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Gold9472
11-05-2005, 10:08 PM
FBI Seeks Pearl Video Ban on Net

http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,52772,00.html

By Declan McCullagh
03:06 PM May. 23, 2002 PT

WASHINGTON -- The FBI has ordered an Internet provider to cease distributing the unedited video of journalist Daniel Pearl being brutally murdered.

On Thursday afternoon, FBI agents from the Newark field office told a Virginia company to delete the 4-minute video, which a customer had posted on the ogrish.com site.

Pro Hosters, located in Sterling, Virginia, responded by consulting with its customer and removing the video -- which has sprouted on scores of websites after Pearl, a 38-year-old Wall Street Journal reporter, was slain in Pakistan by a radical Muslim group.

A videotape of Pearl's execution was delivered to a U.S. consulate in February, and a copy eventually appeared online. This month, CBS News broadcast a 30-second excerpt, which anchor Dan Rather defended as necessary to "understand the full impact and danger of the propaganda war being waged."

Ted Hickman, the owner of Pro Hosters, said the FBI insisted the video be removed immediately and that agents also wanted the identity of the person who runs the ogrish.com site.

"I said that of course I can't release anything without a subpoena," Hickman said. "They said they needed the content offline as soon as possible. I called back and I spoke to both him and his supervisor. Both assured me that it was illegal to post anything related to obscenity."

Sandra Carroll, a spokeswoman for the FBI's Newark office, said "the local office did investigate certain aspects" of the Internet distribution of the Pearl video.

Carroll said she was not that familiar with the investigation, and only knew that "some type of law was quoted in terms of a violation."

Carroll said she would investigate what charges, if any, could be filed.

The contours of the FBI's investigation are anything but clear. A 1996 federal obscenity law exists, but it only applies to work that "appeals to the prurient interest" -- and Pearl's video, as disturbing as it might be, is hardly sexual.

Pro Hosters' Hickman reports the FBI said Dow Jones, the owner of The Wall Street Journal, had contacted them about the video.

Steve Goldstein, a spokesman for Dow Jones, said, "We don't believe that there's any good purpose for showing the Daniel Pearl video."

Goldstein said that when Dow Jones spots a copy of the video online, it calls the cops. "We would notify law enforcement," Goldstein said. "It would be up to law enforcement (to investigate)."

"Obviously we're aware that the video is on the Internet," said Steve Barry, a spokesman for the FBI's Washington headquarters. "Any other legal questions should go to the Department of Justice."

The Justice Department and the U.S. Attorney's office in Newark, New Jersey, both declined to comment, saying they could not discuss investigations in progress.

Barry Steinhardt, the associate director of the American Civil Liberties Union, said he "can't imagine what argument the government is making that they can prohibit a website from publishing" the videotape.

"It's clearly not obscene," Steinhardt said. "I'm sure it's macabre and horrible, but it's not obscene. The publication on a website of this videotape is protected under the First Amendment. Whether it's wise or not I'll leave for others to comment."

One explanation is that the FBI agents were bluffing about possible "obscenity" charges.

"They were definitely trying to intimidate me into taking it down without the paperwork," said Pro Hosters's Hickman.

The ogrish.com site features a gallery of disturbing images and video -- a typical title is "Woman has been raped and mutilated." Ogrish.com's owner did not respond to a request for an interview.

But Hickman says the FBI never complained about other ogrish.com content. "The only thing they mentioned to me was the video of Pearl," Hickman said. "They said the family was suing other organizations that have posted the site. They didn't say take down the site. They mentioned the obscenity of the video itself."

After CBS News aired the video, Pearl's widow denounced the decision as "heartless."

Sandy Genelius, a spokeswoman for CBS News, said no lawsuit has been filed against the company by Pearl's family. "I've haven't heard one thing about it and have no reason to believe it's anything more than a rumor," she said.

An editor at Rotten.com, which posted an edited copy of the execution video, said the site has not been contacted by Pearl's widow or his family. A notice on Rotten.com's "Daily Rotten" section says: "In consideration to the Pearl family, while recognizing the importance of bringing you an uncut version of this film, we have blocked out the graphic images of Pearl's death, leaving the rest of the video intact."

It hardly seems likely that even the best efforts of Dow Jones and the FBI will be enough to rid the Internet of the unedited video. It appears to be available on Yahoo's Geocities, on consumptionjunction.com, bangedup.com, and shopping-nice.com. It also seems to have surfaced on the venerable Usenet newsgroup alt.binaries.pictures.tasteless with the Subject: "Why We Fight Jihad."

This isn't the first time the FBI has tried similar tactics. In 1999, the FBI pressured an Internet service provider to remove a spoof video purporting to be a Y2K military briefing. Last year, FBI agents launched an investigation into the bonsaikitten.com site. (Editor's Note: After this story was edited, FBI spokeswoman Sandra Carroll called Wired News to say the bureau was merely giving advice to websites hosting the Pearl video -- and was not threatening prosecution. She said: "Apparently the conversation with [FBI agent] Jay Kanetkar has been similar to other conversations with other website hosts, appealing to have various of those photos removed. Apparently there is another website here in the U.S. which Jay did not name, both of which were more than happy to voluntarily remove the photos without question.") Julia Scheeres contributed to this report.

Gold9472
11-05-2005, 10:10 PM
Can somebody with a stomach for it watch this video (if you can)? Tell me what you see...

911=inside job
11-05-2005, 11:46 PM
link to somewhere i can watch it with quick time....

Gold9472
11-05-2005, 11:49 PM
Noooooo. I can't even risk seeing a picture of it... you don't understand dude... I can't see that shit.

PhilosophyGenius
11-06-2005, 12:48 AM
I saw the video a long time ago and here is why the FBI is banning it (as opposed to the other beheading videos). Pearl was talking to the camera about how he is Jewish and that his parents are from Israel. After he is beheaded, a list of demands is scrolled top to bottom on the video. The U.S. stopping it's support of Israel was the main demand, followed by the usual stuff (stop crimes against Muslims, treatment of detainees), and also said the U.S. should give Pakistan it's choppers of fighter plans that it bought but never recieved.

The same thing was done with similar al-Qaeda videos that showed anti-Israeli or anti-American footage. When Paul Johnson (Apache engineer) was beheaded in Saudi Arabai, the media did not show the footage of the video where it showed the effects of Apache missles in Palestine & Iraq. It was portrayed as, an innocent American man was kidnaped just because he was American.

That's why media doesn't, or isn't allowed to show this stuff. The govn't wont let them because they show the real reason why they hate us as opposed to what they'd have you believe, which is that "they hate us for our freedom".

Gold9472
11-06-2005, 12:52 AM
Ok... but was there anyway to make out someone, etc... any pictures on the wall, etc...

PhilosophyGenius
11-06-2005, 12:57 AM
Of course not. I mean these things are always professionally done. Like you wouldn't see a beheading video filmed in somone living room with family photos in the backround. To the best of my memory, it was either a white sheet in the backround or a just a plan wall. I also read something which said this was at a small house far away from the city, in the middle of no where. And that when they took him there, he still thought he was going to interview Khalid Sheik Mohammed, not realizing he would be killed (possibly by KSM).

Gold9472
11-06-2005, 12:58 AM
Of course not. I mean these things are always professionally done. Like you wouldn't see a beheading video filmed in somone living room with family photos in the backround. To the best of my memory, it was either a white sheet in the backround or a just a plan wall. I also read something which said this was at a small house far away from the city, in the middle of no where. And that when they took him there, he still thought he was going to interview Khalid Sheik Mohammed, not realizing he would be killed (possibly by KSM).

To my knowledge, Omar Sheikh is the most likely murderer of Daniel Pearl.

PhilosophyGenius
11-06-2005, 01:05 AM
hmmm...There were many people involved and KSM was one that was mentioned as the beheader. But who knows.