[StBernard] DynCorp May Replace Cops in St. Bernard Parish
Westley Annis
westley at da-parish.com
Wed Mar 15 23:58:08 EST 2006
DynCorp May Replace Cops in St. Bernard Parish
by repost Wednesday, Mar. 15, 2006 at 10:25 AM
by Kurt Nimmo
Not long ago, citizens elected police chiefs, or they were appointed by
elected city and county officials, and police chiefs went about hiring
qualified police officers, usually from the community. Not anymore. Now law
enforcement is increasingly militarized and military duties are jobbed out
to the likes of DynCorp and Blackwater. These guys run loose in this
country [Iraq] and do stupid stuff. Theres no authority over them, so you
cant come down on them hard when they escalate force, Brigadier General
Karl Horst, deputy commander of the Third Infantry Division in charge of
security in Baghdad, complained in September, 2005. They shoot people, and
someone else has to deal with the aftermath. It happens all over the place.
If you dont think likewise may happen in St. Bernard Parish, think again.
If DynCorp does not answer to the Pentagon, why should they answer to a
sheriff in Louisiana?
DynCorps track record is abysmal. Its bodyguards working for interim
president Boniface Alexandre in Haiti beat at least two journalists trying
to cover a presidential event and other DynCorp employees were friendly
with several feared Tonton Macoutes leaders (Tonton Macoute, Haitian Creole
for bogeymen, is a secret police modeled after the Italian fascist
Blackshirts, known for killing and torturing the dictator Papa Doc
François Duvaliers opponents, on occasion publicly hanging corpses as
gruesome warnings). DynCorp has always functioned as a cut-out for Pentagon
and CIA covert operations, especially in Haiti, explain Jeffrey St. Clair
and Alexander Cockburn. It is a nightmare to consider these Pentagon and CIA
cut-outs may be directing traffic and arresting pot dealers in America
soon.
DynCorps record is worse than abysmalit comes in near the bottom of the
criminal food chain. According to the Racketeer Influenced Corrupt
Organization Act (RICO) lawsuit filed in Texas on behalf of a former DynCorp
aircraft mechanic, writes Kelly Patricia O Meara for Insight magazine, in
the latter part of 1999 [Ben Johnston, DynCorp whistleblower] learned that
employees and supervisors from DynCorp were engaging in perverse, illegal
and inhumane behavior [and] were purchasing illegal weapons, women, forged
passports and [participating in] other immoral acts [in Bosnia]. Johnston
witnessed coworkers and supervisors literally buying and selling women for
their own personal enjoyment, and employees would brag about the various
ages and talents of the individual slaves they had purchased.
It appears a number of DynCorp employees were in cahoots with United Nations
officers who set up a flourishing sex trade in the Balkans. According to
Amnesty International, the United Nations and NATO peacekeepers (or pimps)
trafficked women and girls for sex in Kosovo, the BBC reported on May 6,
2004. The Amnesty International report includes harrowing testimonies of
abduction, deprivation of liberty and denial of freedom of movement, torture
and ill-treatment, including psychological threats, beatings and rape of
women from Moldova, Bulgaria, and the Ukraine.
DynCorp employees in Bosnia, where the company plays a major policing role,
have engaged in organized sex-slave trading with girls as young as 12, and
DynCorps Bosnia site supervisor was filmed raping a woman, Scahill
responded after Stephen J. Cannon, president and CEO of DynCorp
International, wrote a letter to the Nation complaining about a Scahill
article describing the behavior of DynCorp, Intercon, American Security
Group, Blackhawk, Wackenhut and an Israeli company called Instinctive
Shooting International in New Orleans after Hurricane Katrina. The
companys initial response was to fire the whistleblowers, Scahill adds.
The employees involved in the sex ring were transferred out of the country.
Some were eventually fired, although none were ever criminally prosecuted.
One of the whistleblowers told Congress, DynCorp is the worst diplomat our
country could ever want overseas. No doubt it will the worst possible cop
in St. Bernard Parish, as well.
DynCorp is also in trouble for spraying toxic herbicides over 14 percent of
the entire land mass of the nation of Colombia, purportedly to eliminate
coca crops, writes Al Giordano for Narco News. Although DynCorps
taxpayer-sponsored biological warfare [dubbed Plan Colombia] has not made a
dent in the cocaine trade, it has caused more than 1,100 documented cases of
illness among citizens, destroyed untold acres of food crops, displaced tens
of thousands of peasant farmers, and harmed the fragile Amazon ecosystem.
In addition to poisoning South Americans, DynCorp, according to Giordano,
has also been exposed for contracting mercenary soldiers-of-fortune for the
covert activities of the US-imposed Plan Colombia, a direct and illegal
intervention in the low intensity conflict in Colombia, a civil war going
back to 1948. In other words, as in Haiti, DynCorp rubs elbows with vicious
paramilitary thugs in Colombia, described by Adam Weiss as among the most
brutal human rights violators in the world today.
In the first paragraph of the Washington Post article announcing the
possibility of DynCorp renta-cops (or in the case of Bosnia,
renta-whore-mongers) patrolling St. Bernard Parish, we are told this is
necessary because hundreds of stark white trailers soon to be inhabited by
Hurricane Katrina evacuees will hide criminals and become an incubator for
crime and pose another test for the cash-strapped sheriffs department
of the parish. The FBI has warned that gangs such as Mara Salvatrucha, also
known as MS-13, could come attached to construction crews and establish
operations, prompting the department to establish a strike team that has
already arrested eight alleged members, police officials told the Post,
never mind that the Border Patrol in McAllen, Texas, is having difficulty
preventing Mara Salvatrucha from crossing the wide-open border. Stretched
thin, the department is ready to turn to private contractors to head off
what it fears will be an increase in crime as construction in the parish
booms and residents adjust to life in cramped trailers, or what will
essentially become a concentration camp patrolled by for-profit mercenaries.
It would seem the idea to unleash a tarnished DynCorp on the residents of
St. Bernard Parish was suggested by FEMA. The department did not hold a
competition before recommending DynCorp for the work but would consider
other contactors if FEMA recommended it, Maj. Pete Tufaro, head of the
sheriffs department, told the Post. The department thinks DynCorp is the
cheapest alternative, noting that it would charge less than $700 per day,
compared with the $950 a day charged by Blackwater, he said. In short, no
matter how you look at it, the people of St. Bernard Parish will be under
privatized martial law. Under the plan, DynCorp employees working for the
sheriffs department would take over security at several FEMA trailer sites
and establish three highway checkpoints. Exactly why the residents of
Louisiana need security and checkpoints is not explained. Maybe it has
something to do with Mara Salvatrucha, but then again it more likely has
something to do with incubating a police state.
No doubt, as the economy implodes and a prospective increase in the budget
deficit places at risk the living standards of our country, as new
central banker head honcho Ben Helicopter Bernanke responded to questions
posed by a concerned Congress critter recently, the services of DynCorp and
Blackwater will be required to contain food riots and mass panic. Our
nation, thanks to Bush and the long-running fiat money polices of Bernankes
ilk, faces an economic Katrina, a typhoon poised to swamp and wash away the
lives of millions of people. Sooner before later, stark white trailers
will be needed to house the dispossessed, and the checkpoints and
concentration camp perimeters will be patrolled by the likes of DynCorp.
Come the economic disaster or the next terrorist event, it may be a good
idea to lock up your 12-year old daughter.
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