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View Full Version : Chicago, feds,local cops and prosecutors all in one building




tod evans
02-04-2013, 06:37 AM
Here's a fine example of tax dollars at work, put all of the heralded "drug warriors" in one room and let them plot and scheme in an attempt to keep private citizens from spending their money as they choose.

Instead of firing every one of these jokers, legalizing drugs and emptying the prisons, our broke government in its infinite wisdom has chosen to put all their eggs in one basket for untold millions...

I've gotta wonder how long it'll take before this goes sideways....


http://www.foxnews.com/us/2013/02/02/ap-exclusive-new-drug-fighting-hq-in-chicago-seeks-to-end-inter-agency-rivalry/

CHICAGO – A first-of-its-kind headquarters has opened in Chicago for 70 federal agents, police and prosecutors to work side-by-side, year-round to fight drug traffickers — a set-up meant to end inter-agency rivalry and miscommunication that can hamper investigations.
The recent, fanfare-free opening of the Chicago Strike Force building comes as Mexican cartels now supply over 90 percent of the narcotics in Chicago, and as street gangs vying for turf to sell those drugs kill each other and bystanders caught in the crossfire.
Inter-agency and -department cooperation is hardly a novel concept, but typically takes the form of occasional meetings or temporary joint task forces on specific investigations, said Jack Riley, the head of Chicago's DEA office.
"But you can't talk to your counterparts in once-a-week meetings — you have to talk as things are happening," said Riley, who took the lead in pushing for the facility. "When we get information here, it's not put in a pile and forgotten. It's acted on, now."
Riley gave The Associated Press an exclusive tour of the three-story brick building. Citing security, he asked the AP not to reveal its exact location.
The staff includes city and suburban police, as well as agents from the DEA, FBI, Immigration and Customs Enforcement, the IRS and a half-dozen other agencies. In another rarity, U.S. and state prosecutors also work alongside one another. Riley declined to reveal its budget.
It'll take time to see if the headquarters makes anti-trafficking efforts in Chicago more efficient, said Fred Burton, a security analyst for the global intelligence firm Stratfor.
"It sounds great on paper," he said. "But getting federal agencies to act in unison can be like herding cats."
Over the years, competition has led to situations where agencies end up unknowingly targeting the same traffickers, creating the risk that they could inadvertently foil each other's investigations, Riley said.
Thus, the headquarters was designed to foster camaraderie. Employees' desks all sit in a warehouse-sized room with no dividers or signs identifying who belongs to what agency. Response teams are comprised of members from each agency.
A major focus of their investigations will be the point of contact between major traffickers and local gangs, who serve as street-level salesmen. That's when traffickers are especially vulnerable, Reilly says, because they meet at unfamiliar places or use phones that can be wiretapped.
The ultimate goal is to arrest suspects, squeeze them to cooperate and then move along the cartel's chain of command to indict everyone from the street dealer to the kingpins in Mexico. They hope to replicate investigations like one that led to the 2009 indictment of key leaders of the Sinaloa cartel and the extradition of Sinaloa lieutenant Vicente Zambada, who'll stand trial in Chicago this year.
Beat officers should also benefit from the new headquarters, Riley said. A single office with a range of experts on everything from which gang controls what block to cartel structures in Mexico should help officers in the field make sense of anything suspicious, he said.
"They can call and say, 'Hey, I saw this guy who I think is a gang member hand a bag to this other guy. Does it mean anything? "' he said. "Before, there really wasn't a good place to call. There is now."

jkr
02-04-2013, 09:17 AM
is it smart to put all your eggz in one basket...

brushfire
02-04-2013, 09:31 AM
They may now operate in a more "fast and furious" manner.

HOLLYWOOD
02-04-2013, 10:44 AM
JUST-US System

Anti Federalist
02-04-2013, 12:39 PM
See Something Say Something

torchbearer
02-04-2013, 12:40 PM
Perhaps this should go along with the DHS offices embedded in your county 911/emergency centers.

Origanalist
02-04-2013, 12:49 PM
Oh joy, inter agency graft and corruption.

Anti Federalist
02-04-2013, 01:07 PM
Oh joy, inter agency graft and corruption.

You forgot, tyranny.

MoneyWhereMyMouthIs2
02-04-2013, 02:29 PM
The recent, fanfare-free opening of the Chicago Strike Force building

Fanfare free? People aren't cheering in the streets? Outside of law enforcement and other profiteers, I can hardly find anyone claiming the war on drugs has done anything to reduce drug related problems. And the more savvy understand they are creating them.

Origanalist
02-04-2013, 02:34 PM
You forgot, tyranny.

Not for long.

tod evans
02-04-2013, 02:47 PM
I keep thinking the other side of this supposed "war" is going to start fighting back...

If/when that happens who has the tactical advantage?

Before this brain trust got together all the "bad-guys" were hiding in their various offices in different buildings around the city, now they're all lumped together.............Fish in a barrel if you will..