RE: virus: Nick Berg email I got

From: Eva-Lise Carlstrom (evalise@yahoo.com)
Date: Sat May 15 2004 - 10:50:55 MDT

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    The text you quote below is not from the link you
    included. Where did it come from?

    --Eva

    --- Blunderov <squooker@mweb.co.za> wrote:
    > [Bluderov] Curioser and curioser.
    > Best Regards
    >
    http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2004/05/11/iraq/main616842.shtml

    >
    > <snip>
    > CBS News National Security Correspondent David
    > Martin reports U.S. officials
    > said the FBI questioned Berg in 2002 after a
    > computer password he used in
    > college turned up in the possession of Zacarias
    > Moussaoui, the al Qaeda
    > operative arrested shortly before Sept. 11 for his
    > suspicious activity at a
    > flight school in Minnesota.
    >
    > Moussaoui is now in federal custody and awaiting
    > trial on conspiracy charges
    > stemming from the Sept. 11 attacks.
    >
    > "The suggestion that Mr. Berg was in some way
    > involved in terrorist
    > activity, or may have been linked in some way to
    > terrorist activity, is a
    > suggestion that we do not have any ability to
    > support and we do not believe
    > is a valid one," Ashcroft said at a news conference.
    >
    >
    > The 2002 investigation determined that an e-mail
    > address once used by Berg
    > apparently was obtained by the Moussaoui
    > acquaintances while Berg was
    > briefly an engineering student at the University of
    > Oklahoma in 1999.
    >
    > Berg, a small businessman who went to Iraq seeking a
    > role in reconstruction,
    > was found dead May 8. On May 11, an Islamic Web site
    > posted video in which
    > masked militants beheaded him. The CIA has
    > identified the speaker in the
    > video - the man who murdered Berg - as Abu Musab
    > al-Zarqawi, a terrorist
    > suspected in numerous attacks in Iraq.
    >
    > In the wake of Berg's gruesome murder, the past link
    > to Moussaoui seems a
    > stranger-than-fiction coincidence - an American who
    > inadvertently gave away
    > his computer password to one suspected al Qaeda
    > operative is later murdered
    > by another notorious al Qaeda operative, Zarqawi.
    >
    > The slain man's father, Michael Berg, told reporters
    > that his son met
    > Moussaoui while riding the bus to classes, and had
    > allowed the suspect to
    > use his computer.
    >
    > But the 2002 FBI interview could explain the
    > bureau's interest in Berg while
    > he was detained by authorities in Iraq shortly
    > before the militants
    > kidnapped and killed him.
    >
    > Berg was picked up on March 24 and released on April
    > 6. The details of that
    > detention are the subject of a dispute between the
    > Berg family and the U.S.
    > government.
    >
    > The family contends Berg was detained by the U.S.
    > military, and even filed
    > suit seeking his release on April 5. The U.S.
    > military says Iraqi police
    > detained him. Iraqi police deny that.
    >
    > To back its claims that Berg was in U.S. custody,
    > the family gave The
    > Associated Press copies of e-mails from Beth A.
    > Payne, the U.S. consular
    > officer in Iraq.
    >
    > "I have confirmed that your son, Nick, is being
    > detained by the U.S.
    > military in Mosul. He is safe. He was picked up
    > approximately one week ago.
    > We will try to obtain additional information
    > regarding his detention and a
    > contact person you can communicate with directly,"
    > Payne wrote to Berg's
    > father on April 1.
    >
    > Payne repeated that Berg was "being detained by the
    > U.S. military" in an
    > e-mail the same day to Berg's mother, Suzanne. The
    > next day, Payne wrote
    > that she was still trying to find a local contact
    > for the family, but added
    > that "given the security situation in Iraq it is not
    > easy."
    >
    > The government says the e-mail from Payne was false.
    > State Department
    > spokeswoman Kelly Shannon said Payne's information
    > came from the Coalition
    > Provisional Authority. The authority did not tell
    > Payne until April 7 that
    > Berg had been held by Iraqi police and not the U.S.
    > military, she said.
    >
    > "As Mr. Berg had been released, the consular officer
    > did not convey this
    > information to the family because he was released,
    > thankfully," Shannon
    > said. "And we thought he was on his way."
    >
    > Coalition spokesman Dan Senor said Wednesday that
    > Iraqi police arrested Berg
    > in Mosul on March 24 because local authorities
    > believed he may have been
    > involved in "suspicious activities."
    >
    > In Mosul, police chief Maj. Gen. Mohammed Khair
    > al-Barhawi insisted Thursday
    > that his department had never arrested Berg and
    > maintained he had no
    > knowledge of the case.
    >
    > During his detention, Berg was questioned by FBI
    > agents three times.
    >
    > Berg is believed to have been kidnapped days after
    > Iraqi police or coalition
    > forces released him. The family has blamed the
    > government for keeping him in
    > custody for too long while anti-American violence
    > escalated in Iraq.
    >
    > Shortly before Berg's disappearance, he was warned
    > by the FBI that Iraq was
    > too volatile a place for unprotected American
    > civilians and that he could be
    > harmed, a senior FBI official, speaking on condition
    > of anonymity, said
    > Wednesday.
    >
    > Officials said the U.S. government warned Berg to
    > leave Iraq, and offered
    > him a flight out of the country, a month before his
    > grisly death.
    >
    > The Bergs said they want to know if the government
    > had received an offer to
    > trade Iraqi prisoners for Nicholas Berg. On the
    > videotape of his death,
    > Berg's killers made a reference to a trade offer,
    > but U.S. officials have
    > said they knew of no such offer.
    >
    >
    > Michael Berg said he wanted to hear President Bush
    > address the issue.
    >
    > "I would like to ask him if it is true that al Qaeda
    > offered to trade my
    > son's life for the life of another person," Michael
    > Berg said. "And if that
    > is true, well, I need that information. . and I
    > think the people of the
    > United States of America need to know what the fate
    > of their sons and
    > daughters might be in the hands of the Bush
    > administration."
    > </snip>
    >
    >
    >
    > ---
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