• Re: Treasury secretary won't say whether dept surveils Americans' purch

    From Traitor Hanging Tree@21:1/5 to All on Sun Feb 11 07:31:55 2024
    XPost: alt.government.abuse, alt.politics.usa, alt.politics.usa.constitution XPost: talk.politics.guns

    On 03 Mar 2022, Molly Bolt <mollythebolt666@gmail.com> posted some news:c9a078e8-2d6d-4e20-9b3a-df2339b3cb6en@googlegroups.com:

    Janet Yellen should be hung with the other traitors. Get the ropes
    ready.

    WASHINGTON (TND) — Treasury Secretary Janet Yellen avoided declaring
    whether the department has surveilled consumers’ purchases in a House
    hearing on financial stability Tuesday.

    Yellen refrained from disclosing to Rep. Ann Wagner, R-Mo., whether the Treasury instructed financial institutions to search purchasers’
    transactions.

    “We received a letter from you, I believe, on this topic, and we intend
    to investigate fully and to respond,” Yellen said to Rep. Wagner.

    After Rep. Wagner pressed the secretary to directly address her inquiry,
    Yellen pivoted to describing the responsibilities of the department’s
    Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), which collects, analyzes
    and disseminates financial intelligence. Upon Rep. Wagner’s third
    repetition of her question, Yellen promised a “thorough look” into what
    has occurred.

    “Well, this is really concerning, and I hope that you get to it as
    quickly as possible,” Rep. Wagner responded. The lawmaker claimed Yellen advocated for reporting transactions of $600 or more to the IRS.

    READ MORE | Feds flagged bank transactions for bibles, hunting firearms
    after Jan 6, congressman says

    “Increasingly, we are hearing the federal government is suggesting banks
    search private financial transactions using highly partisan political
    terms or check to see if customers made purchases that could be
    associated with legal sales of firearms or even religious texts,” Rep.
    Wagner remarked.

    Last month, the Judiciary Committee found FinCEN informed financial institutions of the “typologies” of various people of interest, as well
    as search words like “Trump” and “MAGA” for identifying transactions on
    behalf of the federal government.

    FinCEN also warned institutions of extremism indicators, such as bus or
    plane tickets and rental car charges to areas with “no apparent purpose”
    or religious texts containing extremist views, according to the
    committee.

    “In other words, FinCEN used large financial institutions to comb
    through the private transactions of their customers for suspicious
    charges on the basis of protected political and religious expression,” Judiciary Committee Chairman Jim Jordan, R-Ohio, wrote.

    READ MORE | USPS taking heat from Congress for policy allowing
    disclosure of customer info

    The committee also found FinCEN distributed instructions on how to
    detect possible terrorists and active shooters using codes for “small
    arms” and “sporting and recreational goods and supplies” and keywords
    like “Cabela’s” and “Dick’s Sporting Goods.”

    “Despite these transactions having no apparent criminal nexus—and, in
    fact, relate to Americans exercising their Second Amendment rights—
    FinCEN seems to have adopted a characterization of these Americans as
    potential threat actors,” Rep. Jordan said.

    Rep. Jordan alleged the “pervasive” financial surveillance into private transactions was “alarming” and raises “serious doubts” about FinCEN’s
    respect for “fundamental” civil liberties.

    https://mynbc15.com/news/nation-world/treasury-secretary-wont-say-whether -dept-surveils-americans-purchases-concerning-janet-yellen-ann-wagner-fin cen-transactions-financial-crimes-enforcement-network

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