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Gagged Former FBI Translator Claims U.S. Rep Bribe Evidence

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  • Gagged Former FBI Translator Claims U.S. Rep Bribe Evidence

    Huffington Post

    http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andrew-kreig/g agged-former-fbi-transla_b_254788.html
    Andrew Kreig
    DC journalist and attorney
    Posted: August 8, 2009 08:45 PM
    Gagged Former FBI Translator Claims U.S. Rep Bribe Evidence

    Seeking to overcome years of gag restraints, former FBI contract
    translator Sibel Edmonds reportedly claimed in an Aug. 8 deposition
    that several leaders in Congress and other high-level U.S. officials
    were suspected early this decade of being bribed by Turkey's
    government.

    Edmonds, who had been silenced by a gag order obtained by the
    U.S. Justice Department from a federal judge under a "state secrets"
    doctrine after the FBI fired her in 2002, reportedly said in her
    deposition that her FBI work made her aware of high-level officials
    and lobbyists from both parties discussed as potential bribe-takers.

    This account of her testimony was by Wayne Madsen, one of a handful of
    alternative media journalists talking to participants of the
    deposition held at the National Whistleblowers Legal Defense &
    Education Fund headquarters in Washington, DC. His subscription-only
    website cited sources who identified the suspected officials,
    including one in Congress allegedly trapped by a sex-sting using a
    prostitute.

    Reporter Brad Friedman of Los Angeles, who spoke by cellphone with
    Edmonds and several other key deposition participants, wrote a
    parallel "live-blog" account on his non-subscription website. His most
    recent story was headlined: "Deposition of Sibel Edmonds Completed,
    DoJ a 'No Show', Bombshells Under Oath."

    More background is available on the witness's own website. Allies of
    Edmonds suggested that they want to release videos of her deposition
    as soon as possible.

    I attended the first 90 minutes or so of the reporter stake-out of the
    deposition site, and spoke to several of the proceeding's participants
    as they emerged during a break. But I'll defer on substantive claims
    to those who stayed five and a half hours through to the end, and who
    have reported for years on a story seldom covered in detail except in
    the alternative media.

    Edmonds was a contract FBI employee for about six months, translating
    material in Azerbaijani, Farsi and Turkish. The FBI fired her in 2002
    after she complained that colleagues had produced error-prone and
    incomplete translations of important terrorism intelligence before and
    after the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001.

    The Justice Department has argued as recently as this week that the
    witness's employment agreements forbid her from disclosing any
    information learned during her work. The FBI's interests include
    protecting sensitive investigative work regarding officials, and in
    maintaining good relations with the government of Turkey, an important
    U.S. ally in the Mideast. Turkey would be particularly sensitive
    regarding allegations of bribery, of course, and of allegations that
    the government was involved in genocide against Turkey's Armenian
    minority early last century. U.S. voters of Armenian descent want the
    U.S. to pressure Turkey to confess to genocide, which Turkey resists.

    U.S. District Judge Reggie Walton has imposed an order forbidding
    Edmonds from describing government secrets. Edmonds and her attorneys
    have maintained that her FBI agreements do not prevent her from
    responding to a subpoena for oral testimony, particularly as a
    whistleblower informing the U.S. public about important matters.

    Ohio Congressional candidate David Krikorian, a Democrat, subpoenaed
    her as part of his defense against a "false statements" complaint by
    U.S. Rep. Jean Schmidt, an Ohio Republican, before the Ohio Election
    Commission.

    Schmidt's attorney Bruce Fein, a constitutional scholar and a former
    high-level official during the Reagan administration Justice
    Department, told reporters today that he objected to many responses by
    Edmonds during her deposition.



    Follow Andrew Kreig on Twitter: www.twitter.com/AndrewKreig
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