These Days, The Heroes, Increasingly, Are In Jail
Greg Campbell writes at The Daily Caller that the jailed Qwest CEO claimed his imprisonment, supposedly over insider trading, actually stemmed from government retaliation over his refusal to participate in a secret NSA program that he thought would be illegal:
While National Security Agency's harvesting of telephone data is often defended as a necessary component of post-9/11 national security, old court documents claim the spy agency was putting such a program into place months before the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.In court papers filed during his 2007 insider trading trial, former Qwest CEO Joseph Nacchio claimed that Denver-based Qwest was denied lucrative NSA contracts he believed to be worth $50-$100 million, after Nacchio refused to involve Qwest in a secret NSA program that he thought would be illegal.
Subsequent reporting at the time revealed that it was a domestic wiretapping program in which the NSA wanted to snoop on Qwest's vast telephone network without court orders.







And people who should be in prison are treated as heroes. Oliver North, for instance.
Patrick at June 17, 2013 1:31 PM
Ollie shouldnt be in jail, he should have been executed for treason.
lujlp at June 17, 2013 2:29 PM
Why? Because he violated a one line paragraph in a 10K line Christmas Tree finance bill by supplying the Contras with firearms? Or because he went around the French in selling aircraft parts to Iraq?
Jim P. at June 17, 2013 8:45 PM
So why didn't he blow the Feds in from the get-go?
DaveG at June 18, 2013 3:58 PM
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