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The Secret Raids of Alberto Gonzales: Operation Falcon: 10,000 Swept Up

The StateThere's only one way to make sure that the machinery of state-terror is operating at maximum efficiency; flip on the switch and let er rip. That was thinking behind last month's massive roundup of 10,000 American citizens in what was aptly-christened Operation Falcon.

Operation Falcon was a massive clandestine dragnet that involved hundreds of state, federal and local law-enforcement agencies during the week of April 4 to April 10, 2005. It was the largest criminal-sweep in the nation's history and was brainchild of Attorney General Alberto Gonzales and his counterpart in the US Marshal's office, (Director) Ben Reyna.

The secret-raids "produced the largest number of arrests ever recorded during a single initiative," Reyna boasted.

The details are mind-boggling. Over 960 agencies (state, local and federal) were directly involved acting on 13,800 felony warrants and spending nearly $900,000 on the operation. As the conservative Washington Times noted, "The sweep was a virtual clearinghouse for warrants on drug, gang, gun and sex-offender suspects nationwide."

It's clear that the Marshal's office knew where the vast majority of the suspects were or they never would have had such stunning success rounding them up; which, of course, begs the question, "Why did they wait to apprehend alleged' murderers, when they already knew where they were hiding?"

According to the press releases, which celebrated the dazzling display of law enforcement, the raids netted "162 accused or convicted of murder, 638 wanted for armed robbery, 553 wanted for rape or sexual assault, 154 gang members and 106 unregistered sex offenders." (CNN)

Okay, that's roughly 1,000 criminals; what about the other 9,000? Traffic tickets, late child-support payments, jay-walking???

"We're really amazed. We had no idea we'd apprehend more than 10,000 bad guys," said one federal law enforcement official who asked not to be identified. "We didn't know what to expect, but the response from law enforcement personnel everywhere was truly amazing." (CNN)

The media's approbation does little to disguise the real purpose of Operation Falcon. (which is an acronym for "Federal and Local Cops Organized Nationally.")

The Bush administration is sharpening its talons for the inevitable difficulties it expects to face as a result of its disastrous policies. With each regressive initiative, the governing cabal seems to get increasingly paranoid, anticipating an outburst of public rage. Now, they're orchestrating massive round-ups of minor crooks to make sure that every cog and gear in the apparatus of state repression is lubricated and ready to go.

Rest assured that Attorney General Gonzales has absolutely no interest in the petty offenders that were netted in this extraordinary crackdown. His action is just another indication that the noose is tightening around the neck of the American public and that the Bush team is fully prepared for any unpleasant eventualities. They want to make sure that everyone knows that they're ready when its time to thin out the ranks of mutinous citizens.

(Note: to date, the US Marshall's office has issued no public statement to the press as to whether the 10,000 people arrested in operation Falcon have been processed or released.)

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The Secret Raids of Alberto Gonzales: Operation Falcon: 10,000 Swept Up
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 21 2005 @ 01:34 PM UTC
What are most arrrests in this country for? Look it up. Over 4,000 of the people arrested in Falcon where narcotics related warrants. Not to say that this isn't a scary excersize of state power, it is, but please look stuff up before posting.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Falcon_%28Federal_Dragnet%29
The Secret Raids of Alberto Gonzales: Operation Falcon: 10,000 Swept Up
Authored by: tothebarricades on Saturday, May 21 2005 @ 01:36 PM UTC
Are you defending drug arrests?
Huh?
Authored by: Anonymous on Saturday, May 21 2005 @ 02:14 PM UTC
Um no... where'd you get that?

"Okay, that's roughly 1,000 criminals; what about the other 9,000? Traffic tickets, late child-support payments, jay-walking???"

That's what I was referring to. Drugs are what the arrests were mainly for. Though the article doesn't really make sense. He claims that:

1) Most people were arrested for petty insignificant things like late child support, traffic tickets, and jay-walking.
2) And yet these people somehow are gears in the cogs of the machine.

These claims seem to contradict.
Huh?
Authored by: Jim Cape on Sunday, May 22 2005 @ 11:51 AM UTC
"1) Most people were arrested for petty insignificant things like late child support, traffic tickets, and jay-walking."

The article asks what they were arrested for, and posits these trivialities as an answer.

"2) And yet these people somehow are gears in the cogs of the machine."

I think the article was trying to say that these arrests are meant to ensure that the system can process huge numbers of federally coordinated lockups efficiently. I don't think it's a stretch to assume that some people within the bureaucracy will begin looking for ways to "streamline" mass nationally coordinated roundups for the future, but it probably is a stretch to assume that that was the goal. It's more likely Gonzales trying to get into the press for something other than his "how to torture" memos.

As far as the breakdown of who was arrested for what, according to the "facts" page it breaks down as:

drugs: 4291
burglary: 1818
assualt: 1727
armed robbery: 638
rape: 533
weapons: 483
car theft: 203
murder: 162
gang members: 154 (since when is "gang membership" a crime?)
unregistered sex offenders: 106
kidnapping: 68
arson: 38
extortion: 12

total above: 10233
total claimed: 10340

Which leaves 107 people unaccounted for.

Breaking down the math a little further, arson, extortion, burglary, robbery, car theft (all "crimes against property"), "gang membership," drug, and weapons violations accounted for 72.2% (7471) of the arrests; 16.7% of the arrests for assault (which can range from saying you'll kick someone's ass all the way up to sending someone into a coma, depending on the local laws); that leaves only 8.4% (869) of the arrests for people that may actually need isolation from society: rapists, murderers, and kidnappers (and I think the last element is a stretch, since a "custody dispute gone wrong" is also considered a kidnapping).

That's the real story here: 72.2% of all the criminals arrested in this sweep of the country were arrested on warrants for trying to not be broke or having something they weren't supposed to.

As far as the article goes, there's likely no grand conspiracy to ensure local and state cops can process large numbers of detainees or act under direction from federal assholes -- that and donuts are what cops do anyways. Over 1,000,000 state felony convictions were handed out in 2002, which averages out to about 2739 a day. So this "nationwide roundup" averages out to about the same as what the courts across the country do in a single work week. And lets not forget the thousands more from around the world who have been disappeared into the War-o-Terror GULAGs without even normative due process.

Thus, a few points:
1.) This "massive effort" is little more than a hype event designed to show exactly how "tough on crime" Gonzales is.
2.) Since this is roughly a week's worth of court convictions, that also means that if you're freaking out about this now you should be freaking out about it every week (unless you don't worry about so many people going to jail for mostly drug and property crimes unless there's some "national" face put on it).
3.) The real issues are the same as *every* prison-related story. Power, profit, race, class, and the "nanny state." Those are the big fish, not whatever press releases the people on conglomo-tube are parrotting this week.