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Sharyl Attkisson

Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.

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Sharyl Attkisson

OBG*: How independent are vaccine defenders? Vaccine-autism conflicts of interest

Dr. Paul Offit, inventor of controversial rotavirus vaccine and subject of a correction for false statements.

OBG is a look back at an "Oldie But Goodie" news report

In 2008 at CBS News, I reported on the vaccine industry's conflict of interest entitled: How independent are vaccine defenders?

Watch the video here: Vaccine-Autism conflict of interest.

Afterward, one of the vaccine industry officials mentioned, Dr. Paul Offit of Children's Hospital of Philadelphia-- who refused to provide details on his vaccine industry income and ties for the report-- lashed out with false statements. Among other untrue claims, he stated that I had not asked him for information or that he had provided it. In fact, I had carefully documented my requests and his failure to provide the information.

The Orange County Register ended up correcting an article they had published containing Dr. Offit's false claims.

Offit also settled a defamation case filed by vaccine safety advocate J.B. Handley regarding a quote in Offit's book "Autism's False Prophets."

Read the text of my original CBS News report by clicking here.

Read more of my medical and vaccine-related reporting here.

CDC vaccine safety information can be found here.

Support the fight against government overreach in Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.
Thanks to the thousands who have already supported!

WATCH: Patrolling the U.S. Southern border-- in the Caribbean

The following is a transcript of my cover story investigation on “Full Measure.” Watch the video by clicking the link at the end of the page.

We begin with an examination of a U.S. border that you might not have given much thought to. Like our Southern border with Mexico, it’s the target of nonstop efforts by drug traffickers, human smugglers and possibly even terrorists. But this U.S. border is in the Caribbean. And the job of guarding it is arguably even more complicated.

Our Caribbean journey begins at the San Juan, Puerto Rico seaport with a ferry that comes in three times a week from the Dominican Republic. It carries up to a thousand passengers and cargo including vehiclesall getting their last look before entering the U.S.

Sharyl: How does that make it easier for smugglers, the fact that Puerto Rico is out here but it is a US territory?

Roberto Vaquero: Mainly because containerized cargo coming in or leaving Puerto Rico to the US mainland doesn't see customs anymore. They don't see CBP anymore. SHARYL: After this? Vaquero: After this. So we are the last line of defense.

Roberto Vaquero is a top Border Security official here.

Sharyl: So, if they make it through Puerto Rico, they're home free?

Vaquero: Well, basically, yes.

The U.S. territory of Puerto Rico— about the size of Connecticut— is about 1000 miles from the mainland U.S.. It’s only about 80 miles from the Dominican Republic and Haiti across what’s called the Mona Passage. It’s also a straight shot from Venezuela and Colombia. That positioning makes it prime territory for drug runners and human smugglers moving illegal products into the U.S.

Sharyl: I don't think most Americans think of Puerto Rico as a place that is on the front lines of the war on drugs.

Vaquero: It is. It is. And it's very unique. We're in a unique strategic location. It's an easy route for smugglers to actually move their narcotics or any other type of contraband to any secluded beach, maybe to some of the mangroves, maybe to other outer ports, other out sister islands that we have here in Puerto Rico. So, it is strategic. And also, it's considered domestic if you're flying in anything from actually Puerto Rico into the US mainland. So that's a smuggler's dream.

This is where U.S. border agents recently seized 311 pounds of cocaine shaped into 122 bricks and hidden in a tank. Drug sniffing border dogs in Puerto Rico have found boxes from Colombia labelled “red roses” but containing cocaine valued at more than $700 thousand dollars. Cocaine has been hidden in shampoo bottles. And found inside books and drugs found inside dry erase markers.

And while we’re here at the San Juan seaportone of the K-9s seems to be onto something. For the bad guys, moving people and drugs carries great risks— as we’re about to see. If you think patrolling the southern U.S.-Mexico border is challenging, imagine patrolling a border that’s nothing more than an invisible line in the ocean 12 nautical miles out to sea.

Schneeberger: There’s thousands of square miles of ocean to cover, all the way coming up from Venezuela, Columbia, all the way here to Puerto Rico.

Jeffrey Schneeberger is a marine agent with Customs and Border Protection.

Sharyl: Anything else you want to say about the job or what people ought to know about what happens over here?

Schneeberger: Yeah. I mean, it's still the Wild West out here, I think. On the water it's a needle in the haystack at that point. It's not a land border, a line in the water, or a line in the sand that you cross A plane can only do so much with a needle in the haystack, and a boat can only do so much.

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When boats containing drugs or illegal immigrants are spotted agents coordinate with their partners in the air. Here, air units are watching as agents intercept a Colombian fast boat racing through the Caribbean Sea toward Puerto Rico. Here, they’re onto a drug boat from Venezuela. This video shows border agents chasing down a boat carrying three smugglers and 220 pounds of cocaine.

We’re on a Customs and Border Protection Blackhawk helicopter. Agents show us a more than 1000-foot high antenna on the western side of Puerto Rico that smugglers use as a beacon. Then we fly out over the turquoise, blue waters to Desecheo Island, a deserted National Wildlife Refuge. Christopher Columbus landed here on his second voyage to the New World. Today, smugglers charge immigrants three to six thousand dollars each for a boat ride to get dropped off on one of these treacherous remote islands, hoping to get picked up by U.S. patrols. Officials tell us a lot of illegal cash transfers happen here, too.

In the past year throughout Puerto Rico and the US Virgin Islands, more than 1,400 illegal immigrants were picked up. About one-third of them already had criminal histories. In September, a makeshift boat overloaded with 38 illegal immigrants from the Dominican Republic capsized. Three of them drowned.

A Blackhawk crew like the one we’re with provided surveillance and cover when two men from the Dominican Republic were intercepted in a boat carrying more than 4000 pounds of cocaine worth $47 million. A U.S. Border air team spotted this boat carrying illegal immigrants and tracked it until it was intercepted by the Coast Guard.

We wait until dark and head out on a different aircraft a Dash 8 Turboprop plane. Our assignment: to patrol the Mona Passage between the Dominican Republic and Puerto Rico.

Before long, we spot a suspected drug boat.

Sharyl: And there's a boat off the Dominican Republic?

CBP agent: There is a vessel coming off the Dominican Republic.

In November, a plane like ours spotted a boat full of 28 of illegal immigrants. It could have capsized and had no real lifesaving equipment on board. Boat agents rescued them and learned five of the immigrants had snuck in before. Tonight, our airplane crew that spotted the suspicious boat quickly becomes distracted by immediate concerns. There’s a mechanical malfunction with our plane.

We end up having to burn off fuel so we can land.

Sharyl: So normally if you saw a boat like that and we weren't having a maintenance issue, what would we do?

Unidentified: We would definitely go and see if we could a visual on that.

Sharyl: And Tonight, we just have to let it go?

Unidentified: Unfortunately.

Mechanical malfunctions aren’t all that uncommon, they tell us, making their job all the more difficult.

Back at San Juan seaport it turns out the drug sniffing dog was onto something big. In the rear brake drums of the Ford van, Customs and Border Protection found six pounds of heroin valued at $162-thousand dollars. Another big find at this lesser known US border hotspot.

Vasquero: So Puerto Rico is a hot point. They don't have to go through customs anymore. So this is their last point ... This is actually the last line of defense for anything coming into the US.

A US border that lies in the Caribbean sea where there is no chance to build a fence.

Officials report a spike in drug seizures in the Caribbean sector they say when security tightens up on the Mexican border.. things become more active there.

Watch the video investigation by clicking the link below:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/the-caribbean-border

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

We Help You Find Free Online Tax Filing That Some Tried to Hide (PODCAST)

This week, the IRS announced changes in a program that is supposed to allow tens of millions of Americans to get free professional help filing their income taxes. Guess who tried to hide it? We'll tell you how to find it!

Hat tip to ProPublica for its investigation.

Investigative Producer David Bernknopf joins me for this podcast.

Listen now on iTunes or your favorite podcast distributor or by **clicking the arrow in the player below**! Subscribe to my two podcasts “The Sharyl Attkisson Podcast” and “Full Measure After Hours” on iTunes or your favorite podcast distributor. Leave your comments and share with your friends!

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

POLL: Most say Trump's tax records should not be released

A majority of respondents say President Trump's tax records should not be released, according to the latest unscientific poll at SharylAttkisson.com.

Eighty-six percent (86%) replied "no" when asked if Trump's tax records should be released. Ten percent (10%) stated they "don't know/don't care."

Four percent (4%) stated that President Trump's tax records should be released.

Read the full results below. Meantime, be sure and vote in our latest poll at SharylAttkisson.com on the home page. Look for the black box in the right sidebar or scroll way down on the mobile site!

Should Trump's tax records be released?

4% Yes

86% No

<1% Only to Congress

10% Don't know/don't care

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

READ: The FBI "Woods Procedures" that the FBI failed to follow when wiretapping Trump associate

Michael Woods, former FBI agent, in 2005

In 2001, the FBI implemented new protection for US citizens after federal agents got caught repeatedly submitting incorrect information to the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act (FISA) court to obtain wiretaps.

The "Woods Procedures," named for the FBI agent who helped devise them, were supposed to be strict checks and balances that required every fact submitted in support of a wiretap application be verified all the way to the top of the FBI. If a single fact wasn't verifiable, the application was supposed to be withdrawn or the "fact" removed.

Inspector General Michael Horowitz found the FBI violated multiple Woods Procedures rules in the agency's multiple, controversial wiretaps of former Trump campaign associate Carter Page.

"Woods Procedures" FBI document from 2001

Read the entire Woods Procedures document by clicking the link below:

https://fas.org/irp/agency/doj/fisa/woods.pdf

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.

Action at the Other U.S. Southern Border (PODCAST)

On patrol with Customs and Border Protection in Puerto Rico

We couldn’t believe how many illegal immigrants and drugs are being intercepted every day at our Caribbean Southern border: the US territory of Puerto Rico.

The amazing investigative producer Daniel Steinberger joined me on the journey and in this podcast. Watch the video of our Puerto Rico journey at FullMeasure.news starting the afternoon of Sunday, Jan. 5. Do your own research, make up your own mind, think for yourself. 

To listen to the podcast, to to Full Measure After Hours podcast on iTunes or your favorite distributor, or just click the arrow in the audio player below!

Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI

LISTEN: DC Circuit Oral Argument on Don McGahn Congressional Testimony

Former White House Counsel Don McGahn

The DC Circuit Court heard oral argument on whether former White House Counsel Don McGahn must comply with a House subpoena to testify on Special Counsel Robert Mueller's investigation into Trump-Russia collusion.

LISTEN by clicking the link below.

https://www.c-span.org/video/?467697-1/dc-circuit-oral-argument-don-mcgahn-congressional-testimony

Thank you to the thousands who are supporting the landmark case of Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions.

Puerto Rico's battle with drugs and illegal immigration

On border patrol in the Caribbean

As a U.S. territory, Puerto Rico--located in the Caribbean--is a hot spot for smugglers moving drugs and illegal immigrants into the U.S.

Full Measure photographer Bryan (above) and Daniel (right) with Customs and Border Protection before our patrol flight in Puerto Rico

It’s strategically located as a straight shot from drug producing countries like Colombia and Venezuela… and that makes it a destination for cartel thugs and other criminals. If they can make it into the island of Puerto Rico undetected, they are pretty much home free. That's because there are no more U.S. border checks if they fly or sail from PR to the mainland United States.

You’ll see what kind of a border hot spot Puerto Rico is when we go on patrol Sunday on Full Measure.

Listen to the podcast: Action on our other Southern Border

I'll also report from a morgue near the U.S. Mexico border.

This story is about a unique effort to identify remains of all the illegal immigrants found in the Arizona desert. It's an amazing project that tries to help bring dignity and closure to families.

Dr. Greg Hess shows us his Arizona operation that works to identify remains of illegal immigrants found in the desert

We'll bring you an amazing report on a way millions of Americans can get free professional help filing their taxes. So why don't you know about it?

And we'll Follow the Money to find out where President Trump has been donating his presidential salary.

See you on Sunday!

We never waste your time rehashing news you've already seen all week. To learn how to watch Full Measure on TV, online or on demand, click: How to watch Full Measure

Fight improper government surveillance. Support Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI over the government computer intrusions of Attkisson's work while she was a CBS News investigative correspondent. Visit the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund. Click here.
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