The Drug Wars Einsatzgruppen
by
William Norman Grigg
Recently by William Norman Grigg: How
Whitey Bulger Bought Boston
Einsatzgruppen
(German) "Special task forces" composed of police, military, and
intelligence personnel deployed to target and eliminate people identified
as "anti-German elements" by the National Socialist regime; also
referred to as "mobile killing squads."
The invaders
who murdered
Hampton, Virginia resident William Cooper swiped about
$900 in cash. They seized his gun collection. They took the
Lexus from his driveway. By some oversight they neglected to extract
the gold fillings from his teeth.
While they
made off with a decent haul, the robbers were doubtless disappointed
that they couldn't locate the large stash of illicit prescription
drugs they had expected to find. They had the luxury of tossing
the home at leisure without worrying about being interrupted by
the police on account of the fact that they were the police.
William Cooper,
a 69-year-old retiree who suffered from the familiar variety of
afflictions attendant to age, was startled awake on the morning
of June 18 by two men who had barged into his home with their guns
drawn and ready. Since he lived in a neighborhood in which home
invasions (of the non-State-sanctioned variety) were commonplace,
Cooper slept with a loaded handgun on his nightstand. He made an
entirely proper but regrettably ineffective use of that weapon in
an effort to repel the intruders, and was gunned down in his bedroom.
The police
raid was triggered by an unsubstantiated tip from a still-anonymous
informant that the NASA retiree who walked with a cane and, according
to his neighbors, never seemed to have any visitors was illegally
selling prescription drugs from his home. After they murdered Hampton,
the police found about two-dozen different prescription drugs in
the home, including various painkillers and medications for blood
pressure, heart disease, and diabetes.
An apparatchik
with the Hampton PD insisted that the lethal home invasion had turned
up "evidence" of illegal drug dealing. Someone not required to lie
for reasons of professional convenience would admit the obvious:
The victim of this needless home invasion was simply a sick, helpless
old man who made extensive use of his Medicare
Part D benefits. Now that he's dead, the people responsible
for killing him are permitted to keep the stolen property as "proceeds"
from alleged narcotics dealing.
The lethal
June 18 assault on William Cooper's home was carried out under the
supposed authority of Virginia's Peninsula Narcotics Enforcement
Task Force (PNETF).
The "Asset
Forfeiture Addendum" to the
PNETF's most recent "Memorandum of Understanding" specifies
that "TASK FORCE investigations should result in the seizure of
forfeitable assets." It is also expected that the plunder will be
distributed "in a fair and equitable manner," with a little more
than one-third going to the city governments of Hampton and Newport
News, a little less than a fifth going to the State Police, and
the rest being lavished on the "Peninsula Association of Commonwealth
Attorney's Association" (redundancy in the original). At least some
of the boodle would be used to cultivate other informants, as well.
To understand
what really happened in William Cooper's home on June 18, it's useful
to imagine the murdered retiree's body surrounded by police, prosecutors,
and local politicians who pick over his lifeless form like a colony
of vultures. The cash is divvied up, with Hampton and Newport News
getting about $300 apiece, the State Police receiving roughly $180,
and the local prosecutors laying claim to about $120. For taking
the lead in the heist, the Hampton Police Department is permitted
to keep Cooper's car and gun collection, to use or liquidate as
it sees fit.
As this is
a "civil forfeiture" action, it's not necessary to prove that Cooper
actually broke any law. And since he's dead, he can't contest the
forfeiture action in court. If police had conducted an actual investigation,
rather than staging a home invasion robbery on the pretext provided
by an unsubstantiated tip from an unknown informant, they and their
cohorts wouldn't have been rewarded with this modest haul.
Gilbert, Arizona
resident Ross Taylor was fortunate enough not to share William Cooper's
fate when the
local counter-narcotics task force staged an assault on Taylor's
home.
This has to
be considered a species of miracle, given that the raiding party
consisted of at least a dozen masked commandos who were clad in
riot gear, packing assault rifles, and obviously eager for an opportunity
to put a boot on someone's neck.
The throng
of armed tax-feeders that laid siege to Taylor's home consisted
of five undercover officers and seven from the criminal apprehension
team. As the
Phoenix New Times reports, the police raid came in response
to a tip from the guy who installed Taylor's satellite TV system,
a collectivist drone with the soul of a Stasi informant who spied
a tiny amount of pot in the house and did his duty. As an overture
to the assault, the raiders cut power and water to the targeted
home, presumably to prevent anyone inside from disposing of the
purported contraband.
Taylor had
just purchased his home at the time of the raid. Three employees
of a local moving company were present when the storm troopers arrived;
they were handcuffed and detained for more than an hour while the
raiders interrogated Taylor and ransacked his house.
As it happens,
there was marijuana in Taylor's home, but it wasn't contraband.
Taylor is a card-carrying medical marijuana patient who is permitted,
by what the Arizona government presumes to call the "law," to own
up to 2.5 ounces of marijuana.
Taylor patiently
explained these facts to the bellicose bullies who were holding
him at gunpoint. When he showed one of the SWAT operators his state-issued
medical marijuana card, the masked invader told him, "I don't even
know if you're supposed to have this card," referring to a lawsuit
filed by Jan Brewer's administration against Proposition 203 (the
Arizona Medical Marijuana Act), an
initiative that passed last November.
Under the terms
of that statute, as elucidated by the Arizona Department of Health
Services (DHS), those who qualify for medical marijuana cards "can
obtain medical marijuana from a dispensary, the qualifying patient's
designated caregiver, another qualifying patient, or, if
authorized to cultivate, from home cultivation." (Emphasis added.)
Taylor told
his unwanted visitors that he had purchased the marijuana from another
card-carrying medical marijuana patient. He was informed that this
meant he wasn't legally in possession of the marijuana, notwithstanding
the fact that the text of the statute and the DHS guidelines explicitly
permit transactions of that kind.
According to
Gilbert PD press flack Sgt. Bill Balafas, "no one is licensed to
sell [marijuana] and no dispensaries are open, yet." Actually, the
statute itself, as the
DHS admits, effectively licenses anyone with a medical marijuana
card to distribute pot to other qualified users.
The agency
itself was required to begin issuing permits for marijuana dispensaries
at the beginning of June. However, Gov. Brewer instructed Arizona
Attorney General Thomas Horne to order the DHS to disobey the law
by refusing
to accept applications for businesses seeking to open dispensaries.
This was done to buy time while Brewer filed a federal lawsuit to
overturn the voter-enacted medical marijuana law.
Misguided conservatives
who depict Jan Brewer as a champion of "states' rights" aren't likely
to take note of, or be troubled by, her overture to Washington to
practice nullification in reverse by intervening to suppress a voter-enacted
measure liberalizing the state's marijuana laws.
The Brewer
administration's stated reason for seeking an injunction against
the law is a fear that state employees would be subject to prosecution
for violating federal anti-drug ordinances. That legal
argument was supplied by "Keep AZ Drug Free," the pressure group
that opposed last year's marijuana initiative. (It's worth pointing
out that the organization's name encompasses the patent falsehood
that Arizona, or any other state, is and can be kept "drug-free.")
A more honest assessment would lead to the conclusion that in Arizona,
as is the case everywhere in the Soyuz, state and local law enforcement
agencies have been subsumed into the federal Drug War apparatus
and that the political elite aren't willing to end that lucrative
arrangement.
The Arizona
Criminal Justice Commission, which is "responsible for granting
millions of federal and state dollars" to police agencies, has designated
support for narcotics task forces, along with related asset forfeitures,
as its "first priority." The
Commission's current "State Strategy" for "Drug, Gang and Violent
Crime Control" is commendably barren of idiotic prattle about
making, let alone "keeping," the state drug-free. It acknowledges
that Arizona "is the arrival zone for most drugs smuggled into the
United States"; that marijuana "remains readily available and is
considered the most widely used illegal drug throughout the state";
that "cocaine is readily available throughout Arizona, and that
the same is true of methamphetamine.
The policy
objective of the Arizona Criminal Justice Commission as is true
in each of the other fifty federal administrative units called "state
governments" is not to eliminate the narcotics trade, or even
to abate it in any dramatic way, but rather to transmute
it into a reliable source of revenue for the political class and
its armed auxiliaries. Toward that end, the Commission in Arizona,
with the help of plundered money provided by Washington, created
sixteen state-level "drug task forces" in 2007. Those task forces
have "a permanent institutional tie" with the Attorney General's
Office of Financial Remedies.
Arizona's coercive
sector has benefited tremendously from "the overwhelming success
of the asset forfeiture [program] in Arizona," boasts the Commission.
In the year following creation of the sixteen state counter-narcotics
task forces, revenue from asset forfeitures more than doubled
from $19,576,626 in 2006 to $40,297,456 in 2007.
As Tom Barry
of the Center for International Policy observes,
the Commission's strategy document leaves the impression it "is
a drug war agency, not one dedicated to finding ways to improve
criminal justice in Arizona." Once again, this is typical of law
enforcement nation-wide: "Whether at the state or county government
level, the war on drugs is the main prism through which criminal
justice and law enforcement agencies view crime and violence."
What this
means, of course, is that "local" police agencies are essentially
support systems for a plundering army that is literally waging war
against the people in the guise of narcotics enforcement. In fact,
a good case can be made that these paramilitary task forces or,
to use the proper
German translation, einsatzgruppen are carrying out
the precise role that would be played by the dreaded blue-helmeted
UN "peace enforcement" units that haunt the imagination of many
"law and order" conservatives.
The idea of
a UN "Peace Force" was made official federal government policy in
the
1961 State Department Document entitled "Freedom from War: The United
States Program for General and Complete Disarmament in a Peaceful
World."
That proposal,
also known as State Department Document 7277, outlined a three-stage
program through which the United Nations would be "progressively
strengthened in order to improve its capacity to assure international
security and the peaceful settlement of disputes." All national
governments would be required to provide military personnel and
assets to empower the UN, which as British author Simon
Tisdall reminds us was always intended to be a "war-fighting
machine," rather than a forum for peaceful resolution of disputes.
The Orwellian
locution employed to describe this function is "peace enforcement."
The ongoing mission in Libya, which
Mr. Obama refuses to describe as "hostilities" (meaning, one
supposes, that they must be considered "kinetic
military congenialities"), offers a perfect example of how the
7277 program works in practice: The president, invoking
the supposed obligation to uphold the "credibility and effectiveness
of the United Nations Security Council," committed personnel
and resources to an aggressive war without congressional involvement
of any kind. Once again, that is how the international component
of the "Freedom From War" program functions.
In the domestic
realm, "Freedom From War" dictates that each national government
maintain a centralized, militarized "internal security force." In
the intervening decades, many American critics of the UN have speculated
that this element of the 7277 program mandated the eventual occupation
of the country by Blue
Helmet-wearing foreign troops. What has actually happened is
that American police forces have been transformed into a domestic
army of occupation in the service of a
UN-administered program of "global drug prohibition."
The framework
for global prohibition, interestingly, was also unveiled in 1961
the UN's
Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. As a recent report from
the Global Commission on Drug Policy (a body that includes several
former high-ranking UN functionaries, including former Secretary
General Kofi Annan) points out that the UN and the U.S. government,
working through the International Narcotics Control Board, "have
worked
to ensure that all countries adopt the same rigid approach
to drug policy the same laws, and the same tough approach to law
enforcement."
This was described
as a campaign to create a "drug-free" world just as the "Freedom
From War" proposal was allegedly intended to abolish international
military conflict. In practice, of course, both of those initiatives
were actually intended to consolidate the power of a permanent international
Power Elite, as well as to expand its ability to regiment and plunder
productive society.
It
was in the mid-1980s that the federal government began the practice
of confiscating money and property as narcotics "proceeds" through
civil asset forfeiture. Washington effectively globalized that practice
through Article V of the 1988 Vienna
Convention Against Illicit Traffic in Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic
Substances, which dictates that signatory nations "adopt such
measures as may be necessary to enable confiscation" of money and
property designated as "proceeds" of the narcotics trade.
The U.S. government
has eagerly tutored other countries in the use of "non-conviction-based"
confiscation that is, seizure of property from people never found
guilty of a crime.
All of this
did exactly nothing to mitigate the problem of drug addiction, let
alone put an end to it. It did, however, dramatically amplify the
profits enjoyed by both the private sector criminals who distribute
narcotics and the
immeasurably more vicious political criminals who are their
obvious albeit usually unacknowledged business partners.
Fifty
years after the UN which has always been an instrument of the
Anglo-American Power Elite called for a "drug-free world," the
narcotics trade is the world's largest cash business. According
to Antonio Maria Costa, head of the UN's Office of Drugs and
Crime, during the 2008 global financial meltdown, laundered proceeds
from drug trafficking kept the international banking system liquid
until the official counterfeiters at the Federal Reserve could take
over.
Historian
Charles Burris refers to the beast created by "the massive covert
intersection of governments, financial institutions, and organized
crime in the international narcotics trade" as the "Narcosaurus."
Its bloody footprints can be seen everywhere from the opium fields
of Afghanistan (which
are guarded by U.S. military personnel) to the doorways of people
like William Cooper and Jose
Guerena innocent Americans murdered by the Drug War einsatzgruppen
in their own homes.
June
30, 2011
William
Norman Grigg [send him mail]
publishes the Pro
Libertate blog and hosts the Pro
Libertate radio program.
Copyright
© 2011 The American Conservative
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