The Disposable Life of a 20-Year-Old Confidential Informant
Andrew Sadek was bullied into becoming an informant by an unaccountable drug task force. When he turned up dead, police washed their hands of him.
On June 27, 2014, the body of 20-year-old Andrew Sadek, a promising electrical student at the North Dakota State College of Science (NDSCS) in Wahpeton, North Dakota, was pulled from the Red River bordering North Dakota and Minnesota.
Missing for two months, the young man was found shot in the head, wearing a backpack filled with rocks.
The grisly death of a college student in one of the safest towns in the state, where violent crime is extremely rare, did not lead to a sweeping investigation. In fact, police immediately said they did not suspect foul play.
Such a supposition strains credulity as it is, but what would be slowly revealed over the following months is that Andrew had been working as a confidential informant for the police, and that his school knew that authorities were busting its students and using them as bait to catch drug dealers.
This is a story of overzealous prosecution of minor drug offenses by a task force answerable only to itself, callous official indifference toward a grieving family, and a lack of transparency by authorities that raises more questions than it answers.
Paramount among these questions: Why are police using non-violent, first-time offenders in the very dangerous role of confidential informant?
A QUIET FARM KID
Growing up on a family-owned farm in Rogers, North Dakota, Andrew Sadek was active with the raising of their cattle and particularly close to his parents, who lost their older son, Nick, in a car accident in 2005.
Andrew was a few weeks shy of graduation when he went missing in May 2014. Days later, the Sadeks received the shocking news that a warrant had been issued for Andrew's arrest for two felony counts of distributing a controlled substance.
In an interview with Reason TV, Andrew's mother, Tammy, described her deceased younger son as "kind of a homebody" whose only previous brush with the law was a speeding ticket.
"His dreams were to become an electrician and take over the family farm," Tammy says of Andrew. "We sent him off to college, he was excelling at college. That's why this was such a shock to us."
For two gut-wrenching months, the Sadeks prayed Andrew would come home to the farm to help with the spring calving, while police continued to assume Andrew was on the lam.
Then, Andrew's body was found.
Shot. Wearing the backpack filled with rocks. Not wearing the clothes he was last seen in. Without his wallet. An autopsy proved inconclusive in determining suicide or homicide, and no weapon has yet been found.
But according to the Sadeks, Sgt. Steve Helgeson of the NDSCS Campus Police, the lead officer in charge of the investigation, tried to convince them that their son put on the rock-filled backpack, shot himself in the head, and somehow propelled himself into the river.
Tammy says Sgt. Helgeson told her "That's what kids do in that area, they commit suicide," referring to the golf court bridge over the river that connects the Bois de Sioux golf course.
No one who knew Andrew supports this theory. His friend Justin Rippentrop told Reason TV that Andrew was a "laid-back, generous, fun-loving guy," who never showed depressive tendencies and seemed in particularly good spirits as his graduation date approached. Crucially, no one at the college has indicated that Andrew was exhibiting any signs of emotional distress, and no suicide note has been found.
A DRUG TASK FORCE LACKING TRANSPARENCY AND ACCOUNTABILITY
What the police knew but continued to keep from the Sadeks, was that Andrew had been working as a confidential informant for the Southeast Multi-County Agency (SEMCA), a drug task force answerable only to its own board, a 12 person committee made up of local senior police officers and elected officials.
Andrew first came into contact with SEMCA in April 2013, after he twice sold marijuana, a total of 4.5 grams or $80 worth, to a confidential informant. Shortly thereafter, a police raid on Andrew's dorm room turned up nothing but a small plastic grinder and some marijuana residue.
But the grinder, plus the two sales to SEMCA's informant in a "school zone," which in North Dakota includes colleges, was enough for authorities to threaten Andrew with two Class A felony charges, each carrying a possible 20 year sentence. Or, he could "voluntarily" agree to work as a confidential informant.
Upon enrolling at NDSCS, Andrew signed a Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) waiver obligating the school to inform his parents of any disciplinary issues, but the school never notified the Sadeks following the raid on his dorm room, or any time thereafter.
Faced with the prospect of spending the bulk of his life in prison, and without consulting a lawyer or his parents, Andrew chose to become an informant, agreeing to make two controlled buys from each of three SEMCA-targeted drug dealers.
When Andrew was last seen leaving his dorm building on May 1, 2014, he still owed SEMCA one last controlled buy.
Refusing to accept authorities' speculation that Andrew had committed suicide, the Sadeks hired a private investigator, who discovered a significant amount of water in the wheel wells of Andrew's car, suggesting that someone may have driven Andrew's car to the banks of the river where his body was found, before returning it to the campus parking lot.
WHO'S IN CHARGE HERE?
Because Andrew's body was found on the Minnesota side of the river, the NDSCS campus police claimed the case was not in their jurisdiction, which the North Dakota Attorney General's office confirmed. But the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension told Valley News Live, a newscast in Fargo, North Dakota, that they have nothing to do with it. For all the agencies involved with busting Andrew Sadek for selling a small amount of pot, no agency is willing to take the lead in solving his violent death.
Valley News Live reporter Nicole Johnson told Reason TV, "It took a long time to get the results of the autopsy. So I called (Sgt.) Steve Helgeson, the officer in charge of this case, and he told me it was not a top priority." Johnson adds that no one who has directly worked on the case has answered a question of theirs since Andrew was found in June 2014.
Finding no help from the local authorities, the Sadeks' demanded a state-wide investigation, which culminated in a report from the North Dakota Attorney General's Bureau of Criminal Investigation, released in January 2015.
The report revealed for the first time that Andrew had been working as a confidential informant for SEMCA.
That the school knew of the raid on Andrew's dorm room in 2013, but allowed his parents to learn this news only after he went missing raises significant ethical and legal questions in its own right. But the fact that SEMCA only disclosed Andrew's status as a confidential informant because they were forced to by the Attorney General, more than a year after the young man was first targeted by the task force, demonstrates a heartless lack of concern for confidential informants even after they end up dead.
The SEMCA report runs all of four and a half pages, nearly half of which merely names the board members and the authors of the report. And despite the obvious dangers inherent with being an informant working for the police to bust drug dealers, the report found that SEMCA had acted appropriately when using Andrew, a non-violent first time offender, as a C.I. The report's conclusion offered four minor tweaks to protocol, such as having a "Pre-Ops briefing" and assigning a supervisor to each case.
In February 2015, Reason's Jacob Sullum wrote about Wahpeton Police Chief Scott Thorsteinson, a SEMCA board member, and his response to the violent death of a confidential informant in his town:
Thorsteinson conceded that police informants work in "a dangerous subculture" but said cops usually "bend over backwards to protect their C.I."
Thorsteinson said Sadek's death is no cause for reflection on the methods used by drug warriors in North Dakota. "These types of investigations are conducted the same way pretty much everywhere where people breathe in and out," he said. "They never did anything wrong that needed to be changed." Thorsteinson, who acknowledged that Sadek's mother "had to go through a difficult ordeal," explained that busting drug offenders is a thankless but necessary job. "Law enforcement… we're generally not popular," he told KVLY. "The sheep dog is not loved by the flock, and they're hated by the wolf, but we do it anyway." In Thorsteinson's view, the citizens he serves are sheep, while harmless pot dealers like Sadek are wolves.
The lack of a statewide chain of command allowed SEMCA to operate as an entity answerable only to itself. And though SEMCA's board remains intact, the agency now falls under the jurisdiction of the North Dakota attorney general. When contacted by Reason TV about the use of college students as confidential informants, Liz Brocker, a spokesperson for North Dakota's Attorney General Wayne Stenehjem, replied, "We have no opinion about confidential informants."
The Wahpeton Police Department, Richland County State's Attorney, SEMCA, and both NDSCS and its campus police department all either declined to comment or did not respond to Reason TV's request for comment.
DISPOSABLE YOUNG LIVES
Andrew Sadek is not the only young person to be terrified into working as a C.I. In 2014, a confidential informant at the University of Massachusetts died of a drug overdose, prompting criticism that if his parents had been notified, he might have been able to receive treatment for substance abuse. In 2015, Buzzfeed reported on the widespread use of confidential informants on the campus of Ole Miss.
Most notably, in 2008, Florida State student Rachel Hoffman was murdered when police compelled her to make an illegal gun purchase. A sweeping 2012 New Yorker article recounted Hoffman's tragic fate:
She had never fired a gun or handled a significant stash of hard drugs. Now she was on her way to conduct a major undercover deal for the Tallahassee Police Department, meeting two convicted felons alone in her car to buy two and a half ounces of cocaine, fifteen hundred Ecstasy pills, and a semi-automatic handgun.
The operation did not go as intended. By the end of the hour, police lost track of her and her car. Late that night, they arrived at her boyfriend's town house and asked him if Hoffman was inside. They wanted to know if she might have run off with the money. Her boyfriend didn't know where she was.
"She was with us," he recalled an officer saying. "Until shit got crazy."
Two days after Hoffman disappeared, her body was found in Perry, Florida, a small town some fifty miles southeast of Tallahassee, in a ravine overgrown with tangled vines. Draped in an improvised shroud made from her Grateful Dead sweatshirt and an orange-and-purple sleeping bag, Hoffman had been shot five times in the chest and head with the gun that the police had sent her to buy.
Hoffman's death led to state-wide reforms regarding the use of confidential informants, including common-sense modifications such as forbidding the use of recovering drug addicts as informants, additional training for informants and officers, and more robust recordkeeping requirements so that unsuitable candidates are not needlessly placed in potentially lethal situations. In March 2015, a new proposal made it through Florida's Senate Criminal Justice Committee to "add teeth" to "Rachel's Law," which includes criminal penalties for officers who fail to follow protocol or endanger their assigned informants.
THE DEATH THEY WISH WOULD GO AWAY
When the police aggressively prosecute young people unfamiliar with the criminal justice system and then use them as confidential informants, they assume a certain amount of responsibility for their safety. But the lack of interest by the agencies that ensnared Andrew Sadek in vigorously investigating his death as potential murder suggests they wish the case would just go away.
Which only begs the question, why?
Why are the authorities not investigating this case with the same aggressive zeal they continue to use on the campus of NDSCS busting small-time drug sellers?
The heartbroken Sadek family searches for justice for their son, though they are not confident that any law enforcement agency will continue to investigate Andrew's death. Tammy hopes that Andrew's death can serve as a cautionary tale to other young people who get in over their heads and feel they have no other choice but to work as an informant.
"I don't want other kids to end up in this situation," Tammy says. "Talk to your parents. Talk to a lawyer. Don't do the police's job for them."
About 9.45 minutes.
Written and Produced by Anthony L. Fisher.
Camera by Alex Manning.
Special Thanks to Jim Wareham, Ike Walker, Nicole Johnson and Bradford Arick of Valley News Live.
MUSIC: "I Was a Boy" and "Dishonest" by Wooden Ambulance (http://www.facebook.com/wooden.ambulance); "Old" by Smokey Hormel (http://www.smokeyhormel.com)
Scroll down for downloadable versions of this video, and subscribe to Reason TV's YouTube channel for daily content like this.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
Informants are just little people. Who cares what happens to them? There's always more, amirite?
Hey, he could have done life in prison for selling two nickel bags of ditchweed to another CI and having some shake in his dorm room. They were merciful!
Interesting that the cops use techniques they learned from the mob. Hey, if you can't beat'em, join'em, eh? Speaking of which, how far is Wahpeton from Fargo?
The mob? This is the USSR all the way.
"It's for the children."
"If it saves one life..."
"To Protect and Serve"
[hurl]
"Deckard if you ain't cop, you're little people."
"You know, Agent Sadusky, something I've noticed about fishing? It never works out so well for the bait.
See also: Rachel Hoffman of Tallahassee FL.
Fisher includes a section on her in the article.
It takes a willful kind of stupid to send a young girl into a coke and gun deal alone with a bundle of cash.
That is ALL kinds of fucked up. Lord....
Yeah, but better her than them, right? I mean they all went home safe that night and that's what counts, right? RIGHT!?
Well that wasn't a terrible story.
Yeah.. they sure threw the book at those fuck-ups.. They'll think twice before they pull a another stunt like that again. Behold the awful price of malicious incompetence.. and learn from it.
Disgusting.
Poor kid must have been part Russian to commit such a complex suicide. I don't know how these families restrain themselves when some ass with a badge basically says, "fuck your loser kid."
I don't know how any juror could find them guilty if they didn't restrain themselves.
Well, at least they didn't threaten to throw him in a woodchipper or something actually horrible like that. I mean - a nice head shot - boom. Game over.
You know who else treated citizens like commodities once they were no longer useful to the state....
Every Democrat since Wilson?
Every Democrat politician since Wilson?
FTFY
Every Democrat politician since Wilson the discovery of fire?
FTFY
Every Democrat politician since Wilson the discovery of fire?
FTFY
You're going to have to narrow that down a bit.
[REDACTED]
Robespierre?
Jim Henson?
Statism and I mean all statism, is fucking evil.
So, this kid who they had arrest warrants against becomes an informant before he is (apparently) murdered? I wonder what persuaded him to turn informant?
Sgt. Steve Helgeson, I wish you had a conscience. But then you wouldn't be a cop, would you
It's more likely that he "went missing" (got killed and didn't report back) so they thought, "He's running from us. Well, we'll fix his little red wagon." Then they issued the warrants.
So in your world people shouldn't be punished for reneging are their end of the agreement. Libertarianism ladies and gentlemen. No consequences no standards.
Agreement? I'm pretty sure libertarians believe agreements should be voluntary instead of coerced.
You are one sick fuck, Sam, perhaps a pegging by Hillary with a big cock would set you straight...nah.
I couldn't even finish reading this article it makes me so mad.
All this evil tragedy for...
Weed.
Fucken, bloody, fucken weed.
And I'm sure the cops went out and drank to celebrate a successful mission after it was all over.
(Disclaimer: Yeah, comparing pot and alcohol as a way to argue for pot legalization is dumb. But here, it fits.)
comparing pot and alcohol as a way to argue for pot legalization is dumb
Why?
Because when you "treat pot just like alcohol!!!!!!!" you get insane per se DUI standards...just like alcohol.
The idea that alcohol is not regulated out the ass is insane.
Yeah, but thins doesn't happen to people who violate alcohol regulations very much.
Yeah, moonshining is tolerated.
I read these stories and want to buy a woodchipper.
I remember 1981, when four 16-18 yr olds- all "tripping balls" on Mr Natural and smoking dope- and 3 of whom had been drinking Mickey's Big Mouth (I was the non-drinker in the party) got pulled over by a "rent-a-cop" while driving a '65 Ford Falcon in a "private housing development".
Luckily, the beer was gone by then- but the pot smoke was rather noticeable... The cop asked to search the trunk- he found two cases of empty beer bottles in the trunk of a 17 yr old driver's car.
The cop was disgusted, but resigned... if we turned over our pot, he wouldn't arrest us (my oz. was in my crotch by then). Dan wasn't a cigarette guy, so his ashtray was filled to the brim with nothing but "roaches".
I have never laughed harder in my life than when the cop held out one hand- and more than half the "roaches' landed on the ground- there were literally 200-300 in it!.
Then we drove away- and nothing else happened... WTF happened to my country?
Andy and Barney retired, and Opie turned out to be an authoritarian prick, a ruthless sociopath, and a chickenshit coward.. with a badge and gun..
Exactly. We used to throw keg parties outside Minot, ND in the 70's, in a coulee south of town we called Puppydog. The big question was did we want to hear Aerosmith or Warren Zevon.
Other folks partied there as well and left trash around, when we had our keggers we said when we (the partiers) pick up all the trash that other people left we'll tap the keg. Worked pretty well, not much litter after we "policed the area" as my old man put it when camping.
So one day my buddy shows up around supper time with some acid, so we had a party. Come 2 am my the cops show up, my younger brother tipped over and passed out by the bonfire (we called him Oxy, as in the old bleach, he couldn't hold his beer at 18).
So after my friend and I made our case that we actually made an effort to clean the place up the cops seized the keg and left. (It was pretty empty at that point and left). My sister in law (now, 40 years later) was out 50 bucks for the keg and tap deposit, Her mom had dough, so it wasn't a big deal. And no one was arrested or got shot by a cop. We all went home.
No one got shot or pressured to rat someone out, so yep, nothing else happened
One day, please God, I will live to see a police spokesperson defending the indefensible say "All proceedures were followed properly" and get asked by a reporter "Then, may I assume that the idiot who wrote the proseedures is being charged with manslaughter?"
I'd settle for a picture of the corpse on the front page the next day with the headline: "Police: Procedures Were Followed"
They could run the same headline every Friday and just change the picture.
That sounds like a nice web site.
I thought North Dakota police officials were kind-but-firm motherly figures with a zeal for bringing killers to justice.
Funny enough I used to partake with Bill Macy a very long time ago. Mamet too.
They've been replaced with hybrid of Jerry Lundegaard and a pot-bellied pig, and when they catch a kid retailing weed, they say, "Darn tootin' you're facing 40 years. I'm working to help you. Jeez, work with me, kid."
You want the perfect fucking explanation as to why police think they're above the law? They think the rest of us are sheep.
I'd compare it to the end of Pulp Fiction, but at least Jules was trying to be the shepherd.
" They think the rest of us are sheep."
We are. Sometimes for wool, sometimes for mutton.
But either way, we're human livestock, and those with the government guns are the ranchers.
Is officer Choad, aware that the "sheep" pay his bloated salary?
I hope he gets diabetes, and his feet fall off. (Dear DOJ, do I have magic powers? Do you believe I'm a witch?)
Are you that stupid?
What in the Hell are you talking about/ And what is with the "Woodchipper" moniker? This wouldn't be some kind of secret mockery going on would it?
We don't talk about woodchippers!
The first rule of woodchipper club..
whoa whoa whoa
the above comments are starting to drift beyond mere hyperbolic bluster as interpreted by a certain mutton-headed AUSA who couldn't tell his ass from settled case law.
someone post a disclaimer STAT!
What and get my name added to the [REDACTED]?
Not that it matters; if you don't think the government has everyone here's info anyway, then you haven't been paying attention. This just gives them a way to introduce it at any possible [REDACTED].
Modern law enforcement agencies are the ghostly fingers of Joseph de Maistre pillaging among the groaning beams and hushed halls of a civilization that can never truly free itself from the claws of organized morality, politicized progress, and philosophy poltergeists.
Where are those "good apples" I keep hearing about?
I saw a movie whut had one
My cousin is one of those good apples. He's been a State Trooper for ten years and has reported every instance of corruption and abuse-of-power that he has witnessed. Of course, it should be of no surprise what happens next: he refused to corroborate a superior officer's false report and was immediately relocated to a shithole of a city, 150 miles away from his home and family, so he essentially has no choice but to resign.
"Why are police using non-violent, first-time offenders in the very dangerous role of confidential informant? "
BFYTW.
Speculative reasons on why the didn't investigate his murder:
1) They didn't want any bad publicity for their program, and any successful investigation would have revealed that he'd been an informant. Once it had been revealed anyway, starting an investigation then would have clearly shown that was the reason they hadn't done it before then.
2) An investigation would have revealed that they'd ordered him to do something really stupid, perhaps stupid enough that they'd be criminally liable.
3) They know who did it, but arresting the culprit would reveal one or more of their informants, and they'd prefer to keep using those informants to make lots of drug arrests over making a single murder arrest.
How about the more obvious:
0.) They didn't investigate because they know exactly what happened, exactly who did it and have no interest in exposing their own.
Matt is likely correct. His #3 scenario happens all the time. Had a couple of identical cases here.
"3) They know who did it, but arresting the culprit would reveal one or more of their informants, and they'd prefer to keep using those informants to make lots of drug arrests over making a single murder arrest."
With no statute of limitation on the crime of murder, they could afford to catch up with the suspect .. at their leisure.
We have to keep fighting the Drug War to stop young people from destroying their lives. You see, if it weren't for the War on Drugs, this guy would be alive doing and selling drugs, instead of dead with a bullet to the head. Don't you see how that's a much better outcome for him? [/sarcasm]
Does North Dakota have civil forfeiture for drug cases? If so, then we may have a clue to the differing priorities regarding dope-dealing versus murder.
Why, why, that's libel!
I make up to $90 an hour working from my home. My story is that I quit working at Walmart to work online and with a little effort I easily bring in around $40h to $86h? Someone was good to me by sharing this link with me, so now i am hoping i could help someone else out there by sharing this link... Try it, you won't regret it!......
http://www.worktoday7.com
Shut up, tulpa..
William F Buckley Jr. was 100% correct, "...marijuana prohibition has done far more harm to far more people than marijuana ever could."
The WoD probably does more harm in a single day than marijuana has in its five-thousand years of recorded use.
Should be mandatory viewing for any kid heading off to college
S?h?e?e?p? Honor-less dogs with guns, badges, and a penchant for sniffing their own assholes.
That's our war on drugs for you. It is just another excuse to let police and prosecutors do what ever they want. And both main political parties want to keep it that way.
I have a few thoughts on the matter -
Just Like The Soviet Union But With Democracy.
Democracy got us here.
Democracy Mob rule has always worked out to the benefit of all mankind.. as it truly represents the will of people. Stupid founders made us a constitutional republic out of spite..
But the grinder, plus the two sales to SEMCA's informant in a "school zone," which in North Dakota includes colleges, was enough for authorities to threaten Andrew with two Class A felony charges, each carrying a possible 20 year sentence. Or, he could "voluntarily" agree to work as a confidential informant.
Its particularly astounding to me (living in Colorado and in the MJ business) that this crap continues throughout America. Never has it become clearer to me that the war on drugs is misguided and downright dangerous to those living in the land of the free...Americans.
Seems likely the police are the ones that put the bullet in his head.
Why would drug dealers go to the trouble of trying to make it look like a suicide?
Who is worse I sometimes wonder. Criminals adorned with the cloth of law enforcement or just plain unadorned criminals. Personally, I submit it is the former.
Since most of the latter are criminals only because their actions are defined as crimes rather than being viewed as free exchange between two willing participants, I think it is obvious that you are correct.
Why are campus police in charge of a potential murder case? They are not even real police officers...
I gotta say: This is one of the very best Reason TV clips ever.
And the story it tells is a scathing indictment of the War on Drugs. The WoD has so corrupted the idea of justice and law enforcement that officers of the law are more interested busting small-scale retailers of a fairly benign plant than in maintaining a peaceful society.
And when things go wrong, these pigs are far more interested in covering their sorry asses than in investigating a murder and bringing a murderer to justice.
Thanks, reason. I really needed to have my ball sack used for a speed bag this morning. Jesus fucking Christ...
The lead suspect ... any pig on the task force.
Google pay 97$ per hour my last pay check was $8500 working 1o hours a week online. My younger brother friend has been averaging 12k for months now and he works about 22 hours a week. I cant believe how easy it was once I tried it out.
This is wha- I do...... ?????? http://www.netcash5.com
Cop tries to shoot dog. Hits 4 year old girl instead.
http://www.nbc4i.com/story/293.....hits-child
Didn't you read the headline? The girl wasn't shot by a cop, she was hit by gunfire.
My bad. That's why guns should be outlawed. They keep randomly shooting people.
Soo.. the dog shot that poor girl?
There is a real need to put a firm boot on the neck of American policing NOW!
And that does NOT mean getting the feds involved. Hell, that will only make things a hundred times worse.
Elected state level office of special prosecutor?
This is why there are no good cops. They all perpetuate the War on Drugs.
LAPD shoot man seeking assistance in the head. This one will make you scream.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=cjaZnUzMeiI
http://www.latimes.com/local/l.....story.html
I guess the lesson is to NEVER ask the police for help unless it is to be put out of your misery, which they tend to do quite efficiently as in this case.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=01v0ItTqp_I
Good round up of people engaging in guilt by association in an attempt to blame the entire right for the shooting in Charleston.
My personal favorite is Cenk Uygur of the Young Turks getting all high and mighty about evil conservatives. For anyone who doesn't know, Uygur is an Armenian Genocide denier who named his news program after the Young Turks who actually carried out the genocide.
This would be like me naming my news show The Nazi News Hour and when criticized arguing it wasn't a big deal since the Holocaust is a myth concocted by shiftless Jews anyway. I don't think he has the moral authority, therefore, to freak out about southerners flying the Confederate Flag given that none of those people would ever apologize for slave owners the way Uygur apologized for a Turkish committed genocide.
It shocks me that someone who explicitly waves around the fact that he doesn't think the genocide happened, by naming his fucking Youtube show after the perpetrators, isn't written out of the Leftist movement.
You got some shit to answer for, lefties.
Work At Home 100% FREE Opportunity. You will never be asked a single penny. Make at Least $50 Per Day Guaranteed!
Its FREE! Apply Here A LINK: == http://www.worktoday7.com
Upon enrolling at NDSCS, Andrew signed a Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) waiver obligating the school to inform his parents of any disciplinary issues
This doesn't sound right. Mandatory calling parents of adult students for discipline problems? And signing a waiver of your FERPA rights is mandatory for enrollment?
Sgt. Steve Helgeson of the NDSCS Campus Police, the lead officer in charge of the investigation
WTF qualifications does a campus police department of a community college have in investigating a murder? Oh, sorry. "Investigating" a murder. Perfectly qualified for that.
Holy shit. Is that report a turd or what?
On November 22, 2013, Andrew Sadek came voluntarily to the Law Enforcement Center in Wahpeton, ND. The review board did not find any cause for concern with the recorded interview. The charges Sadek was possibly facing were explained to him. The recorded interview was calm in nature and Sadek understood the situation. After the recorded interview, Sadek went through the paperwork to work as a Confidential Informant (CI), which was completed correctly. The review board did not see anything that caused concern with the Confidential Informant process.
And his attorney was....? That's right, even though Sadek was facing felony charges with up to forty years in prison, somehow he didn't have one & wasn't assigned a PD and just completely on his own, without any coercion, became a CI. This report must have been written by Maxwell Smart.
The reasons a CI loses contact varies, but some of the most common reasons are the CI committed new crimes, is incarcerated, or involved with drug usage again, etc.
Wait, what? The CI goes to jail and his handler loses contact with him? Doesn't even run him through their computer lookup if they just stopping calling back? B.S.
Deputy Weber informed the review board that to fulfill his obligation in resolving the charges he had been facing, Sadek needed to conduct one (1) more controlled buy from the individual from the January 2014 buy and also needed to purchase from a new suspect.
So Sadek set up two people to be arrested & needed to come up with a third one. I'm going to go out on a limb and say, since they didn't come up with anything other that a grinder in his possession, Sadek sold small amounts to his buddies. Busting two friends that weren't CIs (who got him arrested to begin with) probably depleted his user friends. He would then had to come up with a stranger. And then there's probably another dealer who's turf he was encroaching on by putting out feelers to strangers. Way too many people for Chief Wiggum to investigate.
Maybe professional drug counselor rollo will come along to tell us how Sadek's death was so much better than going on with life and he got what he deserved.
But wait, there's more! The money shot from the report:
4. Assign a BCI agent to the Wahpeton area and to SEMCA. This would aid in having a direct contact with BCI when dealing with buy funds, reports, CI paperwork, data entry, etc., that is needed when having an operational task force. This would also assist when there are jurisdictional issues around the state.
That's right. Cut the BCI in on the SEMCA action!
Why are police using non-violent, first-time offenders in the very dangerous role of confidential informant?
Because they're the easiest to intimidate. Next question.
I'm just waiting for a reboot of The Punisher where Frank Castle's family dies due to a botched no-knock raid. None of the other Marvel heroes stop him because they're too disgusted.
"Why Are Police Using Non-Violent, First-Time Offenders as Confidential Informants?"
BFYTW.
Cops are stupid, nothing new there.
http://www.Goin-Anon.tk
It was interesting. I didn't mind the fact that there was no romantic interest. Gives you more time for action but you more nice video check this way and comment me
Best Home Deal ??????? http://www.workweb40.com
"Upon enrolling at NDSCS, Andrew signed a Family Educational Rights and Privacy Act (FERPA) waiver obligating the school to inform his parents of any disciplinary issues, but the school never notified the Sadeks following the raid on his dorm room, or any time thereafter."
Since FERPA primarily lists privacy rights and their exceptions, it's more likely that the waiver *permitted* them to inform his parents of any disciplinary issues. What is the evidence that is went beyond that, in more detail?