
BREAKING: The U.S. Senate approves a bill to allow mining near the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. kare11.com/article/news/p…
Nat W
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@nsw43
Stronger Together

BREAKING: The U.S. Senate approves a bill to allow mining near the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness. kare11.com/article/news/p…








Israel's losing the Democratic Party. Whether it's Hasan Piker, college protesters, pro-Palestine activists, center-left / left-leaning American Jews, or a diverse segment of American voters, right or wrong, Netanyahu's leadership & Israel's actions have become a partisan issue.

Spot on. Denying Jewish history is just pure antisemitism. These haters are absolutely clueless. 🇮🇱

Kathryn Bolkovac was a police officer in Lincoln, Nebraska. Years on the force. Divorced. Three grown children. Looking for a change. 1998. She applied to join the UN's International Police Task Force in Bosnia-Herzegovina. The IPTF. Created after the 1995 Dayton Peace Accords. Mission was to monitor and train local law enforcement after the Bosnian War. 1999. Signed a contract with DynCorp Aerospace. US defense contractor. 15 million dollar UN-related contract to hire and train police officers for duty in Bosnia. Pay was 85,000 dollars. Better than Lincoln PD. After training in Fort Worth, Texas, she was sent to Sarajevo. Human rights investigator. Three months later deployed to Zenica. Put in charge of fighting violence against women. Head of the department of gender affairs. Shortly after arriving she encountered a battered young woman. Not from the Balkans. From Moldova. Spoke neither English nor Bosnian. Couldn't explain what happened. But she could point Kathryn to a local nightclub. The Florida. Kathryn investigated. Found seven girls locked in a room upstairs. Held captive. No passports. No way out. Room littered with used condoms. Her team walked the perimeter. Found an exterior staircase. Locked door on the second floor. Forced it open. Seven more girls. Also captive. Sex trafficking ring operated by the Serbian mafia. Girls trafficked from Ukraine, Moldova, and Romania. Some as young as 12 years old. Kathryn found a metal box at the Florida. Full of US dollars. The clientele were Americans working in Bosnia. Potentially her own fellow police officers. Brothels disguised as bars. Restaurants. Hotels. Clubs. Scattered throughout the hills of Bosnia. Victims told her directly. American contractors were buying underage girls. One American police officer working alongside her told her he had purchased a woman outright from a bar owner right outside Sarajevo. Took her home. To keep. To marry. To bring back to the United States. It got worse. International peacekeepers and UN bureaucrats were keeping the underground sex trade alive. Officers from multiple countries working under DynCorp. Some were customers. Some were facilitators. Local police confirmed it. The trafficking started with the arrival of the international peacekeepers. Kathryn pushed for formal investigations. She was reassigned. When she questioned her colleagues' diplomatic immunity she was demoted. Peacekeepers couldn't be prosecuted for crimes committed overseas. Fed up. She sent an email. Detailed everything. Coerced prostitution. Cross-border smuggling of women. Named specific personnel allegedly involved. Sent it to more than 50 people. UN officials. DynCorp officials. Up the entire chain of command. Less than two years on the job. Kathryn was fired. Gross misconduct. Falsifying timesheets they said. She was forced to flee the country. Carrying a bag packed with her investigative reports. A probable threat to her life had been determined. She took her story to BBC News. June 2001. Filed a wrongful termination lawsuit against DynCorp in a UK employment tribunal. August 2, 2002. The tribunal ruled unanimously in her favor. DynCorp ordered to pay approximately 153,000 dollars in damages. DynCorp appealed. Then dropped the appeal in April 2003. Days before announcing an enormously lucrative new contract with the US State Department. To police Iraq's civilian population during the War on Terror. DynCorp fired seven employees for solicitation. Not one faced criminal prosecution. No clear jurisdiction. US Army had no authority over civilian contractors. Case transferred to Bosnian police. Bosnian police unsure about diplomatic immunity under the Dayton Peace Accords. Zero prosecutions. Zero. The seven were simply repatriated. Sent home to their countries. DynCorp kept winning government contracts. Similar police training missions in Afghanistan and Iraq. US Government continued working with them throughout. At least two of the men involved in trafficking at DynCorp were later promoted to upper management. Kathryn was forced out of policing entirely. 2010. Hollywood made the movie. The Whistleblower. Rachel Weisz played Kathryn. Screened at the United Nations in New York. For legal reasons DynCorp was renamed Democra Security. 2011. Kathryn was nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Same year she graduated with a degree in political science from University of Nebraska-Lincoln. She now lives in the Netherlands. Works a desk job as a project manager for an international auctioneering firm. Tried to obtain international contract work. Infamous in that community. Couldn't get back in. The men who bought children were promoted. The woman who reported it works a desk job. Think about what Kathryn found. Sent to Bosnia to help rebuild a war-torn country. Discovered the people sent to protect were the ones exploiting. UN peacekeepers buying girls. American contractors raping children. Organizations created to help enabling a sex trade. Girls as young as 12. Locked in rooms. No passports. No escape. She documented everything. Investigated for months. Reported to 50 officials. Every single one ignored her. Demoted. Fired. Threatened. Forced to flee the country carrying evidence in a bag. Won her lawsuit. Exposed the scandal to the world. Forced the UN to create oversight units. Became a Hollywood film. Nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize. Zero men prosecuted. Not one. Kathryn said it clearly. What happened in Bosnia is similar to later scandals. The abuse continues. The cover-ups continue. But because of her the world saw it. Girls were saved from slavery. UN complicity was proven. The cover-up was exposed. She paid for it with her career. With her ability to work in the field she loved. With years of her life fighting for justice that never fully came. Kathryn Bolkovac. Nebraska police officer. Went to Bosnia in 1999 to help. Found children locked in rooms instead. Reported it. Lost everything. Still speaking about it today. Zero men prosecuted. Not one.