The FBI Behaved Like Nazi Police By Subpoenaing
USA Today Newspaper Demanding Their Readers Names
And IP Addresses Over Article Comments On Slain FBI
Agents In Florida
June 9. 2021
FBI Director Christopher Wray
The FBI launched a legal attack
against USA Today newspaper, demanding the
identities of their readers who commented on a story
about two slain FBI agents in Florida. Two FBI
agents were shot dead while attempting to raid a
property in Florida.
The FBI trampled on the First
Amendment in their demands. The politico website
reported, “The subpoena seeks internet addresses and
mobile phone information that could lead to the
identities of the readers.”
It appears comments were made on
the article that offended the FBI, who have no
regard for the First Amendment. Hence the subpoena,
which USA Today fought off. After terrible publicity
online over their conduct, the FBI withdrew the
subpoena.
The Gizmodo website reported, “The
FBI announced Saturday it had withdrawn a subpoena
seeking to identify readers of a USA Today story
concerning a Florida shooting that left two of its
agents dead. The decision to do so, however, is
purportedly unrelated to allegations raised in court
last week by USA Today’s publisher, which accused
the FBI of violating longstanding Justice Department
rules concerning the press.”
The FBI is under the misguided
impression that people like them. Then they get
their feelings hurt when the public makes
unflattering comments about them. People do not like
the agency. There are tens of thousands of items
online illustrating the public does not like the
FBI.
Americans don't like the FBI nor
do people in foreign countries (The FBI Slammed For Lying About UK
Prosecutor To Get Him Fired Leading To Him Winning Employment Case Over
Wrongful Termination and
The FBI Illegally Went To Iceland To Criminally
Frame Wikileaks Julian Assange But Was Rebuffed By
Suspicious Icelandic Government Minister In Conduct
That Has Become Standard Criminal Behavior From The
U.S. Federal Agency).
Hillary Clinton fans, who are on
the political left, do not like the FBI (due to
former FBI Director James Comey‘s letter that she
feels turned the 2016 election against her). Donald
Trump fans, who are on the political right, do not
like the FBI (due to their insane Russian collusion
investigation).
Black people don’t like the FBI
(due to the agency’s history and ongoing criminal
abuse of black people:
Three Movies Released Denouncing The
Federal Bureau Of Investigation As Criminals Abusing And Killing Black
People (FBI)).
The FBI getting upset at negative
comments would be the equivalent of satan wondering
why people think he’s evil for doing evil things.
The FBI just doesn’t get it. They are not a beloved
entity. Millions think you’re scum and you've richly
earned it with your horrific, decades long run of
evil behavior that has cost people their careers,
family members and lives.
STORY SOURCE
USA Today fights subpoena aimed at
readers of Florida FBI shooting story
06/03/2021 07:25 PM EDT -
Newspaper publisher Gannett is fighting an effort by
the FBI to try to determine who read a specific USA
Today story about a deadly shooting in February near
Fort Lauderdale, Fla., that left two FBI agents dead
and three wounded.
The subpoena, served on Gannett in
April, seeks information about who accessed the news
article online during a 35-minute window starting
just after 8 p.m. on the day of the shootings. The
demand — signed by a senior FBI agent in Maryland —
does not appear to ask for the names of those who
read the story, if the news outlet has such
information. Instead, the subpoena seeks internet
addresses and mobile phone information that could
lead to the identities of the readers…
https://www.politico.com
FBI Effort to Expose 'USA Today' Readers
Was Likely Unlawful, Experts Say
Yesterday 3:25PM - The FBI
announced Saturday it had withdrawn a subpoena
seeking to identify readers of a USA Today story
concerning a Florida shooting that left two of its
agents dead. The decision to do so, however, is
purportedly unrelated to allegations raised in court
last week by USA Today’s publisher, which accused
the FBI of violating longstanding Justice Department
rules concerning the press.
An FBI spokesperson told Gizmodo
that investigators no longer had the need to
identify online readers of the article, saying only
that “intervening investigative developments have
rendered it unnecessary.”
Attorneys and other civil rights
experts reached by Gizmodo on Friday were widely
skeptical of the FBI’s push to identify readers of
the February article, pointing to an array of
concerns centered on First Amendment grounds, as
well as DOJ policies for subpoenaing newsroom…
https://gizmodo.com