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AD Links Jamie Gorelick & Jared Kushner Pig-Farm JABS To Clinton Donors' Fake-News Bridge, Serco's 8(a) Demon Gas

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Cornelis Tromp

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Apr 13, 2017, 12:47:40 AM4/13/17
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#2943: AD Links Jamie & Jared Pig-Farm JABS To Clinton Donors' Fake-
News Bridge, Serco's 8(a) Demon Gas
From: United States Marine Field McConnell
Plum City Online - (AbelDanger.net) – April 13, 2017

To Whom It May Concern:

Field McConnell – United States Marine and Global Operations
Director of Abel Danger – has linked Jamie Gorelick and Jared
Kushner associates' alleged use of DOJ JABS* software to book
prostitutes and blackmailed guests into 'raves' at a BC pig farm
(1996-2002) to the Clinton Foundation donors who appear to have
injected fake news on the federal bridge** to conceal a sarin gas
attack on April 4 by Serco 8(a) Demons*** on a town in southern
Idlib, falsely attributed to the Syrian government.

*Joint Automated Booking System (JABS) – A software system
developed by Nortel Government Solutions for the Department of
Justice (DOJ) to inject fingerprint, photographic and biographic
data into the federal bridge and decoy crime-scene investigators
with tainted labs and fake identities.

** The Federal Bridge Certification Authority – A blackmail or
honey-pot network allegedly set up by Serco 8(a) companies for
Clinton Foundation donors to synchronize fake-news injection
through media plays with deep-state sabotage, murder, propaganda
and/or child-trafficking missions.

***8(a) Demons– Use Serco clock to synchronize assassination,
sabotage or snuff-film attacks by 8(a) companies with fake news
injects by actors tracked by Serco's Demon face-recognition
software.

McConnell alleges that DOJ insiders, including Jamie Gorelick and
McConnell's sister and ConAir founder Kristine Marcy, began a
program to "reinvent government" in October 1996 by selling root-
key access to the federal bridge and JABS to Clinton donors
including the convicted felon Charles Kushner, Citibank and Saudi
Arabia, and, thereby allowing them to conceal murder-for-hire with
fake news intended to eliminate or intimidate mutual enemies
including the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

"Digital Fires Instructor Serco - Camp Pendleton, CA Posted 377
days ago Uses information derived from all military disciplines
(e.g., aviation, ground combat, command and control, combat service
support, intelligence, and opposing forces) to determine changes in
enemy capabilities, vulnerabilities, and probable courses of
action."

"Putin: "Idlib Was A "False Flag" Attack And We Have Learned That
More Are Coming"
by Tyler Durden
Apr 11, 2017 9:36 PM
With Rex Tillerson on his way to Russia, moments ago Russian
president Vladimir Putin shocked reporters when he said that Russia
has received intelligence from "trusted sources" that more attacks
using chemical weapons are being prepared on the Damascus region,
meant to pin the blame on the Assad government.

"We have reports from multiple sources that false flags like this
one – and I cannot call it otherwise – are being prepared in other
parts of Syria, including the southern suburbs of Damascus. They
plan to plant some chemical there and accuse the Syrian government
of an attack,” he said at a joint press conference with Italian
President Sergio Mattarella in Moscow

The Russian President announced that Russia will officially turn to
the UN in the Hague for an investigation of the chemical weapons'
use in Idlib. Moscow has dismissed suggestions that the Syrian
government that it backs could be behind the attack in Idlib
province.

"All incidents reminiscent of the 'chemical attacks' that took
place in Idlib must be thoroughly investigated," Putin said.

Damascus denied the allegations, noting that the targeted area may
have been hosting chemical weapons stockpiles belonging to Islamic
State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) or Al-Nusra Front jihadists.

The incident has not been properly investigated as yet, but the US
fired dozens of cruise missiles at a Syrian airbase in a
demonstration of force over what it labeled a chemical attack by
Damascus.

Putin also pointed out that the latest US missile strikes in Syria
bring to mind the United States' UN Security Council address in
2003 that led to the invasion of Iraq, an address which has now
been thoroughly debunked as using flawed information to garner
global support for an invasion.

"President Mattarella and I discussed it, and I told him that this
reminds me strongly of the events in 2003, when the US
representatives demonstrated at the UN Security Council session the
presumed chemical weapons found in Iraq. The military campaign was
subsequently launched in Iraq and it ended with the devastation of
the country, the growth of the terrorist threat and the appearance
of Islamic State [IS, formerly ISIS] on the world stage," he added.

The Russian president also slammed the Idlib attack, officially
denouncing it as a "false flag" attack.

Putin also said that there is no meeting with Tillerson currently
on his schedule.

Following Putin's presser, Russian General Staff released a
statement announcing that it has information of militants bringing
poisonous substances to areas of Khan Shaykhun, West of Aleppo and
Eastern Guta in Syria.

Chief of the Russian General Staff Main Operational Directorate
Col. Gen. Sergei Rudskoy said that the militants are trying to
provoke new accusations targeted at Syrian government for alleged
use of chemical weapons. The militants aim to incite the US to
conduct new strikes, Rudskoy warned, adding that such measures are
impermissible. He said that according to the Russian general staff
new US airstrikes in Syria are unacceptable and that the Syrian
forces posses no chemical weapons."

"3 others arrested in Pickton probe, jury told
This story contains disturbing details CBC News
Posted: Jan 29, 2007 4:06 PM ET Last Updated: Jan 29, 2007 9:26 PM
ET
Three other people besides Robert William Pickton were arrested in
connection with the murders of Vancouver's missing women, the lead
investigator in the case testified Monday.

None were charged with any of the murders.

The information came out at the start of the second week of
Pickton's first-degree murder trial for the deaths of six women in
New Westminster, B.C., during defence lawyer Peter Ritchie's cross-
examination of Insp. Don Adam, the RCMP officer in charge of the
investigation.

Lynn Ellingsen and Dinah Taylor were arrested more than a week
before Pickton was arrested in February 2002,Adam said.

But he said Ellingsen's connection was "resolved" after an
interview with police.

Adam told the court there was an extensive and thorough
investigation into Taylor and Pat Casanova, who was arrested almost
a year later in January 2003.

The jury has viewed the RCMP's videotaped interrogation of Pickton,
in which Casanova is described as Pickton's friend and police
allege Ellingsen was blackmailing Pickton. Thejury has
heardEllingsen will testify against Pickton.

Casanova is described as Pickton's friend who helped him butcher
pigs. Casanovawill also testify during the trial.

'I believe he was deliberately playing head games with me.'—RCMP
Insp. Don Adam on Robert William Pickton during his 11-hour
interrogation

During the interrogation, Pickton said he and Taylor were very
close. When Adam pushed Pickton to tell police what happened at the
farm, Pickton said several times that he had to talk to her first.

Adam also said he felt Pickton was "toying" with him during the 11-
hour interrogation.

"I believe he was deliberately playing head games with me," Adam
said.

Criminal lawyer Donna Turkotold CBC News thatPickton's defence
lawyer will want to keep asking questions about other possible
suspects in this case.

"It's absolutely essential for the defence, at the earliest time
possible, to put in front of the jury the possibility that other
persons may be responsible for this crime," Turko said Monday.

"I think the public and everyone has been wondering, was Mr.
Pickton capable of these murders? Was he assisted by somebody, or
was he actually an accessory after the fact?"

Plans to search farm before Pickton's arrest

Earlier in his testimony, Adam told the murder trial that Pickton
was a person of interestin the disappearance of women from
Vancouver's Downtown Eastside, and plans were underway to search
his suburban pig farm before his arrest five years ago.

He said police were preparing to get a search warrant when Pickton
was arrested and released on an unrelated firearms charge.

Two weeks later, Pickton was arrested again and charged with the
alleged murders of two missing women. He was eventually charged
with 26 counts of first-degree murder. In the current trial, which
began Jan. 22 in B.C. Supreme Court, he is being tried for six
counts of first-degree murder.

Adam also told the jury that the investigation is not over, and, in
fact, has become even larger because evidence turned up in this
case has led police to other unsolved homicides.

The judge ruled last year that trying all the charges at once would
be too much for the jury, so he split the case into two trials,
with the second one to be held later. Pickton has pleaded not
guilty to all charges."

"Charles Kushner seemed to have an insatiable appetite for money
and power and recognized the role politics played at the nexus of
both. To maximize his influence, Kushner circumvented federal
campaign finance laws by funneling money to candidates and elected
officials with donations made in the names of other people and
through the more than 100 separate real-estate development
partnerships he controlled. In one of this already absurd
campaign's more novelistic ironies, Kushner's dirty dealings caught
the attention of a young, ambitious federal prosecutor named Chris
Christie, who opened up an investigation that called Kushner's
sister, Esther, and brother-in-law, Billy, as witnesses. Determined
to prevent Billy from testifying, Charles set up a honey trap for
his brother-in-law in a motel room—fully equipped with video
cameras—and paid a prostitute $10,000. Kushner then sent a tape of
the assignation to his sister, who promptly turned her brother's
attempt at blackmail over to the authorities."

Jared Kushner, Beware of Jamie Gorelick
By Jack Cashill
More than a few of my Washington allies noticed a seemingly
unremarkable bit of news in a Monday Washington Post article that
they thought I ought to see. The article concerned Jared Kushner's
appointment as adviser to his father-in-law Donald Trump.

The appointment did not trouble my friends. What troubled them was
the Post’s casual mention that Kushner's attorney was none other
than Jamie Gorelick, deputy attorney general under President Bill
Clinton. Observed the Post, Gorelick "is confident that the anti-
nepotism statute does not cover Trump's appointment of Kushner."

Nepotism was the thrust of the article. The Post made no allusion
to the concerns my friends and I have about this relationship. I
assured them that Kushner probably does not know Gorelick’s
history. I write this to make him aware of why bloggers have taken
to calling Gorelick, "The Mistress of Disaster."

Some recent highlights. In 2014, it was revealed that the George
Soros-funded Urban Institute had an officially sanctioned role in
the vetting of non-profits that seek tax-exempt status through the
IRS. Gorelick was the vice-chairman of the Urban Institute board.

In 2011, she represented Duke University in its attempt to squash a
suit by lacrosse team members whose lives had been turned upside
down by false rape accusations that the university aided and
abetted. In 2010, Gorelick represented BP in the Deepwater Horizon
oil mess. It gets worse, much worse.

In 1993, as deputy attorney general under President Clinton,
Gorelick served as “field commander” for the horrific government
assault on a religious community in Waco, Texas, that left more
than eighty dead, twenty of them children.

In 1995, she went on to pen the infamous "wall" memo that prevented
the FBI and CIA from sharing information in the run-up to September
11. At the time, a dismayed FBI investigator wrote a memo to
headquarters which included the sentence, “Someday someone will die
-- and wall or not -- the public will not understand why we were
not more effective."

In 1996, Gorelick stepped up her game, taking a lead role in the
investigation of the TWA Flight 800 disaster. This was the 747 that
inexplicably blew up off the coast of Long Island in July 1996
killing 230 people.

As deputy attorney general serving under a feckless Janet Reno,
Gorelick's assignment was to rein in the FBI. Five weeks into the
investigation, she summoned FBI honcho Jim Kallstrom to Washington
and served up a dose of political reality. To be sure, no account
of the Aug. 22 meeting provides any more than routine detail, but
behaviors began to change immediately afterwards.

The FBI had already leaked to the New York Times information that
would result in a headline on Aug. 23, top right: "Prime Evidence
Found That Device Exploded in Cabin of Flight 800." This article
stole the thunder from Clinton's election-driven approval of
welfare reform in that same day's paper and threatened to undermine
the peace and prosperity message of the next week's Democratic
National Convention.

What followed in the next several weeks was the most ambitious and
successful cover-up in American peacetime history. At its center
was Gorelick. With the help of a complicit media and the active
involvement of the CIA, she and her cronies transformed a
transparent missile strike into a mechanical failure of unknown
origin.

Given her role, the months after the crash had to have been
emotionally harrowing. In May 1997, the Clintons appear to have
rewarded Gorelick for her steely performance with a job that would
pay her $877,573 in that first half-year alone.

According to a Lexis search, not one reporter even questioned why a
middling bureaucrat with no financial or housing experience would
be handed the vice chairmanship of Fannie Mae, a sinecure that the
Washington Monthly called "the equivalent of winning the lottery."

Six years and an incredible $25.6 million later, having done her
share to wreck the American economy, Gorelick responded to the call
of duty once more and took just one of five Democratic seats on the
9/11 Commission.

During the 2004 Commission hearings, CIA Director George Tenet
first addressed the "wall that was in place between the criminal
side and the intelligence side." Tenet made that barrier sound
impenetrable.

"What's in a criminal case doesn't cross over that line. Ironclad
regulations," he insisted. "So that even people in the Criminal
Division and the Intelligence Divisions of the FBI couldn’t talk to
each other, let alone talk to us or us talk to them."

In her response to Tenet, Gorelick acknowledged the wall and
claimed to have used "brute force" in her attempt to penetrate it,
but she took no responsibility for its creation. The task of
assigning credit was left to Attorney General John Ashcroft.

"The single greatest structural cause for Sept. 11 was the wall,"
said Ashcroft. "Full disclosure compels me to inform you that its
author is a member of the commission." That author, of course, was
Gorelick, the same official who oversaw the cooperation of the FBI
and the CIA in the corruption of the TWA 800 investigation.

As the nation learned in the aftermath of 9/11, the "wall" that was
breached all too easily to protect the secrets of TWA 800 held much
too firmly when it came to the secrets of our enemies.

Jared, don't trust her! If need be, I would be happy to sit in a
room with Ms. Gorelick and hash this out."

"Global swoop on newsgroup paedophiles
By Will Knight
More than 130 people in 19 different countries have been arrested
or are under investigation after police traced the distribution of
child pornography through different internet newsgroups.

Technical experts at UK internet service provider Demon Internet
aided officers from the National Crime Squad’s new Hi-Tech Crime
Unit with the investigation.

A spokesperson from Thus, Demon's parent company, says that
investigators were not given access to the server logs that record
Demon users' activities.

Investigators were simply provided with access to newsgroup
postings in the same way as any other Demon customer. Technical
experts from Demon then helped officers distinguish the identifying
information contained within the message "headers" of particular
postings.

Face recognition

Officers traced postings relating to certain images to different
internet service providers around the world and then contacted
Interpol to track down suspects.

Investigators say they discovered 10,000 suspect postings to over
30 different newsgroups and identified 60,000 new images. They plan
to use face recognition software to identify victims in different
images, to help trace them. This software has been developed in
conjunction with UK company Serco, although no technical details
have been released.

"This operation has sadly and distressingly brought thousands of
new images of abuse to our attention," said Detective
Superintendent Peter Spindler of the National Crime Squad. "These
young victims need to be identified and protected as quickly as
possible."

Spindler added: "We are able to show that those accessing these
newsgroups did so regularly and with purpose."

Nine regional police forces in the UK were involved in the
operation. Warrants for searches or arrests were issued in 19
countries, including Australia, Canada, Germany, Israel, Japan,
Russia, Sweden, Turkey, and the US.

Evading detection

According to a report by the BBC, another 400 suspects could not be
traced by investigators. Police have not said how they evaded
detection but it is possible to post messages to news groups
anonymously using intermediary servers that strip away header
information.

The UK government introduced legislation in 2000, giving the police
greater access to internet communications. Further provisions for
the extended storage of data is included in new anti-terrorist
legislation currently passing through parliament.

Privacy advocates claim that these laws could be misused and some
question the justification for the legislation. Peter Sommer, at
the London School of Economics computer science department, says
that the techniques involved in the latest paedophile investigation
did not require a special police warrant.

"It is apparent that the existing legislation was sufficient to
help the NCS gather evidence and secure the ISP co-operation
needed," Sommer told New Scientist.'

"FOR IMMEDIATE AG TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1996 .. ATTORNEY GENERAL
PRESENTS HAMMER AWARDS AT DOJ "LAB DAY" .. WASHINGTON, DC --
Attorney General Janet Reno presented Hammer Awards to three
employee working groups from Justice Department components as part
of the Department's "Justice Performance Review Lab Day," an event
showcasing the achievements of the Department's 16 reinvention labs
… "By accepting the challenge to re-invent government, these
employees are making government more efficient and improving the
way we perform our public responsibilities," Reno said during the
Lab Day event in the Justice Department's Great Hall. Deputy
Attorney General Jamie Gorelick, who also attended, noted that the
employees "have taken the concept of creating a government that
works better and costs less and have made it a reality." The three
Justice Department teams receiving the award are: * The SENTRI
Reinvention Lab, for developing a secure, high-tech, automated
border inspection system at Otay Mesa, California; * The Joint
Automated Booking System (JABS) Lab, a multi- component effort
which has significantly improved the prisoner booking process; *
The Justice Prisoner Alien Transportation System (JPATS), which
combines the resources of several DOJ components to schedule and
transport prisoners more quickly, safely, and economically.
Additional information on the awardees is attached. 96-523"

"Innoventor [a Serco mentored 8(a) company] has been prime
contractor at Warner Robbins Air Force Base for the cesium-based
master regulating clock, a precision instrument that regulates
secondary clocks in complicated systems, for the E-4B Advanced
Airborne Command Post for the U.S. Air Force. The complicated
project was done on time and under budget despite many changes in
scope by the customer. Innoventor works often with Boeing, which
builds the E-4B on, a variety of aircraft projects [allegedly
including death-betting with mentors of the 9/11 war game], and
with Lockheed Martin on solutions for the F-35 joint strike fighter
plane."

"Serco's Office of Partner Relations (OPR) helps facilitate our
aggressive small business utilization and growth strategies.
Through the OPR, Serco mentors four local small businesses under
formal Mentor Protégé Agreements: Three sponsored by DHS (Base One
Technologies, TSymmetry, Inc., and HeiTech Services, Inc.,) and the
fourth sponsored by GSA (DKW Communications, Inc.). Serco and
HeiTech Services were awarded the 2007 DHS Mentor Protégé Team
Award for exceeding our mentoring goals."
http://www.dtic.mil/whs/directives/corres/pdf/100515p.pdf

"Base One Technologies – Corporate Strategy – We are a Government
Certified Women-Owned Business … We practice Diversity Recruitment
and Staffing for IT positions. Base One was founded in 1994 by a
women engineer who had made a career in technology research for
many years. Base One has been very successful in focusing on
diversity recruiting and staffing for IT projects. It has been our
experience that the greater the diversity mix, the more creative
the solution. As in any field the more diverse the viewpoint the
more thorough your analysis. Our engineers can think out of the
box. ..Because of our affiliations we have access to pools of
resources among more diverse groups & individuals. We work with a
large pool of minority professionals who specialize in IT skills.
We are able to have access to these resources through our status as
a D/MWBD firm and our affiliations. These affiliations assist us in
working with resources among more diverse groups & individuals. We
are also partnered with firms that are 8A certified as Minority
firms, Disabled Veteran firms, Native American firms, Vietnam
veteran firms, women owned firms. .. Base One's staff of engineers
are a diverse group of professionals. This diverse network of
engineers helps us to branch out to other engineers and creates an
even larger network of resources for us to work with. ..
Information Security Planning is the process whereby an
organization seeks to protect its operations and assets from data
theft or computer hackers that seek to obtain unauthorized
information or sabotage business operations. Key Clients Benefiting
>From Our Information Security Expertise: Pentagon Renovation
Program, FAA, Citigroup, MCI… Develops, implements and supports
Information Security Counter measures such as honey-pots and
evidence logging and incident documentation processes and
solutions."

"Starnet Gets Its Office Back; Some Casino Interruptions Over
Weekend
23 August 1999
by Fred Faust
Starnet Communications International Inc. is back in control of its
Vancouver headquarters, following a dramatic upheaval that began
with police raids early Friday morning. At 7 a.m. local time
Monday, the office phone was answered by a cheery young woman, and
management and staff were already on the job. In a prepared
statement early Monday, chief executive Mark Dohlen said, "We are
pleased to announce that our company will continue its operations
and proceed with its strategic plans following minor interruptions
to service over the past weekend.''

The company's stock (OTC BB: SNMM) was up to nearly $7 a share in
early Monday trading. It had tanked Friday as news of the police
action spread, losing 69 percent of its value to close at $4.06.
More than 10.5 million shares traded Friday, more than 18 times the
recent average volume.

Starnet is one of the largest providers of gaming software and e-
cash financial services for online casinos. It also operates
Internet pornography sites. Both lines of business are targets of a
long-running police investigation that climaxed in Friday's raids
on Starnet's headquarters and at the homes of six of its top
executives.

The company's 170 Vancouver employees were not allowed into their
offices Friday, as investigators for the Royal Canadian Mounted
Police and local police agencies combed the building. Jason King,
Starnet's chief operating officer and one of the executives whose
homes was raided, told RGTOnLine early Monday that the company had
regained access to three of its four floors on Saturday afternoon.
The last police officers left the remaining floor early Sunday
evening. A spokesman for the RCMP confirmed Monday that "the search
of the premises was completed at 8 p.m. last night.'' He said no
other information was available in the continuing investigation.
"They went through everything,''

King said. "They said they wanted as little disruption as possible,
but they couldn't do everything they needed to in the time span, so
they had to take some things. "We said we'd cooperate fully, and we
did. We provided system administrators and developers to help
expedite the investigators' work. We went well beyond the search
warrant, to show them what we believe is true, and to expedite the
process.

"They were pretty specific in their requests. They knew what they
were looking for.'' King said the headquarters has about 200 work
stations and 150 servers. The police carried out about 10 total
systems, he estimated. Disruptions for Starnet's licensed casinos
and their bettors appears to have been minimal. "Our sites have
been up and down over the weekend,'' said the manager of one online
casino Sunday night. "We can't get the stats; the 'admin' is not
available. But people seem to be able to place their wagers." A
manager of another casino, Superbet.com, said late Sunday, "We are
experiencing no problems from the Starnet situation. Our system is
up and working fine. Our servers did go down over the weekend for
some maintenance, but this was not related to the Starnet
situation.''

King said there were intermittent disruptions in service over the
weekend, but that casinos were able to take bets most of the time.
Even over the weekend, he said, credit card transactions were
processed. That means that bettors were able to receive credits
posted to their credit card accounts. Winnings that are larger than
what is originally deposited by credit card cannot be paid by
credit card. They have to paid by check or wire transfer. Such
checks or wire transfers will go out today, King said Monday. King
said the investigators were amazed at the array of equipment at
Starnet's headquarters, which is in a rundown section of Vancouver.
"The tech team was drooling at our tech capacity here,'' King said.
"Some even joked about coming to work for us."

Although authorities said they have been investigating Starnet for
18 months, they didn't realize the complexity of Starnet's
business, King said. "It took us four years to build this
operation, so you can't expect people to understand it in two
hours," he said. That's why, he said, they provided the police with
access to some of Starnet's servers in Antigua. Canadian
authorities have no right to physically inspect the operations that
are in Antigua. King said they didn't give police access to the
data bases in Antigua, but did let them look at the architecture of
the computer systems there. "They came in, I'm sure, thinking that
everything was run out of Vancouver," King said, "not realizing how
extensive the operation is in Antigua." He said about 30 employees
are based on the island.

No one has been charged or arrested in the investigation. CLEU, the
Coordinated Law Enforcement Unit of British Columbia, said Friday
that "the offences being investigated include illegal betting and
bookmaking, making agreements for the purchase or sale of betting
or gaming privileges, providing information intended for use in
connection with bookmaking, possession and distribution of
pornographic material, and possession of the proceeds of crime.

"Starnet Communications and its subsidiaries have been under
investigation by CLEU investigators for over eighteen months in
regard to illegal gaming and the distribution of prohibited
pornographic materials over the Internet. Investigators have
determined that millions of dollars flowed through Starnet
controlled bank accounts each month as the result of its Internet
based gaming system.''

Starnet's original business was the operation of pornographic
Internet sites. It still has that business, which its executives
have said they will sell in order to concentrate on online gaming.

Friday's raids resulted in major stories in the Canadian media. And
investors were distraught over the drastic drop in price of what
had been one of the year's hottest stocks.

Internet chat rooms were full of talk about Starnet. The bulletin
board of www.ragingbull.com, for example, had hundreds of postings
about the company.

One subject of intense speculation was whether the Federal Bureau
of Investigation was involved in the raids, given the hostility of
many U.S. officials to Internet gaming.

Published reports based on police documents give no indication that
the FBI was involved. But two U.S. agencies apparently were: the
Internal Revenue Service's Criminal Investigation Division and the
U.S. Customs Service.

King said no investigator identified himself or herself as an
American agent, and Starnet had no obvious indication that
Americans were involved.

"Police drop investigation into Serco prisoner transport contract
The outsourcing group said there was no evidence of individual or
corporate wrongdoing
By Marion Dakers 7:42AM GMT 19 Dec 2014
The City of London Police has closed an investigation into Serco’s
prisoner transport contract after more than a year of work,
enabling the firm to continue with the contract until 2018.

The Ministry of Justice called in the police in August 2013 to
examine whether Serco had misleadingly recorded prisoners as being
ready for court when they were not, in order to meet the
performance criteria of the contract.

However, Serco said on Friday that the probe into the Prisoner
Escort and Custody Services (PECS) contract had been closed after
the police found no evidence to support bringing charges against
the outsourcing firm or its staff.

"The information obtained was also sufficient for the City of
London Police to conclude there was no evidence of any corporate-
wide conspiracy or an intention to falsify figures to meet the
DRACT [designated ready and available for court time] contract
requirement by senior Serco management or at the board level of the
company," the firm said in a statement."

"Call it ConAir and Little knows what you mean. It's the name the
air transport system has picked up inside the U.S. Marshals
Service, which flies a fleet of 13 airplanes on regular routes
across the country every day.

During the past year, the prisoner airline spent $24 million moving
more than 100,000 federal inmates -- including 12,000 from San
Diego -- to and from trials, prisons and medical centers nationwide.

The inmates fly mostly on 727s and DC-9s. But the airline, which
has merged with the air wing of the Immigration and Naturalization
Service, also operates Convair 580s, a Lear jet and a number of
smaller aircraft.

Among the most infamous of its recent travelers were Unabomber
suspect Theodore Kaczynski and the men accused in the bombing of
the Oklahoma City federal building, Terry Nichols and Timothy
McVeigh.

Nichols and McVeigh were transported in the dead of night in an
operation much akin to a clandestine military operation, Little
said. He did not want to go into details but mentioned that a decoy
plane was among the ploys used to guard against possible attempts
by supporters to free the suspects.

Federal officials have always been circumspect about the fine
points of prisoner movement. But ConAir soon could gain a higher
public profile with the planned release in June of a movie by the
same name.

In the Disney film, Nicolas Cage plays a hapless prisoner who
wanders into a hijack plot aboard a Marshals Service plane carrying
a group of high-security inmates.

The Hollywood marshals rough up some of the prisoners, and the
plane crashes, leaving the real Marshals Service frowning on the
silver screen's invention, said Kristine Marcy, [Field McConnell's
sister] a top official in charge of detentions.

"We don't beat up our prisoners, and our planes certainly don't
crash," Marcy said on a recent trip to San Diego, where she was
trying to find more jail space for federal prisoners.

The space problem here is acute because of the high number of
border arrests.

So, San Diego is a regular stop on ConAir's West Coast air route,
with 12 flights per week scheduled into Lindbergh Field.

Prisoners -- mostly people being held for entering the country with
false documents -- are flown from San Diego to Las Vegas, where
they are housed in the city jail. They are flown back a few days
later for deportation hearings."

"DHS ICE OTD … Since 1986, through various contracts, Serco has
provided full training lifecycle support for all areas of this key
Law Enforcement organization including Inspections, Border Patrol,
Enforcement, and DHS operations at the Federal Law Enforcement
Training Academy in Glynco, GA. .. Serco developed and scripted
three scenarios based on negligent practices identified by the IG
report that have resulted in the use of lost or uncontrolled
weapons for robbery, murder, and the accidental death of a child.
We used creative animation techniques, sound effects, music, and
talented voice actors playing multiple characters to create an
emotional appeal much different—and infinitely more powerful—from
the standard WBT offering.

Serco has trained more than 400,000 DHS students in every region
and district, at every land, air and sea border crossing, in
classrooms, through WBT, train-the-trainer programs, on-the-job
training and through the implementation of performance support
systems in a blended learning environment. In collaboration with
ICE OTD, our latest efforts have resulted in the accreditation and
completion of three programs, including HSI FOTP, ICE OTD IDC, and
ICE OPR. Serco was integral to the ICE team that was recognized by
the 2012 "Excellence in Law Enforcement" Award given to the ICE
Domestic Field Operations Training Program (DFTOP) Accreditation
Project for having greatly improved ICE training, increasing
operational efficacy and efficiency, and minimizing safety issues
to ICE officers and the public."

Yours sincerely,


Field McConnell, United States Naval Academy, 1971; Forensic
Economist; 30 year airline and 22 year military pilot; 23,000 hours
of safety; Tel: 715 307 8222

McConnell's Co-researcher David Hawkins Tel: 604 542-0891 Forensic
Economist; former leader of oil-well blow-out teams; now sponsors
Grand Juries in CSI Crime and Safety Investigation

Fritz Wuehler

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