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  • Ex-FBI Translator Tests Justice Dept. Again

    EX-FBI TRANSLATOR TESTS JUSTICE DEPT. AGAIN
    y Jeff Stein

    CQPolitics.com
    http://blogs.cqpolitics.com/ spytalk/2009/08/exfbi-translator-tests-justice.htm l
    Aug 4 2009

    Sibel Edmonds may never get her day in court - or at least the kind
    she wants.

    The former FBI translator has spent seven years trying to get a
    court to hear her allegations that foreign agents, in particular
    Turkish intelligence, had penetrated her unit, the State Department,
    the Pentagon and Congress.

    This weekend she's going to try again.

    Edmonds, a multilingual Iranian raised partly in Turkey who graduated
    from college in the U.S., was fired by the FBI in 2002 after lodging
    complaints of incompetence and corruption in the translation unit.

    Although the Justice Department's Office of the Inspector General
    would eventually validate her complaints, in 2002 Attorney General
    John D. Ashcroft threw a cloak of secrecy over the entire affair
    via the so-called state secrets privilege, effectively smothering
    Edmonds's whistleblower suit against the FBI.

    In 2004, the government won another gag order against her when
    U.S. District Court judge Reggie B. Walton ruled that Edmonds could
    not answer questions about her FBI allegations in a suit by families
    of 9/11 victims against the Saudi government.

    This week, Edmonds was scheduled to give a deposition regarding
    Turkish intelligence activities in an arcane congressional election
    dispute in Ohio.

    Rep. Jean Schmidt, R-Ohio, had filed a complaint with the Ohio Board
    of Elections contending that a rival candidate in 2008 had slandered
    her with a charge that she took campaign cash from Turkish interests
    - "blood money," he called it - to vote against a congressional
    resolution blaming Ankara for the "genocide" of 1.5 million Armenians
    during the First World War.

    The candidate, David Krikorian, who ran against Schmidt as an
    Independent but wants to challenge her again in 2010 as a Democrat,
    planned to take a deposition from Edmonds on Saturday, Aug. 8.

    On Monday, Edmonds notified the Justice Department of what she planned
    to tell Krikorian:

    "How certain Turkish entities had illegally infiltrated and influenced
    various U.S. government agencies and officials, including but not
    limited to the Department of State, the Department of Defense and
    individual members of the United States Congress."

    She and her attorneys gave the government "until the end of the day
    to respond," she said, "however, we received no response."

    They gave the Justice Department another deadline -- until noon today,
    to respond.

    No answer.

    Edmonds says that without a red light, she plans to go ahead now and
    spill the beans.

    "Yes, I will provide a deposition unless DOJ officially bars me from
    doing so," she said by e-mail Tuesday evening.

    She invited "the public/media" to attend.

    A senior Justice Department official dismissed Edmonds's maneuver
    as theatrics.

    Edmonds's nondisclosure agreement (NDA) with the FBI requires her to
    give the bureau 30 days advance notice of her desire to speak about
    issues related to her employment, the official said.

    "State Secrets is not on the table here," said the official, demanding
    anonymity in exchange for discussing the issue. "This just about her
    NDA, period."

    The official declined to predict how the Attorney General will respond
    to Edmonds's demand for an immediate answer - if at all -- or what
    action the Justice Department might take if she violates the agreement.

    Edmonds said she has no control over when a party wants to depose her.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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