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Subject: RE: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Daily News Briefing - December 2, 2021
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I will check with INSD.
Jim
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Sent: Thursday, December 2, 2021 8:57 AM
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Subject: Fwd: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Daily News Briefing - December 2, 2021
Assuming INSD is tracking this ?
Law Enforcement Officer From 'Outside Agency' Accidently Fires Gun in Downtown
High-Rise
NJ (12/01, Zeitlinger) reported that a law enforcement agent accidentally fired a gun inside their Jersey City high-rise
home that went through a wall and into a residence next door Tuesday afternoon. According to the article, Jersey
City spokeswoman Kimberly Wallace-Scalcione described the person who discharged their weapon as an "outside
agency officer." Police said in radio transmission it was an FBI agent who worked out of the agency's New York office.
The article noted that no charges were filed and no injuries were reported in the incident.
From: FBI News Briefing
Sent: Thursday, December 2, 20216:20:08 AM
To: FBINewsBriefing
Subject: [EXTERNAL EMAIL] - FBI Daily News Briefing - December 2, 2021
View in Browser
December 02, 2021
Federal Bureau of Investigation
Daily News Briefing
(In coordination with the Office of Public Affairs)
Mobile version and searchable archives available at https://fbi.barbaricumanalytics.com
Table of Contents
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IN THE NEWS
• Michigan Teen Charged in Oxford High School Shooting
• US Reports 1st Case of Omicron Variant in Returning Traveler
• Supreme Court Seems Inclined to Uphold Mississippi Abortion Law That Would Undermine Roe v.
Wade
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
• Jan. 6 Committee Votes To Hold Ex-Trump Official Jeffrey Clark In Contempt
• First Video of FBI's Interrogation With Alleged Capitol Rioter Released
• Charges Filed Against Rhode Island Man Accused of Using Table Leg as Club Against Police on
January 6
• Kansas Man Who Took Video of Himself During Capitol Riot Pleads Guilty to Misdemeanor
• Georgia Man Pleads Guilty to Attacking Police During U.S. Capitol Riot
• 'Embarrassed' Capitol Rioter Who Wore '(Fssk) Your Feelings' Sweatshirt Sentenced
• East Idaho Man Arrested in Connection With U.S. Capitol Attack
• Ohio Man Sentenced to Probation for Role in January 6 Capitol Insurrection
• Arizona Woman Charged With Entering U.S. Capitol During Jan. 6 Insurrection
• Illinois Man Charged in Connection With January 6 Attack on US Capitol
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
• Why the Discredited Dossier Does Not Undercut the Russia Investigation
• Probes by Federal Officials on Phone-hack, Extortion Claims by Jeff Bezos Haven't Led to Public
Action
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
• Ghislaine Maxwell Defense Seeks To Undermine Key Accuser's Allegation
• More Than 30 Years Later a Tantalizing Clue in the Gardner Museum Art Heist Surfaces
• Cuomo Nemesis Is Charged With Campaign Fraud
• Suspect Extradited to Colorado From Ecuador to Face 126 Sexual Assault Charges
• Movie Set Armorer's Father Provides New Theory on How Live Ammo Got on Set in Accidental
Murder Case
• No Trace Of Missing 5-Year-Old Idaho Boy Who Vanished More Than 125 Days Ago
• Disbarred Attorney Sentenced for Fraud Tax Evasion
• Ex-Sheriff, Facing Life for Rapes Pleads Guilty to Bribery
• Double Murder Trial Continues in Connecticut
• FBI Offers $25K Reward For Capture Of Philly Man Wanted For Murder Of Pregnant Girlfriend
• 14 Indicted in Ohio Opioid Ring Operated by Two Brothers
• Trinitarios Gang Member from Massachusetts Pleads Guilty to Trafficking Multiple Guns
Ammunition Cocaine & Crack Cocaine
• Michigan Man Sentenced to Jail in Child Pornography Production and Distribution Case
• Former Reality TV Star Alleged Downloaded Videos and Images of Children Being "Violated"
• Police, FBI Search for Suspect in Alabama Bank Robbery
• FBI Seeks Public's Help in Identifying a California Bank Robber
CYBER DIVISION
• Hacker Steals Medical Records of 400 000 People From Planned Parenthood
• FBI, Secret Service Agents Flock to Missouri to Address Cybersecurity Threats
LABORATORY
• 40 Years Later: Police Solve Baltimore County Teen's Cold Case Murder
LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
• Hate Crime Trial of Former NJ Police Chief Ends in Mistrial
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• Police Group Asks Public for Help as Assaults on Cops Surge
• Fort Myers Police Fire Officer Who Had Been Included in FBI Probe
OTHER FBI NEWS
• CIA Publishes New Account Describing "Challenges" of Briefing Trump
• CIA Files Say Staffers Committed Sex Crimes Involving Children. They Weren't Prosecuted.
• Philip B. Heymann, 89, Dies- Prosecuted Watergate and Abscam
• Dark-Money Group Paid Former Trump AG to Ask for Pardons- He Never Registered as a Lobbyist
• Law Enforcement Officer From 'Outside Agency' Accidently Fires Gun in Downtown High-Rise
• State Department is Prioritizing Return of Missionaries from Ohio Group Kidnapped in Haiti
• Fortenberry's Lawyers Ask For Dismissal of Statements to FBI
INTERNATIONAL NEWS
• Blinken, Russian FM to Meet Amid Ukraine Tensions
• U.S. Tells Russia to Pull Back from Ukraine or Face Painful Sanctions
• Russia Warns Some U.S. Diplomats Will Have to Leave by Jan 31
• Putin Demands NATO Guarantees Not to Expand Eastward
• NATO Chief Says Mission Creep, Corruption Hurt Afghan Effort
• US South Korea Defense Chiefs Discuss Boosting Alliance
• Iran Makes Nuclear Advance Despite Talks to Salvage 2015 Deal
• Iceland Police Say Homemade Bomb Found in Reykjavik Dumpster
• UN Rights Chief: Burkina Faso is Facing a Security Crisis
• Brexit Fears Hold Back US-UK Trade Deal
OTHER WASHINGTON NEWS
• Trump Tested Positive for Virus Days Before Debate Two Ex-Officials Say
• Peter DeFazio, House Transportation Committee Chairman Will Retire
• Senate Republicans Threaten Shutdown Over Vaccine Mandate
• The U.S. Tells Airlines to Identify Travelers from Southern Africa
• Symone Sanders, Senior Adviser to Vice President Harris, Will Leave Post
• ICE Holds Growing Numbers of Immigrants at Private Facilities Despite Biden Campaign Promise
to End Practice
• Biden Marks World AIDS Day by Renewing Support for Worldwide Goal of Ending the Epidemic
by 2030
• Yellen Defends Spending Plans Amid Growing Angst Over Higher Inflation
• House Passes Bipartisan Bill to Speed Judges' Financial Disclosures
• US Military Explosives Vanish, Emerge in Civilian World
• US Defense Chief Slams China's Drive for Hypersonic Weapons
• U.S. to Extend Transit Mask Mandate Through Mid-March
• In Israel the New U.S. Ambassador's Home Lacks a Certain View
BIG PICTURE
• Wall Street Journal
• New York Times
• Washington Post
• Financial Times
• ABC News
• CBS News
• NBC News
• Fox News
WASHINGTON SCHEDULE
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IN THE NEWS
Michigan Teen Charged in Oxford High School Shooting
The Associated Press (12/01, Williams, White) reported that authorities identified the suspect in
yesterday's Oxford High School shooting in Michigan as 15-year-old Ethan Crumbley. Authorities also
revealed that Crumbley has been charged as an adult with murder, attempted murder, and terrorism causing
death, among other charges, as the death toll has risen to four people. The New York Times (12/01, Conlin,
Heyward, Smith, Healy) reported that three hours prior to the shooting, Crumbley's parents were at Oxford
High School meeting with school officials who expressed concerns "about their son's classroom behavior."
According to the article, prosecutors are considering bringing charges against the parents as well. The
Washington Post (12/01, Kalter, Firozi, Thebault, Pietsch, Kornfield) reported that authorities "have not
commented on what may have motivated the shooting, but that investigators have a `mountain of digital
evidence' that shows it was premeditated." The story was also covered by the Wall Street Journal (12/01,
Maher, Chapman), Reuters (12/01, O'Brien, Szekely), CBS News (12/01, Albert), NBC News (12/01,
Gile, Stelloh), CNN (12/01, Hanna, Vera, Broaddus, Pokupecz), New York Post (12/01, Steinbuch), Forbes
(12/01, Kaplan), HuffPost (12/01, Moye), Newsweek (12/01, Davis), Insider (12/01, Epstein, Davis,
Snodgrass), The Epoch Times (12/01, Stieber), The Guardian (12/01, Luscombe) and the Independent
(12/01, Dodds).
US Reports 1st Case of Omicron Variant in Returning Traveler
The Associated Press (12/01, Miller, Rodriguez, Balsamo) and the New York Times (12/01, Shear, Hubler,
Rabin) reported that the U.S. recorded its first confirmed case of the omicron variant on Wednesday, in a
San Francisco-based traveler who returned from South Africa in late November. Coverage noted that the
traveler is fully vaccinated and experiencing mild symptoms and that "aggressive contact tracing" is
underway, according to the CDC. The Wall Street Journal (12/01, McKay) reported that with the detection
of the variant in the U.S., omicron has now been identified in at least 24 countries on five continents since
scientists in South Africa first identified it in late November. The Washington Post (12/01, Sun, Shepherd,
Greenberg) reported that NIAID Director Dr. Anthony Fauci recommended that Americans get booster
shots if eligible, and not wait for an "omicron-specific reformulated booster that, even if approved, would
not be ready for months." A separate article from the Associated Press (12/01, Thompson) reported that
California Gov. Gavin Newsom said that the detection of the omicron variant in the state is "not
surprising" and should not force a lockdown order or other new restrictions. The story was also reported
on by ABC News (12/01, Haslett, Bruce), NBC News (12/01, Edwards, Fieldstadt), Fox News (12/01,
Betz), CNBC (12/01, Kimball), USA TODAY (12/01, Lasin), Newsweek (12/01, Hutzler), Politico (12/01,
Banco, Lim, Cancryn), HuffPost (12/01, Golgowski), Business Insider (12/01, Bendix), the Independent
(12/01, Marcus), The Epoch Times (12/01, Stieber), Washington Examiner (12/01, Lim), and United Press
International (12/01, Dunleavy).
Supreme Court Seems Inclined to Uphold Mississippi Abortion Law That Would
Undermine Roe v. Wade
The Associated Press (12/01, Sherman, Gresko) and the Washington Post (12/01, Barnes) reported that the
Supreme Court signaled that it would allow states to ban abortion much earlier in pregnancy and may
potentially overrule Roe v. Wade, a landmark 1973 decision that found that women have a constitutional
right to abortion. According to the articles, liberal Justice Sonia Sotomayor said that the Supreme Court's
reputation "would be irreparably damaged if nearly a half-century of its abortion jurisprudence were
dismantled because of a change in membership." Coverage noted that the court's decision is not expected
until next June or July. The story was also reported on by the Wall Street Journal (12/01, Bravin, Kendall),
New York Times (12/01, Liptak), Bloomberg (12/01, Bellany, Jeffrey), NBC News (12/01, Gregorian),
ABC News (12/01, Dwyer), CBS News (12/01, Quinn), Politico (12/01, Ollstein, Gerstein), Newsweek
(12/01, Fung), Forbes (12/01, Durkee), CNBC (12/01, Breuninger), The Hill (12/01, Kruzel), Business
Insider (12/01, Seddiq), Axios (12/01, Gonzalez) and the Washington Examiner (12/01, Scanlon).
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Back to Top
CAPITOL VIOLENCE NEWS
Jan. 6 Committee Votes To Hold Ex-Trump Official Jeffrey Clark In Contempt
CNN (12/01, Grayer, Nobles, Cohen, Wild) reported that the House select committee investigating the
January 6 attack on the US Capitol approved on Wednesday night the report to hold former Department of
Justice official Jeffrey Clark in contempt of Congress for defying his subpoena by refusing to answer
questions during a recent deposition and failing to hand over documents to the panel. According to the
article, the panel is also giving Clark another opportunity to appear, on Saturday, in light of a new letter he
sent to the committee stating that he intends to claim Fifth Amendment protection. The New York Times
(12/01, Broadwater) noted that Representative Bennie Thompson, Democrat of Mississippi and the
committee's chairman, said it would move forward with the contempt referral anyway, calling Mr. Clark's
appeal "a last-ditch attempt to delay. The select committee has no desire to be placed in this situation, but
Mr. Clark has left us no other choice," Mr. Thompson added. "He chose this path. He knew what
consequences he might face if he did so. This committee and this House must insist on accountability in
the face of that sort of defiance." According to the Wall Street Journal (12/01, Hughes), Mr. Clark, who
served as an official in the Justice Department, had met with then-President Trump last year shortly before
Christmas, when Mr. Trump was falsely asserting that the election was stolen, according to a report issued
by the Senate Judiciary Committee. The article noted that Mr. Clark then allegedly urged Justice
Department officials to help Mr. Trump subvert the election by announcing that the department was
investigating election fraud and by telling swing-state legislatures to appoint alternate slates of electors
following the certification of the popular vote. HufiPost (12/01, Boboltz), NPR (12/01, Grisales), ABC
News (12/01, Siegel), CBS News (12/01, Kim, Hudak), Roll Call (12/01, Marquette), the Associated Press
(12/01, Jalonick), Reuters (12/01, Zengerle), and The Guardian (12/01, Walters) also reported on the story.
First Video of FBI's Interrogation With Alleged Capitol Rioter Released
The Washington Post (12/01, Weinter, Hermann) reported that Daniel Rodriguez, a Southern California
conservative activist, cried and apologized for using a Taser on a police officer outside the Capitol on Jan.
6, in the first interrogation video of a riot defendant released publicly. According to the article, Rodriguez
is among those accused of assaulting D.C. police officer Michael Fanone, who was shocked with a stun
device as rioters dragged him down the steps of the Capitol. Fanone lost consciousness and was stripped of
his badge and gun; he suffered a heart attack and a traumatic brain injury. The article noted that Rodriguez
has pleaded not guilty and is attempting to block prosecutors from using his statements to the FBI at trial.
At first, he declined to discuss the assault on Fanone with the two special agents who interrogated him just
after his arrest in March. But when pressed, Rodriguez suggested he used a Taser on Fanone to keep him
from getting more seriously injured. ABC News (12/01, Barr), The Daily Beast (12/01, Ross), and CNN
(12/01, Polanz, Lybrand, Rabinowitz) also reported on the story.
Charges Filed Against Rhode Island Man Accused of Using Table Leg as Club
Against Police on January 6
NBC News (12/01, Helsel) reported that charges have been filed against Timothy Desjardins, a Rhode
Island man accused of attacking police with what appeared to be a broken wooden table leg during the Jan.
6 riot at the U.S. Capitol, the U.S. Attorney's Office for the District of Columbia announced Tuesday.
According to the article, a day after the riot, a bag Desjardins was seen wearing was found by police. It
contained his ID, three axes, and two walkie-talkies, according to court documents. There are no
allegations he used the axes in the riot. The article noted that photos in the documents show what appear to
he small hatchets.
Kansas Man Who Took Video of Himself During Capitol Riot Pleads Guilty to
Misdemeanor
The Associated l'ress (12/01, Staff Writer) reported that Mark Rebegila pleaded guilty Wednesday to a
misdemeanor charge for his participation in the Jan. 6 riot at the U.S. Capitol. According to the article,
when Rebegila was interviewed by the FBI in St. Marys on Jan. 15, he said he entered the Capitol after
EFTA00160824
others had crashed the barriers and crowds were going inside, according to probable cause affidavit.
"Rebegila further stated that he asked a police officer if he could go inside and the officer shrugged his
shoulders," according to probable cause affidavit. The Kansas City Star (12/01, Thomas) also reported on
the story.
Georgia Man Pleads Guilty to Attacking Police During U.S. Capitol Riot
Reuters (12/01, Hosenball) reported that Kevin Creek pleaded guilty on Wednesday to attacking a police
officer during the Jan. 6 U.S. Capitol riot by supporters of then-President Donald Trump trying to overturn
his election defeat. The article noted that according to an FBI report, videos show Creek attacking
"multiple" police officers during the riot. During an FBI interview in May, Creek was shown videos of a
rioter attacking police and "admitted the videos looked like him," while claiming he "did not remember
assaulting an officer." He confirmed that during the riot he was armed with a mace and a knife. The Daily
Beast (12/01, McDougall) and WAGA (Fox-5) (12/01, Staff Writer) also reported on the story.
'Embarrassed' Capitol Rioter Who Wore '(F**k) Your Feelings' Sweatshirt
Sentenced
HuffPost (12/01, Reilly) reported that Russell Peterson, a Capitol riot defendant who traveled to D.C. on
Jan. 6 with his mother and stormed the U.S. Capitol while wearing a "(Fnk) Your Feelings" sweatshirt
was sentenced to 30 days behind bars on Wednesday. Peterson was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Amy
Berman Jackson, who imposed a sentence more than twice as long as the two weeks of incarceration
requested by federal prosecutors. According to the article, Jackson said that Peterson's own words, in
which Peterson bragged about his conduct on Jan. 6, had led to her decision. She particularly focused on
his comment that he "had fun lol" on Jan. 6. The article noted that the FBI is still looking for more than
350 members of the pro-Trump mob who engaged in violence, including more than 250 still wanted for
assaulting law enforcement.
Judge: Trump and Allies 'Stoked the Flames ofFear' That Led to January 6 Violence
Politico (12/01, Cheney) added that U.S. District Judge Amy Berman Jackson said Wednesday that those
who organized a pro-Trump Jan. 6 rally that preceded the attack on the Capitol "stoked the flames of
fear" and deserve to be held accountable for what they unleashed. According to the article, Jackson's
comments came as she delivered a sentence to Jan. 6 defendant Russell Peterson, who was charged with
illegally entering the Capitol but not with committing any violence or destruction. The article noted that
Jackson is the latest federal judge to invoke Trump's conduct as a contributor to the chaos and violence of
that day and urge accountability. Judges on the federal bench in Washington, D.C., have expressed a
range of views about the culpability of the former president for the riot, but several, like Jackson, have
more squarely put the onus on Trump in recent weeks.
East Idaho Man Arrested in Connection With U.S. Capitol Attack
The Associated Press (12/01, Staff Writer) reported that Tyler Tew, an eastern Idaho man authorities say
took part in the violent siege on the U.S. Capitol in January, has been taken into custody. According to the
article, the FBI in a news release on Wednesday said Tew of Idaho Falls was arrested Tuesday. The article
noted that court documents include several images from videos that authorities say show Tew inside the
U.S. Capitol. Tew also posted images on his Facebook page that appear to show events outside the
building. KTVB (NBC-7) (12/01, Terhune) also reported on the story.
Ohio Man Sentenced to Probation for Role in January 6 Capitol Insurrection
WCMH (NBC-4) (12/01, Griffin) reported that Caleb Jones, a Columbus man who pled guilty to charges
related to taking part in the Jan. 6 attack on the U.S. Capitol building, was sentenced to home confinement
and probation Wednesday. According to the article, Jones allegedly admitted to a witness that he gained
entry into the building by climbing an outside wall of the building. Court documents state that Jones called
a witness from inside the Capitol building, sending text messages and videos from inside. The article noted
that Jones was allegedly hit with tear gas and escorted out of the building by law enforcement, according
to a separate witness.
EFTA00160825
Arizona Woman Charged With Entering U.S. Capitol During Jan. 6 Insurrection
I he Chronicle (12/01, Smith) reported that Lisa Homer, a former Yakima resident who was involved in
local politics, is facing misdemeanor charges for illegal picketing, disorderly conduct, and entering the
U.S. Capitol building during the Jan. 6 insurrection. According to the article, cell records obtained through
a search warrant allege Homer was inside the Capitol for about an hour on Jan. 6, according to an FBI
Joint Terrorism Task Force report. The report said there was no evidence Homer destroyed any property or
assaulted any law enforcement officers, though she moved extensively throughout the building for one
hour, the report said. The article noted that she is complying with the FBI, and will appear in court
Thursday.
Illinois Man Charged in Connection With January 6 Attack on US Capitol
WMAQ (NBC-5) (12/01, Rogers) reported that Lawrence Ligas was arrested Wednesday on four federal
charges in connection with the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the U.S. Capitol. According to the article, five days
after the attack on the Capitol, the FBI received a tip from an individual who said that Ligas was quoted by
name in an NPR article in which he said, "We're not moving on... We are not Republicans. We are the
MAGA party. We are patriots." That person identified Ligas from a driver's license photo but hadn't seen
him in about 10 years, prosecutors say. The article noted that the complaint also says Ligas was seen in a
YouTube video in Washington, D.C., on Jan. 5, wearing a blue scarf with white stars that authorities said
he was seen wearing at the Capitol the following day. Federal prosecutors also cited other records obtained
from Google, including photographs that show Ligas wearing the same clothing they say he wore in the
Capitol.
Back to Top
COUNTERINTELLIGENCE
Why the Discredited Dossier Does Not Undercut the Russia Investigation
The New York Times (12/01, Savage) reported that while the discredited Steele Dossier has received
significant attention, it was a small part of the overall FBI investigation, which issued more than 2,800
subpoenas, executed nearly 500 search-and-seizure warrants, obtained more than 230 orders for
communications records, made 13 requests to foreign governments under mutual legal assistance treaties,
and interviewed about 500 witnesses. According to the article, the dossier did not create this atmosphere of
suspicion. Mr. Trump's relationship with Russia had been a topic of significant discussion dating back to
the campaign, including before the first report that Russia had hacked Democrats and before Mr. Steele
drafted his reports and gave some to reporters. The article noted that among the reasons: Mr. Trump had
said flattering things about Russian President Vladimir V. Putin, kept bringing on advisers with ties to
Russia, had financial ties to Russia, publicly encouraged Russia to hack Mrs. Clinton, and at his
nominating convention, the party dropped a plank that called for arming Ukraine against Russian-backed
rebels. In March 2017, the F.B.I. publicly acknowledged that it was investigating links between Russia and
Trump campaign associates.
Probes by Federal Officials on Phone-hack, Extortion Claims by Jeff Bezos Haven't
Led to Public Action
The Wall Street Journal (12/01, Ramey, Volz, Viswanatha) reported that in 2019, Amazon founder Jeff
Bezos accused the National Enquirer of attempting to extort him with embarrassing texts and photos, and
his security team suggested that Saudi Arabia could have gleaned this data by hacking his phone.
According to the article, the FBI examined the possibility of a hack as part of a broad federal
counterintelligence investigation into allegations of Saudi-sponsored hacking and espionage against the
U.S., people familiar with the probe said. Mr. Bezos met at least once with federal investigators for that
probe. The article noted that the FBI didn't obtain Mr. Bezos' phone, and the investigation into whether the
Saudis hacked the phone wasn't a high priority. The article also noted that although the FBI often doesn't
directly retrieve devices during an investigation, it stopped short of some technical steps, such as
"jailbreaking" the phone to bypass security restrictions and doesn't appear to have resolved key questions
about what, if anything, the Saudis did.
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Back to Top
CRIMINAL INVESTIGATIONS
Ghislaine Maxwell Defense Seeks To Undermine Key Accuser's Allegation
The Associated Press (12/01, Hays) reported that Ghislaine Maxwell has pleaded not guilty to charges that
prosecutors say show that she and Epstein were "partners in crime." The defense has countered by
claiming she's being made a scapegoat for Jeffery Epstein. According to the article, the trial witness, using
the alias name "Jane", testified in graphic detail on Tuesday about the alleged encounters in the 1990s,
portraying Maxwell as an active participant. The article noted that defense attorney Laura Menninger
confronted the woman with FBI documents from 2019 and 2020, saying she had told the government her
memory was foggy on whether Maxwell was present when Epstein molested her and on whether she ever
touched her.
More Than 30 Years Later, a Tantalizing Clue in the Gardner Museum Art Heist
Surfaces
The Boston Globe (12/01, Murphy) reported that three decades later, the largest art theft in US history
remains unsolved, despite a $10 million reward. No one has been charged and none of the artwork has
been recovered. According to the article, Boston jeweler Paul Calantropo says he was shown a recently
stolen eagle finial from Napoleon's Imperial Guard by his friend Bobby Donati. It was one of 13 artworks
recently stolen in a robbery of Boston's Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum. FBI spokeswoman Kristen
Setera declined to comment on Calantropo's account or whether Donati is believed to have been involved
in the heist, citing the ongoing investigation. She said the FBI is "focused on recovering the art and
returning it to its rightful place at the museum," and "we'd be remiss if we didn't take this opportunity to
remind everyone that the museum is still offering a $10 million reward for information leading to the
return of the artwork in good condition." WBTS (NBC-l0) (12/01, Chiappa) also reported on the story.
Cuomo Nemesis Is Charged With Campaign Fraud
The New York'1limes (12/01, Ferre-Sadumi) reported that Steven McLaughlin, a former New York
assemblyman known for his outspoken criticism of former Governor Andrew Cuomo, was arrested on
Wednesday and charged with stealing thousands of dollars in campaign contributions to settle a personal
debt. According to the article, McLaughlin was accused of withdrawing $5,000 from his campaign fund in
November 2017 and steered the money to a political consulting firm with which he had close ties, Hudson
Valley Strategies, which then cut a check of $3,500 to Mt McLaughlin's staff member. The article noted
the charges against McLaughlin marked the culmination of a yearslong investigation conducted by the
state attorney general's office and the F.B.I.
Suspect Extradited to Colorado From Ecuador to Face 126 Sexual Assault Charges
Fox News (12/01, Stimson) reported that Peter Dettmer is facing 126 sexual assault charges from an
incident in Colorado. Dettmer was accused of sexually assaulting an incapacitated woman in 2016 and was
arrested by the Golden Police Department. Dettmer posted a $2,000 bond and then disappeared. Dettmer
was arrested in Ecuador, on April 27, by the FBI who returned him to Jefferson County on November 24.
The article noted that former FBI Special Agent Bob Pence said, "outside the United States, the FBI has no
authority to conduct those investigations, no authority to carry weapons normally, and no authority to
make arrests. So it's a liaison-type responsibility, and we work with the host countries, and do it very
successfully around the world." Latin Times (12/01, Garcia) also reported on the story.
Movie Set Armorer's Father Provides New Theory on How Live Ammo Got on Set
in Accidental Murder Case
New York Daily News (12/01, Wilkinson) reported that Hannah Gutierrez-Reed, the woman in charge of
the gun fatally fired by Alec Baldwin on the set of "Rust", spoke to investigators as they probed how live
rounds ended up on the film set which led to the death of Halyna Hutchins. According to the article, prop
master Sarah Zachry told police that ammunition on set came from three sources: fellow armorer Seth
Kenney, Gutierrez-Reed's supply from a previous production, and another man identified only as "Billy
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Ray." Gutierrez-Reed said Kenney provided most of the ammo which was suspected to be live ammo from
a previous film. The article noted that Gutierrez-Reed's attorneys, Bowles Law Firm, said, "The Sheriff's
Office has taken a huge step forward today to unearth the full truth of who put the live rounds on the Rust
set, by executing a search warrant on PDQ Arm & Prop, owned by Armorer-Mentor, Seth Kenney. We
trust that the FBI will now compare and analyze the `live rounds' seized from the set to evidence seized in
the search warrant to conclusively determine where the live rounds came from." Los Angeles Times
(12/01, James, Lee) and KOTA (ABC-3) also reported on the story.
No Trace Of Missing 5-Year-Old Idaho Boy Who Vanished More Than 125 Days Ago
Dcygen (12/01, Geiger) reported that the family of Michael Vaughn, a missing 5-year-old boy who
vanished without a trace more than four months ago, is pleading for his safe return as investigators gather
clues as to his whereabouts. According to the article, Vaughn vanished on July 27 near his home in Idaho,
and in the months since investigators have searched surrounding neighborhoods. In October, investigators
were seeking assistance in identifying the driver of a white Honda Pilot that was spotted in the vicinity of
where Vaughn disappeared from and the identity of a man with dark hair, wearing a white t-shirt and black
shorts, who was seen walking nearby at the time. The article noted that the FBI and other agencies are
assisting with the investigation.
Disbarred Attorney Sentenced for Fraud, Tax Evasion
Bitterroot Star (12/01, Howell) reported that former attorney Ronald Lords, who last July admitted to
defrauding investors and to evading income taxes in a real estate investment scheme, was sentenced to
three years in prison and followed by three years of supervised release. According to the article, Lords was
a lawyer who operated Eagles Landing Legal Services as well as a licensed realtor and general contractor
who operated Eagles Landing Construction, Inc. The construction company purported to develop property
and build homes. From June 2011 to September 2018, Lords defrauded several victims by convincing
them to invest money in his construction company. The article noted that the case was investigated by the
FBI and the IRS.
Ex-Sheriff, Facing Life for Rapes, Pleads Guilty to Bribery
The Associated Press (12/01, Staff Writer) reported that a former sheriff, Rodney Strain, pleaded guilty to
a federal bribery charge on Wednesday, weeks after a state jury convicted him of sexually abusing boys.
According to the article, the corruption scheme involved an inmate work-release program that Strain made
private. Strain then arranged to have two of his top deputies profit from it, hiding their involvement by
having an adult child of each sign on as owners. The article noted that Strain is to be sentenced on January
18 on sex charges and four counts of aggravated rape, which carries a mandatory life sentence. WWL
(CBS-4) (12/01, Moore) also reported on the story.
Double Murder Trial Continues in Connecticut
The Day. (12/01, Hartz) reported that red, blue, black, and purple circles dotted a map on display in New
London Superior Court on Tuesday. According to the article, each color represented the whereabouts of a
different cell phone on the night of Dec. 19, 2017, and early the next morning: blue for Kenneth
Lindquist's phone, purple for Janet Lindquist's, black for Matthew Lindquist's, and red for a phone linked
to Sergio Correa, the man accused of killing them. During testimony Tuesday, FBI Special Agent James J.
Wines walked the jury through the location of each phone as their color-coordinated markers traveled
across the map, their approximate locations lining up with the chain of events mapped out by state
prosecutors in the case against Correa. The article noted that the trial for Correa, who faces 14 charges in
the slayings of the Lindquists during a brutal home invasion, entered its 11th day on Tuesday and is
scheduled to continue Wednesday.
FBI Offers $25K Reward For Capture Of Philly Man Wanted For Murder Of Pregnant
Girlfriend
The Daily Voice (12/01, Aclosta) reported that the FBI is offering a reward of up to $25,000 for
information leading to the arrest of a Philadelphia man wanted in the murder of his 21-year-old pregnant
girlfriend from Delaware County. The article noted that according to the FBI, investigators have been
looking for Justin Smith since an arrest warrant was issued in April following the death of 21-year-old
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Dianna Brice and her unborn child. Authorities believe Smith shot Brice in the head multiple times inside
a 2018 black Ford Fusion, which was found engulfed in flames.
14 Indicted in Ohio Opioid Ring Operated by Two Brothers
The Cincinnati Enquirer (12/01, Knight) reported that in a federal indictment unsealed Wednesday, two
brothers are accused, along with 12 others, of participating in a multi-million dollar opioid trafficking ring.
According to the article, the Cincinnati brothers, Steffen Roberson, 40, known as "Worm," and Anthony
Roberson, 44, known as "Chemist," are charged with conspiring to distribute fentanyl, the U.S. Attorney
Office for the Southern District of Ohio said. Investigators said the younger Roberson was "running one of
the largest heroin/fentanyl drug trafficking organizations in the greater Cincinnati area" for at least the past
four years. The elder Roberson "manufactured heroin and fentanyl mixtures, cut the drugs and looked "for
ways to make the drug mixtures more potent," authorities said. The article noted that federal agents
reported that more than 30 search warrants have been executed since 2018 in connection with the group.
Trinitarios Gang Member from Massachusetts Pleads Guilty to Trafficking Multiple
Guns, Ammunition, Cocaine & Crack Cocaine
The Valley Patriot (12/02, Staff Writer) reported that Jose Hernandez-Aragones pleaded guilty to four
counts of being a felon in possession of a firearm; one count of possession with intent to distribute and
distribution of cocaine; and one count of possession with intent to distribute and distribution of cocaine
base, commonly known as crack cocaine. According to the article, Hernandez-Aragones was indicted and
arrested in November 2019 as part of a federal sweep targeting federal and state offenders, including
members and associates of the Trinitarios street gang, in Massachusetts. The article noted that the FBI and
other agencies assisted in this investigation.
Michigan Man Sentenced to Jail in Child Pornography Production and Distribution
Case
Livingston Daily (12/01, Daugherty) reported that Austin Lash, a man originally charged in Livingston
County with child pornography, was sentenced in federal court last week to six years in prison for related
charges. According to the article, Lash "knowingly employed a nine-year-old minor female to engage in
sexually explicit conduct for the purpose of producing any visual depiction of such conduct." The article
noted that approximately 4,000 images of child sexually abusive material were found on his electronic
devices. The local charges were dismissed by Livingston County District Court Judge Daniel Bain on July
15, 2020, in coordination with the FBI and state police.
Former Reality TV Star Allegedly Downloaded Videos and Images of Children Being
"Violated"
Buzzfeed News (12/01, Fallen) reported that former 19 Kids and Counting reality star Josh Duggar
downloaded images and video on a work computer of children as young as 7 years old being "abused,"
"violated," and "exploited," federal prosecutors said in opening statements on Wednesday. According to
the article, Duggar used a device that virtually "split" his HP desktop work computer into "two
independent sides," allowing him to use the computer at the used car dealership's "shed-like" office for
usual business purposes on one side while browsing illegal content on the other. The article noted that
federal officials seized Duggar's iPhone, MacBook, and HP desktop computer at the dealership, among
other devices, via search warrant in November 2019. The devices were sent to Washington, DC, for
review, prosecutors said, and investigators found that Duggar used what is known as a peer-to-peer
network on his desktop computer at his business. Wholesale Motorcars.
Police, FBI Search for Suspect in Alabama Bank Robbery
WHNT (CBS-19) (12/01, Newsum, Tamijani) reported that on Wednesday the Huntsville Police
Department responded to an armed bank robbery. Several units responded to the scene, with no suspect in
sight. Bank employees provided a description of the person. Shortly after, another call of a possible
robbery came through with a person matching the description at another Regions Bank location. Police
determined there was no robbery at that location. The article noted that the HPD is working with the FBI
to investigate the situation. WAFF (NBC-48) (12/01, Staff Writer) also reported on the story.
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FBI Seeks Public's Help in Identifying a California Bank Robber
KSV‘ B (Fox-5) (12/01, Staff Writer) reported that a man clad in clothing akin to that of an on-duty
highway worker robbed a northern San Diego County bank Wednesday. According to the article, the thief,
who was wearing a dark-colored jumpsuit, gloves, safety goggles, and an orange vest, approached a teller
at the Union Bank branch office and demanded cash. After the clerk handed over an undisclosed amount of
money, the man left the bank and drove off in a stolen car. Investigators later found the vehicle abandoned.
The article noted that according to the FBI, the robber, described as heavyset, appeared to be about 6 feet
tall and in his early 50s. KGTV (ABC-10) (12/01, Taylor) also reported on the story.
Back to Top
CYBER DIVISION
Hacker Steals Medical Records of 400,000 People From Planned Parenthood
The Washington Post (12/01, Schaffer, Marks, Knowles) reported that a hacker gained access to the
personal information of hundreds of thousands of Planned Parenthood patients in October, the
reproductive health-care group's Los Angeles branch said Wednesday. According to the article, an
investigation is ongoing and information was compromised for about 400,000 patients of the organization
at the center of the country's fierce debates over abortion rights. The article noted that Erickson said the
attack involved a specific type of malware called ransomware that was behind this year's Colonial Pipeline
shutdown. That hack on the U.S. energy infrastructure drew new public attention to a growing problem for
private organizations and governments alike. Across the country in 2020, 113 federal, state, and local
governments and agencies reported ransomware attacks costing about $915 million, according to one
estimate by Emsisoft, a company that sells cybersecurity services. The Hill (12/01, Miller) also reported on
the story.
FBI, Secret Service Agents Flock to Missouri to Address Cybersecurity Threats
KTVI (Fox-2) (12/01, Colombo) reported that the Secret Service, Homeland Security, and FBI gathered
for a conference in downtown St. Louis to address some of the most pressing cybersecurity issues in the
world. "The State of Cyber 2021 is a great opportunity for the Secret Service to meet with corporations
and security directors to talk about the trends and tactics we're seeing imposed on the civilian population
and also corporations themselves," said Thomas Landry, the special agent in charge of the Secret Service
field office in St. Louis.
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LABORATORY
40 Years Later: Police Solve Baltimore County Teen's Cold Case Murder
WJZ (CBS-13) (12/01, Staff Writer) reported that cold case detectives have determined John Anthony
Petrecca, Jr., who died in 2000, was responsible for the 1981 murder of 13-year-old Heather Porter. "As a
result of advances in forensic technology, Heather Porter's family members now know the identity of the
person who took their loved ones' life," the agency said. "The Baltimore County Police Department would
like to thank Bode Technology, the Hackerman Foundation, and the FBI for their expert analysis,
assistance, and support in solving this cold case." According to the article, in February, police zeroed in on
Petrecca as a possible suspect. A search of his criminal background found he had multiple rape arrests over
the years, and police determined that he lived near the area where Porter was last seen alive. The article
noted that after getting permission to exhume Petrecca's remains from a local cemetery, police sent his
DNA off for lab testing. The suspect's DNA was sent off for lab testing and positive results were provided
to the FBI.
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LAW ENFORCEMENT SERVICES
Hate Crime Trial of Former NJ Police Chief Ends in Mistrial
The Associated Press (12/01, Staff Writer) reported that a retrial in the hate-crime case against a former
New Jersey police chief ended without a verdict Wednesday. According to the article, a federal judge
declared a mistrial after jurors couldn't reach a verdict in the trial of Frank Nucera, the former police chief
of Bordentown, near Trenton. Nucera faced one count each of hate crime assault and deprivation of civil
rights, for allegedly slamming a handcuffed Black man's head into a doorjamb in 2016 while two officers
were escorting the man from a hotel. Nucera had pleaded not guilty. The article noted that in 2019, a
separate jury deadlocked on the same charges, but convicted Nucera of lying to the FBI, and he was
sentenced to 28 months in prison on that count. The article also noted that Nucera has remained free on
bail as the case has progressed. He retired in 2017 during the FBI investigation.
Police Group Asks Public for Help as Assaults on Cops Surge
NewsNation Now (12/01, Palmer) reported that fatal attacks on U.S. police officers have dramatically
increased in 2021 and the National Police Association has released a public service announcement seeking
the public's help. According to the article, a total of 59 law enforcement officers were killed in the line of
duty in the first nine months of 2021, according to statistics compiled by the FBI. "That basically
translates to every five days, more often than every five days in this country, an officer is murdered in the
line of duty," FBI Director Christopher Wray said of the increase. "And that's totally unacceptable, and it's
a tragedy and it needs attention."
Fort Myers Police Fire Officer Who Had Been Included in FBI Probe
Fort Myers News-Press (12/01, Braun) reported that the Fort Myers Police Department fired Officer Jason
Jackson on charges including interfering with an internal affairs investigation and associating with felons.
According to the article, FMPD said the case against Jackson started with a recommendation from the
Freeh Report in 2016 then led to a four-year FBI investigation which ended in April. The article noted that
the news release said that when FMPD received documents from the FBI, the department launched a five-
month internal affairs investigation. That included interviews with 27 community members, many of them
Dunbar residents, who had concerns about Jackson's actions on and off duty.
Back to Top
OTHER FBI NEWS
CIA Publishes New Account Describing "Challenges" of Briefing Trump
CBS News (12/01, Gazis) reported that the U.S. intelligence community faced "greater challenges" in
briefing former President Trump than it had confronted in almost five decades, when President-elect Nixon
was taking office, according to a new account published by the CIA's internal research center. According
to the article, the briefings during the transition were led by a group of 14 intelligence officials hand-
picked by Ted Gistaro, a veteran CIA analyst who later served as former President Trump's briefer. They
hailed from the CIA, FBI, State Department, and other agencies, and were the "largest and most
organizationally diverse group of experts ever deployed for transition briefings," according to the
document. The article noted that while the earliest sessions were substantive, they could also be
meandering, according to former Director of National Intelligence Jim Clapper, who said Mr. Trump "was
prone to fly off on tangents; there might be eight or nine minutes of real intelligence in an hour's
discussion."
CIA Files Say Staffers Committed Sex Crimes Involving Children. They Weren't
Prosecuted.
BuzzFeed News (12/01, Leopold, Cormier) reported that over the past 14 years, the Central Intelligence
Agency has secretly amassed credible evidence that at least 10 of its employees and contractors committed
sexual crimes involving children. According to the article, though most of these cases were referred to US
attorneys for prosecution, only one of the individuals was ever charged with a crime. Prosecutors sent the
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rest of the cases back to the CIA to handle internally, meaning few faced any consequences beyond the
possible loss of their jobs and security clearances. That marks a striking deviation from how sex crimes
involving children have been handled at other federal agencies such as the Department of Homeland
Security and the Drug Enforcement Administration. CIA insiders say the agency resists prosecution of its
staff for fear the cases will reveal state secrets. The article noted that in one instance in January 2010, a
CIA contractor logged into a chatroom using an agency IP address and solicited sex from an FBI agent
posing as a child. The contractor acknowledged an obsession with child sexual abuse images, but by the
time the inspector general obtained a search warrant and seized the man's computer, someone had
"removed the hard drives and thrown them away," according to the reports.
Philip B. Heymann, 89, Dies; Prosecuted Watergate and Abscam
The New York Times (12/01, Seelye) reported that Philip B. Heymann, who served four Democratic
presidents over six decades, mostly in the Justice Department, and who helped prosecute major
investigations, including Watergate and the Abscam bribery sting operation, died on Tuesday at his home
in Los Angeles. According to the article, in the 1960s, Mr. Heymann, then in his mid-30s and at the State
Department, was outraged to learn that J. Edgar Hoover, the all-powerful director of the F.B.I., had ordered
the surveillance of Americans abroad if he was suspicious of their leftist politics. Mr. Heymann called
attention to the practice as a violation of civil liberties, which helped end it. The article noted that Mr.
Heymann's high-profile investigations included Abscam, the F.B.I. sting operation in the late 1970s that
caught public officials on tape accepting bribes from agents posing as Arab sheikhs in return for political
favors. The operation, which inspired the 2013 movie "American Hustle," led to the convictions of a
United States senator, Harrison A. Williams Jr., Democrat of New Jersey, as well as six members of
Congress and more than a dozen other criminals.
Dark-Money Group Paid Former Trump AG to Ask for Pardons; He Never
Registered as a Lobbyist
The Daily Beast (12/01, Sollenberg) reported that former Acting Attorney General Matthew Whitaker left
the Trump administration and almost immediately started asking for presidential pardons, without
registering as a lobbyist, even though he was bein
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