On June 27, 2014, a promising electric student at North Dakota Science University (NDSCS) in Wahpeton, North Dakota was removed from the Red River of North Dakota and Minnesota, the remains of Andrew Sadek, 20 years old. .
After missing for two months, the young man was shot in his head and found that he was carrying a back pack full of rocks.
One of the most dangerous college students died in one of the safest cities in the province. Violent crime was very rare and did not lead to a thorough investigation. In fact, the police said immediately they suspected a foul.
Such a hypothesis would not be credible, but in the coming months Andrew was working as a confidential information provider for the police, authorities have used the authorities to break students and feed them as baits I know that. . Cataclysm
The panel is responsible solely for the indifferent official indifference to the sad family, and the lack of transparency in asking questions from the authorities rather than asking more questions.
The most important of these questions is as follows. Why does the police use non-violent first-time criminals as a highly dangerous person for confidential information providers?
Andrew Saadec, who grew up on a family-run farm in Rogers, North Dakota, actively raised cattle, especially parents, who lost Nick's first son in a car accident in 2005.
In May 2014, Andrew disappeared in a few weeks after graduation. A few days later, Sadkes received the shocking news that Andrew was arrested on two serious crimes released by regulated substances.
In an interview with Reason TV, Andrew's mother Tami expressed the deceased son as "family activist." His only legitimate rhetoric was a speeding ticket.
"His dream is to become an electrical engineer and take over the family farm," Tammy told Andrew. "We let him go to college, and he did well at the university, so that was a shock to us."
During the two months of suffering, SedEx prayed that Andrew would return to the farm to help spring delivery, and the police continued to assume Andrew was in the forest.
I am shooting. I am wearing a pack full of rocks. He was not wearing the clothes I saw last time. I do not have his wallet. Necropsy confirms that suicide or murder is not definitive and no weapons are found.
According to Sadec, Sergeant. Steve Hurgerson of NDSCS Campus Police, who is responsible for the investigation, tried to convince them that the son wore a rocky backpack and shoot himself and pushed into the river in some way.
Tammy said sergeant. Helgenson told her, "This is what children have done in the area, they committed suicide."
Nobody knows that Andrew supports this theory. His friend Justin Rippentrop was to Reason TV, Andrew was a "leisurely, generous, fun person" who never showed the tendency of depression, his mental condition seemed particularly good as the graduation date approached. Importantly, none of the universities said Andrew was showing signs of emotional distress and could not find a suicide memo.
It was a 19 - year - old schizophrenic patient who was cooperating with his accomplice, the government; the masking officer had a lot of encounters with syrae; confidential information provider; during the trial, The main problem is mainly because his lawyers are characterized by his plan and the efforts repeated by the information provider to promote the implementation of the bombs 163 who are 51-year-old Egyptian immigrants Information Provider, Osama Eldawoody was recruited by the New York City Police after 9 / 11.164 as an information provider. During his term as an information provider, Eldawoody attended the conference. The New York mosque has a service of 575 prayers, sometimes four to five times a day, and also records the number of license plates of various congregations 166 Police monitoring of a mosque in New York City is a survey It is an important part of the strategy. Terrorist activities 166
Traditionally, law enforcement agencies and other criminal justice agencies were responsible for the confidentiality of those information. Therefore, federal rule title 28, part 20, part C, and the National Crime Information Center (NCIC) policy documents approved on December 6, 1982 until mid-1999 require management and exchange of criminal justice information did. Provided by a criminal justice agency, or in some cases a non-criminal justice agency under the control of a criminal justice agency