Archive for March, 2017

Ministry of Interior warns of fraudulent messages through social networking – Gulf Today

ABU DHABI: The UAE Ministry of Interior has warned of suspicious messages through social networking that promote narcotic drugs.

In a statement, the ministry said that it has recently noticed that some UAE residents have been receiving random calls on their personal phones and messages via WhatsApp.

"These contacts from foreign countries include messages from Pakistan that carry pictures of narcotic drugs, and ask for money transfers in order to receive them," it added.

The ministry stated that it is confident about public awareness and dealing with anonymous sources and calls, which promote illicit trade and profit. "In fact, it is a fraud to seize funds from others. As such, those who get involved in this bogus trade will be legally accountable, in accordance with the Anti-Narcotics and Psychotropic Substances Act and Cyber Crimes."

It urged the public not to respond to those messages or reply them, adding that relevant authorities should be informed immediately about such suspicious messages.

Colonel Saeed Al Suwaidi, Director-General of the Anti-Drug Federal Directorate General at the Ministry of Interior, said that the messages have been monitored while stressing that work is underway in co-ordination with counterpart agencies in friendly and sisterly countries to monitor all forms of false communications, and to access their source in any location.

He emphasised that police and security authorities in the UAE were capable of paralysing such attempts, through their special relations with counterpart agencies in the relevant countries, to track down perpetrators.

Al Suwaidi urged the public not to hesitate to report any suspicious numbers, or people trying to sell contraband goods or committing illegal activities. The public should communicate with the relevant agencies through the telephone number, 80044.

WAM

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Ministry of Interior warns of fraudulent messages through social networking - Gulf Today

New Hampshire House Passes Bill Banning Support for Warrantless Federal Spying Programs – Tenth Amendment Center (blog)

CONCORD, N.H. (Mar.10, 2017) The New Hampshire House has passeda bill that would ban material support or resources towarrantless federal spying.The vote was 199-153.

Rep. Neal Kurk and Rep. Carol McGuire, along with two cosponsors, introduced House Bill 171 (HB171). The legislation would prohibit the state or its political subdivisions from assisting a federal agency in the collection of electronic data without a warrant.

Neither the state nor its political subdivisions shall assist, participate with, or provide material support or resources to enable or facilitate a federal agency in the collection or use of a persons electronic data or metadata, without that persons informed consent, or without a warrant issued by a judge and based upon probable cause that particularly describes the person, place, or thing to be searched or seized, or without acting in accordance with a judicially-recognized exception to the warrant requirement of the Fourth Amendment to the Unites States Constitution.

On Feb. 15, the full House gave HB171 initial approval with an ought to pass recommendation by a 199-153 vote. It was then referredback to the House Criminal Justice and Public Safety Committee. Under House rules, bills with certain subject matter are required to go through a 2nd committee for approval, however the Chair has the discretion to decline that 2nd referral.

Today, House House Criminal Justice and Public Safety ChairDavidWelch(r) exercised that prerogative per House Rule 46(f), and the original Feb. 15 vote stands as final House passage of the bill.

PRACTICAL EFFECT

Because the federal government relies heavily on partnerships and information sharing with state and local law enforcement agencies, passage of HB171 wouldhinder warrantless surveillance in the state. For instance, if the feds wanted to engage in mass surveillance on specific groups or political organizations in New Hampshire, it would have to proceed without state or local assistance. That would likely prove problematic.

The feds share and tap into vast amounts of information gathered at the state and local level through a programknown as the information sharing environment or ISE. This includes monitoring phone calls, emails, web browsing history and text messages, all with no warrant, no probable cause, and without the people even knowing it.

According to its website, the ISE provides analysts, operators, and investigators with information needed to enhance national security. These analysts, operators, and investigators have mission needs to collaborate and share information with each other and with private sector partners and our foreign allies. In other words, ISE serves as a conduit for the sharing of information gathered without a warrant.

State and local law enforcement agencies regularly providesurveillance data to the federal government through ISE and Fusion Centers. They collect and store information from cell-site simulators (AKA stingrays), automated license plate readers (ALPRs), drones, facial recognition systems, and even smart or advanced power meters in homes.

Passage of HB171 would set the stage to end this sharing of warrantless information with the federal government. It would also prohibit state and local agencies from actively assisting in warrantless surveillance operations.

By including a prohibition on participation in the illegal collection and use of electronic data and metadata by the state, HB171would also prohibit what NSA former Chief Technical Director William Binney called the countrys greatest threat since the Civil War.

The bill would ban the state from obtaining or making use of electronic data or metadata obtained by the NSA without a warrant.

Reuters revealed the extent of such NSA data sharing with state and local law enforcement in an August 2013 article. According to documents obtained by the news agency, the NSA passes information to police through a formerly secret DEA unit known Special Operations Divisions and the cases rarely involve national security issues. Almost all of the information involves regular criminal investigations, not terror-related investigations.

In other words, not only does the NSA collect and store this data. using it to build profiles, the agency encourages state and local law enforcement to violate the Fourth Amendment by making use of this information in their day-to-day investigations.

This is the most threatening situation to our constitutional republic since the Civil War, Binney said.

NSA FACILITIES

The original definition of material support or resources included providing tangible support such as money, goods, and materials and also less concrete support, such as personnel and training. Section 805 of the PATRIOT Act expanded the definition to include expert advice or assistance.

Practically-speaking, the legislation would almost certainly stop the NSA from ever setting up a new facility in New Hampshire.

In 2006, the agency maxed out the Baltimore-area power grid, creating the potential, as the Baltimore Sun reported, for a virtual shutdown of the agency. Since then, the NSA aggressively expanded in states like Utah, Texas, Georgia and elsewhere, generally focusing on locations that can provide cheap and plentiful resources like water and power.

For instance, analysts estimate the NSA data storage facility in Bluffdale, Utah, will use 46 million gallons of water every day to cool its massive computers. The city supplies this water based on a contract it entered into with the spy agency. The state could turn of the water by voiding the contract, or refusing to renew it. No water would effectively mean no NSA facility.

What will stop the NSA from expanding in other states? Bills like HB171. By passing this legislation, New Hampshire would become much less attractive for the NSA because it would not be able to access state or local water or power supplies. If enough states step up and pass the Fourth Amendment Protection act, we can literally box them in and shut them down.

LEGAL BASIS

HB171 rests on a well-established legal principle known as the anti-commandeering doctrine. Simply put, the federal government cannot force states to help implement or enforce any federal act or program. Theanti-commandeering doctrineis based primarily on four Supreme Court cases dating back to 1842. Printz v. US serves as the cornerstone.

We held in New York that Congress cannot compel the States to enact or enforce a federal regulatory program. Today we hold that Congress cannot circumvent that prohibition by conscripting the States officers directly. The Federal Government may neither issue directives requiring the States to address particular problems, nor command the States officers, or those of their political subdivisions, to administer or enforce a federal regulatory program. It matters not whether policy making is involved, and no case by case weighing of the burdens or benefits is necessary; such commands are fundamentally incompatible with our constitutional system of dual sovereignty.

NEXT UP

California Gov. Jerry Brown signed a limited version of the Fourth Amendment Protection Act in 2014. The law prohibits state cooperation when a federal agency requests state assistance in data collection if there exists actual knowledge that the request constitutes an illegal or unconstitutional collection of electronically stored information. Although that law will need further steps to put into practical effect, it set a strong foundation that HB171 would expand on for New Hampshire.

The legislation willnow move to the Senate for further consideration.

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New Hampshire House Passes Bill Banning Support for Warrantless Federal Spying Programs - Tenth Amendment Center (blog)

Why Florida judge rejected the ‘stand your ground’ defense in movie shooting – Christian Science Monitor

March 11, 2017 A retired Tampa Bay police captain will face second-degree murder and aggravated battery charges after a judge rejected his petition to dismiss the case based on Floridas stand your ground law.

Curtis Reeves Jr., the former officer, was involved in a 2014 dispute with Chad Oulson at a suburban Tampa theater, over Mr. Oulsons use of a cell phone during previews of the movie "Lone Survivor." His trial date has not yet been set.

The ruling comes as Floridas state senate prepares to vote on a bill that would force prosecutors to prove that a defendant was not acting in self-defense before cases are brought to trial. That would shift the burden of proof away from defendants, putting Florida at the vanguard of the two dozen states with laws permitting the use of forcein self-defense in some cases, deadly force in confrontations where a person "fears death or great bodily harm."

Mr. Reeves had argued that the dispute had quickly become a life-or-death struggle, claiming that Mr. Oulson had struck him with either his fist or cell phone and cornered him in his seat, according to the Tampa Bay Times.

But Pinellas-Pasco Circuit Judge Susan Barthle rejected that account, finding that surveillance video clearly countered Reeves claims of being hit or menaced by Oulson. Reeves appeared to haveinitiated contact with the alleged victim on at least three occasions..

In fact, the video clearly shows that the closest the alleged victim ever came to the defendant was when his hand reached for and grabbed the defendants popcorn and threw it on him, wrote the judge in her opinion, according to a local ABC affiliate. At that point, she added, Reeves lunged forward and fired at the alleged victim, "who at that point was so far back from the defendant that he could not even be seen in the video anymore."

The new bill being considered by Floridas Senate has garnered opposition from Democrats and prosecutors, who say it would stack the odds against victims of gun crimes and encourage vigilantism.

"This legislation would effectively require defendants who raise stand your ground defenses to be convicted twice, said Lucy McBath at a committee hearing on the bill, according to ABC News. Ms. McBaths teenaged son Jordan Davis was fatally shot by Michael Dunn after an argument in Jacksonville. Mr. Dunn was later convicted of murder, though the first jury on the case was unable to reach a decision an outcome McBath blames on jury instructions that, as in the 2013 Trayvon Martin case, included details about the stand- your-ground law.

Among supporters of the bill is Marissa Alexander, who was convicted in 2012 to 20 years in prison for firing what she calls awarning shot" near her estranged husband, in another high-profile, stand-your-ground case in Florida. Ms. Alexanders conviction was later thrown out, and she was freed in a 2014 plea deal.

"So for me, one shot and a 12-minute verdict got me 20 years in my own home, concealed weapon license, white-collar worker, she said, according to NPR.

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Why Florida judge rejected the 'stand your ground' defense in movie shooting - Christian Science Monitor

New migrant crisis on the way: Fears sparked of ‘summer of chaos’ at British border – Express.co.uk

Almost 20,000 have already made it by sea to mainland Europe in the first 67 days of 2017, it emerged yesterday.

The crisis is set to intensify as the weather in the Mediterranean improves.

The French have closed six motorway service stations on the approaches to Calais to prevent them being used by migrants trying to sneak aboard UK-bound lorries.

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But their action may have come too late, truckers leaders warned last night.

The French authorities need to take action before the situation gets any worse

James Hookham - Freight Transport Association

James Hookham, deputy chief executive of the Freight Transport Association, said: Our members have reported signs that migrants are returning to Calais and French motorway operator Sanefs move to close truck parking areas at services near the port due to problems confirms this.

The French authorities need to take action before the situation gets any worse.

We dont want to see a return to last summers chaos when drivers suffered threats and intimidation at unprecedented levels.

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EPA

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Moroccan Police look at immigrants trying to jump the six-meter-high fence in Ceuta, Spanish enclave on the north of Africa, 09 December 2016.

The looming crisis was laid bare in figures released by the International Organisation for Migration which revealed that 19,567 migrants and refugees entered Europe by sea this year, up to March 8, a rate of almost 300 a day.

Tory MP David Davies said: The European nations are aiding and abetting this chaotic exodus by sending out rescue boats to pick up thousands of migrants trying to enter the Continent illegally from North Africa.

They should be taking them straight back to ports and safe refugee camps so they are not incentivised to risk their lives trying.

I hope this worrying development doesnt herald the return to the chaotic events of last year.

The unprecedented move to close the service stations is the first indicator that a new wave of migration is expected after the demolition of the notorious Jungle camp last year.

Operator Sanef has closed four of the six rest areas which have become a magnet for trafficking gangs.

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One, at St-Hilaire-Cotte on the A26, roughly 30 miles from Calais, is a well-known trafficking hotspot.

It is a short walk from a muddy migrant camp in woods close to the village of Norrent-Fontes where a Daily Express reporting team was attacked last year.

Others out of action are at Grande-Synthe, close to an official migrant camp on the outskirts of Dunkirk, Steenvoorde on the A25, La Grande Bucaille and Nortkerque on the A26 and Berck on the A16, around 55 miles south of Calais.

For the past two summers British drivers have faced a wave of violence and intimidation on the approach to the Calais ferry terminal, with migrants using burning blockades in an effort to slow down vehicles returning to the UK so they can break in.

Road Haulage Association chief executive Richard Burnett said: We always advise our international drivers not to stop within 100 miles of Calais unless they absolutely have to.

"To even consider yet another summer of misery is quite simply out of the question.

If Sanef remains resolute not to reopen the rest areas we will be demanding more security is deployed on the approach roads and that includes the French military.

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REUTERS

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Migrants try to reach a rescue craft from their overcrowded raft, as lifeguards from the Spanish NGO Proactiva Open Arms rescue all 112 on aboard

French officials estimate migrants are returning to the northern coast at a rate of 100 a week. There are now thought to be at least six secret refugee camps in the Nord-Pas-deCalais region.

Home Office figures revealed by the Daily Express after a freedom of information request showed 24,800 attempts to enter the UK illegally were stopped at the British border on the Continent during the first six months of last year.

In 2015 the number reached a record 84,088.

Charlie Elphicke, Tory MP for Dover, said: We must be vigilant and take action now before any new Jungle camp forms at Calais.

We cant risk another summer of chaos, thats why we need to act before the first tent is pitched.

The Home Office said: We work closely with the French authorities on the security of the UK-France border but the operation of the French motorway network is a matter for them.

Continued here:
New migrant crisis on the way: Fears sparked of 'summer of chaos' at British border - Express.co.uk

Feds clueless on migrant crisis – Toronto Sun


Toronto Sun
Feds clueless on migrant crisis
Toronto Sun
The good news is the Liberal cabinet is now taking the issue of illegal migrants crossing our border from the U.S. seriously. The bad news is they clearly don't have a clue about what's actually going on. On Friday, U.S. Homeland Security Secretary ...

and more »

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Feds clueless on migrant crisis - Toronto Sun