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JOHN KERRY'S FBI FILES STOLEN

 
 
Titus
 
Reply Sun 28 Mar, 2004 08:32 am
FBI documents about FBI surveillance of John Kerry in the early 1970s have been stolen, according to their owner.

http://www.cnn.com/2004/US/West/03/27/kerry.documents/index.html

The burglary was described as, "very clean. They didn't break any glass. They didn't take anything like cameras sitting by. It was a very professional job."

Who would've stolen Kerry's FBI files? And so professionally too?
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Type: Discussion • Score: 1 • Views: 870 • Replies: 10
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doglover
 
  1  
Reply Sun 28 Mar, 2004 11:50 am
Re: JOHN KERRY'S FBI FILES STOLEN
Titus wrote:
FBI documents about FBI surveillance of John Kerry in the early 1970s have been stolen, according to their owner.

The burglary was described as, "very clean. They didn't break any glass. They didn't take anything like cameras sitting by. It was a very professional job."

Who would've stolen Kerry's FBI files? And so professionally too?


Shades of Watergate! Shocked

Couple of months ago, some reporter asked Bush what he is going to do with a huge campaign chest of $100 million plus raised during the primary season, when he didn't have any opponent? Bush's response: Just watch us!

Hopefully the media will follow up on this story.
0 Replies
 
farmerman
 
  1  
Reply Sun 28 Mar, 2004 12:27 pm
JONNYGATE
0 Replies
 
Titus
 
  1  
Reply Sun 28 Mar, 2004 05:44 pm
I fear if the owner of these files on Kerry makes too much noise, we'll read in the media that his body was found in a canyon somewhere in Marin County.

As I've said before, these globalists are very dangerous ghouls who will stop at nothing to realize their goal, and that goal is absolute power and dominance, and of course, the return of their hereditary pawn, George W. Bush, to the White House in November.
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Brand X
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Mar, 2004 08:50 am
I wonder who in the Demo party stole the files because the FBI places Kerry at a meeting in Nov. 1971 where anti-war Vietnam veterans were discussing the idea of murdering certain members of the Congress of the United States who were in favor of the Vietnam war. The idea was discussed, and the idea was rejected.

Kerry never bothered to report the plan to any authorities according to the FBI.
0 Replies
 
Titus
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Mar, 2004 09:17 am
The Democrats stole the files on Kerry? LOL!!!

This job reeks of GOP dirty tricksters: steal the files with the intent of finding some crumb in their content to use against Kerry in the campaign.
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Brand X
 
  1  
Reply Mon 29 Mar, 2004 09:26 am
Yeah, they stole them to feed their paper shredder it was hungry...LOL!

The info on his attendance in that meeting is already out so I don't see the files missing to be a big deal, except for the theives need to be dealt with, whoever they are.
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 Apr, 2004 05:23 am
Hanky panky?


Quote:
Crime, Politics and Kerry's Missing FBI Files
By Marc Morano
CNSNews.com Senior Staff Writer
April 09, 2004

(CNSNews.com) - The author who alleges that three boxes of FBI files dealing with Democratic presidential candidate John Kerry's anti-war group were stolen from his home last month, did not allow police officers the opportunity to process the crime scene.

The police report of the incident also neglects to mention that the Kerry campaign dispatched a messenger to the home of author Gerald Nicosia to pick up copies of the FBI files a week before the alleged theft of the documents.

CNSNews.com has obtained a copy of the police report related to the alleged theft of three of the 14 boxes containing FBI files that Nicosia was keeping in his home. Nicosia is the author of the book Home to War: A History of the Vietnam Veterans' Movement and is a Kerry supporter. In addition to the three boxes, Nicosia alleges that "several file folders have been removed from the remaining 11 boxes," according to the police report.

The March 26, 2004 report from the Twin Cities Police Department in Larkspur, Calif., noted that "there were no signs of forced entry into the residence" and the department confirmed Thursday that there were still no leads or suspects in the case.

Absent from the police report was any mention of the fact that the Kerry campaign had sent an aide to Nicosia's house in Corte Madera, Calif., to review the documents. Kerry's campaign dispatched the aide on the same day CNSNews.com reported that the FBI files showed Kerry was in attendance at a controversial 1971 meeting in Kansas City of Vietnam Veterans Against the War (VVAW).

That meeting allegedly involved the discussion of possibly trying to assassinate several U.S. senators still committed to the American war effort in Vietnam. Prior to the publication of the CNSNews.com article on March 18, Kerry had repeatedly denied being in attendance at the meeting.

Nicosia said he reached out to Kerry's campaign a week before the documents were allegedly stolen.

"Senator Kerry was obviously [at the Kansas City Meeting in 1971]. I called the Kerry office and said, 'You know, I think you folks really should look at these documents before you make any further statements,' Nicosia told Joe Scarborough, the host of MSNBC's Scarborough Country on April 2.

"And ... they immediately sent a messenger to my house, got copies of the documents and that evening Senator Kerry did issue a retraction and said based on the documents, he now believed that he was at that meeting," Nicosia added.

The police report noted that journalists, including those from the Los Angeles Times and CNN had had access to Nicosia's home. The report also indicated that a sliding glass door repairman had been granted access to the home. But there is no mention of the Kerry campaign having sent a representative there.

In a statement Nicosia submitted to the Twin Cities Police Department, which was included in the report on the alleged theft, he stated that, "the [FBI] documents have significant political value in the upcoming Presidential election, as they cast John Kerry in various lights, both good and bad."

Nicosia also did not want the alleged crime "scene processed," according to the police report.

The narrative of the police report filed by officer Theo Mainaris reads: "I checked the residence and I did not locate any signs of forced entry. After talking about that situation with Nicosia, he informed me he did not want the scene processed."

Detective Patrick Eddinger of the Twin Cities Police Department told CNSNews.com that Nicosia's refusal to have the scene processed was not "normal."

"It's not usually normal. Normally, we come in and we actually process the scene to see if we can find any fingerprints or anything else," Eddinger explained. "There was no force to anything in the residence -- what we could find -- in order to gain entry," he added.

Despite the lack of any evidence or leads, Nicosia is now publicly speculating that Republican Party operatives may have stolen the FBI documents from his home.

"I would say that the Republicans had the largest motivation," Nicosia told Scarborough last week. Scarborough said the case "almost sounds like a "West Coast version of Watergate, 2004."

When pressed on the issue, Nicosia went further in his accusations. "Oh, I would think it would be the Republicans, not John Kerry. I was cooperating with John Kerry. I'm a Kerry supporter," Nicosia said.

But Eddinger said he has no suspects at the moment. "It's an ongoing investigation. I am still trying to gather information," he said.

The Twin Cities Police department may seek some of that information from the Kerry campaign itself. "There is a couple of other people I need to talk to, including possibly the Kerry campaign," Eddinger said.

According to the police report, Nicosia alleged that the crime occurred on Thursday, March 25 while the house was empty from 2:30 p.m. until 5:30 p.m.


SOURCE
0 Replies
 
Foxfyre
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 Apr, 2004 10:37 am
Bravo Brand X for finding this. Of course this thread will probably come to a screeching halt while the 'I hate Bush' people post accusations elsewhere and hope you don't find those. Smile
0 Replies
 
Brand X
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 Apr, 2004 11:08 am
I figured it was someone in the Dem party that 'stole' them, looks like I may have been right.
0 Replies
 
BWShooter
 
  1  
Reply Fri 9 Apr, 2004 11:27 am
Brand X wrote:
I wonder who in the Demo party stole the files because the FBI places Kerry at a meeting in Nov. 1971 where anti-war Vietnam veterans were discussing the idea of murdering certain members of the Congress of the United States who were in favor of the Vietnam war. The idea was discussed, and the idea was rejected.

Kerry never bothered to report the plan to any authorities according to the FBI.

Kerry is innocent and that story was made up by the right wing faction of this country.
^sarcasm.
0 Replies
 
 

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