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Strategies & Market Trends : Take the Money and Run -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Shoot1st who wrote (12640)8/2/2002 2:46:27 PM
From: Augustus Gloop  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17639
 
8/2/2002 12:12 (General)

WASHINGTON (AP) -- Lawmakers have been refusing requests by
the FBI that they take lie detector tests as part of an
investigation into leaks from a congressional inquiry into the Sept.
11 attacks, a leader of the inquiry said Friday.
Sen. Richard Shelby, the top Republican on the Senate
Intelligence Committee, said he refused to take the test and he
believes all other lawmakers did so as well.
"I don't know who among us would take a lie-detector test,"
said the Alabama senator. "First of all, they're not even admissible
in court and second of all, the leadership (of both parties) have
told us not to do that."
Shelby said he believes all 37 members of the House and
Senate intelligence committees, which are conducting the joint
inquiry, have been questioned by the FBI.
In an interview with Associated Press reporters, Shelby said
leaders of the inquiry realize they made a mistake in asking the FBI
to investigate the leaks.
"Here we are investigating the FBI for huge failures and now
we're asking them to investigate us," he said.
He said it also violates the government's separation of
powers.
"You know the Senate and, I assume the House, has always
investigated their own," he said.
A law enforcement official said the exams "are always
voluntary." Lie-detector tests are a standard element of FBI
investigations and are meant to eliminate people from suspicion.
The FBI's investigation is broad -- several dozen
congressional staff members also have been questioned and even some
CIA agents have been interviewed.
Investigators are trying to determine who leaked information
to CNN about communications in Arabic that made vague references to
an impending attack on the United States. The communications were
intercepted by the National Security Agency on Sept. 10.
An intelligence source later told The Associated Press they
contained the phrases, "Tomorrow is zero hour" and "The match is
about to begin."
The intercepts weren't translated until Sept. 12.
Their relevance is uncertain. Intelligence officials said it
wasn't clear if the conversations referred to the Sept. 11
hijackings. Even if they did, they offered few clues about the
nature of the attacks.
White House spokesman Ari Fleischer has called the
disclosure of the language "alarmingly specific."
"The selective, inappropriate leaking of snippets of
information risks undermining national security, and it risks
undermining the promises made to protect this sensitive
information," he said.
The leak investigation was sought in June by Sen. Bob
Graham, D-Fla., chairman of the Senate Intelligence Committee, and
Rep. Porter J. Goss, R-Fla., chairman of the House Intelligence
Committee.
Asked at the time whether lawmakers would submit to FBI
interviews and polygraphs, Goss said they "will cooperate with the
FBI in any way possible."
Concern about leaks has been a key reason the White House
has opposed creating an independent commission to investigate the
Sept. 11 attacks, a panel sought by some lawmakers and victims'
relatives.
President Bush has said the intelligence panels were better
positioned to avoid leaks, that they "understand the obligations of
upholding our secrets and our sources and methods of collecting
intelligence."
But Bush has clashed with Congress before over leaks. On
Oct. 5, he limited sensitive congressional briefings to leaders of
the House and Senate and their intelligence committees. He dropped
the restrictions a week later after Graham and Goss assured him they
would rein in lawmakers.



To: Shoot1st who wrote (12640)8/2/2002 2:53:52 PM
From: MulhollandDrive  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 17639
 
lasagna...

no wonder you're so fuzzy headed....all those simple carbs...

:)

i've never been in a hooters either...don't you have hooters billboards around your part of the country?