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Operation FOXFIRE I mean TIPS

 
 
8===>Q: alyn
00:10 / 12.06.03
I'm so dumbfounded I can't even think of anything clever to say. (DM, this presidential administration is clearly an illusion, I'd like to roll to disbelieve it.) From Salon.com:

When neighbors attack!
Volunteers for Operation TIPS, John Ashcroft's citizen spy army, are being steered to the Fox crime show "America's Most Wanted." Is the merger of tabloid TV with the federal snooping operation funny or scary or both?

- - - - - - - - - - - -
By Dave Lindorff



Aug. 6, 2002 | When Attorney General John Ashcroft announced the formation of Operation TIPS, a planned army of tens of millions of American volunteers charged with ferreting out terrorists in their neighborhoods, plenty of pundits questioned whether Americans spying on Americans was a good thing. Very few people asked exactly how it would work, and the Justice Department didn't offer any clues.

To find out, I logged on to the Citizen Corps Web site, went to the Terrorism Information and Prevention System (TIPS) page, and signed up as a volunteer. I quickly discovered that TIPS is having a devilish time getting off the ground. After an initial welcome from the Justice Department, I heard nothing for a month. When I finally called two weeks ago to ask what citizens were supposed to do if they had a terror tip, I was given a phone number I was told had been set up by the FBI.

But instead of getting a hardened G-person when I called, a mellifluous receptionist's voice answered, "America's Most Wanted." A little flummoxed, I said I was expecting to reach the FBI. "Aren't you familiar with the TV program 'America's Most Wanted'?" she asked patiently. "We've been asked to take the FBI's TIPS calls for them."

Has Ashcroft turned his embattled volunteer citizen spy program -- which has been blasted by left and right alike -- over to Fox Broadcasting's "America's Most Wanted"?
 
 
grant
13:17 / 12.06.03
It's a bit bizarre on the face of it, but there is a logic there. Apparently, from what I've read, America's Most Wanted is a show that actually works, as far as apprehending wanted criminals goes.

Which says a lot about American society, actually.
 
 
SMS
19:35 / 12.06.03
It does indeed. John Walsh has taken his tragedy and turned it into a great gift to the rest of the country.

If this story on Salon.com is accurate, I do wonder what is done with the information you give to America's Most Wanted. Presumably, they don't simply take your suspicious neighbor's name and slander him as a terrorist. This kind of thing needs to be filtered through appropriate channels before declaring someone a wanted man. Does anyone know where the procedure for this can be found? Is there a government website with this kind of info?
 
 
w1rebaby
15:43 / 13.06.03
I imagine that it's more about America's Most Wanted already having (a) a lot of people to take calls and (b) the mechanisms for getting information from those calls through to the FBI.

I doubt that, even when not connected with the (now dead) TIPs, they would do much with the information except file it in the right boxes and send it to the Men In Black. Basically, I expect they were just being used as a big call centre.
 
 
8===>Q: alyn
04:13 / 15.06.03
Are you kidding?!? There is obviously going to be a show.

Haven't you people seen Running Man?
 
  
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