Two Iraqi Nationals Indicted on Federal Terrorism Charges in Kentucky

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WASHINGTON — An Iraqi citizen who allegedly carried out numerous Improvised Explosive Device (IED) attacks against U.S. troops in and another Iraqi national alleged to have participated in the insurgency in have been arrested and indicted on federal terrorism charges in the Western District of Kentucky.

The in Bowling Green, Ky., and the criminal complaints and indictment unsealed today were announced by Todd Hinnen, Acting Assistant Attorney General for National Security; David J. Hale, U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky; Elizabeth A. Fries, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI Louisville Division; and the members of the Louisville .

, 30, and , 23, both former residents of Iraq who currently reside in Bowling Green, were charged in a 23-count indictment returned by a federal grand jury in Bowling Green on May 26, 2011. Alwan is charged with conspiracy to kill U.S. nationals abroad; conspiracy to use a weapon of mass destruction (explosives) against U.S. nationals abroad; distributing information on the manufacture and use of IEDs; attempting to provide material support to terrorists and to al-Qaeda in Iraq; as well as conspiracy to transfer, possess and export Stinger missiles. Hammadi is charged with attempting to provide material support to terrorists and to al-Qaeda in Iraq, as well as conspiracy to transfer, possess and export Stinger missiles.

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Two more indictments unsealed in the Camp Arifjan bribery scandal

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2 Americans Are Indicted in Contract Bribery

JACK HEALY – (NY Times) – BAGHDAD - May 30, 2011 - Two American businessmen have been charged with giving Army officers airline tickets, spa vacations and more than $1 million in bribes to secure multimillion-dollar contracts to supply the American military and help rebuild Iraq, according to court documents.

A federal indictment against the men, , and his son, , was unsealed on Friday. Both are charged with four counts of bribery and one count of conspiracy.

The Lees are among nearly 60 contractors and military officers to face criminal charges stemming from the scramble for often poorly monitored government contracts in the early years of the Iraq war.

Federal officials have also blocked 120 people and companies accused of fraud and corruption from doing business with the government. The Lees’ company, , was suspended in July 2007.

Justin W. Lee was expected to appear in federal court in Philadelphia as early as Tuesday, and George H. Lee is believed to be at large outside the United States, possibly in Kuwait or Dubai. A lawyer who has represented the company did not return phone or e-mail messages on Monday.

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Thank you to ALL our fallen heroes!

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Memorial Day, formally known as Decoration Day because the graves of Union Soldiers who died in the Civil War were decorated with flowers, was first observed in 1865. In 1866 it was declared that would be observed nationwide on May 30th. was first used in 1882 but did not become official until 1967. In 1971, was changed from May 30th to the last Monday in May in order to give Americans another three day weekend.

Memorial Day is now a day to honor all the brave men and women who paid the ultimate price for your freedoms. Your freedom of speech, your freedom of religion, your right to keep and bear arms, your right to travel freely, your right to choose your own leaders. So many countries STILL do not have these most basic freedoms.

Join us by honoring those who have given their life, so we could live ours as we choose, by flying your US flag. Please display your flag correctly!  Did you know the US Flag is to be displayed at half staff until noon on Memorial Day? Click HERE for information on how to correctly display the US flag.

Below are links to US war memorials honoring our heroes.

Operation Iraqi Freedom

Operation Enduring Freedom – Afghanistan

Desert Storm

Vietnam War

Korean

World War II

World War I

To all the US Service members who died in other conflicts or terrorist attacks, you are not forgotten.

Ms Sparky & Forseti

 

Importunate at an inopportune time & other news

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Dept. of Defense attorney charged in Edison sex sting
Two other men also arrested earlier this month
(Madison News Journel) – EDISON - May 28, 2011 – A senior civilian attorney for the U.S. Department of Defense, who has high security clearance, has been charged with importuning in a case involving a 15-year-old Edison girl.

The arrest stemmed from a sting in which a police officer posed online as a 15-year-old girl.

Edison police Chief John A. Edwards said more charges are pending against , of New Albany. Smith was arrested Monday at Boundary and State streets and taken to the Morrow County Correctional Facility.

Two computers were seized from his home in New Albany. Those will be sent to the state Bureau of Criminal Investigation and Identification for further examination.

Special agents from the Department of Defense have been in contact with Edison police and are conducting their own internal investigation, Edwards said. (Click HERE for article)

Hackers break through security at several U.S. defense contractors
Michael Santo – (The Examiner) – May 27, 2011 – Hackers have managed to breach the networks of several U.S. defense contractors, Reuters reported on Friday. Reuters received the information from a source with direct knowledge of the attacks.

(Read the rest of the story here…)

THE AMERICANS LEFT BEHIND

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In honor of the men and women who serve our country, we will be posting stories and articles this weekend to remember and celebrate the heroes of our nation. ~ Ms Sparky & Forseti

Charles Ervin Shelton
Colonel, United States Air Force

Photo from The P.O.W. Network

U.S. Veteran Dispatch Staff Report – September/October, 1994 Issue – As the nation’s last Vietnam POW is declared dead, fresh details emerge on an failed effort to save captured servicemen.

Colonel Charles Shelton was the last official Vietnam War POW: the one missing American still designated as being alive by the . Shot down during a reconnaissance mission over northern on April 29, 1965, the 33-year-old pilot managed to parachute safely from his RF-101C jet and make radio contact with his home base after he hit the ground. But he was grabbed by Pathet Lao fighters and vanished. Unable to verify his fate, the Air Force listed Shelton as “known captured alive” for 29 years.

On Sept. 20, the Air Force, at the request of Shelton’s children, finally put the question to rest and changed his status to “killed in action.” Last week, as a bugler played taps, the Pentagon held a memorial for Shelton at Arlington National Cemetery. His name will be carved on the back of the headstone marking the grave of his widow who, deeply frustrated by so many dashed hopes, killed herself four years ago.

Even decades later, many families of Americans who might have been left behind in Southeast Asia when the war ended have never felt satisfied that the U.S. did everything it could to find them. As the last POW was symbolically buried, TIME was piecing together the tale of the one attempt the U.S. made after the war to rescue American prisoners. The bare outlines of that 1981 plan have appeared in occasional press stories over the years. The still refuses to discuss the case. Pentagon officials today say the Defense Department never had reliable intelligence on whether Americans were still alive. But here is a full report of that abortive effort, as uncovered in government documents and more than 20 interviews with military, intelligence and Reagan Administration officials involved in the rescue planning:

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Korean War POW finally buried after 60 years

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In honor of the men and women who serve our country, we will be posting stories and articles this weekend to remember and celebrate the heroes of our nation.  ~ Ms Sparky & Forseti

The flag covered casket of is carried down the center of St. Joseph Catholic Church during funeral services in Freeport, Ill., Wednesday, May 25, 2011. More than half a century after he died in Korea, the bones of the young soldier, , are returned after being matched with relatives' DNA. (AP Photo/Seth Perlman)

JOHN O’CONNOR – (AP)- May 27, 2011 – For 60 years, Artie Hodapp’s family agonized over a heart-rending mystery: Where had the young man, known for his rollicking sense of humor, come to rest after dying in the ?

They couldn’t know that the answer was among 17 boxes of remains that the North Koreans turned over nearly two decades ago. Nor could they know that the DNA the Army collected from his surviving siblings several years ago would finally help solve the riddle.

Hodapp’s long journey home came to an end this week at a Catholic cemetery in northern Illinois, where he was buried with full military honors beneath a grave marker his sister bought despite not knowing where he was.

“We waited all this while,” said , 88, remembering her parents and siblings who died without knowing Hodapp’s fate. “The rest are all gone, but I’ve got to feel good about it for them too, the rest of the family. Everybody wanted him back but there was nothing we could do about it.”

Six decades later, Hodapp is no longer a forgotten soldier of the so-called Forgotten War, but an example of the U.S. Defense Department’s stubborn efforts to account for young men lost in long-ago battles. Through a review of Army reports and the memories of a fellow POW tracked down in New Jersey, The Associated Press was able to reconstruct the conditions under which the young man – called a “spitfire” and the “life of the party” – starved to death in a prisoner of war camp.

The story of Arthur Leon Aloysius Hodapp comes partly from a soldier held in the same camp, who described the pasty cattle feed given to prisoners, the agonizing dysentery and the “give-up-itis” to which some men succumbed. Other clues surfaced in a cousin’s chance meeting with a former POW in Minnesota who had Hodapp’s name and date of death scratched in his boot. Finally, U.S. military scientists were finally able to link his siblings’ DNA to Hodapp’s dental records.

Army officials announced the identification just shy of 60 years after Hodapp’s April 23, 1951 capture by Chinese Communists in heavy fighting 40 miles north of Seoul. He died July 3, 1951, in or near the POW camp, which his family didn’t know until the war ended two years later.

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CEJA – Piercing the criminal veil in government contracts

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…criminal acts committed by U.S. citizens and contractors abroad could threaten our foreign relations.  As such, it is right for us to examine the ways we can bring these criminals within the reach of the law.  Legislation extending the reach of U.S. criminal law to contractors was introduced in the 110th and 111th Congresses.  Both times, that legislation failed to clear both chambers and was never signed into law.  ~Senator Charles Grassley of Iowa

In the last Congress, the heard testimony from , a young woman from Texas who took a job with in in 2005 when she was 20-years-old.  In her first week on the job, she was drugged and gang-raped by co-workers.  When she reported this assault, her employers moved her to a locked trailer, where she was kept by armed guards and freed only when the State Department intervened.

Ms. Jones testified about the arbitration clause in her contract that prevented her from suing Halliburton for this outrageous conduct, and Congress has moved to change the civil law to prevent that kind of injustice. Criminal jurisdiction over these kinds of atrocious crimes abroad, however, remains complicated, depending too greatly on the specific location of the crime, making prosecutions inconsistent and sometimes impossible. We must fix the law to help avoid arbitrary injustice and ensure that victims will not see their attackers escape accountability. ~Senator Patrick Leahy of Vermont

Given the evolving nature of our engagement in various countries such as Iraq and Afghanistan, and given the large number of employees and contractors being utilized by agencies other than the Department of Defense, we view the enactment of CEJA as crucial to ensuring accountability and demonstrating to other countries that we do not give U.S. Government employees license to commit crimes overseas.  ~Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer

Click HERE to view the video of the hearing

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