Message from @retiredDep

Discord ID: 467728832481460234


2018-07-14 16:14:53 UTC  

! rank

2018-07-14 16:15:05 UTC  

!rank

2018-07-14 16:15:06 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/467725739656216599/card.png

2018-07-14 16:15:38 UTC  

MEMPHIS, TN (WMC) -
Three former FedEx workers have been indicted for stealing cash right out of the U.S. Mail.

According to the indictment, the three women likely targeted religious organizations because there was a strong chance the mail would have cash.

"We disagree with the fact that any churches were singled out to be targeted,” said attorney Mike Scholl, who represents Crystal Berry. "It sounds like they're admitting they did it they just weren't targeting churches. We've entered a not guilty plea at this point so there has been no admission on behalf of my client in court."

Berry, Tiara Williams, and Kimberly Smith were indicted for stealing the mail and its contents.

A news release says in 2015, the women worked in the same area of the Memphis FedEx Hub and they would search through mail, remove some of the contents and smuggle the items off the premises.

All three women were fired from FedEx.

In a statement FedEx wrote:

"We do not tolerate illegal activity in our network, and we fully cooperated with authorities in their investigation. The individuals in the indictment are no longer employed by FedEx. As this is a law enforcement matter, additional inquiries should be directed to authorities."
Since it is a federal indictment, mugshots and details are not readily available. It appears the women have all bonded out and will have court appearances to deal with their cases.

Copyright 2018 WMC Action News 5. All rights reserved.

2018-07-14 16:16:15 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/467726027217567758/DiAg6fhUcAA7dhK.png

2018-07-14 16:18:02 UTC  
2018-07-14 16:18:07 UTC  
2018-07-14 16:20:11 UTC  

Peter Strzok Gets Hammered For Over Four Hours By House Republicans

2018-07-14 16:20:11 UTC  

You have gained a rank @Kristabelle, you just advanced to 1 . Thanks for all you do Patriot!

2018-07-14 16:27:08 UTC  

SALT LAKE CITY — A retired Army intelligence officer from Utah accused of being a spy for China and selling classified national defense information pleaded not guilty in federal court Friday.

Because of the classified documents the government will rely on to prosecute Ron Rockwell Hansen, of Syracuse, authorities will use a secure room — sensitive compartmented information facility, or SCIF — in the courthouse to store the evidence. Prosecutors, attorneys and other court workers must be granted top-secret clearance to access the information.

U.S. Magistrate Judge Paul Warner imposed an order to prevent the sharing of documents outside the case. The court also appointed a classified information security officer.

The government gave Rockwell's lawyers CDs containing 32,000 pages of unclassified documents Friday, which prosecutor Robert Lund said amounts to less than 10 percent of the evidence.

Federal agents arrested Hansen last month as he was preparing to board a flight from Seattle to China. His arrest came after a four-year FBI investigation, 14 search warrants, dozens of subpoenas and witness interviews, and "techniques that we can't discuss in open court," Lund said.

2018-07-14 16:27:15 UTC  

Trump was on the big screen at the Tommy march

2018-07-14 16:27:23 UTC  

Appearing in court handcuffed, shackled and wearing red Salt Lake County Jail scrubs, Hansen, 58, told the judge he is living on his military retirement and could not afford an attorney. Warner appointed federal public defenders to represent him.

Hansen is charged with attempting to gather or deliver defense information; being an unregistered agent of a foreign government; three counts of bulk cash smuggling; eight counts of structuring money transactions and two counts of smuggling goods from the United States. He faces life in prison if convicted.

Prosecutors and defense attorneys declined comment following Friday's hearing.

Hansen is a former Defense Intelligence Agency officer. He retired from the U.S. Army, where he served for 20 years as a warrant officer with a background in signals intelligence and human intelligence. He speaks fluent Mandarin-Chinese and Russian.

During his military service, the U.S. government entrusted Hansen with access to sensitive government materials, including closely held national defense information and classified documents and materials, according to the charges.

He also signed numerous nondisclosure contracts in which he acknowledged that giving away such information could be a violation of criminal espionage laws, according to charging documents.

2018-07-14 16:28:06 UTC  

Hello Clarice (from James Woods' twitter)

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/467729008864395295/Dh9ev4pVQAEb3-S.png

2018-07-14 16:41:16 UTC  

My UFO's,

Photographing

The Geoengineering,

Solar Aerosol Injection of OUR Skies'

https://ps247.link/qr8JRTicvuPrzR

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/467732324075962401/12.12._2016_Lester_Prairie_MN_11.52_pm_origanal.jpeg

2018-07-14 16:42:58 UTC  

https://cdn.discordapp.com/attachments/435869520998170624/467732748472418324/37175696_10156205316786638_1150359754183278592_n.png

2018-07-14 16:47:04 UTC  

WHAT HAS FACEBOOK DONE TO TACKLE FAKE NEWS?
In 2016, following the shock November 2016 US election results, Mark Zuckerberg claimed: 'Of all the content on Facebook, more than 99 per cent of what people see is authentic'.
He also cautioned that the company should not rush into fact-checking.
But Zuckerberg soon came under fire after it emerged fake news had helped sway the election results.
In response, the company rolled out a 'Disputed' flagging system that it announced in a December 2016 post.
The system meant users were responsible for flagging items that they believed were fake, rather than the company.
In April 2017, Facebook suggested the system had been a success.
It said that 'overall false news has decreased on Facebook' - but did not provide any proof.
'It's hard for us to measure because we can't read everything that gets posted', it said.
But it soon emerged that Facebook was not providing the full story.
In July 2017, Oxford researchers found that 'computational propaganda is one of the most powerful tools against democracy,' and Facebook was playing a major role in spreading fake news.
In response, Facebook said it would ban pages that post hoax stories from being allowed to advertise in August 2017.
In September, Facebook finally admitted during congressional questioning that a Russian propaganda mill had placed adverts on Facebook to sway voters around the 2016 campaign.
In December 2017, Facebook admitted that its flagging system for fake news was a failure.
Since then, it has used third-party fact-checkers to identify hoaxes, and then given such stories less prominence in the Facebook News Feed when people share links to them.
In January, Zuckerberg said Facebook would prioritise 'trustworthy' news by using member surveys to identify high-quality outlets.
Facebook has now quietly begun 'fact-checking' photos and videos to reduce fake news stories. However, the details of how it is doing this remain unclear.

2018-07-14 16:53:19 UTC  

See how migrants Party of the coast of Italy sponsored by George Soros https://www.facebook.com/VofEurope/videos/653851568329666/?t=25