And what hotel would allow loud FBI door-banging “training courses” in the middle of the night? It’s not plausible as the FBI’s in-house training facilities are pretty advanced.
In short this sounds like a cover up, at the very least. But the thing about the shower really is disturbing and warrants more information.
And, so what's next? Will Marriott give me the option to stay in a "Water-front, certified non-FBI training room." in the future? </sarcasm>
TV-script-speculation: Maybe they were trying to spook some other pilot who was supposed to be there, but the poor guest in room 1505 had been reassigned to fly the route of the target pilot.
My guess for the shower is that it is probably a smaller room in the hotel room, without access to the windows or door. Putting someone in there makes them feel more confined.
A simple call to a supervisor to confirm if the role player is who they are talking should have fixed this in less than 2min.
Which ironically goes to prove that their interrogation tactics are basically crap, considering it took over 40 mins to realize they got the wrong person.
Which is not surprising at all, because it really does seem US law enforcement agencies seem to base their tactics more on shows like 24 as opposed to what actually works (I’ve had a conversation with a hostage specialist trainer, and the most shocking part to me was when he told me they spend almost no time on de-escalation training).
Why would you call your supervisor if you believe the role player is role playing someone you should interrogate?
First you need to have a doubt about that person being the role player, but them denying that they are who they are might seem like the expected response.
At most I could imagine the person in the other room, expecting a "surprise" interrogation might be wondering why nobody has been knocking on their door for 45 minutes. But maybe they don't know when the exact moment should be.
Especially when it should be as simple as texting a photo and name of the actual suspect back and forth within seconds. Or maybe in this case, it would be verifying the hotel room number.
Either way, this verification step does not seem like it should take 45min+.
so US citizen detained and waterboarded by US army personnel on US soil. Posse Comitatus Act, Detainee Treatment Act, Eighth Amendment, Section 2340A of Title 18. The list goes on and on.
I suspect bathroom is likely sop for securing a target.
https://www.shouselaw.com/ca/blog/warrant/are-police-allowed...
Getting the right hotel room is like thing one. Figuring out you got the wrong guy is thing two.
Basically they’ve proven that they’re not suited to work in the FBI.