Sunday, April 28, 2013

Slow Saturday Special: Marathon Bomber in Military Custody

Yeah, I know what they said about rights and the courts and all, but ipso de facto:

"Bombing suspect moved to Devens" by Brian MacQuarrie and Liz Kowalczyk  |  Globe Staff, April 27, 2013

A military installation. Being treated as an enemy combatant whether they say so or not.

A week after he was caught in a manhunt that captivated the nation, Boston Marathon bombing suspect Dzhokhar Tsarnaev sat in a federal prison hospital in Ayer, confined to a small, single-person cell linked to the outside only by a narrow window and a slot for food.

What office is he waiting to live in?

The small boat in which he had hidden was removed Friday from a Watertown backyard by the federal investigators building a case against him.

And in ways big and small, Greater Boston seemed to be regaining its rhythm, with commerce in full swing on Boylston Street, where two shrapnel-filled bombs killed three people and injured more than 260 on April 15.

Well, hey, it's all been done before.

US marshals confirmed Friday morning that they had transferred Tsarnaev overnight to Federal Medical Center Devens, an all-male prison facility about 40 miles west of Boston that holds 1,044 inmates and pretrial defendants on the sprawling former Army base.

Former now Federal. What's the difference? I thought it was going to be put to economic and business uses, and they turned it into a pri$on?

Tsarnaev was transported from Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, where some bombing victims and their families became upset that the bombing suspect was being treated in the same hospital.

Boston bloodlust.

Now, Tsarnaev is one of seven pre­trial inmates in the Federal Bureau of Prisons hospital at Devens, consigned to a high-security section where he is receiving regular medical attention and scrutiny from guards, said prison spokesman John Colautti.

Translation: He's being interrogated and tortured to comply with the narrative. Or they are squirreling away their agent and he's going along.

Other inmates there include 300 chronic-care prisoners, some of whom need mental-health services, and individuals in the federal prison system’s only residential treatment program for sex offenders. Twenty inmates are serving life sentences. 

Translation: pharmaceutical and other compulsory drugs may be involved.

Tsarnaev’s transfer ended a wrenching week for bombing victims and staff at Beth Israel Deaconess, which offered counseling from social workers, psychiatrists, and clergy....

They had a hard time fulfilling their oaths, huh? Good thing Iraqi doctors didn't feel that way about Jessica Lynch.

Governor Deval Patrick, after a ceremony to recognize executive branch workers who had assisted the bombing response, defended to reporters the decision to order residents in Boston and elsewhere into their homes during the hunt for Dzhokhar Tsarnaev....

At the same news conference, State Police Colonel Timothy Alben rejected the suggestion that there had been a breakdown in data-sharing between federal and state anti­terrorism agencies.

Related: Boston Globe Suffering a Nervous Breakdown

Alben said the State Police had sufficient access to FBI data. “I think we need to put this to rest. Last Thursday, when we went to the media and disclosed all of those photographs and videos, it was because we did not have an identification of who this subject was,” Alben said.

See: Sunday Globe Special: Running of the Bull

It's an avalanche these days.

However, questions persist on Capitol Hill and elsewhere about why Tamerlan Tsarnaev had appeared on CIA and FBI watch lists, but did not receive greater scrutiny before or immediately after the bombings.

We know the answers; they are just playing the game of propaganda.

The Patrick administration said it is asking for federal relief for small businesses and private nonprofit organizations affected by the bombings.

Related: Slow Saturday Special: Loans Lift Boston in Wake of Bombing

Who is that going to help? 4% interest?

The governor and legislators also have asked for a review of state benefits that the Tsarnaev family received. In a letter to Representative David Linsky, a Natick Democrat who chairs the House Post Audit and Oversight Committee, state officials said the parents of the brothers had received food stamps and Aid to Families with Dependent Children while Dzhokhar and Tamerlan lived with them in Cambridge.

See: State Government Sponsored and Supported Boston Bombers

There is that and the car the FBI gave him and the money made from dealing drugs.

Anzor and Zubeidat Tsarnaev, the parents of the brothers, received food stamps from October 2002 to November 2004, and from August 2009 to December 2011, according to the letter. Anzor Tsarnaev received cash assistance from Aid to Families with Dependent Children from January to March 2003, and again from August 2009 to June 2010, according to the state Department of Transitional Assistance.

Translation: The CIA and FBI will take care of you and your family if you cooperate (until they want to double-cross you), and this is what happens if you do not.

Also, Tamerlan’s wife, Katherine Russell Tsarnaev, received food stamps and welfare benefits from September 2011 to November 2012, according to the letter. Tamerlan stayed at home to care for the couple’s young daughter, now 3, while his wife often worked seven days a week as a home health aide.

Linsky said Friday he was awaiting follow-up documentation from the department that would detail specific amounts of aid the family received. The governor and Linsky said they will examine the records to determine whether the Tsarnaevs were entitled to the benefits.

“We’ll do our own analysis of the documents. I will go where the evidence takes us,” Linsky said.

Yeah, right.

“My intent is to always protect the taxpayers. I want to make sure that those benefits were rightfully authorized and received.”

What the web version added:

Meanwhile, the Associated Press reported that US intelligence agencies added the mother of the Boston bombing suspects to a government terrorism database 18 months before the bombings. 

That's because she is a smart, a lawyer, and on to them.

The AP, citing two officials briefed on the investigation, reported that the CIA asked for the Boston terror suspect and his mother to be added to a terrorist database in the fall of 2011, after the Russian government contacted the agency with concerns that both had become religious militants. About six months earlier, the FBI investigated Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his mother, Zubeidat Tsarnaeva, also at Russia’s request, one of the officials said. The FBI found no ties to terrorism.

We know why. This is all breaking down.  

Related:

Six Zionist Companies Own 96% of the World's Media
Declassified: Massive Israeli manipulation of US media exposed
Operation Mockingbird

Of course, they would tell the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth about all this.

The Globe reported Thursday that Russian authorities had warned the FBI about Tamerlan Tsarnaev and his mother. However, according to the official quoted by the Globe, Tsarnaev’s mother was not placed on US terror watchlist, as her son was, an indication that the FBI did not consider her a threat.

The lies, I mean, the story is still evolving. You know, like a pooh.

--more--"

More military flavor and feel for you:

"On that fateful Friday, the troopers said, they dealt with a flood of false alarms from a jittery public, and had been flying over suburban streets and backyards in their helicopter, with its forward-looking infrared camera used to record heat images and its 3 million candlepower Night Sun searchlight."

Then they HAD TO HAVE KNOWN he was in the BOAT!