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Fbi Quotes

Quotes tagged as "fbi" Showing 1-30 of 127
“We are humiliated and disillusioned once again by our own countrymen because they attempt to trample on us, which increases our isolation and unimportance.”
Dorlies von Kaphengst Meissner Rasmussen, Escaping the Russian Onslaught: A Family’s Story of Fleeing the Russian Army after Hitler’s Nazi Regime

Jennifer Lynn Barnes
“Too young to party, just odd enough to participate in federal investigations of serial murder. Story of my life.”
Jennifer Lynn Barnes, All In

Albert Einstein
“I came to America because of the great, great freedom which I heard existed in this country. I made a mistake in selecting America as a land of freedom, a mistake I cannot repair in the balance of my lifetime.”
Albert Einstein

Mac Barnett
“He checked out his surrounding. More books. A drinking fountain. A poster showing a guy slam-dunking a basketball with one hand and holding a book in the other, urging kids to READ! Weird, thought Steve. How can he even see the hoop?

...

You see, Steven, Librarians are the most elite, best trained secret force in the United States of America. Probably in the world."
"No way."
"Yes way."
"What about the FBI?"
"Featherweights."
"The CIA?"
Mackintosh snorted. "Don't make me laugh. Those guys can't even dunk a basketball andd read a book at the same time.”
Mac Barnett, The Case of the Case of Mistaken Identity

P.T. Macias
“Oh dios mio, she makes me burn, she makes me need. She is etching herself into mi alma”
P.T. Macias, Hot & Spicy

John Grisham
“You wired the kid," Truemann said meekly to no one in particular.
"Why not? No crime. You're the FBI, remember. You boys run more wire than AT&T."[Reggie Love]”
John Grisham, The Client
tags: fbi, humor

James Allen Moseley
“Too many people think the ends justify the means. They should all be shot!” said the President.”
James Allen Moseley, The Duke of D.C.: The American Dream

Paula Stokes
“I don’t make to-do lists, but if I did, today’s would have gone something like this: 1. get drunk, 2. get laid, 3. go surfing (not necessarily in that order.) Noticeably absent from the list: get arrested. And yet here I am, spending my eighteenth birthday with my back against the wall of the Colonel’s hunting cabin, two FBI agents prowling the dark with their guns drawn, both trying to get me to confess to the murder of my friend Preston DeWitt.”
Paula Stokes, Liars, Inc.

Bryan Burrough
“To the generations of Americans raised since World War 2, the identities of criminals such as Charles "Pretty Boy" Floyd, Baby Face Nelson, "Ma" Barker, John Dillenger, and Clyde Barrow are no more real than are Luke Skywalker and Indiana Jones. After decades spent in the washing machine of popular culture, their stories have been bled of all reality, to an extent that few Americans today know who these people actually were, much less that they all rose to national prominence at the same time. They were real.”
Bryan Burrough, Public Enemies: America's Greatest Crime Wave and the Birth of the FBI, 1933-34

Dean Koontz
“...he dreamed of being director of the FBI instead of attorney general. Considering some of the unsavory characters who had held the latter post, Milo didn't have the credentials for it.”
Dean Koontz, Relentless

“This monograph by Special Agent Ken Lanning (1992) is merely a guide for those who may investigate this phenomenon, as the title indicates, and not a study. The author is a well known skeptic regarding cult and ritual abuse allegations and has consulted on a number of cases but to our knowledge has not personally investigated the majority of these cases, some of which have produced convictions. p179
[refers to Lanning, K. V. (1992)
Investigator's guide to allegations of "ritual" child abuse. Quantico, VA: National Center for the Analysis of Violent Crime.]”
Pamela Sue Perskin, Cult and Ritual Abuse: Its History, Anthropology, and Recent Discovery in Contemporary America

James Allen Moseley
“Suddenly, a spiral of lightning snaked across the frowning sky and struck Ray and Ilsa. In a spectacular flash, they vanished. An earth-shattering bang of thunder knocked over all the FBI agents. Ilsa’s file of genealogical records flew into the air. The thoroughly singed pages flew down the street, twisting in the frantic breeze. The bullhorn fell from the limp fingers of Agent Schweppes’ hand. The rain began to fall like bullets.”
James Allen Moseley, The Duke of D.C.: The American Dream

Suzanne Ferrell
“Something was in her mouth. Sami's tongue slid along the edges of something plastic. Flat, low ridges, holes-an adjustable strap. A baseball cap?

Another taste. Hair spray. Gross.

Someone had stuffed her baseball cap in her mouth, and from the feel of it they had taped it in place. Her arms were tied behind her and she lay face down on the floor-of what? Her car. The carpeting scraped her cheek every time they hit a bump.

Panic flooded Sami's senses. She came instantly awake. Inhaling deeply through her nose, she willed herself to calm down. Her working motto flashed through her brain, panic never accomplished anything. Of course she had never been kidnapped and tied up before.

In the dim light of passing cars, she glimpsed things-paper gum wrappers, an old straw, one whopper wrapper, a CD cover.

That's where Sting went. Been looking for that for days. Man did she need to vacuum this car out.

A metallic scent hit her nose. She'd recognize that smell until the day she died. Blood. And by the odor, someone had lost a great deal of it.”
Suzanne Ferrell, Kidnapped

Becky Masterman
“Sometimes the old-age serenity thing is crap.”
Becky Masterman, We Were Killers Once

“Walt Disney, because of his fervent anticommunism, developed a cordial relationship with the Federal Bureau of Investigation and its director, J. Edgar Hoover. Herbert Mitgang goes so far as to argue that 'from 1940 until his death in 1966 [Walt Disney served] as a secret informer for the Los Angeles office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.”
Henry A. Giroux, The Mouse that Roared: Disney and the End of Innocence

“The FBI, the country's national security apparatus, have declared white supremacy to be the country's most dangerous domestic terrorist threat.”
April Ryan, Black Women Will Save the World: An Anthem – A White House Reporter's Chronicle Featuring Kamala Harris, Maxine Waters, and Valerie Jarrett

“What an analysis of ten years’ worth of Justice Department data shows is that Islamic terrorism in the United States is not an immediate and dangerous threat.”
Trevor Aaronson, The Terror Factory: Inside the FBI's Manufactured War on Terrorism

“In the decade since 9/11, the FBI has built the largest network of spies ever to exist in the United States—with ten times as many informants on the streets today as there were during the infamous Cointelpro operations under FBI director J. Edgar Hoover—with the majority of these spies focused on ferreting out terrorism in Muslim communities.”
Trevor Aaronson, The Terror Factory: Inside the FBI's Manufactured War on Terrorism

Julie James
“Because I love you. I think I’ve always loved you, from that very first morning in the auditorium, when you stood up and inspired our whole class with your speech. You amazed me every day at the Academy, and now that we’ve reconnected—and you’re actually being nice to me for a change. Those feelings have only gotten stronger.”
Julie James, The Thing About Love

“Kid, every murder is like an onion. It's got layers to it. The closer you get to the center, the more you want to cry.”
Ava Strong, Twisted Truth

Holly Smale
“Is that.." I swallow as my entire body begins fizzing. "Is that them?"
"Yes," Toby says. "Or no. That's a very vague question, Harriet. They wouldn't let you into the FBI with that kind of approach. I've checked."
"One day," Nat says, sighing, returning from the office, "you're going to answer a question like a normal person, Toby, and we'll all pass out from shock.”
Holly Smale, Picture Perfect

Sharon Carter
“I'm not one of your playthings, Mr. Morgan. I'm here because I have questions concerning your shipping operations," she declared earnestly, taking a seat at the large, round table.”
Sharon Carter, Love Auction III: When Love Finds You

Michael Franzese
“In our life, you didn’t have a crime, and then they go investigate it, they were investigating you, to see what crime you might commit.”
Michael Franzese, Mafia Democracy: How Our Republic Became a Mob Racket

“He said he would be willing to meet with any group, white or black, if they are willing and are honestly sincere in trying to find the problem and present a solution to the racial problem. He said the lack of education for the white as well as the black is one of the causes for the social problem in the United States. He said education will replace deficiency in the Negro and deficiency in the white person. Negro leaders have to accept the fact that there are problems between the white and black people and they must be sincere in trying to obtain a solution to their problems.”
Clayborne Carson, Malcolm X: The FBI File

Sean Howe
“In a few instances, security informants in the New Left got carried away during a demonstration, assaulted police, etc.,” the FBI admitted in an internal report, but this was a gross understatement. FBI-supervised informants in Seattle also built bombs and provided them to anti-war activists.”
Sean Howe, Agents of Chaos: Thomas King Forçade, High Times, and the Paranoid End of the 1970s
tags: fbi

K.M. Mayville
“I wasn't used to seeing a lone wolf. I could've sword the FBI sent them out in identical pairs. This one even have that generic look about him, like God had rolled a lot of him off a belt thirty years ago, got 'em to quality control, gave 'em one good once over and said, 'Eh, good enough for government work.”
K.M. Mayville, A Cult of Questionable Motives

John E. Douglas
“Often, I’d found that local law enforcement was not particularly thrilled to have us consulting on a case. Either they were wary of the Bureau’s reputation for moving in and then claiming all the credit because they wanted to control the investigation on their own, or they were worried our analysis wouldn’t conform with the theory both the police and the community had firmly in mind.”
John E. Douglas, When a Killer Calls

Margaret     Roberts
“According to Terry Nichols, that winter of 1995, in Junction City, Timothy McVeigh accidentally let slip his FBI handler’s name: “Larry Potts.” Potts, the demoted former FBI deputy director, would surely have outraged McVeigh for his prominent roles in the FBI sieges at Ruby Ridge and Waco. Potts had set the rules of engagement that led to the horrendous sniper killing of Vicki Weaver on her cabin porch in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, as she held her newborn baby in her arms. Then at Waco, Potts had toured the scene late in the FBI’s long siege and recommended the attorney general approve the deadly tear gas raid that ended the Texas standoff with scores of deaths.

McVeigh said he believed Potts was manipulating him and forcing him to go off script, which I understood meant to change the target of the bombing,” Nichols said. “That was the only time I ever heard McVeigh refer to Larry Potts in that context.”
Margaret Roberts, Blowback: The Untold Story of the FBI and the Oklahoma City Bombing

Margaret     Roberts
“The Oklahoma City bombing was an FBI PATCON plot allowed to go too far, unleashing neo-Nazi violence on hundreds of innocent citizens.”
Margaret Roberts, Blowback: The Untold Story of the FBI and the Oklahoma City Bombing

Margaret     Roberts
“Eric Holder (Deputy Attorney General) and Janet Napolitano (Secretary of Homeland Security) — both of whom were knee deep in PATCON and the cover-up of the true circumstances behind the deaths of [168] men, women and children in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995.”
Margaret Roberts, Blowback: The Untold Story of the FBI and the Oklahoma City Bombing

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