Taking
photos of clouds earns Texas man a visit from the FBI
If
you’re corresponding with known terrorists and attempting to
overthrow the US government, it’s safe to expect a knock on your
door from the FBI. But what if you just happen to think that storm
clouds look really, really cool?
RT,
8
October, 2012
Michael
Galindo, 26, learned the hard way that anything and everything is
seemingly fair game for an FBI investigation. He was taking photos of
a dark and stormy rain cloud above his native Texas town of Houston
last month and had to pay the consequences for it when a federal
agent appeared at his front door on Friday.
Galindo
answered honestly when FBI Agent David Pileggi showed up at his
Houston household last week and asked him about some photos he took
on September 13 near the former Lyondell Refinery.
“He
said I was spotted near the refinery but I couldn’t even remember
doing that. I thought it had to be somebody else,” Galindo tells
Photography is Not a Crime. “It wasn’t until he mentioned my
camera that I made the connection.”
Galindo
says he never once stepped foot on the refinery’s property, but it
was enough to raise suspicion nonetheless. Someone at the facility
spotted him shooting photos and phoned in the police, who in turn
rang up the FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force.
According
to Galindo, he was just “looking for a clear line of site” so he
could snap a photo of storm clouds overheard, something he does
regularly as a volunteer member of he National Weather Service’s
Skywarn program, a coast-to-coast system that lets civilians submit
breaking information about any storms stretching across the sky. The
Skywarn website acknowledges that the program is run in conjunction
with 122 local Weather Forecast Offices throughout the country,
including many that offer free training classes to amateur
meteorologists.
Galindo
tells Photography is Not a Crime that the entire incident with Agent
Pileggi ended peacefully. “He told me, ‘you’re not a threat and
you are doing a public service but just be careful next time,’”
the man recalls. That isn’t to say, though, that he got off without
a hassle: Galindo says the agent asked him questions off a three-page
document that involved any history he may have had with the US
military or traveling overseas.
Now,
Galindo says, he is left wondering if the FBI has since opened up a
file on him.
“The
worst thing I’ve done is get speeding tickets, but I haven’t
gotten one in three years,” he tells the website.

I wonder what they have got to hide?
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