellsberg, including from the Supreme Court: “revelation of [the Pentagon Papers] will do substantial damage to public interests,” wrote Justice White. But it’s incoherent in the extreme to praise Ellsberg while condemning Manning (particularly since everything Manning is accused of leaking bears a much lower secrecy designation than the massive amounts of Top Secret material leaked by Ellsberg).

Critically, if one believes the authenticity of the purported Manning/Lamo chat log snippets selectively released by Wired, then Manning was very clear about why he decided to leak these materials: he sought to trigger worldwide reforms of government wrongdoing exposed by these documents:

Lamo: what’s your endgame plan, then?…

Manning: well, it was forwarded to [WikiLeaks] - and god knows what happens now - hopefully worldwide discussion, debates, and reforms - if not, than [sic] we’re doomed - as a species - i will officially give up on the society we have if nothing happens - the reaction to the [Baghdad Apache attack] video gave me immense hope; CNN’s iReport was overwhelmed; Twitter exploded - people who saw, knew there was something wrong … Washington Post sat on the video… David Finkel acquired a copy while embedded out here… . - i want people to see the truth … regardless of who they are … because without information, you cannot make informed decisions as a public.

This leaves little doubt about Manning’s motives. And there is also little doubt that Manning has achieved those ambitious and noble goals on multiple levels. Although the extent is reasonably in dispute, even WikiLeaks’ most embittered antagonists — such as New York Times Executive Editor Bill Keller — acknowledge that the release of the diplomatic cables played some role in the uprising in Tunisia, which in turn sparked similar uprisings of historic significance throughout the Middle East. From Keller:

For those who do not follow these subjects as closely, the stories are an opportunity to learn more. If a project like this makes readers pay attention, think harder, understand more clearly what is being done in their name, then we have performed a public service. And that does not count the impact of these revelations on the people most touched by them. WikiLeaks cables in which American diplomats recount the extravagant corruption of Tunisia’s rulers helped fuel a popular uprising that has overthrown the government.

Beyond that, the documents Manning is alleged to have leaked have revealed a wide range of corruption, deceit and illegality by government officials around the world. They have forced Americans to confront the realities of the wars they endlessly wage and support. And it is virtually impossible to read news articles about any significant event in the Middle East without encountering references to important information revealed by WikiLeaks documents.

In sum, if one believes the allegations and the chat logs, Manning’s actions have already led to many of the “reforms” and increased awareness he hoped to achieve. Thus do we have the strange spectacle of Americans cheering on the democratic uprisings in the Middle East and empathizing with the protesters, all while revering American political leaders who for years helped sustained the dictatorships which oppressed them and disdaining those (Manning) who may have played a role in sparking the protests. More revealingly, American political leaders responsible for grave atrocities (like this and this and this) are treated like peace-loving statesmen and honored dignitaries, while those who heroically risk their lives to expose and end that wrongdoing (Manning, and Ellsberg before him) are thrown into a cage, threatened with death, and scorned by All Decent People.

Part of what explains that is just the standard authoritarian mindset: even heinous acts committed under sanction of officialdom are treated as inherently legitimate, while those who challenge those authorities are scorned. But there’s something broader that accounts for the almost universal disdain directed at Manning: these leaks showed us the true face of American conduct in the world. Those who reveal truths which most people would prefer to ignore are typically hated, and are often those most severely punished.

* * * * *

As a reminder:  Manning — convicted of nothing — continues to be held in 23-hour/day, highly repressive solitary confinement; despite protests from Amnesty International, a formal investigation by the U.N.’s top torture official, and the replacement of the brig commander, Manning has been held that way for ten straight months, with no change in sight.

UPDATE:  Two briefs points to underscore the key issues here.  First, Richard Nixon — when justifying the attacks on Daniel Ellsberg — denounced him for having provided ”“aid and comfort to the enemy.”  As usual, the more things ”change,” …

And then there’s this question I posed on Twitter:

UPDATE II:  Lt. Col. David Coombs, Manning’s counsel, just posted the following:

Last night, PFC Manning was inexplicably stripped of all clothing by the Quantico Brig. He remained in his cell, naked, for the next seven hours. At 5:00 a.m., the Brig sounded the wake-up call for the detainees. At this point, PFC Manning was forced to stand naked at the front of his cell.

The Duty Brig Supervisor (DBS) arrived shortly after 5:00 a.m. When he arrived, PFC Manning was called to attention. The DBS walked through the facility to conduct his detainee count. Afterwards, PFC Manning was told to sit on his bed. About ten minutes later, a guard came to his cell to return his clothing.

This type of degrading treatment is inexcusable and without justification. It is an embarrassment to our military justice system and should not be tolerated. PFC Manning has been told that the same thing will happen to him again tonight. No other detainee at the Brig is forced to endure this type of isolation and humiliation.

I’m already disgusted anticipating the Obama loyalists and right-wing fanatics who will jointly defend this.

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  • 2 years ago
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Shooters walk free, whistleblower jailed #MustWatch #BradleyManning #WikiLeaks #CableGate

Shooters walk free, whistleblower jailed

Due to the enormous request Panorama has produced an English version of our film about the alleged WikiLeaks Whistleblower Bradley Manning.

CLICK HERE TO VIEW

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  • 2 years ago
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PayPal reinstates account for Bradley Manning supporters

PayPal  has ended its freeze on payments designed to help Bradley Manning, who’s under investigation for leaking thousands of classified cables to WikiLeaks.

But, says PayPal, the decision to suspend the account had nothing at all to do with WikiLeaks, and neither does its decision to reinstate it.

PayPal says that Courage to Resist had been failing to comply with its policy requiring non-profits to associate a bank account with their PayPal account. But while Courage to Resist concedes this, it says it had its reasons.

“We exchanged numerous emails and phone calls with the legal department and the office of executive escalations of PayPal. They said they would not unrestrict our account unless we authorized PayPal to withdraw funds from our organization’s checking account by default,” says the organization’s Jeff Paterson.

“Our accounting does not allow for this type of direct access by a third party, nor do I trust PayPal as a business entity with this responsibility given their punitive actions against WikiLeaks-an entity not charged with any crime by any government on Earth.”

PayPal denies that it had any such plans.

“To be clear: PayPal cannot take such action without the authorization of an account holder, nor does it ever take such unauthorized actions,” says Anuj Nayar, the company’s director of communications, in a statement.

“Upon review, and as part of our normal business procedures, we have decided to lift the temporary restriction placed on their account because we have sufficient information to meet our statutory ‘Know Your Customer’ obligations.”

Presumably, it’s pure coincidence that the decision to reinstate the account came just hours after Courage to Resist issued a press release on the matter, and after 10,000 people signed a petition asking Paypal to reverse its decision.

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  • 2 years ago
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