The FBI Sued And Slammed On Television For Racial And Sexist
Harassment At Quantico Academy
June 3. 2019
Sixteen women who attended the Federal Bureau of Investigation
(FBI) training academy, Quantico, have sued the rogue law
enforcement agency for racial harassment, sexual harassment and
gender discrimination. The class action lawsuit was filed last week,
in response to illegal, abusive and treacherous misconduct the FBI
engaged in against the group of women.
The women stated in their lawsuit that “a good old boy network”
at the FBI’s Quantico academy subjected them to months of unlawful
abuses during training. Then they were either kicked out right
before graduation or their goal of becoming agents immediately
terminated by the agency after completing the course.
At the root of the abuses is the FBI’s sick effort to weed out
independent thinkers. FBI agents are like jaded, brainwashed robots.
They do what they are told, no matter how evil and unlawful the
orders. Women who complain about sexual harassment, racial abuse and or
gender discrimination, will be classified as people who have
standards, believe in independent thinking and adhering to a strong
sense of right and wrong, which is not what the FBI is looking for
in agents.
The FBI is looking for individuals willing to unlawfully
spy and lie, without questioning authority or whistle blowing. The
FBI does not want whistle blowers. They want people who will
illegally spy on Americans and foreigners, then lie in Congress
about it. The FBI wants individuals will to break the law and not
break their silence regarding said misconduct, when questioned by
the Inspector General or Congress.
Under former FBI director Robert S. Mueller, the FBI was caught
committing a host of crimes, which was well documented in the
mainstream press (see article excerpt below). I broke several
scandals regarding FBI misconduct, due to the crimes I witnessed
them commit (see this site's Exclusives
page).
In a number of cases concerning a wide spectrum of people, FBI
agents knew the orders Mueller gave were unconstitutional, corrupt
and illegal, but under their Quantico training, they did it anyway
without question, engaging in egregious misconduct and acts of
obstruction of justice to cover it up. Then they lied to the
Inspector General and Congress about said crimes. Some of this
misconduct was in relation to the war in Iraq, terrorism cases,
missing children cases, bank fraud and money laundering cases by
high profile individuals and unlawful conduct by famous people.
The lawsuit filed by the sixteen women will face significant
hurdles. The FBI routines corrupts judges into ruling in their
favor. The FBI has sent agents into judge’s chambers telling them
what to write in rulings in the agency’s favor.
There have been cases where the FBI’s criminal negligence caused
innocent people to die and the courts sided with the FBI, rather
than the bereaved victims families, in what should have been open
and shut cases in the surviving loved ones’ favor.
I have repeatedly warned on this website that the heinous crimes
the FBI is committing behind the scenes is going to bring America
crashing down. They are going to destroy America with this
lawlessness. Each time they go further and further with the
misconduct. They have gotten lost in the corruption, carried away in
something very evil and it is only a matter of time before that
agency takes the country down. That is the only thing that comes of
such corruption. A self-induced, catastrophic fall.
STORY SOURCE
'Good old boy network' dominates FBI academy, discrimination
lawsuit claims
May 30, 2019 / 1:17 AM - (Reuters) - Sixteen women filed a
lawsuit against the FBI on Wednesday, claiming sexual discrimination
and accusing it of running “a good old boy network” in its training
program. Male instructors exposed the former recruits to a hostile work
environment, sexual harassment and inappropriate jokes, according to
the lawsuit, which was filed in federal district court in
Washington.
Seven of the women still work for the Federal Bureau of
Investigation and some did not use their full names in the suit,
fearing retaliation, according to a court filing. According to the suit, the bureau’s instructors are mostly men
and they penalized and dismissed female trainees at a significantly
higher rate than male trainees. Some of the litigants accused the instructors of making
inappropriate jokes and making multiple sexual advances on at least
one of the female trainees…
https://www.reuters.com
Sixteen women allege discrimination at FBI training academy in
lawsuit
May 30, 2019, 7:39 AM EDT - WASHINGTON — Sixteen women who
trained to become FBI agents and analysts have come forward in a
lawsuit filed Wednesday accusing the bureau of gender discrimination
in how it trains and evaluates female candidates.
The women, seven of whom still work at the FBI, detail incidents
where they say they were punished for behavior their male
counterparts got away with. They also describe what they say is a
male-biased review process, and even overt sexual harassment. Ten of
the former trainees agreed to be interviewed exclusively by NBC
News. Five of them asked not to be identified by their full names.
The former trainees said their experiences at the FBI's training
academy in Quantico, Virginia, left them feeling powerless and
angry. "They made me feel like I was worthless and disposable," said
one plaintiff, who asked to be identified only as "Ava."…
https://www.nbcnews.com
Robert Mueller's forgotten surveillance crime
spree
01/29/18 11:47 AM EST The views expressed by
contributors are their own and not the view of The Hill - When
Robert Mueller was appointed last May as Special Counsel to
investigate Trump, Politico Magazine gushed that “Mueller might just
be America’s straightest arrow — a respected, nonpartisan and
fiercely apolitical public servant whose only lifetime motivation
has been the search for justice.” Most of the subsequent press
coverage has shown nary a doubt about Mueller’s purity. But, during
his 11 years as director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation,
Mueller’s agency routinely violated federal law and the Bill of
Rights.
Mueller took over the FBI one week before the 9/11
attacks and he was worse than clueless after 9/11. On Sept. 14,
2011, Mueller declared, “The fact that there were a number of
individuals that happened to have received training at flight
schools here is news, quite obviously. If we had understood that to
be the case, we would have — perhaps one could have averted this.”
Three days later, Mueller announced: “There were no warning signs
that I’m aware of that would indicate this type of operation in the
country.” His protestations helped the Bush administration railroad
the Patriot Act through Congress, vastly expanding the FBI’s
prerogatives to vacuum up Americans’ personal information.
Deceit helped capture those intrusive new
prerogatives. The Bush administration suppressed until the following
May the news that FBI agents in Phoenix and Minneapolis had warned
FBI headquarters of suspicious Arabs in flight training programs
prior to 9/11. A House-Senate Joint Intelligence Committee analysis
concluded that FBI incompetence and negligence “contributed to the
United States becoming, in effect, a sanctuary for radical
terrorists.” FBI blundering spurred the Wall Street Journal to call
for Mueller’s resignation, while a New York Times headline warned:
“Lawmakers Say Misstatements Cloud F.B.I. Chief's Credibility.”
But the FBI was off and running. Thanks to the
Patriot act, the FBI increased by a hundredfold — up to 50,000 a
year — the number of National Security Letters (NSLs) it issued to
citizens, business, and nonprofit organizations, and recipients were
prohibited from disclosing that their data had been raided. NSLs
entitle the FBI to seize records that reveal “where a person makes
and spends money, with whom he lives and lived before, how much he
gambles, what he buys online, what he pawns and borrows, where he
travels, how he invests, what he searches for and reads on the Web,
and who telephones or e-mails him at home and at work,” the
Washington Post noted. The FBI can lasso thousands of people’s
records with a single NSL — regardless of the Fourth Amendment’s
prohibition of unreasonable warrantless searches...
https://thehill.com