Feral Jundi

Saturday, November 28, 2009

Law Enforcement: Bullets Hold the Key in Bond’s Unique View to a Kill

   Now this is neat. Dr. Bond has developed a technique to lift finger prints off of shell casings, even if they were wiped clean or old.  The oils or acids on the finger, do their thing to the casing, and it acts like metal etching in a way.  Bond’s technique is to be able to bring out the etching.

   So what does that mean in the grand scheme of things?  Old cases, that had just bullet casings left over, will be brought forward and re-examined.  In war zones, we could track the enemy by the prints they leave on casings.  Better yet, if a contractor was in a shooting, and they were able to go back to the scene and find any enemy shell casings, they could prove they were fired upon by a specific individual, based on the prints lifted.

   This is really applicable now that we are implementing biometrics to COIN operations.  We are using finger printing machines and eye scanners to identify everyone in a combat zone.  Doom on you if you are an insurgent trying to hide amongst the population, because we can now connect shell casings to you.  And seeing how this technique just came out within the last year or so, it will be interesting how far they are taking this.

   What is really cool though, is if they could lift prints off of shrapnel?  That means anyone that touched the metal of an IED, could potentially be called out or added to a matrix of intel, all based on the fingerprints lifted. Even suicide bombers that have blown up, could have the metal components on their system tested.

   Also, if the lawyers for the Blackwater Five are reading this (Nisour Square), then you need to look into grabbing any of the shell casings taken from scene, and lifting some finger prints.  Or even the bullets in bodies could be used. Interesting stuff. –Matt

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Bullets hold the key in Bond’s unique view to a kill

Michael Pollitt

Thursday 5 February 2009

Detective Garrie Dorman wants to find a killer. He travelled from Connecticut last week to ask Dr John Bond, scientific support manager for Northamptonshire police and honorary research fellow at the University of Leicester Forensic Research Centre, for help. Bond again successfully used a pioneering technique (Forensic science‘s magic bullet, 28 August 2008) to recover fingerprints from shell casings.

(more…)

Wednesday, November 25, 2009

Legal News: Navy SEALs Face Assault Charges for Capturing Blackwater Bridge Mastermind

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News,Podcasts — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 10:50 AM

   This makes me sick.  I hope these guys are able to prove how idiotic this really is by taking it all the way to a court-martial. These three men are heroes, and should be treated as such.  Hell, I should hope that this booger eater got a big fat lip for what he did to those Blackwater men that day.  Despicable.

   Also, check out this podcast here about this story. It is an interview between Uncle Jimbo of Blackfive and G. Gordon Liddy. –Matt

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Navy SEALs Face Assault Charges for Capturing Most-Wanted Terrorist

Tuesday , November 24, 2009

By Rowan Scarborough

Navy SEALs have secretly captured one of the most wanted terrorists in Iraq — the alleged mastermind of the murder and mutilation of four Blackwater USA security guards in Fallujah in 2004. And three of the SEALs who captured him are now facing criminal charges, sources told FoxNews.com.

The three, all members of the Navy’s elite commando unit, have refused non-judicial punishment — called an admiral’s mast — and have requested a trial by court-martial.

Ahmed Hashim Abed, whom the military code-named “Objective Amber,” told investigators he was punched by his captors — and he had the bloody lip to prove it.

Now, instead of being lauded for bringing to justice a high-value target, three of the SEAL commandos, all enlisted, face assault charges and have retained lawyers.

(more…)

Saturday, November 21, 2009

Legal News: U.S. to Drop Shooting Case Against Blackwater Guard

Filed under: Iraq,Legal News — Tags: , , , — Matt @ 8:55 AM

The trial likely will hinge on whether the Blackwater guards were provoked. Iraqi witnesses say Blackwater fired the only shots. Some members of the Blackwater convoy said they saw gunfire. Others said they didn’t. Radio logs of the shooting indicate the guards were fired on. 

*****

     Yep, that is my thoughts on this too.  These men were operating in a war zone, and if in fact they were fired upon, then I think the prosecution does not have a case.  Instead, they will have to fall back on the BS anti-machine gun law to do any kind of damage to these men.  My guess is that this will end up just like the Haditha case, with the Marines. This is war, and to prove that these men decided to wake up one day, go on a convoy operation and deviate from the mission to purposely kill innocent people unprovoked, is a stretch. Not to mention the radio logs, the bullet holes in the vehicles and bullets in people and things.  We will see how it goes, and I truly hope for a fair trial for these guys.  God knows, everyone else has already convicted them of a crime in the court of public opinion.-Matt

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US to drop shooting case against Blackwater guard

By MATT APUZZO

Nov 20, 2009

WASHINGTON – The Justice Department intends to drop manslaughter and weapons charges against one of the Blackwater Worldwide security guards involved in a deadly 2007 Baghdad shooting, prosecutors said in court documents Friday.

The shooting in busy Nisoor Square left 17 Iraqis dead and inflamed anti-American sentiment abroad. It touched off a string of investigations that ultimately led the State Department to cancel the company’s lucrative contract to guard diplomats in Iraq.

Iraqis have said they’re watching closely to see how the U.S. judicial system handles the five men accused of unleashing an unprovoked attack on civilians with machine guns and grenades.

(more…)

Tuesday, November 3, 2009

Legal News: Simon Mann, Nic Du Toit, and Others Pardoned in Equatorial Guinea

Filed under: Equatorial Guinea,Legal News — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 12:32 PM

The former special forces officer apologised, saying he was not the most senior coup plotter.

Mann had implicated Sir Mark Thatcher and Lebanese businessman Ely Calil as organisers of the plot.

Sir Mark, who now lives in southern Spain, was fined and received a suspended sentence in South Africa in 2005 for unknowingly helping to finance the plot.

After Mann’s verdict, Sir Mark reiterated to the BBC that he had had no direct involvement.

He said he had known nothing about any plan to overthrow the government and added that he had already faced justice in South Africa.

Upon Mann’s release, Sir Mark released a statement, saying: “I am delighted that Simon will be reunited with his family at last.”

Mr Calil also said he was “thrilled” at the news, adding: “I’m sure that friends who have been praying for his safe return since this nightmare began will rally around.” 

*****

   Oh really?  I hope Sir Mark and Mr. Calil will have a nice fat ‘pain and suffering’ bonus, ready to give to all the members of this team? If not, stand by for the legion of book deals that the various members will write, all telling ‘the other side of the story’.  It could get interesting with this one.

   Also stand by for any new info about Spain’s or the UK’s involvement with this coup plot.  Hence why Scotland Yard is probably involved. Of course they would like to find out Thatcher’s involvement, but they probably want to know what else Simon knows.  Like I said, this could get interesting and I am thinking that many folks probably wished that Simon Mann and company just stayed in prison.

   On another note, I wonder if Simon Mann will fire up Sandline International again?  The URL for his company is still active. –Matt

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Pardoned coup plot Briton freed

November 3, 2009

Former British soldier Simon Mann, who had been sentenced to 34 years for a coup plot in Equatorial Guinea, has been freed.

Earlier Mann and four South Africans jailed with him had been pardoned by the country’s president and were told to leave within 24 hours.

Mann, who was sentenced in July 2008, had admitted to conspiring to oust President Teodoro Obiang Nguema.

Mann’s family said they were “absolutely delighted”.

Equatorial Guinea’s ambassador to the UK Agustin Nze Nfumu told the BBC World Service’s Focus on Africa programme that Mann was now with his brother and sister who had travelled to the country for his release.

(more…)

Monday, November 2, 2009

Legal News: Murder Charge Briton Daniel Fitzsimons May Face Psychiatric Tests

   I found this over at PMH and figured I would post it here as well. This story will give the reader a little bit of an inside view on how the Iraqi legal system is working out. –Matt

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Murder charge Briton Daniel Fitzsimons may face psychiatric tests

Sunday 1 November 2009

Lawyers for Daniel Fitzsimons, the British security contractor accused of shooting dead two colleagues in Baghdad, have asked for him to be moved to a psychiatric unit in an attempt to head off a murder trial that could lead to a death sentence.

Fitzsimons, a former paratrooper, was taken to Baghdad’s central criminal court today for a pre-trial hearing in which several witnesses were due to testify that he had been involved in the late night shooting in the city’s international zone in August. But the case was unexpectedly adjourned until 15 November after a lawyer for one of the victims asked for more time to prepare his case.

Several minutes before the trial was due to begin, Fitzsimons met his lawyer, the high-profile Iraqi legal figure Tareq Harb, for the first time. His pre-trial briefing amounted to a five-minute conversation outside the court room and a phone call to his UK-based solicitor, John Tipple.Harb said the court was obliged to agree to his request to move Fitzsimons to a psychiatric unit in Baghdad’s Rashad Hospital, where he will be evaluated by three psychiatrists. He is understood to have been treated in the UK for a psychological condition.

The trial was adjourned until November 15. Before the hearing,Earlier, Judge Saad Dawoud Suleiman, who will preside over the case – the first of its kind since full judicial rights were handed back to Iraqi authorities on 30 June – said Fitzsimons would face a death penalty if convicted.

“This is a very serious case,” he said in his chambers inside the fortified court house on the edge of the international zone. “The death penalty is on the statutes for such a crime.”

An official from the British embassy in Baghdad was at the court, as was a representative from ArmorGroup, which had contracted Fitzsimons to return to Iraq for a third tour as a security contractor several weeks before the alleged incident. An Iraqi guard who was wounded in the alleged attack, in which Briton Paul McGuigan and Australian Darren Hoare were killed, was also present, along with members of his family.

In the hours after the shooting, Fitzsimons signed a statement allegedly confessing to the shootings. But today he told the Guardian he could not remember the night of the shooting and planned to withdraw the confession. “I was under the influence of the drugs they gave me at the time,” he said. “I don’t remember a thing.”

Iraqi investigators say in the hours before the shooting, McGuigan and Hoare had gone to Fitzsimons’s room in the ArmorGroup compound and provoked him. They claim the pair had then sat with Fitzsimons, who had been drinking. Shortly afterwards a violent row allegedly erupted.

The prisoner advocacy group Reprieve is now also lobbying for Fitzsimons, whom and his UK legal team want him extradited to the UKhome to stand trial.

“Reprieve are now formally part of the UK legal team,” said Tipple. “They are playing a proactive role and taking it very seriously.”

Iraq has indicated it will take a tough stance with Fitzsimons, who is the first foreign national to be tried under Iraqi law since the American military withdrew to its bases in June. Senior officials have so far indicated they will not agree to any extradition request.However, Mr Harb said yesterday that the Central Criminal Court is obligated to agree to his request to move Mr Fitzsimons to a psychiatric unit in Baghdad’s Rashad Hospital, where he will be evaluated by three psychiatrists. He is understood to have been treated in the UK for a psychological condition.

Story here.

 

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