FBI “Child Porn Sting” Used Child Porn Sites To Hack User’s Computers & Steal Personal Info

WOW!!!!!

The FBI seems to have run, or is running a scheme, or as they call it a “Operation Pacifier sting”, where the FBI created, published and managed pornographic websites specializing in child porn, and then hack the each website visitor’s computer to steal personal information, which was then sent back to the FBI, and then prosecuted.

FBI "Child Porn Sting" Used Child Porn Sites To Hack User's Computers & Steal Personal Info

FBI “Child Porn Sting” Used Child Porn Sites To Hack User’s Computers & Steal Personal Info

Sound kind of like Obama & Holder’s “Fast & Furious Gun Running Scandal”, which has caused the deaths of many Mexicans and Americans.

Some critics have compared the sting to the notorious Operation Fast and Furious, in which the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives allowed the illegal sales of thousands of guns to drug smugglers, who later used them in crimes.

The funny thing is that the FBI actually committed a much worse crime than the people they lured into their entrapment by operating child pornography websites, and also by using their trap as a means to invade people’s personal property without a warrant or court order.

The FBI is corrupt, and is under Obama and Hillary Cli8nton’s TOTAL control.

The American People have lost all respect and trust in the FBI, the Justice Department, and the current so-called president, and and it is NOW time for a change!

WE NEED TO ELECT DONALD TRUMP TO BRING LAW & ORDER BACK TO OUR NATION!!

For two weeks in the spring of 2015, the FBI was one of the largest purveyors of child pornography on the internet.

After arresting the North Carolina administrator of The Playpen, a “dark web” child-pornography internet bulletin board, agents seized the site’s server and moved it to an FBI warehouse in Virginia.

They then initiated “Operation Pacifier,” a sting and computer-hacking operation of unparalleled scope that has thus far led to criminal charges against 186 people, including at least five in Washington state.

The investigation has sparked a growing social and legal controversy over the FBI’s tactics and the impact on internet privacy. Some critics have compared the sting to the notorious Operation Fast and Furious, in which the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives allowed the illegal sales of thousands of guns to drug smugglers, who later used them in crimes.

Defense attorneys and some legal scholars suggest the FBI committed more serious crimes than those they’ve arrested — distributing pornography, compared with viewing or receiving it.

Moreover, the FBI’s refusal to discuss Operation Pacifier and reveal exactly how it was conducted — even in court — has threatened some of the resulting criminal prosecutions. Last month, a federal judge in Tacoma suppressed the evidence obtained against a Vancouver, Wash., school district employee indicted in July 2015 on a charge of receiving child pornography because the FBI refused to reveal how it was gathered.

Similar motions are pending in other prosecutions in Washington and elsewhere around the country.

During the two weeks the FBI operated The Playpen, the bureau says visitors to the site accessed, posted or traded at least 48,000 images, 200 videos and 13,000 links to child pornography. At the same time, agents deployed a secret “Network Investigative Technique,” or NIT, to invade their computers, gather their personal information and send it back to the FBI.

According to court documents, between Feb. 20 and March 4, 2015, as many as 100,000 people logged onto the site, which was accessible only by using the anonymous “Tor” browser, which encrypts and routes internet traffic through thousands of other computers to hide the identity of a user.

Tor, which is used for private communications by government officials, lawyers, journalists, judges and others, was thought to be virtually uncrackable until news of the FBI’s operation became public.

Mozilla, the company that offers the Tor browser, asked the FBI to reveal its methods so it can be patched, warning in a court motion that, “absent great care, the security of millions of individuals using Mozilla’s Firefox internet browser could be put at risk” by its disclosure. The Tacoma judge denied the request.

The FBI declined to be interviewed for this story. The Department of Justice (DOJ) referred The Seattle Times to court filings by prosecutors in the case.

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