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Sharyl Attkisson

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Why is the Department of Justice still fighting so hard in Attkisson computer intrusion case?

Sharyl Attkisson (shown here prior to testimony to Congress about her case) with attorney Tab Turner (left) and computer forensics analyst Don Allison (right)

Under ordinary circumstances, the Department of Justice would investigate and prosecute a case against those responsible for an unlawful intrusion into a national journalist's computers and work.

So why is the Department of Justice is fighting so hard against the Attkisson computer intrusion case -- instead of providing justice?

See a video update below.

Read more about the Attkisson computer intrusion case, including a summary of the forensic evidence here.

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.

A horrific American tragedy many have forgotten: The Jonestown Massacre

More than 900 American men, women and children died in the Jonestown Massacre in Guyana

Update: Watch the Full Measure TV cover story now at this link: http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/surviving-jonestown

It’s been 41 years since the socialist cult leader Jim Jones took more than 900 of his American followers to their graves.

How was Jones allowed to operate unfettered in San Francisco, then in Guyana, South America amid many disclosures of abuse from former followers and their families?

Jackie Speier says it was in large part because of Jones' political connections in San Francisco and beyond.

Speier was a young Congressional aide 41 years ago who went to investigate the "Jonestown" cult compound. Her boss, Rep. Leo Ryan, was murdered on that trip by cult members-- and she was shot five times.

Today, Speier is herself a U.S. Congresswoman and tells us her story Sunday on Full Measure.

Also this week, should the future of electric cars in the U.S. include billions of your tax dollars?

Americans have already spend billions powering America’s  electric car industry. Those subsidies are now phasing out. President Trump wants to end them entirely but some members of Congress are pushing to continue or expand them.

Add into the mix the fact that China is the dominant force in the global electric car market and looking to gobble up more of the share.

Lisa Fletcher will examine what lies ahead.

And-- Scott Thuman milks a snake.

Watch Sunday! HOW TO WATCH FULL MEASURE and TV STATION LIST

https://sharylattkisson.com/full_measure_station-list/

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.

No station in your city? There's a new way you can watch Full Measure anytime, anywhere on our new streaming service: STIRR. Download the free STIRR app on your phone. It's also available on Roku, Apple TV and Fire.Live on STIRR: Choose any home station and then watch the first run of Full Measure each week there on the landing page at 10am. On Demand on STIRR: Scroll down to "Explore More," Scroll over to the "News" box, and Full Measure is the third item at "Nation and World." Watch anytime!


Ex-U.S. intel analyst arrested and charged with leaking to the press

Predator drone

Another alleged leaker could bite the dust...

A third alleged government leaker has been arrested and charged with improperly providing information to The Intercept news organization.

31-year old Daniel Hale is a former U.S. intelligence analyst. He would have been about 26-years old in 2014 when he allegedly obtained 17 documents while working for a defense contractor, and allegedly provided them to The Intercept.

The documents pertained to a U.S. military drone program that was the subject of an expose published in The Intercept in 2015 entitled "The Drone Papers." It revealed details about the Obama administration's use of drones for "targeted" assassinations in the Mideast and Africa.

Hale was arrested in Nashville, Tennessee today and faces up to 50 years in prison for allegedly improperly leaking government documents.

Under U.S. law, experts say it is not illegal for news organizations to receive improperly obtained documents unless the organization or its representative encouraged or arranged illegal activity to obtain them.

Read the Wall Street Journal on the case article below:

https://www.wsj.com/articles/ex-intelligence-analyst-arrested-for-leaking-classified-information-to-the-intercept-11557418741

Fight government overreach and double-standard justice by supporting the Attkisson Fourth Amendment Litigation Fund for Attkisson v. DOJ and FBI for the government computer intrusions. Click here.

"Media...sold a bunch of snake oil" -- Sen. Grassley on Trump-Russia probe

Today, the Democrat-led House of Representatives Judiciary Committee voted 24-16 (along party lines) to hold Attorney General William Barr in contempt over his refusal to turn over the unreacted version of the Mueller Report on Trump-Russia collusion.

Next, the matter will be taken up by the full House of Representatives.

Meantime, the Republican head of the Senate Finance Committee, Chuck Grassley, took to the Senate floor to comment on the Mueller report and the media's response to it.

Many in the media seem to be unhappy with the results of the Mueller Report or embarrassed that the world knows they sold a bunch of snake oil for the past two years. And now the jig is up.

I hope the media will pursue the origins of the Russian collusion investigation with the same vigor as they’ve pursued the collusion narrative.

It would go a long ways, then, to res)tore the media's damaged credibility.

And knowing how all this started will help us prevent such a fiasco from ever happening again. 

--Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa)

Watch Sen. Grassley's statement by clicking the link below:

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.

Refuting Letter to Editor About Vaccine Claims

The following is a response to a Letter to the Editor of SC Now in South Carolina written by a physician. The letter contained misinformation, incomplete information and false information.

Dear Editor:

The letter "Vaccines given to children are beneficial” from C.D. Bardi, MD, published Sunday in the Morning News, contains a disturbing combination of false information and disinformation.

In referring to me as “a journalist known for her anti-vaccine bias,” Bardi borrows a play from the smear playbook of pharmaceutical industry propagandists who attempt to controversialize and discredit journalists and scientists reporting on vaccine safety issues.

As an investigative reporter (formerly of CBS News and now “Full Measure with Sharyl Attkisson”), I’ve repeatedly reported on the benefits of vaccination – as well as challenges and safety issues. This is no more “anti-vaccine” than my reporting on drug industry corruption is “anti-medicine” or reporting on Firestone tire dangers is “anti-tire.”

Through the years and with help from contacts inside the pharmaceutical industry and government, I discovered a great deal of information is widely misrepresented by reporters, physicians, the vaccine industry and government. My reporting has received recognition from the national Emmy awards and has been cited positively in a peer-reviewed, published medical journal.

To be clear, as I reported: the federal government’s pro-vaccine expert in court cases, Dr. Andrew Zimmerman of John’s Hopkins, a world renowned pediatric neurologist, recently signed a sworn affidavit stating that he long ago told federal officials that vaccines can cause autism, after all, in “exceptional” cases. He goes on to say the government covered up and misrepresented his opinion in court.

There is a current complaint about this before the Department of Justice. Zimmerman’s findings are in line with what has been expressed by the head of CDC immunization safety, former head of the National Institutes of Health Dr. Bernadine Healy and many other noted scientists and studies: Vaccines may trigger autism in a susceptible subgroup of children. Some conditions the government has acknowledged that make children susceptible include mitochrondrial disorder and Tuberous Sclerosis.

As for a some of the additional false statements in Dr. Bardi’s letter:

>> 1. "The problem is that Zimmerman presented no actual evidence to support his opinion.”

False, as described above.

>> 2. "Yet his opinion was misrepresented as new evidence by Attkisson.”

False.

>> 3. "All of these published studies … showed no link between autism and the MMR vaccine. …”

False. Many peer-reviewed, published studies and scientists have found links, including some conducted by the CDC (although the links are explained in different ways).

>> 4. "Routine administration of … vaccines given to children are [sic] absolutely beneficial.”

This lacks important context. According to the CDC, no vaccine is beneficial or recommended for all children. For example, the CDC recently stated that the MMR vaccine should not be given to children with "a parent, brother, or sister with a history of immune system problems.”

Lastly, I would say that Bardi’s letter title would be more accurate if it read “Vaccines given to children are largely beneficial.” Four billion dollars in payments for vaccine injuries have been paid to families in the little-known federal vaccine court.

One trick, say scientists, is identifying which children might suffer reactions to which vaccines so that they can be saved while maintaining a robust vaccine program for the rest.

The other trick is cutting through a pervasive disinformation propaganda campaign.

Sharyl Attkisson, Investigative Correspondent

Read the letter at SC Now by clicking the link below:

https://www.scnow.com/opinion/letters/article_9f7b2f64-70d7-11e9-ade3-c7d61876bbc8.html

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.

Shades of Grey: A disturbing follow up to our story on allegedly false sex charges

The accuser who claimed she was raped by liberal PR pro Trevor FitzGibbon (above) has now retracted her allegations. But where does FitzGibbon go to get his reputation back?

The accuser "retracts and withdraws" her statements against the man she accused: Trevor FitzGibbon.

When we reported our Full Measure cover story "Shades of Grey," we explained the risk of how the #MeToo environment can be weaponized. Dishonest figures can accuse their enemies of sexual abuse and hope that "they will be believed," as victims, with few questions asked.

In our story, we profiled the story of the liberal public relations agent Trevor FitzGibbon.

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.

FitzGibbon claimed he was falsely accused of rape as part of a large smear campaign, possibly to controversialize him for his support of Bernie Sanders over Hillary Clinton, and also for his representation of entities some on the left targeted, such as WikiLeaks, Julian Assange and Bradley (later Chelsea) Manning.

Trevor FitzGibbon was smeared by sex allegations that were never prosecuted, just like his client, Julian Assange; and WikiLeaks associate Jacob Applebaum.

FitzGibbon, like Julian Assange, was hit with sex accusations yet never prosecuted. The accusations came after internal documents from a government contractor showed an organized campaign to target and controversialize Assange, WikiLeaks and those associated with the group.

FitzGibbon admitted sexual contact with Radack, but claimed it was a consensual affair. He turned over to police sexually explicit photos and text messages she allegedly sent to him. He also eventually sued Radack (who declined our interview request due to the pending litigation).

FitzGibbon alleged that he and Radack had a consensual relationship. He produced photos and text message to police and in court.

The charges against FitzGibbon, a relative unknown, were oddly picked up by international news outlets such as The New York Times, Huffington Post, The Guardian, The Washington Post and other liberal publications that are often "on narrative," such as The Nation, Slate and Medium.

Fitzgibbon says that as a result of the publicity branding him as a criminal or predator, his reputation was destroyed and he lost his business and his career opportunities.

Now, an interesting development.

On Friday, Radack issued a retraction of "every allegation" she has " ever made against Fitzgibbon."

Watch the original Full Measure report at the link below:

http://fullmeasure.news/news/cover-story/shades-of-grey-07-24-2018

Below is a transcript of our original Full Measure report:

From the fall of Hollywood’s Harvey Weinstein to the political demise of New York Attorney General Eric Schneiderman, there’s no shortage of sexual abuse allegations against famous men. The MeToo movement has liberated women to talk about long-tolerated misconduct. But it’s also led to whispers about the grey area between improper harassment and criminal assault. And questions about whether it’s now easier for people to get smeared by unproven — or even false— allegations. Today’s cover story is: Shades of Grey.

FitzGibbon: If you’ve got two believable stories, you’ve got— you can take anybody down.

Trevor FitzGibbon claims it happened to him. His story begins in December 2015, when he ran his own progressive PR firm and got a fateful call from his company’s vice president.

FitzGibbon: He said, “You have a problem.” And I said, “What's wrong?” He said, “Well, in the past 48 hours, H.R. has gotten six phone calls all accusing you of sexual harassment.” And my heart kind of fell.

Before that call, FitzGibbon had angered some fellow liberals for his support of Bernie Sanders over Hillary Clinton and for representing clients connected to WikiLeaks. He represented Bradley Manning— who passed classified materials to WikiLeaks. Edward Snowden— the government whistleblower WikiLeaks once helped. The journalist Snowden leaked to: Glenn Greenwald And he represented WikiLeaks and its founder Julian Assange. The WikiLeaks connection will come into play later. FitzGibbon says after the HR phone call, before he even knew who his accusers were, they had gone to the national press.

FitzGibbon: And it's really interesting to see the Huffington Post because at first they say it was harassment. A few hours later it was assault. And then, that got spun into rape culture.

Inside of 2 weeks— FitzGibbon’s staff had turned on him, his company shut down. With help from feminist lawyer Gloria Allred, three women filed criminal complaints. One of them, attorney Jesselyn Radack, claimed FitzGibbon— “touched her breast” against her will, then days later, when she met up with him at a hotel, raped her.

FitzGibbon: It was 100 percent consensual.

Sharyl: You did have sexual relations with her?

FitzGibbon: Yes but that was 100 percent consensual.

Here’s where shades of grey color the picture. FitzGibbon admits to “inappropriate behavior” toward female employees, and to cheating on his wife with Radack, but nothing criminal. Evidence he gave prosecutors included friendly sexual text messages and photos allegedly sent by Radack before and after the alleged assaults.

FitzGibbon: Text messages, photos that she sent me after the first alleged assault took place. And then afterwards, being very happy.

After reviewing the text messages and conducting a lengthy investigation, prosecutors “declined to file criminal charges.”

Sharyl: So for a year you lived under the cloud of possible prosecution for rape?

FitzGibbon: Yes.

Sharyl: And what happened in that timeframe to you?

FitzGibbon: I couldn't defend myself in the press. I was vilified in the national media and on social media and the accusers— and whatever political machine came after me— used it to poison the water to make it almost impossible for me to get work.

Sharyl: You lost your business.

FitzGibbon: I lost the business, lost my home.

Attorney Nicole Smith defends companies against sexual harassment claims and isn’t connected to FitzGibbon’s case. She says the current environment can breed confusion and even false allegations.

Smith: “Me too” movement is phenomenal, but it also is a catchphrase for conduct that really, is every scope of any kind of allegation from a slight that someone might feel that they had been disrespected to actual criminal conduct. So couching all of that conduct in one term is difficult then when you try and unravel individual claims.

Some victims’ advocates say accusers should automatically be believed. The recent conviction of entertainer Bill Cosby for allegations that were 14 years old seemed to make the case. But it’s not always cut and dry.

Sharyl: Are you finding that in this environment of “women should be believed” that there is a downside?

Smith: So often in these cases, I think what we're faced with is it's a “He Said, She Said” thing. There's not a lot of witnesses, if any, ever present. So to say that you're just always going to believe the woman really doesn't get us anywhere.

It may also open the possibility that accusations can be weaponized to smear a target for hidden motives. FitzGibbon began to suspect he was the target of a smear right after it was announced he wouldn’t be charged yet he was attacked in a national press release.

FitzGibbon: And that press release was a letter signed by 72 national organizations pledging to never hire me or work with me again.

Sharyl: What did you think of when you saw that?

FitzGibbon: It was one of the first times that I realized that something else is at play.

He’d sold his house, was split from his wife and children, including infant twins and was too discredited to find work. FitzGibbon now thinks powerful people may have come after him because of his PR work for enemies of the mainstream Democratic party and the stateincluding WikiLeaks. In 2016, WikiLeaks published embarrassing insider emails of Hillary Clinton officials and the Democratic National Committee, and WikiLeaks was accused of working with Russia and being pro-Trump. There’s little doubt there are powerful efforts to smear WikiLeaks and its supporters. Government contractors circulated this dossier in 2010, a wide-ranging strategy to combat “The WikiLeaks Threat,” to “sabotage or discredit” WikiLeaks supporters using “social media exploitation” and “disinformation.”

FitzGibbon: It shows the photos and the names of the individuals that were supportive of WikiLeaks or worked with WikiLeaks

Sharyl: And the PR documents specifically discussed going after these people.

FitzGibbon: Ways to discredit to target to smear them.

Several targets were FitzGibbons’ clients. Two were discredited by sex claims alleged in the media but never prosecuted just like FitzGibbon. WikiLeaks’ Assange and a key associate Jacob Appelbaum. With Assange, two women told a journalist that consensual sex with him when he was in Sweden for a speech, turned into rape. A rape investigation hung over his head for seven years—before it was dropped last year. Anonymous accusers started a website to publicly accuse Appelbaum of groping and rape. He was forced out of his job, but also never charged. In the end, a smear campaign can often take advantage of the uncertainty surrounding a case of 'he said she said.' And that’s the problem. FitzGibbon asked a lawyers’ disciplinary body to punish Radack for alleged false allegations. They declined, saying the “question was close” but “The truth about what occurred in private is sometimes hard to prove.” Even if someone isn't ultimately prosecuted, they may find they’re tainted just because this aura of inappropriateness or criminality lingers over them regardless of what the outcome is in the court of law.

Smith: And the costs that they incur, obviously representing themselves in that proceeding.

Sharyl: Did you do any of these things— any of these things that the women said you did?

Fitzgibbon: In regards to being flirtatious?

Sharyl: Anything that they said was inappropriate?

Fitzgibbon: You know, I'll say this. I was accused of assault and I was accused of first degree assault which is rape. And I didn't do any of that.

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.


Unaccompanied children entering U.S. are usually released into custody of illegal immigrants already here

An eye-opening report on what happens to "unaccompanied children" or "UAC" after they cross the border into the United States.

Andrew Arthur with the Center for Immigration Studies highlights statistics showing where most of these children are placed once in the U.S.:

Generally, most [Unaccompanied Minors] are released to a parent or other family member in this country, the majority of whom do not have lawful status in the United States.

--Andrew Arthur, Center for Immigration Studies

Arthur cites statistics made public by Sen. Ron Johnson, R-Wisconsin.

  • Between July 2018 and January 2019, 23,445 UACs were released to sponsors.
  • Of those sponsors, 18,459 (79%) had no status in the U.S.
  • 21 were under final orders from removal.
  • Six were denied asylum and were appealing to federal court.
  • 638 (3%) were in removal proceedings.

Below are excerpts from Arthur's findings. The entire report can be read here.

Flawed U.S. laws and policies encourage UACs to make that trip to the United States, and encourage the parents and other relatives of those UACs to pay criminal organizations to bring them to this country. In particular, [under the Trafficking Victims Protection Reauthorization Act of 2008 (TVPRA)], the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) is required to turn all of those UACs from non-contiguous countries (that is every country other than Canada and Mexico) over to the Office of Refugee Resettlement (ORR) in the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) within 48 hours of the point at which they were identified as UACs, for prompt placement in the least restrictive setting "that is in the best interest of the child". In FY 2018, the average UAC spent 60 days in an ORR shelter before being released.

There is strong evidence to support the conclusion that many, if not most, of these sponsors are the ones who are paying the smugglers to bring these UACs to the United States. For example, consider the order of Judge Andrew Hanen of the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Texas in U.S. v. Nava-Martinez, in which the defendant was convicted of smuggling a Salvadoran minor to the United States:

This is the fourth case with the same factual situation this Court has had in as many weeks. In all the cases, human traffickers who smuggled minor children were apprehended short of delivering the children to their ultimate destination. In all cases, a parent, if not both parents, of the children was in this country illegally. That parent initiated the conspiracy to smuggle the minors into the country illegally. He or she also funded the conspiracy. In each case, the DHS completed the criminal conspiracy, instead of enforcing the laws of the United States, by delivering the minors into the custody of the parent living illegally in the United States. In response to this Court's inquiry about this policy in the instant case, the Government responded with a copy of the 1997 Flores v. Reno ... settlement agreement and a copy of a portion of the Homeland Security Act. No other explanation was offered — no doubt because there is no explanation. The DHS has simply chosen not to enforce the United States' border security laws.

According to U.S. Customs and Border Protection statistics, through March 2019, 35,898 UACs have been apprehended by the U.S. Border Patrol entering the United States illegally in the first six months of FY 2019. That compares to 50,036 in all of FY 2018, and 41,435 in FY 2017.

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.

Unscientific Poll: What Should Happen to Trump?

In last week's SharylAttkisson.com poll, we asked if President Trump should be impeached, harassed but not impeached, supported, or none of those options.

An overwhelming 90% of respondents said that Trump should be supported.

Full results are below:

President Trump should be…

Impeached (2%)

Harassed but not impeached (>1%)

Supported (90%)

None of the above (7%)

I don’t know (>1%)

Don't forget to check out the most recent poll on the sharylattkisson.com homepage.

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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