Was Homeland Security
Behind Attack On 911 Investigative Journalist Bollyn?
Christopher Bollyn | September 1 2006
The "undercover tactical unit"
involved in the assault and TASERing of a 9/11 investigative journalist
at his Chicago-area home was most likely an operation ordered by the
Department of Homeland Security, according to a former high-ranking
police official.
Since the bizarre and brutal attack against me by three heavily-armed
agents at my family home in Hoffman Estates , Illinois , a number of
people have commented on the seemingly odd use of an "undercover
tactical unit" to respond to a non-emergency 911 call.
Some of the most insightful comments have come from a former senior
police official from Illinois , who spoke to a source close to AFP.
The former police chief was familiar with the details of the incident
when he made his comments.
The former police chief said the deployment of an armed tactical unit
wearing body-armor on a "gang suppression" exercise in a neighborhood
in which there are no gangs or history of gang activity was itself "highly
unusual."
Although the Hoffman Estates Police Department (HEPD) C.O.P. Clint Herdegen
told AFP that the tactical unit was on a normal patrol, this unit of
heavily-armed men had never been seen before in the neighborhood prior
to the night before the incident.
That this undercover unit of three agents, supposedly on a mission of
"gang suppression," wearing tactical gear and ready to "do
battle," would "blow their cover" by responding to a
non-emergency 911 call from a concerned citizen about their presence
in his neighborhood is one of the many anomalies of the incident.
The Illinois Terrorism Task Force (ITTF) has released a video entitled
"Homeland Security Begins at Home: 7 Signs of Terrorism."
Patty Thompson, spokesman for the task force, told AFP that calling
911 to report unidentified armed men is exactly what the ITTF would
expect a citizen to do.
Why did a covert "gang suppression" unit leave their so-called
"patrol" and respond to a non-emergency 911 call? Did these
three unidentified heavily-armed agents have any right to respond to
a 911 call and did they have any right to come onto my property without
a warrant or probable cause, legal experts ask.
The Chicago Police Department has guidelines, specifically adopted "to
ensure that the anti-gang loitering is not enforced in an arbitrary
or discriminatory way." Under the CPD guidelines, the Ordinance
may be enforced only by trained officers in "areas frequented by
members of criminal street gangs." Such gangs do not exist in my
neighborhood, and never have.
In the opinion of the former police chief, the operation appears to
have been ordered by the Department of Homeland Security (DHS), under
the leadership of the Israeli-American dual national Michael Chertoff.
Chertoff, who has been the subject of several of my articles about 9/11
and the failure of his department to respond to Hurricane Katrina, is
the son of Livia Eisen, one of the first agents of Israel's military
intelligence agency, the Mossad.
The purpose of the heavily-armed "gang suppression" squad
in a neighborhood in which there has never been any gang activity was
meant to "intimidate, scare, and harass" me, according to
the former police chief. The "gang" that was being monitored
was, in fact, me, he said, but the tactical unit and the local police
chief were probably not aware of the political nature of the target.
The tactical unit had probably only been told that I was a "very
dangerous person."
The reason for the conspicuous presence of the heavily-armed agents
around my house was to create a provocation and confrontation, according
to the former police chief, in which I would be arrested and humiliated.
The local chief-of-police would probably have been the only local official
who had direct connection with DHS, according to the former chief. DHS
maintains contacts with local police departments and is able to give
orders to local officials, according to its mandate.
"More than 87,000 different governmental jurisdictions at the federal,
state, and local level have homeland security responsibilities,"
according to the DHS "organization" webpage dedicated to "Department
Subcomponents and Agencies."
Experts have "come to expect" that DHS will involve local
police playing "a large role in many aspects of homeland security,"
according to a September 2005 article by David Thacher, "The Local
Role in Homeland Security," in Law & Society Review.
A recent analysis, cited by Thacher, indicated that local police would
be "developing new areas of investigative expertise, cooperating
much more with federal law enforcement and intelligence agencies, working
more closely with the military, [and] increasing their levels of surveillance
over their communities."
An inquiry to DHS asking about the precise nature of its interaction
with local police departments went unanswered. Lt. Richard Russo, spokesman
for the HEPD, however, told AFP that senior officers had gone through
"command post" training with DHS and a private New York-based
contractor called BowMac.
Lt. Dennis Carroll of the neighboring Schaumburg P.D. told AFP that
DHS and the Schaumburg police "work very well together." Asked
who handles the communication with the federal agency, Carroll said
there is a liaison at the police department.
Russo did not know if local police are required to act on orders given
by DHS, but said they probably would, in the spirit of mutual co-operation
with the federal agency.
A former Swedish marine and public safety expert who works in France
commented on the odd use of a "gang suppression team" to respond
to a 911 call. The decision by the HEPD to send the undercover unit
to explain their presence was "illogical," according to the
European public safety expert.
"This was provocative, threatening, and very unusual," he
said. "This is not the way to handle a 911 call. The gang suppression
team should have been instructed not to get out of the car. There was
no need to get out of the car, but if there were, the proper thing would
have been to send only one man to the house without a gun. Or
better, wait for an official, marked police car with a uniformed officer
to explain the situation.
"Police teams of any kind always operate in pairs," he said.
"Police teams never operate in formations of three for obvious
reasons."
"Gangs are local juveniles with some strange ways," the France-based
public safety expert wrote, "Easily handled by social workers,
not undercover agents in body armor. So the statement by the HEPD that
undercover agents were on a gang suppression mission seems to be an
outrageous lie." In France , gang suppression units always have
a person videotaping their actions. In my case, there was no filming
by the police and my wife was physically prevented from taking photographs.
The police have offered two explanations about why the "gang suppression"
unit was sent, both of which seem illogical. The first is that this
was the nearest unit, although the 911 call was not an emergency call,
but rather a request for an explanation more than 30 minutes after I
had observed the heavily-armed unit near my house. However, after the
arrival of the tactical unit, a half-dozen squad cars and two emergency
vehicles immediately appeared on the scene to support the action.
The uniformed police, however, clearly had orders not to intervene and
stayed back until after the assault and arrest had been completed. This
raises the question, what were the orders given to the tactical unit
and to the uniformed police?
An AFP supporter contacted the Palo Alto Police Department ( Calif.
) to ask if citizens, believing that armed federal agents are spying
on their home without probable cause, are entitled to call 911 and report
the apparent threat to their safety?
"Yes, one can call 911," the Palo Alto police spokesperson
said. "But," she added, "if federal agents are watching
a home, in most cases, the local law enforcement is notified, and they
are in contact with the federal agents, but local police are not to
reveal which agency is involved or why." Nor are the local police
allowed to intervene in any action taken by the federal agents.
Chief Herdegen of the HEPD subsequently told AFP that the tactical unit
had returned to my house to identify themselves and explain their purpose.
However, despite repeated requests, the three men refused to do either.
Why would the HEPD send a unit who could not, or would not, identify
themselves? The refusal by the armed agents to identify themselves as
legitimate police officers prevented them from resolving the 911 call,
and allowed them to exacerbate the situation leading to the violent
assault.
---------------------------------------------------

Prison
Planet.tv: The Premier Multimedia Subscription Package: Download and
Share the Truth!
Please help
our fight against the New World Order by giving a donation. As bandwidth
costs increase, the only way we can stay online and expand is with your
support. Please consider giving a monthly or one-off donation for whatever
you can afford. You can pay securely by either credit card or Paypal.
Click here
to donate.
FAIR
USE NOTICE