Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Local FBI Office Sees Uptick In Heroin On Indy's Streets: Gee, I Wonder Why?

A special-agent-in charge in the local Indianapolis FBI office, Bob Jones, discussed the priorities of the local office with the media today. Among the efforts outlined by Jones is a "safe streets" task force. Jones says that Indianapolis is seeing an uptick in heroin-related deaths and gang activity.
Another task force, known as "safe streets" is targeting community based violence, often facilitated by both national and neighborhood based gangs. A sudden rise in heroin deaths and drug busts last year may be behind some of the violence seen in recent months, Jones said.
“We've seen an uptick in heroin here, and we know that fuels a lot of the gangs. Gang violence in Indianapolis seems to be rising in frequency, and we focus a little bit more on that because of it,” he said.
Intel from the task force has also enabled agents to target gang leadership.
“The biggest thing we can do through our safe streets task force and our criminal enterprise theory of investigation is take these gangs and their associates off in large swaths. We want to focus on the gangs where we can arrest 30, 40 or 50 at a time, versus the ones and twos. That's probably the best way to make those neighborhoods safer,” Jones said.
Let's see, where does the heroin originate? That would be Afghanistan. Who's calling the shots in Afghanistan? That would be the CIA, which pays bribes to the country's leadership and drug warlords in their employ to protect its drug-running operations. In fact, heroin production in Afghanistan has skyrocketed since the U.S. invaded the country for the purpose of eliminating Al Qaeda, the terrorist organization founded and funded by the CIA. The largest drug trafficker in the world is the CIA. Until the FBI starts investigating and prosecuting high-level people within the CIA and their contracted agents, including those operating right here in Indiana, for their role in drug trafficking, money laundering and other international criminal activity, the federal government's so-called war on drugs will remain nothing more than an overt effort by the federal government to eliminate drug operations that compete with the CIA's drug rings.

Jones says its public corruption task force remains active, which continues to ignore the largest public racketeering operations in state government and the city of Indianapolis. Let's put it this way, Indiana and the city of Indianapolis continue to be one of the most ideal places in America to engage in public corruption activity. Your chances of being prosecuted if you're working with the right people are slim to none. The amount of public money that is being pilfered by those of greatest influence in government has reached unimaginable proportions. There seems to be a consensus that those committing the most egregious acts are being regularly briefed and tipped off about any information coming to the attention of the public corruption task force, and that the politically-driven U.S. Attorney's Office will only prosecute low-hanging fruit involving persons deemed disposable by those in charge. Whistle blowers beware. These people are ruthless when it comes to exacting revenge on people who threaten their empire. Any source

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