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Entries in Organised crime (278)

Friday
06Jun

Interview: Bulgaria 'will deliver' on crime

Bulgaria is scaling up its fight against corruption and organised crime with the first sentences now effective, Bulgarian Deputy Prime Minister and Foreign Minister Ivaylo Kalfin told EurActiv in an interview, also highlighting his country's difficulties in communicating a more positive image of itself.

Kalfin pointed to recent changes in the Ministry of the Interior, where the minister, Rumen Petkov, was forced to resign in April (EurActiv 15/05/08) after it was found there had been leaks of information to the mob. He explained that society and public opinion are playing an increasingly significant role since they are taking everything related to corruption and organised crime "very seriously". The newly established state agency for national security, dubbed "the Bulgarian FBI" by the press, will also help, he added. He said it is already functional and in charge of major investigations. 

The Bulgarian minister admitted that his country has a communication problem with the Commission and a problem with communicating its messages in the broader sense. He regretted that in the press is creating - in his words  - a distorted image by highlighting only deficiencies, despite the country's "very good history" over the past year and a half. He nevertheless believes the Commission's approach is fairer, saying he was optimistic that the EU executive would take account of the achievements in its final monitoring report due in July. 

He attached a great importance to the newly established post of Deputy Prime Minister responsible for European Funds, recently taken by Meglena Plugchieva, previously Bulgaria's Ambassador to Germany (EurActiv 13/05/08).. He explained that although this post is unique among EU countries, "it has its logic" in Bulgaria due to the need to solve existing problems. 

To read the interview in full, please click here

Links


Friday
25Apr

TRANSCRIPT OF PANEL DISCUSSION AT THE CENTER FOR STRATEGIC AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES FOLLOWING ANNOUNCEMENT BY ATTORNEY GENERAL MICHAEL B. MUKASEY ON INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME STRATEGY 

24 April 2008
Department of Justice Documents

Justice Department Press Releases

THURSDAY, APRIL 24, 2008 (202) 514-2007

TRANSCRIPT OF PANEL DISCUSSION AT THE CENTER FOR STRATEGIC AND INTERNATIONAL STUDIES FOLLOWING ANNOUNCEMENT BY ATTORNEY GENERAL MICHAEL B. MUKASEY ON INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZED CRIME STRATEGY

Washington, D.C.

April 23, 2008

2: 00 P.M. EDT

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: As I said, our three panelists have very impressive resumes in law enforcement, intelligence, and counter terrorism.

Alice Fisher, the Assistant Attorney General for the Criminal Division of DOJ. She supervises the prosecutors in the division on matters ranging from national security, international affairs to corporate fraud and public corruption. From 2003 to 2005, Ms. Fisher was a partner in the litigation department of Latham & Watkins D.C. office that specializes in white collar and internal investigations including account and securities fraud, healthcare fraud, and foreign corrupt practices act matters, and Congressional investigations. She also advised clients on a range of issues related to the Patriot Act.

From July 2001 to 2003 Ms. Fisher served as Deputy Assistant to the Attorney General in the Criminal Dvision of DOJ. Here, she was responsible for managing the counter-terrorism, the fraud section, the criminal appellates section and the capital cases section. On top of all this, she worked on various policy issues for criminal law enforcement and national security. Very impressive, indeed.

John Pistole began his FBI career as a special agent in 1983. He served in Minneapolis and New York before being promoted to supervisor in the organized crime section at FBI headquarters here in D.C., and served as an instructor in organized crime matters for almost 30 cases of new agents.

He went on to serve a as field supervisor of a white collar crime and civil rights squad in Indianapolis, where he created a health care fraud task force and a public corruption task force and in his spare time developed curriculum and provided instruction at the International Law Enforcement Academy in Budapest.

Then, John went on to serve as special agent in charge in Boston with oversight for white-collar crime, computer intrusion, programs, etc. He's done absolutely everything and, as you all know, he's now the number two at the FBI.

Julie Myers is the Assistant Secretary of homeland Security for U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, with the chilling acronym ICE. She leads the largest investigative component of the Department of Homeland Security and the second largest investigative agency in the federal government, with more than 15,000 employees and an annual budget of more than 5 billion dollars. ICE now has five integrated divisions - the tension and removal operations, investigations, federal protective service, intelligence and international affairs.

She came to lead this 21st-century law-enforcement agency after a long record of service to the nation with leadership positions at treasury, where she handled money laundering and financial crimes, also justice, commerce, and homeland security, where she was elevated to Assistant Secretary last December.

And, why don't we start. Introduce the third after we get started. Who would like to go first" First -- just looking for the last one. Someone's gone into my cards - a little sabotage here.

MR. PISTOLE: We can just take questions, Arnaud.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: You're ready to take questions" You're not going to make any presentations" I've got all three" Oh, thank you so much. He's my deputy. Soon to become number one, as you can see. So, who would like to go first" You want to talk first?

MS. FISHER: We're happy to just take questions.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Go ahead. If you have something to say please go ahead.

MS. FISHER: Well, I think from all of our perspectives, I would just briefly say that the strategy itself - which, I think part of it has now been released publicly, if you got it when you, maybe, arrived - outlines what our goals and our objectives are on focusing this law enforcement operational strategy. And it really focuses on making sure that we collect and synthesize information about international organized crime, both from the assets that we have here in-country, but also quite poignantly working with our foreign counterparts, who are often facing the same problem, the same criminals sometimes, the same groups, but certainly some of the same issues that we have.

And working with them very closely to gather information and synthesize it so that we can then really move in to targeting, as the Attorney General said, those international organized criminal groups of individuals that we can focus our resources on and focus our attention on trying to disrupt them, dismantle them, and use our law enforcement tools to prosecute them here and bring them to justice. We do think that, obviously, this poses a threat domestically, which is why we are focusing on it. But the strategy goes through nine very particular goals and objectives of how we need to coordinate and do those things, both on a short-term basis and a long-term basis.

MR. PISTOLE: Well, this is obviously something that the FBI has been addressing, in terms of traditional organized crime here in the U.S., for a number of years and we see this strategy as an opportunity to expand upon what we've been doing.

As for the partnership, both state and local law enforcement agencies and, of course, our federal agencies domestically, in concert with those international partners - primarily law enforcement services, but also security services around the world - that have a vested interest in identifying and dismantling international organized crime groups that pose a threat to these individuals who, we could say, are mobsters without boarders. There's a clear indication here of what these people are trying to do, and this is why we are here to promote this strategy.

MS. MYERS: I would just add to what John and Alice said, that I think the strategy does represent a good first step forward for the U.S. government, looking at these vulnerabilities which we know are global in nature, and then looking at, "how can we comprehensively attack them?" And to follow up on a couple of the questions that were asked to the Attorney General, I think one of the really critical points is actually getting a foreign consensus on where the vulnerabilities are and where the gaps are.

For example, in bolt-cash smuggling, making sure that our counterparts have the same kinds of regulations so they have the laws on the books, and they can enforce them. It does no good if we only have the laws here, given that these mobsters have no boarders. We've got to make sure we have the laws and the structure to enforce them overseas.

And to that end, I think actually we're seeing some great progress. I think with India, with the Chairman of Customs, with India working on the IPR things. Our Mexican counterparts, obviously, are hugely helpful and I think all around the world we're trying to work law enforcement to law enforcement to really attack those particular vulnerabilities.

So I want to congratulate Alice and Jen Shasky and the DOJ team for putting us together.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Want to take questions" You've already had one. The lady behind you.

QUESTION: Thanks. Stephanie Kid-Gesnow with the financial times. Two questions. First, on international cooperation, there's a very specific case involving the Justice Department's investigation of BAE which they have made public. We reported last week that the British government has not cooperated in this investigation, has yet to hand over any information.

So just wondering if, Ms. Fisher, what your view is of what you might still get from the British government and whether that's likely to change, given the high-court ruling which I'm sure you're very familiar with from a few weeks ago.

The question was directed to Alice Fisher

MS. FISHER: Obviously, because, as you noted, it is an ongoing investigation, the policy pf the justice department is that we don't comment on on-going investigations. However - and I will say generally, and I'm not addressing that particular case at all - I will say generally as we talk through the strategy, and as Julie said about our cooperation with foreign law enforcement, the UK has set up SOKA, which is looking at organized crime in the U.K. And we're going to cooperate with them on this strategy and our efforts against international organized crime as we are with other countries and their operations.

QUESTION: As a follow-up, what kind of options does the U.S. or the Justice Department have when you're not getting cooperation from allies in general?

MS. FISHER: We're always very hopeful that our allies will cooperate with us in criminal investigations. There are mutual legal assistance treaties and mutual legal agreements that we have with many countries where cooperation is discussed as part of those treaties and different means and modes of cooperation are discussed. We don't have them with all countries, mutual legal agreements. We don't have extradition agreements with all countries.

One of the things that we have talked about and discussed with regard to this strategy is making an effort to really streamline that process, to get information quickly so we can go after and keep up with these criminals quickly. When we are sharing information with foreign governments I think John can probably talk and Julie can probably talk as well about this, but I think in general our relationships with our foreign counterparts on the law enforcement side are very good because we share a lot of the same global, criminal problems.

MR. PISTOLE: I think that's right. From our perspective, clearly it is on a case-by-case basis that we look and bi-lateral, the much broader information sharing issues that are out there are fine, but we really try to look at it from a very pragmatic, practical standpoint of, "what evidence do we need for a particular prosecution, either here in the U.S. or in that host country where the individual or the group may be?"

So it is on a case-by-case basis, looking at the MLAT's - the Mutual Legal Assistance Treaties - in whatever process we need. What we've tried to do the last seven years is streamline that process so there's an informal information sharing that leads to the actual evidence that would be needed to charge somebody.

MS. MYERS: I would just add that at ICE we also have the customs sharing agreement, Customs to Customs, which also allows us to get the information informally and are a huge help in meeting our needs with our foreign counterparts.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Could you identify yourself as well?

QUESTION: My name is Martin Apple. I work with a large number of scientists. As I see this, you have an international network which is highly adaptable, highly adaptive, and rapidly evolving. And you're trying to fight it by coordinating internal national police forces that are hierarchical and have to cooperate and collaborate within and abroad.

Why don't you create a counter structure to the IOC that's also rapidly evolvable, rapid - a network system - that's just as rapidly evolvable, just as rapidly adaptable and able to take care of things in more anticipatory ways?

The question was directed to John Pistole.

MR. PISTOLE: One of the things that we try to do collectively - it's hosted by the FBI - is what's called the Eped National Academy which brings in 250 to 300 foreign or law enforcement officers around the country and around the world four times a year.

So up to 1,200 people, law enforcement officers at the mid-level, every year, and it's that informal haring that allows us -- it's basically a golden rolodex in law enforcement around the world and people from every agency participate in that.

So we've been doing that for decades, and what that allows us to do is have that flexible, agile, adaptable network out there that anybody can pick up anybody that's been through the national academy graduate. They all have a little yellow brick from doing this obstacle course. And it's a network out there so it allows for that information sharing on a person to person basis in a way that is without hierarchy or without structure. And so when there is a particular need for information, that network allows us to that. And then following up, obviously, with the formal process. So that's one aspect. I know it's not exactly what you were addressing but that's a practical solution.

MS. FISHER: Well, as aggressive and adaptable as they're going to be in committing crimes and seeking profit from their crimes, we're going to be as aggressive and as adaptable as we can be. And we have to keep up with their technology. They are becoming more and more sophisticated as you'll see in the strategy. Their use of cyber-crime and their use of technology to commit these crimes and their threat to our institutions by using the new schemes and methods with money laundering and pushing through billions of dollars through our systems. All of those things.

We have to use all of our tools for law enforcement, but we have to look at whether there are other non-law enforcement tools that we need to use. We need to look at and consider, and the counsel and the strategy will consider, are there other regulations that the Treasury Department should be looking at with regard to protecting our financial institutions from this kind of crime" Are there other things that the State Department diplomatic security section can be doing with regard to visas" Are there other things that ICE can be doing" Are there other legislation or tools that we need" We have to think of all of those things, not just about prosecution, not just about investigations, but globally, what is the best way working with our foreign counterpart s and the assets that we have here to attack this problem?

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Microphone for the lady in red, please.

QUESTION: I'm Judy Ho. I was vice chairman of President Reagan's commission on organized crime. We had a very tough time getting money out of the Congress. It took us a year to get subpoena power. We finished our report - it was seven volumes. I think there were twenty copies of it, most of which have vanished. And when the Reagan administration ended the Bush administration picked it up a little but to that end, it dropped. We're now in a position where - are you adequately funded" Do you have the subpoena power that you need" And what is the plan for transition of this very important program to the next administration, whoever is the president?

The question was directed to Alice Fisher

MS. FISHER: Okay, trying to take all of those questions. We thought about the resources. That's obviously an issue for any kind of law enforcement strategy. There are plenty of things that we can do, and the strategy talks about short-term goals and long-term goals. And there's plenty of things that we need to be doing now to leverage the resources that we have, to use the information that we have, to collect it, to synthesize it, to focus and to target.

And as far as the -- whether it will get dropped and whether it will carry on as you noted, given the timing of this, I think the reconvening of the Attorney General's crime council, some of the things that we're going to be doing to share information now is going to hopefully institutionalize this. This is not something that should go away. It's going to be the people that are the great people of the Department of Justice and the Department of Homeland Security and the Department of Labor and the Department of State that will carry this on.

And what we tried to do to make sure that it wouldn't get pushed to the side, quite frankly, is to be very specific about the objectives and the goals and the implementation process. And so you all will have a summary of the strategy, but in the actual long term strategy itself, it lists almost to the one, two, three, four things, step by step, that we need to accomplish, both from a short term perspective and a long term perspective so It doesn't get dropped, I hope.

QUESTION: Hi, I'm Laura Jakes-Jordan. I'm with the Associated Press. When the Attorney General was talking about the list of organized crime groups that's going to be complied, it made me think of the annual list that the state Department puts out on the designated terrorist groups globally. So I'm wondering if this list is going to be maintained in the same way. Are you guys going to be releasing it publicly" Are you going to be updating it every year" Will certain sanctions be taken against the groups that are on the list, like assets being frozen, that kind of thing" Thanks.

The question was directed to Alice Fisher

MS. FISHER: I think that's a great question. On the list that the Attorney General was talking about, as far as the targeting and our really focusing, "who do we need -- who poses the biggest threat" And who do we need to go after?" Obviously, when it serves our investigative purposes it may be that some of those groups are named, are named publicly. But I don't think that that's the plan. Because this really is for law enforcement purposes to come up with a list so we can gather our resources together to go after that.

So as fart as publishing that from the Department of Justice's standpoint, that's not planned, although there may be times when it serves our law-enforcement and investigative purposes to share that list with our foreign counterparts or to make that public.

On the sanctions, that's a different issue. There are certain regulations that the Ttreasury Department has with regard to naming drug kingpins that will be sanctioned in certain ways, for example. That, to the extent that those regulations apply to some of the groups that we're looking at, we may seek that. We may work with Treasury Department to do that. We certainly would consider looking at those options and will consider those options.

MR. PISTOLE: And I would just add that there are many ongoing investigations, many of which are undercover operations, which obviously we could not disclose. And the identity of those groups we would not publish at this time. But I think it's designed as a living document that would be updated as needed for targeting purposes.

QUESTION: Louise Shelley, Terrorism Transnational Crime and Corruption Center, George Mason University. One of the things I didn't see in your plan was interaction with the academic and the business community that may be seeing trends that are apart from what the government is seeing or complementary to them. And earlier this year I was at a very high level conference in Great Britain, instigated at the request of SOKA to get input from those other elements. I was wondering if you're thinking of that, because with the high level financial involvement, people in the business community may also be seeing things that you're not.

The question was directed to Alice Fisher

MS. FISHER: Absolutely. And I thought that the Attorney General mentioned it in his speech. Many of the people in this room are experts and have a great deal of expertise that would help us, would assist us, and we certainly want that input. And I think that outreach, in particular to the academic community and also part of private industry, where appropriate, is very, very important. And there are some mechanisms already set up for that.

MS. MYERS: And I think the strategy layers in a number of the ongoing programs including ICE's cornerstone project, which works with the financial community, secret services, electronic crimes task force works with a number of other financial institutions, and so on. So it's certainly our intent to make sure that we're getting all the input we can, because, frankly, technology and things move too quickly for government to sit around and think that we have all the answers on this.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Yes sir. Blue shirt?

QUESTION: Yes. I'm Bill Eicher. I wanted to ask especially John. The President has told us several times that major terrorist plots within our country were foiled. The question is basically, is the record of the past going to apply to the future" That we got what we need to gather in the way of law enforcement to stymie or deter further terrorism?

The question was directed to John Pistole.

MR. PISTOLE: If your question is specifically dealing with terrorism -- is that -- is your question specifically dealing with terrorism, counter terrorism efforts, as opposed to organized crime?

QUESTION: Yes, strictly terrorism.

MR. PISTOLE: Obviously, there have been a number of plots that have been directed, groups that have been dismantled in the U.S. and of course working primarily through the joint terrorism task forces, the 100 task forces around the country that comprise state and local, the 800,000 state and local police that act as force multipliers. We rely on those individuals and the business community, the private citizens of the country, to provide information. There's a number of trip-wires out there.

We have been successful collectively thus far but that's a very difficult standard to meet, dealing with a determined adversary who is committed to attacking any time, any place that they have the means, opportunity and can do that. So it's something that it's obviously our top priority in terms of the criminal investigative matters. We still have half of our 12,500 special agents of the FBI working in traditional criminal areas and international organized crime is one of those top priorities.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Bill Pulp, formerly of State Department counter-terrorism. This question is for John. There's no question that some international terrorist groups have had links with organized crime, have used organized crime networks, etc. To the extent that you can say anything in this room, and it might be nothing but, if you can, can you say anything about core al-Qaeda and organized crime" Not marginal group -- more marginal groups, but al-Qaeda and organized crime?

The question was directed to John Pistole.

MR. PISTOLE: Yeah what I can say thus far, Bill - and good to see you - is although we have identified we, law enforcement intelligence communities, have identified other terrorist organizations that have benefited from organized crime and clearly a number of different aspect here. We have not seen to date a direct link between what we would describe as international organized crime, traditional organized crime, and core al-Qaeda.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: If I could put in at this point, surely Columbia is a convergence of transnational crime and transnational terrorism, as Afghanistan and those mountainous areas between Pakistan and Afghanistan are today.

MR. PISTOLE: Absolutely. Yes, there's a number of other groups, and if we went into detail, whether it's FARC or Hezbollah or other groups, but not core al-Qaeda thus far.

QUESTION: Hi. Randal Mikkelsen with Reuters. I wanted to ask -- Attorney General Mukasey referred to need for new legislation as well as information sharing and enhanced law-enforcement tools, and I'm wondering if you plan to apply the Patriot Act, FISA, some of the anti-terrorism tools that were adopted after 9/11 and whether you anticipate resistance from Congress, which has shown a lot of weariness now toward granting law enforcement authorities new authority over surveillance and things like that.

The question was directed to Alice Fisher.

MS. FISHER: We're not, at this point, proposing new legislation. We have many, many tools at our disposal to go after these types of criminals, whether it's the racketeering statute, whether it's the general cyber crime statues, the counterfeit good IP statues, we have a host of statutes that we're going to use to prosecute these organized criminals. And we have, as I mentioned before, mutual legal assistance treaties to work with our foreign counterparts to try to share information in that particular way.

So while the council may consider at some point whether there are other tools that we need to request, we're not there yet. We're not seeking new legislation or tools at this point. We will only use the tools that we have at our disposal and we have a lot of them and we'll use them in the appropriate way.

QUESTION: Casaer Manuers with Effa News Service. I wonder if you can tell us how this new strategy will change your cooperation with governments in Latin America in any way, perhaps in Mexico and Columbia, and where you see the biggest threats in the content there, you know, that pose to the United States. Thank you.

The question was directed to John Pistole.

MR. PISTOLE. We have close working relationships across the board with the individual law enforcement agencies of most Central and South American countries. There's obviously a huge gang initiative with El-Salvador and other Central American countries.

In terms of international organized crime, there are disparate groups and individuals that we focus on, and have robust information sharing and evidence sharing in those individual matters. I happen to be visiting four Latin American countries next month meeting my counterparts on the law enforcement and, some, the security service sides to discuss some of these very issues. But it is a healthy, robust relationship in almost all instances.

MS. MYERS: And if I could just add to John's comment briefly, I think one of the things for ICE is one of our biggest priorities in working with those countries is that the transboarder smuggling, particularly of special interest aliens and others that is gone and exploited by these international criminal organizations. And I think our cooperation there is absolutely essential to make sure they are not only prosecuted here, but there if appropriate.

QUESTION: Mindy Reiser, with the United Nations Association. I am interested in Interpol. There's been some criticism of it over the years. I wonder if you could share some of your thoughts on how it's doing, what could be improved, and also the U.N. has different agencies looking at some of the criminal elements and drug trafficking. If you could talk about how effective you've seen that in operation?

The question was directed to John Pistole.

MR. PISTOLE: Interpol plays a key part in international law enforcement, obviously, dealing in a number of different areas. There's a senior FBI executive who is on the executive board, works with Ron Noble, this person heads up -- Tom Fuentes heads up our international operations office with our 75 offices around the world, so there's a significant interaction.

The key for Interpol, I think, is how there can be timely information sharing on critical issues and they do a great job, generally across the board. We still look to the bilateral relationships, country to country, service to service, for the actual information intelligence and evidence that we need to pursue our goals and objectives just as the host services do.

MS. FISHER: I would also just note that the United Nations Convention on transnational crime is obviously going play a key role in how we share information and how we continue to garner support and use that particular convention to go after international organized crime.

QUESTION: Winter Overlander, Consulting International Liaison. Recently due to anti-trust policy regulations, a steel company near the Baltimore area had to be divested and was made available for purchase by a foreign steel company - in this case, it was a Russian steel company, Service Star, which now owns the company also the port facility in Baltimore.

And my question is, when something like this occurs, not to case dispersions on the company that has acquired it, but to ask simply what is the effect of foreign ownership on a port on the Unites States ability to control, regulate, investigate and protect the boarders?

The question was directed to Julie Myers.

MS. MYERS: Exactly. John was helping me passing that off to another DHS entity not here. Certainly, and in a number of transactions -- certain transactions are obviously subject to the CIFIUS process and things like that, where there's an interagency review headed by the Treasury Department with the other departments weighing in. But for companies that are foreign owned, they're still subject to U.S. laws. And they're still subject to U.S. laws and I think because our relationships are growing with our foreign counterparts, we're having increasing success in extraditing people back to this country, and in prosecuting them there in their home country if their crimes so warrant.

At ICE, what we're looking to do for bad businessmen and for other foreign nationals who commit crime is we want to make sure the U.S. is not a safe haven for them. And we want to make sure that we take all steps to use our immigration authorities to remove them from this country and then, if they have assets here, to forfeit those assets if they've engaged in a hypothetical situation of wrong doing and behavior.

But I think certainly there's no question that increasing foreign ownership does pose requires us to be extremely diligent and make sure that they are abiding by all the U.S. laws that they have to abide by.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: We have time for two more.

QUESTION: Suzanne Spalding with Bingham-Mickutchum. I wanted to follow up on the question back here about legal authorities that currently are applicable in the counter terrorism realm, because of course a lot of those in intelligence, surveillance authorities for example, are not limited to terrorism, and particularly the Protect America Act and the legislation under debate in Congress now is really only limited to foreign intelligence. So to the extent that international organized crime is a legitimate form and intelligence target, aren't those authorities also already available to you in addition to your law enforcement authorities?

The question was directed to John Pistole.

MR. PISTOLE: Let me answer it this way by saying we believe that the investigative tools and authorities that we have are more than adequate for addressing international organized crime. The fact that we can sue other authorities on the national security side for counter-terrorism, counter-intelligence, espionage, whatever it may be, is simply an indication that there are tools in precise situations but we have not, at least in the FBI, been in a situation where we need to invoke those tools for international organized crime.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: One more. Yes, sir.

QUESTION: Hi. Evan Perez, Wall Street Journal. I wanted to know why you're not perhaps being more public about the specific goals that you've set aside for this strategy. I mean, if we are going to know whether you've achieved it I guess it would be good for us to know what those goals are. I mean, you said you had these more specific, not included in the overview that you released?

The question was directed to Alice Fisher.

MS. FISHER: The review actually does list out the goals and key results from those goals. I mean, there may be interim, the one, two, three's that go under each one of these goals. This is meant to be a summary. It's not necessarily that we're attempting to hide that or not get measured by that.

Hopefully our success will be that we disrupt and dismantle these criminal organizations and make our country safer. But certainly some of those - the threat assessment, on the other hand - is something that includes a lot of investigative information and classified information and that's why it was wasn't released.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Perhaps I could ask the last question of the three panelists. John Negroponte asked me just as he was taking over as DNI asked me if I knew what a pedabyte was. I had no idea. And he said that the entire Library of Congress and it's contents was 0.02 pedabytes, and moving through cyberspace every day is over 600 pedabytes - several hundred times more than the entire library of Congress. How do you find the bad guys in this global soup" I mean, isn't that virtually mission impossible?

MR. PISTOLE: Almost. Obviously it's a matter of international cooperation, and that's part of the beauty of this strategy, is formalizing the informal relationships we've had around the globe. But clearly, sometimes trying to find the needle in the haystack is easier when the haystack is being looked at by hundreds or thousands or tens of thousands of people rather than just a handful of people. So that's the forced multipliers I spoke about earlier.

And when it comes to the pedabytes, and I know that's bigger than a terabyte but that's about as far as I go on that, there's a lot of tools, obviously, on the national security side, getting back to this other question, that could be beneficial if it posses significant enough threat.

If I could just add one thing I think is a real challenge in the technology realm is keeping up, keeping up with that. Having our forensic agents making sure that they not only know how to sift through this information in a timely fashion but that we have the more sophisticated devices that can uncrypt things and make progress. And that is really a continuing challenge for us because forensics - computer forensics - are such a huge part of, frankly, almost any case these days.

MR. DE BORCHGRAVE: Well, I think we're very lucky to get the expertise of three fabulous experts, and please join me in thanking them.


Wednesday
12Mar

MS-13 Organization & U.S. Response

 From: http://www.samuellogan.com/publications.html

MS-13 Organization & U.S. Response coverIt is not our intent to make strong predictions, but given the information we've sourced, it is clear that violence in Mexico will get worse before security improves. The level of US involvement, as of May 2007, remains a topic of casual discussion and off the record interviews. We look forward to the possibility of closer cooperation between the two countries but are not hopeful that it will make the agenda before the end of the Bush administration or Calderón's six-year term in office.

The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) considers the Mara Salvatrucha (MS-13) the most dangerous street gang in the United States. The violent nature of MS-13 members results in a number of murders and vicious beatings. Already a number of cases, tried in Maryland, New York, and Tennessee, have resulted in hefty prison sentences, even life in prison for MS-13 gang members.

The MS-13, even as a criminal organization, is far from a national security threat, but its presence in US cities and towns, along the US border, and its connections with Mexican organized crime and a number of criminal elements in Central America designate the MS-13 as one of the latest groups to threaten the well being of US citizens across the country.

In this special report, we present an in-depth review of the information that suggest the MS-13 has potential to be much more than a street gang.

 

  • Download MS-13 Organization & U.S. Response

Thursday
14Feb

Kosovo: The US and the EU support a Political Process linked to Organized Crime 

Kosovo Prime Minister Hashim Thaci is part of a criminal syndicate

By Michel Chossudovsky
From: Global Research, February 12, 2008

Our orientations are clear. The building of the state of Kosova, economic development, economic and social well-being and rigorous measures against corruption, organized crime and negative behavior, so we can have improved security and integrate Kosova into European Union structures. 

(Hashim Thaci, chairman of the Democratic Party of Kosovo (PDK), Prime Minister of the Kosovo provisional government, former KLA leader and known criminal) 


The PDK, led by Hashim Thaci, former Kosovan Liberation Army commander, took control of many municipalities after the war. The party has close links with organized crime in the province
. (The Observer, 29 October 2000)

Mr. Thaci, nicknamed "the Snake" during his KLA days, is a sharp-suited 32-year-old former rebel commander with poor oratory skills, links to organized crime and a determination to preserve relations between his party and the United States
(The Scotsman, 20 October 2000)


I know a terrorist when I see one and these men are terrorists," US Special Envoy and Ambassador Robert Gelbard

Hashim Thaci founded the "Drenica-Group" an underground organization that is estimated to have controlled between 10% and 15% of all criminal activities in Kosovo (smuggling arms, stolen cars, oil, cigarettes and prostitution). Wikipedia The Free Encyclopedia



The US, the EU and the UN are supporting a Kosovo government headed by a known criminal, Prime Minister Hashim Thaci.

The position of Prime Minister was created by so-called Provisional Institutions of Self-Government (PISG) established by the United Nations Interim Administration Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK)  Under UN mandate, the purpose of the provisional government is to provide 'provisional, democratic self-government' in advance of a decision on the political status of Kosovo. What this signifies is that the United Nations has not only set the stage for an "Independent" Kosovo government in violation of international law, it has installed  a Kosovo government integrated by the members of a criminal syndicate. All three Kosovo Prime Ministers, Ramush Haradinaj, Agim Ceku and Hashim Thaci are war criminals.   


Hashim Thaci and EU Secretary-General Javier Solana

The Kosovo Democratic Party headed by former KLA Commander Hashim Thaci is essentially an outgrowth of the former Kosovo Liberation Army. 

US-NATO covert support the KLA, goes back to the mid-1990s. Iin the year preceding the 1999 bombing of Yugoslavia, the KLA was quite openly supported by the Clinton administration.  

KLA leader Hashim Thaci was a protégé of Madeleine Albright. He was chosen by Albright to play a key role on Washington's behalf at the 1998 Rambouillet negotiations. .


Madeleine and Hashim

The links of the KLA to organized crime have been documented by Interpol and the US Congress. The Washington Times in an article published in May 1999 describes the KLA and its links to the Clinton administration as follows:

 Some members of the Kosovo Liberation Army [headed by the current Kosovo Prime minister Hashim Thaci] , which has financed its war effort through the sale of heroin, were trained in terrorist camps run by international fugitive Osama bin Laden -- who is wanted in the 1998 bombing of two U.S. embassies in Africa that killed 224 persons, including 12 Americans.

The KLA members, embraced by the Clinton administration in NATO's 41-day bombing campaign to bring Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic to the bargaining table, were trained in secret camps in Afghanistan, Bosnia-Herzegovina and elsewhere, according to newly obtained intelligence reports.    

 The reports also show that the KLA has enlisted Islamic terrorists -- members of the Mujahideen --as soldiers in its ongoing conflict against Serbia, and that many already have been smuggled into Kosovo to join the fight.     ....

The intelligence reports document what is described as a "link" between bin Laden, the fugitive Saudi millionaire, and the KLA --including a common staging area in Tropoje, Albania, a center for Islamic terrorists. The reports said bin Laden's organization, known as al-Qaeda, has both trained and financially supported the KLA. (Washington Times,  May 4, 1999, see complete article below)

The Christian Science Monitor in an August 14, 2000 report describes the criminal network controlled by Thaci:

UN police suspect that much of the violence and intimidation has come from former KLA members, especially those allied with Hashim Thaci, the former KLA leader and head of the Democratic Party of Kosovo, one of the KLA's political offshoots.

In one recent incident, the shop of an LDK activist in Mr. Thaci's home village was sprayed with automatic gunfire - the second such attack since November.

Thaci's party potentially has much to lose in the elections, which are for municipal offices only. After Serb forces withdrew last year, the KLA occupied town halls and public institutions across Kosovo and set up its own provincial government.

Although the UN has gradually asserted its own authority and placed representatives of other political groups in local governments, in places like Srbica ex-KLA members affiliated with Thaci's party still exercise virtual complete control.

"These guys are not going to give up power that easily," says Dardan Gashi, a political analyst with the International Crisis Group, a US-based research organization with an office in Pristina.

UN police also suspect organized crime is involved in some of the violence. They say that criminal groups engaged in racketeering, smuggling, and prostitution rely on close links to some people in power. The prospect of losing these connections - and the income they generate - may make them ill-disposed toward the LDK.

Officials say the problem is the worst in the Drenica region of Kosovo, the KLA's heartland and a stronghold of Thaci's party. Srbica, where Koci is the local LDK president, is one of the main towns in Drenica. (emphasis added)

The Heritage Foundation: Support the KLA-KDP, despite its Criminal Connections 

The Heritage Foundation in a May 1999 report acknowledges that the KLA is a criminal organization. It nonetheless called for the support of the KLA should by the Clinton administration: 

Should the U.S. harness the KLA's military potential against Milosevic's brutal regime, despite the KLA's unusual ideological roots and apparent ties to organized crime? ...  The KLA does not represent every group seeking an end to Milosevic's brutal campaign and is known to have committed some atrocities of its own, it is the most significant force resisting Yugoslav aggression within Kosovo. Moreover, the scale and scope of its crimes have been dwarfed by the systematic campaign of terror unleashed by Yugoslav military, paramilitary, and police forces inside Kosovo. which Washington has done consistently since the 1999 war. (Heritage Foundation Report, 13 May 1999) 

Shunning the KLA now will deprive the United States of the benefits of cooperating with a resistance force that is capable of ratcheting up the pressure on Milosevic to negotiate a settlement (Ibid)

The Heritage Foundation supports the Kosovo Democratic Party (KDP) which is integrated by former members of the KLA.

The KDP has retained its links  to organised crime.  This position broadly summarizes the attitude of the "international community" in relation to Kosovo.  More recently, the Heritage Foundation, which plays a behind the scenes role in the formulation  of US foreign policy, has been pushing for Kosovo "Independence"  

Hashim Thaci



Hashim Thaci with another war criminal: Tony Blair

The evidence amply confirms that the prime minister of Kosovo never severed his links to organized crime. 

A known criminal is being protected by the United Nations: He was arrested in Budapest in July 2003 on an Interpol warrant and was immediately released, following a request from the UN Mission in Kosovo (UNMIK). This is not an isolated event. There is evidence that the UN Mission and its international police force have protected the former KLA, which in the wake of the 1999 NATO bombing was relabeled the Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC) under a formal UN mandate. 

According to Serbian Justice Minister Vladan Batic, "the prosecution at the Hague war crimes tribunal has over 40,000 pages of evidence against former Kosovo Liberation Army leader Hashim Thaci,  (quoted by Radio B92, Belgrade, 3 July 2003). 

In April 2000, US Secretary of State Madeleine Albright "ordered The Hague chief prosecutor Carla del Ponte to omit from the list of war crime suspects Hashim Thaci" (Tanjug, 6 May 2000). Carla del Ponte subsequently claimed that there was not enough evidence to indict Thaci on war crimes. .

More generally, the UN Mission has acted as an accessory in protecting a criminal syndicate. 

In November 2003, criminal proceedings against several former KLA commanders were initiated in Belgrade. These included Hashim Thaci, Agim Ceku and Ramush Haradinaj. .Both Haradinaj and Ceku's names are on Interpol lists.

Agim Ceku

Agim Ceku is known for having committed extensive war crimes in the Krajina region of Croatia in the mid-1990s involving the massacre and ethnic cleansing of the Serb population. He was a former brigadier general in the Croatian Army and a key planner of Operation Storm,  which led to the expulsion of several hundred  thousand Serbs from Krajina region of Croatia. In 1999, he was appointed Commander of the KLA, with the approval of the US and NATO.  He was subsequently appointed Commander of the UN sponsored Kosovo Protection Corps (KPC) (on a UN payroll) and became Prime Minister of Kosovo in 2006, succeeded by Hashim Thaci, the current Prime Minister  In Kosovo, he has continues to have links to organized crime syndicates. According to a London Observer, the KPC which was headed by Ceku, was involved in acts of torture as well protecting prostitution in Kosovo. (March 14, 2000 , Atlanta Journal-Constitution) 

From Left to right: Hashim Thaci, Bernard Jouchner, General Michael Jackson, Agim Ceku, General Wesley Clarke 

 

 

• Staff writer David R. Sands contributed to this story from Washington.





Tuesday
22Jan

Who is behind mysterious release of money launderer?

From: World-Check

Prominent Antonini scandal figure Walter Alexander del Nogal was reportedly released from an Italian jail, where he was being held without bond on charges of trafficking narcotics to the Mafia, under unusual circumstances that suggest it occurred as the result of the corrupt influence of either a sovereign government, or organised crime, or both. The existence of pending escape charges against him in Switzerland, where he fled whilst serving a sentence for drug trafficking and money laundering, and a detainer reportedly lodged by the United States, should absolutely bar his release as a matter of law. Although he contacted Venezuelan media to advise of his release, strangely no Italian journalist has seen him in person as a free man, nor was any court order authorising his pre-trial release published, though it has been reported that a magistrate permitted his release. How can an individual charged with criminal dealings with the Mafia by a court simply walk out of jail unless he has help at the highest level of government? And was the Venezuelan government involved? A senior official of the Italian government reportedly met in Caracas with President Chavez and other high-level Venezuelan officials, and del Nogal's release occurred immediately thereafter.


Wednesday
16Jan

A Contemporary Challenge to State Sovereignty: Gangs and Other Illicit Transnational Criminal Organizations (TCOs) in Central America, El Salvador, Mexico, Jamaica, and Brazil

From: http://www.strategicstudiesinstitute.army.mil

 

Authored by Dr. Max G. Manwaring.

A Contemporary Challenge to St... Cover Image
Added January 15, 2008
Type: Monograph
66 Pages
File Size: 344KB
-Download it directly to your computer
 

Another kind of war within the context of a “clash of civilizations” is being waged in various parts of the Americas, Africa, Asia, Europe, the Middle East, and elsewhere around the world today. Some of the main protagonists are those who have come to be designated as first-second-, and third-generation street gangs, as well as their various possible allies such as traditional Transnational Criminal Organizations. In this new type of war, national security and sovereignty of affected countries is being impinged every day, and gangs’ illicit commercial motives are, in fact, becoming an ominous political agenda.


Friday
11Jan

Gangsters go global

BOOKS

The Mafia in Naples


Jan 10th 2008
From The Economist print edition



CONVENTIONAL wisdom has it that Italy's economy is failing, in part because it cannot produce corporations big enough to compete internationally. “Gomorrah” is a useful corrective to that view.

Roberto Saviano demonstrates that the Camorra, the Naples Mafia which provides the word-play for his book's title, is doing just fine in the globalised economy. Once a web of mobsters whose most international activity was smuggling cigarettes, the Camorra eases uninspected Chinese goods into Europe and provides loans at usurious rates to the sweatshops that produce many of the elegant garments Italy sells abroad. It imports arms from eastern Europe and exports them to Basque guerrillas. Its various clans launder money through businesses scattered from Taiwan to Brno, from Miami Beach, Florida, to Five Dock, New South Wales.

 

Gomorrah: A Personal Journey into the Violent International Empire of Naples' Organized Crime System.
By Roberto Saviano. Translated by Virginia Jewiss.
Farrar, Straus and Giroux; 320 pages; $25.
Macmillan; £16.99

Tuesday
18Dec

Drug trafficking undermines Guinea-Bissau peace: UN

The Security Council has urged the UN system and Government of Guinea-Bissau to take action against illicit drug and organised crime. It noted with deep concern the threat that drug and human trafficking posed to peace consolidation in Guinea-Bissau and the stability of West Africa
The president of the world council, Leslie Kojo Christian of Ghana called upon the government, with support from the international community, to take action to safeguard the security of officials involved in combating those crimes.
The Council welcomed the decision by the Economic Community of West African States to convene a regional conference later this year aimed at developing a regional plan of action to deal with the challenge.
It also welcomed the scheduled legislative elections in Guinea-Bissau in 2008 and called on all segments of the country’s society to ensure that they took place in a peaceful and orderly fashion. It appealed to the international community to provide the necessary logistical and technical support to ensure the effective and timely organisation of the polls.
The 15-Member Council welcomed the cooperation between Guinea-Bissau and international financial and development agencies and requested UN chief Ban to present proposals on how best the UN could provide effective assistance in an integrated and holistic manner to national efforts towards stabilisation.
The Council expressed its intent to consider as a matter of priority the request from the Prime Minister that Guinea-Bissau be placed on the agenda of the Peace building Commission.
The Security Council also expressed its concern with the fragility of the democratisation process in Guinea-Bissau, as well as persistent economic and social crisis. It recognised the importance of containing and reversing the threat of drug trafficking to the peace consolidation process in Guinea-Bissau.
It recalled its previous statements on Guinea-Bissau, and having considered the latest report of the Secretary-General on developments in Guinea-Bissau and on the activities of the United Nations Peacebuilding Support Office in Guinea-Bissau reaffirmed its support for the continuing efforts to consolidate peace in that country, in a presidential statement
It acknowledged that there is a need for profound reform of the justice sector, including the combat against organised crime and drug trafficking. The government continued with its effort to improve relations with international partners and to enhance the country’s external credibility in order to mobilise resources for its Minimum Public Finance Stability Programme.
It noted the threat posed by drug and human trafficking, which can undermine the important gains made with respect to rule of law, democratic and transparent governance. The Council further noted that the danger posed by drug trafficking in Guinea-Bissau could have negative implications towards the region, as well as other regions.
The report stated that there has been improvement in government revenue but there are still structural problems in curbing expenditure. Spain and Guinea-Bissau signed a cooperation agreement worth 15 million dollars, covering the area of democratic governance and the social sector.
The governments of Portugal and Guinea-Bissau signed an annual cooperation plan for 2007 worth some 10 million dollars, as well as a memorandum of understanding for assistance in combating drug trafficking.


Wednesday
12Dec

Organised Crime "Invested" BGN 200 M in Bulgaria Local Polls

From: NOVINITE
12 December 2007, Wednesday

Organised crime circles had "invested" roughly BGN 200 M to buy votes at last month's local elections in Bulgaria, think-tank Centre for Study of Democracy (CSD) claimed on Wednesday.

The think-tank made the claim at a round table on organised crime, where it presented a report titled "Organised Crime in Bulgaria: Markets and Trends".

Organised crime rings in Bulgaria have a nationwide coverage and lynchpins that own perfectly legal businesses as cover, CSD Senior Fellow Tihomir Bezlov said.

Bulgaria's local polls have been plagued by widespread allegations of vote-buying, although only a handful of cases are being investigated by prosecutors.

The elections showed that the organised crime is entrenching itself in the local administration, said German Ambassador to Bulgaria Michael Geier, one of the speakers at the round table.

Tuesday
04Dec

MAFIA IS BACK - Organised Crime in Streets of Zagreb

Organised Crime in Streets of Zagreb
 
Ten years ago the candidate for the Zagreb underground leadership, Ivan Sakota, was probably killed by yesterday murdered Davor Zecevic.
Nina Bura

Exactly ten years passed since the murder of Ivan Sokota (24), young candidate for the leadership of the Zagreb underground. He was killed around 1:00 a.m. on June 28 in from on the coffee bar Kvak in Maticeva Sr., precisely by a bullet that hit him under his armpit. The murder happened in front of a crowd, that sat on the outside chairs of the serious bar on that summer evening. Davor Zecevic Zec was charged for the murder of Sakota and was murdered himself last night. It was known that Sakotina's uncles vowed to make the murderer of their nephew not only in front of the court. However, the paying of an old debt came on schedule. Although 10 years later.

Slisko’s and Bagaric’s mafia clan’s settlements of accounts  

And ten years ago Zagreb really looked like a battle field for two mafia clans, Slisko’s and Bagaric’s, and their settlements of accounts. The clan war officially started in spring 1997, when young Sokota was killed. Then followed the murder of Spehtim Taci (27), who was witness of Sakotina’s murder. Tacin was eliminated in his BMW on the crossroad of Zagorska St. and Selska St., while he was waiting at the traffic lights green light. He was killed by a motorcyclist who stopped next to him.

Mijat Vrdoljak (35) was the next on the list. Known for his business with cars, but also as holder of debts, Vrdoljak escaped death the first time when a bomb was placed in his car, but he was killed a month later, shot from a fast driving car.

Il capo di tutti i capi – eliminated

The following year, on July 15, 1998, il capo di tutti i capi, Zlatko Bagaric was killed. In the coffee atmosphere of NK Dubrava, the Rodic brothers shot Bagaric after he had beaten them all night. Nikica Jelavic, supposed heir of Bagaric, was injured that night.