How much was Danforth paid to get to the truth of the matter?   Maybehe
should return a portion of his fee.

Saba
��

The FBI scandal widens
��2001�WorldNetDaily.com

It's time for Congress to call FBI Director Louis Freeh before an
open-public interrogation, put him under oath and force him to answer
some tough questions.

It has never been more clear that Freeh's renegade agency has been
flouting the law, obstructing justice and conducting cover-ups of
massive proportions with regard to the Waco massacre, the Oklahoma City
bombing and the shoot-down of TWA Flight 800.

Even John Danforth, under attack for his own whitewash of the Waco
debacle, has turned on those upon whom he relied to conduct his
supposedly "independent" investigation.

Last week he told the Washington Post the FBI was so uncooperative in
his Waco probe that he threatened Freeh with a search warrant to gain
access to relevant documents. He says he's still not sure the FBI has
turned over all the evidence he requested as special counsel.

"It was like pulling teeth to get all this paper from the FBI," he said.

Maybe now Danforth is getting an idea of how tough it has been for
ordinary citizens and members of the press to get any real factual data
from this unaccountable FBI.

This development should be viewed in the context of other revelations in
WorldNetDaily concerning the FBI's cover-up of what looks more and more
like a broader conspiracy in the Oklahoma City bombing. They should also
be viewed in the context of explosive disclosures by  four courageous
FBI whistleblowers on CBS' "60 Minutes II" that demonstrate the rogue
agency was simply not interested in evidence that didn't fit its
official theories of what happened and who was involved.

We have a problem in this country � a serious problem � when the FBI
no longer has credibility with so many Americans, including a cautious,
play-it-safe man like John Danforth.
Now we also learn that a former federal prosecutor may go to jail for
breaking an agreement with the government over the Waco case.

Bill Johnston admitted withholding information about the Branch Davidian
siege and the use of pyrotechnic tear gas. He said he did so out of fear
hostile colleagues might take retribution against him.

He added that Danforth's investigators "treated me with the same
loathing and hostility that I had encountered from the Justice
Department," according to an Associated Press report.

The FBI has admitted withholding thousands of pages of evidence in the
Oklahoma City bombing case, resulting in the delay of Timothy McVeigh's
execution and certainly inviting more questions about the agency's
procedures, competence and trustworthiness.

Now, a shocking new video documentary on TWA Flight 800, the commercial
airliner that exploded over Long Island Sound in 1996 raises even more
questions about another high-profile FBI investigation.

Hundreds of eyewitnesses � including some experienced military pilots
� say they saw one or two missiles streak toward the plane just before
the first of several explosions. Their statements appear to have been
systematically ignored or twisted to conform to the government's theory
that the plane just exploded on its own � a freak accident for which
there is no plausible scientific evidence to support.

Is there a pattern emerging here?

What was going on in this time period that might have prompted the
government � at the very highest levels � to spin the news coverage
in a way that would minimize its own culpability?

Is it possible, after all we now know about the Clinton administration,
that political considerations could have been paramount over the truth
� especially truth that could lead to further distrust of government,
anxiety about national security and who-knows-what-else?

As someone who has been involved in seeking the truth about Waco,
Oklahoma City and TWA Flight 800 for many years now, I am both
frustrated at these new disclosures and encouraged that we may yet be
closer to learning the facts.

But journalists don't have subpoena power. We
can't extract answers from public officials who don't want to cooperate.
We can only make noise and tell Americans what we know.

At some point, the branch of government closest to the people � the
Congress � must become engaged. At some point, Congress must stop
passing the buck to special prosecutors. At some point, public hearings
need to be held to demand on-the-record answers to questions that have
haunted Americans for far too long.

Joseph Farah is editor and chief executive officer of WorldNetDaily.com
and writes a daily column.

�
NEWS:

Explosives rocked FBI building in '87�Post confirms WND White House
vandalism account�Florida Judge Sauls to be honored

Thursday�Sudan: Blood spills as oil flows�Saudi role in energy
production�COMMENTARY:

Silenced: Flight 800 cover-up, part 2
By Jack Cashill�Mideast 'moderates'?
By Joseph Farah�Government: How big is too big?

By Jane Chastain�
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