Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Obama Could Have Been Beheaded By ISIS

SeeCharges expected in White House beheading

SITE has the video.

Related:

Obama Assassination PsyOp Jumps the Fence
Obama Assassination PsyOp Stuck on the Fence

You won't be after these:

"Secret Service stumbled after 2011 White House shooting" by Carol D. Leonnig | Washington Post   September 29, 2014

WASHINGTON — The gunman parked his black Honda directly south of the White House, in the dark of a November night, in a closed lane of Constitution Avenue. He pointed his long, semiautomatic rifle out of the passenger window, aimed directly at the home of the president of the United States, and pulled the trigger.

A bullet smashed a window on the second floor, just steps from the first family’s formal living room. Another lodged in a window frame, and more pinged off the roof, sending bits of wood and concrete to the ground.

At least seven bullets struck the upstairs residence of the White House, flying some 700 yards across the South Lawn.

But because of a string of security lapses, it was not until four days later that the Secret Service realized that a man had fired a high-powered rifle at the White House.

President Obama and his wife were out of town on that evening of Nov. 11, 2011, but their younger daughter, Sasha, and Michelle Obama’s mother, Marian Robinson, were inside, while older daughter Malia was expected back any moment from an outing with friends.

Secret Service officers initially rushed to respond. One, stationed directly under the second-floor terrace where the bullets struck, drew her .357 handgun and prepared to crack open an emergency gun box.

Snipers on the roof, standing just 20 feet from where one bullet struck, scanned the South Lawn through their rifle scopes for signs of an attack. With little camera surveillance on the White House perimeter, it was up to the Secret Service officers on duty to figure out what was going on.

Then came an order that surprised some of the officers. ‘‘No shots have been fired. . . . Stand down,’’ a supervisor called over his radio. He said the noise was the backfire from a nearby construction vehicle.

That command was the first of several security lapses, never previously reported, as the Secret Service failed to identify and properly investigate a serious attack on the White House.

While the shooting and eventual arrest of the gunman, Oscar R. Ortega-Hernandez, received attention at the time, neither the bungled internal response nor the potential danger to the Obama daughters has been publicly known.

By the end of that Friday night, the agency had confirmed that a shooting had occurred but wrongly insisted the gunfire was never aimed at the White House.

Is there ever a time when this government doesn't knee-jerk a lie at first? 

Then they wonder why we never believe them?

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The focus on this stuff lately is either an assassination in the works being pre-programmed in the public mind or an excuse for more tyranny.

"White House intruder got deep into building" by Carol D. Leonnig | Washington Post   September 30, 2014

WASHINGTON — The man who jumped the White House fence this month and sprinted through the front door made it much farther into the building than previously known, overpowering one Secret Service officer and running through much of the main floor, according to three people familiar with the incident.

You mean previously told, right?

An alarm box near the front entrance of the White House designed to alert guards to an intruder had been muted at what officers believed was a request of the usher’s office, said a Secret Service official who spoke on the condition of anonymity.

The officer posted inside the front door appeared to be delayed in learning that the intruder, Omar Gonzalez, was about to burst through. Officers are trained that, upon learning of an intruder on the grounds — often through the alarm boxes posted around the property — they must immediately lock the front door.

After barreling past the guard immediately inside the door, Gonzalez, who was carrying a knife, dashed past the stairway leading a half-flight up to the first family’s living quarters. He then ran into the 80-foot-long East Room, an ornate space often used for receptions or presidential addresses.

Gonzalez was tackled by a counterassault agent at the far southern end of the East Room. He reached the doorway to the Green Room, a parlor overlooking the South Lawn with artwork and antique furniture, according to three people familiar with the incident.

Secret Service officials had earlier said he was quickly detained at the main entry. Agency spokesman Edwin Donovan said the office is not commenting during the ongoing investigation of the incident.

People jumping over the White House fence have become a more common occurrence, but most individuals are tackled by Secret Service officers guarding the complex before getting even a third of the way across the lawn. Gonzalez is the first person known to have jumped the fence and made it inside the executive mansion.

This after I was told Delta Force did a drill decades ago and found deficiencies, a day after I was told no one could ever imagine something like this.


************

The more detailed account of this month’s security breach comes from people who provided information about the incident to the Post and whistleblowers who contacted Representative Jason Chaffetz of Utah, chairman of a House Oversight subcommittee on national security.

Oh, so the Secret Service and this White house was caught telling more lies, huh?

************

The new revelations follow accounts provided to the Post last week detailing how Gonzalez’s ability to enter the White House reflected a failure of multiple levels of security at the compound. The agency relies on these successive layers as a fail-safe for protecting the president and the White House complex.

If I were Obama I would be damn worried about my safety.

In this incident, a plainclothes surveillance team was on duty that night outside the fence, meant to spot jumpers and give early warning before they made it over. But that team did not notice Gonzalez. There was an officer in a guard booth on the North Lawn. When that officer could not reach Gonzales, there was supposed to be an attack dog, a specialized SWAT team and a guard at the front door — all at the ready.

The dog was not released, a decision now under review. Some people familiar with the incident say the handler probably felt he could not release the dog, because so many officers were in pursuit of Gonzalez and the dog may have attacked them instead.

That's the best lame excuse you can come up with?

Since the incident, the Secret Service has added an additional layer of temporary fencing while the agency reviews its procedures.

Which was the goal of this charade, wasn't it?

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Gee, the Secret Service really sucks these days.

Other articles from today that I'm cutting loose:

Ben Bradlee of Washington Post in hospice
Denver judges consider border immigration cases
Jury selection begins in penalty retrial of Arias in Arizona

While in the spirit of things, why not slice off the last two sections, too?