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Hornberger’s Blog, December 2007

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Monday, December 31, 2007 Bhutto, JFK, and Conspiracies by Jacob G. Hornberger It’s interesting to compare the attitude of the U.S. mainstream press toward the assassination of Benazir Bhutto with its attitude toward the assassination of President John Kennedy. The immediate reaction of the American press (and U.S. government officials) to the Bhutto killing has been a presumption of a conspiracy. Equally important, among the prime suspects are Pakistani intelligence agencies. For example, the New York Times reported: “Pakistani and Western security experts said the government’s insistence that Ms. Bhutto, a former prime minister, was not killed by a bullet was intended to deflect attention from the lack of government security around her…. Her vehicle came under attack by a gunman and suicide bomber as she left a political rally in Rawalpindi, where the Pakistani Army keeps its headquarters, and where the powerful Inter-Services Intelligence agency has a ...

Hornberger’s Blog, September 2009

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009 Free Speech Loses Out in Kahre Case by Jacob G. Hornberger A federal judge has ruled against the ACLU’s motion to quash a subpoena that federal prosecutors had issued against the Las Vegas Review Journal in the Robert Kahre legal-tender/tax resistance case in Las Vegas. During the trial (see my commentaries on the Kahre case here , and here , and here ), the Review Journal published a news story about the trial. On its website, several people posted comments in response to the news article. Most of the comments were critical of the Federal Reserve, the IRS, and the federal prosecution of Kahre. Such criticisms obviously didn’t sit well with the prosecutors, who served a subpoena on the newspaper demanding production of all identifying information on ...

Hornberger’s Blog, September 2009

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009 Free Speech Loses Out in Kahre Case by Jacob G. Hornberger A federal judge has ruled against the ACLU’s motion to quash a subpoena that federal prosecutors had issued against the Las Vegas Review Journal in the Robert Kahre legal-tender/tax resistance case in Las Vegas. During the trial (see my commentaries on the Kahre case here , and here , and here ), the Review Journal published a news story about the trial. On its website, several people posted comments in response to the news article. Most of the comments were critical of the Federal Reserve, the IRS, and the federal prosecution of Kahre. Such criticisms obviously didn’t sit well with the prosecutors, who served a subpoena on the newspaper demanding production of all identifying information on ...