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OrlandoMary
04-03-2005, 02:45 PM
Watchdog agencies asleep at the House of Death
By Bill Conroy,
Posted on Sat Mar 26th, 2005 at 11:06:53 PM EST

The first major sign that DEA supervisor Sandalio Gonzalez had hit a nerve with his letter of protest over the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s handling of the House of Death murders materialized in May 2004.

The blowback came at him through a legal case he has pending against DEA. In 2002, Gonzalez filed a discrimination lawsuit against the agency in federal court in Miami. The case, which is still pending, stems from a stash of cocaine that came up missing after a 1998 raid of a house in suburban Miami.

Prior surveillance of the house indicated there should have been about 32 kilograms of cocaine on the premises, but the total amount accounted for after the search fell 10 kilos short of that mark.

Gonzalez suspected foul play. He says the same Miami-Dade Police team involved in the raid was responsible for “compromising three prior drug cases.”

Gonzalez was clued into the potential corruption after receiving a memo from one of his agents outlining “apparent official misconduct ... and violations of federal law,” according to a discrimination lawsuit Gonzalez filed in federal court in Miami.

“It was alleged that police officers may have taken the cocaine,” Gonzalez asserts in the lawsuit.

In the wake of pushing for an investigation into the missing coke, Gonzalez found himself the target of a series of actions by his superiors that he claims were designed to intimidate, embarrass and ultimately silence him. Gonzalez subsequently filed Equal Employment Opportunity claims against his superiors for their actions and ultimately took his case into federal court.

In addition to suffering retaliation and discrimination designed to “harass and humiliate (him) and slander his character and damage his reputation,” Gonzalez asserts in his lawsuit that in January 2001 he was transferred involuntarily to the less prestigious post of special agent in charge of the El Paso, Texas Field Division.

Some three years later in El Paso, [more]

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2005/3/26/23653/8069


OrlandoMary
www.maryschneider.us

princesskittypoo
04-06-2005, 03:39 PM
Watchdog agencies asleep at the House of Death
By Bill Conroy,
Posted on Sat Mar 26th, 2005 at 11:06:53 PM EST

The first major sign that DEA supervisor Sandalio Gonzalez had hit a nerve with his letter of protest over the U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement?s handling of the House of Death murders materialized in May 2004.

The blowback came at him through a legal case he has pending against DEA. In 2002, Gonzalez filed a discrimination lawsuit against the agency in federal court in Miami. The case, which is still pending, stems from a stash of cocaine that came up missing after a 1998 raid of a house in suburban Miami.

Prior surveillance of the house indicated there should have been about 32 kilograms of cocaine on the premises, but the total amount accounted for after the search fell 10 kilos short of that mark.

Gonzalez suspected foul play. He says the same Miami-Dade Police team involved in the raid was responsible for ?compromising three prior drug cases.?

Gonzalez was clued into the potential corruption after receiving a memo from one of his agents outlining ?apparent official misconduct ... and violations of federal law,? according to a discrimination lawsuit Gonzalez filed in federal court in Miami.

?It was alleged that police officers may have taken the cocaine,? Gonzalez asserts in the lawsuit.

In the wake of pushing for an investigation into the missing coke, Gonzalez found himself the target of a series of actions by his superiors that he claims were designed to intimidate, embarrass and ultimately silence him. Gonzalez subsequently filed Equal Employment Opportunity claims against his superiors for their actions and ultimately took his case into federal court.

In addition to suffering retaliation and discrimination designed to ?harass and humiliate (him) and slander his character and damage his reputation,? Gonzalez asserts in his lawsuit that in January 2001 he was transferred involuntarily to the less prestigious post of special agent in charge of the El Paso, Texas Field Division.

Some three years later in El Paso, [more]

http://narcosphere.narconews.com/story/2005/3/26/23653/8069


OrlandoMary
www.maryschneider.us

seems everywhere lately you can find corruption. individual greed.