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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWelcome to the War on Drugs
The DEA Once Turned A 14-Year-Old Into A Drug Kingpin. Welcome To The War On DrugsPosted: 10/24/2014 10:47 am EDT
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2014/10/24/dea-war-on-drugs_n_6030920.html
Just months after Edward Snowden unmasked the National Security Agency's massive domestic spying program, The New York Times broke news of the Hemisphere Project, which pairs experts from telecommunications giant AT&T with federal and local anti-drug officials, including DEA agents. It gives law enforcement officials access to "every call that passes through an AT&T switch -- not just those made by AT&T customers -- and includes calls dating back 26 years," according to the Times report. That's around 4 billion call records every day, each logged with information on the location of callers. The official government slideshow describing the program suggested it had been helpful in tracking drug dealers who frequently change phones, or use disposable "burner" phones.
snip>
If an arrest was made, agents were instructed to hide the fact that the initial tip had come from SOD, and instead use "normal investigative techniques to recreate the information." This process is sometimes used to hide case details from prosecutors and judges, as well as defense attorneys. Several lawyers told Reuters that the practice could jeopardize a defendant's constitutional right to fair trial and cover up evidence that might otherwise be inadmissible.
snip>
Confidential informants -- sometimes referred to as "snitches" -- are crucial assets in the DEA's war on drugs. In 2005, the agency told the Justice Department it has around 4,000 of these sources actively working for it at any given time. Many of these informants are recruited after being caught for drug crimes themselves, and are offered a chance to work for the DEA as a way to earn a reduced sentence. Others have made a full-time profession out of informing, a controversial practice in itself, as some critics suggest it encourages longtime informants to go after and potentially entrap low-level dealers rather than higher profile targets.
Informants can make tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars helping the government prosecute and convict drug dealers, with payment often contingent on how much money is seized in an eventual bust. That's how Andrew Chambers Jr. once made a name for himself as "the highest-paid snitch in DEA history," with a 16-year career as a federal informant between 1984 and 2000, during which time he reportedly netted as much as $4 million in government money, nearly half of it from the DEA. A report earlier this year in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette found that Chambers was only one of the agency's million-dollar informants.
snip>
If an arrest was made, agents were instructed to hide the fact that the initial tip had come from SOD, and instead use "normal investigative techniques to recreate the information." This process is sometimes used to hide case details from prosecutors and judges, as well as defense attorneys. Several lawyers told Reuters that the practice could jeopardize a defendant's constitutional right to fair trial and cover up evidence that might otherwise be inadmissible.
snip>
Confidential informants -- sometimes referred to as "snitches" -- are crucial assets in the DEA's war on drugs. In 2005, the agency told the Justice Department it has around 4,000 of these sources actively working for it at any given time. Many of these informants are recruited after being caught for drug crimes themselves, and are offered a chance to work for the DEA as a way to earn a reduced sentence. Others have made a full-time profession out of informing, a controversial practice in itself, as some critics suggest it encourages longtime informants to go after and potentially entrap low-level dealers rather than higher profile targets.
Informants can make tens or even hundreds of thousands of dollars helping the government prosecute and convict drug dealers, with payment often contingent on how much money is seized in an eventual bust. That's how Andrew Chambers Jr. once made a name for himself as "the highest-paid snitch in DEA history," with a 16-year career as a federal informant between 1984 and 2000, during which time he reportedly netted as much as $4 million in government money, nearly half of it from the DEA. A report earlier this year in the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette found that Chambers was only one of the agency's million-dollar informants.
Very good article. Much more info at source.
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Welcome to the War on Drugs (Original Post)
Live and Learn
Oct 2014
OP
RKP5637
(67,111 posts)1. Just like wars, the 'war on drugs' is just another source of revenue. Quite pathetic. n/t
zappaman
(20,606 posts)2. Saw them in April
New album is really great!
truedelphi
(32,324 posts)4. ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^n/t
Initech
(100,081 posts)3. The war on drugs needs to end now!!!!
There were D.A.R.E. people outside my local supermarket and they asked me to donate, I said "I don't support the republican backed war on drugs, the system of propaganda that it's created, and I most definitely don't support the for profit prison system in America." And moved on.
truedelphi
(32,324 posts)5. And then those DARE people followed you home! n/t
Live and Learn
(12,769 posts)6. The DARE program has proven to be ineffective.
I don't know why anyone would still support it.
JaneyVee
(19,877 posts)7. If the war on drugs was about anything other than just...
Locking up black people, the DEA would be raiding music festivals instead.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)8. That's crazy talk. The War on Drugs is working exactly as intended ...
v
Live and Learn
(12,769 posts)9. Wow, that is quite a chart.
Do you have the link for that?