Feds ‘knew smuggler’ in Border Patrol case
January 30th, 2007 . by ChrisHmm, the plot thickens and the noose tightens around the Feds that knew the smuggler they used to convict the two Border Patrol agents.
Sphere: Related ContentHmm, the plot thickens and the noose tightens around the Feds that knew the smuggler they used to convict the two Border Patrol agents.
Sphere: Related ContentFOIA documents reveal at a secret meeting last year whether or not to make changes in policy and release the “vision” at the end or bring it forth immediately. These traitors to America decided it was best to do it stealthily under our noses.
Sphere: Related ContentDon’t you feel so sorry for them? Let’s all set up a fund for them, so they don’t go hungry.
Guess who voted against making English the national language, but voted for illegal immigrants to benefit from Social Security? Read the awful truth here.
Sphere: Related ContentCongressman Dana Rohrabacher recently halted his investigation into the Oklahoma City bombing saying he was impeded by a less than cooperative Justice Dept. Two prisoners suspiciously died while in federal custody, one after saying he had information that would “blow the lid off the Oklahoma City Bombing case.” The first prisoner resembled the 2nd.
Sphere: Related ContentWhen they started checking the victim’s background, they discovered she had an arrest warrant out for her….The woman says she was not aware there was a warrant out for her, and her attorney says it appears to be a paperwork error. She was not allowed bond, and the medical staff at the jail refused to give her the Morning After Pill
Sphere: Related ContentThe underreported story of the US’s private army in Iraq. These soldiers cost taxpayers much more than our own military, but then that’s the whole point: a transfer of public funds to private pockets. The fact that theirs deaths don’t add to the official US death toll is just icing on the cake.
Sphere: Related ContentPrint StoryEmail StoryA Kanawha County delegate said she’s worried that the privacy of the state’s high school students has been neglected, with schools and teachers free to release students’ names to military recruiters even when the student hasn’t expressed an interest in the armed forces.
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