GOP Senators vs. the Transportation Security Administration

Shorter GOP : there has never been a more important time than the aftermath of a failed terrorist attack on an airplane to ensure the Transportation Security Administration doesn’t have a leader. Apparently someone told Sen. Jim DeMint (R-S.C.) that it’s bad optics to keep a hold on Errol Southers, the TSA administrator-designate, because of DeMint’s hostility to organized labor . So now they’re turning to a more legitimate basis for the hold: Southers’ inconsistent answers about the time in the late 1980s when he inappropriately accessed a federal database to spy on the man his wife cheated on him with. Southers, a former FBI agent, both alerted the Senate to his inconsistencies and called them “inadvertent.” He clearly needs to explain further. But are we to believe the GOP is actually concerned that the TSA chief might be inappropriately aggressive in violating terror suspects’ privacy? That this is something the Republicans in the Senate, who lined up behind the Bush administration’s warrantless surveillance programs, ever cared about? And let’s be real: are they not going to cut some slack to a guy who abused his power one time to spy on his wife’s boyfriend? Whatever happened to the defense of marriage! Still, watch the Democrats miss an opportunity to nail the GOP for putting hostility to working Americans ahead of national security. Read the original post: GOP Senators vs. the Transportation Security Administration

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GOP Senators vs. the Transportation Security Administration

FBI issues check scam warning – Port Huron Times Herald

FBI issues check scam warning Port Huron Times Herald The FBI Detroit Field Office is reminding the public to be on guard for business check scams . There have been reports recently of fake checks being mailed … and more

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FBI issues check scam warning – Port Huron Times Herald

Intelligence Official: Info From State Department on Abdulmutallab Was ‘Very Thin’

After State Department spokesperson Ian Kelly told reporters yesterday that an interagency process led by the National Counterterrorism Center was responsible for revoking Umar Farouk Abdulmutallab’s visa into the U.S. — and not the State Department, which issued the visa — perhaps some pushback was inevitable. Indeed, a U.S. intelligence official who requested anonymity to discuss an ongoing case said that the State Department provided that process with “very thin information” and “definitely not enough” to yank Abdulmutallab’s visa and put him on the no-fly list. Recall that in November, Abdulmutallab’s father told officials at the U.S. embassy in Abuja, Nigeria that Abdulmutallab might pose a threat. Embassy officials put Abdulmutallab on a master database of non-specific threat information called TIDE , run by the National Counterterrorist Center. And that’s where the first bureaucratic chokepoint in Abdulmutallab’s saga is found.  The NCTC uses a set of criteria agreed upon by the State Department, the FBI, the Department of Homeland Security and the intelligence community to determine who goes to a different list, known as the Terrorist Screening Database, run by the FBI. And if someone is on that database, that would prompt visa revocation and placement on the no-fly list. So what’s the standard for moving from TIDE to the Terrorist Screening Database? “Specific derogatory information leading to reasonable suspicion” that someone poses a terrorist threat. And what State got from Abdulmutallab’s father — and disseminated through the TIDE process — didn’t fit the bill, the U.S. intelligence official said. “Realistically, a lot of guys call every day and say their relative or former friend is dangerous,” the official explained. To use that level of information to revoke someone’s visa or stop someone from flying would be “unmanageable. We’d probably shut down air traffic.” It remains to be seen if that’s going to be a compelling explanation to lawmakers furious that Abdulmutallab got on Northwest Airlines Flight 253. But unless Congress weakens the standards for moving from TIDE to the Terrorist Screening Database, that’s the way it is. “If Congress wants us to change the criteria,” the official said, “we will move from there.” But buyer beware. See original here: Intelligence Official: Info From State Department on Abdulmutallab Was ‘Very Thin’

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Intelligence Official: Info From State Department on Abdulmutallab Was ‘Very Thin’

Solomon Dwek, key witness in FBI’s NJ corruption probe, admits role in real … – NJ.com

NJ.com Solomon Dwek, key witness in FBI's NJ corruption probe, admits role in real … NJ.com He is accused of depositing a bogus $25 million check in a closed PNC Bank account in Eatontown. After writing a check on that account he allegedly … and more

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Solomon Dwek, key witness in FBI’s NJ corruption probe, admits role in real … – NJ.com

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