Monday, November 3, 2008

Oregon: CIA-Linked Mercenary Firm Offers to 'Detain Troublemakers' on Election Day

Also see: "Evergreen Defense: War profiteer, NRSC donor... and now, election security?"

By Nathan Hodge
blog.wired.com
November 03, 2008

CIA-linked private military contractor Evergreen Defense & Security Services offered to post sentries at Oregon polling stations on election day, "detaining troublemakers" and making sure voters "do not get out of control."

In an e-mail to local election supervisors, obtained by the McMinnville, Oregon News Register, Evergreen president Tom Wiggins said he "recognized the potential conflict" that could occur on November 4th. "Never has there been a more heated battle in the race for president."

The company, he said, 'proposes to post sentries at each voting center on November 4th to assure that disputes amongst citizens do not get out of control. All guards will be unarmed, but capable of stopping any violence that may occur and detaining troublemakers until law enforcement arrives.'

Evergreen's website describes its security arm as having "nearly five decades of experience working with the U.S. Armed Forces, the Department of Defense, the Department of Interior, the United Nations, NASA, and the U.S. Air Mobility Command. Many of our contracts include highly sensitive work-scope, and take place in locations ranging from the deserts of the Middle East to the jungles of South America to the highest peaks of Mt. McKinley in Alaska."

According to the News Register, Evergreen "exudes the gung-ho patriotism that is associated with the company founder, a political conservative who enjoys close ties with the federal government and military."

No kidding. Back in the late '80s, the company "acknowledged one agreement under which his companies provide occasional jobs and cover to foreign nationals the CIA wants taken out of other countries or brought into the United States." More recently, Evergreen's parent company flew Bill O'Reilly into Kuwait in 2006, according to SourceWatch.

But rest easy: The Oregonian reports that the company struck out with its sales pitch.

http://blog.wired.com/defense/2008/11/spooky-defense.html

1 comment:

  1. Hah! Great story. Wasn't there once a bunch of Orangemen this side of the border who maintained "order" and broke heads on election day? This election could be a real history lesson.

    I note that although Evergreen didn't get the contract, they didn't mention if heh someone heh heh else heh did.

    Glad to be rural this cloudy twenty-first century morn,
    Lord Reptor.

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