Man’s lawsuit contends his son accosted by deputy over toy pistol

“A Bonita Springs man is suing the Collier County sheriff and a deputy, alleging his civil rights were violated when he was arrested after questioning why his 5-year-old son couldn’t bring a lime green toy gun into the county fair. Maytham Mahmoud, 47, contends sheriff’s Sgt. Gaines Myers, who was then the fair’s security director, used excessive force and violated his rights by throwing him to the ground and kneeing him after he asked why the toy gun wasn’t allowed.” Continue reading

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Man Sues TSA For $5 Million Following Peanut Butter Arrest

“An Arizona man who was arrested at the behest of the TSA, following a wisecrack over a jar of peanut butter is suing the federal agency for $5 million. Frank Hannibal, 50, was detained and dragged from LaGuardia Airport recently by police after a run-in with TSA agents over the jar of gourmet sandwich spread. ‘The liquid oil that separated from the peanut butter had them baffled,’ Hannibal told the New York Daily News. Hannibal spent the next 24 hours in a cell, during which time he was fed a peanut butter sandwich by cops who later charged him with the felony of ‘falsely reporting an incident’.” Continue reading

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The DEA Wants to Use a $37 Pot Sale to Seize a $1.5 Million Anaheim Building

“As it happens, the building owners are the kind of clients whom defense attorneys love to represent: law-abiding citizens. Specifically, they are married, in their late middle age and from Irvine. The wife is a dentist; the husband a computer engineer who holds a government security clearance, which is why the latter asked to remain anonymous. Although he feels he has done nothing wrong, he explains, even being accused of allowing his property to be used to break the law is embarrassing to him.” Continue reading

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Welcome to the Malware-Industrial Complex

“Freshly discovered weakness in a popular piece of software, known in the trade as a ‘zero-day’ vulnerability because the software makers have had no time to develop a fix, can command prices in the hundreds of thousands of dollars from defense contractors, security agencies and governments. This trade in zero-day exploits is poorly documented, but it is perhaps the most visible part of a new industry that in the years to come is likely to swallow growing portions of the U.S. national defense budget, reshape international relations, and perhaps make the Web less safe for everyone.” Continue reading

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Cyber security battle looms after Obama issues executive order

“President Barack Obama’s order aimed at ramping up protection from cyberattacks will address only a small portion of threats and sets up a fresh battle in Congress over legislation. Obama acted this week after two failed attempts in Congress to pass measures to protect critical infrastructure from computer attacks. Because most of the networks in question are in private hands, officials say they must rely on voluntary reporting by industry of any cyber threats or attacks. Legislation would be needed to shield businesses from liability when they do report potential malware threats.” Continue reading

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At least 20 prisoners still missing from CIA ‘black sites’

“In one of President Barack Obama first acts in the White House, he ordered the closure of the CIA’s so-called ‘black-site’ prisons, where terror suspects had been held and, sometimes, tortured. But the CIA’s prisons left some unfinished business. In 2009, ProPublica’s Dafna Linzer listed more than thirty people who had been held in CIA prisons and were still missing. Some of those prisoners have since resurfaced, but at least twenty are still unaccounted for. A few emerged from foreign prisons after the turmoil of the Arab Spring. One has died.” Continue reading

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Veterans Administration again accused of covering up the causes of ‘Gulf War Syndrome’

“An alarming but widely-ignored report by a federal panel of high-level scientists charged with advising the government on the disease accused the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs of covering up the true nature and cause of a profound systemic illness that medical scientists have traced to wartime exposures — including neurotoxins, depleted uranium, and microbes, among others. The culprits, the committee claims, are bureaucrats in the Veterans’ Administration Office of Public Health, whose coordination of a robust strategic plan for Gulf War Illness (on which RAC had consulted) has ‘gutted’ science, ‘focus,’ ‘energy,’ and budgetary resources.” Continue reading

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US Killed Hundreds of Children in Afghanistan, Says New Report — US Rejects Report

“The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child reported that it was ‘alarmed’ by reports that hundreds of children died as a result of the U.S.-led war in Afghanistan because of a ‘reported lack of precautionary measures and indiscriminate use of force,’ the Los Angeles Times reported over the weekend. The UN report also condemned the arrest and detention of children in Afghanistan. But the U.S. military said ‘the reports were unsubstantiated and cited figures from the U.N. Assistance Mission in Afghanistan showing that the vast majority of civilian deaths and injuries in Afghanistan over the last several years were caused by insurgents.'” Continue reading

Continue Reading US Killed Hundreds of Children in Afghanistan, Says New Report — US Rejects Report