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Politics : Bill Clinton Scandal - SANITY CHECK -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: Neocon who wrote (40953)3/31/1999 12:05:00 PM
From: DMaA  Read Replies (4) | Respond to of 67261
 
Did you see this indictment of the new political "Justice" Department?

            ***Media Research Center CyberAlert***
          Wednesday March 31, 1999 (Vol. Four; No. 57

    An editorial in the March 30 Investor's Business Daily
disclosed this fascinating tidbit of information: "From 1993 to
1997, federal officials requested 2,686 wiretaps. For all its
concern for probable cause and legal standards, the Justice
Department turned down one request in those four years -- Lee's in
1996."

    That's right, the FBI's request to wiretap We Ho Lee was the
only request Janet Reno's Justice Department rejected in the
administration's first years. They approved 99.96 percent of such
requests.

    Here are some excerpts from the editorial, titled "Abetting
Espionage."

It's almost too fantastic to believe. But evidence has surfaced
that the administration may have turned a blind eye toward Red
Chinese espionage -- if not actually abetted it....

"Some journalists -- in particular Jeff Gerth and James Risen of
The New York Times -- have made some very disturbing discoveries.
Not only did the Clinton administration take its sweet time in
investigating the alleged theft after learning of it, there's
reason to believe that the Justice Department failed to follow its
usual procedures in overseeing the FBI probe of the matter....

After trying to shift blame for the theft to previous
administrations (the first instances did take place in the
mid-1980s), the Clinton administration went into damage control.
It claimed loudly and longly that it aggressively tried to get to
the bottom of the matter. And, of course, the White House has
pledged to investigate.

But media spin notwithstanding, the administration has failed to
guard the nation's secrets. Indeed, it took steps to put these
secrets more at risk. And it blocked the FBI from fully probing
the security breach.

Central to the story is Wen Ho Lee, a Taiwan- born American. He
worked for the Los Alamos National Lab, which develops nuclear
weapons.

Soon after the theft was discovered, Lee became the prime suspect.
Yet he was not only allowed to keep his job, reports the Times, he
got promoted to a more sensitive post. He was also permitted to
hire a Red Chinese national as an assistant. Authorities can't
find him.

These infractions would be bad enough. But the Justice
Department's actions regarding the FBI's probe of Lee border on
the criminal.

As part of the probe, the bureau requested a wiretap on Lee.
Justice denied it, arguing it did not have sufficient grounds to
take to a federal court to get the tap approved.

But a look at the Justice Department's record on wiretaps calls
that argument into serious question.

>From 1993 to 1997, federal officials requested 2,686 wiretaps. For
all its concern for probable cause and legal standards, the
Justice Department turned down one request in those four years --
Lee's in 1996.

The Clinton administration's defense that it had few grounds to
wiretap Lee might carry weight if most of the wiretaps Justice
OK'd resulted in incriminating evidence. That would suggest
Justice was setting and meeting high standards for wiretaps.

But again the record suggests Justice is talking through its hat.
In 1997, 21.4% of federal wiretaps produced incriminating
information. Indeed, through the first four years of Clinton's
term, only one in five wiretaps revealed shady actions.

Yet in the case of Lee and alleged Chinese espionage, the
department seems to think that it needed cold proof of illegal
activity before approving a wiretap....

Several conclusions can be drawn from this case, each one more and
more incredible.

One is that key officials in the Clinton administration are
incredibly naive. Another is that they are criminally incompetent.
Both answers are plausible, given this administration.

But it's not too big a leap to ask if some officials were more
than naive or incompetent. Were they intentionally ignorant? Did
the push for campaign cash in 1996 -- some of it coming from
Chinese sources -- take precedence over national security?

An even more disturbing speculation is that someone in the
administration was actively working for the Red Chinese.

Sure, it sounds like a Tom Clancy novel. But why did Justice deny
the wiretap request? Why did the Energy Department promote Lee to
a spot where he could learn more secrets? How did a Chinese
national get hired for such a sensitive job?

The administration has its hands full now with Kosovo. But it must
not be allowed to duck these questions on Red China's espionage.

    END Excerpt

    You can access much of IBD online at investors.com
Their password access system has been down, so click on the
register button and for free you'll get a username and password
that will allow you to access many more articles from that day's
paper.

    See the March 26 CyberAlert to read about how the networks
ignored the New York Times story referenced by Investor's Business
Daily about how Wen Ho Lee got a more sensitive job after he was
under suspicion and how the FBI cannot now locate an assistant he
had hired.


mediaresearch.org.