#1
lol

http://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/crime/files-for-lawsuit-against-cia-stolen-in-break-in-at-uw/

Police are investigating the theft of material related to a recent lawsuit filed against the CIA. It is missing after a suspicious break-in at the UW’s Center for Human Rights.

University of Washington police are investigating a break-in at the offices of the director of the school’s Center for Human Rights after a computer and hard drive containing sensitive information about a recent lawsuit against the Central Intelligence Agency were stolen.

The center says that the office of Dr. Angelina Godoy was burglarized sometime between Thursday and Sunday. Godoy reported that the hard drive contained “about 90 percent of the information” relating to research in El Salvador that is the foundation of a freedom-of-information lawsuit the center filed Oct. 2 against the CIA.

The lawsuit alleges that the CIA has illegally withheld information about a U.S.-supported El Salvador Army officer suspected of human-rights violations during that country’s civil war in the 1980s against leftist rebels.

“While we have backups of this information, what worries us most is not what we have lost but what someone else may have gained,” the center wrote in a news release about the thefts. “The files include sensitive details of personal testimonies and pending investigations.”

Godoy acknowledged that the theft could be a “common crime,” but said in the statement that there are disturbing and suspicious elements to the burglary.

Only Godoy’s office was targeted and there was no sign of a forced entry, according to the release. It appeared that the office was carefully searched rather than ransacked and the door was relocked upon exit, “characteristics that do not fit the pattern of an opportunistic campus theft,” the release says.

Finally, the timing of the theft — just weeks after publicity surrounding the CIA lawsuit — “invites doubt as to potential motives.”

Contacted by The Seattle TImes, Godoy declined to comment, citing the ongoing investigation.

UW Police Maj. Steven Rittereiser confirmed the burglary and said a detective has been assigned to the case. He confirmed that there was no sign of a forced entry.

“Right now, we just know that we have some missing hardware,” he said.

The release says officials have contacted sources in El Salvador, “many of whom have emphasized parallels between this incident and attacks Salvadoran human rights organizations have experienced in recent years.” A concern at the center is that the stolen information could endanger rights workers in that country.

The lawsuit was filed by the UW, the Center for Human Rights and Mina Manuchehri, a fellow at the Center for Human Rights and a third-year law student at the UW. It alleges the agency has illegally withheld records regarding retired Salvadoran Army Col. Sigifredo Ochoa Perez, who is under criminal investigation in that country for alleged involvement in massacres of civilians.

It also alleges the CIA has withheld documents pertaining to UCLA professor Philippe Bourgois, a survivor of a 1981 massacre of hundreds of civilians that was allegedly led by Ochoa Perez in the El Salvadoran town of Santa Cruz.



I sure this one gets solved!!

#2
lmao
#3
i hope the boys in blue bring the curtain down on this criminal caper
#4
https://ceinquiry.wordpress.com/2015/10/21/suspicious-burglaries/
#5
what happens if the cops arrest ciamen in the middle of one of these burglaries
#6

littlegreenpills posted:

what happens if the cops arrest ciamen in the middle of one of these burglaries


there would be a shootout and either way someone would win

anyways

my friend posted this to me

and i was like aww hell naw

this was probably an El Salvadorean

CIAttleite

u get me

maybe not even employed

but ex-contra or whatever

#7
just kidding plz don't murder me cia/elsalvadoreans reading this

babyfinland

*points fingers in gun shape*

peace
#8

littlegreenpills posted:

what happens if the cops arrest ciamen in the middle of one of these burglaries


medals for everyone!

#9

littlegreenpills posted:

what happens if the cops arrest ciamen in the middle of one of these burglaries

that department gets a discount on their next order of military hardware and some random black kid will end up in jail

#10

shriekingviolet posted:

littlegreenpills posted:

what happens if the cops arrest ciamen in the middle of one of these burglaries

medals for everyone!

Oh yeah, thats right, sorry.

discount on military equipment, and a random black kid gets heroically shot by the brave officers in fear for their lives

#11
I am reminded of a pending case at the Hague in which Timor-Leste is suing Australia for eavesdropping on official discussions in 2004 in order to gain advantage in extremely lucrative negotiations over oil deposits in the Timor Sea. ASIO openly raided the offices of Timor's Australian lawyer and the home of their star witness, a former ASIS officer who led the 2004 spying operation. Timor had to sue Australia to get the documents back, and they were successful. However, the star witness is still under threat of prosecution by Australian authorities, who have cancelled his passport, meaning he is currently unable to travel to the Hague to testify.

The current battle (which is ongoing) is part of a decades-long history of Australia attempting to take advantage of Timor-Leste's considerable resources, going back to its support of Indonesia's 1975 annexation of Timor. The Indonesian occupation led to the death of around 200,000 Timorese, and the country remains tragically poor.

HBkyNwsQXlI&start;=15