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Sharyl Attkisson

Untouchable Subjects. Fearless, Nonpartisan Reporting.

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News

Afghanistan and billions of US tax dollar waste

As President Trump talks about removing remaining US troops from Afghanistan, we'll have a troubling assessment of all the American tax dollars lost to waste, fraud and abuse.

Sunday on Full Measure, we're talking to the Obama-appointed watchdog who still serves under President Trump: the Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction Inspector General John Sopko.

Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction John Sopko

We'll have video from Sopko's most recent visit to Afghanistan and will see empty buildings we built but nobody ever occupied, and facilities that we paid for but don't work. Sopko says we also pay for "ghost" soldiers and police who don't really exist.

Also on Full Measure, Lisa Fletcher will tell us about the new "space race." It's the race to get the competitive advantage when it comes to Artificial Intelligence. Experts say national security is at stake.

Special Inspector General for Afghanistan Reconstruction John Sopko visits Afghanistan for an inspection
Full Measure Station List here.

We received overwhelming, positive response to last week's original investigation on vaccines and autism. The government and vaccine industry's lead pro-vaccine medical expert defending vaccines in court says he told the government lawyers years ago that vaccines can cause autism in "exceptional" cases, after all. But he says the government covered it up and misrepresented his opinion in vaccine court to debunk vaccine-autism claims. Read a sampling of the feedback here.

See you on Sunday on TV or online! Listings at link below.

Sinclair's Full Measure receives widespread praise for autism-vaccine report

"Watch this video. It’s not an unhinged, baseless attack on vaccines like so many anti-vaxxer videos. Sharyl Attkisson’s investigation is lucid, factual, and as alarming as it needs to be without going over the top. Spot on."

Scott Boyd, News, Opinions, Quotes

We received our largest volume of feedback, overwhelmingly positive, in response to our Full Measure cover story on the pro-vaccine medical expert who says vaccines can cause autism, after all, in "exceptional" cases.

Dr. Andrew Zimmerman says he told this to the government lawyers at the Justice Department whom he worked for years ago as an expert witness but they kept that hidden and misrepresented his opinion in vaccine court to debunk vaccine-autism claims.

It's another story you won't see anywhere else.

If you missed the report, watch here.

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/the-vaccination-debate

A small sampling of some of the feedback we received follows.

‘Pro-vaccination’ DOJ expert warned of connection between vaccines and autism

A preview of Attkisson v. DOJ/FBI oral arguments

Oral Arguments-- soon. 

"Former CBS News reporter Sharyl Attkisson is preparing for her oral arguments in her case against the Department of Justice and the FBI. Attkisson claims her computer was compromised by DOJ agents in late 2012 while she was reporting on the Benghazi attacks, Fast and Furious and Obamacare. She first sued the Obama administration over the unwanted surveillance in January 2015..."

Read the rest of the story from Town Hall here: 

https://townhall.com/tipsheet/cortneyobrien/2019/01/10/sharyl-atkisson-previews-her-case-against-eric-holders-doj-n2538618

How the FBI missed the Boston Marathon bombers

The following is the 19th in a series of excerpts from my New York Times bestseller “Stonewalled,” which recounts the government intrusions of my computers. More excerpts to follow. Links to previous excerpts are below.

History and experience lead me to be more circumspect. There are thousands of examples over the decades, but one need look no further than Fast and Furious to find government misconduct, bad actors, and false information all wrapped up in one. Or consider the 2013 IRS scandal in which the government got caught targeting nonprofit groups for political reasons after insisting it would never do such a thing.

Even if we could assume 100 percent altruistic motives on the part of the government now and forevermore, there are still serious questions to consider. Wyden is getting at the heart of them with his inquiries. I’ll illustrate them with an analogy.

What if your local police were to claim that they can prevent crime in the community if they mount twenty-four-hour surveil- lance cameras on every public street corner? You might say okay. What if they say they can prevent more crime if they monitor every resident’s emails and phone calls? That’s a little tougher. You might have some questions. How much crime would be prevented? Where’s the proof? Have the police tried less intrusive methods? What inde- pendent body will monitor for abuse? Okay, now let’s ratchet it up another notch. What if the police decide, in secret, that they can

theoretically prevent one murder a year if they mount hidden surveil- lance cameras inside every room inside every family’s private home? Shouldn’t anyone who’s innocent of breaking the law be willing to sacrifice his family’s privacy to save a human life?

(Why the pregnant pause?)
Apply the analogy to today’s ethical and privacy questions.
How many terrorist acts would have to be thwarted to justify

what level of intrusion in our privacy or on our civil liberties? The calculus is entirely theoretical since there are no accurate predictive models. Nobody can say for sure how many supposedly prevented plots would have been carried out or how many lives would have been lost but for the privacy invasion. Is bulk collection of data solely to credit in examples of foiled terrorist acts? Were less broad, less intrusive methods tried and proven ineffective before each more intrusive effort was launched? If so, are the more intrusive methods providing measurably better results? What independent controls and audits are in place to guarantee protection of private information from abuse by those with political or criminal motivations? Can the public trust the government officials who want to use the secret techniques to provide accurate and honest assessments of these questions—even when the same officials have provided false information in the past? Should the public be excluded from policy debates about these issues?

A real-world example provides additional reasons to question the merit of mass data collection.

On March 4, 2011, U.S. officials were alerted to Tamerlan Tsarnaev, the future Boston Marathon bomber. The tip didn’t come from NSA collection of metadata, the tracing of cell phone calls, or the tracking of Internet activity: it came from Russia, which sent a notice to the U.S. Embassy in Moscow requesting the FBI look into Tsarnaev, who was living in America. The FBI later said it did all it could to investigate and even interviewed Tsarnaev but found nothing suspicious. Six months

later, in September 2011, Russia sent another alert about Tsarnaev, this time to the CIA. But like the FBI, the CIA also found nothing of con- cern. Off the official radar, Tsarnaev went on to murder three people and injure an estimated 264 in the April 15, 2013, bombing attack at the Boston Marathon. He was killed in a shootout with the police. (His brother is awaiting trial.)

Boston Marathon bombing, April 2013

In the end, U.S. officials pretty much blamed the Russians in pub- lic news reports. They said the Russians should have provided more explicit detail about why they’d been so suspicious of Tsarnaev back in 2011. It’s an embarrassing admission: our best U.S. intelligence officials were handed a future terrorist but couldn’t detect the threat because, they say, Russia should have helped us more?

Is it reasonable to believe this same U.S. intelligence structure has the skill, then, to cull through hundreds of millions of phone call records for subtle leads and then connect the dots to terrorist plots? Or is the government simply expanding its own bureaucracy: building an unwieldy, expensive database ripe for misuse that will require an increasing army of manpower to maintain, store, and guard it?

Answers aren’t easy. Like a lot of people, I place great value on the intelligence community’s role in protecting the public. Many skilled and devoted agents and officers often do a tremendous job. But I believe it’s possible to give the public a role in the discussion in a way that doesn’t divulge crucial secrets to the enemy.

As a footnote to the Tsarnaev story, I can’t help but think about how the government found no cause to monitor this future terrorist at the very same time it aggressively targeted leakers as well as American journalists who had committed no crimes.

To be continued...

[hr]Read excerpt #1 here: The Computer Intrusions: Up at Night

#2: Big Brother: First Warnings

#3: The Computer Intrusions: Disappearing Act

#4: The Incredible, Elusive "Verizon Man"

#5: I Spy: The Government's Secrets

#6: Computer Intrusions: The Discovery

#7: Notifying CBS About the Government Computer Intrusions

#8: The MCALLEN Case: Computer Intrusion Confirmed 

#9: The Disruptions Continue

#10: Revelations in the Government Computer Intrusion

#11: Obama Leak “Witch Hunt”

#12: Obama’s War on Leaks 

#13: The Computer Intrusions Become Public

#14: The Govt. Computer Intrusions: Word Spreads

#15: My Computer Intrusion and the National Connection 

#16: URGENT dispatch

#17: Clapper’s False Testimony

#18: Government Spying First Revealed

[hr]

Govt. spying first revealed: the computer intrusions


The following is the 18th in a series of excerpts from my New York Times bestseller “
Stonewalled,” which recounts the government intrusions of my computers. More excerpts to follow. Links to previous excerpts are below.

As damage control for Clapper’s misstep, the Obama administration mounts an outreach effort on Capitol Hill. Clapper is now sent to defend the very programs he swore didn’t exist. Senators get three classified briefings in a week’s time. NSA director Keith Alexander joins Clapper’s PR campaign to exalt the controversial intelligence- gathering methods. They explain, behind closed congressional doors, that they’ve thwarted dozens of attack plots and saved the lives of countless Americans. (This is a claim that would later be roundly debunked by an independent committee investigating the policy.) America should be grateful, not critical. Perhaps in those private brief- ings, the senators urge Clapper to clear the air with a formal, public apology. Whatever the genesis, he writes a letter on June 21, 2013, to Senate Intelligence Committee chairman Democrat Dianne Fein- stein admitting that his March testimony was “clearly erroneous.”

He indicates that he had misunderstood Wyden’s question. That seems to differ with his earlier June 9 interview with NBC News, in which he’d said that he’d given “the least untruthful” answer that he could give.

Wyden isn’t moved by the apology. A week later, on June 28, 2013, he leads a group of twenty-six senators in asking Clapper to publicly provide information on the “duration and scope” of the intelligence collecting as well as examples of how it’s provided unique intelligence “if such examples exist.” Twenty-one Democrats, four Republicans, and an Independent sign the letter.

During this time, I hear and read a lot of opinions from colleagues, viewers, friends, and strangers about the government’s secret collec- tion of data. Many of them say they don’t mind if the government collects their information.

“They’re welcome to look at anything I have,” says one acquaintance. “I’m not breaking any laws.”

Part of that sentiment may come from the fact that we long ago began trusting nearly every aspect of our private lives to credit card companies, banks, electronic mail, and Internet connections. Despite the dire warnings we hear every day about identity theft and other se- rious threats, such problems account for a relatively small proportion of the number of transactions we conduct. Every day, without giving it a second thought, we expose ourselves to dozens of opportunities for our personal information to be compromised, but for the most part we suffer few serious consequences. Also, many Americans have come to accept the idea that for the government to help keep us safe in a post-9/11 reality, it must be able to use diverse tools and methods, even if that means sacrificing some measure of our privacy and liberty. On top of that, the social media culture has dramatically faded privacy boundaries. We post everything from the embarrassingly inappropriate to the intensely private. Some view privacy as having be- come an old-fashioned, overrated notion.

By implication, the people who are happy to trust their personal communications to the government are conferring trust upon whoever and whatever the government may become in the future. What’s more, they fully trust each and every person who may gain access to the information. These people don’t foresee a time when there may be facets of the government that aren’t benevolent. They don’t envision the possibility of dishonest players in the mix. To them, the motivations of the government and all those who are in it will always and forevermore be good: their government would never break the law, violate ethics, or exploit private information for inappropriate use.

I’m not quite there.

To be continued...

[hr]Read excerpt #1 here: The Computer Intrusions: Up at Night

#2: Big Brother: First Warnings

#3: The Computer Intrusions: Disappearing Act

#4: The Incredible, Elusive "Verizon Man"

#5: I Spy: The Government's Secrets

#6: Computer Intrusions: The Discovery

#7: Notifying CBS About the Government Computer Intrusions

#8: The MCALLEN Case: Computer Intrusion Confirmed 

#9: The Disruptions Continue

#10: Revelations in the Government Computer Intrusion

#11: Obama Leak “Witch Hunt”

#12: Obama’s War on Leaks 

#13: The Computer Intrusions Become Public

#14: The Govt. Computer Intrusions: Word Spreads

#15: My Computer Intrusion and the National Connection 

#16: URGENT dispatch

#17: Clapper’s False Testimony

The problem with Fake Science: it's rampant

This investigative report may lead you to question much of what you hear and read about scientific and medical studies. It's a cautionary note issued by respected industry leaders who say unseen interests are exerting enormous control over research and what is-- or isn't-- published. Their startling claim: that a large percentage of articles in prestigious medical journals are simply not to be believed. We begin with Dr. Marcia Angell of Harvard, a pioneer in the medical journal field.

Dr. Marcia Angell: I think physicians and the public have come to believe that drugs are much better and much safer than they really are. 

What makes Dr. Marcia Angell's skepticism so remarkable is where she places much of the blame: on researchers and medical journals. That includes the prestigious New England Journal of Medicine, where she worked for 20 years and was its first female Editor in Chief from 1999 to 2000. 

Sharyl: Most people probably think an article is in a journal, probably written at a university based on independent study, and that's that. 

Angell: It used to be that way, as you describe it, pretty simple, and it began to change as the pharmaceutical industry became richer, more powerful, more influential, and began to take over the sponsorship of probably most clinical research.

Read the rest of the report and watch the video at the Full Measure link below:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/fake-science-08-06-2017

The Govt's Pro-Vaccine Medical Expert: Vaccines Can Cause Autism in "Exceptional" Cases, After All

Today we investigate one of the biggest medical controversies of our time: vaccines. There’s little dispute about this much-- vaccines save many lives, and rarely, they injure or kill. A special federal vaccine court has paid out billions for injuries from brain damage to death. But not for the form of brain injury we call autism. Now—we have remarkable new information: a respected pro-vaccine medical expert used by the federal government to debunk the vaccine-autism link, says vaccines can cause autism after all. He claims he told that to government officials long ago, but they kept it secret.

Hear from Robert F. Kennedy, Junior, Chairman and Chief Legal Counsel, www.childrenshealthdefense.organd other officials in the Full Measure investigation, and watch the video here:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/the-vaccination-debate

Dr. Andrew Zimmerman's full Affidavit on alleged link between vaccines and autism that U.S. govt. covered up

The following is the full sworn Affidavit and curriculum vitae for Dr. Andrew Zimmerman, the world-renowned pro-vaccine pediatric neurologist specializing in autism. He says as an expert witness for the government defending vaccines in vaccine court in 2007, he told the government that vaccines can cause autism in "exceptional" cases, but says the government hid the information and misrepresented his opinion.

Watch the replay of the full Full Measure investigation here: Vaccine Debate

Dr. Zimmerman's experience:

Order the New York Times bestseller "The Smear" today online or borrow from your library
Full Measure is broadcast Sundays to 43 million US households on ABC, CBS, FOX, NBC, Telemundo and CW stations owned by Sinclair Broadcast Group. Replays at FullMeasure.news anytime.
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