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Politics : US Government Attack on Gibson Guitar -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: MJ who wrote (130)12/15/2011 8:39:57 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Respond to of 227
 
The US Justice Department is Being used for specific leftwing vendettas
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Obama's Justice Department joins Britain's 'Climategate' leaker manhunt


By: Christopher C. Horner | 12/15/11
washingtonexaminer.com


I have seen apparent proof that the United States Department of Justice (DOJ), Criminal Division, is working with United Kingdom police to pursue the leaker of the 2009 and 2011 “Climategate” emails.

I have learned that last week DOJ sent a search-and-seizure letter to the host of three climate-change "skeptic" blogs. Last night, UK police raided a blogger’s home and removed computers and equipment.

The leaked records derailed “cap-and-trade” legislation in the U.S. and, internationally, as well as talks for a successor to the Kyoto Protocol. The emails and computer code were produced with taxpayer funds and held on taxpayer-owned computers both in the US and the UK, and all were subject to the UK Freedom of Information Act, the U.S. Freedom of Information Act and state FOIA laws.

They also were being unlawfully withheld in both the UK (by the University of East Anglia) and the U.S. (Department of Commerce’s National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA), including stonewalling me for two years, and three other requesters for longer).

The hunt involving U.S. and UK law enforcement agencies is now escalating. On Wednesday night UK time, six detectives with the UK police (Norfolk Police Department) raided the home of at least one blogger, removing his equipment to look for clues to the identity of leaker “FOIA 2011.”

On December 9, DOJ sent a preservation letter under 18 U.S.C 2703(f) to the publication platform (website host) Wordpress. This authority authorizes the government to request an Internet Service Provider (ISP) to preserve all records of a specific account for 90 days while the feds work on a warrant.

Norfolk PD affirmed to the subject of at least one of their raids that this international law enforcement hunt is for the leaker, meaning not for those whose acts the leaker exposed by making public emails containing admissions in their own words.

In the U.S., the academic and political Left have had fits about Virginia Attorney General Ken Cuccinelli exercising even more specific, anti-fraud authority to seek further records from University of Virginia in following up on indications from the first Climategate release of possible fraud against the taxpayer.

Apparently, that represented an abuse of the police power. No word yet if they are outraged by DOJ’s current foray or that of the UK raiding team.

The DOJ attorney sending the preservation letters, as it happens in this small world, a graduate of the University of Virginia (UVA). And UVA is also the subject of litigation a group I am associated with, the American Tradition Institute (ATI), that has filed suit on behalf of Virginia taxpayers seeking Climategate-related emails the school holds.

This is a case which has members of the Virginia faculty and establishment beside themselves and demanding an all-out effort to oppose production of the requested documents in an effort to wear us and Cuccinelli down.

So far UVA has spent upwards of $1 million fighting Cuccinelli’s request, and school officials continue to fight us in court every step of the way.

Clearly, this is no small matter in the quarters insisting that this taxpayer-financed information never see the light of day. Even the criminal legal apparatus of the U.S. and UK must be invoked against this threat, apparently.

To review: The UK police and the US DOJ, Criminal Division, are pursuing a leaker of public records subject to one or more FOIA, records that were unlawfully withheld under those laws, which leaks indicate apparent civil violations (tortious interference by seeking dismissal of certain “skeptics”), and raising reasonable questions of fraud against taxpayers.

And they are pursuing the leaker.

Here’s the text of the DOJ request to the ISP:

“Pursuant to Title 18, United States Code, Section 2703(f), this letter is a formal request for the preservation of all stored communications, records, and other evidence in your possession regarding the following domain name(s) pending further legal process: [DELETED] (“the Accounts”) from 00:01 GMT Monday 21 November 2011 to 23:59 GMT Wednesday 23 November 2011.

“I request that you not disclose the existence of this request to the subscriber or any other person, other than as necessary to comply with this request. If compliance with this request might result in a permanent or temporary termination of service to the Accounts, or otherwise alert any user of the Accounts as to your actions to preserve the information described below, please contact me as soon as possible and before taking action.

“I request that you preserve, for a period of 90 days, the information described below currently in your possession in a form that includes the complete record. This request applies only retrospectively. It does not in any way obligate you to capture and preserve new information that arises after the date of this request. This request applies to the following items, whether in electronic or other form, including information stored on backup media, if available:

“1. The contents of any communication or file stored by or for the Accounts and any associated accounts, and any information associated with those communications or files, such as the source and destination email addresses or IP addresses.

“2. All records and other information relating to the Accounts and any associated accounts including the following:

a. Names (including subscriber names, user names, and screen names);

b. Addresses (including mailing addresses, residential addresses, business addresses, and e-mail addresses);

c. Local and long distance telephone connection records;

d. Records of session times and durations, and the temporarily assigned network addresses (such as Internet Protocol (“IP”) addresses) associated with those sessions, including any log history of when username “FOIA” uploaded posts to the Accounts;

e. Length of service (including start date) and types of service utilized;

f. Telephone or instrument numbers (including MAC addresses);

g. Other subscriber numbers or identities (including the registration Internet Protocol (“IP”) addresses); and

h. Means and source of payment for such service (including any credit card or bank account number) and billing records.”

Christopher C. Horner is an attorney in Washington, DC, pursuing several "climate" related freedom of information requests.

Read more at the Washington Examiner: washingtonexaminer.com



To: MJ who wrote (130)2/1/2012 3:15:54 PM
From: joseffy1 Recommendation  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 227
 
10-foot Gibson guitars arrive in Waukesha


Rick Wood A collection of 10-foot-tall fiberglass sculptures of Les Paul Gibson guitars is unloaded by artist Jeff Seymour (left) and George Clemmerson of F.A.S.T. Corp., which produced the guitars. Local artists will be chosen to paint the sculptures, which will be placed in prominent locations in Waukesha.

By Laurel Walker of the Journal Sentinel Jan. 31, 2012
jsonline.com



Rick Wood
A collection of 10-foot-tall fiberglass sculptures of Les Paul Gibson guitars is unloaded by artist Jeff Seymour (left) and George Clemmerson of F.A.S.T. Corp., which produced the guitars. Local artists will be chosen to paint the sculptures, which will be placed in prominent locations in Waukesha.










Waukesha - Ten 10-foot tall guitars, modeled after the Les Paul Gibson, arrived on a flatbed trailer - guarded by a mammoth fiberglass bulldog - Tuesday morning, a sure sign that the GuitarTown Project is for real.

The Gibson Foundation and Mayor Jeff Scrima announced earlier this month that Waukesha had been selected for the project, following on the heels of cities such as Los Angeles, Nashville and London.

In other GuitarTown Project cities, the guitars typically were decorated by artists, often signed by celebrities and auctioned off to raise money for charity.

Later Tuesday, a Waukesha steering committee planned to select artists to turn the plain pieces into works of art that will be mounted in prominent spaces downtown, said Lynn Gaffey, artist and gallery owner who serves on the committee.

The guitars were made and delivered by a driver for F.A.S.T. Corp. of Sparta. George Clemmerson, an employee who delivered the hollow sculptures, which are free standing but came with metal stands, said they weigh about 50 pounds each. The bulldog that accompanied them was headed to a Beloit restaurant, he said.

F.A.S.T. manufactures fiberglass statues and water park attractions for use around the world, according to its website. Clemmerson said the company has built other guitar sculptures for Gibson.

Another 15 regulation-size, playable Les Paul Gibsons have been shipped to Waukesha and will also be decorated, then completed with the strings and hardware added.

Initially the Gibson Guitar Corp. had said it would donate 10 of the smaller guitars but has since increased the number to 15, said Norm Bruce, a downtown businessman and project steering committee member. Some of those will be auctioned off while others may be on permanent display, he said.

Scrima said his New Day in Waukesha fund - primarily funded so far from his own salary - is contributing $15,000 for seven of the sculptures that were delivered Tuesday. Another three of the large ones were donated by Gibson, Bruce said.

The steering committee is seeking sponsors for the guitars in order to raise money for charity. So far, only the Waukesha County Museum's long-proposed Les Paul exhibit has been named as a beneficiary of money raised.

Les Paul, a renowned musical innovator and guitarist, was born in Waukesha and is buried at the city's Prairie Home Cemetery. He died Aug. 12, 2009, at the age of 94.

A VIP sneak-peak event, when the finished guitars will be unveiled, is planned for May 31. The first public viewing is officially planned for June 1.

Gaffey said the project is on a tight deadline.

First the guitars have to be clear-coated and dried. Once artists are selected, they'll pick up their guitars at the Springs Artisan Village, a collection of artists' studios on Wisconsin Ave. at the Fox River where the guitars were delivered and are being temporarily stored.

The committee also has to pick sites for displaying the guitars and will likely combine public and private spots. Some could even be on a building, Gaffey said.

The project plans will also be sent through city channels, beginning with the Public Art Committee, Gaffey said.