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DAG Eric Holder was repeatedly told the ‘Wall’ was blocking intel sharing
911FamiliesForAermica.org ^ | January 27, 2009 | Tim Sumner

Posted on 01/27/2009 2:26:06 PM PST by Sergeant Tim

Three times during his tenure as Deputy Attorney General, Eric Holder was made fully aware that intelligence sharing with the Criminal Division was not taking place. As the officer in charge of day-to-day operations at the Department of Justice, his lack of due diligence ensured that the 'Wall' between the intelligence and criminal divisions of the FBI that Jamie Gorelick had built would remain in place for the foreseeable future. The 'Wall' stood as the Clinton administration and intelligence community saw the rising threat of al Qaeda, Ramzi Yousef was prosecuted for making the bomb used in the 1993 attack upon the World Trade Center and "Bojinka" plot to bomb American jetliners, and our embassies in Africa were attacked in 1998.

Despite being well informed in 1997 of the problem, Mr. Holder allowed the very working group he had formulated to not make a single serious recommendation; then he disbanded the group without action:

In June 1996, a memorandum was drafted for the Attorney General to issue emphasizing that contacts between intelligence and criminal agents were not prohibited. (Appendix D, Tab 28) This draft memorandum (961) was never issued, however. (McAdams 7/16/99) By September 1997, according to Daniel S. Seikaly, Director of the Executive Office for National Security ("EONS"), the Director of the FBI had complained to the Attorney General that, despite the July 1995 memorandum, OIPR was preventing the FBI from contacting the Criminal Division. (962) (Seikaly 4/4/00) According to a memorandum Seikaly wrote at the time, the Attorney General was "anxious" to see the problem resolved. (Appendix D, Tab 37) Deputy Attorney General Holder instructed Seikaly to convene a working group consisting of representatives from OIPR, the FBI, and the Criminal Division to address the issue. (Appendix D, Tab 37; Seikaly 4/4/00)) Seikaly concluded that the Attorney General's memorandum was not being followed, indeed that both OIPR and the FBI "were ignoring the procedures out of an abundance of caution." (Appendix D, Tab 45) One suggestion was "simply to ask the Attorney General to ... reassert the validity of the Procedures," (id) but there was some sentiment that it would be inappropriate for the Attorney General to issue a memorandum that essentially said "And we really mean it this time." (Seikaly 4/4/00) In the end, the working group was disbanded without recommendation and no significant action was taken. [emphasis added mine] -- Bellows Report, page 722, (pdf reader required)

As stated in Chapter 3 of the 9/11 Commission Report, In both 1999 and 2000, "[S]eparate reviews concluded independently that information sharing was not occurring, and that the intent of the 1995 procedures was ignored routinely," yet again, Holder took no action.

By the time Holder was DAG, the effects of Jamie Gorelick's memorandum were fully entrenched, everyone was "misinterpreting" the rules. It's true that Gorelick chaired the Working Group and she wrote that they "went beyond what the law requires," but also affecting the interpretation of the rules was the Intelligence side, Criminal side culture/rivalry.

A fellow 9/11 family member emailed today and wrote:

What makes it all relevant today is the obsessive concern for the rules which are aimed at protecting the civil rights of criminal defendants. That's what the 'Wall' was. All this talk about "fighting the war on terror while retaining our core values" ... like we're giving up our souls if we don't protect the rights of terrorists and, in the case of the 'Wall', they were wrong. They weren't protecting anybody's "core values" -- they were risk averse, career-protecting, turf-protecting, know-it-all lawyers, and their vanity about being morally superior for protecting the so-called rights of defendants helped get 3,000 people killed. I don't know that Holder is any more responsible than Gorelick, or even as much as her; she wrote the 1995 memo.

I differ slightly. DAG Eric Holder saw far more evidence of the 'Wall' than did his predecessor DAG Jamie Gorelick -- on his watch and within his lane -- just as the lights began blinking al Qaeda blood red on his control panel.

Michelle Malkin reported today that even Arlen Specter, my Senator, has announced that he will support Eric Holder's nomination for Attorney General.

Yesterday, I was told that the staff looked at questions of the 'Wall' while vetting Eric Holder's nomination but no one seems to have tied the 9/11 Commission Report to the Bellows Report. Lacking that, minority members of the Judiciary Committee instead concentrated on concerns about his involvement in the Marc Rich and FALN pardons.

To date, what has been withheld from public view is the 9/11 Commission's Staff Monograph on the 'Wall' -- it exists, as I confirmed on January 15, 2009.

READ THE REST HERE.


TOPICS:
KEYWORDS: 911families; ag; alqaeda; arlenspecter; attorneygeneral; barackobama; bho2009; bhoag; bhodoj; corruption; democrats; ericholder; faln; gorelick; holder; holderrecord; jamiegorelick; marcrich; obama; thewall; wall; wot

1 posted on 01/27/2009 2:26:07 PM PST by Sergeant Tim
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To: Just Lori; TheForceOfOne; SilvieWaldorfMD; Tennessee Nana; ThreePuttinDude; eastsider; del4hope; ..

Ping!


2 posted on 01/27/2009 2:27:44 PM PST by Sergeant Tim (In the War on Terror, there is no place to run from here.)
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To: Sergeant Tim

It was just a simple oversight. A youthful indescretion.


3 posted on 01/27/2009 2:28:50 PM PST by ichabod1 (Change is not a destination, Hope is not a strategy)
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To: Sergeant Tim

Despicable Spector

These guys have no clue as to who they actually work for.

Why doesn’t Obama just hire McGreevey’s gay lover for head of homeland security, how is any of this non sense any different,


4 posted on 01/27/2009 2:35:51 PM PST by HonestConservative (http://www.operationvalentine.blogspot.com/)
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To: Sergeant Tim

Any real American have any confidence in anyone in this administration?
I think they ALL belong in public stocks.


5 posted on 01/27/2009 2:38:11 PM PST by Joe Boucher (An enemy of Islam)
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To: Joe Boucher
"Any real American have any confidence in anyone in this administration?"

No.

6 posted on 01/27/2009 2:40:26 PM PST by blackbart.223 (I live in Northern Nevada. Reid doesn't represent me.)
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To: Sergeant Tim

(no links)

SOME DOUBT US WOULD CUT DEAL WITH MOUSSAOUI - HIS ALLEGED 9/11 ROLE RAISES STAKES, THEY SAY
Boston Globe, The (MA) - Saturday, July 20, 2002
Author: Wayne Washington, Globe Staff
WASHINGTON - Cutting a deal with Zacarias Moussaoui would be less appealing to federal prosecutors than the plea bargain reached with John Walker Lindh, because government prosecutors believe that Moussaoui was slated to be a direct participant in the Sept. 11 attacks, legal observers said yesterday.

On Thursday, Moussaoui, 34, informed US District Court Judge Leonie M. Brinkema that he wanted to plead guilty to six terrorism conspiracy charges so that federal prosecutors would not seek a death sentence. But unlike Lindh, who faced less serious charges and was not alleged to have had a direct tie to the terrorist attacks, Moussaoui is on trial for plotting them.

The standards for a plea agreement with Moussaoui, legal observers said, should, therefore, be far higher than they were for Lindh, who pleaded guilty to two of the 10 terrorism charges against him Monday in exchange for a maximum sentence of 20 years. He had faced a possible life sentence at trial.

“I don’t know what kind of deal you strike with Moussaoui,” said Joseph diGenova, a former US attorney for the District of Columbia. “You can not negotiate a deal with one of the hijackers of Sept. 11. I can not conceive of a situation where the government would cut a deal with him.”

(snip)

President Bush, Attorney General John D. Ashcroft, and FBI Director Robert S. Mueller III have insisted that preventing acts of terrorism is the top priority of federal law enforcement, but it is not certain whether Moussaoui has enough information on Binalshibh and others to justify a deal.

DiGenova said prosecutors have to question just how cooperative Moussaoui would be, because he has been in custody for nearly a year without talking and has publicly sworn allegiance to bin Laden.

“Who’s going to believe him?” diGenova said.

Eric Holder , who was deputy attorney general during the Clinton administration, said he would make a deal if he believed that Moussaoui had important information to share. DiGenova said he would not, largely because he doubts that Moussaoui has such information.

“He was a small cog in the wheel,” diGenova said. “He got his money. He got his training. He was intentionally kept ignorant.”

Indeed, bin Laden has bragged on videotape that the hijackers themselves did not know other plotters and did not realize their mission was suicidal.

(snip)

..

ASHCROFT’S POLICE CHIEF ROLE WIDENS
St. Louis Post-Dispatch (MO) - Sunday, November 24, 2002
Author: Karen Branch-Brioso Post-Dispatch Washington Bureau
Six decades after the threat of war in Europe prompted President Franklin Roosevelt to move the Immigration and Naturalization Service into the Justice Department, another wartime administration will move the immigration agency out — and into a new Department of Homeland Security.

The impact on Attorney General John Ashcroft and his Justice Department will be substantial, by any measure. Under the homeland security plan engineered by President George W. Bush and approved last week by Congress, the shift of immigration employees alone will take a 28 percent bite out of the Justice Department’s 141,276-member workforce. Those same employees will take more than $6 billion of the Justice Department’s $30 billion budget with them when they go.

(snip)

New freedom, new challenges

Many suggest that the departure of INS will free up Ashcroft, as well.

The Justice Department under Ashcroft has devoted enormous energy to plans to retool the agency and to separate its enforcement duties, such as deportation and border protection, from its service functions, such as issuing green cards and processing citizenship applications.

“The loss of INS is huge,” said Eric Holder , deputy attorney general from 1997 to 2000. “On a day to day basis, that will fundamentally affect the work of the leadership at the Justice Department.

“At Justice, you spend a significant portion of your time dealing with INS-related issues and INS-related problems.”

But the transfer of those issues to another department may bring new challenges to Ashcroft where law enforcement and immigration issues intersect, as they have frequently since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, Holder said.

“With the loss of the (INS) enforcement side, it makes it a little more difficult to employ the use of a tool that this administration has very effectively used in combating terrorism,” Holder said. “Say, if you want to use an immigration basis to hold somebody. If the FBI has intelligence that someone who is illegally in this country is an al-Qaida supporter, it’s one thing when the FBI is just communicating within the Justice Department. It’s a whole other thing when the FBI has to communicate with another Cabinet agency. You have to form a way to have these agencies talk to each other. You have to somehow get to the informality that made the use of that INS tool so effective.”

One piece of the immigration enforcement will remain under Ashcroft’s control: the Executive Office of Immigration Review, which includes 228 immigration court judges nationwide, as well as the Board of Immigration Appeals.

(snip)


7 posted on 01/27/2009 3:01:33 PM PST by maggief
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To: blackbart.223

hello blackbart.223
What kind of .223
and where in Nevada are ya?


8 posted on 01/27/2009 3:40:17 PM PST by Joe Boucher (An enemy of Islam)
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To: Joe Boucher
"What kind of .223"

An AR 15 plus a Mini 14. North of Sparks if you need to know.

9 posted on 01/27/2009 3:47:08 PM PST by blackbart.223 (I live in Northern Nevada. Reid doesn't represent me.)
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To: blackbart.223

Don’t need to know just interested in asking folks about where they are.
I’ve been in Reno, Virginia city, Lake Tahoe and found it quite nice.
Especially Virginia City, didn’t care much for tahoe or reno though.
How do you like the area?
Also I have a Ruger mini 14 but not an Ar15. How do you compare the two?
But no, I do not need to know.


10 posted on 01/27/2009 4:10:52 PM PST by Joe Boucher (An enemy of Islam)
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To: Joe Boucher
"Also I have a Ruger mini 14 but not an Ar15. How do you compare the two?"

If I could only have one it would be the Mini 14. The AR 15 is a custom built and very reliable. Does this answer your question?

11 posted on 01/27/2009 4:14:58 PM PST by blackbart.223 (I live in Northern Nevada. Reid doesn't represent me.)
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