All posts tagged: Shackled

Trump Tells “Less Shackled” Pulte To Fire Intelligence Officials As Senate Blocks FISA Extension

Trump Tells “Less Shackled” Pulte To Fire Intelligence Officials As Senate Blocks FISA Extension

When has the Senate ever not increased government spy powers? When President Trump installs Bill Pulte as acting DNI and instructs him to start kicking hornet nests, apparently.   In a WSJ interview published Friday, Trump revealed he has directed incoming acting Director of National Intelligence Bill Pulte to begin the process of firing a large number of employees as part of a major shake-up of the U.S. intelligence community. Trump described the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) as “unnecessary and/or too big” and said he wants it made “much smaller” – and possibly even terminated. “I’d like to see it smaller. I think there are a lot of people in there that shouldn’t be there,” Trump said, targeting holdovers from prior administrations. He told Pulte to “start the process” of firings, noting that Pulte’s acting status makes him “less shackled” and gives him more power in the short term to do the “hard work” of downsizing before a permanent director is confirmed. Trump compared the approach to Education Secretary Linda McMahon’s efforts to …

Shackled together | Radio Times

Shackled together | Radio Times

Add Prisoner to your Watchlist In a warehouse in south Wales, a high-value witness and a prison transport officer are about to pay a price for becoming close – too close – as they flee an organised crime gang intent on stopping some damning court testimony. Given that they’re handcuffed together, if Tahar Rahim’s Tibor is to be “slaughtered” by his brutal former employers, then so is Izuka Hoyle’s Amber. Such are the stakes of new Sky Atlantic drama Prisoner. The six-part thriller – with its echoes of 1958 Sidney Poitier/Tony Curtis “shackled prisoners” classic The Defiant Ones – was created by screenwriter Matt Charman (Oscar-nominated for Steven Spielberg’s Bridge of Spies) and directed by Bafta-winner Otto Bathurst (Lockerbie: a Search for Truth, PeakyBlinders). Hoyle, best known for Boiling Point and BigBoys, describes the scene pictured above as “the precursor to a major action sequence. It’s the moment you learn why Tibor is agreeing to be a witness for the National Crime Unit… and the possibility of moles in the British government.” Close contact: Killer …