Yesterday, Thursday US EST, Friday NZT, a press conference was held at the National Press Club in Washington D.C. by US
based NGO Judicial Watch with FBI agent Robert Wright. Prior to the Press Conference Wright was threatened with criminal
prosecution if he shared his views with the public.
According to its website ( http://www.judicialwatch.org./ ): “Judicial Watch, Inc. was established in 1994 to serve as an ethical and legal "watchdog" over the US government,
legal, and judicial systems to promote a return to ethics and morality in our nation's public life.
As a non-partisan, non-profit foundation based in Washington, D.C., and with offices throughout the country, Judicial
Watch relies on supporters, like yourself, to help us root out corruption in our government and to make sure offenders
are brought to justice. “
Robert Wright, an agent for 10 years, was a member of an FBI counter- terrorism taskforce. He alleges that active agents
were threatened and impeded in anti-terrorism investigations.
For the RealVideo broadcast of the C-SPAN press conference with FBI whistleblower Robert Wright see...
Click Here.
See also a facsimile of a letter to the FBI on behalf of Wright by Wright’s lawyer…
For initial coverage in the US media of Robert Wright’s press conference see the following links..
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BLOOMBERG NEWS
Bloomberg News
By Julie Ziegler
Washington, May 30 (Bloomberg) -- An FBI agent in Chicago who has written an unpublished book attacking the agency's
counterterrorist activities said the bureau is preventing him from airing his criticisms.
The agent, Robert Wright, said his aim is to expose the Federal Bureau of Investigation's failures in deterring
terrorist attacks and strip the agency of responsibility for probing terrorism. He held a news conference with his
lawyers to accuse the FBI of muzzling him.
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CHICAGO SUN TIMES
May 31, 2002
BY PETE YOST
WASHINGTON--The Bush administration Thursday gave the beleaguered FBI broad new powers to monitor Americans, saying the
agency needed a new weapon in the battle against terrorism and promising not to return to the file-building abuses of
the past.
In a move aimed at averting another Sept. 11, Attorney General John Ashcroft freed the FBI to monitor Internet sites,
libraries, churches and political organizations, calling restrictions on domestic surveillance ''a competitive advantage
for terrorists.''
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FOX NEWS
Thursday, May 30, 2002
By Ian Christopher McCaleb
WASHINGTON — A government watchdog and FBI counter-terrorism agent are accusing the agency of prohibiting him from
conducting his probe into terror financing activities because he complained about obstruction by bureau superiors.
Chicago-based FBI Special Agent Robert Wright, who worked in counterterrorism from 1993-1999, said the recent trajectory
of his FBI career has taken a downward spiral since he complained about two incidents that inhibited his ability to
continue terror funding and money laundering probes of members of Islamic terrorist groups Hamas and Hezbollah.
Wright, who is filing a complaint through his counsel Judicial Watch, said in documents that the FBI would not provide
him decent computer equipment, a problem that has been acknowledged by the FBI as being a bureau-wide problem.
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CNS NEWS
By Jeff Johnson
CNSNews.com Congressional Bureau Chief
May 30, 2002
Capitol Hill (CNSNews.com) - In a memorandum written 91 days before the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks, an FBI agent warned
that Americans would die as a result of the bureau's failure to adequately pursue investigations of terrorists living in
the country.
FBI Special Agent Robert Wright, Jr., who wrote the memo, led a four-year investigation into terrorist money laundering
in the United States.
Wright began crying as he concluded his remarks at a Washington press conference Thursday.
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UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL
By Nicholas M. Horrock
UPI Chief White House Correspondent
WASHINGTON, May 30 (UPI) -- A Chicago FBI agent charged Thursday that colleagues stymied his efforts to investigate the
funding of Middle East terrorists in 1994 and 1995 to keep cushy surveillance assignments going and protect their jobs.
Special Agent Robert Wright said these activities "allowed foreign-born terrorist operatives, such as the perpetrators
of the Sept. 11 attacks, to engage in illegal activities in the United States." He also disclosed that a Muslim FBI
agent had accused him of religious discrimination during the investigation and he made public a sworn statement he had
given on the charges.
Wright, who is attached to the Chicago Field Office of the FBI, held a Washington news conference sponsored by Judicial
Watch -- a private, conservative watch dog group -- at which he read from and released a copy of a lawsuit he has
launched against the FBI, and an exchange of letters about a book he is seeking to publish. He declined to answer
questions.
ENDS