DHS compiled 'intelligence reports' using *baseball cards *on journalists [View all]
The baseball cards are what the military used to hunt al Qaeda terrorists and Saddam Hussein & co
now used on protestors and reporters.
The Department of Homeland Security has compiled intelligence reports about the work of American journalists covering protests in Portland, Ore., in what current and former officials called an alarming use of a government system meant to share information about suspected terrorists and violent actors.
Over the past week, the departments Office of Intelligence and Analysis has disseminated three Open Source Intelligence Reports to federal law enforcement agencies and others, summarizing tweets written by two journalists a reporter for the New York Times and the editor in chief of the blog Lawfare and noting they had published leaked, unclassified documents about DHS operations in Portland. The intelligence reports, obtained by The Washington Post, include written descriptions and images of the tweets and the number of times they had been liked or retweeted by others.
Some of the leaked DHS documents the journalists posted and wrote about revealed shortcomings in the departments understanding of the nature of the protests in Portland, as well as techniques that intelligence analysts have used. A memo by the departments top intelligence official, which was tweeted by the editor of Lawfare, says personnel relied on FINTEL, an acronym for financial intelligence, as well as finished intelligence Baseball cards of arrested protesters to try to understand their motivations and plans. Historically, military and intelligence officials have used such cards for biographical dossiers of suspected terrorists, including those targeted in lethal drone strikes.
Some of the leaked DHS documents the journalists posted and wrote about revealed shortcomings in the departments understanding of the nature of the protests in Portland, as well as techniques that intelligence analysts have used. A memo by the departments top intelligence official, which was tweeted by the editor of Lawfare, says personnel relied on FINTEL, an acronym for financial intelligence, as well as finished intelligence Baseball cards of arrested protesters to try to understand their motivations and plans. Historically, military and intelligence officials have used such cards for biographical dossiers of suspected terrorists, including those targeted in lethal drone strikes.
https://www.washingtonpost.com/national-security/dhs-compiled-intelligence-reports-on-journalists-who-published-leaked-documents/2020/07/30/5be5ec9e-d25b-11ea-9038-af089b63ac21_story.html