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San Francisco DA Won't Release Details of Paul
Pelosi Assault
An attack on the spouse of the Speaker of the House is of considerable
interest, but the San Francisco district attorney refused to provide documents and video of
the police activity at the home of Paul Pelosi, Nancy Pelosi’s husband,
where David Wayne DePape was arrested following an alleged assault on
October 28, 2022.
Among the items District Attorney Brooke Jenkins refused to release are a
recording of Paul Pelosi’s 911 call and police officers’ body camera
footage. Nikki Moore, assistant district attorney, took the unusual step of
providing some details about the incident response to our California Public
Records Act request:
In our November 2022 request to the district attorney, we noted a news
report stating that news organizations had been rebuffed on similar
requests and, pursuant to the California Public Records Act, we asked for,
in addition to the recording and camera footage: All records of
communications, including emails and text messages, between the District
Attorney’s Office and the San Francisco Police Department concerning the
incident. We also asked for communications with several federal agencies,
including the Justice Department, the Capitol Police, and the FBI. And we
asked for the identities of the persons at the
Pelosi home at the time of the incident.
In declining the information we requested,
Assistant DA Moore cited Section 6254 of
California law, which governs records requests, and specifically subsection
(f), which allows for the withholding from the public of certain “records
of investigations conducted by the Office of the Attorney General and the
Department of Justice, the Office of Emergency Services and any state or
local police agency …”
There is significant public interest in the terrible attack on Paul Pelosi
and it is odd that the local authorities are withholding basic information
about the incident.
In our previous work, in September, we received records from the California Highway Patrol Public
Records Unit that included 44 photos and five hours of audio/video footage
depicting the misconduct and arrest of Paul Pelosi. The material shows that
Mr. Pelosi invoked his wife’s name and shared his police charity
membership during the arrest for suspected alcohol intoxication while
driving.
Judicial Watch Appeal Seeks FBI January 6 Communications with Banks
We are pushing back on the attempt to curtail our investigation into the
full details about the January 6 disturbance.
We want the details about what looks to be an unprecedented abuse of the
financial privacy of countless innocent Americans by big banks and the
FBI.
We filed an appeal challenging a U.S. District Court for the District of
Columbia decision allowing the FBI to withhold records of communication
between the FBI and several financial institutions about the reported
transfer of financial transaction records of people in DC, Maryland and
Virginia on January 5 and January 6, 2021 ( Judicial Watch, Inc. v.
U.S. Department of Justice (No. 22-5209).
The FBI’s cover-up should be rejected, and
the records made public.
Our appeal, filed in the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of
Columbia, comes in the FOIA lawsuit we filed after
the FBI failed to respond to a February 10, 2021, FOIA request ( Judicial Watch v. U.S.
Department of Justice (No. 1:21-cv-01216)). We are asking
for:
All records of communication between the FBI and any financial
institution, including but not limited to Bank of America, Citibank, Chase
Manhattan Bank, Discover, and/or American Express, in which the FBI sought
transaction data for those financial institutions’ debit and credit card
account holders who made purchases in Washington, DC, Maryland and/or
Virginia on January 5, 2021, and/or January 6, 2021.
In our appellate brief, we argue:
This appeal arises from what appears to be an unprecedented abuse of
the financial privacy of thousands of Americans. Substantial and compelling
evidence demonstrates that the FBI sought and received records from
financial institutions of anyone who used a credit card or engaged in other
transactions in the Washington, D.C. area on January 5 or 6, 2021. This
would include many thousands of persons living
in the Washington, DC area, including possibly members of this
Court.
In our appeal we point out that the lower court was mistaken when it
upheld the FBI’s
Glomar response (neither confirming nor denying the existence of
records) because the FBI previously acknowledged the existence of the
records in multiple ways. For instance, court records filed in support of a
criminal case include the FBI’s statement of facts that provides the
defendant’s address, which was obtained through “his Bank of America
account and recent Expedia transactions.”
In another case, the FBI “confirmed that it obtained records from PNC
Bank and discusses in detail the multiple ways that it used the financial
data.”
Additionally, “financial records obtained from JP Morgan Chase bank
corroborate [the defendant] used a credit card issued in his name to
purchase gas and food enroute to Washington, DC …”
We cite two additional cases where the FBI describes in publicly available
court records its use of financial records in the January 6
investigation.
We conclude:
[Judicial Watch] more than adequately demonstrated that the FBI may
have sought and received records from financial institutions of anyone who
used a credit card or engaged in other transactions in the Washington, DC
area on January 5 or 6. If so, this would be an unprecedented abuse of the
financial privacy of thousands of Americans. [Judicial Watch’s] FOIA
request to investigate this should not be blocked by a meritless
Glomar response.
The head of the federal agency created after 9/11 to protect the
nation’s transportation system is accused of fraud, waste, and abuse of
authority for unlawfully deploying assets to the Mexican border to perform
duties unrelated to transportation, according to a report filed with the
Department of Homeland Security (DHS) Inspector General. In the formal
complaint to the DHS watchdog, the Air Marshal National Council, which
represents thousands of Federal Air Marshals (FAM) nationwide, accuses
Transportation Security Administration (TSA) Administrator David Pekoske
and FAM Director Tirrell Stevenson of violating federal law and
overstepping their authority for assigning the highly trained aviation
security specialists to assist the U.S. Border Patrol with the illegal
immigration crisis. FAM operates under TSA and both function under DHS.
“The TSA personnel are being sent to El Paso TX, San Diego CA, Laredo TX,
McAllen TX, Tucson AZ, and Yuma AZ,” the complaint states, adding that
internal agency documents reveal the “highly skilled FAMs” are being
sent to the southwest border to perform “Hospital Watch, Transportation,
Law Enforcement Searches, Welfare Checks, and Entry Control.” The duties
have no relation to TSA’s core mission of transportation security, the
filing says, and instead the air marshals will assist migrants who have
crossed the border into the United States. TSA was created after 2001 to
help prevent another terrorist attack, though the agency is famous for its
lapses, including a big one just days ago when a man was allowed to board a
plane in Cincinnati with two box cutters. FAM is charged with protecting
commercial passenger flights by deterring and countering the risk of
terrorist activity. At the very least it seems like a waste to send the
highly trained law enforcement agents to the border to babysit illegal
immigrants.
“The statute does not give the Administrator any authority to deploy TSA
or FAM employees to the southern border to perform non transportation
security related matters,” the complaint to the DHS IG states.
“Further, under section (g) the statute describes what the Administrators
authority is if an emergency, as defined by the Secretary of Homeland
Security, is declared.” The act makes clear that the legislative intent
is to only allow TSA to exercise authority and deploy its assets for
transportation security, the report to the DHS watchdog confirms. “To
date Mr. Pekoske nor Mr. Stevenson have declared the deployments to be
related to transportation security,” according to the complaint.
Furthermore, the duties, “Hospital Watch, Entry Control, Law Enforcement
searches, and Transportation,” could not be interpreted to have any nexus
to the TSA core mission of transportation security. Additionally, the
document notes that Congress has not appropriated any funds in the TSA
budget for border security, making any money expended for the cause a
violation of the Antideficiency Act which prohibits federal employees from
obligating funds unless Congress has approved the amount and purpose of the
spending.
A few weeks ago Judicial Watch obtained the DHS
memorandum to the nation’s air marshal force announcing that officers
would soon be sent to the southern border to help deal with “a surge in irregular
migration.” The notice states that “the
unprecedented volume of Noncitizen Migrants (NCMs) currently apprehended
mandates immediate further action to protect the life and safety of federal
personnel and noncitizens in CBP [Customs and Border Protection]
custody.” It is the first acknowledgment, albeit leaked involuntarily, by
the Biden administration that there is indeed a crisis along the nation’s
famously porous southern border. “To support its mission, CBP is seeking
federal employees from DHS Components and other federal agencies to be
placed on reimbursable TDY assignments to assist in critical support
functions,” the widely circulated mandate reads, adding that “LE/FAMS
has been directed by DHS to support this request.” Air marshals
interviewed by Judicial Watch expressed outrage that they are being pulled
from their critical inflight security duties to assist with the mayhem
created by the Biden administration’s failed immigration policies.
Until next week…
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