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My Experience of Getting Detained by the National Security Agency

Posted by on Mar 22, 2014 in Blog, Personal, Politics, Travel | 7 comments

 

NSA-Entrance

This is the only photo I can legally show you of my recent visit to the National Security Agency.

 

Three flaps of a starlet’s wing off the Baltimore-Washington Parkway, peering over and above the surrounding treetops of piney woods nestled in the rolling Maryland countryside, there’s an ugly rectangular building tiled in the grey-mirrored glass.

Several buildings actually.  They’re grouped into one ominous compound, almost in circle-the-wagons mode, purposely secluded from the outside world and walled off by high-fences topped with razor-wire, ringed by heavily-patroled parking lots with late-model vehicles driven by black-ops bureaucrats.

It’s them versus the world.  Within their universe, everyone is a suspect.  All are potential enemies, even those who walk in and out of those ugly rectangular buildings every single day.  No one is trusted.

Every movement within and around the compound is monitored by non-stop surveillance.  All the time.  Everywhere.  And — those suspicious eyes and nosy ears extend way beyond just the piney woods.  They know what we do.  They know what we say.  They know what we write.  They know what we text.  All this leads to speculation about what’s coming next — will they ultimately know what we think? 

This place has no visitors.  This place doesn’t welcome guests.  This place might as well not exist at all.  Aside from the towers and wires and otherwordly white domes, those ugly grey buildings might otherwise blend in well with the broader and more expansive federal quilt of the national security and defense establishment which has come to blanket (some would say suffocate) the greater National Capital area, a mammoth region of three states growing by the month which now stretches from just south of Baltimore all the way down some 50 miles south through the District of Columbia, across the Potomac, into Northern Virginia and on to Triangle and Quantico — best known as the home of the U.S. Marine Corps, and what’s known in intelligence inner circles as “The Farm.”  [See Footnote 1]

This is a complex of secrets and secrecy.  It’s an arena of perpetual paranoia.  It’s a regimented information labor camp where the loyal foot soldiers who come and go 24-hours-a-day, 365-days-a-year, are the spookiest of spooks.  Not because they’re evil people.  Rather because they’re so extraordinarily knowledgable and powerful, and yet so ordinary.

Today’s superspy isn’t James Bond sitting at a Baccarat table sipping a martini.  He (and increasingly she) is a GS-11 civil servant wearing some cotton-polyester blend purchased on sale at Target with kids’ soccer games to attend on Saturdays.  This is what the national defense establishment has become — not massive armies of soldiers and tanks and navies of battleships — but countless anonymous faces toiling silently behind desks topped with the latest flatscreens who can change lives with a single mouseclick.

And yet, it’s all such a mirage.  As hard as this secret place tries to dissuade the curious from gazing beyond the fence or speculating as to what nefarious deeds happen behind those mirrors of grey glass, the bunker mentality within triggers quite the opposite response.  Any impartial observer is left to conclude that no place that’s this inhospitable can possibly be up to much good.

Earlier today, I found this out firsthand.

On Friday, March 21st, the National Security Agency detained me for nearly two hours for “trespassing into a restricted area.”  What follows is the story of that most unusual ordeal at the entrance to the smartest building in the world.

[See Footnote 2]

***************

The signs off the Baltimore-Washington Parkway read as follows:

NSA — NEXT RIGHT

NSA — AUTHORIZED VEHICLES ONLY

NSA — RESTRICTED ACCESS

Naturally, I didn’t heed any of the warnings.  I didn’t follow the rules.  I’m stubborn, some might even say stupid.  Point conceded.

I wondered.  What would happen if I pulled into the parking lot of the National Security Agency?  Does anyone ever test their security?  Remember, this is unabashedly America’s most secretive government agency.  Its size, scope, staff, and budget exceed that of the Central Intelligence Agency.  That’s right, it’s bigger than the CIA!  And up until a few years ago, most Americans probably couldn’t even tell you what “NSA” stands for.  Accordingly, let me try and explain.  Put into simple terms, it’s where all the phone conversations and e-mails, and texts from just about anywhere in the world are collected, analyzed, re-analyzed, and stored.  It’s the world’s largest communication database.  But if this all sounds like the Library of Congress, think again.  It’s not.

See, there’s a little problem.  That’s because there are some legitimate questions as to what exactly is going on inside the NSA, and how much of what they do is legal.  Come to find out, much of what they do is illegal.  They’re now spying on Americans.

And hardly anyone is doing much about it.  Short of fighting in the courts and trying to reduce their budgets (which are top secret), there’s not much we can do about it.  We’ve all become targets.

***************

I did have some legitimate reasons for visiting the National Security Agency, beyond simple curiosity and some misguided fantasy to engage in political protest.

In town this weekend on a Poker Night in America television shoot, Maryland Live Casino is only a few miles away.  In fact, off the road from the distance, the huge casino might very well be indecipherable from the NSA building, or any other large government installation in the area.

My crazy idea was to have a few of the poker players “accidentally” make a wrong turn off the B/W expressway, end up stuck in the NSA parking lot and get thrown out of a restricted area by uniformed police officers.  Then, capture it all on film.  I wondered — what would happen if a few well-known poker players pulled up into this forbidden zone?  What’s the worst thing that could go wrong?  Being asked to leave?  What are they going to do — shoot Darvin Moon?

Well, I wasn’t about to let our cast and crew take such a monumental risk without a trial run.  Who knows what the NSA might actually do if they saw us with a bunch of electronic equipment and movie cameras?  They could seize everything we own, arrest us, and ship us off to Guantanamo.  As appealing as it seems to have Steve Dannenmann waterboarded, I wasn’t going to gamble the entire production on the whims of some security official carrying a sidearm at the National Security Agency.

I’m dumb, but I’m not stupid.

So, I was willing to play the unrehearsed off-camera role of guinea pig-sacrificial lamb-test dummy.  At 2:30 on Friday afternoon just as a cold rain began to fall over central Maryland, I ventured off on a lonely road.  I took the forbidden exit.  Moments later, I would find myself detained and under interrogation.  [See Footnote 3]

***************

While driving and slowly approaching that ugly grey building, I rolled down my car window and snapped several photographs, I’d later learn a federal crime that carried the possibility of five-year imprisonment and a $10,000 fine, per offense. 

The photos had innocuous intentions really, simple location shots which were meant to be shared with the crew when and if we decided to go through with the crazy idea of filming the poker players testing America’s most fiercely-protected bunker of homeland security.

Suddenly out of nowhere, someone I couldn’t see and from a place unknown shouted — PHOTO!

PHOTO!  WHITE CAR!  NEW YORK PLATES!

At that instant, I’d reached the front gate to the NSA employee foot entrance.  Apparently, I’d made it further inside than most unwelcome guests.  A perfectly-chiseled federal officer brandishing a depot of automatic weapons with several live rounds of ammunition with arms reach stepped out from a hut and approached the car.  The following conversation ensured:

“What’s the nature of your business here, sir?”

“I’m on a location shoot for a new television show.”

“Were you taking photographs?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Why were you taking photographs?”

“As I said, I’m here scouting a place to film a new television show and I wanted to see if there was a visitor’s center where I could come and ask permission.”

This is protected property.  We don’t have a visitor’s center.” 

“You mean like, you don’t give tours?

Ooops.  I didn’t mean to come across as a smart ass.  But sometimes I can’t help it.  It’s in my nature.  From the instant those words left my mouth, I realized that was the wrong thing to say.

“Sir, pull your vehicle to the side.  I will need identification and proof of registration.”

“It’s a rental car.”

Within minutes, five squad cars emblazoned with NATIONAL SECURITY AGENCY POLICE pulled up beside me.  Uniformed officers stood around as another man in a suit began asking me the questions.  Oh, and it was raining.

Not good.

****************

I was detained for an unknown period of time, perhaps a few hours.  It seemed longer than it was.  I was forced to wait until employees began streaming out of the building.  One presumes this must have been at least 4 or 5 pm.  The workers consisted of all kinds of people wearing different military uniforms (fatigues, dess unis, camouflage) and civilian clothes — a mishmash of career spook bureaucrats bonded by regiment and patriotism.

My records were apparently searched during this period of detainment.  I can only speculate what databases were accessed.  Fortunately, my record is clean, despite some very odd associations over the years.  Other officers came up and asked questions.  Others surrounded the car.  Then, yet another officer approached and asked me to step out of the car.

This really wasn’t good.

Oh shit, I thought.  Did they find my website?  All that anti-defense budget stuff and the pro-Palestinian sentiment aren’t going to go over very well with this crowd.  The second officer started to grill me all over again.

“Mr. Dalla — normally, I would ask you like 60 questions.  We have to make sure you’re not Ivan the Terrible coming to take us down.”

“I understand, officer.  I’ll answer your questions honestly.  I assure you I will cooperate.”

So, we went through it again.  And again.  I repeated myself, with the same recount of what happened.  Obviously, the officers were looking for consistency.

I knew I’d be released — eventually.  I wasn’t in any real danger.  But I sure could have been inconvenienced a great deal.  And, according to law, I could have been hit with heavy fines, even imprisonment.  This is the iron grip that permeates within a nation that sacrifices its liberties for “national security.”  Yeah, there’s a valid reason to protect federal installations, especially places where sensitive work goes on.  I get that.  I don’t like it.  But I get it.  I wish there was more transparency.  But, that’s the world we live in, especially in a post-9-11 age.

My cell phone was confiscated.  It was checked and re-checked.  Photos I had taken earlier were erased (with no objection from me).  I was informed that each photo of a restricted area carried a potential $10,000 fine and five years imprisonment.  Adding up a dozen photos, that could have been quite a heavy penalty.  And I don’t think they take MasterCard.  [See Footnote 4]

Clearly, the intent was to intimidate me.  It worked.  I was ready to get the hell out of there, with no desire ever to come back.  Mission accomplished.

In fairness to the security officers, they were polite and professional throughout the ordeal.  They were also firm and businesslike.  I was treated fairly and respectfully.  No complaints.  My beef is with what goes on inside that ugly building.  That’s where our lives hang in the balance of a microchip.

Once my name finally checked out after a mega-search and my identity didn’t trigger an alias for Ivan the Terrible, my identification was returned.  I was released and permitted to go on my way and was escorted out of the restricted area.

***************

So, what secrets do lie within?

What do they really know about what we do?

Moreover, what shall become later of this information they gather?  Perhaps most important what will “national security” mean within our society in another decade, or two?  What will they know about us all then?  Will anyone care?

I wonder — will there be any secrets left?

They’re watching us.  But who’s watching them?

Footnote 1 — “The Farm” is where many covert operatives within the Central Intelligence Agency are trained.

Footnote 2 — Read more about this most secretive of federal agencies here at the National Security Agency Wiki page.

Footnote 3 — This was actually the second time I’ve pulled into the NSA parking lot.  About 15 years ago, I ran out of gas while driving on the B/W Parkway, and coasted off the ramp into the same parking lot (it’s been renovated since then, I came to find out).  I was provided with a free can of gas and was escorted off the property, without incident.

Footnote 4 — The federal officer explained that no photos are permitted which might also contain employee faces or license numbers of cars in the parking lot.  The fear is “the enemy” could target an NSA employee.  So, any imagery of the NSA you see in media has been doctored where all means of identification are removed.  A search of “NSA PHOTOS” reveals only stock photos of the building and generic shots of some insensitive areas. 

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Mitch Garber vs. Andy Abboud — Best Sound Bites

Posted by on Mar 20, 2014 in Blog, General Poker, Las Vegas, World Series of Poker | 0 comments

 

Howard Stutz, Mitch Garber, Nolan Dalla

Howard Stutz (Reporter, Las Vegas Review-Journal), Mitch Garber (CEO, Caesars Interactive, and WSOP.com), and Nolan Dalla

 

The opening day of the IGaming North America 2014 conference took place yesterday at the Planet Hollywood Casino, in Las Vegas.  Read my initial reaction here:  Andy Abboud Melts Down at IGaming North America Conference.

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A Nation of Tip Jars

Posted by on Mar 17, 2014 in Blog, Las Vegas, Rants and Raves, Restaurant Reviews | 20 comments

 

tip-jar

Nothing screams “WTF!” louder than the scene I witnessed last week here in Las Vegas.  Sitting atop the glass counter above all kinds of expensive gold and diamond jewelry was — a tip jar. 

I shit you not.

At a jewelry store!

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Isolationism Redefined

Posted by on Mar 16, 2014 in Blog, Politics | 4 comments

 

state-department-photo

 

Global conflicts don’t unfold in black and white anymore.  They never did.  The world is an increasingly indistinguishable shade of grey.  It sure seemed we were on the right side back during World War II.  The same can be said of the Cold War, too.  But since then, American hegemony hasn’t changed much, while many parts of the world have morphed into a vast landscape without borders, tariffs, and restrictions. 

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Facing the Firing Squad: Robert “Chipburner” Turner

Posted by on Mar 15, 2014 in Blog, Facing the Firing Squad, General Poker | 2 comments

RobertsPic

 

MEET ROBERT TURNER

It’s not often you meet the inventor of a poker game.

That’s the case with Robert “Chipburner” Turner, a longtime veteran of the green felt who has devoted his life to poker.

Turner initially invented and helped to popularize Omaha High-Low Split, arguably the second most popular form of poker played inside many cardrooms today.  He introduced the game of Omaha (which was then played “high only”) to Nevada in 1982, and to California in 1986 when flop games first became legal.

Over the years, Turner has worked as a casino executive, poker host, and tournament promoter.  He’s been part of management at the Hustler Casino and the Bicycle Casino in Los Angeles.  He created Legends of Poker for the Bicycle Casino and the National Championship of Poker for Hollywood Park Casino, both which started in 1995.  He created World Team Poker, the first professional league for poker, in 2000.  He helped to create “Live at the Bike,” the first live gaming site broadcast on the Internet, in 2002.  Turner is currently working with his new companies Crown Digital Games developing mobile apps and Vision Poker, a poker marketing and managing group.

As a player, Turner is a living legend among his peers, having enjoyed success both in tournaments and as a highly-respected cash game pro.  In sheer volume, Turner probably won and cashed in more tournaments overall than any other player during the 1980s and 1990s.  His first major career victory took place at the Grand Prix of Poker, in 1986.  Since then, he’s won a World Series of Poker gold bracelet and posted what might be an unbreakable record for consecutive high finishes in the WSOP Main Event Championship — coming in 10th place in 1991, 36th place in 1992, 13th place in 1993, and 6th place in 1994.

I first met Turner back in 1995.  That year, we dined out together at the Chinese restaurant inside Binion’s Horseshoe, this while the WSOP was going on.  Linda Johnson and Jan Fisher made our introduction.  But Turner seemed preoccupied with something else during our dinner, for reasons only a poker player would understand.

Turner made a commitment to attend the dinner but then left the table repeatedly between courses.  He would order his meal, then leave for five minutes, return and sample the appetizers, and then rush out the door again.  This went on for more than an hour.  Finally, it became apparent that Turner was “in action.”  He was playing in a WSOP gold bracelet while having dinner.  That wacky multi-tasking moment always stuck with me, and in many ways defines Turner, who always seems to strive for balance.  It also made quite an impression that Turner, someone I’d never met before, would keep his dinner engagement in spite of the fact he was playing in the biggest poker event of the year.

Not surprisingly, Turner acquired a well-deserved nickname to go along with his unpredictable style, which was a novel tournament strategy at the time.  Everyone began calling him “Chip Burner Turner,” because he’d either be one of the first ones out of the tournament or be among the chip leaders within the first few hours.  Turner doesn’t mess around.  Turner doesn’t waste time.

Indeed, when it comes to poker, Turner has pretty much done it all and seen it all.  That is, except for “Facing the Firing Squad.”

Until now.

Visit Robert Turner’s website here — ROBERT TURNER POKER

Follow Robert Turner on Twitter at — @thechipburner

Read more about Robert Turner’s history with Omaha High-Low Split here — CARDPLAYERLIFESTYLE

Robertblack

 

What are some of the things you stand for?

Fairness and integrity in poker.  I wish all poker games could be played fairly, and without collusion and cheating.

 

What are some of the things you stand against?

Politicians who do not understand the human suffering that some people endure right in their own backyards.

 

What living person do you admire the most, and why?

My four children — Tammy, Jaden, Julian and Gracie — who range in age from 10 to 47 years of age.  My life wouldn’t have been the same without them.  They have been the driving force of my life and kept it in balance.

 

What historical figure do you admire the most, and why?

Franklin D. Roosevelt, because he changed the South and gave the people hope along with the rest of the country.

 

What living person do you despise?

I try not to say bad things about people, but that being said, Vladimir Putin is one sick person.

 

If money were not an object, what profession would you chose?

A football coach — because you are rewarded for hard work.  It gives you the chance to shape young minds.

 

What is it about yourself that you are most proud of?

All the tournaments I have created over the years that are still played today, including Legends of Poker, the Grand Slam of Poker, the National Championship of Poker, and others.  I strived to make each tournament a major event and not just another poker tournament.

 

What is it about yourself that you’d like to change?

I would like to be a better listener.  I seem to answer before people are finished.  My mind just moves on.   My wife tells me all the time, “I’m not finished!”

 

What’s the most exciting thing you’ve ever done?

Went on a rush for two days and never missed one flop.  It’s only happened once, and I have played poker for fifty years.

 

What are the most unusual time and place you ever visited?

The Alabama football team playing for the National Championship right in my back yard in Pasadena, California at the Rose Bowl against Texas.  They won.  It doesn’t get any better, and the best part was I shared it with my son.

 

Name a place you’ve never visited where you still want to go.

I’ve been all over the world except Asia, so I would love to visit China.

 

Favorite book, favorite movie, and favorite musician.

The Holy Bible never stops teaching you about life.

— My favorite movie is Forrest Gump.

— My favorite music runs the gamut.  If I’m in the mood for country, it’s George Strait.  If it’s pop, it’s the Beatles.  As for rock ‘n’ roll, it’s Led Zeppelin.

 

What upsets you the most?

Some of the thinking by my friends and relatives in the South.  That said, I love them all.

 

What bores you?

Soccer.  Unless I bet a lot of money on it, then it’s exciting.

 

Do you believe in an afterlife and why do you believe it so?

Yes, I believe in an afterlife because I do believe your spirit will carry on, and if not, what a disappointment.

 

QueenMary

 

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Remembering Jackie Gaughan

Posted by on Mar 12, 2014 in Blog, General Poker, Las Vegas, World Series of Poker | 0 comments

 

Jackie Gaughan in 1965

Casino pioneer Jackie Gaughan in 1965, in front of his El Cortez Hotel and Casino

 

The name Jackie Gaughan might not be as well-known as other Las Vegas icons.  In a town built by Binion, Hughes, Kerkorian, Wynn, and others, he was one of the support beams behind all the flashy neon. 

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Should the Boston Marathon Bomber Get the Death Penalty?

Posted by on Mar 11, 2014 in Blog, Politics | 4 comments

 

death-penalty

 

His name does not deserve to be mentioned.  He doesn’t deserve to be known.  He doesn’t deserve to be remembered in any way.  Not in any way, shape, or form. 

We don’t care who he is, or what he thinks.  Even writing the word “he” in place of his name troubles me.

Accordingly, throughout the remainder of this essay, I shall refer to him as the “Boston Marathon Bomber.”

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