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Archive for August 5th, 2008

Law Professor tells tech conference: plans to shut down Internet already on deck

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Steve Watson, infowars.net
August 5, 2008

Amazing revelations have emerged concerning already existing government plans to overhaul the way the internet functions in order to apply much greater restrictions and control over the web.

Lawrence Lessig, a respected Law Professor from Stanford University told an audience at this years Fortune’s Brainstorm Tech conference in Half Moon Bay, California, that “There’s going to be an i-9/11 event” which will act as a catalyst for a radical reworking of the law pertaining to the internet.

Lessig also revealed that he had learned, during a dinner with former government Counter Terrorism Czar Richard Clarke, that there is already in existence a cyber equivalent of the Patriot Act, an “i-Patriot Act” if you will, and that the Justice Department is waiting for a cyber terrorism event in order to implement its provisions.

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Government lab both source of anthrax attacks as well as false reports linking them to Iraq, Islam

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Glenn Greenwald, salon.com
August 1, 2008

The FBI’s lead suspect in the September, 2001 anthrax attacks — Bruce E. Ivins — died Tuesday night, apparently by suicide, just as the Justice Department was about to charge him with responsibility for the attacks. For the last 18 years, Ivins was a top anthrax researcher at the U.S. Government’s biological weapons research laboratories at Ft. Detrick, Maryland, where he was one of the most elite government anthrax scientists on the research team at the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Disease (USAMRIID).

The 2001 anthrax attacks remain one of the great mysteries of the post-9/11 era. After 9/11 itself, the anthrax attacks were probably the most consequential event of the Bush presidency. One could make a persuasive case that they were actually more consequential. The 9/11 attacks were obviously traumatic for the country, but in the absence of the anthrax attacks, 9/11 could easily have been perceived as a single, isolated event. It was really the anthrax letters — with the first one sent on September 18, just one week after 9/11 — that severely ratcheted up the fear levels and created the climate that would dominate in this country for the next several years after. It was anthrax — sent directly into the heart of the country’s elite political and media institutions, to then-Senate Majority Leader Tom Daschle (D-SD), Sen. Pat Leahy (D-Vt), NBC News anchor Tom Brokaw, and other leading media outlets — that created the impression that social order itself was genuinely threatened by Islamic radicalism.

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‘Please kill me,’ bus beheading suspect pleads as history of psychiatric treatment surfaces

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Joe Friesen, The Globe and Mail
August 5, 2008

ERICKSON, MAN. — Vince Li stood in a Manitoba courtroom Tuesday pleading for it all to end.

“Please kill me,” he said quietly, in a court packed with journalists and members of the victim’s family.

Mr. Li, 40, is accused of stabbing and beheading 22-year-old Tim McLean, a complete stranger, who was sleeping next to him on a Greyhound bus bound for Winnipeg on July 30.

The judge ordered a psychiatric assessment to determine whether Mr. Li is fit to stand trial and whether he can be held criminally responsible for his actions. He has so far refused to speak to a lawyer.

Court was told Mr. Li spent four days in a Canadian psychiatric facility at some point
, but the Crown is still trying to determine where and when. Crown lawyer Joyce Dalmyn said Mr. Li has not yet offered any explanation for what occurred aboard Greyhound 1170.

“No explanation, no note, almost nothing verbal,” Ms. Dalmyn said. “There is nothing to indicate it’s anything other than a random and unprovoked attack.”

Meanwhile, new details have emerged about how Mr. Li spent the 24 hours before Mr. McLean was killed, including that he spent a night on a public bench, sold a laptop to a teenager that contained personal letters and photos, as well as a note that expressed feelings of guilt at leaving China, and confusion about life in Canada.

Mr. Li first stepped off the Greyhound bus from Edmonton in the tiny western Manitoba town of Erickson, population 456, just before 6 p.m. last Tuesday, July 29.

He strode across the street from the convenience store, which doubles as a bus depot, carrying five pieces of luggage under his arms. He was wearing small black sunglasses, a green shirt and a hat, and looked perfectly put together, like a businessman, said Darren Beatty, a 15-year-old student who works at a local gas station.

“The whole time I seen him he never took off his sunglasses,” Mr. Beatty said.

He watched him sit down on a shaded wooden bench next to the Co-Op grocery on Main Street, arranging his bags around him and resting his arms as though he were sitting in an arm chair.

He didn’t move for the next three hours.

Around 9 p.m., he walked into the M and M store, where David Dauphinais’s husband Darren was working alone.

Mr. Li hung around for what felt like ages, making Darren extremely uncomfortable. He called his husband, saying he was afraid to walk home.

“He was really freaked out,” Mr. Dauphinais said. “He said there was something about this guy that made the hair on the back of his neck stand up.

“Darren’s a treaty Indian. When Darren gets nervous about somebody, I listen.”

Mr. Dauphinais rushed back from a meeting, only to find that Mr. Li had left the store when another customer walked in.

That night neither could sleep, fretting about the mysterious stranger. Mr. Dauphinais got out of bed at 3 a.m. and went down to check on his store. He saw Mr. Li sitting across the street, bolt upright on the bench, eyes wide open.

The following morning, Mr. Beatty was riding his bike when he saw a laptop on the curb. The screen was open and a hand-written sign said “$600 for sale, or best offer.”

He circled on his bike, noted the brand-new Acer 4200, and approached Mr. Li.

He offered $100, then immediately lowered it to $50. Mr. Li contemplated for a moment.

“That’s probably enough to get you a bus ticket,” Mr. Beatty said. They settled on $60, plus a bag.

“I just thought he was a guy having a hard time,” he said, adding he never felt threatened. “He seemed lost. As I was talking to him about [the laptop] he muttered something about America. He had a thick accent so it was hard to understand.

“He seemed really happy to get some money in his hand.”

Mr. Beatty brought the computer home, and, after returning to get the password from Mr. Li (it was 7777), he unwittingly opened a window on the world of a man who would soon become one of Canada’s most notorious accused killers.

He found more than 20 resumes, each tailored to a specific job application. One was for a police service, one for McDonald’s, one for Wal-Mart. He also found dozens of photos that he assumed were taken by Mr. Li, including several of a black military plane that he thought were taken by an amateur in mid-air. There were photos of a formal Chinese military parade, and others of Chinese models in clothes, and some of mountains in British Columbia.

There was a letter in Mandarin, translated with Google translator, which seemed to be addressed to someone back in China. It said he was happy to be free, living under beautiful, free skies, but that he felt guilty for leaving China, and that everything in Canada was not as he expected, Mr. Beatty said.

Mr. Li, who recently worked as a newspaper deliveryman, immigrated to Canada in 2001 under the federal skilled worker program, though it’s not known whether it was Mr. Li or his wife Anna who qualified. He’s believed to be a Canadian citizen.

On the morning after the attack, Mr. Beatty got a call from the RCMP at work, saying an incident had occurred involving the man who sold him his laptop. An officer visited his home and seized the computer, saying he might get restitution but wasn’t likely to get the laptop back.

“I asked the cop, “Did he use my money to buy a weapon? But he said, ‘No, not that we know of,’ ” Mr. Beatty said.

Mr. Li returned to the M and M store around 1:30 p.m. Mr. Dauphinais said he stood waiting in an alley behind the store for the next 41/2 hours for the bus to arrive.

Just before 6 p.m., he boarded the Greyhound in Erickson, not Brandon as several witnesses reported, and sat down near the front. After a cigarette break in Brandon, he moved to the back and sat next to Mr. McLean.

Court was told Tuesday that when he was arrested, Mr. Li was carrying a plastic bag containing a human nose, ear and part of a mouth, believed to be Mr. McLean’s, and that police officers saw him hacking at and eating the corpse. During the ensuing standoff RCMP officers heard him say, “I have to stay on the bus forever.”

Mr. Li’s next court appearance is Sept. 8.

Source

Journalists beaten for reporting on separatist attacks in China

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

ABC News Australia
August 5, 2008

Uighur separatists killed 16 police when they attacked a police station using a truck, home-made explosives and knives.

The two organisations said Masami Kawakita, a 38-year-old photographer from the Chunichi Shimbun newspaper’s Tokyo headquarters, and Shinji Katsuta, a 37-year old reporter from Nippon Television Network’s China General Bureau, both suffered light injuries.

The two men arrived in Kashgar late on Monday and were stopped by force when covering the incident.

They were allegedly taken inside a nearby hotel, and were beaten before being released two hours later.

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Psych tests ordered for beheading suspect

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Mike McIntyre, Winnipeg Free Press
Tuesday, August 05, 2008

PORTAGE LA PRAIRIE, Man. – Shocking details of the gruesome decapitation slaying aboard a Greyhound bus last week emerged in court here Tuesday, prompting a judge to order a psychiatric assessment of accused killer Vincent Li.

The 40-year-old man, facing second-degree murder charges, refused to speak to a lawyer or the judge, communicating only through grunts and vigorous ‘yes’ or ‘no’ head shakes.

At one point, however, he was overheard to say “Kill me now.”

Crown attorney Joyce Dalmyn outlined the entire case against Li, who is charged with the unprovoked killing of Tim McLean, 22.

The case has made headlines around the world and produced an outpouring of grief and anger.

Dalmyn went through all of the evidence in an attempt to show why a mental health evaluation was required which will determine if Li is fit to stand trial and whether he can be held criminally responsible. There was no publication ban.

Dalmyn said Li attacked a sleeping McLean for absolutely no reason, stabbing him as many as 40 times while 36 horrified passengers looked on.

He got McLean on the ground and then sat on top of him, in the aisle of the bus, stabbing away with a large hunting knife, court was told.

A passenger called 911 while the Greyhound driver pulled over at the side of the Trans-Canada Highway, allowing all the passengers to flee.

The driver then locked the bus with just Li and a mortally wounded McLean inside.

Police rushed to the scene and surrounded the bus. Officers then watched in horror as Li began carrying around McLean’s severed head and appeared to be taunting them with it, court was told.

Li said nothing to police, said Dalmyn, except for telling them at one point: “I have to stay on this bus forever.”

At one point, Li began cutting other body parts off and was even seen to consume some of them, she said.

There were audible gasps in the packed courtroom at this revelation, including from several members of McLean’s family.

“He appeared to be focused on his victim. He did not appear to be drunk or high,” said Dalmyn. “This was a completely random attack. There’s been no link established (between Li and McLean).”

Police didn’t storm the bus, waiting until Li smashed out a window and tossed a bloody knife and scissors toward them.

Li then jumped from the broken window – cutting his hand on the shards of glass – and was arrested.

Police searched him and found several severed body parts, including an ear, nose and partial mouth, inside a plastic bag in his pocket, court was told.

Police tried to interview Li but he refused to make verbal responses, said Dalmyn. However, he did mutter that he was “guilty” at least four times, she said.

Court was told that Li’s common-law wife claims the man spent four days in a psychiatric ward in Alberta recently. RCMP are trying to confirm the claims.

Li came to Canada in 2001, living in Winnipeg for nearly five years before leaving his wife and moving to Edmonton, court was told.

He had been exhibiting “bizarre and unusual behaviour” in recent weeks and months, said Dalmyn.

Legal Aid assigned lawyer Randy Janis to try and speak with Li this weekend. He told court Tuesday morning that Li is refusing to communicate with him.

Li confirmed by shaking his head that he doesn’t want a lawyer and doesn’t agree with the court-ordered psychiatric assessment.

A Winnipeg psychologist had 30 days to complete a detailed report on Li which will determine what the next step in the process is. Their first meeting is set for Thursday.

Li’s case has been adjourned until Sept. 8.

Source

Nephew of slain native chief slain in turn by police – tribal leaders call for inquiry

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

CBC News
August 5, 2008

Officers ‘forced to’ use firearm after Taser fails to subdue man: police

Manitoba native chiefs are calling for a public inquiry into the Winnipeg Police Service in the wake of the police shooting that killed Craig McDougall over the weekend.

McDougall, 26, was shot by officers who responded to a disturbance call around 5 a.m. Saturday at a house on Simcoe Street, in the city’s West End neighbourhood. Police said he had refused repeated demands to drop a knife.

At a press conference Tuesday morning outside the house, family members said police had been called to deal with a fight between two young women, and that officers had arrested McDougall’s father.

McDougall had just arrived home and was talking on a cellphone to his girlfriend as the situation unfolded, family members said. The girlfriend heard everything, including the gunshots, they said.

One witness at the news conference insisted there had been no knife, and several others said he posed no danger to police because he had been on one side of a metre-high fence, while the officers were on the other.

(more…)

RCMP spied on… Rita MacNeil?

Tuesday, August 5th, 2008

Jim Bronskill, Canadian Press
August 5, 2008

Feminist singer of ‘women’s lib songs,’ among dozens under scrutiny in early ‘70

OTTAWA–RCMP spies infiltrated the women’s movement in the early 1970s, monitoring marches and rallies to keep an eye on feminists including Rita MacNeil, who would become a much-admired Maritime songstress.

An undercover source reporting on a March 1972 gathering of women’s liberation groups in Winnipeg compiled biographical sketches of several delegates, noting MacNeil was in attendance from the Toronto Women’s Caucus.

“She’s the one who composes and sings women’s lib songs,” says the RCMP memo, portions of which remain secret.

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