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The Daily Muck
US Sponsored Secret Renditions in East Africa
"A network of U.S. allies in East Africa secretly have transferred to prisons in Somalia and Ethiopia as many as 150 people who were captured in Kenya while fleeing the recent war in Somalia, according to human rights advocates here. Kenyan authorities made the arrests as part of a U.S.-backed, four-nation military campaign in December and January against Somalia's Islamist militias, which Bush administration officials have linked to al-Qaida." (McClatchy)
Iraqi Who Promoted False Intel. Protected By Germany
"The Iraqi defector known as Curveball, whose fabricated stories of 'mobile biological weapons labs' helped lead the U.S. to war four years ago, is still being protected by the German intelligence service, an ABC News investigation has found. Intelligence sources, who provided ABCNews.com with the first known photo of the man, say he has been resettled in a small town near the Munich headquarters of the German service, which has continued to honor its original commitment made when he fled Iraq in 1999." (ABC's The Blotter)
Abramoff's Guam Link Further Examined
United States Reps. George Moller (D-CA) and Nick Rahall (D-WV) have requested a congressional probe to further examine convicted lobbyst Jack Abramoff's relationship to the Pacific country of Guam and connection to the firing of US attorney Frederick A. Black. (Kuam News) Black, who was investigating Abramoff's financial ties to Guam in 2002, was one of eight prosecutors fired by the Justice Department in what critics are calling a politically-motivated purge. Shortly after Black's firing, the probe examinining Abramoff's Guam ties died down. (Think Progress)
Efforts Underway to Streamline Campaign Finance Reports
Standing alone among the majority of campaign finance reports, whose work is primarily done electronically, the Senate rules still require candidates to file reports by hand, a process which many complain is overly cumbersome and time-wasting. In a Senate hearing today, legislators will decide whether to update the system to allow candidates to keep track of their records through computer databases. (The Washington Post)
Government Documents Hidden From View
"More than 1 million pages of historical government documents -- a stack taller than the U.S. Capitol -- have been removed from public view since the September 2001 terror attacks, according to records obtained by The Associated Press. Some of the papers are more than a century old." (Associated Press)

Comments (4)
JEP wrote on March 14, 2007 11:05 AM:Stay on the trail of Moller and Rayhall as they uncover the Frederick Black fiasco, there's only 3 degrees of separation (not 6) between events like Hookergate and this political firing.
It is just one of these many keyways will open all the other doors.
And thanks for all the work you've done to keep us up on the "not-so immaculate deception." I first heard of your blog at Firedog Lake during the early days of the Libby trial, and along with Larry Johnson's blog, really gave me a better view of the grotesque underbelly of the Bush gang.
Anonymous wrote on March 14, 2007 11:09 AM:Stay on the trail of Moller and Rayhall as they uncover the Frederick Black fiasco, there's only 3 degrees of separation (not 6) between events like Hookergate and this political firing.
It is just one of the many keyways that will open all the other doors.
And thanks for all the work you've done to keep us up on the "not-so immaculate deception." I first heard of your blog at Firedog Lake during the early days of the Libby trial, and along with Larry Johnson's blog, it really gave me a better view of the grotesque underbelly of the Bush gang.
Aaron G. Stock wrote on March 14, 2007 11:38 AM:The rationale behind people's hiding things like photos of public government buildings, or blocking people from taking photos of bridges, airports, and other infrastructure, is fascinating to me: the idea that if no one has a photo of it, no one will even think that doing something bad to it is even possible. Next thing you know, we're going to have government officials say that X Dam or Y Bridge doesn't actually exist. You can have a picnic or swim near it, you can give directions to it, heck, you can even drive over it, but you can't prove it's there because you don't have... a photo.
How needlessly paranoid and unreal is this line of thinking?
epenisa wrote on January 10, 2008 7:02 AM:Hello
Nice work from your side... have a nice time with yoru blog :)
G'night