Chase Washington

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Chase Washington

Chase Washington

@hucklebuck305

“Twitter’s a war zone. If somebody’s going to jump in the war zone, it’s like okay, you’re in the arena, let’s go.” 🇧🇸 🏳️‍🌈

Bahamas Katılım Mart 2020
941 Takip Edilen138 Takipçiler
Chase Washington retweetledi
Michael Weiss
Michael Weiss@michaeldweiss·
Look, I’ll save you the headache. Kiriakou was known for two things *before* he unmasked an undercover CIA officer, went to prison for doing so, got out, and then went to work for the Russians. When he was stationed in Greece, he illegally parked his car at the port in Piraeus next to the ferry boarding area. The police told him to move it. Kiriakou locked himself inside and refused to get out of his car and said he didn’t have to, he was from the U.S. Embassy. Caused an unnecessary diplomatic stink over a fucking parking violation, which became notorious in the building — although not nearly as notorious as what else happened to him in Greece. His wife had an affair. When Kiriakou found out about it, he behaved in a manner unbefitting of any officer of any clandestine service, except maybe Russia’s, which is why he’s a good fit for them now. As he’ll be the first to tell you, he’s got bills to pay. Big on the IRGC-aligned podcast bro circuit but knows nothing, is aggressive in his ignorance, and generally held to be a laughingstock at his former organization. I believe the kiddos call this being a “whistleblower,” which is even more hilarious. Thank you for attending my TED Talk.
Mikale Olson@realmikolson

John Kiriakou is the perfect hire for Russian state media (or any nation with a vested interest in demoralizing the United States through targeted internal propaganda). Here’s why: 1. He has the credential of “former CIA officer” under his belt. That means something to American viewers. Military or government service, in general, goes a long way toward establishing legitimacy and trust. 2. He clearly has a long-standing grudge against the United States. He was charged with leaking the identity of a covert operative and was imprisoned for several years. He also lost his standing within the American political establishment as a result. The story he tells about the case is one in which he is, of course, the Snowden-adjacent hero. Again, this strikes at the heart of disgruntled Americans who have firsthand experience with government corruption. 3. He lacks principle. He’s willing to accuse the U.S. government of corruption (hey, fair enough) while, ironically, happily accepting paychecks from the Russian government, one of the most corrupt governments in modern history and a sworn adversary of the United States. He rails against the U.S. and its alleged covert torture program (and he may be right about that, for argument’s sake), yet aligns himself with a regime that has openly and brutally tortured innocent people for generations. His excuse? They let him “say whatever he wants.” Either John is an idiot (he’s not), or he’s in on the operation. There’s only one reason the Russian government would hire him: to convince Americans to hate America. And what better salesman for that cause than a disgruntled former government agent with no sense of honor? This is precisely why Russian state media has also cozied up to figures like Candace Owens and Tucker Carlson. Whether these influencers are selling out for clicks, money, ideology, or something in between, the end result is the same: convincing millions of Americans that the only solution left is to abandon America and burn it to the ground. Who, I wonder, might benefit from such an outcome?

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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@WPBF25News She was released from ICE custody on February 27. She was found at the bus stop in medical distress the morning of March 2nd. Where was she all day in the 28th and 1st?
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WPBF 25 News
WPBF 25 News@WPBF25News·
Woman's hypothermia death after her release from ICE custody ruled a homicide | Click on the image to read the full story wpbf.com/article/daphy-…
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Ghostwraithkillla
Ghostwraithkillla@Ghostwraitkill·
@ObtainerOf You know America and French robbed Haiti of there resources but I guess none of these racist will do there research
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ObtainerOfRareAntiquities
No offense but how does Haiti have a world cup team? Who in Haiti picks the players? Where do they train? The amount of infrastructure required just seems like too much idk
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Chase Washington retweetledi
Foreign Interference Research Center
FBI counterintelligence just dropped a declassified assessment covering 173 confirmed cases of Americans spying against their own government between 1947 and 2001. Not attempted cases. Confirmed espionage operations. The document maps out five decades of systematic foreign intelligence recruitment targeting anyone with a security clearance who could access military technology, intelligence capabilities, or strategic defense information. Defense contractors, military personnel, intelligence community members. The whole ecosystem. Three recruitment vectors dominated: financial incentives, ideological motivation, and coercion. Foreign services weren't throwing darts at a board. They built comprehensive targeting frameworks around clearance levels and institutional access points across government agencies and private contractors. The timeframe matters. This spans the entire Cold War through the first year of the current counterterror era. 1947 takes you back to the National Security Act, the creation of CIA, the formalization of the modern intelligence apparatus. 2001 ends right as everything pivoted to counterterrorism after 9/11. What you're seeing documented is the baseline threat environment that shaped American counterintelligence doctrine. Every security protocol, every polygraph, every compartmentalization system grew out of this pattern of systematic penetration by foreign services. The FBI assessment shows their own evolving capabilities too. Early Cold War counterintelligence was reactive, catching spies after damage was done. By the 1980s they were running sophisticated counterintelligence operations like the ones that rolled up Robert Hanssen and Aldrich Ames. But 173 confirmed cases over 54 years means one successful espionage operation every 3.6 months on average. That's the documented floor, not the ceiling. These are cases where FBI developed enough evidence to confirm espionage occurred. The technology transfer component is crucial. Foreign services weren't just collecting intelligence reports. They systematically targeted defense technologies, weapons systems, and classified research programs. Every major American military advantage became a collection priority for adversary intelligence services. The document reveals how foreign intelligence services adapted their recruitment strategies across different decades. Early Cold War operations relied heavily on ideological motivation and communist party connections. Later periods show increased financial recruitment and more sophisticated operational security. The declassification timing isn't accidental. FBI is establishing historical baselines as current counterintelligence faces similar systematic targeting by Chinese intelligence services, Russian SVR, and other state actors. The recruitment methods haven't changed fundamentally. Financial incentives, ideological appeals, and coercion still drive most espionage cases. What has changed is the scale and scope of targeting. Modern foreign intelligence operations don't just target government employees with clearances. They target anyone with access to sensitive technologies, research programs, or policy information across academia, private industry, and government. The 1947-2001 framework also demonstrates the long-term persistence of foreign intelligence threats. These weren't episodic operations tied to specific crises. Foreign services maintained continuous collection efforts against American targets across multiple decades and changing geopolitical circumstances. The assessment shows counterintelligence success rates improving over time as FBI developed better detection capabilities and more sophisticated analysis of foreign intelligence operations. But the fundamental challenge remained constant: protecting sensitive information in an open society where foreign intelligence services could operate with significant freedom. The documented cases include some of the most damaging espionage operations in American history. Walker spy ring. Aldrich Ames. Robert Hanssen. Each case revealed systemic vulnerabilities in security protocols and led to major reforms in how agencies protect classified information and monitor personnel with security clearances. The declassified assessment provides a historical baseline for understanding how foreign intelligence services identify, assess, develop, and recruit American citizens with access to sensitive information. The operational patterns established during this period continue to inform modern counterintelligence analysis and threat assessment methodologies. Modern counterintelligence efforts can trace direct lineage back to lessons learned from these 173 documented cases. Every background investigation protocol, every security interview, every anomaly detection system evolved from understanding how foreign services successfully recruited Americans during the Cold War and post-Cold War periods. The FBI documentation serves as both historical record and operational guide for contemporary counterintelligence professionals facing similar systematic targeting by foreign intelligence services operating against American interests today. foreigninterference.org/post/fbi-docum… #foreigninterference #AssetRecruitment #MilitaryEspionage #TechnologyTransfer
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Chase Washington retweetledi
National Security Division, U.S. Dept of Justice
13 internet domains used to target U.S. persons, including current and former security clearance holders with access to classified and sensitive U.S. government information, were seized today by federal authorities. “These domain seizures offer a glimpse at how foreign actors can use promises of easy money to lure Americans into revealing sensitive or classified information that they are duty‑bound to protect,” said Assistant Attorney General John A. Eisenberg. “Anyone approached online with offers of easy income for vague ‘consulting’ work should treat those overtures with extreme caution and remain vigilant for warning signs of malicious targeting.” Read more: justice.gov/opa/pr/justice…
National Security Division, U.S. Dept of Justice tweet media
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Isaac Hayes III
Isaac Hayes III@IsaacHayes3·
The Karmelo Anthony verdict shows that the justice system has reverted back to the Jim Crow South era. It is no longer about evidence. It is no longer about right or wrong. It is about keeping racial score through the prosecution and imprisonment of Black people. It was no surprise that an all white jury would find a 19 year old kid, who was bullied and harassed by two 6’1” bullies, guilty of murder while he was minding his business. We have seen this story before. A young Black man is put on trial, and somehow the burden shifts from what happened to him, to why he should not have defended himself. The facts become secondary. The optics become everything. The outcome feels predetermined long before the verdict is read. People will tell you not to make it about race. But race has always been part of the story in America. The hard truth is that many Black people no longer believe they will receive the benefit of the doubt when their freedom is on the line. And verdicts like this are exactly why. At some point, we have to stop pretending that everyone is playing by the same set of rules. Because the people watching this case saw something very different than what that jury claimed to see.
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@mrsmasshole2 @News2ATeam @ATFHQ They didn’t cut the power. This was proven by the AR state police investigation. And that ATF office hadn’t been issued body cams yet. But I encourage you to report any alleged violations of law or policy to the DOJ-OIG instead of X.
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ATF HQ
ATF HQ@ATFHQ·
A Florida man was sentenced to 30 years in federal prison for attempted murder of ATF Special Agents. John Caleb Allen, 26, fired at the agents approximately 14 times when they attempted to serve a search warrant. A bullet passed through the shirtsleeve of one agent, and another was struck by a bullet in his body armor; neither was seriously injured. Read more at justice.gov/usao-ndfl/pr/b…. @ATF_Tampa
ATF HQ tweet mediaATF HQ tweet media
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@Mrgunsngear Try the VA app. Health tab. They respond to messages quickly in the app. Never had an issue.
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Mrgunsngear
Mrgunsngear@Mrgunsngear·
Just spent over an hour waiting for someone to pick up the phone for a VA referral. I eventually hung up and will call back another day as it's not a rush / time sensitive thing at all. Posting as a reminder that VA "healthcare" is government run and is horrifically inefficient. Government also pretends to care about veterans and this is how that system works. Imagine if they scaled it to the entire country and it was for a group of people the government doesn't even pretend to care about....
Mrgunsngear tweet media
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@RossElderWrites I mean, when you put it that way, HRT is just a swat team too bro. But don’t know how many US swat teams were doing this : en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation… I also don’t think you quite familiar w/ Fed LE. Or you’d have a better take. Also, also, thank you Ross for the compliment. ✊🏿
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Ross Elder
Ross Elder@RossElderWrites·
@hucklebuck305 It's a SWAT team, bro. It's not that special. I'm also quite familiar with how Fed LE operate. Also, also, nice AI fake dude on the range profile picture.
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@News2ATeam @ATFHQ -Do fed agencies serve low energy warrants where guns are present? -Dealing firearms w/o a FFL is legal now? TIL - it wasn’t a no knock. his widow admitted so much. - in the US you can sue anyone for anything, lawsuit isn’t proof of anything
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News2A
News2A@News2ATeam·
The ATF conducted an early morning, no-knock, high energy / dynamic entry on the Malinowski house, in which Mr. Malinowski defended himself, likely believing it was a burglar. The warrant and subsequent raid was for a paperwork crime, a rule that the ATF later rescinded. There is an ongoing wrongful death lawsuit for Mr. Malinowski's death.
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@jim3percent @ATFHQ NotSoSlim, respectfully, were you home schooled by a pigeon? YOU are the one asserting the ATF was (possibly? probably?) serving a fed misd SW. That’s where we are. That didn’t happen. & the proof is in PACER. Get $100 for ur fav charity. Post a pdf from pacer of a fed misd SW.
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NotSoSlimJim 🎖
NotSoSlimJim 🎖@jim3percent·
@hucklebuck305 @ATFHQ Oh no, I proved your red herring argument to be false. Now make an argument based on a logical fallacy, fall back on an ad hominen responses, and sprinkle on some projection to fill my bingo card on "stupid arguments".
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@jim3percent @ATFHQ Bro, of course all federal agents have the ability to enforce all federal laws (including misd). But ur moving the goal post. Again. This isn’t hard. Get on PACER and show me a federal misd SW where ATF is the affiant. I’ll donate to a charity of ur choice once u provide it.
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@jim3percent @ATFHQ Don’t be disingenuous. -You asked if it was a felony warrant. - I (sarcastically) asked if federal mag judges are signing many misd SWs (they aren’t) - you said Id be surprised - I doubted it’d be surprised and asked you for proof of federal misd SWs in NDFL Now here we are.
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@jim3percent @ATFHQ Doubtful. I have access to PACER. Please point me to a northern district of Florida misdemeanor search warrant.
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Chase Washington
Chase Washington@hucklebuck305·
@mrsmasshole2 @News2ATeam @ATFHQ Or the risk you take when you shoot at federal agents serving a federal warrant signed by magistrate. The ATF agent sent home that day. So, sounds like Bryan took the risk (and lost)
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