Stolen hard drives put former Iraq firefighters at risk
Excerpt:
Stolen hard drives put former Iraq firefighters at risk
December 28, 2010 — Ms Sparky
On December 9, Wackenhut Services, LLC (WSLLC) President David W. Foley sent a letter to the New Hampshire Attorney General’s Office and informed them that:
On November 29, 2010, we discovered that certain hard drives shipped from our office in Iraq were stolen in transit to out US offices along with other office equipment. After investigation, on November 30, 2010 we determined, to the best of our knowledge, that the stolen hard drives contained personal information of certain of our past employees. Based on our investigation, we believe that the stolen hard drives contained the following unencrypted personal information of our past employees: (i) first and last names, (ii) social security numbers, (iii) passport numbers, (iv) last known home addresses and (v) date of birth and place of birth.
On December 13, 2010 WSLLC notified each of the affected personnel via the US Postal Service to inform them of the breach. They were offered a one year subscription to ConsumerInfo.com credit monitoring service and some advice on how to best protect their credit.
Open Pit Burning US Military Facilities
Excerpt:
Military Burn Pits and Chronic Health Problems
Defense contractors hired to oversee military waste management are facing a number of burn pit lawsuits. The US military allege that open burn pits, particularly the Balad burn pit, the most notorious of the Iraq burn pits, have resulted in a number of serious side effects due to burn pit exposure.
FREE CASE EVALUATION
Send your Burn Pit claim to a Lawyer who will review your case at NO COST or obligation.Open Pit Burning and US Military
The US Military returning from Iraq and Afghanistan may be suffering chronic, long-term health issues as a result of exposure to toxic fumes from open burn pits. Defense contractors have used burn pits at the majority of US military bases in the Middle East as a method of military waste disposal. All kinds of toxic waste have been incinerated in these open burn pits, including human waste, plastics, hazardous medical waste, lithium batteries, tires, hydraulic fluids and vehicles—often using jet fuel as an accelerant.
Since the beginning of the Iraqi war in 2003, countless service members have developed serious health issues. According to the "Afghanistan and Iraq Report", which was released by the US Government Accountability Office, four burn pits on US bases in Iraq are not meeting standards set in 2009 for burn pit operations.
The report, titled "DOD Should Improve Adherence to Its Guidance on Open Pit Burning and Solid Waste Management", goes on to say that some veterans returning from both conflicts have reported pulmonary and respiratory ailments, among other health concerns, that they attribute to burn pit emissions.
Burn Pit Lawsuits
Current and former members of the military have filed lawsuits in federal court in at least 43 states. The burn pit lawsuits, filed against Department of Defense contractors, claim mismanagement of the burn pit operations at several installations in both Iraq and Afghanistan, which resulted in exposure to harmful and toxic smoke and led to adverse health events.
Burn pit lawsuits have been filed against defense contractors KBR and its former parent company Halliburton, claiming the companies endangered the health of US troops and contractors in Iraq and Afghanistan by unsafely burning massive amounts of garbage on US bases.
One lawsuit filed in the United States District Court for District of Maryland (David Jobes v. KBR, April 2010) alleges that prolonged exposure to the pits’ smoke, ash, and fumes caused injuries such as chronic illnesses, risk of illnesses and wrongful death. The suit claims that the defendants—KBR Inc., Kellogg, Brown &d Root Services, Kellogg Brown & Root LLP and Halliburton Company-- had a duty to warn US service members and civilians working and living around burn pit fumes about health and safety issues but failed to properly do so.
The suit also claims that Halliburton and KBR received approximately five billion dollars per year in exchange for promising to provide contractually defined services. KBR apparently built the burn pit upwind from soldiers’ living quarters, in violation of the LOGCAP statement of work and Army regulations, which stated that burn pits had to be built downwind of living quarters. Yet the contractors allegedly ignored this guidance.
Open Pit Burning Timeline
2001 onwards: US Military relies on defense contractors in Afghanistan to dispose of its waste by using open burn pits.
2003 onwards: US Military in Iraq are exposed to toxic fumes from burn pits.
2004: KBR uses burn pits in US bases and camps across Iraq and Afghanistan to dispose of toxic wastes.
Early 2007: CHPPM and the Air Force Institute for Operational Health conduct a joint assessment of the burn pit at Balad, the largest US base in Iraq and home to about 25,000 U.S. military personnel and several thousand contractors.
December 2007: A draft executive summary (from the above) goes out to military commanders in Iraq, who post it for troops to see. It shows dioxin levels at 51 times acceptable levels, particulate exposure at 50 times acceptable levels, volatile compounds at two times acceptable levels, and cancer risk from exposure to dioxins at two times acceptable levels for people at Balad for a year and at eight times acceptable levels for people at the base for more than a year.
2008: The Military Times reports that the burn pit at Balad may have exposed tens of thousands of troops to cancer-causing dioxins, poisons such as arsenic and carbon monoxide, and hazardous medical waste
April 2009: Lawsuits are filed in state courts on behalf of current and former military personnel, private contractors and families of men who allegedly died because of exposure to the fumes at the Balad Air Force Base burn pit. Attorneys for the plaintiffs are also seeking to file a class action lawsuit.
June 2009: Jill Wilkins of Eustis, the wife of a local soldier who died from a brain tumor after being exposed to smoke from garbage-burning pits in Iraq, joins more than a dozen Florida soldiers in a class action lawsuit against KBR and its former parent company, Halliburton. Burn pit lawsuits have been filed in 16 states, with about 200 plaintiffs.
A lawsuit in Missouri against KBR and Halliburton accuses the companies of poisoning US soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan by burning toxic waste.
A proposed class action led by Albert Paul Bittel claims the defendants burned trucks, tires, batteries, metals, biohazard material including animal and human corpses and other toxins. The refuse was burned in open pits using diesel fuel.
Similar allegations are made in state courts in Maryland, Alabama, Georgia, California, Texas, Illinois, Wyoming, North Carolina and Minnesota.
January to March 2010: GAO visits four burn pits in Iraq (one operated by military personnel and three operated by contractor personnel) and determines that none are managed in accordance with CENTCOM's 2009 regulation. It discovers that all four pits burn plastic--a prohibited item that can produce carcinogens when burned.
August 2010: To date, more than 500 war veterans have reported illnesses they blame on exposure to open-pit burning of toxic waste by the military and defense contractors Halliburton and its former subsidiary, KBR.
Still, 251burn pits are in use in Afghanistan and 22 in Iraq.
September 2010: In a letter to Secretary of Defense Robert Gates, Rep. Earl Blumenauer (D-OR) calls for the declassification of an Army contract with KBR that provides the company financial immunity in cases of its own negligence, and announces legislation to increase Congressional oversight of the war contracting process.
Blumenauer releases a report detailing KBR's history of alleged misconduct in Iraq, including burning toxic chemicals in open pits on US bases.
October 2010: The US Government Accountability Office releases the "Afghanistan and Iraq Report" , claiming that four burn pits on US bases in Iraq are not meeting standards set in 2009 for burn pit operations.
Burn Pit Exposure Legal Help
If you or a loved one has suffered illness or an adverse health event resulting from these circumstances, please click the link below and your complaint will be sent to a lawyer who may evaluate your claim at no cost or obligation.
Please click here for a free evaluation of your Burn Pit case
Last updated on Jun-4-11 BURN PIT ARTICLES AND INTERVIEWS
Are Burn Pits to Blame for Respiratory Ailments in the Military?
Fort Campbell, KY: Amongst the various and most obvious hazards faced by military personnel while representing and defending their country overseas is the very air they breathe. To that point, it is alleged that toxins and other substances spewing forth from burn pits is further endangering the health of soldiers [READ MORE]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Open Pit Burning Linked to Intestinal Problems and More…
San Antonio, TX: Jessie was stationed in Iraq from 2004–2005, nine months of which he spent in Balad, home of the most notorious Open Pit Burning site. "We saw and tasted the smoke day and night, the pit plumes were huge in Balad," he says. Jessie believes his intestinal problems, chronic cough and sleep apnea are directly related to exposure to the open pit burns. And he is just one of thousands of troops with serious medical issues.
[READ MORE]
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
California Family Claims City Responsible for Burn Pit Exposure
Hemet, CA: The family of a California boy who suffered burn pit exposure while flying a kite on a beach wants to know if the state and local area properly maintain such fire rings on their beaches, reports the Orange County Register [READ MORE]
MORE BURN PIT
Open Pit Burn Exposure Echoes Asbestos Disease
Mother Files Burn Pit Lawsuit Over Son's Injuries
Q&A with Open Pit Burn Attorney Ben Stewart
Death of US Veteran Linked to Burn Pits
[MORE NEWS ARTICLES]
[MORE LAWYER INTERVIEWS]
YOUR BURN PIT STORIES
Publish your Burn Pit experience here for our readers to learn from.
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Sunday, June 5, 2011
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Death_squad
Excerpt:
A death squad is an armed military, police, insurgent, or terrorist squad that conducts extra-judicial killings, assassinations, and forced disappearances of persons as part of a war, insurgency or terror campaign. These killings are often conducted in ways meant to ensure the secrecy of the killers' identities, so as to avoid accountability.[1][2]
Death squads are often, but not exclusively, associated with the violent political repression under dictatorships, totalitarian states and similar regimes. They typically have the tacit or express support of the state, as a whole or in part (see state terrorism). Death squads may comprise a secret police force, paramilitary group or official government units with members drawn from the military or the police. They may also be organized as vigilante groups.
"Extrajudicial killings" are the illegal killing of leading political, trades union, dissidents, and social figures by either the state government, state authorities like the armed forces and police (as in Liberia under Charles G. Taylor), or criminal outfits such as the Italian Mafia.
Extrajudicial killings and death squads are most common in the Middle East (mostly in Palestinian territories and Iraq),[3][4][5][6][7] Central America,[8][9][10] Afghanistan, Bangladesh,[11] India and Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir,[12][13][14][15][16][17] several nations or regions in Equatorial Africa,[18][19][20] Jamaica,[21][22][23] Kosovo,[21][22] many parts of South America,[24][25][26] Uzbekistan[citation needed], parts of Thailand[27][28] and in the Philippines.[28][29][30][31][32][33]
Kevin Lloyd of The Bill and Terry Lloyd of ITN on TV Weekly
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YXZOCQ06a4
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/oct2006/lloy-o16.shtml
EXCERPT:
Britain: Court finds ITN journalist Terry Lloyd murdered by US forces
By Liz Smith
16 October 2006
An Oxfordshire coroner’s court ruled Friday, October 13 that the Independent Television News (ITN) journalist Terry Lloyd was unlawfully killed by US forces in southern Iraq in March 2003.
At the end of a six-day inquest, Assistant Deputy Coroner Andrew Walker told the court, “Having carefully taken into account all the evidence I am satisfied so that I am sure that had this killing taken place under English law it would have constituted an unlawful homicide.... I shall write to the attorney general [Britain’s highest judge] and the Director of Public Prosecutions with a view to considering the appropriate steps to bring the persons involved in the incident to justice.”
Walker stressed, “I have no doubt that Mr. Lloyd was killed by a tracer bullet fired from an American gun.”
Shooter, why not look at the people at the top who are in charge of our universities.
The worst of them were educated at our most prestigious
schools!!!
If Prof Jones is looking for verification by his peers through papers, it is because he recognizes that other people will only take him seriously when he does it the old fashioned way. (He's waking folks up and learning as he goes.)
Prof Jones is a teacher and now he's stepped out of that realm to do other things. Why not give him a break?
I was around in the beginning and he was speaking out before he had their approval. He wasn't asking for white papers back then.
He was attacked and had to learn the hard way how to get through to others.
Professor Jones was devastated when BYU rebuked him for speaking out.
When you say real professional journals, what exactly does that mean? Who are the real professionals these days?
Real professional journalists are 'DEAD' now because they were reporting the truth. Daniel Perle???
Would you say Ken Lay was a real professional? What about Henry Kissinger? Louis Gerstner Jr. was CEO at IBM and he was an insider in the education field??? (He's CEO of the Carlyle group now.)
What about Dick Cheney's wife? Isn't she involved in education? (What about Laura Bush, isn't she a librarian?)
Here are a list of some of the journalists that tried to be professional and do their jobs........
Look at all of the people that while doing their jobs died in the line of fire........ and murdered by who??? The elite group that runs the world thinking they are superior.
Brian Quig http://www.apfn.org/apfn/Brian_Quig.htm
What about Gary Webb? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Webb
War with Iraq > Memorial
Journalists killed or missing in Iraq
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KILLED
Steven Vincent, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal correspondent
•American journalist found dead in Basra
Steven Vincent, whose work has appeared in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, and his female Iraqi translator were abducted at gunpoint by five men Tuesday evening as they left a currency exchange shop, police Lt. Col. Karim al-Zaidi said.
Vincent's body was discovered on the side of the highway south of Basra later. He had been shot in the head and multiple times in the body, al-Zaidi said.
Liqaa Abdul-Razzaq, al-Sharqiya television, of Iraq
•Popular TV presenter killed in Iraq
Liqaa Abdul-Razzaq, a popular presenter who had worked for Iraqi state television before the war, was killed by gunmen Oct. 27, 2004 on her way home from work at al-Sharqiya television in Baghdad.
Abdul-Razzaq, mother of a 6-year-old boy and a month-old baby girl, was killed only two months after her husband was murdered. The motive for the killings was not clear.
Karam Hussein, 22, European Pressphoto Agency photographer, of Iraq
Hussein was gunned down Oct. 15, 2004 by four unidentified assailants while leaving his home in Mosul. Before working for Pressphoto, Hussein contributed photographs to the Associated Press.
Dina Hassan, al-Hurriya television correspondent, of Iraq
•Iraqi TV journalist killed in drive-by shooting
Dina Mohamad Hassan, an Iraqi journalist, was gunned down Oct. 14, 2004 in the Baghdad neighborhood of Al-Adhamiya. She worked for Al-Hurriya, a TV station run by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) which is headed by a Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani.
Mazen Tomeizi, 26, Al Arabiya TV producer, of Palestine
•U.S. army defends helicopter attack in Baghdad
Witnesses said Tomeizi was killed Sept. 12, 2004 when a U.S. helicopter fired into a crowd of Iraqis cheering around a military vehicle torched during fighting in Haifa street, an area widely known as a stronghold for anti-U.S. insurgents. Reuters cameraman Seif Fouad was wounded in one of the subsequent rocket strikes.
Enzo Baldoni, 56, freelance journalist, of Italy
•Berlusconi condemns reported killing of Italian hostage in Iraq
•Italian journalist held hostage is killed Al-Jazeera says
Baldoni, 56, a part-time journalist whose main job was as an advertising copy writer, went to Iraq for the news magazine Diario. Arab television reported Aug. 26 it received video footage of Baldoni being killed by militants but did not broadcast tape because of gruesome content.
Hussein Osman, translator, of Lebanon
•DNA tests confirm that missing Lebanese translator was killed in firefight early in Iraq invasion
Translator Hussein Osman of Lebanon, had been missing since the shooting incident March 22 in southern Iraq in which Terry Lloyd was killed. DNA tests carried out by British military investigators indicate that remains found at the site of the gunbattle were those of Osman.
Shinsuke Hashida, 61, freelance journalist, of Japan
Hashida, his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, 33, and their Iraqi interpreter were killed May 27 in an attack on the road between Mahmoudiya and Latifiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad. Hashida, an experienced war correspondent, had intended to bring back to Japan an Iraqi boy who suffered injuries to his eyes in an attack.
Kotaro Ogawa, 33, freelance journalist, of Japan
Ogawa and his uncle had just left the Japanese military base in the town of Samawa, south of Baghdad, and were heading towards the capital when their vehicle was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired by an armed group. The vehicle caught fired and exploded. Only the driver, who was injured, managed to get out in time.
Rashid Hamid Wali, 38, Al-Jazeera television
•Jazeera newsman killed in clashes in Iraq
Wali, assistant cameraman and fixer for the Qatar-based satellite channel Al-Jazeera, was killed by gunfire May 20 in the Iraqi city of Karbala. The father of six was filming fighting in the southern city of Karbala where U.S. forces are battling to put down a weeks-old rebellion by militiamen loyal to radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
Waldemar Milewicz, 47, TVP television correspondent, of Poland
•Leading Polish journalist shot dead in Iraq
Gunmen ambushed the Polish TV crew on May 7 south of Baghdad, killing Milewicz – Poland's best-known war reporter – and Mounir Bouamrane, TVP television producer, 36, a dual Algerian-Polish national. It was only the third day in Iraq for the Polish crew.
Asaad Kadhim, U.S.-funded TV station Al-Iraqiya correspondent, of Iraq
Kadhim, a correspondent for the U.S.-funded Al-Iraqiya TV, and his driver, Hussein Saleh, were killed April 19 by gunfire from U.S. forces near a checkpoint close to the Iraqi city of Samara, about 75 miles northwest of the capital, Baghdad. Cameraman Jassem Kamel was injured in the shooting.
On April 20, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the deputy director of operations for coalition forces in Iraq, confirmed that U.S. troops killed the journalist and his driver. According to media reports, Kimmitt said that coalition forces at the checkpoint warned the journalists' vehicle to stop by firing several warning shots. When the vehicle ignored those shots, Kimmitt said, forces fired at the car.
Burhan Mohammed Mazhour, ABC television cameraman, of Iraq
•Iraqi cameraman working for ABC killed
Mazhour was shot in the head while covering clashes in Falluja and taken to a hospital there, where he died shortly afterwards. Witnesses said U.S. troops fired at him. The U.S. military said it had no information about the incident.
Omar Hashim Kamal, Time magazine translator, of Iraq
•Iraqi working for Time magazine dies after attack
Time magazine said Kamal was shot on March 24 in Baghdad and had been in critical condition at an American military hospital in the Iraqi capital. He died March 26. Kamal is survived by a wife and 4-year-old son.
Ali Abdelaziz, Al Arabiya cameraman, of Iraq
Ali Abdelaziz, a cameraman working for Dubai-based satellite television channel Al Arabiya, was shot and killed by U.S. troops on March 18. A second Iraqi journalist, Ali al-Khatib, dies the next day from wounds sustained in the same incident.
Mohammed Farhan, Majeed Rashid, Nadia Shawkat; employees of Diyala TV, of Iraq
Gunmen open fire on a minibus March 18, killing three Iraqi journalists and wounding nine other employees of a coalition-funded TV station in Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad.
Safir Nader and Haymin Mohamed Salih, cameramen with Qulan TV;
Abdel Sattar Abdel Karim, freelance photographer for Arabic-language daily Al Ta'akhy;
Ayoub Mohamed and Gharib Mohamed Salih, of Kurdistan TV;
Semko Karim Mohyideen, freelance journalist
Killed on Feb. 1 in twin suicide bombings on offices of Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and Kurdistan Democratic Party in Irbil.
Duraid Isa Mohammed, CNN translator-producer, of Iraq
•Two CNN employees killed in Iraq
CNN said in a broadcast that the pair was returning from an assignment Jan. 27, 2004 in a two-car convoy that came under attack. A CNN cameraman in the second car was grazed in the head by a bullet but was safe, the network said. It said correspondent Michael Holmes was also in the car along with three other people but none of them were hurt.
The vehicles were traveling toward the Baghdad suburb of Mahmoudiya when a rust-colored Opel came up behind one car. A gunman, standing through the sunroof, opened fire at the convoy with an AK-47, the network said.
The car with Holmes and wounded cameraman Scott McWhinnie escaped as an armed security adviser who was with them returned fire.
Yasser Khatab, CNN driver, of Iraq
Mazen Dana, 43, Reuters cameraman, of Palestine
•Cameraman's death result of U.S. military flaws, report says
•Soldiers' testimony raises questions over U.S. report
•U.S. says troops followed rules in cameraman's death
• Fellow journalists accuse U.S. soldiers of negligence in shooting of cameraman
Mazen Dana, 43, was shot and killed by U.S. soldiers Aug. 17, 2003 while videotaping near a U.S.-run prison on the outskirts of Baghdad. The U.S. Army said its soldiers mistook his camera for a rocket-propelled grenade launcher.
Jeremy Little, 27, sound engineer for NBC News, of Australia
•Australian soundman dies from Iraq wounds
Little died July 6, at military hospital in Germany from wounds suffered on June 29 in a grenade attack on a military vehicle in Fallujah.
Richard Wild, 24, freelance cameraman, of Britian
•Young British journalist killed in Baghdad yearned to become war correspondent
Tarek Ayyoub, 35, Al-Jazeera producer and correspondent, of Jordan
•Jazeera TV cameraman killed in Baghdad raid
Jose Couso, 37, Tele 5 cameraman, of Spain
•Spanish judge to probe death of Iraq war cameraman
•Spanish cameraman killed in Baghdad hotel blast
Taras Protsyuk, 35, Reuters cameraman, of the Ukraine
•Reuters cameraman dies in Iraq hotel blast
Christian Liebig, 35, Focus magazine, of Germany
Christian Liebig, journalist for Focus weekly, Germany, April 7, south of Baghdad in a friendly fire incident.
Julio Anguita Parrado, 32, El Mundo reporter, of Spain
Julio Anguita Parrado, reporter for El Mundo, Spain, April 7, south of Baghdad in a friendly fire incident.
Kamaran Abdurazaq Muhamed, Kurdish translator for BBC
Killed on April 6 in U.S. aircraft bombing of joint convoy of Kurdish fighters and U.S. Special Forces in northern Iraq.
Michael Kelly, 46, Washington Post columnist
•Atlantic Monthly editor-at-large killed in accident in Iraq
Michael Kelly died April 3 while traveling with the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division as it moved across Iraq, according to a statement issued by Atlantic Media. He was the first American journalist to die in the conflict.
Kaveh Golestan, 52, BBC cameraman, of Iran
•BBC journalist killed in northern Iraq
Kaveh Golestan, 52, an Iranian freelance cameraman for the BBC, died instantly April 2 when he stepped on a land mine as he climbed out of his car in the town of Kifrey.
Terry Lloyd, 50, ITV News
•Search shows ITN journalists were attacked from two sides
The British television news network ITN has said it believes its reporter Terry Lloyd was killed March 22 by "friendly fire" from British or American soldiers en route to the southern Iraqi city of Basra.
He was one of a four-man ITV News team came under fire, apparently from coalition forces, outside the city. Iraqi ambulances took a number of dead and injured from the area into the city.
His body is believed to lie in a Basra hospital under Iraqi control.
Lloyd, a seasoned war correspondent who also had covered conflicts in Cambodia and the Balkans, was ITN's longest-serving reporter and was the first ITN correspondent to be killed on assignment in the network's 48-year history, the network said.
"Terry was brave, he was determined and he was safety conscious," said ITN chief executive Stewart Purvis. "He was a lovely guy."
Lloyd was 50, and married with two children.
The whereabouts of Lloyd's colleague, cameraman Fred Nerac, 43, of France, is unknown.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Lloyd
EXCERPT:
InvestigationThe Royal Military Police (RMP) carried out an investigation into the incident. Major Kay Roberts, an RMP investigator, testified at the inquest on Terry Lloyd that a videotape of the incident, taken by a cameraman attached to the US unit that killed Terry Lloyd, had been edited before it had been passed on to the British investigation. The RMP forensics expert who examined the tape concluded that about 15 minutes had been removed from the start of the recording. Roberts testified at the inquest that she was sent the tape "some months" after the incident[4] and that the she was told by the US authorities that the footage they handed over was "everything that they had".
The ITN team were driving in two cars both clearly marked as press vehicles. Frédéric Nérac and Hussein Osman were in the car behind Terry Lloyd and Daniel Demoustier. They encountered an Iraqi convoy at the Shatt Al Basra Bridge in Basra, Iraq. Nérac and Osman were taken out of their car and made to get into an Iraqi vehicle. The British investigation into the incident established the convoy was escorting a Baath Party leader to Basra. US forces shot at the Iraqi convoy, killing Osman: Nérac's body has not been recovered, but investigation suggests it is unlikely he could have survived.[5]
Frédéric Nérac's wife Fabienne Mercier-Nérac testified that she had received a letter from US authorities who denied being at the scene when the ITN News team was attacked.
Demoustier and Lloyd, still in the ITN car, were caught in crossfire between the Iraqi Republican Guard and U.S. forces. Lloyd was hit by an Iraqi bullet, an injury from which he could have recovered. He was put into a civilian minibus that had stopped to pick up casualties. Forensic evidence presented at the inquest shows U.S. forces shot at the minibus after it had turned to leave the area, killing Terry Lloyd outright. Demoustier survived.
Paul Moran, 39, Australian Broadcasting Corp. cameraman
Paul Moran, 39, was killed March 22 by an apparent car bomb at a checkpoint near a camp of the al-Qaida-linked militant group Ansar al-Islam in northern Iraq. Australian Broadcasting correspondent Eric Campbell suffered minor shrapnel injuries, a network statement said.
Journalists had gone to the checkpoint to interview refugees streaming out of the area that had been attacked. One of the cars coming out with the refugees exploded, according to an account pieced together from witnesses and reporters.
Another civilian and three Peshmergas, or Kurdish soldiers, also were killed. None of their identities were made known immediately.
Moran, who was based in Paris, had worked extensively in the Middle East. He is survived by his wife and baby daughter
MISSING
Fred Nerac, cameraman, 43, of France
•Chirac urges British action over missing cameraman
•Search shows ITN journalists were attacked from two sides
The Foreign Ministry said Frederic Nerac, who works for Britain's Independent Television News, ITN, had been hurt, but it had no information on his condition or current whereabouts.
It was the first information about Nerac since the attack which killed British ITN reporter Terry Lloyd.
The crew had been driving toward the southern city of Basra when they came under fire.
NON-HOSTILE INCIDENT
Mark Fineman, 51, Los Angeles Times correspondent
•L.A. Times correspondent dies of apparent heart attack
Veteran Los Angeles Times correspondent Mark Fineman died Sept. 23 of an apparent heart attack while working in Baghdad. Fineman and fellow Times correspondent Alissa J. Rubin were waiting in the offices of the Iraqi Governing Council for an interview when he complained of chest pains and collapsed. He was rushed to a hospital but doctors could not revive him.
Elizabeth Neuffer, 46, Boston Globe reporter
Elizabeth Neuffer, a reporter for The Boston Globe, died May 8 after the car in which she was a passenger apparently struck a guardrail near the town of Samarra, about halfway between Baghdad and Tikrit. Neuffer's translator, Waleed Khalifa Hassan Al-Dulami, also died in the accident.
Veronica Cabrera, 28, America TV camerawoman, of Argentine
•Argentine camerawoman dies of injuries in Iraq
Veronica Cabrera, an Argentine free-lance camerawoman, died April 15 of injuries from a car crash outside the Iraqi capital on April 14.
Mario Podesta, 52, America TV correspondent, of Argentine
•Argentinian journalist dies in car crash in Iraq
Mario Podesta, an Argentine TV reporter, was instantly killed in a car crash outside the Iraqi capital on April 14.
David Bloom, 39, NBC correspondent
•NBC News correspondent dies of blood clot
Gaby Rado, 48, Channel 4 TV reporter, of Britain
Gaby Rado, a correspondent for Channel 4 News, Britain, died March 30 after apparently falling from a hotel roof in northern Iraq.
shooter586 wrote:
More of those pesky peer-reviewed artcles in real professional journals.
Maybe we can see if Prof jones can get around to submitting one?
Probably not. He needed to make up his own "journal" so his friends can
rubber stamp the review. We all know how he is about getting his papers
peer-reviewed by real professionals.
http://www.civil.northwestern.edu/people/bazant/PDFs/Papers/00%20WTC%
20Collapse%20-%20What%20did%20&%20Did%20Not%20Cause%20It%20-%20Revised%
206-22-07.pdf
or
http://tinyurl.com/2hy2s8
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Excerpt:
A death squad is an armed military, police, insurgent, or terrorist squad that conducts extra-judicial killings, assassinations, and forced disappearances of persons as part of a war, insurgency or terror campaign. These killings are often conducted in ways meant to ensure the secrecy of the killers' identities, so as to avoid accountability.[1][2]
Death squads are often, but not exclusively, associated with the violent political repression under dictatorships, totalitarian states and similar regimes. They typically have the tacit or express support of the state, as a whole or in part (see state terrorism). Death squads may comprise a secret police force, paramilitary group or official government units with members drawn from the military or the police. They may also be organized as vigilante groups.
"Extrajudicial killings" are the illegal killing of leading political, trades union, dissidents, and social figures by either the state government, state authorities like the armed forces and police (as in Liberia under Charles G. Taylor), or criminal outfits such as the Italian Mafia.
Extrajudicial killings and death squads are most common in the Middle East (mostly in Palestinian territories and Iraq),[3][4][5][6][7] Central America,[8][9][10] Afghanistan, Bangladesh,[11] India and Indian-administered Jammu and Kashmir,[12][13][14][15][16][17] several nations or regions in Equatorial Africa,[18][19][20] Jamaica,[21][22][23] Kosovo,[21][22] many parts of South America,[24][25][26] Uzbekistan[citation needed], parts of Thailand[27][28] and in the Philippines.[28][29][30][31][32][33]
Kevin Lloyd of The Bill and Terry Lloyd of ITN on TV Weekly
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8YXZOCQ06a4
http://www.wsws.org/articles/2006/oct2006/lloy-o16.shtml
EXCERPT:
Britain: Court finds ITN journalist Terry Lloyd murdered by US forces
By Liz Smith
16 October 2006
An Oxfordshire coroner’s court ruled Friday, October 13 that the Independent Television News (ITN) journalist Terry Lloyd was unlawfully killed by US forces in southern Iraq in March 2003.
At the end of a six-day inquest, Assistant Deputy Coroner Andrew Walker told the court, “Having carefully taken into account all the evidence I am satisfied so that I am sure that had this killing taken place under English law it would have constituted an unlawful homicide.... I shall write to the attorney general [Britain’s highest judge] and the Director of Public Prosecutions with a view to considering the appropriate steps to bring the persons involved in the incident to justice.”
Walker stressed, “I have no doubt that Mr. Lloyd was killed by a tracer bullet fired from an American gun.”
Shooter, why not look at the people at the top who are in charge of our universities.
The worst of them were educated at our most prestigious
schools!!!
If Prof Jones is looking for verification by his peers through papers, it is because he recognizes that other people will only take him seriously when he does it the old fashioned way. (He's waking folks up and learning as he goes.)
Prof Jones is a teacher and now he's stepped out of that realm to do other things. Why not give him a break?
I was around in the beginning and he was speaking out before he had their approval. He wasn't asking for white papers back then.
He was attacked and had to learn the hard way how to get through to others.
Professor Jones was devastated when BYU rebuked him for speaking out.
When you say real professional journals, what exactly does that mean? Who are the real professionals these days?
Real professional journalists are 'DEAD' now because they were reporting the truth. Daniel Perle???
Would you say Ken Lay was a real professional? What about Henry Kissinger? Louis Gerstner Jr. was CEO at IBM and he was an insider in the education field??? (He's CEO of the Carlyle group now.)
What about Dick Cheney's wife? Isn't she involved in education? (What about Laura Bush, isn't she a librarian?)
Here are a list of some of the journalists that tried to be professional and do their jobs........
Look at all of the people that while doing their jobs died in the line of fire........ and murdered by who??? The elite group that runs the world thinking they are superior.
Brian Quig http://www.apfn.org/apfn/Brian_Quig.htm
What about Gary Webb? http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gary_Webb
War with Iraq > Memorial
Journalists killed or missing in Iraq
ASSOCIATED PRESS
KILLED
Steven Vincent, The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal correspondent
•American journalist found dead in Basra
Steven Vincent, whose work has appeared in The New York Times and The Wall Street Journal, and his female Iraqi translator were abducted at gunpoint by five men Tuesday evening as they left a currency exchange shop, police Lt. Col. Karim al-Zaidi said.
Vincent's body was discovered on the side of the highway south of Basra later. He had been shot in the head and multiple times in the body, al-Zaidi said.
Liqaa Abdul-Razzaq, al-Sharqiya television, of Iraq
•Popular TV presenter killed in Iraq
Liqaa Abdul-Razzaq, a popular presenter who had worked for Iraqi state television before the war, was killed by gunmen Oct. 27, 2004 on her way home from work at al-Sharqiya television in Baghdad.
Abdul-Razzaq, mother of a 6-year-old boy and a month-old baby girl, was killed only two months after her husband was murdered. The motive for the killings was not clear.
Karam Hussein, 22, European Pressphoto Agency photographer, of Iraq
Hussein was gunned down Oct. 15, 2004 by four unidentified assailants while leaving his home in Mosul. Before working for Pressphoto, Hussein contributed photographs to the Associated Press.
Dina Hassan, al-Hurriya television correspondent, of Iraq
•Iraqi TV journalist killed in drive-by shooting
Dina Mohamad Hassan, an Iraqi journalist, was gunned down Oct. 14, 2004 in the Baghdad neighborhood of Al-Adhamiya. She worked for Al-Hurriya, a TV station run by the Patriotic Union of Kurdistan (PUK) which is headed by a Kurdish leader Jalal Talabani.
Mazen Tomeizi, 26, Al Arabiya TV producer, of Palestine
•U.S. army defends helicopter attack in Baghdad
Witnesses said Tomeizi was killed Sept. 12, 2004 when a U.S. helicopter fired into a crowd of Iraqis cheering around a military vehicle torched during fighting in Haifa street, an area widely known as a stronghold for anti-U.S. insurgents. Reuters cameraman Seif Fouad was wounded in one of the subsequent rocket strikes.
Enzo Baldoni, 56, freelance journalist, of Italy
•Berlusconi condemns reported killing of Italian hostage in Iraq
•Italian journalist held hostage is killed Al-Jazeera says
Baldoni, 56, a part-time journalist whose main job was as an advertising copy writer, went to Iraq for the news magazine Diario. Arab television reported Aug. 26 it received video footage of Baldoni being killed by militants but did not broadcast tape because of gruesome content.
Hussein Osman, translator, of Lebanon
•DNA tests confirm that missing Lebanese translator was killed in firefight early in Iraq invasion
Translator Hussein Osman of Lebanon, had been missing since the shooting incident March 22 in southern Iraq in which Terry Lloyd was killed. DNA tests carried out by British military investigators indicate that remains found at the site of the gunbattle were those of Osman.
Shinsuke Hashida, 61, freelance journalist, of Japan
Hashida, his nephew Kotaro Ogawa, 33, and their Iraqi interpreter were killed May 27 in an attack on the road between Mahmoudiya and Latifiya, 20 miles south of Baghdad. Hashida, an experienced war correspondent, had intended to bring back to Japan an Iraqi boy who suffered injuries to his eyes in an attack.
Kotaro Ogawa, 33, freelance journalist, of Japan
Ogawa and his uncle had just left the Japanese military base in the town of Samawa, south of Baghdad, and were heading towards the capital when their vehicle was hit by a rocket-propelled grenade fired by an armed group. The vehicle caught fired and exploded. Only the driver, who was injured, managed to get out in time.
Rashid Hamid Wali, 38, Al-Jazeera television
•Jazeera newsman killed in clashes in Iraq
Wali, assistant cameraman and fixer for the Qatar-based satellite channel Al-Jazeera, was killed by gunfire May 20 in the Iraqi city of Karbala. The father of six was filming fighting in the southern city of Karbala where U.S. forces are battling to put down a weeks-old rebellion by militiamen loyal to radical Shi'ite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr.
Waldemar Milewicz, 47, TVP television correspondent, of Poland
•Leading Polish journalist shot dead in Iraq
Gunmen ambushed the Polish TV crew on May 7 south of Baghdad, killing Milewicz – Poland's best-known war reporter – and Mounir Bouamrane, TVP television producer, 36, a dual Algerian-Polish national. It was only the third day in Iraq for the Polish crew.
Asaad Kadhim, U.S.-funded TV station Al-Iraqiya correspondent, of Iraq
Kadhim, a correspondent for the U.S.-funded Al-Iraqiya TV, and his driver, Hussein Saleh, were killed April 19 by gunfire from U.S. forces near a checkpoint close to the Iraqi city of Samara, about 75 miles northwest of the capital, Baghdad. Cameraman Jassem Kamel was injured in the shooting.
On April 20, Brig. Gen. Mark Kimmitt, the deputy director of operations for coalition forces in Iraq, confirmed that U.S. troops killed the journalist and his driver. According to media reports, Kimmitt said that coalition forces at the checkpoint warned the journalists' vehicle to stop by firing several warning shots. When the vehicle ignored those shots, Kimmitt said, forces fired at the car.
Burhan Mohammed Mazhour, ABC television cameraman, of Iraq
•Iraqi cameraman working for ABC killed
Mazhour was shot in the head while covering clashes in Falluja and taken to a hospital there, where he died shortly afterwards. Witnesses said U.S. troops fired at him. The U.S. military said it had no information about the incident.
Omar Hashim Kamal, Time magazine translator, of Iraq
•Iraqi working for Time magazine dies after attack
Time magazine said Kamal was shot on March 24 in Baghdad and had been in critical condition at an American military hospital in the Iraqi capital. He died March 26. Kamal is survived by a wife and 4-year-old son.
Ali Abdelaziz, Al Arabiya cameraman, of Iraq
Ali Abdelaziz, a cameraman working for Dubai-based satellite television channel Al Arabiya, was shot and killed by U.S. troops on March 18. A second Iraqi journalist, Ali al-Khatib, dies the next day from wounds sustained in the same incident.
Mohammed Farhan, Majeed Rashid, Nadia Shawkat; employees of Diyala TV, of Iraq
Gunmen open fire on a minibus March 18, killing three Iraqi journalists and wounding nine other employees of a coalition-funded TV station in Baqouba, 35 miles northeast of Baghdad.
Safir Nader and Haymin Mohamed Salih, cameramen with Qulan TV;
Abdel Sattar Abdel Karim, freelance photographer for Arabic-language daily Al Ta'akhy;
Ayoub Mohamed and Gharib Mohamed Salih, of Kurdistan TV;
Semko Karim Mohyideen, freelance journalist
Killed on Feb. 1 in twin suicide bombings on offices of Patriotic Union of Kurdistan and Kurdistan Democratic Party in Irbil.
Duraid Isa Mohammed, CNN translator-producer, of Iraq
•Two CNN employees killed in Iraq
CNN said in a broadcast that the pair was returning from an assignment Jan. 27, 2004 in a two-car convoy that came under attack. A CNN cameraman in the second car was grazed in the head by a bullet but was safe, the network said. It said correspondent Michael Holmes was also in the car along with three other people but none of them were hurt.
The vehicles were traveling toward the Baghdad suburb of Mahmoudiya when a rust-colored Opel came up behind one car. A gunman, standing through the sunroof, opened fire at the convoy with an AK-47, the network said.
The car with Holmes and wounded cameraman Scott McWhinnie escaped as an armed security adviser who was with them returned fire.
Yasser Khatab, CNN driver, of Iraq
Mazen Dana, 43, Reuters cameraman, of Palestine
•Cameraman's death result of U.S. military flaws, report says
•Soldiers' testimony raises questions over U.S. report
•U.S. says troops followed rules in cameraman's death
• Fellow journalists accuse U.S. soldiers of negligence in shooting of cameraman
Mazen Dana, 43, was shot and killed by U.S. soldiers Aug. 17, 2003 while videotaping near a U.S.-run prison on the outskirts of Baghdad. The U.S. Army said its soldiers mistook his camera for a rocket-propelled grenade launcher.
Jeremy Little, 27, sound engineer for NBC News, of Australia
•Australian soundman dies from Iraq wounds
Little died July 6, at military hospital in Germany from wounds suffered on June 29 in a grenade attack on a military vehicle in Fallujah.
Richard Wild, 24, freelance cameraman, of Britian
•Young British journalist killed in Baghdad yearned to become war correspondent
Tarek Ayyoub, 35, Al-Jazeera producer and correspondent, of Jordan
•Jazeera TV cameraman killed in Baghdad raid
Jose Couso, 37, Tele 5 cameraman, of Spain
•Spanish judge to probe death of Iraq war cameraman
•Spanish cameraman killed in Baghdad hotel blast
Taras Protsyuk, 35, Reuters cameraman, of the Ukraine
•Reuters cameraman dies in Iraq hotel blast
Christian Liebig, 35, Focus magazine, of Germany
Christian Liebig, journalist for Focus weekly, Germany, April 7, south of Baghdad in a friendly fire incident.
Julio Anguita Parrado, 32, El Mundo reporter, of Spain
Julio Anguita Parrado, reporter for El Mundo, Spain, April 7, south of Baghdad in a friendly fire incident.
Kamaran Abdurazaq Muhamed, Kurdish translator for BBC
Killed on April 6 in U.S. aircraft bombing of joint convoy of Kurdish fighters and U.S. Special Forces in northern Iraq.
Michael Kelly, 46, Washington Post columnist
•Atlantic Monthly editor-at-large killed in accident in Iraq
Michael Kelly died April 3 while traveling with the U.S. Army's 3rd Infantry Division as it moved across Iraq, according to a statement issued by Atlantic Media. He was the first American journalist to die in the conflict.
Kaveh Golestan, 52, BBC cameraman, of Iran
•BBC journalist killed in northern Iraq
Kaveh Golestan, 52, an Iranian freelance cameraman for the BBC, died instantly April 2 when he stepped on a land mine as he climbed out of his car in the town of Kifrey.
Terry Lloyd, 50, ITV News
•Search shows ITN journalists were attacked from two sides
The British television news network ITN has said it believes its reporter Terry Lloyd was killed March 22 by "friendly fire" from British or American soldiers en route to the southern Iraqi city of Basra.
He was one of a four-man ITV News team came under fire, apparently from coalition forces, outside the city. Iraqi ambulances took a number of dead and injured from the area into the city.
His body is believed to lie in a Basra hospital under Iraqi control.
Lloyd, a seasoned war correspondent who also had covered conflicts in Cambodia and the Balkans, was ITN's longest-serving reporter and was the first ITN correspondent to be killed on assignment in the network's 48-year history, the network said.
"Terry was brave, he was determined and he was safety conscious," said ITN chief executive Stewart Purvis. "He was a lovely guy."
Lloyd was 50, and married with two children.
The whereabouts of Lloyd's colleague, cameraman Fred Nerac, 43, of France, is unknown.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terry_Lloyd
EXCERPT:
InvestigationThe Royal Military Police (RMP) carried out an investigation into the incident. Major Kay Roberts, an RMP investigator, testified at the inquest on Terry Lloyd that a videotape of the incident, taken by a cameraman attached to the US unit that killed Terry Lloyd, had been edited before it had been passed on to the British investigation. The RMP forensics expert who examined the tape concluded that about 15 minutes had been removed from the start of the recording. Roberts testified at the inquest that she was sent the tape "some months" after the incident[4] and that the she was told by the US authorities that the footage they handed over was "everything that they had".
The ITN team were driving in two cars both clearly marked as press vehicles. Frédéric Nérac and Hussein Osman were in the car behind Terry Lloyd and Daniel Demoustier. They encountered an Iraqi convoy at the Shatt Al Basra Bridge in Basra, Iraq. Nérac and Osman were taken out of their car and made to get into an Iraqi vehicle. The British investigation into the incident established the convoy was escorting a Baath Party leader to Basra. US forces shot at the Iraqi convoy, killing Osman: Nérac's body has not been recovered, but investigation suggests it is unlikely he could have survived.[5]
Frédéric Nérac's wife Fabienne Mercier-Nérac testified that she had received a letter from US authorities who denied being at the scene when the ITN News team was attacked.
Demoustier and Lloyd, still in the ITN car, were caught in crossfire between the Iraqi Republican Guard and U.S. forces. Lloyd was hit by an Iraqi bullet, an injury from which he could have recovered. He was put into a civilian minibus that had stopped to pick up casualties. Forensic evidence presented at the inquest shows U.S. forces shot at the minibus after it had turned to leave the area, killing Terry Lloyd outright. Demoustier survived.
Paul Moran, 39, Australian Broadcasting Corp. cameraman
Paul Moran, 39, was killed March 22 by an apparent car bomb at a checkpoint near a camp of the al-Qaida-linked militant group Ansar al-Islam in northern Iraq. Australian Broadcasting correspondent Eric Campbell suffered minor shrapnel injuries, a network statement said.
Journalists had gone to the checkpoint to interview refugees streaming out of the area that had been attacked. One of the cars coming out with the refugees exploded, according to an account pieced together from witnesses and reporters.
Another civilian and three Peshmergas, or Kurdish soldiers, also were killed. None of their identities were made known immediately.
Moran, who was based in Paris, had worked extensively in the Middle East. He is survived by his wife and baby daughter
MISSING
Fred Nerac, cameraman, 43, of France
•Chirac urges British action over missing cameraman
•Search shows ITN journalists were attacked from two sides
The Foreign Ministry said Frederic Nerac, who works for Britain's Independent Television News, ITN, had been hurt, but it had no information on his condition or current whereabouts.
It was the first information about Nerac since the attack which killed British ITN reporter Terry Lloyd.
The crew had been driving toward the southern city of Basra when they came under fire.
NON-HOSTILE INCIDENT
Mark Fineman, 51, Los Angeles Times correspondent
•L.A. Times correspondent dies of apparent heart attack
Veteran Los Angeles Times correspondent Mark Fineman died Sept. 23 of an apparent heart attack while working in Baghdad. Fineman and fellow Times correspondent Alissa J. Rubin were waiting in the offices of the Iraqi Governing Council for an interview when he complained of chest pains and collapsed. He was rushed to a hospital but doctors could not revive him.
Elizabeth Neuffer, 46, Boston Globe reporter
Elizabeth Neuffer, a reporter for The Boston Globe, died May 8 after the car in which she was a passenger apparently struck a guardrail near the town of Samarra, about halfway between Baghdad and Tikrit. Neuffer's translator, Waleed Khalifa Hassan Al-Dulami, also died in the accident.
Veronica Cabrera, 28, America TV camerawoman, of Argentine
•Argentine camerawoman dies of injuries in Iraq
Veronica Cabrera, an Argentine free-lance camerawoman, died April 15 of injuries from a car crash outside the Iraqi capital on April 14.
Mario Podesta, 52, America TV correspondent, of Argentine
•Argentinian journalist dies in car crash in Iraq
Mario Podesta, an Argentine TV reporter, was instantly killed in a car crash outside the Iraqi capital on April 14.
David Bloom, 39, NBC correspondent
•NBC News correspondent dies of blood clot
Gaby Rado, 48, Channel 4 TV reporter, of Britain
Gaby Rado, a correspondent for Channel 4 News, Britain, died March 30 after apparently falling from a hotel roof in northern Iraq.
shooter586
More of those pesky peer-reviewed artcles in real professional journals.
Maybe we can see if Prof jones can get around to submitting one?
Probably not. He needed to make up his own "journal" so his friends can
rubber stamp the review. We all know how he is about getting his papers
peer-reviewed by real professionals.
http://www.civil.northwestern.edu/people/bazant/PDFs/Papers/00%20WTC%
20Collapse%20-%20What%20did%20&%20Did%20Not%20Cause%20It%20-%20Revised%
206-22-07.pdf
or
http://tinyurl.com/2hy2s8
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