Osodecentx said:
4th and Inches said:
Osodecentx said:
4th and Inches said:
Interesting..
8/11: Lists *SCI docs* in raid inventory filed with Magistrate Judge Reinhart
8/30: Lists *no SCI docs* in detailed inventory filed with Judge Cannon
8/31: Filed FBI picture of SCI cover sheets. Were they empty? Where did SCI docs go?
Link? I'd like to look at your sources, if you're serious about convincing people
well. Source one is the inventory filed with the magistrate- a simple google search will find it
Source two is the detailed inventory filed with Judge Cannon. A simple google search will find it.
Source 3 is a photo everybody and his brother has seen.
If the possession of unclassified documents is the violation, what difference does SCI make? The warrant didn't reference SC
I docs, did it?
Important conceptual points to help interpret what is reported: SCI = "sensitive, compartmented information," referring to compartments within Top Secret, conceptutally interchangeable with TS. So when you see "SCI" mentioned, it would typically mean "one or more compartmentations within TS."
Generally speaking, a security clearance gets you full access to materials marked "Confidential" and "Secret." The volume of C and S is so great that no one person could read or carry it all. You get what concerns your area, but there is no formal effort to compartmentalize, to restrict dissemination beyond the normal routing indicators (who has action, who is "cc'd.") Not so with TS. There is no "higher level" of classification, merely compartmentations within TS and that compartmentation is formally managed. You have to demonstrate "need to know" to gain access to each compartment, limiting the breadth of your access across the TS level, and your badge/file indicates what you are eligible to see. Yes, "need to know" matters everywhere, but at Secret & Confidential levels it's a matter of professionalism, of not asking about or revealing things you know shouldn't be shared with those who aren't involved in the subject.
Generally speaking, TS is technical in nature.
Exceedingly sensitive humint is a different story. (bears markings not found on the docs from MAL raid.)
Confidential is stuff that, if declassified, would in most cases beg questions about why it was classified at all. Very mundane stuff, admin details, etc....