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bananas's JournalSamsung Offices Raided as Scandal Around President Park Grows
Source: Wall Street Journal
South Korean prosecutors raided the offices of Samsung Electronics Co. early Tuesday morning amid allegations that the South Korean technology company gave money to a close friend of President Park Geun-hye who has been accused of exerting influence over government affairs.
A spokesman for Seoul Central District Prosecutors Office confirmed that it seized documents from Samsungs office of external relations in Seouls Gangnam neighborhood. A spokeswoman for Samsung didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
The prosecutors raid on Samsung suggests that the growing political scandal could now be turning toward the countrys sprawling conglomerates, who have long been some of South Koreas most influential power brokers.
In recent days, the scandal has resulted in the resignation of the presidents chief of staff and four senior aides, and brought tens of thousands of protesters out into the streets of Seoul. Ms. Park, whose single five-year term is set to expire in about a years time, has seen her public-approval ratings sink to record lows amid calls for her resignation.
Read more: http://www.wsj.com/articles/samsung-offices-raided-as-political-scandal-widens-1478566324
CIA Releases Controversial Bay of Pigs History
Source: National Security Archive
- 2016 Change in FOI Law Overturns Agency Stonewalling
- CIA fought release for years, claimed draft would confuse the public
- National Security Archive FOIA case prompted Congresss 25-year sunset
The CIA today released the long-contested Volume V of its official history of the Bay of Pigs invasion, which it had successfully concealed until now by claiming that it was a draft and could be withheld from the public under the FOIAs "deliberative process" privilege. The National Security Archive fought the agency for years in court to release the historically significant volume, only to have the U.S. Court of Appeals in 2014 uphold the CIAs overly-broad interpretation of the "deliberative process" privilege. Special credit for todays release goes to the champions of the 2016 FOIA amendments, which set a 25-year sunset for the exemption: Senators John Cornyn, Patrick Leahy, and Chuck Grassley, and Representatives Jason Chaffetz, Elijah Cummings, and Darrell Issa.
Chief CIA Historian David Robarge states in the cover letter announcing the documents release that the agency is releasing this draft volume today because recent 2016 changes in the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) requires us to release some drafts that are responsive to FOIA requests if they are more than 25 years old. This improvement codified by the FOIA Improvement Act of 2016 came directly from the National Security Archives years of litigation.
The CIA argued in court for years backed by Department of Justice lawyers that the release of this volume, written by Agency historian Jack B. Pfeiffer, would confuse the public. National Security Archive Director Tom Blanton says, Now the public gets to decide for itself how confusing the CIA can be. How many thousands of taxpayer dollars were wasted trying to hide a CIA historian's opinion that the Bay of Pigs aftermath degenerated into a nasty internal power struggle? Archive senior analyst and Cuba Project Director Peter Kornbluh notes, We know now why the CIA attempted to cover up this document for so long. It is a vivid historical example of what Pfeiffer called the agency's dirty linen that CIA officials never wanted to air in public."
Read more: http://nsarchive.gwu.edu/NSAEBB/NSAEBB564-CIA-Releases-Controversial-Bay-of-Pigs-History/
Security Firm Running Dakota Access Pipeline Intelligence Has Ties to U.S. Military Work in Iraq and
Security Firm Running Dakota Access Pipeline Intelligence Has Ties to U.S. Military Work in Iraq and Afghanistan
10/31/2016 09:09 pm ET
Steve Horn
Research Fellow, DeSmogBlog
TigerSwan is one of several security firms under investigation for its work guarding the Dakota Access pipeline in North Dakota while potentially without a permit. Besides this recent work on the Standing Rock Sioux protests in North Dakota, this company has offices in Iraq and Afghanistan and is run by a special forces Army veteran.
According to a summary of the investigation, TigerSwan is in charge of Dakota Access intelligence and supervises the overall security.
The Morton County, North Dakota, Sheriffs Department also recently concluded that another security company, Frost Kennels, operated in the state while unlicensed to do so and could face criminal charges. The firms attack dogs bit protesters at a heated Labor Day weekend protest.
Law enforcement and private security at the North Dakota pipeline protests have faced criticism for maintaining a militarized presence in the area. The American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and National Lawyers Guild have filed multiple open records requests to learn more about the extent of this militarization, and over 133,000 citizens have signed a petition calling for the U.S. Department of Justice to intervene and quell the backlash.
The Federal Aviation Administration has also implemented a no-fly zone, which bars anyone but law enforcement from flying within a 4-mile radius and 3500 feet above the ground in the protest area. Dallas Goldtooth, an organizer on the scenes in North Dakota with the Indigenous Environmental Network, said on Facebook that DAPL private security planes and choppers were flying all day within the designated no-fly zone.
Donnell Hushka, the designated public information officer for the North Dakota Tactical Operation Center, which is tasked with overseeing the no-fly zone, did not respond to repeated queries about designated private entities allowed to fly in no-fly zone airspace.
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Dakota Access pipeline protesters crowdsource for $5,000, get $1 million
Source: Associated Press
CANNON BALL, N.D. - The crowdsourcing goal was modest: $5,000, enough to help a few dozen people camping in North Dakota to protest the nearby construction of the four-state Dakota Access oil pipeline. The fund has since topped a staggering $1 million.
The fund is among several cash streams that have provided at least $3 million to help with legal costs, food and other supplies to those opposing the nearly 1,200-mile pipeline. It may also give protesters the ability to prolong their months-long encampments that have attracted thousands of supporters, as the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe pursues the fight in court.
And as the number of protest-related arrests increased this week, so did contributions - the funds raked in more than $200,000 between Thursday and Friday alone.
But demonstrators are quick to note that the amount of money raised and what they have left isnt the same.
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Read more: http://www.cbsnews.com/news/dakota-access-pipeline-protesters-crowdsource-5000-get-1-million/
12 arrested in San Francisco in Dakota Access Pipeline protest
Source: San Francisco Chronicle
San Francisco police arrested a dozen people Monday who were protesting the Dakota Access Pipeline at Citibank headquarters in the city, officials said.
Demonstrators filled the street outside the building at 1 Sansome St. and filed into the lobby just before 9 a.m. carrying signs that read, Water is Life and Citi Dont Fund Dakota Access.
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The protestors locked themselves to one another to prevent access to the elevators in the building, said Laurel Sutherlin, a 39-year-old San Francisco resident who joined the protest.
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The protest, organized by Diablo Rising Tide, demanded that Citibank halt financing of the $3.8 billion crude oil pipeline project that is expected to span 1,168 miles.
Today was really about pulling the veil back and exposing [Citibanks] association with this bigger controversy, Sutherlin said. Citibank still has the opportunity to pull out.
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Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/bayarea/article/12-arrested-in-San-Francisco-in-Dakota-Access-10425925.php
Why your Facebook friends are checking in at Standing Rock
Source: CNN
Protesters are using a new weapon in their push to block the Dakota Access Pipeline: Facebook.
By Monday, hundreds of thousands of people had checked in at Standing Rock Indian Reservation on the social networking site.
But many of them weren't anywhere near the location where demonstrators have been picketing the controversial $3.7 billion pipeline.
A post circulating on Facebook gave one possible explanation for the surge in activity, claiming that the mass check-ins were organized to prevent local law enforcement from tracking protesters on social media.
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Read more: http://edition.cnn.com/2016/10/31/us/standing-rock-facebook-check-ins/index.html
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