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Informant

An informant (also called an informer or, as a slang term, a "snitch", "rat", "canary", "stool pigeon", "stoolie" or "grass", among other terms)[1] is a person who provides privileged information, or (usually damaging) information intended to be intimate, concealed, or secret, about a person or organization to an agency, often a government or law enforcement agency. The term is usually used within the law-enforcement world, where informants are officially known as confidential human sources (CHS), or criminal informants (CI). It can also refer pejoratively to someone who supplies information without the consent of the involved parties.[2] The term is commonly used in politics, industry, entertainment, and academia.[3][4]

A representative from the U.S. State Department congratulates and offers a partial payment to a fully disguised informant whose information led to the neutralization of a terrorist in the Philippines
Two-page totally confidential, direct and immediate letter from the Iranian Minister of Finance to the Minister of Foreign Affairs (Hossein Fatemi) about creating a foreign information network for controlling smuggling, 15 December 1952

In the United States, a confidential informant or "CI" is "any individual who provides useful and credible information to a law enforcement agency regarding felonious criminal activities and from whom the agency expects or intends to obtain additional useful and credible information regarding such activities in the future".[5]

Criminal informants edit

Informants are extremely common in every-day police work, including homicide and narcotics investigations. Any citizen who provides crime-related information to law enforcement by definition is an informant.[6]

Law enforcement and intelligence agencies may face criticism regarding their conduct towards informants. Informants may be shown leniency for their own crimes in exchange for information, or simply turn out to be dishonest in their information, resulting in the time and money spent acquiring them being wasted.

Informants are often regarded as traitors by their former criminal associates. Whatever the nature of a group, it is likely to feel strong hostility toward any known informers, regard them as threats and inflict punishments ranging from social ostracism through physical abuse and/or death. Informers are therefore generally protected, either by being segregated while in prison or, if they are not incarcerated, relocated under a new identity.

Informant motivation edit

 
FBI Anchorage aid for assessing confidential human sources

Informants, and especially criminal informants, can be motivated by many reasons. Many informants are not themselves aware of all of their reasons for providing information, but nonetheless do so. Many informants provide information while under stress, duress, emotion and other life factors that can affect the accuracy or veracity of information provided.

Law enforcement officers, prosecutors, defense lawyers, judges and others should be aware of possible motivations so that they can properly approach, assess and verify informants' information.

Generally, informants' motivations can be broken down into self-interest, self-preservation and conscience.

A list of possible motivations includes:

  • Self-Interest:
    • Financial reward.[7]
    • Pre-trial release from custody.
    • Withdrawal or dismissal of criminal charges.
    • Reduction of sentence.
    • Choice of location to serve sentence.
    • Elimination of rivals or unwanted criminal associates.
    • Elimination of competitors engaged in criminal activities.
    • Diversion of suspicion from their own criminal activities.
    • Revenge.[7]
    • Desire to become a spy.
  • Self-Preservation:
    • Fear of harm from others.
    • Threat of arrest or charges.
    • Threat of incarceration.
    • Desire for witness protection program.
  • Conscience:
    • Desire to leave criminal past.
    • Guilty conscience.
    • Redemption.
    • Mutual respect.
    • Genuine desire to assist law enforcement and society.[8]

Labor and social movements edit

Corporations and the detective agencies that sometimes represent them have historically hired labor spies to monitor or control labor organizations and their activities.[9] Such individuals may be professionals or recruits from the workforce. They may be willing accomplices, or may be tricked into informing on their co-workers' unionization efforts.[10]

Paid informants have often been used by authorities within politically and socially oriented movements to weaken, destabilize and ultimately break them.[11]

Politics edit

 
A redacted version of the FBI policy manual concerning the use of informants

Informers alert authorities regarding government officials that are corrupt. Officials may be taking bribes or be participants in a money loop also called a kickback. Informers in some countries receive a percentage of all money recovered by their government.[citation needed]

The ancient Roman historian Lactantius described a judiciary case which involved the prosecution of a woman suspected to have advised another woman not to marry Maximinus II: "Neither indeed was there any accuser, until a certain Jew, one charged with other offences, was induced, through hope of pardon, to give false evidence against the innocent. The equitable and vigilant magistrate conducted him out of the city under a guard, lest the populace should have stoned him... The Jew was ordered to the torture till he should speak as he had been instructed... The innocent were condemned to die.... Nor was the promise of pardon made good to the feigned adulterer, for he was fixed to a gibbet, and then he disclosed the whole secret contrivance; and with his last breath he protested to all the beholders that the women died innocent."[12]

Criminal informant schemes have been used as cover for politically motivated intelligence offensives.[13]

Jailhouse informants edit

Jailhouse informants, who report hearsay (admissions against penal interest) which they claim to have heard while the accused is in pretrial detention, usually in exchange for sentence reductions or other inducements, have been the focus of particular controversy.[14] Some examples of their use are in connection with Stanley Williams,[15] Cameron Todd Willingham,[16] Thomas Silverstein,[17] Marshall "Eddie" Conway,[18] and a suspect in the disappearance of Etan Patz.[19] The Innocence Project has stated that 15% of all wrongful convictions later exonerated because of DNA results were accompanied by false testimony by jailhouse informants. 50% of murder convictions exonerated by DNA were accompanied by false testimony by jailhouse informants.[20]

Terminology and slang edit

Slang terms for informants include:

The term "stool pigeon" originates from the antiquated practice of tying a passenger pigeon to a stool. The bird would flap its wings in a futile attempt to escape. The sound of the wings flapping would attract other pigeons to the stool where a large number of birds could be easily killed or captured.[50]

List of notable individuals edit

By country edit

Russia and Soviet Union edit

A system of informants existed in the Russian Empire and was later adopted by the Soviet Union. In Russia, such people were known as osvedomitel or donoschik, and secretly cooperated with law enforcement agencies, such as the secret-police force Okhrana and later the Soviet militsiya or KGB. Officially, those informants were referred to as "secret coworker" (Russian: секретный сотрудник, sekretny sotrudnik) and often were referred by the Russian-derived portmanteau seksot. In some KGB documents has also been used the designation "source of operational information" (Russian: источник оперативной информации, istochnik operativnoi informatsii).[53]

Germany edit

Poland edit

Venezuela edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "informer". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Merriam-Webster. Retrieved 6 June 2016. 2: one that informs against another; specifically : one who makes a practice especially for a financial reward of informing against others for violations of penal laws
  2. ^ "The Weakest Link: The Dire Consequences of a Weak Link in the Informant Handling and Covert Operations Chain-of-Command" by M Levine. Law Enforcement Executive Forum, 2009
  3. ^ "Pursuing strategic advantage through political means: A multivariate approach" by DA Schuler, K Rehbein, RD Cramer – Academy of Management Journal, 2002
  4. ^ "Reading English for specialized purposes: Discourse analysis and the use of student informants" by A Cohen, H Glasman, PR Rosenbaum-Cohen, TESOL Quarterly, 197
  5. ^ "Special Report". oig.justice.gov. Retrieved 2021-01-28. According to the Confidential Informant Guidelines, a confidential informant or "CI" is "any individual who provides useful and credible information to a Justice Law Enforcement Agency (JLEA) regarding felonious criminal activities and from whom the JLEA expects or intends to obtain additional useful and credible information regarding such activities in the future."
  6. ^ Palmiotto, J., Micheal. Criminal Investigation. 4th ed. Boca Raton, FL: CRC Press, 2013. pp. 65–66
  7. ^ a b Lyman, D., Micheal. Criminal Investigation: The Art and the Science. 6th ed. Columbia College of Missouri. Pearson, 2010. p. 264
  8. ^ Allen, Bill Van (2011). Criminal investigation : in search of the truth (2nd ed.). Toronto: Pearson Canada. p. 217. ISBN 978-0-13-800011-0.
  9. ^ "Private detective agencies and labour discipline in the United States, 1855–1946" by RP Weiss. The Historical Journal, 2009. Cambridge Univ Press
  10. ^ "Judicial Control of Informants, Spies, Stool Pigeons, and Agent Provocateurs" by RC Donnelly – Yale Law Journal, 1951
  11. ^ "Thoughts on a neglected category of social movement participant: The agent provocateur and the informant" by GT Marx – American Journal of Sociology, 1974
  12. ^ Lactantius. "On the Deaths of the Persecutors".
  13. ^ "CIA Assets and the Rise of the Guadalajara Connection" J. Marshall – Crime, Law and Social Change, 1991
  14. ^ scc.lexum.umontreal.ca 2010-11-10 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ . Democracy Now!. November 30, 2005. Archived from the original on November 15, 2007.
  16. ^ Mills, Steve; Possley, Maurice (December 9, 2004). "Man executed on disproved forensics". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved September 1, 2009.
  17. ^ . Project Posner. Archived from the original on September 28, 2007. Retrieved May 28, 2007.
  18. ^ James, Joy, ed. (2007). Warfare in the American Homeland: Policing and Prison in a Penal Democracy. Durham, NC: Duke University Press. pp. 96–99. ISBN 978-0-8223-3923-6.
  19. ^ Berman, Thomas; Sher, Lauren (May 26, 2010). "Etan Patz Case Reopened 31 Years Later". ABC News. Retrieved July 16, 2011.
  20. ^ Stutzman, Rene (December 27, 2011). "Wrong convictions spur Florida to rethink using jail informants". Orlando Sentinel.
  21. ^ a b c "snitch". Thesaurus.com. September 2023.
  22. ^ a b Wilmer, HA (1965). "The Role of the "Rat" in the Prison". Fed. Probation. 29.
  23. ^ Orwant, Jon (2003). Games, Diversions & Perl Culture: Best of the Perl Journal. O'Reilly Media. ISBN 9781449397784.
  24. ^ "The Origin of fink 'informer, hired strikebreaker'" by William Sayers. A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles, Notes, and Reviews. Winter 2005 Cornell University
  25. ^ Devlin, A (1995). Criminal Classes: Offenders at School. Waterside Press. ISBN 9781906534493.
  26. ^ "The Intelligence War in Northern Ireland" by K Maguire – International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence, Volume 4, Issue 2 1990, pp. 145–165
  27. ^ "grass". Oxford English Dictionary. A spy or informer, esp. for the police
  28. ^ Greer, Steven C. (1995). Supergrasses: a study in anti-terrorist law enforcement in Northern Ireland. Clarendon Press. ISBN 9780198257660.
  29. ^ Chicano intravenous drug users: The collection and interpretation of data from hidden Populations by R Ramos. 1990
  30. ^ Prison patter: a dictionary of prison words and slang by A Devlin. 1996
  31. ^ "Some ethical dilemmas in the handling of police informers" by C Dunnighan, C Norris – Public Money & Management, 1998
  32. ^ "nose". Oxford English Dictionary. A spy or informer, esp. for the police
  33. ^ a b Nicaso, Antonio; Danesi, Marcel (2013). Made Men: Mafia Culture and the Power of Symbols, Rituals, and Myth (1st ed.). Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. p. 86. ISBN 978-1-4422-2227-4. LCCN 2013006239. OCLC 1030395983.
  34. ^ Rossi, Federica (April 2021). Treiber, Kyle (ed.). "The failed amnesty of the 'years of lead' in Italy: Continuity and transformations between (de)politicization and punitiveness". European Journal of Criminology. 20 (2). Los Angeles and London: SAGE Publications on behalf of the European Society of Criminology: 381–400. doi:10.1177/14773708211008441. ISSN 1741-2609. S2CID 234835036. The 1970s in Italy were characterized by the persistence and prolongation of political and social unrest that many Western countries experienced during the late 1960s. The decade saw the multiplication of far-left extra-parliamentary organizations, the presence of a militant far right movement, and an upsurge in the use of politically motivated violence and state repressive measures. [...] The early 1980s were characterized by the appearance of the first pentiti (justice collaborators), waves of arrests and trials, and the incarceration of several hundreds of radical left activists, many of whom were sentenced to very long terms (22 years and over). According to available data, 4087 activists were detained at the beginning of the 1980s in prisons around the country, including a few hundred in maximum security facilities.
  35. ^ a b Drake, Richard (2021) [1989]. "The Blast Furnace of Terrorism: 1979–1980". The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy (2nd ed.). Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana University Press. p. 220. ISBN 9780253057143. LCCN 2020050360.
  36. ^ Sullivan, Colleen (2011). "Dozier, James Lee (1931– )". In Martin, Gus (ed.). The SAGE Encyclopedia of Terrorism (2nd ed.). Los Angeles and London: SAGE Publications. pp. 162–163. ISBN 9781412980166. LCCN 2011009896.
  37. ^ "Speaker and Structure in Donne's Satyre" by NM Bradbury. Studies in English Literature, 1500–1900, 1985.
  38. ^ "Sociology of Confinement: Assimilation and the Prison 'Rat'" by EH Johnson. The Journal of Criminal Law, Criminology, and Police Science. 1961
  39. ^ a b "Reflections on the role of statutory immunity in the criminal justice system" by WJ Bauer – Journal of Criminal Law. & Criminology, 1976
  40. ^ Natapoff, Alexandra (2009). "The Role of Rap and Hip Hop". Snitching: Criminal Informants and the Erosion of American Justice. New York and London: New York University Press. pp. 135–138. ISBN 9780814758588.
  41. ^ "snout". Oxford English Dictionary. A police informer
  42. ^ "Instigated Crime" by S Shaw – Alta. LQ, 1938
  43. ^ a b "Elevating the Role of the Informer: The Value of Secret Information". MW Krasilovsky. ABAJ, 1954
  44. ^ "On Truth and Lie in a Colonial Sense: Kipling's Tales of Tale-telling" by A Hai – ELH, 1997
  45. ^ "Telling tales in school" by A Minister. Education 3–13, 1990
  46. ^ McDonald, Henry (2000-10-28). "End of 'touts' in Northern Ireland". Retrieved 2018-02-01.
  47. ^ "The murky world of informers". BBC News. 2006-04-04. Retrieved 2018-02-02.
  48. ^ Prison ministry: hope behind the wall by Dennis W. Pierce – 2006
  49. ^ "De onde surgiu o termo X-9?" (in Portuguese). Super Interessante Magazine. 21 December 2016. Retrieved 11 August 2023.
  50. ^ Fuller, E. (2014). The Passenger Pigeon. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press. pp. 72–88. ISBN 978-0-691-16295-9.
  51. ^ "Lawyer X: how Victoria police got it 'profoundly wrong' with informant Nicola Gobbo". the Guardian. 2020-09-04. Retrieved 2022-08-27.
  52. ^ Ash, Timothy Garton (September 25, 2003). . The New York Review of Books. Archived from the original on 2016-03-05.
  53. ^ Andropov to the Central Committee. The Demonstration in Red Square Against the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia. September 20, 1968 2007-10-12 at the Wayback Machine

External links edit

  Media related to Informants at Wikimedia Commons

  • Federal informants in Chicago gangs

informant, this, article, about, person, provides, privileged, information, other, uses, disambiguation, informer, stool, pigeon, redirect, here, other, uses, informer, disambiguation, stool, pigeon, disambiguation, informant, also, called, informer, slang, te. This article is about a person who provides privileged information For other uses see Informant disambiguation Informer and Stool pigeon redirect here For other uses see Informer disambiguation and Stool pigeon disambiguation An informant also called an informer or as a slang term a snitch rat canary stool pigeon stoolie or grass among other terms 1 is a person who provides privileged information or usually damaging information intended to be intimate concealed or secret about a person or organization to an agency often a government or law enforcement agency The term is usually used within the law enforcement world where informants are officially known as confidential human sources CHS or criminal informants CI It can also refer pejoratively to someone who supplies information without the consent of the involved parties 2 The term is commonly used in politics industry entertainment and academia 3 4 A representative from the U S State Department congratulates and offers a partial payment to a fully disguised informant whose information led to the neutralization of a terrorist in the Philippines Two page totally confidential direct and immediate letter from the Iranian Minister of Finance to the Minister of Foreign Affairs Hossein Fatemi about creating a foreign information network for controlling smuggling 15 December 1952 Look up informant or stool pigeon in Wiktionary the free dictionary In the United States a confidential informant or CI is any individual who provides useful and credible information to a law enforcement agency regarding felonious criminal activities and from whom the agency expects or intends to obtain additional useful and credible information regarding such activities in the future 5 Contents 1 Criminal informants 1 1 Informant motivation 2 Labor and social movements 3 Politics 4 Jailhouse informants 5 Terminology and slang 6 List of notable individuals 7 By country 7 1 Russia and Soviet Union 7 2 Germany 7 3 Poland 7 4 Venezuela 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksCriminal informants editInformants are extremely common in every day police work including homicide and narcotics investigations Any citizen who provides crime related information to law enforcement by definition is an informant 6 Law enforcement and intelligence agencies may face criticism regarding their conduct towards informants Informants may be shown leniency for their own crimes in exchange for information or simply turn out to be dishonest in their information resulting in the time and money spent acquiring them being wasted Informants are often regarded as traitors by their former criminal associates Whatever the nature of a group it is likely to feel strong hostility toward any known informers regard them as threats and inflict punishments ranging from social ostracism through physical abuse and or death Informers are therefore generally protected either by being segregated while in prison or if they are not incarcerated relocated under a new identity Informant motivation edit nbsp FBI Anchorage aid for assessing confidential human sources Informants and especially criminal informants can be motivated by many reasons Many informants are not themselves aware of all of their reasons for providing information but nonetheless do so Many informants provide information while under stress duress emotion and other life factors that can affect the accuracy or veracity of information provided Law enforcement officers prosecutors defense lawyers judges and others should be aware of possible motivations so that they can properly approach assess and verify informants information Generally informants motivations can be broken down into self interest self preservation and conscience A list of possible motivations includes Self Interest Financial reward 7 Pre trial release from custody Withdrawal or dismissal of criminal charges Reduction of sentence Choice of location to serve sentence Elimination of rivals or unwanted criminal associates Elimination of competitors engaged in criminal activities Diversion of suspicion from their own criminal activities Revenge 7 Desire to become a spy Self Preservation Fear of harm from others Threat of arrest or charges Threat of incarceration Desire for witness protection program Conscience Desire to leave criminal past Guilty conscience Redemption Mutual respect Genuine desire to assist law enforcement and society 8 Labor and social movements editCorporations and the detective agencies that sometimes represent them have historically hired labor spies to monitor or control labor organizations and their activities 9 Such individuals may be professionals or recruits from the workforce They may be willing accomplices or may be tricked into informing on their co workers unionization efforts 10 Paid informants have often been used by authorities within politically and socially oriented movements to weaken destabilize and ultimately break them 11 Politics edit nbsp A redacted version of the FBI policy manual concerning the use of informants Informers alert authorities regarding government officials that are corrupt Officials may be taking bribes or be participants in a money loop also called a kickback Informers in some countries receive a percentage of all money recovered by their government citation needed The ancient Roman historian Lactantius described a judiciary case which involved the prosecution of a woman suspected to have advised another woman not to marry Maximinus II Neither indeed was there any accuser until a certain Jew one charged with other offences was induced through hope of pardon to give false evidence against the innocent The equitable and vigilant magistrate conducted him out of the city under a guard lest the populace should have stoned him The Jew was ordered to the torture till he should speak as he had been instructed The innocent were condemned to die Nor was the promise of pardon made good to the feigned adulterer for he was fixed to a gibbet and then he disclosed the whole secret contrivance and with his last breath he protested to all the beholders that the women died innocent 12 Criminal informant schemes have been used as cover for politically motivated intelligence offensives 13 Jailhouse informants editJailhouse informants who report hearsay admissions against penal interest which they claim to have heard while the accused is in pretrial detention usually in exchange for sentence reductions or other inducements have been the focus of particular controversy 14 Some examples of their use are in connection with Stanley Williams 15 Cameron Todd Willingham 16 Thomas Silverstein 17 Marshall Eddie Conway 18 and a suspect in the disappearance of Etan Patz 19 The Innocence Project has stated that 15 of all wrongful convictions later exonerated because of DNA results were accompanied by false testimony by jailhouse informants 50 of murder convictions exonerated by DNA were accompanied by false testimony by jailhouse informants 20 Terminology and slang edit Narc Narcotics redirects here For another usage of the phrase narc see Drug addict Slang terms for informants include blabbermouth 21 cheese eater 22 canary derives from the fact that canaries sing and singing is underworld or street slang for providing information or talking to the police 23 dog Australian term May also refer to police forces who specialize in surveillance or police generally ear someone who overhears something and tells the authorities fink this may refer to the Pinkertons who were used as plain clothes detectives and strike breakers 24 grass 25 or supergrass 26 rhyming slang for grasshopper meaning copper or shopper 27 having additional associations with the popular song Whispering Grass and the phrase snake in the grass 28 narc a member of a specialist anti narcotic law enforcement agency or police intelligence force 29 nark this may have come from the Romani term nak for nose or the French term narquois which means cunning deceitful and or criminal 30 31 nose 32 pentito Italian term meaning one who repents Originally and most frequently used in reference to Mafia informants 33 it has also been used to refer to informants for Italian paramilitary and terrorist organizations 34 such as the Red Brigades 35 36 and Front Line 35 and people who delivered confidential informations to the authorities during the Maxi Trial and Mani pulite nationwide judiciary investigations 33 pursuivant archaic 37 rat 22 38 informing is commonly referred to as ratting in American English snitch 39 informing is commonly referred to as snitching term originally used within the African American community and more recently associated with hip hop music hardcore rap and trap alongside their derivative subgenres and subcultures 40 snout 41 spotter 42 squealer 39 stikker Danish term meaning stabber mainly used in relation to World War II During and after the Nazi occupation of Denmark 1940 1945 the word has been used specifically to indicate the Danish whistleblowers agents and spies which informed the German secret police the Gestapo in order to undermine the Danish resistance movement stool pigeon or stoolie 43 tell tale or tell tale 44 45 tattle tale tittle tattle 43 tout Northern Irish term for an informant often one who informed on the activities of Irish paramilitary organizations during the Troubles 46 47 trick 48 turncoat 21 weasel 21 X9 A slang term in Brazil possibly inspired by the comic strip Secret Agent X 9 49 The term stool pigeon originates from the antiquated practice of tying a passenger pigeon to a stool The bird would flap its wings in a futile attempt to escape The sound of the wings flapping would attract other pigeons to the stool where a large number of birds could be easily killed or captured 50 List of notable individuals editTim Allen actor who was arrested with cocaine and provided the names of other dealers in exchange for a sentence of three to seven years rather than a possible life imprisonment Nicky Barnes head of The Council which he would later testify against Whitey Bulger Boston Irish mob boss Nicholas Calabrese the first made man to testify against the Chicago Outfit James Carey Irish terrorist Steve Flemmi Whitey Bulger s partner in crime Flores twins Pedro and Margarito Nicola Gobbo former Australian barrister who provided information on her own clients 51 Sammy Gravano former underboss of the Gambino crime family Daniel Hernandez a k a Tekashi 6ix9ine American rapper who testified against Nine Trey Gangsters Henry Hill Lucchese crime family associate Frank Lucas New York City drug dealer turned informant Joseph Massino the first boss of one of the Five Families in New York City to turn state s evidence George Orwell author of Orwell s list 52 Abe Reles Murder Inc hit man Freddie Scappaticci member of the Provisional IRA Joseph Valachi soldier of the Genovese crime family Salvatore Vitale former underboss of the Bonanno crime family Richard Wershe Jr commonly known as White Boy Rick the youngest FBI informant ever at age 14By country editRussia and Soviet Union edit A system of informants existed in the Russian Empire and was later adopted by the Soviet Union In Russia such people were known as osvedomitel or donoschik and secretly cooperated with law enforcement agencies such as the secret police force Okhrana and later the Soviet militsiya or KGB Officially those informants were referred to as secret coworker Russian sekretnyj sotrudnik sekretny sotrudnik and often were referred by the Russian derived portmanteau seksot In some KGB documents has also been used the designation source of operational information Russian istochnik operativnoj informacii istochnik operativnoi informatsii 53 Germany edit Main article Unofficial collaborator Poland edit Main article pl Tajny wspolpracownik Venezuela edit Main articles Snitch Law and es Patriota cooperanteSee also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Informants Agent provocateur Aguilar Spinelli test Counter terrorism Covert interrogation Denunciation Espionage Hollywood blacklist Pentiti Plea bargain Turn state s evidence United States Marshals Service Watergate scandal Whistleblower Witness Protection ProgramReferences edit informer Merriam Webster Dictionary Merriam Webster Retrieved 6 June 2016 2 one that informs against another specifically one who makes a practice especially for a financial reward of informing against others for violations of penal laws The Weakest Link The Dire Consequences of a Weak Link in the Informant Handling and Covert Operations Chain of Command by M Levine Law Enforcement Executive Forum 2009 Pursuing strategic advantage through political means A multivariate approach by DA Schuler K Rehbein RD Cramer Academy of Management Journal 2002 Reading English for specialized purposes Discourse analysis and the use of student informants by A Cohen H Glasman PR Rosenbaum Cohen TESOL Quarterly 197 Special Report oig justice gov Retrieved 2021 01 28 According to the Confidential Informant Guidelines a confidential informant or CI is any individual who provides useful and credible information to a Justice Law Enforcement Agency JLEA regarding felonious criminal activities and from whom the JLEA expects or intends to obtain additional useful and credible information regarding such activities in the future Palmiotto J Micheal Criminal Investigation 4th ed Boca Raton FL CRC Press 2013 pp 65 66 a b Lyman D Micheal Criminal Investigation The Art and the Science 6th ed Columbia College of Missouri Pearson 2010 p 264 Allen Bill Van 2011 Criminal investigation in search of the truth 2nd ed Toronto Pearson Canada p 217 ISBN 978 0 13 800011 0 Private detective agencies and labour discipline in the United States 1855 1946 by RP Weiss The Historical Journal 2009 Cambridge Univ Press Judicial Control of Informants Spies Stool Pigeons and Agent Provocateurs by RC Donnelly Yale Law Journal 1951 Thoughts on a neglected category of social movement participant The agent provocateur and the informant by GT Marx American Journal of Sociology 1974 Lactantius On the Deaths of the Persecutors CIA Assets and the Rise of the Guadalajara Connection J Marshall Crime Law and Social Change 1991 scc lexum umontreal ca Archived 2010 11 10 at the Wayback Machine A Conversation with Death Row Prisoner Stanley Tookie Williams from his San Quentin Cell Democracy Now November 30 2005 Archived from the original on November 15 2007 Mills Steve Possley Maurice December 9 2004 Man executed on disproved forensics Chicago Tribune Retrieved September 1 2009 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Plaintiff Appellee v CLAYTON FOUNTAIN THOMAS E SILVERSTEIN and RANDY K GOMETZ Defendants Appellants Project Posner Archived from the original on September 28 2007 Retrieved May 28 2007 James Joy ed 2007 Warfare in the American Homeland Policing and Prison in a Penal Democracy Durham NC Duke University Press pp 96 99 ISBN 978 0 8223 3923 6 Berman Thomas Sher Lauren May 26 2010 Etan Patz Case Reopened 31 Years Later ABC News Retrieved July 16 2011 Stutzman Rene December 27 2011 Wrong convictions spur Florida to rethink using jail informants Orlando Sentinel a b c snitch Thesaurus com September 2023 a b Wilmer HA 1965 The Role of the Rat in the Prison Fed Probation 29 Orwant Jon 2003 Games Diversions amp Perl Culture Best of the Perl Journal O Reilly Media ISBN 9781449397784 The Origin of fink informer hired strikebreaker by William Sayers A Quarterly Journal of Short Articles Notes and Reviews Winter 2005 Cornell University Devlin A 1995 Criminal Classes Offenders at School Waterside Press ISBN 9781906534493 The Intelligence War in Northern Ireland by K Maguire International Journal of Intelligence and CounterIntelligence Volume 4 Issue 2 1990 pp 145 165 grass Oxford English Dictionary A spy or informer esp for the police Greer Steven C 1995 Supergrasses a study in anti terrorist law enforcement in Northern Ireland Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198257660 Chicano intravenous drug users The collection and interpretation of data from hidden Populations by R Ramos 1990 Prison patter a dictionary of prison words and slang by A Devlin 1996 Some ethical dilemmas in the handling of police informers by C Dunnighan C Norris Public Money amp Management 1998 nose Oxford English Dictionary A spy or informer esp for the police a b Nicaso Antonio Danesi Marcel 2013 Made Men Mafia Culture and the Power of Symbols Rituals and Myth 1st ed Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield p 86 ISBN 978 1 4422 2227 4 LCCN 2013006239 OCLC 1030395983 Rossi Federica April 2021 Treiber Kyle ed The failed amnesty of the years of lead in Italy Continuity and transformations between de politicization and punitiveness European Journal of Criminology 20 2 Los Angeles and London SAGE Publications on behalf of the European Society of Criminology 381 400 doi 10 1177 14773708211008441 ISSN 1741 2609 S2CID 234835036 The 1970s in Italy were characterized by the persistence and prolongation of political and social unrest that many Western countries experienced during the late 1960s The decade saw the multiplication of far left extra parliamentary organizations the presence of a militant far right movement and an upsurge in the use of politically motivated violence and state repressive measures The early 1980s were characterized by the appearance of the first pentiti justice collaborators waves of arrests and trials and the incarceration of several hundreds of radical left activists many of whom were sentenced to very long terms 22 years and over According to available data 4087 activists were detained at the beginning of the 1980s in prisons around the country including a few hundred in maximum security facilities a b Drake Richard 2021 1989 The Blast Furnace of Terrorism 1979 1980 The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy 2nd ed Bloomington Indiana Indiana University Press p 220 ISBN 9780253057143 LCCN 2020050360 Sullivan Colleen 2011 Dozier James Lee 1931 In Martin Gus ed The SAGE Encyclopedia of Terrorism 2nd ed Los Angeles and London SAGE Publications pp 162 163 ISBN 9781412980166 LCCN 2011009896 Speaker and Structure in Donne s Satyre by NM Bradbury Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 1985 Sociology of Confinement Assimilation and the Prison Rat by EH Johnson The Journal of Criminal Law Criminology and Police Science 1961 a b Reflections on the role of statutory immunity in the criminal justice system by WJ Bauer Journal of Criminal Law amp Criminology 1976 Natapoff Alexandra 2009 The Role of Rap and Hip Hop Snitching Criminal Informants and the Erosion of American Justice New York and London New York University Press pp 135 138 ISBN 9780814758588 snout Oxford English Dictionary A police informer Instigated Crime by S Shaw Alta LQ 1938 a b Elevating the Role of the Informer The Value of Secret Information MW Krasilovsky ABAJ 1954 On Truth and Lie in a Colonial Sense Kipling s Tales of Tale telling by A Hai ELH 1997 Telling tales in school by A Minister Education 3 13 1990 McDonald Henry 2000 10 28 End of touts in Northern Ireland Retrieved 2018 02 01 The murky world of informers BBC News 2006 04 04 Retrieved 2018 02 02 Prison ministry hope behind the wall by Dennis W Pierce 2006 De onde surgiu o termo X 9 in Portuguese Super Interessante Magazine 21 December 2016 Retrieved 11 August 2023 Fuller E 2014 The Passenger Pigeon Princeton and Oxford Princeton University Press pp 72 88 ISBN 978 0 691 16295 9 Lawyer X how Victoria police got it profoundly wrong with informant Nicola Gobbo the Guardian 2020 09 04 Retrieved 2022 08 27 Ash Timothy Garton September 25 2003 Orwell s List The New York Review of Books Archived from the original on 2016 03 05 Andropov to the Central Committee The Demonstration in Red Square Against the Warsaw Pact Invasion of Czechoslovakia September 20 1968 Archived 2007 10 12 at the Wayback MachineExternal links edit nbsp Media related to Informants at Wikimedia Commons Federal informants in Chicago gangs Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Informant amp oldid 1216905972, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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