2012 – Happy New Year 2012 from the Victoria’s Secret Angels

Victoria’s Secret Angels Erin Heatherton, Adriana Lima, Candice Swanepoel, Lindsay Ellingson, Doutzen Kroes and Lily Aldridge let you in on their resolutions and a sexy little New Year’s tradition.

VIDEO – Bollywood Stars wish ‘Happy New Year 2012’ – EXCLUSIVE

POLITICAL MURDER TODAY – Syria man records his own death

FEMEN Protes in Kiev – Uncensored

 

 

Study – Open Source Center Chinese Premier Promotes Cyberspace Agenda

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Authoritative PRC media reports of Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao’s live online appearances illustrate authorities’ expanding use of the Internet to set and control policy discourse in Chinese-language virtual space. They also suggest ongoing efforts to manage leaders’ images and portray them as accessible and soliciting online public opinion. While some apparent missteps suggest a cautious, evolving approach to interactive Internet media in relation to top leaders, reported leadership statements indicate sustained attention to the goal of incorporating new technologies into the propaganda system.

Recent online appearances by Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on authoritative PRC media platforms indicate that Beijing continues to expand its use of Internet media to broadcast unique programs communicating the government’s view and signaling its policy preferences as part of its overall media strategy.

  • On Saturday 27 February, in the run-up to the annual meeting of China’s National People’s Congress (NPC), Wen appeared in a live “web chat” — his second — jointly hosted by Xinhua Wang, the internet portal of PRC official news agency Xinhua, and by Zhongguo Zhengfu Wang (www.gov.cn), the PRC central government website. The two sites also posted feature pages with reports, video, and transcripts of the chat. Xinhua billed the event in advance as Wen’s “annual dialogue with netizens” (27 December 2009).
  • Wen’s 27 February 2010 online appearance followed his first live “web chat” (zaixian fangtan), held by Zhongguo Zhengfu Wang on 28 February 2009. Xinhua later described that chat as the first of the “top ten events” of 2009 (29 December 2009).
  • On 27 December 2009, Xinhua Wang broadcast an exclusive online interview of Wen held inside the Zhongnanhai central leadership compound, in which — like the web chats — Wen presented the Chinese leadership’s views by “answering netizens’ questions.”

Suggesting an attempt to portray Wen as accessible and soliciting public opinion, in his live online appearances Wen answered selected questions ostensibly submitted by Internet users. Reports portrayed the live online events as direct and sincere communication between Wen and the public as represented by Internet users, who are sometimes referred to in PRC media as “netizens” (wang min) or “net friends” (wang you).

  • The moderator of Wen’s 27 February web chat claimed to have selected questions from among 190,000 submitted online by Internet users and 70,000 submitted via cell phone instant message (SMS) by users of the joint Xinhua Wang — China Mobile online newspaper, according to the chat transcript (Xinhua Wang). The moderator described “net friends” worldwide as “eagerly looking forward” to “meeting” Wen based on the “deep, positive impression” created by the 2009 web chat, in which Wen was said to  have answered Internet users’ questions in a “frank and honest way.”
  • Wen and the moderator worked to create personal emotional appeal throughout the chat, starting with the language of Wen’s opening remarks emphasizing his sense of duty to “the people” and his desire to have a sincere “heart-to-heart” exchange (Xinhua Wang). Wen claimed that he “follows the various issues raised by netizens on the Internet very closely.”
  • Similarly, a Xinhua report on the February 2009 web chat quoted Wen as saying that the government needs to solicit “questions about governance from the people” (28 February 2009).
  • Jiefangjun Bao Online, website of the daily newspaper of the Central Military Commission, touted “zero distance” between netizens and the PRC leadership and described Wen as a “super net friend” in a report on the 2009 web chat (10 March 2009).

DOWNLAOD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

OSC-ChinesePremierCyberspaceAgenda

FBI – Former Chief Executive Officer of Construction Supply Company Convicted in Bank Fraud Scheme

BROOKLYN, NY—Following three weeks of trial, a federal jury in Brooklyn today returned guilty verdicts against Courtney Dupree, the former chief executive officer at GDC Acquisitions, on charges of bank fraud, false statements, and conspiracy to commit bank fraud. These charges arose out of the defendant’s scheme to defraud Amalgamated Bank, GDC’s asset-based lender, of $21 million in fraudulent loans. When sentenced by U.S. District Judge Kiyo Matsumoto, the defendant faces a maximum sentence of 30 years in prison on the most serious charge. The jury also acquitted Thomas Foley, GDC’s former chief operating officer.

The verdicts were announced by Loretta E. Lynch, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York.

GDC, based in Long Island City, Queens, is a holding company that owns various subsidiaries, including JDC Lighting, a lighting distributor; Unalite Electric and Lighting, a lighting maintenance company; and Hudson Bay Environments Group, a furniture distributor. The evidence included the testimony of GDC’s former chief financial officer and two GDC accountants, all three of whom had previously pleaded guilty to fraud charges arising from the scheme. At trial, the government proved Dupree and others gave Amalgamated Bank false financial information for GDC in which they had fraudulently inflated the company’s accounts receivables in order to obtain initially, and then maintain, credit lines totaling approximately $21 million. For example, the defendant represented to Amalgamated Bank in writing in November 2009 that GDC had $25.2 million in accounts receivables when, in fact, it had only $9 million. The evidence proved that the conspirators inflated the accounts receivables by a variety of means, including by recording fake sales that had never taken place in the corporate books. According to the trial testimony, the scheme unraveled when one of the accountants turned himself into the FBI and cooperated in the government’s investigation in an undercover capacity for approximately two months.

“The defendant Courtney Dupree defrauded an FDIC insured bank out of millions of dollars by lying about his company’s financial condition,” stated U.S. Attorney Lynch. “Executives who abuse positions of influence and trust should expect to be investigated and prosecuted to the full extent of the law.”

U.S. Attorney Lynch extended her grateful appreciation to the FBI and the U.S. Postal Inspection Service, the agencies responsible for leading the government’s criminal investigation.

The government’s case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys David C. Woll and Michael L. Yaeger, and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney Brian Morris.

This case was brought in coordination with President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For more information about the task force, visit http://www.stopfraud.gov.

FRAUD – Confidential People’s Bank of China Report on Billions in Theft by Government Officials

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

ChinaCentralBankCorruption

This report was originally released by the Chinese central bank before later being removed. For more explanation of the report and its contents, see:

 

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China’s rulers say corrupt cadres are the nation’s worst enemy. Now, according to a report that was given widespread coverage this week in local media, Beijing says that enemy resides overseas, particularly in the U.S.

The 67-page report from China’s central bank looks at where corrupt officials go and how they get their money out. A favored method is to squirrel cash away with the help of loved ones emigrating abroad, schemes that often depend on fake documents.

News of the study got prominent notice this week in Chinese media. A sample headline from page one of the Shanghai Daily on Thursday: “Destination America For China’s Corrupt Officials.”

The reports said the study was posted to the website of China’s central bank. While the document remains widely available in Chinese cyberspace, the report – dated June 2008 and identified as “confidential” – no longer appears on the People’s Bank of China website.

The central bank didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Though the report reads like an academic study, it doesn’t cite a clear conclusion.

Instead, it is broken into two main sections, the first starting with estimates that up to 18,000 corrupt officials and employees of state-owned enterprises have fled abroad or gone into hiding since the mid-1990s. They are suspected of pilfering coffers to the tune of 800 billion yuan, or $123 billion — a sum that works out to 2% of last year’s gross domestic product.

Destination America for China’s corrupt officials:

America is the destination most favored by high-ranking corrupt Chinese officials fleeing the country with large sums of money, according to a report by China’s central bank.

Other popular destinations include Australia and the Netherlands.

Those unable to get visas for Western countries opt for temporary stays in small countries in Africa, Latin America and eastern Europe while they wait for a chance to move to more developed countries, the People’s Bank of China report said.

Low-ranking officials usually escape to neighboring countries such as Thailand, Myanmar, Malaysia, Mongolia and Russia, it said.

The report cited research by the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences which revealed that about 16,000 to 18,000 government employees, police officers, judicial officers, senior managers of government institutions and state-owned companies, as well as employees of Chinese organizations in foreign countries, had escaped abroad or gone missing since the middle of the 1990s.

The money they carried with them is said to add up to 800 billion yuan (US$123 billion).

SECRET – U.S. Pacific Command China Pandemic Influenza Readiness Review

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The United States (U.S.) Pacific Command (PACOM) and the Hawaii National Guard (HING) have entered into an Inter-Service Support Agreement (ISSA) to execute two (2) USPACOM J07, Command Surgeon, Pandemic Influenza (PI) led activities in support of the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID): A Comprehensive Nation Review/Disparity Analysis and a PI Healthcare System Surge Demand and Intervention Workshop. These USAID approved and resourced training and education activities support military-to-military engagement for a World Health Organization (WHO) PI Phase 6 event in six (6) USAID focus countries; a WHO PI Phase 6 event is defined as sustained human-to-human transmission in at least two (2) WHO regions with at least two (2) countries involved in one of the regions. The six (6) USAID focus countries for this project are Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Nepal, and Vietnam. This report will focus specifically on China.

The People’s Republic of China is one of the global leaders in vaccine research and production, and an active participant in international PI initiatives, but despite steps to improve influenza surveillance and ministerial coordination, major challenges remain to Chinese PI response preparedness. Substantial global concern has emerged in recent years regarding China’s ability to effectively monitor, prevent, and contain infectious disease threats within its borders. Factors including potential Avian Influenza (AI) outbreaks in poultry, China’s immense size and population, a largely underdeveloped health care infrastructure, and a sizable poultry industry all contribute to make China a global PI hotspot and an important area of focus for the potential emergence of human influenza pandemics that threaten the rest of the world.

A PI Review Team from PACOM will use the results of this report as a starting point to complete an in-country review of China’s military capabilities (People’s Liberation Army) to prepare for and respond to this threat. The team will use an interactive Review Tool, standardized and scalable to the needs of China, to aid the team members in identifying capability disparities. Analysis of the information collected in this Review Report and through the use of the Review Tool will provide PACOM and USAID with the data needed to develop a three (3) to five (5) year strategic plan for future PI preparedness efforts in China.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

China-PI-Review

CONFIDENTIAL – The Majority of U.S. Foreign Aid is Now Military Aid

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A new bill approved by Congress last week would again make the Defense Department the premier funder of security assistance to foreign countries, giving it more than double the comparable budget of the agency popularly associated with America’s foreign aid, the State Department.

The $17 billion Pentagon aid budget for the 2012 fiscal year is the second in a row to exceed the State Department’s by $10 billion, a disparity that has begun to provoke debate among foreign policy experts in Washington. Seven years ago, circumstances were reversed, with the State Department spending triple the amount the Pentagon spent on such aid.

Some foreign aid experts have complained that, as a result of the shifting responsibilities, U.S. aid priorities have shifted from trying to establish good governance to supporting stronger foreign military partners.

Defense-funded security assistance programs, like those funded directly by the State Department, include military and police training, counter-drug assistance, counterterrorism activities, and infrastructure projects. These programs, detailed in the 2012 National Defense Authorization Act, have been steadily expanding, according to a March 2011 report by the Stimson Center, a nonprofit research group in Washington.

The expansion has largely come at the expense of the authority of the State Department, which was long chiefly responsible for the planning, budgeting and oversight of security assistance – including military training – with the Department of Defense responsible for implementation. After 9/11, the Pentagon has assumed more authority in foreign aid budgeting and planning.

The Pentagon has argued that supporting foreign forces reduces the chance that U.S. troops will be deployed overseas. The Pentagon has also long complained that State Department-run aid programs are too slow and inflexible. Its combatant commanders now frequently tap funds that can be distributed almost at will, known in aid parlance as “walking around money” and formally as the Combatant Commander Initiative Fund and the Commander Emergency Response Fund.

The 2012 budget bill authorizes spending of more than $415 million for these funds, or around $100 million less than in 2011.

NEO-STASI 2011 – WIE DIE NEO-STASI HEUTE AKTIV IST – 2011 – Retrospective-Retrospektive

Dear Readers,

the year 2011 has shown which  damage the “Nazi underground” and their terrorist cell could do.

Much more damage, much meaner and more dangerous is going on with the Neo-Stasi.

They have  a strong netwerk of politicians, lawyers, attorneys, bankers, media, hackers, SEO specialists, informers, experts and cyber-infiltration killers, but continues to be of professional killers.

Because these people were still not detected and punished.

They still use a lot of money missing from the DDR-money and their fellows even sit in the German parliament!

The peak of the iceberg is  “GoMoPa”.

They could even prevent an impeccable Berlin justice Senator by infiltrating the media before he could be dangerous for them.

2011 was the year of the unmasking of Neo- Stasi and their supporters in the media and the judiciary by our strength and dedication.

Sincerely yours,

Bernd Pulch, Master of Arts in Journalism, Germanic and Comparative Literature

Liebe Leser,

das Jahr 2011 hat gezeigt, welche Schäden der “Nationalsozialistische Untergrund” und deren Terror-Zelle angerichtet hat.

Viel mehr Schäden, viel gefährlicher und viel gemeiner geht die Neo-Stasi vor.

Sie verfügt über ein starkes Netwerk von Politkern, Anwälten, Bankiers, Medien, Hackern, SEO-Spezialisten, Unterwanderungsexperten und Cyber-Killern, aber auch weiterhin von professionellen Mördern.

Denn diese Leute wurden bis heute nicht enttarnt und bestraft. Gehen die etwa aufs Arbeitsamt oder schulen die sogar um ?

Wohl kaum, denn sie werden weiter gefragt, die alten Stasi-Seilschaften  funktionieren und viel Geld aus den verschwundenen DD-Geldern ist da  und die Genossen sitzen sogar im Bundestag  !

Die Spitze des Eisberg ist die enttarnte Stasi-Seilschaft “GoMOPa”.

Sie konnten sogar einen untadeligen Berliner Justiz-Senator durch willfährige Medien verhindern bevor er ihnen gefährlich werden konnte.

2011 war auch das Jahr der Enttarnung dieser Stasi-Bande ud ihrer Helfer in den Medien und in der Justiz.

Herzlichst Ihr

Brnd Pulch, Magister Artium der Publizistik, Germanistik und Komparatistik

TOP-SECRET-Libyan Intelligence Service CIA-MI6 Extraordinary Rendition Documents

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These documents concerning CIA rendition of terrorism suspects, with the help of the UK, were recovered from the offices of Libyan intelligence.

 

DOWNLOAD FULL DOCUMENTS HERE

LibyaRendition

 

CONFIDENTIAL -STRATFOR Hacked Update

30 December 2011. A writes that five Pastebin posts of recovered STRATFOR passwords have been removed as indicated below. In addition, four files from sources have been removed from Rapid Share (1) and Wikisend (3).

29 December 2011.

Lulzxmas Dumps 860,000 STRATFOR Accounts:

http://pastebin.com/f7jYf5Wd

http://www.megaupload.com/?d=O5P03RXK

28 December 2011.

Prepping for the Stratfor 5M Email Release

http://pastebin.com/Qsqpsr6t

http://piratenpad.de/Stratfor

27 December 2011.

http://pastebin.com/78MUAaeZ [Now removed]

These are 28517 of 53281 (54%) passwords from the list of STRATFOR customer accounts cracked.

Part 1/3: http://pastebin.com/CdD92fJG [Now removed]

Part 2/3: http://pastebin.com/AcwQgHmF [Now removed]

Part 3/3: http://pastebin.com/78MUAaeZ [Now removed]

26 December 2011. Firms and personal first names beginning with “D” through “My” (~ 30,000).

http://pastebin.com/q5kXd7Fd

https://rapidshare.com/#!download|44tl6|2444489251|STRATFOR_full_d_m.txt.gz|3255|
R~7B8842ED6343CEAE67A23C094E131679|0|0 [Now removed]

And 25,000 IT work tickets:

http://www.verzend.be/s8v8ccig12hp/it.tar.gz.html

26 December 2011. Sample Stratfor.com email:

http://pastebin.com/HmDs0EM4

“just a small preview of the mayhem to come. 1 out of 2.7 million”

26 December 2011. STRATFOR leaked accounts (10257 passwords recovered)

http://pastebin.com/CdD92fJG [Now removed]

25 December 2011. Firms and personal miscellaneous names not in alphabetical order (~13,000):

http://pastebin.com/8v3768Bw [Now removed]

http://wikisend.com/download/132838/stratfor_full_misc.txt.gz [Now removed]

25 December 2011. Firms and personal first names beginning with “B-By” through “C-Cz” (~4,000) :

http://pastebin.com/bUqkb9mq

http://wikisend.com/download/597646/stratfor_full_b.txt.gz [Now removed]

25 December 2011. Firms and personal first names beginning with “A” through “Az” (~ 4,000).

http://pastebin.com/bQ2YHDdw

http://wikisend.com/download/601776/stratfor_full_a.txt.gz [Now removed]

25 December 2011. A message allegedly to subscribers from George Friedman, Stratfor, was posted to Facebook and Pastebin (below).

25 December 2011. A paste today denying Anonymous role:

http://pastebin.com/8yrwyNkt

And, Stratfor’s A client list of passwords:

http://pastebin.com/5H33nPEK

24 December 2011

STRATFOR Hacked

Related:

http://pastebin.com/8MtFze0s

http://pastebin.com/CAWDEW8G

A sends:

Subject: Important Announcement from STRATFOR
Date: Sat, 24 Dec 2011 19:49:58 -0500
From: STRATFOR <mail[at]response.stratfor.com>

Dear Stratfor Member,

We have learned that Stratfor’s web site was hacked by an unauthorized party. As a result of this incident the operation of Stratfor’s servers and email have been suspended.

We have reason to believe that the names of our corporate subscribers have been posed [sic] on other web sites. We are diligently investigating the extent to which subscriber information may have been obtained.

Stratfor and I take this incident very seriously. Stratfor’s relationship with its members and, in particular, the confidentiality of their subscriber information, are very important to Stratfor and me. We are working closely with law enforcement in their investigation and will assist them with the identification of the individual(s) who are responsible.

Although we are still learning more and the law enforcement investigation is active and ongoing, we wanted to provide you with notice of this incident as quickly as possible. We will keep you updated regarding these matters.

Sincerely,

George Friedman

STRATFOR
221 W. 6th Street, Suite 400
Austin, TX 78701 US
http://www.stratfor.com

http://www.facebook.com/stratfor

http://pastebin.com/6a86QSMM

Dec 25th, 2011

On December 24th an unauthorized party disclosed personally identifiable information and related credit card data of some of our members. We have reason to believe that your personal and credit card data could have been included in the information that was illegally obtained and disclosed.

Also publicly released was a list of our members which the unauthorized party claimed to be Stratfor’s “private clients.” Contrary to this assertion the disclosure was merely a list of some of the members that have purchased our publications and does not comprise a list of individuals or entities that have a relationship with Stratfor beyond their purchase of our subscription-based publications.

We have also retained the services of a leading identity theft protection and monitoring service on behalf of the Stratfor members that have been impacted by these events. Details regarding the services to be provided will be forwarded in a subsequent email that is to be delivered to the impacted members no later than Wednesday, December 28th.

In the interim, precautions that can be taken by you to minimize and prevent the misuse of information which may have been disclosed include the following:

– contact your financial institution and inform them of this incident;

– if you see any unauthorized activity on your accounts promptly notify your financial institution;

– submit a complaint with the Federal Trade Commission (“FTC”) by calling 1-877-ID-THEFT (1-877- 438-4338) or online at https://www.ftccomplaintassistant.gov/; and

– contact the three U.S. credit reporting agencies: Equifax (http://www.equifax.com/ or (800) 685-1111), Experian (http://www.experian.com/ or (888) 397-3742), and TransUnion (http://www.transunion.com/ or (800) 888-4213), to obtain a free credit report from each.

Even if you do not find any suspicious activity on your initial credit reports, the FTC recommends that you check your credit reports periodically. Checking your credit reports can help you spot problems and address them quickly.

To ease any concerns you may have about your personal information going forward, we have also retained an experienced outside consultant that specializes in such security matters to bolster our existing efforts on these issues as we work to better serve you. We are on top of the situation and will continue to be vigilant in our implementation of the latest, and most comprehensive, data security measures.

We are also working to restore access to our website and continuing to work closely with law enforcement regarding these matters. We will continue to update you regarding the status of these matters.

Again, my sincerest apologies for this unfortunate incident.

Sincerely,

George Friedman

SECRET – (SBU) State Department Uganda Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament Report to Congress

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The Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act, Public Law 111-172, requires the Secretary of State to submit a report to Congress on implementation of the President’s strategy to support disarmament of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and assistance provided toward a lasting solution to the conflict in northern Uganda.

The United States has worked over the last year with our bilateral and multilateral partners to advance the President’s strategy. With our encouragement, the African Union (AU) and United Nations (UN) are working to enhance regional coordination toward addressing the LRA threat. We have also continued to support regional efforts to increase diplomatic and military pressure on the LRA. We have deployed U.S. military personnel to the region to serve as advisors to regional militaries pursuing the LRA. Meanwhile, we continue work with partners in the region to increase civilian protection, facilitate LRA defections, and address humanitarian needs, while also supporting the recovery of northern Uganda.

The United States remains committed to pursuing the multi-year, comprehensive strategy submitted to Congress last year. Any reduction in regional cooperation or military pressure could enable the LRA to regroup and rebuild its forces. However, the extent of U.S. efforts to implement the strategy remains a function of available and consistent resources. Given our budget constraints, we continue to encourage other members of the international community to join this effort and help fill funding gaps. We co-chair the International Working Group on the LRA, a mechanism established to enhance coordination among all donors.

Enhancing Regional Efforts to Apprehend LRA Top Commanders

Over the last year, the United States has worked with regional governments to enhance their military operations to apprehend or remove top LRA commanders from the battlefield. We continue to provide critical logistical support and nonlethal equipment to assist the Ugandan military’s counter-LRA operations. With our encouragement, the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has deployed a U.S. trained and equipped battalion to participate in counter-LRA efforts in the LRA’s area of operations in the DRC. As the Central African Republic (CAR) and South Sudan increase their efforts to counter the LRA, we are engaging with and supporting their militaries. We have provided some equipment to the CAR forces deployed to the LRA-affected area.

Although regional militaries have reduced the LRA’s numbers to an estimated 200 core fighters and an unknown number of accompanying children and abductees, the LRA will remain a serious regional threat as long as Joseph Kony and the LRA’s top leaders remain in place. Over the last year, sustained military pressure has limited the LRA’s opportunities to regroup and rearm. Abductees and low-level fighters have continued to escape and reintegrate into their communities. Nonetheless, the LRA is still terrorizing communities and undermining regional security across a broad swath of central Africa. According to the UN, there have been over 250 attacks attributed to the LRA this year alone.

In line with the President’s strategy, we have reviewed how we can improve our support to the coalition of LRA-affected countries to increase the likelihood of successful operations to apprehend or remove LRA top commanders from the battlefield and bring them to justice. On October 14, the President reported to Congress that he had authorized a small number of U.S. forces to deploy to the LRA-affected region, in consultation with the regional governments, to act as advisors to the regional militaries that are pursuing the LRA. These advisors will enhance the capacity of regional militaries to coordinate and fuse intelligence with effective operational planning. The U.S. forces will not themselves engage directly against LRA forces unless necessary to defend themselves.

This is a short-term deployment with clear goals and objectives. We believe the U.S. advisors can address critical capabilities gaps to help the regional forces succeed. Additionally, our advisors are sensitive to civilian protection considerations and will work closely with our embassies to ensure they remain cognizant of local and regional political dynamics. The State Department has deployed a Civilian Response Corps officer to the region to work with the advisors in this regard. We will regularly review and assess whether the advisory effort is sufficiently enhancing the regional effort to justify continued deployment. Our embassies will also continue to consult with the regional governments and ensure their consent as we move forward. Continued deployment is conditional on regional governments’ sustained commitment and cooperation to bring an eventual end to the LRA threat.

Supporting Post-Conflict Recovery and Reconciliation in Northern Uganda Finally, the United States remains committed to supporting efforts to promote comprehensive reconstruction, transitional justice, and reconciliation in northern Uganda, where the LRA carried out its brutal campaign for nearly two decades. In Fiscal Year 2011, USAID provided approximately $102 million in assistance to northern Uganda, including:

• $2 million to assist internally-displaced persons (IDPs) and returnees to secure durable return solutions;
• $2.1 million to enhance accountability and administrative competence of local governance institutions, including the civilian police and judiciary;
• $4.2 million to help former LRA combatants with vocational education and employment opportunities; and
• $15 million to promote rural rehabilitation and food security.

Northern Uganda has undergone a visible transformation since the LRA’s departure from Uganda in 2005, especially in terms of infrastructure and social services. The population is able to move freely, stores are open, and fields are being cultivated. According to UNHCR, an estimated 95 percent of people once living in IDP camps have moved from camps to transit sites or returned home.

According to the Ugandan Bureau of Statistics, poverty in northern Uganda declined from 60.7 percent to 46.2 percent between 2005/6 and 2009/10, representing the largest decline in poverty of all regions in Uganda during that period. Yet, even with this impressive decline, the north remains the poorest region in the country. Furthermore, land issues, tensions between tribes and subtribes in the region, and widespread psycho-social trauma, among other issues, need to be addressed to ensure the sustainability of peace in northern Uganda.

From 2009 to 2011, the Government of Uganda (GoU) contributed approximately $ 110 million to its Peace, Recovery and Development Plan for Northern Uganda (PRDP). This is less than the government’s original pledge to provide 30 percent of the PRDP’s total budget, but GoU officials state that they will continue to earmark funds for northern Uganda’s recovery. During this period, non-USG donors have provided significant funding in support of the PRDP.

DOWNLOAD FULL DOCUMENT HERE

 

StateDepartment-LRA

MEDIA – White House Refuses to Inform Lawmakers About Drone Operations

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A Pakistani protester holds a burning US flag as they shout slogans during a protest in Multan on October 31, 2011 against the US drone attacks in the Pakistani tribal region. Nearly 60 US drone strikes have been reported in Pakistan so far this year, dozens of them since Navy SEALs killed Al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden in the garrison city of Abbottabad, close to the capital Islamabad, on May 2. Relations between Pakistan and the United States deteriorated after that, and again over accusations that Pakistani intelligence was involved with the Haqqani network, blamed for a siege last month of the US embassy in Kabul. AFP PHOTO / S.S. MIRZA

Tensions Rising Over Drone Secrecy:

Tensions are quietly increasing between the White House and some congressional leaders over access to sensitive information about the government’s use of drones in Pakistan and Yemen, officials said.The White House has brushed aside requests for information from lawmakers, who argue that the strikes, carried out secretly by the Central Intelligence Agency and the military’s Joint Special Operations Command, have broad implications for U.S. policy but don’t receive adequate oversight.Some current and former administration, military and congressional officials point to what they see as significant oversight gaps, in part because few lawmakers have full access to information about the drone strikes.Lawmakers on Congress’s intelligence committees are privy to information about all CIA and military-intelligence operations, but members of at least two other panels want insight on the drone program.

Compounding the dispute: Lawmakers who are briefed on classified information are legally constrained from raising their concerns publicly. Current and former officials say the White House wants to keep a tight hold on classified information to avoid unauthorized disclosures.

The demand for lawmakers outside the intelligence committees to have access to details on the covert drone program, said one U.S. official, “just doesn’t hold water.”

After the CIA launches a drone strike, the intelligence committees receive a notification telephone call almost immediately, which is followed by a secure fax with the details of the strike, according to government officials. There are also monthly meetings at the CIA’s Langley, Va. headquarters with congressional staff to review the program and classified briefings or hearings on Capitol Hill at least every three months.

Administration officials say the drone programs run by the CIA and Joint Special Operations Command are carefully monitored by top officials at both agencies and by the White House National Security Council.

Secrecy defines Obama’s drone war:

Since September, at least 60 people have died in 14 reported CIA drone strikes in Pakistan’s tribal regions. The Obama administration has named only one of the dead, hailing the elimination of Janbaz Zadran, a top official in the Haqqani insurgent network, as a counterterrorism victory.The identities of the rest remain classified, as does the existence of the drone program itself. Because the names of the dead and the threat they were believed to pose are secret, it is impossible for anyone without access to U.S. intelligence to assess whether the deaths were justified.The administration has said that its covert, targeted killings with remote-controlled aircraft in Pakistan, Yemen, Somalia and potentially beyond are proper under both domestic and international law. It has said that the targets are chosen under strict criteria, with rigorous internal oversight.It has parried reports of collateral damage and the alleged killing of innocents by saying that drones, with their surveillance capabilities and precision missiles, result in far fewer mistakes than less sophisticated weapons.

Yet in carrying out hundreds of strikes over three years — resulting in an estimated 1,350 to 2,250 deaths in Pakistan — it has provided virtually no details to support those assertions.

Exposed and Uncensored – Nudity Protests

Nudity Protests

[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** Brazilian carnival queen Viviane Castro parades with an image depicting President Barack Obama painted on her left leg during carnival celebrations in Sao Paulo, Brazil, Saturday, Feb. 21, 2009. Castro’s stomach reads in Portuguese “for sale,” a message she said represented the sale of Brazil’s Amazon to the U.S. (Folha Imagem, Lalo de Almeida)
[Image](EDITORS NOTE: Image contains nudity. The indignants have come from across the country to protest high levels of unemployment, the austerity measures and what they consider a stagnant and corrupt political system. Getty

[Image]

[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** A model walks her bicycle during a protest against worldwide pollution in Bogota, Wednesday, April 1, 2009. (Fernando Vergara)
[Image]EDS NOTE NUDITY – South Korean prostitutes in their underwear and covered in body and face paint, and some others wearing mourning clothes, rush to police line after a rally in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, May 17, 2011. Hundreds of prostitutes and pimps rallied Tuesday near a red-light district in Seoul to protest a police crackdown on brothels, with some unsuccessfully attempting to set themselves on fire. AP
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** A woman holds up her bike during the World Naked Bike Ride in Sao Paulo, Saturday, June 14, 2008. Although total nudity is prohibited in public areas in Brazil, the woman was not detained. Of about 200 bikers, police detained only one man after he denied to wear his clothes. (Andre Penner)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** A policemen kicks a man during the World Naked Bike Ride in Sao Paulo, Saturday, June 14, 2008.(Andre Penner)
[Image](EDITORS NOTE: THIS IMAGE CONTAINS PARTIAL NUDITY) Protesters perfom during demonstrations against the influence of bankers and financiers in front of the Reichstagsgebaeude on October 15, 2011 in Berlin, Germany. Thousands of people took to the streets today in cities across Germany in demonstrations inspired by the Occupy Wall Street protests in the United States. Activists are demanding an end to the free-wheeling ways of global financial players whom they see as responsible for the current European and American economic woes.

[Image]

[Image]AUGUST 13: (EDITORS NOTE: Image contains nudity. Several thousand men and women turned out to protest against rape and a woman’s right to her body.
[Image]EDS NOTE NUDITY Semi naked activists from the Ukrainian female rights group Femen protest in front of the Saudi Arabian embassy against a ban on driving cars for women in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, June 16, 2011. (Sergei Chuzavkov)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** A nude demonstrator gestures towards the police in Malmo, Sweden, Friday Sept. 19, 2008. A street occupation by activists on the fringes of the European Social Forum turned into stone throwing and fighting. (Drago Prvulovic)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** A protester performs during a march to mark the 1968 Tlatelolco plaza “massacre”‘ in Mexico City, Thursday, Oct. 2, 2008. Hundreds of student demonstrators were killed by men with guns and soldiers on October 2, 1968, ten days before the 1968 Summer Olympics celebrations in Mexico City. (AP Photo/Alexandre Meneghini)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** Employees of LUSH Fresh Handmade Cosmetics lead a protest outside of the LUSH Walnut Street shop, wearing nothing but aprons to urge shoppers to buy products that are free of packaging, in Philadelphia, Wednesday, Aug. 27, 2008. (Justin Maxon)
[Image]** EDS NOTE: NUDITY ** Animal rights activist wearing banderillas, barbed darts which are stabbed into the bull’s neck during bullfights, are seen during a protest prior to start the nine day San Fermin Festival on Sunday in Pamplona northern Spain, Saturday, July 5, 2008. (Alvaro Barrientos)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** A policeman sprays pepper gas as he detains a man during the World Naked Bike Ride in Sao Paulo, Saturday, June 14, 2008.(Andre Penner)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** Two models wearing gas masks ride bicycles during a protest against worldwide pollution as a man takes their picture in Bogota, Wednesday, April 1, 2009. (Fernando Vergara)
[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** Five models wearing gas masks pose for a photo as they protest worldwide pollution in Bogota, Wednesday, April 1, 2009. (Fernando Vergara)
[Image]**EDS NOTE NUDITY** A group of women with their bodies painted march during the International Day of the Elimination of Violence Against Women in Bogota, Wednesday, Nov. 25, 2009. (Fernando Vergara)
[Image]**EDS NOTE NUDITY** Women with painted bodies perform during a march against violence against women in San Salvador, Wednesday , Nov. 25 , 2009. Hundreds of people marched Wednesday in honor of International Day for Elimination of Violence against Women. (Luis Romero)
[Image]EDS NOTE NUDITY – Women protest against the high cost of living during a rally marking May Day in the streets of San Salvador, El Salvador, Sunday May 1, 2011. Activists filled the streets marking International Workers’ Day with skits and marchers that brought attention to the rising cost of living and growing disparities between the rich and poor. AP
[Image]EDS NOTE NUDITY – Students, one with her body painted, march to protest a government law project to increase private investments in public universities in Medellin, Colombia, Thursday, April 7, 2011.

Nudity Celebration

[Image]** EDS NOTE NUDITY ** Dancers perform on a Vila Isabel samba school float at the Sambodrome in Rio de Janeiro, Monday, Feb. 23, 2009. (Natacha Pisarenko)
[Image]**EDS NOTE NUDITY** A dancer performs during the parade of the Gavioes da Fiel samba school in Sao Paulo, Sunday, Feb. 22, 2009. (Andre Penner)

TOP-SECRET – U.S. Army Guerrilla Hunter Killer Smartbook Version 9.5

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To effectively defeat an enemy, one must first understand the enemy. Intelligence professionals have forgotten the basic principles on which intelligence analysis is conducted, instead they sub-scribe to the paradigm that the enemy faced in this Global War on Terror has no structure or doctrine. Any organization, military or civilian, must have a structure and a way of doing business if they are to have any chance of being successful. As previously stated, understanding an enemy is critical to defeating him, but how much do we really understand the Taliban? We know that the Taliban fights in small groups using unconventional tactics that usually manifest themselves in the form of Improvised Explosive Device (IED), Direct Fire (DF), and Indirect Fire (IDF) attacks against Coalition Forces (CF) vehicles, patrols, and operating bases. The Taliban uses fear and intimidation against the Afghan people, collecting taxes, establishing court systems based on Shari’a law and doling out justice when these laws are broken. We also know that the Taliban enjoys sanctuary in regions bordering Afghanistan, such as Pakistan, with most of their senior leadership issuing decrees and orders just across the border. All of these “knowns” about the Taliban are not new to warfare of this nature, instead many of these same factors have been observed all over the world and throughout time. The military leader and fighter Ernesto “Che” Guevara waged guerrilla campaigns in multiple countries almost forty years ago using many of the same tactics the Taliban em-ploy today. Che’s successful war in Cuba and his failed guerrilla movements in the Congo and Bolivia are not the only historical examples of low intensity conflict that resemble our current fight in Afghanistan. Mao Tse Tung, Carlos Marighella and Alberto Bayo are just a few other Guerrilla leaders whose writings were examined and captured in the Guerrilla Hunter Killer Template. Volumes of source documents exist that can be referenced to help understand and define the enemy. Interestingly, the Guerrilla Hunter Killer Template was written using these source documents almost exclusively, but as you will see the parallels to the Taliban are frightening and therefore applicable to the war in Afghanistan. Truly understanding and defining the enemy as a collective group, not as individuals, is key to defeating him. The GH/K template blends historical writings of Guerrilla Leaders in conjunction with current and past United States Army doctrine to form the “melting pot” that is The Guerrilla Hunter Killer.

Once a base line understanding of the enemy was established, we understood the need to use common graphics and terms to accurately describe the enemy formations and tactical tasks. Sim-ply using U.S. Army operational terms and graphics does a severe disservice to all involved. The enemy we face is not the U.S. Army, and we should not attempt to “make them fit” into our own maneuver doctrine. While some tactical terms and graphics may fit what the enemy is trying to accomplish and how he organizes himself a majority do not, and at the end of the day this method is simply shoe horning the enemy into doctrine meant for ourselves. The enemy deserves his own graphics and tactical terms, for his structure and tasks are unique to what he is attempting to accomplish.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

 

GuerrillaHunterKillerSmartbook

Confidential from the FBI – A Year in Review 2011 – Bulger, Mafia, Cybercrime, Terrorism, Fraud – Part 1

 

 

Case Files 2011The FBI conducted thousands of investigations in 2011, from terrorists bent on murder and cyber thieves hacking networks to corrupt government officials and fraudsters stealing billions of dollars from innocent victims.

 

As the year comes to a close, here is a look at some of the most significant cases the Bureau investigated with the help of our domestic and international law enforcement and intelligence community partners.

 

Part 1 focuses on our top investigative priority: protecting the nation from terrorist attack. The death of Osama bin Laden in May was a milestone, but al Qaeda remains committed to high-profile attacks against the U.S. And on the home front, lone offenders radicalized on the Internet continue to pose a serious threat to national security.

 

Here are some of the top terror cases of 2011, in reverse chronological order:

 

Murder of U.S. soldiers in Iraq: A 38-year-old Canadian citizen was indicted this month by a New York grand jury for his role in the murder of five American soldiers in a suicide-bomb attack in Iraq in 2009. The individual was arrested last January in Canada, and the U.S. is seeking his extradition.

 

Senior citizens indicted in ricin plot: Four Georgia men in their 60s and 70s were arrested last month for planning to manufacture the biological toxin ricin and purchasing explosives for use in attacks against American citizens. The defendants are alleged to be part of a fringe militia group.

 

Plot against Saudi ambassador: Two individuals were charged in October for their participation in a plot directed by elements of the Iranian government to murder the Saudi ambassador to the U.S. with explosives while the ambassador was on U.S. soil. One of the individuals is in custody; the other is still at large.

 

Attack planned on U.S. Capitol: A 26-year-old Massachusetts man was arrested in September and charged with plotting to bomb the Pentagon and U.S. Capitol using remote-controlled aircraft filled with explosives.

 

Material support to terrorists: An Albanian citizen living in New York was charged in September with providing material support to terrorists for planning travel to Pakistan to join a radical jihadist fighting group. He was arrested while trying to catch a flight out of the country.

 

Texas bomb plot: A 21-year-old soldier who was absent without leave was charged in July with planning to detonate a bomb inside a restaurant frequented by soldiers from Fort Hood. When he was arrested, the individual was in possession of a variety of bomb-making components. In November he was charged with additional crimes including attempted murder.

 

Plot to attack Seattle military installation: Two men were indicted in July for conspiring to use a weapon of mass destruction to attack a military installation in Seattle with the intention of killing U.S. citizens. Law enforcement first became aware of the plot when an individual alerted them that he had been approached about participating in the attack.

 

Conduit to terror organizations: A Somali national in his mid-20s was indicted in July for providing material support to foreign terror organizations al Shabaab and al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP). He was captured in the Gulf region by the U.S. military in April 2011 and was allegedly a conduit between al Shabaab and AQAP.

 

Iraq bomb attacks: An Iraqi citizen who allegedly carried out numerous improvised explosive device (IED) attacks against U.S. troops in Iraq and another Iraqi national alleged to have participated in the Iraq insurgency were indicted in May on terrorism charges in Kentucky, where both were residents.

 

Jihadist indicted: A 20-year-old Saudi Arabia citizen and Texas resident was arrested in February and charged with attempted use of a weapon of mass destruction in connection with the purchase of chemicals and equipment used to make an IED and his research of potential U.S. targets. The individual came to the U.S. in 2008 on a student visa.

Confidential from the FBI – A Year in Review 2011 – Bulger, Mafia, Cybercrime, Terrorism, Fraud – Part 2

 

 

Case Files 2011With our partners in the law enforcement and intelligence communities, the FBI worked thousands of investigations during 2011, from cyber and hate crimes to public corruption and multi-million-dollar fraud schemes. As the year draws to a close, we take a look back at some of 2011’s most significant cases.

 

Part 1 focused on terrorism. This segment highlights some of the year’s top cases from the FBI’s other investigative priorities:

 

Martin Luther King Jr. Day attempted bombing: A Washington state man was sentenced to 32 years in prison last week for attempting to bomb a Martin Luther King Jr. Day parade last January in Spokane.

 

International cyber takedown: Six Estonian nationals were arrested last month for running a sophisticated Internet fraud ring that infected millions of computers worldwide with a virus and enabled the thieves to manipulate the multi-billion-dollar Internet advertising industry.

 

Operation Delta Blues: After a two-year investigation dubbed Operation Delta Blues, 70 individuals—including five law enforcement officers—were charged in Arkansas in October with crimes including public corruption, drug trafficking, money laundering, and firearms offenses.

 

Corporate fraud scheme: The former chairman and owner of Taylor, Bean & Whitaker (TBW), a privately held mortgage lending company, was sentenced in June to 30 years in prison for his role in a more than $2.9 billion fraud scheme that contributed to the failure of TBW and Colonial Bank, one of the 25 largest banks in the U.S.

 

James “Whitey” Bulger arrested: Top Ten fugitive James “Whitey” Bulger was arrested in June thanks to a tip from the public—just days after a new FBI media campaign was launched to help locate the Boston gangster who had been on the run for 16 years.

 

Cyber fraud organization disrupted: In an unprecedented move in the fight against cyber crime, the FBI disrupted an international cyber fraud operation in April by seizing the servers that had infected as many as two million computers with malicious software.

 

Southwest border gang arrests: Thirty-five members and associates of the Barrio Azteca gang were charged in March with various counts of racketeering, murder, drug offenses, and money laundering. Ten of the defendants were Mexican nationals and were also charged in connection with the 2010 murders in Juarez, Mexico of a U.S. Consulate employee, her husband, and the husband of a U.S. Consulate employee.

 

Health care fraud takedown: Twenty individuals, including three doctors, were charged in South Florida in February for their participation in a fraud scheme involving $200 million in Medicare billing for mental health services. The charges coincided with a national federal health care fraud takedown involving 111 defendants in nine cities.

 

Selling secrets for profit: A 66-year-old resident of Hawaii was sentenced in January to 32 years in prison for communicating classified national defense information about U.S. military planes to the People’s Republic of China, along with illegally exporting military technical data and other offenses.

 

Massive Mafia takedown: Nearly 130 members of the Mafia in New York City and other East Coast cities were arrested in January in the largest nationally coordinated organized crime takedown in FBI history. Charges included murder, drug trafficking, arson, loan sharking, illegal gambling, witness tampering, labor racketeering, and extortion

CONFIDENTIAL – U.S. Forces – Iraq Private Security Contractors (PSC) Registration Requirements

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(U) FRAGO 0309 REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS FOR PRIVATE SECURITY CONTRACTORS

(PSC) TO USF-I OPERATIONS ORDER 10-01.

(U) TIME ZONE USED THROUGHOUT THIS PUBLICATION: CHARLIE (C).

1. (U) SITUATION: USF-I, DEPARTMENT OF STATE AND NUMEROUS OTHER ENTITIES IN
IRAQ HAVE CONTRACTED SECURITY OPERATIONS FOR FORWARD OPERATING BASES (FOB)
AND PERSONAL SECURITY DETAILS (PSD) TO PRIVATE SECURITY CONTRACTORS (PSC).
GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ, MINISTRY OF INTERIOR (MOI) HAS IN RECENT MONTHS INDICATED
THAT CONTRACTED SECURITY COMPANIES ARE NOT OPERATING WITH THE THE PURVIEW OF
ESTABLISHED LAW. AS A RESULT, MANY PRIVATE SECURITY COMPANIES HAVE BEEN
STOPPED AT SNAP CHECK POINTS AND ENTRY CONTROL POINTS TO VERIFY THEIR
CREDINTIALS. THOSE COMPANIES OUT OF COMPLAINCE HAVE HAD PERSONNEL ARRESTED
AND WEAPONS AND VEHICLES CONFISCATED. GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ, IN COORDINATION
WITH USF-I, HAS GRANTED A 30 GRACE PERIOD FOR ALL PRIVATE SECURITY
CONTRACTORS TO COMPLY WITH IRAQ LAW STARTING 14 JAN 2010 AND ENDING 12 FEB
2010.

2. (U) MISSION: EFFECTIVE UPON PUBLICATION, USF-I UNITS WITH PRIVATE
SECURITY CONTRACTORS AND ARMED CONTRACT CIVILIANS WILL ENSURE THAT ALL ARE IN
FULL COMPLIANCE WITH PUBLISHED USF-I POLICY AND GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ LAW PRIOR
TO 12 FEB 2010.

3. (U) EXECUTION:

3.A. (U) CONCEPT OF THE OPERATION:

3.A.1 (U) UPON RECIEPT OF THIS FRAGO, MSC’S IDENTIFY THE NUMBER OF PRIVATE
SECURITY CONTRACTORS (PSC) AND ARMED CIVILIAN CONTRACTORS WITNIN THEIR
COMMAND AND VERIFY THEIR LEVEL OF COMPLIANCE WITH USF-I POLICY DIRECTIVES AND
GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ LAW. DIRECT ALL CONTRACT OFFICER REPRESENTATIVES(COR)TO
TRACK SUBMISSION OF REQUIRED INFORMATION TO GOI BY EACH COMPANY UNTIL COMPLETE. ADDITIONALLY SUBMIT A STATUS REPORT TO JCC-I/A AND ACOB WEEKLY INDICATING COMPLETE DOCUMENT SUBMISSION AND THE PERCENTAGE OF MOI EMPLOYEE
ID AND WEAPON CARDS RECEIVED FROM GOI. AFTER REACHING 100% CONTINUE TO SUBMIT
UPDATES WITH A MONTHLY COR REPORT TO JCC-I/A.

3.B. (U) TASKS TO UNITS:

3.B.1. (U) ALL MSC’S AND SEPARATES.

3.B.1.A (U) ALL UNITS WITH CIVILIAN ARMING AUTHORIZATIONS FROM THE DEPUTY
CHIEF OF STAFF (DCOS), USF-I WILL NOMINATE AND JCC-I/A WILL APPOINT OF A
CONTRACTING OFFICER REPRESENTATIVE (COR) WHO IS PROPERLY TRAINED, QUALIFIED,
AND ASSIGNED COR DUTIES AS A PRIMARY TASK IAW DCMA COR TRAINING AND
REQUIREMENTS.

3.B.1.B (U)CONTRACT OFFICER REPRESENTATIVE (COR) VERIFIES THAT EACH COMPANY
WITH A DOD CONTRACT FOR ARMED PERSONNEL WITHIN THEIR COMMAND IS IN COMPLIANCE
WITH ALL USF-I POLICY DIRECTIVES AND GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ LAW. SUBMIT A WEEKLY
STATUS REPORT TO JCC-I/A AND ACOB UNTIL ALL UNITS ARE IN COMPLIANCE AND THEN
MONTHLY THERE AFTER WITH THE MONTHLY COR REPORT TO JCC-I/A.

3.B.2. (U) JCC-I/A

3.B.2.A (U) RECEIVE AND CONSOLIDATE COR WEEKLY AND MONTHLY REPORTS. PROVIDE
AN AGGREGATE STATUS REPORT OF ALL APPLICABLE CONTRACTS AND ISSUES RELATED TO
NON-COMPLAINCE TO USF-I ARMED CONTRACTOR OVERSIGHT BRANCH (ACOB).

3.B.2.B (U) ENSURE ALL CONTRACTS WITH ARMED CONTRACTORS HAVE TRAINED CONTRACT
OFFICER REPRESENTAIVES (COR) APPOINTED, MONTHLY CONTRACTOR STATUS REPORTS
SUBMITTED AND STRICT MONITORING BY CONTRACTING OFFICERS (KO).

3.D. (U) TASKS TO STAFF:

3.D.1. (U) USF-I J34 PROTECTION

3.D.1.A (U)UPON PUBLISHING OF THIS FRAGO, ENSURE ARMED CONTRACTOR OVERSIGHT
BRANCH (ACOB) PROVIDES OVERSIGHT OF ALL DOD ARMED CONTRACTORS SUPPORTING USFI
OPERATIONS.

3.D.1.B (U) REVIEW THE CONSOLIDATED ARMED CONTRACTOR COMPLIANCE RESULTS FROM
JCC-I/A, AND FORWARD TO J3 AND COMMAND GROUP WITH ANALYSIS OF ANY ISSUES.

3.D.1.C (U) COORDINATE WITH GOI TO MAINTAIN A STATUS ON THE NUMBER OF DOD
PRIVATE SECURITY CONTRATORS WHO HAVE SUBMITTED THE REQUIRED DOCUMENTS.
FURTHER ASSESS STATUS OF GOI PROCESSING MOI EMPLOYEE ID AND WEAPONS CARDS.
BASES.

3.E. (U) COORDINATING INSTRUCTIONS:

3.E.1. (U) ALL PRIVATE SECURITY CONTRACTORS ARE REQUIRED TO COMPLY WITH ALL
USF-I POLICY DIRECTIVES, ORDERS AND GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ LAW. FOR A LIST OF
REQUIRMENTS ON GOVERNMENT OF IRAQ REQUIRMENTS VISIT WEBSITE
WWW.IRAQIINTERIOR.COM/PSCD/PSCD_INDEX.HTM.

3.E.2. (U) PER THE GUIDANCE ISSUED AT THE PRIVATE SECURITY MEETING ON 17 JAN
10 CORS WILL RECEIVE REPORTS ON THE STATUS OF PERSONNEL, WEAPONS AND VEHICLES
EVERY TUESDAY FROM PRIVATE SECURITY CONTRACTORS. SEE ENCLOSURE 1, PSC
LICENSE AND REGISTRATION STATUS REPORT FORM. AFTER THE CRISIS PERIOD CEASES,
REPORT THE INFORMATION MONTHLY TO COR WHO WILL SUBMIT CONSOLIDATE REPORT TO
JCC-I/A.

3.E.3. (U) ALL REQUESTS FOR 30 DAY GRACE PERIOD WAIVERS CAN BE REQUESTED FROM
GOI AT THE OFFICE OF THE DIRECTOR REGISTRATION AND ASSESSMENT OF PRIVATE
SECURITY CONTRACTORS.

 

DOWNLOAD ORGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

iraqpscregistration2

SECRET – Photos of U.S. “Kill Team” Posing with Murdered Afghan Civilians

The following photos depict soldiers from the 5th Stryker Brigade, 2nd Infantry Division, posing next to the corpse of Gul Mudin, an unarmed Afghan civilian killed by their unit on January 15, 2010, as well as the corpses of two other unnamed Afghan civilians.  The photos were published today by Der Spiegel in their German-language print release. However, they are blocked behind a paywall that restricts their dissemination.  The U.S. Army responded to the release by saying that the photos depict “actions repugnant to us as human beings and contrary to the standards and values of the United States.”  There are reportedly more than four thousand photos of the “kill team”.

Pfc. Andrew Holmes

Spc. Jeremy N. Morlock

Two civilians killed by the unit.

UNCENSORED – Femen protest in Kiev

TOP-SECRET – Restricted U.S. Military Multi-Service Kill Box Employment Manual

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The Kill Box MTTP reinforces kill boxes as three-dimensional areas used to facilitate the integration of joint fires while also being a permissive fire support coordination measure (FSCM) in accordance with JP 3-09, Joint Fire Support. The publication offers a detailed explanation of kill box employment and provides information to effectively organize, plan, and execute kill box procedures.

The purpose of this publication is to provide planners and operators with a single source MTTP manual that focuses on employment of kill boxes at the operational and tactical levels of warfighting to facilitate the expeditious air-to-surface lethal attack of targets which may be augmented by or integrated with surface-to-surface indirect fires. The target audience includes commanders, operations and intelligence sections of Service components, and their counterparts on the JFC’s staff.

1. Definition and Purpose

a. Definition: A kill box is a three-dimensional area used to facilitate the integration of joint fires. It is a permissive FSCM as described in JP 3-09, Joint Fire Support.

b. Purpose: When established, the primary purpose of a kill box is to allow lethal attack against surface targets without further coordination with the establishing commander and without terminal attack control. When used to integrate air-to-surface and surface-to-surface indirect fires, the kill box will have appropriate restrictions. The goal is to reduce the coordination required to fulfill support requirements with maximum flexibility while preventing fratricide.

Note: All aircrew conducting air interdiction within the confines of a kill box will execute their mission in accordance with rules of engagement (ROE) and special instructions (SPINS) applicable to air interdiction.

2. Establishment

a. Supported component commanders, acting on JFC authority, establish and adjust kill boxes in consultation with superior, subordinate, supporting, and affected commanders. Requirements for kill boxes and other control measures are determined using normal component targeting and planning processes and are established and approved by commanders or their designated staff (e.g., G-3, fire support coordinator [FSCOORD]). Information about the type, effective time, duration, and other attributes will be published and disseminated using existing voice and digital command and control (C2) systems. Kill boxes should be canceled when no longer needed.

b. There are two types of kill boxes: blue and purple. Chapter 3 provides further details.

(1) Blue Kill Box. A blue kill box permits air interdiction in the kill box without further coordination from the establishing headquarters (HQ).

(2) Purple Kill Box. A purple kill box permits air interdiction in the kill box without further coordination from the establishing HQ while allowing land and maritime component commanders to employ surface-to-surface indirect fires. The end state is maximum use of joint fires within the kill box to create synergistic effects with maximum potential for engaging targets.

c. Kill box characteristics:

(1) Target Area. The location and size of the kill box are determined by the expected or known location of targets in a specified area. The dimensions of a kill box are normally defined using an area reference system (i.e., Global Area Reference System [GARS]) but could follow well defined terrain features or be located by grid coordinates or by a radius from a center point. The standard dimensions using GARS would be a cell (30 minute (min) by 30 min [approximately (approx) 44 kilometer (km) by 44km] area), quadrant (15 min by 15 min [approx 22km by 22km] area), or keypad (5 min by 5 min [approx 7.5km by 7.5km] area). Reference JP 2-03, Geospatial Intelligence Support to Joint Operations, for further information concerning GARS.

(2) Airspace. The airspace block located above the kill box target area is protected and extends from the surface (or coordinating altitude if established) up to a ceiling established by the airspace control authority. The airspace for a purple kill box includes a floor and a ceiling to enable separation between aircraft delivering air-to-surface fires, trajectories of surface-to-surface indirect fires, surface-to-air fires, and other aircraft. The height of the ceiling should be established in the Airspace Control Plan (ACP), Airspace Control Order (ACO), or SPINS to permit standardized planning for other airspace uses. These parameters are developed by coordination between fire support and airspace organizations.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

MTTP-KillBox

WARUM DIE STASI-LISTE HEUTE NOCH SINNVOLL IST

Liebe Leser,

warum ist diese Liste und deren Publikation heute noch sinnvoll ?

Zum Einen für die Millionen der Opfer der traditionellen STASI.

Aber auch für die Opfer der Neo-STASI ! Und zu denen gehören auch Sie !

Die alten Netzwerke existieren weiter in der Finanz, Wirtschaft, den Medien, der Justiz, der Polizei und der Politik.

Ich will Sie hier nicht mit meinem persönlichen Schicksal und den aus oben genannten Verflechtungen entstanden lebens- und existenzbedrohlichen Folgen für mein Umfeld und mich langweilen.

Das ist sekundär.

PRIMÄR IST , WIE IST SO ETWAS HEUTE NOCH MÖGLICH  ?

In diesem Zusammenhang sage ich, mich wundert in Deutschland nichts mehr.

Die staatlichen Stellen haben versagt und versagen weiter und verstecken sich hinter Formalien ! In Sachen STASI ebenso wie in Sachen Wirtschaftskrise !

Das kann die Realität nicht stoppen.

Mit dem Staat versagen die deutschen Medien- unfähig und korrupt !

Aus diesen Gründen ist die Publikation der STASI-Liste und der damit verbundenen auch und besonders heute noch tätigen Genossen sinnvoller denn je.

Denn die Neo-STASI ist den Neo-Nazis an Finanzkraft, Organsiationskraft, Agenten, IM etc weit überlegen und sitzt sogar im Bundestag.

Die wenigen Mahner, die es dagegen gab, wurden systematisch ruiniert  oder getötet !

Die 3 Affen – stumm, taub und blind sind das Wahrzeichen der deutschen Justiz und Exekutive !

Wohin das führt ?

Na, schauen Sie sich doch einmal um !

Herzlichst Ihr

Bernd Pulch, Magister Artium der Publizistik, Germanistik und Komparatistik

CONFIDENTIAL- Raytheon Non-Lethal Acoustic Pressure Riot Shield Patent

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A man-portable non-lethal pressure shield provides both a physical as well as pressure shield. The pressure shield addresses the concerns of military, police and human rights organizations and international law as regards effectiveness, efficiency and safety and efficiency. A folded acoustic horn is incorporated into the physical shell of the shield. The horn couples acoustic pulses from a sonic pulse generator to an acoustic aperture to output a pulsed pressure beam that approximates a plane wave to produce a pressure barrier. The operator may specify a desired effect on its human target that is maintained as range-to-target changes or a desired effect at a specified perimeter range. The shields may be networked to facilitate coordinated action among multiple pressure shields as a force multiplier or to provide a more sophisticated pressure
barrier.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

RaytheonPressureShield

 

 

CONFIDENTIAL from the CIA – Stories of Sacrifice and Dedication Civil Air Transport, Air America, and the CIA

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Booklet featuring two specific stories that exemplify
the themes of sacrifice and dedication: Lima Site 85 and a CIA mission
utilizing CAT flight support to recover an
agent inside Communist China.

DOWNLOAD HERE THE ORIGINAL E-BOOK

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DER BEWEIS – WARUM DIE STASI-LISTE ECHT IST UND WIE SIE FRÜHER DURCH EINSCHÜCHTERUNG VERHINDERT WURDE

Liebe Leser,

Neo-STASI versucht die Echtheit der STASI-Listen zu diskreditieren, um ihren Einfluss zu zementieren.

Dies nachdem ihre Morddrohungen und Verleumdungen mich nicht gestoppt haben und nicht stoppen werden.

Die STASI-Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Durch dieses pseudo-juristische Machwerk, dass niemals ausserhalb von Deutschland Bestand hat !

Mein Kommentar: Pseudo-juristische, formale Spitzfindigkeiten ersetzen Hirn und Herz- nur deshalb konnte es mit Deutschland im 20. Jahrhrundert soweit kommen und dieses Denken ist weiterhin überall vorhanden und wird sich bitter rächen – wieder einmal – denn Querdenken und/oder  besser selbst denken ist nicht angesagt in diesen Formal-Strukturen. Und die Main-Stream-Presse ist völlig anzeigenhörig und duckmäuserisch. Ein Fiasko !

Die Geschichte zeigt, wohin diese groteske Wirklichkeits-Verleugnung führt. Armes Deutschland ! Wieder einmal !

Ich habe meinen Beitrag geliefert, um diese Fehlentwicklungen zu vermeiden. Viele andere auch… Und Sie  ?

Herzlichst Ihr

Bernd Pulch

Magister Artium der Publizistik, Germanistik und Komaparatistik

 

TOP – SECRET – DoD Non-Lethal Weapons Reference Book 2011

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PURPOSE: The purpose of the NLW Reference Book is to provide a single source document that contains key information about NLW descriptions, effects, characteristics, concepts of employment, and associated operational parameters and considerations to enhance NLW education and training.

EXPLANATION OF TERMS: The NLW described in this book are at various acquisition stages and of varied Service interest. Service-unique systems meet specific Service needs, often meet Joint needs, and are provided to ensure Joint visibility and consideration. Systems are grouped as follows:

  • FIELDED: NLW currently in use.
  • PROTOYPE: NLW which have completed development, produced in limited quantities and no fielding decision has been made.
  • DEVELOPMENTAL: NLW requiring technological or other improvements prior to production approval. Typically denotes a Service-led program of record with a technical readiness level (TRL) of 5 or higher. Anticipated fielding dates are provided, but are subject to change and should not be used for acquisition or resource planning.
  • CONCEPTUAL: Ideas or concepts that can support exercises and modeling &simulations. Typically denotes a pre-acquisition science and technology project with a TRL of 4 or less. Conceptual capabilities do not currently exist, but are potential technologies that could be developed to satisfy a non-lethal requirement in the near future.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

DoD-NLW

Amercia vs iran – Iran Says American Could Face Death Penalty

STUDY – Study Finds 40% of South Asians Have Paid a Bribe in the Past Year

A chart from the Transparency International study found that police are the largest recipient of public service bribes in South Asia.More than one in three south Asians say they were forced to bribe officials in the last year, mainly for services they were legally entitled to, an international anti-graft watchdog said on Thursday.

A survey released by Berlin-based Transparency International in the Nepalese capital Kathmandu showed bribery has become so endemic that the region is second only to sub-Saharan Africa as the corruption hotspot of the world.

The watchdog surveyed 7,800 people in India, Pakistan, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and the Maldives, finding 40 percent had paid backhanders over the last 12 months to public servants, with police being the largest recipients.

Two thirds of Indians, Bangladeshis and Pakistanis who had dealt with the police said they had paid bribes to corrupt officers in the last 12 months.

“With bribery such a big part of life for south Asians, you can see why so many people are angry at their governments for not tackling corruption,” said Rukshana Nanayakkara, senior programme coordinator for the watchdog’s south Asia region.

“People are sick of paying bribes to get on with their daily lives, and they are sick of the sleaze and undue influence of public servants.”

Who Do Indians Bribe Most?

If the Lokpal Bill ever gets cleared by the Indian Parliament, episodes of everyday corruption, widely perceived as endemic, may finally start to decline.

At the moment, the figures are not encouraging, according to a new study by the Berlin-based anticorruption group Transparency International.

The report, “Daily Lives and Corruption,” offers fresh data on bribery in South Asia based on a survey of 7,500 people taken over the past two years. The results are alarming: they suggests that 39% of South Asians who had to deal with public services in the previous year admitted to paying a bribe.

In India, more than half of the people surveyed, or 54% of respondents, said they’ve paid a bribe. This was only worse in Bangladesh, where the figure is 66%, or two out of every three people. In Pakistan, the figure was around 50%, in Nepal 32%, in Sri Lanka 32% and in the Maldives 6%.

Take a look at how frequently Indians pay bribes when dealing with the following public services:

Police: 64%

Land services (buying, selling, renting and inheriting property): 63%

Registry and permit services: 62%

Tax revenue: 51%

Utilities (including water, telephone, electricity services): 47%

Judiciary: 45%

Customs: 41%

Medical services: 26%

Education: 23%

 

DOWNLOAD ORGINAL STUDY HERE

 

TI_SouthAsia_web

CONFIDENTIAL – FBI – Man Pleads Guilty in $74 Million Ponzi Scheme

ALBUQUERQUE—Douglas F. Vaughan, 64, of Albuquerque, pled guilty to wire and mail fraud charges that involved his operation of a Ponzi scheme in which he fraudulently obtained more than $74 million from approximately 600 investors who were promised extraordinary returns, announced U.S. Attorney Kenneth J. Gonzales. Carol K.O. Lee, Special Agent in Charge of the Albuquerque Division of the FBI, and Daniel S. Tanaka, Director of the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department’s Securities Division, joined the U.S. Attorney in making the announcement.

Vaughan entered guilty pleas to count one and four of a 30-count indictment charging him with wire fraud and mail fraud, respectively, before Chief Judge Bruce D. Black in federal court in Santa Fe, N.M., this afternoon. Under the terms of his plea agreement, Vaughan will be sentenced to a term of imprisonment between 10 and 12 years. Chief Judge Black will determine Vaughan’s specific sentence within that range, with Vaughan retaining the right to request a sentence at the lowest end of the range and the U.S. Attorney’s Office retaining the right to request a sentence at the highest end.

Vaughan also faces up to five years of supervised release following imprisonment, a fine of up to $250,000, or twice the gross gain or gross loss resulting from his offenses, whichever is greater, as well as any restitution ordered by the court. The plea agreement also requires that Vaughan immediately forfeit to the United States previously seized funds in the amount of $38,298.24 and real property located in Spring Valley, Nevada, and that Vaughan agree to the imposition of a money judgment against him in the amount of $74,745,723.93, which represents a portion of the gross proceeds that he derived from the offenses charged in the indictment.

The plea agreement also requires that Vaughan resolve two other pending cases: a civil case filed against Vaughan by the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) in federal court, and a bankruptcy case initiated by Vaughan in federal bankruptcy court. In the SEC case, Vaughan will consent to the entry of a judgment that permanently enjoins him from violating the federal securities laws. Vaughan also is required to consent to an order by the SEC in an administrative proceeding that bars him from associating with any broker, dealer or investment advisor, and from participating in any stock offerings. In the bankruptcy case, Vaughan is required to enter into a stipulated judgment that denies him a discharge from bankruptcy.

Under the terms of the plea agreement, the U.S. Attorney’s Office will move to dismiss the remaining 28 counts of the indictment after sentence has been imposed on Vaughan. Vaughan remains on conditions of release under pretrial supervision pending his sentencing hearing, which has yet to be scheduled.

Vaughan was charged on February 24, 2011, in an indictment alleging that, between 2005 and 2010, Vaughan operated a promissory note investment program, which he marketed as a means of generating revenue to grow his real estate business, as a Ponzi scheme. It alleged that Vaughan owed more than $74 million in unpaid principal and interest payments to approximately 600 investors when the fraudulent scheme collapsed in early 2010. Vaughan’s plea agreement includes a 16-page addendum.

According to the addendum, Vaughan was the chairman, chief executive officer, president and majority shareholder of Vaughan Company, Realtors (VCR), a business that operated primarily as a residential real estate brokerage and was at one time the largest independent residential brokerage in New Mexico. In 1993, Vaughan began an investment program in which he accepted money on behalf of VCR in exchange for interest-bearing promissory notes. The typical note had a three-year term, an interest rate ranging from 8 percent to 40 percent per year, and provided for interest to be paid in monthly installments. At the end of the note’s term, Vaughan either paid off the principal or offered the investor the opportunity to “roll over” the principal into a new note. Vaughan signed each promissory note on behalf of VCR.

Vaughan led investors to believe that their investments in the promissory note program were actually or virtually risk-free because they were guaranteed by VCR, Vaughan’s personal guarantee, and a $2.5 million deed of trust on certain real estate. Vaughan marketed his promissory note program by representing that the invested funds would be used to purchase real estate and to acquire smaller real estate companies. Instead, Vaughan used the promissory note program funds primarily for three undisclosed purposes: (i) to pay the interest and principal on promissory notes taken out by earlier investors; (ii) to pay himself, under the guise of salary, bonuses, or some other personal transfers; and (iii) to subsidize the operation of VCR, which was generating insufficient “legitimate” revenues to sustain itself.

The addendum states that, by 2005, the promissory note program was an important source of funding for VCR and, without the infusion of capital generated by new promissory note program investors, VCR was insolvent. Despite this, Vaughan continued to distribute the same marketing materials for the promissory note program, sign the same promissory notes, and make the same corporate and personal guarantees. Although Vaughan represented to investors that he would not extend more than $2,500,000.00 in promissory notes, end-of-year financial records reflect that the aggregate principal balance owed to note holders far exceeded this amount:

2004—$24,351,605.00;
2005—$32,299,363.37;
2006—$39,969,110.68;
2007—$49,984,845.80;
2008—$62,844,445.57; and
2009—$74,386,623.38.

From at least 2005 through February 2010, Vaughan used funds from new promissory note program investors to make interest payments to existing note holders and thus lulled existing investors into believing that they were being paid returns from VCR’s legitimate business revenues. However, VCR’s corporate tax returns reflected the following annual losses:

2004—$4,041,048.00;
2005—$5,595,285.00;
2006—$7,461,409.00;
2007—$9,913,893.00;
2008—$13,313,323.00; and
2009—$13,907,738.00.

In announcing Vaughan’s guilty plea, U.S. Attorney Gonzales said, “Today Doug Vaughan stood up in court and admitted that he deceived hundreds of investors into handing over tens of millions of dollars with promises of guaranteed high rates of return and the safety of their investments. Instead, people who trusted Vaughan ended up losing a lot of money, in some cases, their life savings. The United States’ plea agreement with Doug Vaughan brings about a fair and certain resolution of this case. The 10- to 12-year federal prison sentence included in the plea agreement holds Vaughan accountable for the massive Ponzi scheme in which he defrauded hundreds of investors, and is a very significant sentence in a financial fraud case. It is an appropriate resolution for the victims of Doug Vaughan’s crimes who have suffered financially and emotionally as a result of Vaughan’s scam and for the United States’ ensuing efforts to bring Vaughan to justice. Today’s guilty plea helps bring finality to what could have been a protracted criminal case. Although the victims of Vaughan’s crimes will not be compensated for their financial loss, I hope they will find a measure of solace and closure in knowing that Vaughan will be held accountable for his actions by spending substantially the rest of his productive life behind bars.”

Special Agent in Charge Lee added, “Mr. Vaughan’s plea today is the result of the hard work and dedication of the FBI special agents and U.S. Attorney’s Office prosecutors who worked together to bring to justice the individual responsible for the largest Ponzi scheme in New Mexico history. This multi-million-dollar fraud scheme wreaked havoc on the lives of hundreds of hard-working people and demonstrates the immense impact white-collar criminals can have on a community. Today’s fraud schemes are more sophisticated than ever, and we at the Albuquerque FBI, along with our law enforcement and community partners, are dedicated to the pursuit of those who choose to violate the investors’ trust and the law for personal gain.”

“Mr. Vaughan has accepted responsibility for his actions but it is cold comfort for the hundreds of New Mexicans that he victimized,” said Director Tanaka of the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department’s Securities Division. “We are proud of all the team members who demonstrated such commitment to investigating and prosecuting New Mexico’s largest Ponzi scheme. Financial crime is an insidious threat, therefore we will take the fight to those who would exploit the citizens of New Mexico.”

The case against Vaughan was the result of a joint federal-state investigation by the FBI, the Securities Division of the New Mexico Regulation and Licensing Department, U.S. Postal Inspection Service, U.S. Secret Service and the New Mexico Attorney General’s Office. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Gregory J. Fouratt and John C. Anderson.

This case was brought in coordination with the President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force, which includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. The task force is also making the public aware of resources available to protect against these types of fraud and how to report fraud when it occurs. To learn more about investment scams, how to take steps to protect yourself from scams or how to report investment fraud if you believe you have been victimized, the task force recommends that you visit its website, http://www.StopFraud.gov.

Secret from the FBI – Murder of ICE Special Agent Jaime Zapata and the Attempted Murder of ICE Special Agent Victor Avila

WASHINGTON—Julian Zapata Espinoza, also known as “Piolin,” has been extradited from Mexico to the United States to face charges for his alleged participation in the murder of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) Special Agent Jaime Zapata and the attempted murder of ICE Special Agent Victor Avila on Feb. 15, 2011, in Mexico.

The charges and extradition were announced today by Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division; U.S. Attorney Ronald C. Machen Jr. for the District of Columbia; Kevin Perkins, Assistant Director for the FBI Criminal Investigative Division; and ICE Director John Morton.

On April 19, 2011, a federal grand jury in the District of Columbia returned a four-count indictment against Zapata Espinoza, charging him with one count of murder of an officer or employee of the United States, for the murder of ICE Special Agent Zapata; one count of attempted murder of an officer or employee of the United States and one count of attempted murder of an internationally protected person, both for the attempted murder of ICE Special Agent Avila; and one count of using, carrying, brandishing and discharging a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence causing death.

“Julian Zapata Espinoza (“Piolin”) allegedly participated in the murder of ICE Special Agent Jaime Zapata and the attempted murder of ICE Special Agent Victor Avila,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “The indictment unsealed today, and the successful extradition of Piolin to the United States, reflect the Justice Department’s vigorous and determined efforts to seek justice for Agents Zapata and Avila. We will continue to work closely with our law enforcement partners in Mexico to hold violent criminals accountable.”

“This prosecution exemplifies our unwavering effort to prosecute those who committed this heinous offense against U.S. law enforcement agents,” said U.S. Attorney Machen. “We will not rest until those responsible for the murder of Agent Zapata and the wounding of Agent Avila are brought to justice.”

“The extradition of Julian Zapata Espinoza to face charges in the U.S. is a significant development in the ongoing investigation into the murder of Special Agent Jaime Zapata and attack on Special Agent Victor Avila,” said Kevin Perkins, Assistant Director for the FBI Criminal Investigative Division. “This extradition would not have been possible without the dedicated efforts of all involved in this case. The FBI, DHS and the Department of Justice will continue its pursuit of justice for the Zapata family.”

“The extradition and charges filed against Zapata Espinoza is an important step in bringing Jaime and Victor’s alleged shooters to justice,” said ICE Director Morton. “All of us at ICE are encouraged by today’s action and appreciate the unwavering work and support of all our law enforcement partners in this case. Our hearts and prayers continue to go out to Jaime’s family and his close colleagues within the ICE community. ICE will continue to see that Jaime and Victor’s work is done by continuing our efforts with all involved in working on this case.”

The indictment was unsealed today, when Zapata Espinoza made his initial appearance before U.S. District Chief Judge Royce Lamberth of the District of Columbia. Zapata Espinoza was ordered detained without bail. His next appearance in court is scheduled for Jan. 25, 2012.

The case is being investigated by the FBI, with substantial assistance from ICE, the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, the Drug Enforcement Administration, the U.S. Customs and Border Patrol, the Diplomatic Security Service and the U.S. Marshals Service. The investigation was also coordinated with the assistance of the Government of Mexico.

The case is being prosecuted by the Organized Crime and Gang Section and the Narcotic and Dangerous Drugs Section of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Columbia. The Office of International Affairs of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division provided substantial assistance.

An indictment is a formal charging document and defendants are presumed innocent until proven guilty.

TOP-SECRET from the CIA – Penetrating the Iron Curtain

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In the mid-1950s the US faced the first real challenge since World War II to its strategic superiority over any nation on earth. The attempt to collect intelligence on the Soviets began with an initial period of poor collection capabilities and consequent limited analysis. With few well-placed human sources inside the Soviet Union, it was only with the CIA’s development of, what can only be called, timely technological wizardry—the U-2 aircraft and Corona Satellite reconnaissance program—that breakthroughs occurred in gaining valuable, game-changing intelligence. Coupled with the innovative use of aerial and satellite photography and other technical collection programs, the efforts began to produce solid, national intelligence.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL PDF HERE

missile gap book

CONFIDENTIAL – U.S. House of Representatives Report: Warlords Provide Security for U.S. Supply Chain in Afghanistan

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Specifically, the Subcommittee on National Security and Foreign Affairs Majority staff makes the following findings:

1. Security for the U.S. Supply Chain Is Principally Provided by Warlords. The principal private security subcontractors on the HNT contract are warlords, strongmen, commanders, and militia leaders who compete with the Afghan central government for power and authority. Providing “protection” services for the U.S. supply chain empowers these warlords with money, legitimacy, and a raison d’etre for their private armies. Although many of these warlords nominally operate under private security companies licensed by the Afghan Ministry of Interior, they thrive in a vacuum of government authority and their interests are in fundamental conflict with U.S. aims to build a strong Afghan government.

2. The Highway Warlords Run a Protection Racket. The HNT contractors and their trucking subcontractors in Afghanistan pay tens of millions of dollars annually to local warlords across Afghanistan in exchange for “protection” for HNT supply convoys to support U.S. troops. Although the warlords do provide guards and coordinate security, the contractors have little choice but to use them in what amounts to a vast protection racket. The consequences are clear: trucking companies that pay the highway warlords for security are provided protection; trucking companies that do not pay believe they are more likely to find themselves under attack. As a result, almost everyone pays. In interviews and documents, the HNT contractors frequently referred to such payments as “extortion,” “bribes,” “special security,” and/or “protection payments.”

3. Protection Payments for Safe Passage Are a Significant Potential Source of Funding for the Taliban. Within the HNT contractor community, many believe that the highway warlords who provide security in turn make protection payments to insurgents to coordinate safe passage. This belief is evidenced in numerous documents, incident reports, and e-mails that refer to attempts at Taliban extortion along the road. The Subcommittee staff has not uncovered any direct evidence of such payments and a number of witnesses, including Ahmed Wali Karzai, all adamantly deny that any convoy security commanders pay insurgents. According to experts and public reporting, however, the Taliban regularly extort rents from a variety of licit and illicit industries, and it is plausible that the Taliban would try to extort protection payments from the coalition supply chain that runs through territory in which they freely operate.

4. Unaccountable Supply Chain Security Contractors Fuel Corruption. HNT contractors and their private security providers report widespread corruption by Afghan officials and frequent government extortion along the road. The largest private security provider for HNT trucks complained that it had to pay $1,000 to $10,000 in monthly bribes to nearly every Afghan governor, police chief, and local military unit whose territory the company passed. HNT contractors themselves reported similar corruption at a smaller scale, including significant numbers of Afghan National Police checkpoints. U.S. military officials confirmed that they were aware of these problems.

5. Unaccountable Supply Chain Security Contractors Undermine U.S. Counterinsurgency Strategy. While outsourcing principal responsibility for the supply chain in Afghanistan to local truckers and unknown security commanders has allowed the Department of Defense to devote a greater percentage of its force structure to priority operations, these logistics arrangements have significant unintended consequences for the overall counterinsurgency strategy. By fueling government corruption and funding parallel power structures, these logistics arrangements undercut efforts to establish popular confidence in a credible and sustainable Afghan government.

The following companies are prime contractors under the HNT contract:

NCL Holdings (NCL) – NCL was founded in May 2005 by Hamed Wardak, the son of the Afghan Defense Minister, Abdul Rahim Wardak. The company is based in Northern Virginia. Prior to receiving the HNT contract in 2009, NCL performed security operations in Afghanistan for Department of Defense contractors. NCL subcontracts out all of its trucking operations under HNT, and had no direct experience with managing trucking before this contract.

The Sandi Group – The Sandi Group is based in Washington, D.C. and has worked in private sector development in both Iraq and Afghanistan. To perform HNT missions, the Sandi Group has subcontracted out all trucking to local Afghan subcontractors.

Mesopotamia Group and EMA, Joint Venture – Mesopotamia Group, a Delaware-based company and EMA, an Afghan company, received an HNT contract as a joint venture after having worked on the BPA contract in a contractor-subcontractor relationship, with EMA as the local subcontractor. EMA owns many of its own trucks and also brokers with owner-operators from local tribes. Mesopotamia Group provides management and capital to the joint venture.

HEB International Logistics – HEB is an international logistics and transportation company based in Dubai. HEB owns some of its own trucks but principally relies on local Afghan subcontractors. HEB performed trucking operations under the BPA prior to receiving the HNT contract.

Anham, LLC – Anham is a partnership that was formed in 2004 by a Virginia-based investment group (HII-Finance), a Saudi conglomerate, and a Jordanian investment group. It is based in Dubai. Anham owns its own trucks and does not subcontract to local companies, but it performs far fewer missions than the leading HNT contractors.

The Four Horsemen International (Four Horsemen) and Three Bullets Incorporated (Three Bullets), Joint Venture – Four Horsemen is a New Jersey-based security company with principal operations in Afghanistan managed by Western military expatriates; Three Bullets is an Afghan-based transportation company that owns some of its own trucks and brokers with local owner-operators. Four Horsemen provides the security force for the joint venture. Four Horsemen had previously performed security operations under the BPA with other companies, and Three Bullets performed trucking operations on the BPA.

Afghan American Army Services (AAA) – AAA is Afghan-owned and was added to the HNT contract in November 2009 following a bid protest before the U.S. Government Accountability Office. AAA had previously worked under the BPA and had performed trucking operations since July 2006. Under HNT, AAA subcontracts out trucking operations to several local companies.

Guzar Mir Bacha Kot Transportation (GMT) – GMT is an Afghan-owned company that was added to the HNT contract in November 2009 in order to increase trucking capacity. GMT was a prime contractor on the BPA and the company has provided trucking services in Afghanistan for more than 15 years. GMT provides its own trucks and, before receiving the HNT contract, worked as a subcontractor for other HNT prime contractors.

DOWNLOAD THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

WarlordInc

SECRET – Afghan National Army Base and Incentive Pay Chart

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TOP-SECRET -U.S. Army Afghanistan Route Clearance Handbook

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Route clearance (RC) operations for Operation Enduring Freedom in Afghanistan are much different from RC operations for Operation Iraqi Freedom in terms of the terrain, seasonal weather, level of infrastructure, volume of insurgent threats, sources of improvised explosive device (IED) components, and motivation for IED emplacement. The purpose of this supplement is to focus on RC in Afghanistan.

Overview of Afghanistan

Afghanistan is composed of 34 provinces and is operationally divided into five regional commands: Regional Command Capital, Regional Command East, Regional Command North, Regional Command South, and Regional Command West. Regional Command Capital is completely surrounded by Regional Command East but is independent of the Regional Command East command. Regional Command Capital is composed of Kabul Province alone. The provinces in Regional Command East are Paktika, Paktya, Khwost (P2K); Ghazni, Wardak, Logar; Nangarhar, Nuristan, Konar, Laghman (N2KL); Bamyan; Parwan; Kapisa; and Panjshir. The provinces in Regional Command North are Faryab, Jawzjan, Sari Pul, Balkh, Samangan, Kunduz, Baghlan, Takhar, and Badakhshan. The provinces in Regional Command South are Nimroz, Helmand, Day Kundi, Oruzgan, and Zabul. The provinces in Regional Command West are Badghis, Herat, Ghowr, and Farah.

U.S. forces are focused primarily on Regional Command East. Regional Command East is further divided into five areas of operations (AOs). The five AOs for Regional Command East are Currahee in the southeast, Duke in the northeast, Warrior in the north-northwest, Ghazni in the west, and Spartan in the center. The provinces in AO Currahee are Paktika, Paktya, and Khwost (P2K). The provinces in AO Duke are Nangarhar, Nuristan, Konar, and Laghman (N2KL). The provinces in AO Warrior are Bamyan, Parwan, Kapisa, and Panjshir. AO Ghazni is composed of the Ghazni Province alone. The provinces in AO Spartan are Wardak and Logar.

Some AOs are further subdivided into minor AOs; however, the minor AOs do not necessarily correspond to the provincial boundaries. AO Currahee is composed of Team (TM) Paktya, TM Khowst, TM Eagle, and TM White Eagle. AO Duke is composed of AO Raptor, AO Pacesetter, AO King, AO Rock, and AO Saber. AO Warrior, AO Ghazni, and AO Spartan are not broken down into minor AOs.

In AO Currahee, the minor AO boundaries generally align with the provinces; however, there are a few exceptions. TM Paktya contains only Paktya Province. TM Khowst contains only Khowst Province. TM Eagle contains the east half of Paktika Province, while TM White Eagle contains the west half of Paktika Province.

In AO Duke, the minor AO boundaries generally do not align with the provinces; however, there are a few exceptions. AO Raptor contains Nangarhar Province. AO Pacesetter contains Laghman Province. AO King contains the westernmost third of Nuristan Province; AO Rock contains the middle third of Nuristan Province and the westernmost three-quarters of Konar Province. AO Saber contains the easternmost third of Nuristan Province and the easternmost quarter of Konar Province.

Terrain and Weather

In Afghanistan, the terrain varies drastically from one area to the next. The country is divided into three major geographic zones: the northern steppe, the southern desert plateau, and the spine of the Hindu Kush mountain range. The northern steppe runs across the northern border from Badghis in Regional Command West to Takhar in Regional Command North. The southern desert plateau runs across the western and southern border from Herat in Regional Command West to Kandahar in Regional Command South. The Hindu Kush mountain range and its offshoots run generally from northeast to southwest and cover the rest of the country.

The provinces that contain the northern steppe include Badghis, the northern half of Faryab, Jawzjan, the northern half of Sari Pul, the northern two-thirds of Balkh, Konduz, and the northeast quarter of Takhar. The provinces that contain the southern desert plateau include the western half of Herat, the western two-thirds of Farah, Nimroz, the southern three-quarters of Helmand, and the southwestern three-quarters of Kandahar. The provinces that contain the Hindu Kush mountain range and its offshoots include Badakhshan, Takhar, Baghlan, Samangan, Balkh, Sari Pul, Faryab, Herat, Ghowr, Farah, Helmand, Day Kundi, Oruzgan, Kandahar, Zabul, Paktika, Paktya, Khowst, Ghazni, Wardak, Logar, Bamyan, Parwan, Kapisa, Panjshir, Nuristan, Laghman, Konar, Nangarhar, and Kabul.

Some areas are extremely mountainous, and the so-called roads are nothing more than narrow goat trails, which offer insurgent forces excellent cover and concealment from approaching maneuver forces. There are many ideal spots for ambush near to the roads, and several IED events in these areas have coordinated small arms fire incorporated into the attacks. In other areas of the country, the terrain is wide open desert and without many hiding spots near the roads. The methods of attack in these areas are drastically different.

Fighting Season

The weather in Afghanistan plays a major role in the way units conduct operations. The seasonal nature of the mountainous regions lends itself to a “survival season” and a “fighting season.” The survival season is primarily the winter months. Harsh winters offer extremely cold temperatures and large snow accumulations. In many areas, the snowfall makes the roads completely impassible and shuts off ground maneuvers completely in some parts of the country. The fighting season begins with the spring thaw and allows for movement in areas that were previously impassible due to the harsh winter conditions. This fighting season usually ramps up from the early spring to the beginning of summer. The summer weather can also be harsh. Hot, dusty, dry conditions will often limit the movement of forces not properly protected from the heat. In the fall, when the extreme heat has passed, IED activity sparks up again; however, it is usually not as intense as the spring fighting. Most people are focusing on preparing for the coming winter months and not on fighting.

Infrastructure

Infrastructure or, more to the point, a lack of infrastructure is a major issue in Afghanistan. The vast majority of the roads in Afghanistan are unimproved and not well defined. Often the location of the road changes from season to season and from year to year. Flooding, washouts, rockslides, lack of infrastructure, discovery of a better/safer/faster/more direct path, and many other factors all contribute to the ever-changing network of trails and paths used for vehicular traffic. In some areas, drivers use dry riverbeds as primary roads during the dry season. These wide open “roads” can quickly become raging rivers during the spring thaw. In some areas, the roads are paved; however, many years of damage from tracked vehicles and explosions from previous wars have greatly degraded their serviceability. These paved roads are often limited to the main ring road and a few off shoots from that road.

The sources of IED components in Afghanistan are drastically different from those in Iraq. In Afghanistan, there are fewer components for making IEDs. A cache in Afghanistan usually does not meet the minimum requirements of a cache in Iraq. The enemy uses homemade explosives in IEDs in Afghanistan, which bring additional complications to the RC mission. Additionally, there are many existing minefields that are mistaken for IEDs. RC units should deal with these areas as minefields rather than IEDs. Sometimes the enemy transplants mines from the minefields to a roadway. In these situations, it is difficult to determine if the area is a part of a larger minefield and should be dealt with as such, or if the area is more like an IED and should be dealt with accordingly.

The motivations for using IEDs in Iraq and Afghanistan are similar in some areas and different in others. In the lowlands, which are primarily in the south and west, the enemy uses IEDs as an initiator for an attack and then again when targeting first responders or reactionary forces. In the highlands, which are primarily in the north and east, the enemy uses IEDs to shape an attack and limit mobility.

Culture, People, and Religion

Culture

Afghan culture is a rich mix influenced by different ethnicities and languages. It is extremely difficult to generalize about an entire population; however, Afghans are typically friendly and hospitable. Their lives have been rife with conflict, and they can be stern. The Afghan’s belief that Allah controls all matters greatly influences his perceptions. This belief helps Afghans tolerate extreme physical hardship.

Approximately 44 percent of Afghans are Pashtun, about half of whom are of the Durrani tribal group and the other half of the Ghilzai group. Tajiks are the second largest ethnic group with 25 percent of the population, followed by Hazaras at 10 percent and Uzbeks at 8 percent. Other smaller groups, including Turkmen, Qizilbash, Kazakhs, Aimaq, Wakhis, Nuristanis, Baluchis, Kyrgyz, Sikhs, Hindus, and Jews, constitute the remaining 13 percent of the total population.

People

The Afghans’ primary loyalty is to their families, kin groups, clans, or tribes; they express their identities through these groups. Their moral attitudes are often strict and inflexible, and they stress honor and individual responsibility to fulfill expected roles. Personal disputes are not resolved easily because of the need to protect one’s honor. Personal behavior affects family honor, so Afghans consider it essential to live according to these rigid rules. Piety and stoicism are admired traits.

Afghan society is mostly rural. The rural populations are mostly concentrated along the rivers. Villages in Afghanistan encircle larger towns that act as commercial, communication, and administrative centers. The most heavily populated and urban part of the country is between the cities of Kabul and Charikar. Other population concentrations can be found east of Kabul near Jalalabad, in the Heart oasis and the valley of the Harirud River in the northwest, and in the Valley of Kunduz River in the northeast. Most urban settlements have grown along the ring road that runs from Kabul southwest to Kandahar, then northwest to Herat, northeast to Mazar-e Sharif, and southeast to Kabul. Cities have formed where major routes intersect.

Thirty-two languages and dialects are spoken in Afghanistan. Dari (a form of Persian) is spoken widely and has several dialects. It is similar to the Farsi spoken in Iran and Tajik spoken in Tajikistan. Pashtu has two major variants and many dialects.

Religion

Afghanistan is an Islamic society; 84 percent of the population follows the Sunni tradition, 15 percent of the population follows the Shi’a tradition, and 1 percent of the population follows other traditions. However, Islam has not been a unifying force that has overcome ethnic differences. Local religious leaders are often not well educated. The level of religious observation varies, but most Afghans profess a strong adherence to the Islamic faith.

 

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USArmy-AfghanRouteClearance

TOP-SECRET from the CIA – Berlin – A city torn apart

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/historical-collection-publications/building-of-the-berlin-wall/BerlinWallPublication_thumb.jpg

From the end of World War II in 1945, the question of Berlin’s status 90 miles within the Deutsche Demokratische Republik (East Germany) and the Soviet Union’s zone of occupation, along with the status of Germany among the community of nations, remained a source of tension between the East and West. Premier Khrushchev continued to push President Eisenhower and the other Western leaders for resolution of the issue.

 

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BerlinPublication

CONFRIDENTIAL – ATF American/Canadian Northern Border Extremists like Ku Klux Klan

https://publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/northernborderextremists.png

 

According to information obtained via the Southern Poverty Law Center (SPLC), the number of hate groups operating with the United States has risen and continues to rise. In 2006, law enforcement intelligence and SPLC information counted 844 organizations in 2007; this number has risen to 888, an increase of approximately 4.7 percent. This number may seem small; however, during an 8-year time period, this has translated into a 48-percent jump in the number
of groups since 2000, when there were 602 hate groups operating in the United States, according to research by the intelligence project of the SPLC. Much of the expansion has been driven by hate groups’ exploitation of the issue of illegal immigration, which most Americans see as a pressing concern. This overview addresses the issue of American and Canadian extremism in Canada and in those States that fall along the American-Canadian border.

Federal law enforcement officials believe White supremacists and other hate groups consist of some of the most violent and dangerous domestic organizations because of their willingness to act on their hatred. While traditional targets of hate groups have been African Americans and Jews, White supremacists have enhanced their focus in recent years to include homosexuals, prochoice advocates, Hispanics, and Asians.

America, unfortunately, has no shortage of extremists. Some come from the far right, in the
form of racist and anti-Semitic hate groups or anti-government extremists. Others come from the
far left, which include environmental and animal rights extremists.
At the same time as the United States enacted its Hate Crimes Statistics Act of 1990, which
lobbied to recognize the impact of crimes motivated by hatred, hate crimes commenced in
Canada. Although the term hate crime is commonly used today, little consensus exists as to its
exact meaning. Although most definitions list a number of identifiable traits based on race,
religion, and ethnicity, differences remain.

To date, more than 40 States have enacted hate crime legislation. Of these, 21 States and the
District of Columbia also include sexual orientation as a protected status.

In Canada, some of these definitional issues are currently being addressed. To date, Canada has
no centralized system for collecting national police-reported statistics relating to hate-motivated
crimes. Offenders of hate crimes have been associated with organizations such as Neo Nazis,
Skinheads, and the Ku Klux Klan. At the root of extremism are radical ideologies and religious
beliefs, held in anger and frustration, which can lead to violent acts ranging from hate crimes to
terrorism.

Hate and extremist activity are also flourishing through new electronic avenues such as the
Internet. Monitoring this activity at both the national and international levels remains difficult at
best in both Canada and the United States.

Rightwing Extremists

Rightwing extremists reject Federal Authority and are in favor of State or local government.
They are concerned with preserving the Constitution, including their right to liberty and privacy.
These extremists are nationalistic and may embrace racist views or multiple belief systems. This
group consists of the following:

• Militias – Origins mid to late 1993

The militia movement is a relatively new rightwing extremist movement consisting of armed
paramilitary groups, both formal and informal, with an anti-government, conspiracy-oriented
ideology. Militia groups began to form shortly after the deadly standoff at Waco, Texas, in
1993. By the spring of 1995, they had spread to almost every State. Many members of militia
groups have since been arrested, usually on weapons, explosives, and conspiracy charges.
Although the militia movement has declined in strength from its peak in early 1996, it remains
an active movement, especially in the Midwest, and continues to cause a number of problems for
law enforcement.

• White Supremacists

Groups or individuals that believe Caucasians/Aryans are intellectually and morally superior to
other races and use their racist ideology to commit crimes, acts of violence, and terrorism are
called White supremacists. Most advocate racial separation and segregation. White
supremacists are broken down generally into six types: Neo-Nazi, Ku Klux Klan, Christian
Identity, Skinhead, Odinist, or Racist Prison Gangs. The largest two are briefly described below.

To effectively combat the growing violence of the White racist, law enforcement agencies must
continue to cooperate and communicate. Supremacists are transient in nature, and it is not
uncommon for members to travel from city to city committing crimes. Skinheads in particular
have a belief that a crime committed in a locality other than their own is likely to go unnoticed
by law enforcement. Typically their criminal activity is often centered around a major event,
such as a march, rally, or skinhead concert.

Although there was deterioration in the formal structure of these groups in the last few years,
evidence suggests hate group organization is definitely on the rise in Canada. The Canadian
White supremacist community has been scattered and without formal leadership for the last few
years, but Internet recruitment has allowed individuals to align themselves with pre-established
hate groups in urban areas in both Canada and the United States.

It seems as though small arms and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) are the weapons of
choice for supremacists/extremists because they are widely available and easy to construct and
use. Some groups have shown an increased interest since September 11, 2001, in using
chemical, biological, and radiological weapons, raising law enforcement concerns that these
groups may pursue different methods of attack in the future.

The animal and environmental extremists believe companies are responsible for the destruction
of animal habitats and natural resources. In the last couple of years arson has become the tool
most widely used by animal rights and eco-terrorist groups. Law enforcement can become
proactive by identifying and locating logical targets (i.e. construction sites causing
environmental controversies or facilities that use animals for testing) and consider initiating
liaisons with these targets. Law enforcement has made strides prosecuting cells, but has been
unable to end the arsons directed toward housing developments in the United States and Canada.
The abortion issue will continue to be a political topic in the years to come. ATF will continue
to monitor violent (i.e. arsons/bombing) incidents directed toward reproductive healthcare
centers.

In conclusion, there appears to be a significant number of domestic extremist groups operating in
Pennsylvania, New York, Ohio, Michigan, and Washington. The main ideology of these groups
is the supremacy of the White race with disrespect toward the U.S. Government. To date, there
are estimated to be more than 600 members of the neo-Nazi skinhead movement in Canada.
While their numbers declined in the late 1980s, the trend was reversed in the 1990s. With
immigration an issue of the upcoming U.S. Presidential election, law enforcement could expect
to see even more of an increase in hate crimes. It should also be noted that mergers of Canadian
and U.S. groups may possibly take place between racist groups operating along the border as the
United States will have its first African-American President taking office in January 2009.

 

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https://publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/domesticterrorism.png

 

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northernborderextremists

ANONYMOUS and Stratfor’s “private client list

Could this be Stratfor’s “private client list”? And what kind of info do you think we have on them?

 

anonymous targets – one in a series of targets they say will last all week – a private security firm called STRATFOR. from news site RT:
Anonymous hacks and discredits STRATFOR intelligence company

­The global intelligence company Strategic Forecasting, Inc has been hacked by Anonymous group. Anonymous claim to have dumped a heap of information from the server, including internal correspondence and credit card data. AnonymouSabu tweeted “Over 90,000 Credit cards from LEA, journalists, intelligence community and whitehats leaked and used for over a million dollars in donations.” Hackers also defaced Stratfor’s website, forcing the administrators to shut down the web server for some 40 minutes. Stratfor has released a statement to its clients about the security breach, saying that they are “diligently investigating the extent to which the subscriber information may have been obtained.” A number of large corporations and government agencies are among the clients of Strategic Forecasting, which provides strategic intelligence on global business, economic, security and geopolitical affairs. Anonymous have not released the complete list of Stratfor’s clients yet, but mentioned that the United States Air Force, Goldman Sachs investment bank, and financial broker MF Global were on the list.

#antisec #lulzxmas

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Company:         Bear Stearns
Company:         Bearing Point
Company:         Bechtel
Company:         Bechtel Corporation
Company:         Bechtel Corporation
Company:         BedRock Ventures
Company:         Bee-Sting Ventures
Company:         Behr & Associates
Company:         Belier Group, LLC
Company:         Bellevue Baptist Church
Company:         Bellocchi & Co LLC
Company:         Belmont Properties
Company:         Belux
Company:         Benchmark Asset Managers
Company:         benjamin investments
Company:         BENS
Company:         Benson Inc
Company:         Benton Rutledge Properties
Company:         Berkshire Securities Inc.
Company:         BertFilm
Company:         Bessemer Trust
Company:         Best Buy
Company:         Best Buy
Company:         Bettinger Financial Advisors, Inc.
Company:         Bevmor Mgmt
Company:         BG Group
Company:         BHP Billiton
Company:         BHP Billiton
Company:         BHP Billiton
Company:         BILBROinc.
Company:         Bill Owens, LLC
Company:         BIN S.A.
Company:         BioCompsoite Solutions
Company:         BioHorizons
Company:         BIONDO INVESTMENT ADVISORS
Company:         Birkmere Associates LLC
Company:         Birmingham International Air
Company:         BJ Services Company
Company:         Black & Veatch
Company:         Black and Veatch
Company:         Black Star
Company:         Blackbird Technologies
Company:         Blackfriars Capital Management AS
Company:         BlackRock
Company:         Blackwater Security Consulting
Company:         BLACKWELL CONSULTING, LLC
Company:         Blankinship & Foster, LLC
Company:         BLB
Company:         Blessing Petroleum Group, LLC
Company:         Blinn College
Company:         Blizzard Enterprises
Company:         BLOCK 4 CONSULTING
Company:         Blue Altarus, Inc
Company:         Blue Diamond CT
Company:         Blue Fox Management
Company:         Blue Mountain, Ltd.
Company:         Blue Planet Services LLC
Company:         Blue Shield of California
Company:         Blue Sky Apeiron Pty Ltd
Company:         Blue Water Intl
Company:         Blue, Johnson & Associates, Inc.
Company:         Bluebonnet Consulting, Inc.
Company:         blueshift tech
Company:         Blum Capital Partners
Company:         blurgl Inc.
Company:         BMI
Company:         BMO Capital Markets
Company:         BMO Nesbitt Burns
Company:         BMO Nesbitt Burns
Company:         BMS
Company:         BNC National Bank
Company:         BNMM & Associates Engineering, LLC
Company:         BNP Paribas
Company:         BNS
Company:         BNY Mellon
Company:         Bob Haden, Broker
Company:         Bob Lunday Consulting
Company:         bobfloran@aol.com
Company:         Boeing
Company:         Boeing
Company:         Boeing
Company:         Boeing
Company:         Boeing
Company:         Boeing Company
Company:         Boeing Company
Company:         Boeing Company
Company:         Boeing Company
Company:         Boeing Corporation – BD Int
Company:         Boenning
Company:         Bold Marketing Partners
Company:         Bongo Woodley Consultants
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Company:         Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Company:         Borger Financial Service
Company:         Bose Corporation
Company:         Boston College
Company:         Boston Partners
Company:         Boulder Capital
Company:         Bowditch Consulting, LLC
Company:         Box Appliance Service Co.
Company:         Boyden
Company:         BP
Company:         BP
Company:         BP
Company:         BP
Company:         BP
Company:         BP
Company:         Bp Exploration (Caspian Sea) Limited
Company:         BP Plc
Company:         BP Plc
Company:         BPI Gestao de Activos
Company:         Br. Gen USAF
Company:         Bradford & Associates Ltd
Company:         Bravado Appraisal Group
Company:         Brazile and Associates, LLC
Company:         Brazillian Army Commisison
Company:         Brechnitz Group
Company:         Brencourt Advisors
Company:         Bresnahan & Associates, Inc.
Company:         Brett M. Poston, P.C.
Company:         Brian C Jensen, CPA
Company:         Brian Stableford
Company:         BriarPatch Opportunities
Company:         Brickell Motors
Company:         Brickell Motors
Company:         Bridges Family Petroleum, Inc.
Company:         Bridgespan
Company:         brinkmann roofing co
Company:         Brisbois Capital Mgmt, LLC
Company:         Bristol Myers Squibb
Company:         Brookstreet Securities
Company:         brown advirory
Company:         Brown Technical Service
Company:         Browning, Randall, Pasteur & Assoc LLC
Company:         Brownsville OEM / HS
Company:         Brummer & Partners
Company:         Bsrclays Capital
Company:         BT Ireland
Company:         Budway Enterprises
Company:         Buffalo State College (SUNY)
Company:         Bugg Properties, Inc.
Company:         bulk bag express, inc
Company:         Bull Dog Trading
Company:         Bullard, McLeod & Associates, Inc.
Company:         Burns, Taylor, et al
Company:         Burrows Paper Corporation
Company:         BUSARA
Company:         Business Health Plus
Company:         Business Technology Associates LLC
Company:         BV
Company:         BybeePower
Company:         BYC co.ltd.
Company:         Bytheway Limited
Company:         C R Parr & Associates, PC
Company:         C.A.P. Enterprises, Inc
Company:         C.C.I.
Company:         C.S. Crosby & Associates
Company:         C/ HQJOC
Company:         c/o Al Witzell
Company:         C/o Johns Byrne
Company:         C2I – CI/HUMINT TEAM
Company:         CA Stromberg AB
Company:         CACI
Company:         Cadent Energy Partners
Company:         CAI
Company:         Calamos Holdings
Company:         Calamos Holdings LLC.
Company:         Caldera Resources Inc.
Company:         Cales Investments, Inc.
Company:         Calgas Exploration Ltd
Company:         Calhoun High school
Company:         CALIBRE Systems, Inc.
Company:         California State University San Bernardiono Graduate Student
Company:         calpian
Company:         Caltex Australia Limited
Company:         Calvary Baptist Church
Company:         Calyon Corporate and Investment Bank
Company:         Calyon Financial Inc.
Company:         CAM International
Company:         Camber
Company:         Cambium Group
Company:         Cambria Investment Management
Company:         Campbell Fittings Inc
Company:         Campbell Soup
Company:         Canaccord Capital
Company:         Canada Pension Plan Investment Board
Company:         Canada-Israel Committee
Company:         Canadian Air Transport Security (CATSA)
Company:         Canadian Defence & Foreign Affairs Institute
Company:         Canadian Forces College
Company:         Canadian Forces College
Company:         Cancel
Company:         canceled account 01/04/2008 via call to customer service
Company:         Candlestick LLC
Company:         Canonbury Group
Company:         CAPE Legacy Fund
Company:         Capital Alpha Partners, LLC
Company:         Capital Group Companies
Company:         Capital Group Companies
Company:         Capital Group Companies
Company:         Capital Group Companies
Company:         Capital Group Companies
Company:         Capital Group Companies
Company:         Capital Growth Management
Company:         Capital Ideas, Inc.
Company:         Capital One
Company:         Capital Plan, Inc
Company:         CapitalRock Advisors
Company:         Capral
Company:         CapRock Oil Tools, Inc.
Company:         Cardframer
Company:         Cardinal Gas Partners,LLC
Company:         CARE International
Company:         Cargill
Company:         Cargill Inc & Subsid
Company:         caritas
Company:         Carlsen & Co.
Company:         Carnegie Capital
Company:         Carobu Engineering
Company:         carpeteers carpet cleaning service
Company:         Carrelton Asset Management
Company:         Carrollton
Company:         Carrow Companies, LLC
Company:         Cart-Away Concrete Systems
Company:         Cartel Consulting
Company:         Carter Concepts, Inc
Company:         Carthage College
Company:         Casablanca Infrastructure Pvt. Ltd.
Company:         Casals & Associates, Inc
Company:         Cascadian Enterprises LLC
Company:         Casey Financial
Company:         Caspian Steppes
Company:         Castleman Group
Company:         Catalent
Company:         Catalyst
Company:         Catalyst Investment Group Limited
Company:         Caxton Associates LLC
Company:         CB Richard Ellis
Company:         CBR
Company:         CBS
Company:         CC Riders
Company:         CCG
Company:         CCM (Pty) Ltd
Company:         CCOliphant&Son,Inc.
Company:         CCS International
Company:         CDW
Company:         CECO Associates
Company:         Cedar Road Capital
Company:         CEFAM
Company:         CEL & Associates, Inc.
Company:         cell 502 905 1842
Company:         CEMEX
Company:         Center for Environmental Diplomacy
Company:         Center for European Policy Analysis
Company:         Center for Global Strategies
Company:         Center for International Security and Strategic Studies
Company:         Center of Doctrine and Strategic Development (CDSD), RTA
Company:         Central Florida Community College
Company:         Central Trust & Investment Co
Company:         Centurion
Company:         CEO, MVmax
Company:         Cerberus Capital Management
Company:         Cervantes and Associates
Company:         CESCE, S.A. –  VAT: ESA28264034
Company:         CG Maton Agency, Inc.
Company:         CH&I Technologies
Company:         CH2M HILL
Company:         CH2M HILL
Company:         Chairman & CEO / Belvoir Media Group LLC
Company:         Chamber of Deputies
Company:         Chaminade College Preparatory
Company:         Chaminade University
Company:         Chandlas Enterprises Ltd
Company:         Changsha Huir Biological-tech Co.,ltd
Company:         Chapman Consulting
Company:         Charles D. Haines, LLC
Company:         Charles F. Day & Assoc. LLC
Company:         Charles Schwab
Company:         Charles Schwab
Company:         Charles Schwab & Co, Inc
Company:         Charles Sturt University
Company:         Charlotte Pipe
Company:         Chaswil Ltd
Company:         Chemonics International
Company:         Chen and Partners
Company:         ChengChi University
Company:         ChengChi University
Company:         Chesney & Company
Company:         Chevron
Company:         Chevron
Company:         Chevron Corporation
Company:         Chevron Corporation
Company:         Chevron Corporation
Company:         Chevron Corporation
Company:         Chevron Corporation
Company:         Chevron Global Gas
Company:         Chevron Phillips Chemical Company
Company:         Chevron Phillips Chemical Company
Company:         Chevron Phillips Chemical Company
Company:         Chickasaw Capital Management
Company:         Chile Company
Company:         Chinese Embassy
Company:         Choate, Hall & Stewart
Company:         Chosunilbo
Company:         CHP
Company:         Christian Science Monitor
Company:         CHRISTUS Health
Company:         CHS, Inc
Company:         Chubb & Son
Company:         Church of the Great God
Company:         CI Investments
Company:         CI Investments
Company:         Cia. Colombiana de Inversiones S.A.
Company:         CIBC
Company:         CIBC Wood Gundy
Company:         cibc world markets
Company:         CIBC World Markets
Company:         circle financial group
Company:         Cisco
Company:         Cisco
Company:         Cisco
Company:         Cisco Systems
Company:         Cisco Systems
Company:         Citadel International
Company:         Citgo
Company:         CITGO Petroleum Corporation
Company:         Citi
Company:         Citi Investment Research
Company:         Citi Smith Barney
Company:         Citigroup
Company:         Citigroup
Company:         Citigroup
Company:         Citigroup
Company:         CITIGROUP
Company:         Citigroup Corporate & Investment Bank
Company:         Citigroup Smith Barney
Company:         Citigroup Smith Barney
Company:         Citigroup/Smith Barney
Company:         Citizens & Northern Bank
Company:         citizens natl bank
Company:         City Center Security
Company:         City Center Security
Company:         City of Miami Police Department
Company:         City of Weslaco
Company:         Cityteam
Company:         ck locke & partners
Company:         Claire Orthopaedics PA
Company:         Claren Road
Company:         Clarium Capital Management
Company:         clarkson and company
Company:         Clarsen & Associates
Company:         Clayton Consultants, Inc.
Company:         Clemens Capital
Company:         Clemson University
Company:         Cloverdale Investments Pte Ltd
Company:         Clovis Point Solutions, LLC
Company:         CMC
Company:         CMS Energy
Company:         CMSU, LLC
Company:         CNR HOLDING AS
Company:         Co / TD Waterhouse
Company:         Co-Mar Management Services
Company:         Coca-Cola
Company:         Cognitive Assets
Company:         Cognitive Investments LLC
Company:         Cogsdill Tool Prod.
Company:         Cole Papers, Inc.
Company:         Colgate Palmolive
Company:         Colgate Palmolive
Company:         Colgate Palmolive
Company:         Colgate Palmolive
Company:         Colliers International
Company:         Colliers International
Company:         Colliers International
Company:         Collins Development Co
Company:         Colorado Army National Guard
Company:         colorado player consultans
Company:         COLSA Corporation
Company:         Colton & Associates, P.C.
Company:         Columbia University
Company:         Combat Support Associates
Company:         ComitÈ Internacional de la Cruz Roja
Company:         Commonwealth North
Company:         comp
Company:         Company:
Company:         Compass Asset Management
Company:         Compass Capital AG
Company:         compass financial advisors,llc
Company:         Compass Foundation
Company:         Compensation Resource Group
Company:         Compliance Associates
Company:         Comprehensive Computer Services
Company:         ComPro Realty
Company:         Computer Sciences Corp.
Company:         Comunicaciones Nextel de Mexico SA de CV
Company:         CONCERT Advisor Services
Company:         Condortech Services, Inc.
Company:         Conductix, Inc
Company:         Conflex Consulting
Company:         Conflict Resolution, Inc.
Company:         Confluence Investment Management
Company:         Congress of  Racial Equality
Company:         Connect Consulting, Inc.
Company:         Conning & Company
Company:         ConocoPhillips
Company:         ConocoPhillips
Company:         ConocoPhillips
Company:         ConocoPhillips
Company:         ConocoPhillips Russia
Company:         Consejo Mexicano de Asuntos Internacionales, A.C.
Company:         Consilium
Company:         Consolidated Water Power Co
Company:         Constellation Investment Group
Company:         Constellation Wealth Advisors
Company:         Consulant/Adjunct Professor Utah State University
Company:         consultant
Company:         consultco
Company:         Consultiera
Company:         Consultora Demison
Company:         Consultoria Estrategica Primer Circulo, S.C.
Company:         Contact name is Debbie McCoy
Company:         Contingent Macro Advisors LLC
Company:         Convio Inc
Company:         Cook Management, LLC.
Company:         Coolescence, LLC
Company:         Cooperative Consultants, Inc.
Company:         Copernio Corporation
Company:         Copymaven, Inc
Company:         Corbin Capital Partners
Company:         Corestates Capital, LLC
Company:         Coril Holdings Ltd.
Company:         Cormark
Company:         Corn Products International
Company:         Cornell University
Company:         Cornish & Co.
Company:         Cornwall Capital, Inc.
Company:         Corona Investments, LP
Company:         Corporacion REY S.A.
Company:         Corporate Intelligence Analyst Network, Pty. Ltd.
Company:         Corriente Partners
Company:         Coss Consulting Int. BDA
Company:         Cottage Realty LLC
Company:         Cottonfield Family Office AG
Company:         Cougar Global Investment
Company:         Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Company:         Council on Foreign Relations (CFR)
Company:         COUNTRY Trust Bank
Company:         Covenant
Company:         Covenant International
Company:         Covenant International
Company:         Coventry Realty
Company:         Covepoint Capital Advisors
Company:         Coyote Oilfield Consulting Ltd.
Company:         CR
Company:         Crain’s Detroit Business
Company:         CRANE CURRENCY
Company:         Crane Realty
Company:         Credit Libanais SAL
Company:         Credit Suisse
Company:         Credit Suisse
Company:         Credit Suisse
Company:         Credit Suisse
Company:         Credit Suisse
Company:         Credit Suisse
Company:         Creighton University
Company:         CRI
Company:         Crisis Management Initiative
Company:         Criswell Financial, Inc.
Company:         Crossinvest (Asia) Pte Ltd
Company:         crosswind partners,llc
Company:         Crown Flour Mills
Company:         Crown Point Solutions
Company:         Crown Productions
Company:         Crown Productions
Company:         Crown Productions
Company:         CRP
Company:         CS INVEST CONSULTING
Company:         CSA Wealth Management
Company:         CSC
Company:         CSC
Company:         csx transportation
Company:         CTV
Company:         Cubic
Company:         Cubic Applications
Company:         CUF QI
Company:         Cumberland Advisors
Company:         Cure International
Company:         Currie Partners, Inc.
Company:         Cushman & Wakefield
Company:         Cushman & Wakefield
Company:         Cushman & Wakefield
Company:         Custom Concrete Co
Company:         Custom Direct LLC
Company:         Cyrte Investments
Company:         Cyrte Investments
Company:         d elliott
Company:         D-8 Organization
Company:         D-Link Corporation
Company:         D. J. Hall & Co
Company:         D.B. Root & Company, Inc.
Company:         D&D Securities Inc.
Company:         Dallas Federal Reserve Bank
Company:         Dan Aridor Holdings Ltd
Company:         Dandelion Digital
Company:         Daniel Defense International
Company:         Daniel I Shapiro, M.D.,P.C.
Company:         Danneberg Oil Ltd
Company:         Das Kapital Capital
Company:         DataSphere, LLC
Company:         DataView LLC
Company:         DataViz, Inc
Company:         David Anderson Financial Planning, LLC
Company:         David B. Dunbar & Associates
Company:         David F Palmer
Company:         David G. Major Associates, Inc.
Company:         Davis LLP
Company:         Davis-Ross Investment Advisers LLC
Company:         Davutoglu Avukatlik Burosu Attorneys at Law
Company:         Dawnhouse Ltd.
Company:         DCF Capital
Company:         De Lage Landen Financial Services, Inc.
Company:         DE Shaw
Company:         De Stefano Wealth Management
Company:         DEALGLOBAL SERVICIOS S.A.
Company:         Deane Retirement Strategies
Company:         Debt Settlement Associates, LLC
Company:         Decipher Securities
Company:         Deere & Company
Company:         Defense $ Security  , Consulting/Training
Company:         Defense Intelligence Agency
Company:         DEFINE CREATIONS
Company:         DEIK
Company:         Del Campo
Company:         Del Oil
Company:         Dell
Company:         Dell Inc
Company:         Deloitte
Company:         Deloitte
Company:         Deloitte
Company:         Deloitte and Touche
Company:         Deloitte Consultanta SRL
Company:         Delta Air Lines
Company:         Delta Airlines
Company:         Delta Corporation Limited
Company:         Demand Lending
Company:         Demographic Wave, LLC
Company:         Dentist
Company:         Denton Record-Chronicle
Company:         Denton Record-Chronicle
Company:         DEP, PC
Company:         Department of Army
Company:         Department of Defense
Company:         Department of Defense
Company:         Department of Defense & Homeland Securtity Group
Company:         Department of Energy
Company:         Department of Justice
Company:         Department Of National Defense
Company:         Department of the Air Force
Company:         Deployment Support Command, USAR
Company:         DEPLU
Company:         Dept. of Treasury
Company:         DER SPIEGEL
Company:         Desert Palms Golf and RV Resort
Company:         DeShurko Investment Services, Inc.
Company:         deutsche bank
Company:         Deutsche bank
Company:         Deutsche Bank
Company:         Deutsche Bank
Company:         Deutsche Bank
Company:         Deutsche Bank
Company:         DEUTSCHE BANK
Company:         Deutsche Bank AG
Company:         Deutsche Bank AG Hong Kong Branch
Company:         Development Plus
Company:         Development Research Associates
Company:         Development Solutions, Inc.
Company:         Devonshire Investors
Company:         Dexter Oilfield Inc.
Company:         DFI
Company:         DGAM
Company:         DHL
Company:         DHR International
Company:         DHRC
Company:         DHS International Advisors LLC
Company:         DHS/TSA
Company:         Diablo Health Company
Company:         DIAM U.S.A., Inc.
Company:         Diamond Hill Investment Group, Inc.
Company:         DIARIO PANORAMA
Company:         Dickson Financial Group
Company:         DigiscanUSA LLC
Company:         Digital Analysis & Graphics, Inc.
Company:         Digital Bear Consulting
Company:         Digital Solutions & Video Inc
Company:         Dillon Aero Inc.
Company:         Dimension Capital Management
Company:         DINACIE
Company:         Dipartimento di Matematica
Company:         direct action medical network
Company:         direct resources
Company:         Discere Docendo, Inc
Company:         Discovery Institute for Public Policy
Company:         Diversified Mortgage
Company:         DML Associates, LLC
Company:         DO NOT RENEW
Company:         DO NOT RENEW SUBSCRIPTION
Company:         Doctors Without Borders
Company:         Doctors Without Borders
Company:         Doctors Without Borders
Company:         DoD
Company:         DOD
Company:         Domaine Clarence Dillon S.A.
Company:         Dominion Resources
Company:         Dominion Resources
Company:         dominion securities
Company:         Domus Enterprises
Company:         Don Kuykendalls Comp Accounts
Company:         Don Kuykendalls Comp Accounts
Company:         Don Kuykendalls Comp Accounts
Company:         Donald Martin Enterprises, Inc.
Company:         Dora French Designs
Company:         Doraville Police Dept
Company:         Doug Bell & Associates
Company:         Doug Whitehead Comp Accounts
Company:         Dover Consulting
Company:         Dow Chemical
Company:         Dow Corning
Company:         Downeast Rover, Inc.
Company:         Downer Grove South ISD
Company:         Doxsee Sea Clam Co,Inc
Company:         Dr. John Templeton
Company:         Dr. John Templeton
Company:         Dr. John Templeton
Company:         Dr. Wayne Peace Inc.
Company:         DRD Laboratory, LLC
Company:         Dresdner Kleinwort
Company:         DRS Defense Solutions, LLC
Company:         DRS Technologies
Company:         DRW Trading Group
Company:         DSS Engineering
Company:         DTC Communications
Company:         dte energy
Company:         DTE Energy Trading
Company:         DTI
Company:         Du Pont China Ltd.
Company:         Du Pont China Ltd.
Company:         Duarte Design, Inc.
Company:         Dudobi Limited
Company:         Duke Energy
Company:         Duke Energy
Company:         Duke Energy
Company:         Duke Energy Corporation
Company:         Duke Management Company
Company:         Duke University
Company:         Duke University
Company:         Dumas Bay Properties
Company:         Dunross & Co AB
Company:         DUOMENTIS
Company:         Dutko Worldwide
Company:         Dutko WorldWide
Company:         Duty  Tire  &  Service  Center
Company:         Dwight Asset Management
Company:         Dynamatic Technologies Limited
Company:         Dynamic Capital Holdings, LLC
Company:         Dynamic IT Solutions
Company:         Dynamiq Pty Ltd
Company:         E-B Advertising & Display
Company:         e-Ventus Corporation
Company:         E.I. du Pont de Nemours & Company
Company:         eads
Company:         Ealby & Jake Group, LLC
Company:         East Asia Strategic Centre
Company:         Eastman Chemical Company
Company:         Eastman Dillon Oil & Gas Associates
Company:         easyDNS Technologies Inc.
Company:         Eaton
Company:         Eaton Vance
Company:         Eaton Vance
Company:         EBERVEIN FINANCIAL GROUP, INC.
Company:         Echostar Purchasing
Company:         Ecocem
Company:         ECONOMETRIX TREASURY MANAGEMENT
Company:         eCreate
Company:         Ed Kenley Investments
Company:         EDARE sprl
Company:         Edatis
Company:         Eddington Capital Management
Company:         Edengate Estate
Company:         Editora Abril
Company:         EDITORIAL CLIO, LIBROS Y VIDEOS SA DE CV
Company:         EDS
Company:         EESS
Company:         EGS
Company:         Ehanced Investment Partners LLC
Company:         EHC Global
Company:         Eidactics
Company:         Eldred Rock Associates
Company:         Electoral Office of Jamaica
Company:         Eli Lilly
Company:         Eli Lilly
Company:         Elk Creek Trading Company
Company:         Elkem AS
Company:         Elliott Cove Capital Management
Company:         Elm Income Group, Inc
Company:         ELS Riska and Security Consulting, LLC
Company:         Embassy of Angola
Company:         Embassy of Argentina
Company:         EMBASSY OF BRUNEI DARUSSALAM
Company:         Embassy of India
Company:         Embassy of India
Company:         Embassy of Italy
Company:         Embassy of Japan
Company:         Embassy of Lithuania Defence Attache Office
Company:         Embassy of Peru, Belgium
Company:         Embassy of Romania
Company:         Embassy of Sweden
Company:         Embassy of Vietnam
Company:         Embassy Republic of Uzbekistan
Company:         Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University
Company:         Emerald Touch Inc
Company:         Emerson
Company:         Emertia
Company:         Emirates Investment Services (EIS)
Company:         EMO Trans Inc.
Company:         Empire Homes
Company:         Empire Royalty Co.
Company:         EN McCully Trading
Company:         Enbridge Inc.
Company:         EnCana
Company:         Endeavor Real Estate Group
Company:         Endeavour Group
Company:         Endurance
Company:         Energy & Precious Metals Capital
Company:         Energy Developments and Investments Corporation
Company:         ENERGY STRATEGY CONSULTANTS
Company:         Engel, McCarney and Kenny LLP
Company:         EnTEC
Company:         Entergy
Company:         Entergy Operations, Inc.
Company:         Enterra Solutions
Company:         Entheos Consulting
Company:         ENTRIX, Inc.
Company:         Envestnet
Company:         Environmental Chemical Corporation
Company:         EPCINT International, Inc.
Company:         EPCINT International, Inc.
Company:         EPCINT International, Inc.
Company:         EPCINT International, Inc.
Company:         Episcopal Church
Company:         EPRS Energy Co
Company:         Epson America, Inc.
Company:         EQM Inc
Company:         Equinox Partners
Company:         Equity Research Associates
Company:         ERA Coastal Properties
Company:         Ergon Refining, Inc.
Company:         Eric Haupt General Const.
Company:         Ericsson
Company:         ESCOC MoFA
Company:         Escuela de Graduados en AdministraciÛn P˙blica y PolÌtica P˙blic
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         ESRI
Company:         Essential Financial Planning
Company:         Essex County Prosecutor’s Office
Company:         Eto Investmenrs Limited
Company:         EURISC Foundation
Company:         Eurizon Capital
Company:         Euro Guild
Company:         eurocology
Company:         Europacific Marketing, Inc.
Company:         EUROPEAN COMMISSION
Company:         European Commission – League of Arab States Liaison Office
Company:         European Commission ECHO Amman
Company:         European Parliament
Company:         Europol
Company:         euurfid
Company:         Evans Consultants
Company:         Everett Advisory Partners
Company:         Everglades Capital Management
Company:         EvoCapital Limited
Company:         EWA/IIT
Company:         Ex Cathedra
Company:         Ex3, Inc.
Company:         ExACT Mixing
Company:         Excalibur Consulting
Company:         Excel Risk Consultancy
Company:         EXECAIRE
Company:         executive insurance
Company:         Executive Search International
Company:         Exel Inc.
Company:         Exelon Nuclear
Company:         Exeter Group
Company:         Expat Money Management, Inc.
Company:         ext 113
Company:         Extek Pacific
Company:         ExxonMobil
Company:         ExxonMobil
Company:         ExxonMobil Corporation
Company:         ExxonMobil Corporation
Company:         ExxonMobil Russia Inc
Company:         F & F Conseil
Company:         F & G Ventures
Company:         F. Clark Sauls, MD
Company:         F.J. Westcott Company
Company:         F&D Advisors
Company:         Faherty Property Co. Ltd.
Company:         Fahnestock Asset Management
Company:         Fairmont State University
Company:         FAITH BAPTIST CHURCH
Company:         Falcon Private Bank Ltd
Company:         Falcon Security Group Iraq
Company:         Fallon-Countrywide Ltd
Company:         Farm Field Defense, Inc.
Company:         Farm Field Defense, Inc.
Company:         Farm Field Defense, Inc.
Company:         Faron Comps
Company:         Fat Prophets
Company:         Fayez Sarofim & Co.
Company:         Fazzari + Partners LLP
Company:         FCC
Company:         FDH Asset Mgt. Inc.
Company:         fdlnz
Company:         Fed Reserve
Company:         Federal Express
Company:         Federal Express
Company:         Federal Express / U.S. Navy
Company:         Federal Way  AFJROTC
Company:         Federated Financial Corporation of America
Company:         Federated Investors
Company:         Fedoroff Associates
Company:         Ferrell Capital Management
Company:         Ferrington Vineyards
Company:         FFM
Company:         FGV
Company:         FH International
Company:         FIB Management AG
Company:         Fick & May Law Firm
Company:         Ficogrande Pty Ltd
Company:         Fidelity
Company:         Fidelity
Company:         Fidelity International
Company:         Fidelity Investments
Company:         Fidelity Investments
Company:         Fidelity Management & Research Company
Company:         Fidelity Management & Research Company
Company:         Fidelity Management & Research Company
Company:         Fidelity State Bank and Trust Co
Company:         FIDUCIARY REVIEW SERVICES
Company:         Fifth Street Capital, LLC
Company:         FIG Partners LLC
Company:         Finacial Design Associates
Company:         Financial Achievement Services Inc
Company:         Financial Advisory Corporation
Company:         Financial Advisory Services
Company:         Financial Leadership Group, LLC
Company:         Financial Management Advisors
Company:         Financial Stocks, Inc
Company:         Financial Strategies & Solutions Group
Company:         Financial Technologies
Company:         Financial Times
Company:         FINARC
Company:         Finch
Company:         Fine Gardens
Company:         FINTRAC
Company:         First Austin
Company:         First Baptist Concord
Company:         First Capitol Ag
Company:         First Financial Advisors
Company:         First Industries Corp
Company:         FIRVA Capital Management, LLC
Company:         FIT Group
Company:         Five Corners Consulting
Company:         Flick Confreres & Associates Pty Ltd
Company:         FlightSafety International Inc.
Company:         Flint Financial Group
Company:         Flint Hills Resources
Company:         Florida Engineering & Design Inc.
Company:         Fluent Wealth Partners
Company:         Fluid Communications
Company:         Fluor Corporation
Company:         Fluor Corporation
Company:         Fluor Corporation
Company:         fmc
Company:         Focus Financial
Company:         Focus LLC
Company:         Focus Strategies Merchant Banking, LLC
Company:         Focustar Consulting
Company:         Foliage Software Systems
Company:         Fondazione CDF
Company:         FondElec Capital ADvisors, LLC
Company:         FONINSA
Company:         Force 10 Consulting, LLC
Company:         Ford Commercial
Company:         Ford Foundation
Company:         Fore Research and Management, LP
Company:         Forecast International
Company:         Foreign Affairs
Company:         Foreign Policy Research Institute
Company:         Forensic Analytics LLC
Company:         foreseeable risk analysis center
Company:         Formula Capital
Company:         Forticom UAB
Company:         Fortis
Company:         FortisMeespierson
Company:         Forum for Comparative Correction
Company:         Forward Pass Inc
Company:         Fory Group LLC
Company:         Foster Dykema Cabot
Company:         Foster Tire Co.
Company:         Foundation for Environmental Security and Sustainability (FESS)
Company:         Fountain cosmetics pty ltd
Company:         Fourells Business Development Group
Company:         Fox Consulting
Company:         Fox News Channel
Company:         Foxhall Capital
Company:         Framestore
Company:         Frank Wilson
Company:         Franklin Templeton
Company:         Fraumann Associates LLC
Company:         freedom foundation inc
Company:         Freestyle Marketing
Company:         Fremont Group
Company:         Friday, Friday & Kazen
Company:         Fried Asset Management Inc.
Company:         Friesland Campina Middle East
Company:         Frist Capital, LLC
Company:         Frontline Systems Inc.
Company:         Ft. Richardson
Company:         Fuel For Truth
Company:         Fujisanke communications international
Company:         Fulcrumnet
Company:         Full Court Fundamentals
Company:         Full Spectrum Technologies, Inc.
Company:         FundaciÛn TelefÛnica G 8208680
Company:         Funding Blueprint, LLC
Company:         Fusion Enterprises
Company:         Future Escape Ltd
Company:         Future Pipe Industries
Company:         FX Concepts, Inc.
Company:         G3
Company:         Gaia Capital Management Inc
Company:         Gaines & Co
Company:         Galo Properties
Company:         GAM LLC
Company:         Gamma Capital LLC
Company:         Gamma Knife Center of the Pacific
Company:         Garanti Bankas?
Company:         Gardner-Webb University
Company:         Gartner Group
Company:         Gateway Consulting Group, Inc.
Company:         Gauteng Discount Consultants
Company:         gavekal
Company:         gavel capital group inc.
Company:         GBB
Company:         GCM Analys
Company:         GCResourses
Company:         GDT
Company:         GE Real Estate
Company:         Gelker Gear
Company:         Gemini Financial Services Corporation
Company:         Gemini industries
Company:         Gemmer Asset Management LLC
Company:         General Atlantic
Company:         General Dynamics
Company:         General Dynamics
Company:         General Dynamics
Company:         General Dynamics AIS
Company:         General Dynamics Land Systems
Company:         General Dynamics Land Systems
Company:         General Dynamics Land Systems
Company:         General Dynamics Land Systems
Company:         General Electric
Company:         General Electric
Company:         General Electric
Company:         General Electric
Company:         General Electric Company
Company:         General Electric Company
Company:         General Growth Properties
Company:         General Maritime Corporation
Company:         General Mills
Company:         General Steamship Corporation
Company:         Generation Investments
Company:         Geohazards Consultant
Company:         GeoPetra
Company:         George Mason U.
Company:         George Mason University
Company:         George Washington Univ
Company:         George Weiss Associates
Company:         Georgetown University
Company:         Georgetown University
Company:         Georgetown University
Company:         Georgia of Technology
Company:         Georgian Library Association
Company:         Geotechnologies
Company:         Gevo Inc
Company:         GFA
Company:         Ghent University
Company:         GIFT MEMBERSHIP
Company:         Gillespie Air Services Inc
Company:         GIPL
Company:         glencrest investment advisors
Company:         Glenmede Trust Company
Company:         Glennel Associates
Company:         Global Capital Investments, Inc.
Company:         Global Criterion Solutions Limited
Company:         Global Crop Diversity Trust
Company:         Global Exchange Trading
Company:         Global Geophysical.com
Company:         Global Group Solutions
Company:         Global Impact Inc.
Company:         Global Industries
Company:         Global Project srl
Company:         Global Prospect
Company:         Global Security Services, LLC
Company:         Global SourceNet
Company:         Global Technonlogy Applicatons, Ltd.
Company:         Global Terrorism Consulting
Company:         GlobalAffairs.org
Company:         GlobalBusiness Initiatives
Company:         GlobaLogix, Inc
Company:         GlobalSecur Consulting Services
Company:         GlobalView Capital, LLC
Company:         Globepharm
Company:         GMAC Financial Services
Company:         GMI Solutions
Company:         Gnomon Security
Company:         Gobal Executive Protection
Company:         Godandi & Sons, Inc.
Company:         Gold Coast Futures Group
Company:         Golden Dome Data
Company:         Golden Hills Brokers/SG
Company:         Golden Key Investments, Ltd.
Company:         Golder Investment Management
Company:         goldi inc
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Goldman Sachs
Company:         Golfregistrations.com LLC
Company:         goodkin consulting
Company:         Goodwood Investments
Company:         Google, Inc
Company:         Gordon Asset Management, LLC
Company:         GorGrp Inc.
Company:         GORGRP, Inc.
Company:         Gornal Consulting
Company:         Gov
Company:         goverment
Company:         government
Company:         Government of Alberta
Company:         Government of Canada
Company:         Government of Macedonia
Company:         Government of Ontario
Company:         GP Investimentos
Company:         GPLP
Company:         Grace Fellowship
Company:         Grace Outdoors
Company:         Graf Financial Advisors, LLC
Company:         GRANBERG AS
Company:         Grand-Jean Capital
Company:         Granite Investment Advisors
Company:         Grant Aviation
Company:         Grant Thornton LLP
Company:         Grasshopper Creek Associates, Inc.
Company:         Graver Capital Management
Company:         Great Northern Sentry Co.
Company:         Greater Good Global Support Services
Company:         Green Valley company
Company:         Greenberg Traurig
Company:         Greensfelder, Hemker & Gale, P.C.
Company:         greenville hosp system
Company:         Gregory & Cook inc
Company:         Gresham Ventures
Company:         GreyBridge Solutions
Company:         Griffith University
Company:         Grossmann Jet Service
Company:         Grupo Atenea
Company:         Gryphus d.o.o.
Company:         GSCG
Company:         Guardian Western Inc.
Company:         Guardian-gbs
Company:         Guerin & Guerin Inc.
Company:         Guermantes Inc
Company:         guilford county emergency services
Company:         Gulf Strategic Advisors
Company:         Gulf Strategies, LLC
Company:         Gutierrez Law Firm
Company:         Guy N Molinari, LP
Company:         Gygi Capital Management
Company:         H-E-B
Company:         H.I.S. Security Consulting, LLC
Company:         H.J. Heinz
Company:         H.M. Payson & Co.
Company:         H&H Investment Advisors
Company:         H&S Engineering
Company:         HABERTURK TV
Company:         Halbert Mill
Company:         Haliburton
Company:         Hall Wilson, LLC
Company:         Halliburton
Company:         Halliburton
Company:         Hallwood Investments Limited
Company:         Hamilton Jackson Consulting
Company:         hamilton robinson llc
Company:         Hammarskjold & Co.
Company:         Hammond Law Firm
Company:         Hampton  Consulting
Company:         Hampton-Newport News Community Services Board
Company:         Hancock Bank
Company:         Hancock Holding Company
Company:         Hands On Centering
Company:         Harding University
Company:         Harley-Davidson, Inc.
Company:         Harley-Mohawk Inc.
Company:         Harris Investment Mgmt
Company:         Harris Investments
Company:         Harrison Cardiology Clininc
Company:         HARRY B. SANDS, LOBOSKY & CO
Company:         harston consulting
Company:         Hart Security
Company:         Harvard University
Company:         Harvest Investment Consultants
Company:         Haven
Company:         HAWAII HOLDINGS, LLC
Company:         Hawkesbury Advisors
Company:         Hayden Capital Preservation, LLC
Company:         Hazelett Strip-Casting Corp
Company:         HB Technologies, Inc.
Company:         HBA CONSULTORIA
Company:         HBK Capital Management
Company:         HBS Financial Planning Ltd
Company:         HeadCase Humanufacturing, Inc.
Company:         Health Plus Inc
Company:         healy mattos
Company:         Hefren-Tillotson
Company:         Heineken USA
Company:         Heldenfels Enterprises
Company:         helen yunker realty
Company:         Hellenic Center for Chinese Studies (EKKIM)
Company:         Helmerich & Payne
Company:         Herbert (3) Limited
Company:         Hercules Offshore
Company:         Heritage Plastics Inc
Company:         Heritage West Financial
Company:         Hermening Financial Group LLC
Company:         Heron Capital Management Inc
Company:         Herzstein Charitable Foundation
Company:         Heska Corp
Company:         Hess Corp
Company:         Hess Corporation
Company:         Hewlett Packard Centro de Servicios Globales S de RL de CV
Company:         Hewlett-Packard Company
Company:         Heximer Investment Mgmt
Company:         hff
Company:         hgkhg
Company:         HHC, 20th EN BN
Company:         HHC, 5th BDE, 75th DIV (BCTD)
Company:         Hickory Ground Solutions
Company:         Hidden Advantage, Inc.
Company:         Higdon Law Firm
Company:         Highfields
Company:         Highfields Capital
Company:         Highschool Software&Media
Company:         Highview Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Hill Musuem & Manuscript Library
Company:         hillsboro journal
Company:         hillsboro journal inc
Company:         Hillwood Energy
Company:         Hilton Hotels Corp
Company:         Hinds Banner
Company:         Hines
Company:         Hirshfield Law
Company:         Hitachi-GE Nuclear Energy, Ltd.
Company:         Hits Magazine
Company:         HL Cap Inc
Company:         HMZ Law
Company:         Hoff & Leigh
Company:         Hoisington Management
Company:         Holland Investment Management
Company:         Holonym
Company:         Holowesko Partners Ltd
Company:         home
Company:         Home
Company:         Home
Company:         Home & Family
Company:         Home Network News, Inc.
Company:         Homeland Security
Company:         Homeopathic Trends, Inc.
Company:         HOMEWORTH
Company:         Honeywell
Company:         Honeywell International
Company:         Honeywell International
Company:         Hoover Institution
Company:         Hoover Investment Mgt
Company:         Horizon
Company:         Horst & Associates Consulting
Company:         Hortgrow Services
Company:         Hoshen-Eliav
Company:         Hospital
Company:         Hotel Diplomat AB
Company:         HouseMaster
Company:         houston insurance
Company:         Houston Police Department
Company:         how 2 pty ltd
Company:         Howrey, LLP
Company:         HR Financial Services, Inc.
Company:         HREF Tools Corp.
Company:         HSBC
Company:         HSBC
Company:         HSBC
Company:         HSBC Bank Australia
Company:         HSBC Markets (Asia) Limited
Company:         HSBC Securities Japan Limited. Tokyo Branch
Company:         HTC Security
Company:         Hubbell Incorporated
Company:         Huber Companies, Inc.
Company:         Hueter Engineering
Company:         Hughes Financial Services
Company:         Human Intelligence Enterprise
Company:         Humint Services Group
Company:         Hungarian Mission to NATO
Company:         hungerpiller capitla managment
Company:         Hunt Oil
Company:         Hunt Oil
Company:         Hunt Oil
Company:         Hunter  Douglas
Company:         Hunton & Williams LLP
Company:         Hurst-Euless-Bedford ISD
Company:         Husky Energy
Company:         Hyatt Hotels
Company:         Hyatt International (Europe Africa Middle East) LLC
Company:         HYPATIA I & S
Company:         HyperCompany
Company:         Hyperion Resources
Company:         I agree with the author.
Company:         Ian A Schapkaitz
Company:         IASG, Inc.
Company:         IB Russia Trading Ltd Oy
Company:         IBCONTACTS
Company:         IBM
Company:         IBM
Company:         ICA FLUOR
Company:         ICANN
Company:         ICAP
Company:         ICC
Company:         ICC
Company:         ICCO
Company:         Iceline Investments Inc.
Company:         iCONOS
Company:         ICRC
Company:         icrier
Company:         Idea Transfer Inc
Company:         Ideal Aerosmith, Inc.
Company:         IDSS Co.
Company:         IFSC Ireland
Company:         IIIT
Company:         IISD
Company:         Image Enhancement Center
Company:         Imara SP Reid
Company:         IMM Swiss AG
Company:         Immediate Response Group LLC
Company:         Immunity Incorporated
Company:         Immunity Incorporated
Company:         impact outdoor advertising co
Company:         Incoe corporation
Company:         Independent
Company:         Independent
Company:         Independent Contractor
Company:         index ventures
Company:         Indian Military Review
Company:         Individual
Company:         Individual
Company:         Individual
Company:         Individual
Company:         Individual
Company:         Individual
Company:         Industrial Supply
Company:         Infinium Capital Mgt
Company:         Inflection Energy LLC
Company:         Informatica
Company:         ING Group
Company:         ING Investment
Company:         ING Life Insurance Japan Ltd
Company:         Innovation Capital
Company:         Innovative Solutions
Company:         Innovative Title Services, LLC
Company:         Innoven
Company:         Institute of International Politics and Economics
Company:         Institute of South East Asian Studies
Company:         Institute of the Legislation and Comparative Law under the Russ/
Company:         Intact Investment Management Inc.
Company:         Integration consulting
Company:         Intel
Company:         Intel
Company:         Intel Corp
Company:         Intel Corporation
Company:         Intel Corporation
Company:         Intel Corporation
Company:         Intel Corporation
Company:         Intel Corporation
Company:         Intel Corporation
Company:         INTELLMD
Company:         Intelsec Corporation
Company:         Inter-Pochta.ru
Company:         Interacciones casa de Bolsa C.A
Company:         Intereal Corp.  /  Bressie & Co.
Company:         Intergraph
Company:         Interlogic, Inc.
Company:         International Association of Chiefs of Police
Company:         International Atomic Energy Agency
Company:         International Committee of the Red Cross
Company:         International Consultant
Company:         International Criminal Court
Company:         International Equity Sales
Company:         International Iron Works, Inc.
Company:         International Medical Corps
Company:         International Mission Board
Company:         International Mission Board
Company:         International Mission Board
Company:         International Mission Board
Company:         International Mission Board
Company:         International Monetary Fund
Company:         International Paper
Company:         International Pathfinder Solutions Ltd
Company:         International Rescue Committee
Company:         International Science Exchange
Company:         INTERNATIONAL SERVICE CONSULTANTS LTD.
Company:         International SOS
Company:         International Test Solutions
Company:         Interpochta.ru
Company:         INTERPOL
Company:         INTERPOL
Company:         Interventional Pain Management
Company:         Intl Crescent Ltd.
Company:         Intrepid Group Limited
Company:         Invatamant Superior
Company:         Invemed
Company:         Inveniam
Company:         Invensys Plc
Company:         Inversiones, Inc.
Company:         Invesco AIM
Company:         Investment Science Asset Management Pty Ltd
Company:         Investure
Company:         Invus Financial Advisors
Company:         IOM
Company:         Iowa Division of Criminal Investigation
Company:         IPKeys Technologies, LLC
Company:         IPM AB
Company:         IPMServ
Company:         IPS Advisory, Inc.
Company:         IR Sources, Inc.
Company:         IR Weinbraub
Company:         Iron Point Capital Management
Company:         IronBridge Capital Management
Company:         Ironwood Investment Counsel, LLC
Company:         Ironworks Capital
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         IS Corporate
Company:         ISBC
Company:         Islamabad Policy Research Institute
Company:         Island Capital Management, LLC
Company:         ISPSW
Company:         Israel Aerospace Industries
Company:         Israel Aerospace Industries Ltd
Company:         Isurus Capital Management LLP
Company:         IT army
Company:         ITT Aerospace and Communications
Company:         ITT Corporation
Company:         Ivy Tech State College
Company:         Izzle Networks
Company:         J & B Ventures, Inc.
Company:         J RANDALL FARRAR MD
Company:         J WOODWARD NELSON & ASSOCIATES, CONSULTANTS
Company:         J. L. Benacci Ventures
Company:         J. Wood Television Production
Company:         J.O. Alvarez Inc.
Company:         J.T. Parker Associates, Inc.
Company:         JAARS Inc.
Company:         jack chivers realty
Company:         Jacobs
Company:         Jacobs Consultancy Inc.
Company:         JAH Consulting
Company:         JAH Consulting
Company:         Jalapeno Corporation
Company:         james alexander fine gardens llc
Company:         James Raymond
Company:         JANA Partners, LLC
Company:         Janus Executive Services
Company:         Janus Solutions
Company:         Janusian Security Risk Management Ltd
Company:         Japan Center for International Finance
Company:         JAPCC
Company:         Japs-Olson Company
Company:         Jarin Ltd
Company:         JAS Global Investments LLC
Company:         JAS Global Investments, LLC
Company:         JAYFEL Associates
Company:         Jaypee Capital Services
Company:         JB Drax
Company:         Jebsen Management AS
Company:         Jefferies
Company:         Jefferies & Company
Company:         Jeffers Ltd
Company:         Jefferson Institute
Company:         Jefferson Waterman International
Company:         Jennifer Richmond Comps
Company:         Jennings Capital
Company:         Jensen Construction, Inc.
Company:         Jera servcices
Company:         Jerry Brown’s Boat Service
Company:         JETRO London
Company:         JETRO London
Company:         Jewish Community Association of Austin
Company:         Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs
Company:         JFH-MS ANG
Company:         JGC Corporation
Company:         JGC Corporation
Company:         JHL Capital Group LLC
Company:         JLG Industries
Company:         JM Advisors, LLC
Company:         JMP Consulting
Company:         john c eklof LLC
Company:         John C. Lincoln Health Network
Company:         John D. Svirsky Inc.
Company:         John Pavel, DDS-INTEGRATIVE ORAL&MAXILLOFACIAL SRGY
Company:         John S. Appel and Associates, Inc.
Company:         John S. Landrum Interests
Company:         John W. Brooker & Co.
Company:         Johns Hopkins University Applied Physics Lab
Company:         Johnson Management Group, Inc.
Company:         Johnson Rice & Co
Company:         JOHTAN
Company:         JOHTAN
Company:         Jones Day
Company:         jonescarroll
Company:         JonesTrading
Company:         Joy Productions
Company:         JP Consulting
Company:         JP Morgan
Company:         JP Morgan
Company:         JP Morgan
Company:         JP MORGAN
Company:         JP Morgan Chase & Co.
Company:         JP Oglesby & Associates, Inc.
Company:         JPayne Mortgage
Company:         JRG Law
Company:         judicial recovery systems
Company:         Jumbert
Company:         Junipero group LLC
Company:         Jupiter Asset Management
Company:         K&A Shardlow Pty Ltd
Company:         Ka mgt and Mkt  consultants
Company:         Kaisere
Company:         kaizen capital
Company:         Kalbian Hagerty LLP
Company:         Kaleb Resources LLC
Company:         Kallpa Asset Management
Company:         KAM
Company:         Kanaanlawfirm
Company:         Kanos Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Kardiologicke centrum MUDr. Janky Skrobakove s.r.o.
Company:         KASHMERE VENTURES, LLC
Company:         kathy@kenngeorge.com
Company:         Kay Investments Inc.
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR
Company:         KBR – 65203
Company:         kcbox
Company:         keiser & Associates
Company:         Kelford Capital
Company:         Kellbgg Brown and Root
Company:         Keller Group
Company:         Kelly Services
Company:         Kemnay Advisory Services
Company:         Kenfield Capital Strategies
Company:         Kenneth A. Ziskin Law Corp
Company:         Kenneth Frenke & Co.
Company:         KenPeek Enterprises
Company:         Kensington Investment Group
Company:         Kent School
Company:         kentwood associates
Company:         KERRY J. BLAIN, INC.
Company:         Kesar Terminals & Infrastructure Ltd
Company:         Ketchum
Company:         Key Private Bank KUI
Company:         KFPC(Pty)Ltd
Company:         KG Solutions, Inc.
Company:         KHennesseyAssociates
Company:         Kiawah Development Partners
Company:         KIDA
Company:         KIERS & CO
Company:         Killer Admins, Inc.
Company:         Kinder Family LImited Partnership
Company:         Kinder Morgan
Company:         Kinetic Concepts, Inc. (KCI)
Company:         KING INVESTMENT ADVISORS
Company:         King’s College London
Company:         Kinnett Capital
Company:         Kinross Gold
Company:         KIO
Company:         Kiraca Group
Company:         Kirton & McConkie
Company:         Kite Lake Capital Management (UK) LLP
Company:         Kitt McCord Associates
Company:         KJS P/L
Company:         Knight Advisors
Company:         Knight Equity Markets
Company:         Knights of Columbus
Company:         Knights of Columbus
Company:         Knights of Columbus
Company:         Knights of Columbus
Company:         KNO
Company:         Knoll Capital Management
Company:         Knowledge Trading Pty Ltd
Company:         Koch Asset Management
Company:         Kola Science Center Norway/Mira Consulting
Company:         Korea IT Times
Company:         Korean Mission to the UN
Company:         korti
Company:         kp partners
Company:         KPMG
Company:         Kroger Pharmacy
Company:         Kroll, Inc.
Company:         Kronos
Company:         Kruck Consulting, LLC
Company:         Krueger Asset Management, Ltd
Company:         KS DANISMANLIK VE GUVENLIK LTD
Company:         KTF
Company:         Kurke & Associates, inc.
Company:         L A Motley LLC
Company:         L A R Enterprises
Company:         L T Mlcoch, Inc.
Company:         L-3 Communications
Company:         L-3 Communications
Company:         L-3 Communications
Company:         L-3 Communications MPRI
Company:         L. G. Sucsy & Co. Inc.
Company:         L3 Com/MPRI
Company:         La Follette Associates
Company:         LA Times
Company:         LABOVITZ
Company:         Labrador Capital. LLC
Company:         LAC Consultants Corp
Company:         Lake Cook Investment Corp.
Company:         Lake Forest (IL) Police Department
Company:         Lancaster Capital Management
Company:         landspitali-university hospital of iceland
Company:         Lanham O’Dell & Company
Company:         LanRunner
Company:         Lansdowne Partners
Company:         Lansdownepartners.com
Company:         Lantern Security
Company:         Lap Dance Diet, LLC
Company:         LaPacifica Publications
Company:         Lapin & Davis, LLP
Company:         LARRY HUSTON STUDIO
Company:         Larry T. Lanning Services Company
Company:         Las Vegas Chamber of Commerce
Company:         Las Vegas Development Associates., LLC
Company:         Lasercom
Company:         Latent S.E.A. LLC
Company:         Lattice Semiconductor Corp
Company:         Laurel Knoll Farm, LLC
Company:         Laurel Lodge Enterprises, Inc.
Company:         Law Firm
Company:         Law Office of Patrick J. Massari
Company:         Law Offices of Jane A. Clark
Company:         LAW OFFICES OF JIM BLAIR
Company:         Law Offices of Wendy L. Rome
Company:         LB Trailer Sales
Company:         LDB & Assoc.
Company:         Lee Ault & Company
Company:         Lee Financial
Company:         LEEDS HOLDINGS S/E, INC
Company:         Leeds University
Company:         Leeston Medical
Company:         Leeway Transportation Inc.
Company:         Lefebure Brothers
Company:         Legion Lighting Co., Inc.
Company:         Lehigh Univesity – Investment Office
Company:         Lehman Brothers
Company:         Let Freedom Ring
Company:         Letaw Associates
Company:         Lewis-Pipgras, Inc.
Company:         Lexmark Internacional S de R.L. de C.V.
Company:         Lexmark International, Inc.
Company:         Lextek International
Company:         LGT Investment Management (Asia) Ltd.
Company:         LHC llc
Company:         Libre Consturction
Company:         lider and fogarty
Company:         Lifechangers, Inc.
Company:         Lighthouse for the Blind
Company:         Lighthouse Information Systems, Inc.
Company:         Lighthouse Investment Group LLC
Company:         Limitless LLC
Company:         Lincoln Group
Company:         LIONCLAD
Company:         Lionscrest Capital Ltd
Company:         Lisa Chakrabarti, Fine Artist
Company:         Litigation Research
Company:         Live Oak Systems
Company:         LJT Inc
Company:         LL
Company:         Locke Financial Services, Inc.
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin
Company:         Lockheed Martin – ISO
Company:         Lockheed Martin Corporation
Company:         Lockheed Martin Investment Company
Company:         Locus Pharmaceuticals, Inc.
Company:         Logic Fund Management Limited
Company:         Lohengrin Group
Company:         Loma Linda University
Company:         Lone Star Ventures
Company:         Lone Star Ventures
Company:         Lonely Planet Publications
Company:         Long Investment Advisory, Inc.
Company:         Longhorn Capital Partners LP
Company:         loop capital
Company:         Loqtus Enterprises
Company:         Lord, Abbett & Co. LLC
Company:         Lorence & Vander Zwart
Company:         Lorimax Investigations
Company:         Los Alamos National Laboratory
Company:         Los Alamos National Laboratory
Company:         Los Angeles Times
Company:         LostChord.Org
Company:         Louis Berger Group, Inc
Company:         Lourido Capital, S.L.
Company:         Love Services Pty Ltd
Company:         Lowell International Company
Company:         Lowry Hill
Company:         LPL
Company:         LRQA Ltd
Company:         LST Prudential Limited.
Company:         LTAstrology
Company:         Luanne InfoSearcy
Company:         Lubrizol
Company:         Lucas Capital Advisors, LLC
Company:         Lundin Sudan Limited
Company:         Lusman Capital Management
Company:         Lustig & Associates, P.A.
Company:         Lux Capital
Company:         LVM Capital Management, Ltd.
Company:         Lyman Ward Military Academy
Company:         lynchris holdings inc.
Company:         Lynn Clough Portraits
Company:         LyondellBasell – Houston Refining
Company:         Lyric Opera of Chicago
Company:         M. Lukic & Associates Insurance Brokers LTD.
Company:         m.glosser&sons inc
Company:         M2 Solids LC
Company:         M3G Capital
Company:         M6 Concrete Accessories
Company:         MacDougall, MacDougall, MacTier
Company:         MacKenzie Financial
Company:         MacLeod International
Company:         Macquarie
Company:         macquarie bank
Company:         Madacovi Ltd
Company:         Madden Asset Management
Company:         Maersk Line, Limited
Company:         Magnitude Capital
Company:         Magog Holdings Limited
Company:         Mainichi Shimbun
Company:         Mainsail Asset Mgmt
Company:         Maitland-Carter Properties, Co.
Company:         Makena Capital Management
Company:         maliban sal
Company:         Malmgren Global
Company:         management services
Company:         Manas Publications
Company:         Manitowoc
Company:         manley asset managemeny
Company:         Manning Navcomp, Inc.
Company:         Manro Haydan Trading
Company:         Manulife Financial
Company:         Maranatha Group LLC
Company:         MAREX Financial Limited
Company:         Marine Corps
Company:         Marinette Marine Corporation
Company:         Market-Tek Enterprises, Inc.
Company:         Markit
Company:         Marsh USA Inc.
Company:         Marsh, Inc.
Company:         Marshfield Associates
Company:         Martin Capital
Company:         Martingale Systems
Company:         Martronics Corporation
Company:         Marvin & Palmer Associates, Inc.
Company:         MAS
Company:         Mason County Fire District # 2
Company:         Mass. Trial Court
Company:         master asset management
Company:         MasterCard
Company:         Matt Management Co.
Company:         Matteson-Hudson Construction Company
Company:         Mawarid Holding Company
Company:         Max Recovery
Company:         Mc Guinness & assoc.
Company:         McCaffrey and Company International
Company:         McCormick & Company, Inc.
Company:         McCormick Tribune Foundation
Company:         McDep LLC
Company:         MCG
Company:         McGlinchey Stafford
Company:         McGrew Enteprises
Company:         McIntosh Enterprises
Company:         McKinsey
Company:         McQuilling Services, LLC
Company:         McSafetySolutions, LLC
Company:         MD
Company:         MDA
Company:         MDOG
Company:         MDRI
Company:         MDW Investments
Company:         Mead OBrien Inc.
Company:         MeadWestvaco
Company:         Med-Link Staffing, Inc.
Company:         MedExpress Companies
Company:         Mediabiz International Inc.
Company:         Medical Graphics Corporation
Company:         Medway Capital
Company:         Melberg Marketing
Company:         mercuria
Company:         Mercyhurst College
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Merrill Lynch
Company:         Mesa Police Department
Company:         mesirow financial
Company:         MetaCarta
Company:         metis consulting
Company:         METKA
Company:         Metro-North Railroad
Company:         Mexican Navy
Company:         Meximerica Media Inc
Company:         MF Global
Company:         MF Global
Company:         MF Publishing
Company:         MFC Global Investment Management
Company:         MFK Bank
Company:         MGS Group
Company:         Miami University
Company:         Miami-Dade College
Company:         Michael J. Poff lcsw pa
Company:         Michael V. Fewell & Assoc., Inc.
Company:         Michigan State University
Company:         Mick Geary Production
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft
Company:         Microsoft Corporation
Company:         Microsoft Corporation
Company:         Middle East Access
Company:         Middle East Facilitations Executive
Company:         Middle East Observatory
Company:         MIGROS TICARET AS
Company:         MilePro LLC
Company:         Military
Company:         Military Personnel
Company:         Millardair
Company:         Miller Investment Management
Company:         MILNEWS.ca – Military News for Canadians
Company:         Min Pin Rescue
Company:         Minining Interactive Corp.
Company:         Ministry of Defence – Singapore (Library)
Company:         Ministry of Defense
Company:         Ministry of Economic Affairs
Company:         Ministry of External Relations
Company:         Ministry of Foreign Affairs & International Trade
Company:         Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Emigrants, BOUSTROS Palace
Company:         Ministry of the Economy & Foreign Trade
Company:         mintzlaff design, inc.
Company:         Mipod Nuclear
Company:         MIR Corporation
Company:         Miracle of the Rosary Mission, Inc.
Company:         Miravisa S.A.
Company:         Mission Advisors
Company:         Mission Leader
Company:         Mission of Lithuania to UN
Company:         Missouri State Employees’s Retirement System
Company:         MitonOptimal Limited
Company:         Mitsubishi UFJ Securities
Company:         MJWW
Company:         MJWW
Company:         Mliven
Company:         MLSK Associates LLC
Company:         MLTDesign
Company:         Mobile Reasoning, Inc.
Company:         MoD
Company:         Modern Transport Systems Corp.
Company:         Mody Pumps Inc.
Company:         MOHAMMED JALAL & SONS
Company:         Molinos Azteca SA de CV
Company:         Monarch Machinery, Inc.
Company:         Monitor Group
Company:         Monroe & Associates
Company:         Monsanto
Company:         Monsanto Company
Company:         Montesino
Company:         montgomery goodwin investments
Company:         montgomery goodwin investments
Company:         Monthly $19.95
Company:         Monthly $19.95
Company:         Moody’s Corporation
Company:         Moog Inc.
Company:         Moore Consultant
Company:         MoPress
Company:         Moray Holdings Ltd
Company:         morgan keegan
Company:         Morgan Keegan
Company:         Morgan Stanely
Company:         morgan stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         Morgan Stanley
Company:         MORGAN STANLEY
Company:         morganstanley
Company:         Morningstar
Company:         Morris Communications
Company:         Morrison  Company
Company:         Morrison Cohen LLC
Company:         Morse Wealth Management, LLC
Company:         Mortgage Loan Specialists
Company:         Morty\’s Cabin Inc
Company:         Moscow State University Science Park
Company:         Moseley Law
Company:         Moss
Company:         Mostly, Inc.
Company:         Mota Motors
Company:         Motorola, Inc.
Company:         Motorola, Inc.
Company:         Mott Corporation
Company:         Mount Lucas Management
Company:         Mount Pleasant Baptist Church
Company:         Mountain Dreams
Company:         Mountain Pacific Group, LLC
Company:         Mountain Travel Sobek
Company:         Mountain Vines Cellars LLC
Company:         Mountaire, Inc
Company:         Mowery @ Schoenfeld
Company:         Mowery Capital Management
Company:         mp4 Aviation Security LLC
Company:         MPRI
Company:         MQP
Company:         MRM Capital
Company:         MS Designs
Company:         MSA
Company:         MSF – OCG
Company:         MSIA
Company:         msnbc
Company:         Mueller Water
Company:         Mulberry Street Family Dentistry
Company:         Murphy Companies
Company:         My Test Company
Company:         Myers Center for the Eye
Company:         N W Altemus & Co.
Company:         n. d. pitman & company, inc.
Company:         n/a
Company:         n/a
Company:         n/a
Company:         n/a
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         N/A
Company:         na
Company:         na
Company:         NA
Company:         NA
Company:         NA
Company:         NA
Company:         NAFTA GAS CONSULTING AUSTRALIA Pty. Ltd.
Company:         Nagant Communications
Company:         Nancy A. Socha & Associates, LLC
Company:         Naples Council on World Affairs
Company:         NARF
Company:         NAS
Company:         NASA
Company:         Nathan Lane Associates
Company:         National Assembly of Republic of Korea
Company:         National Australia Bank
Company:         National Bank of Romania
Company:         National Bank of Romania
Company:         National Center for Intelligence & Counter-Terrorism
Company:         national chengchi university
Company:         National City Corporation
Company:         National Commercial Bank
Company:         National Democratic Institute
Company:         National Instruments
Company:         National Journal
Company:         National Oilwell varco
Company:         National Oilwell Varco
Company:         National Oilwell Varco
Company:         National Oilwell Varco
Company:         National Oilwell Varco
Company:         National Security Corresponden
Company:         National War College
Company:         Natixis Alternative Investments (US), Inc.
Company:         natl. bond &trust
Company:         NATO
Company:         Naval Criminal Investigative Service
Company:         Naval History & Heritage Command
Company:         Navigators
Company:         Navy
Company:         NBC News
Company:         nbcnews
Company:         NCH Corp.
Company:         NCMC
Company:         NCMEC
Company:         Neat Communications
Company:         Nelson Associates
Company:         Neo Dimension
Company:         nestle
Company:         Net Results Group
Company:         NetCom Solutions
Company:         Netherlands Armed Forces
Company:         NetJets International
Company:         NetJets, Inc.
Company:         Neuberger Berman
Company:         Neuberger Berman
Company:         Neuberger Berman
Company:         Neumeier Consulting, Inc
Company:         New Dominion LC
Company:         New England Financial
Company:         New Hope Partners, LLC
Company:         New Mountain Capitol
Company:         New Orleans Private Patrol
Company:         New Tribes Mission
Company:         New Tribes Mission
Company:         New West Investment Management, Inc.
Company:         New York Marriott Marquis
Company:         New York State Police
Company:         New Zealand Dept of the Prime Minister & Cabinet
Company:         New Zealand Fire Service
Company:         New Zealand Fire Service
Company:         New Zealand Police, Wellington District
Company:         Newmont Mining Corporation
Company:         Newmont Mining Corporation
Company:         Newmont South America
Company:         Nexant Inc.
Company:         nexen petroleum usa
Company:         Nexstore Investments
Company:         NextChem PTY LTD
Company:         NF Wealth Management
Company:         ng
Company:         NI
Company:         NIELSEN WURSTER GROUP
Company:         Nigerian Agip Oil Company
Company:         Nigerian Airforce
Company:         Nike, Inc.
Company:         nil
Company:         NIL
Company:         NJ-TF1 / EAOEM
Company:         NMHG
Company:         NMKK Holdings
Company:         NMU
Company:         No Company Name
Company:         Noble Rogue Consulting
Company:         Noblegene Development
Company:         Nomads Aus Pty Ltd
Company:         Nomura
Company:         Nomura
Company:         Nomura International
Company:         Non profit Orgnization
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         none
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         None
Company:         NONE
Company:         Noonan Trading LLC
Company:         Noram Management
Company:         Nordic American Group
Company:         Nordile Holdings Ltd.
Company:         Nordstrom
Company:         Norm Portner Consulting
Company:         North American Energy Credit and Clearing Corp
Company:         north phoenix anesthesiologists, ltd
Company:         Northern Forum
Company:         Northern Gulf institute
Company:         Northern Leasing Systems, Inc.
Company:         Northern Trust
Company:         Northern Trust, NA
Company:         Northfield Glass Group Ltd.
Company:         Northrop Grumman
Company:         Northrop Grumman
Company:         Northrop Grumman
Company:         Northrop Grumman Coroporation, Aerospace Sector
Company:         Northrop Grumman Intl.
Company:         Northrop Grumman IT
Company:         NorthStar Nuclear Medicine, LLC
Company:         Northwest Airlines
Company:         Northwestern University
Company:         Norvest,Inc
Company:         not applicable
Company:         Not Applicable
Company:         Not Applicable
Company:         notify gptaylor20@gmail.com for renewal 512-966-0299
Company:         Novero County / HIDTA
Company:         NPR
Company:         NRCan
Company:         NS Fields
Company:         NTAsset
Company:         NTMA
Company:         NTX Resources
Company:         Nucleus Global Investors
Company:         Null Pointer Solutions
Company:         Nustar Energy LP
Company:         NVS
Company:         NYCHESSKIDS
Company:         Nye Lubricants, Inc.
Company:         NYPD
Company:         NYPD
Company:         NYPSC
Company:         NYSP
Company:         O’Brien’s Response Management Inc
Company:         O’Melveny & Myers LLP
Company:         Oak Ridge Strategy Group
Company:         Oak Springs Partners
Company:         Oakhurst Consulting
Company:         OAM
Company:         Oasis Petroleum
Company:         Oasis Security Solutions
Company:         Oberrauch Advisory
Company:         Objective Consulting, Inc.
Company:         OBS24 Security Services Ltd
Company:         OC International
Company:         OC International
Company:         OC International
Company:         Occidental Oil and Gas Corporation
Company:         Occidental Oil and Gas Corporation
Company:         Occidental Petroleum
Company:         Ocean Park Advisors
Company:         Ocelot Developments Pty Ltd
Company:         Ochoco Armory
Company:         OCI
Company:         octcs
Company:         Odentrading llc
Company:         OER, Inc.
Company:         OETA – The Oklahoma Network
Company:         Off Road Equipment Parts Inc
Company:         Office of Hon Joel Fitzgibbon MP, Minister for Defence
Company:         Office of the Asia Pacific Advisor
Company:         Ogden Asset Management
Company:         Ogilvy & Mather Advertising
Company:         OI Ventures
Company:         Old Saw Mill Investments Inc
Company:         Olive International
Company:         Oliver Wyman – Delta Organization & Leadership
Company:         Omaha Public Power District
Company:         OMICRON electronics GmbH
Company:         Omniplan
Company:         Omniture
Company:         on24, Inc.
Company:         One Stone Productions, Ltd.
Company:         OneBeacon Insurance
Company:         ontourgroup
Company:         ONUG Communications, Inc.
Company:         Onyx Capital
Company:         Operadora de Personal Tecnico, SA de CV
Company:         Operations and Safety Solutions, LLC
Company:         Oppenheimer & Co, Inc
Company:         oppenheimer and co
Company:         oppenheimer&co.inc.
Company:         OppenheimerFunds
Company:         OpTech
Company:         Optimal Wealth & Investments, Inc.
Company:         Optiver Holding BV
Company:         Oracle
Company:         Orange Light
Company:         Orbis Capital Inc.
Company:         Orbital Research Inc.
Company:         Oregon Custom Homes
Company:         Oregon HIDTA Fusion Center
Company:         Orkla ASA
Company:         Oryx
Company:         OSET GREGOR – DETEKTIV
Company:         Ostend Tennis Club
Company:         Ottawa International Airport
Company:         Out of Office Films
Company:         Ove Arup and Partners, P.C.
Company:         Oxberr Risk Strategies
Company:         Oxford
Company:         Oyu Tolgoi LLC (Rio Tinto)
Company:         PACES,LLC
Company:         pacific real properties
Company:         Pacific Wealth Creators Ltd
Company:         Palacio y Asociados
Company:         Paladin Associates
Company:         paladin strategy partners LLC
Company:         PALL
Company:         palm beach family physicians
Company:         Palo Verde Group
Company:         Palos capital corp.
Company:         Pan Optic
Company:         Paper Fibers International, Inc.
Company:         Pappas Consulting, LLC
Company:         Paracelsus Clinic of Washington
Company:         Paramount Strategic Advocacy, Inc
Company:         Parker Hannifin
Company:         Parliament
Company:         Parmi les retraitÈs
Company:         Parr Johnston Consultants
Company:         Parsons Corporation
Company:         Parthenon Futures Management, LLC
Company:         Pat Flynn for U. S. Senate
Company:         Pathmark
Company:         Patriot Tours, Inc.
Company:         Patronus Analytical
Company:         Paul Comstock Partners
Company:         Paul Davis Restoration
Company:         Paul E. Morris, M.D.
Company:         Pauling Advisors Limited
Company:         Pave & Bogaards
Company:         Pay By Touch
Company:         Payden & Rygel
Company:         PDF Solutions, Inc.
Company:         peak financial advisors
Company:         Pecks Management Partners Ltd
Company:         Pellerin Milnor
Company:         Peninsula Goldfields Pty Ltd
Company:         Penn Davis McFarland, Inc.
Company:         Pennsylvania Trust Co.
Company:         Pentarch Forest Products
Company:         Performance Capital Services, LLC.
Company:         Perimeter Capital Management
Company:         Periodico Reforma
Company:         Perkins Coie LLP
Company:         Perot Systems
Company:         Perot Systems Corporation
Company:         Personal
Company:         Personal Financial Advisors, Inc.
Company:         Personal Safety Training Group
Company:         Personal Use
Company:         Personal Use
Company:         Peruvian Defence Ministry
Company:         Peter Payne Limited
Company:         Peter R. Mack & Co., Inc.
Company:         PETERCAM
Company:         PetMol Development
Company:         Petro Summit Investments UK Ltd
Company:         Petro-Canada
Company:         Petrobras
Company:         Petrobras EnergÌa
Company:         Petroleum Advisory Forum
Company:         Petroleum Database Services
Company:         PetroStar Associates
Company:         Pfizer Venezuela, S.A.
Company:         Pfizer, Inc
Company:         Pfizer, Inc.
Company:         PFPA
Company:         PGR
Company:         Phado BVBA
Company:         Phibro LLC
Company:         PHIDIPPIDES CAPITAL
Company:         PhilanthroCorp
Company:         Philippine Daily Inquirer
Company:         Philips
Company:         Phillips & Associates, Inc.
Company:         Phillips Security Consulting
Company:         PIFHelp
Company:         Pinkerton Consulting & Investigations
Company:         Pinnacle Northwest Financial, LLC
Company:         Pinon PC Support
Company:         Pioneer Investments Austria
Company:         Pioneer Natural Resources
Company:         Pioneer Natural Resources
Company:         Piper Jaffray
Company:         Piper Jaffray
Company:         Pivot International
Company:         PJ
Company:         PJTV
Company:         PK Enterprises
Company:         Placements Gilles Landry Inc.
Company:         plainfield financial group
Company:         Plano ISD
Company:         Plansmith
Company:         Plaskolite
Company:         Platinum Asset Management
Company:         Playboy Enterprises
Company:         Pletcher Consulting LLC
Company:         Plum Cor
Company:         Plumb Performance Portfolio
Company:         Plus Capital Ltd.
Company:         PMF
Company:         PMP Solutions
Company:         PNM
Company:         Polar Capital Partners
Company:         Polaris Management Assistance Consultancy
Company:         POLESTAR  MGT
Company:         Polio Eradication Initiative, WHO
Company:         Porter Capital Management
Company:         Porter Orlin LLC
Company:         Portola Valley Consulting Group
Company:         Portuguese Navy
Company:         Post Advisory Group
Company:         Post Road Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Potomac Associates
Company:         Potomac Fusion, Inc.
Company:         Potomac Institute for Policy Studies
Company:         Poudre Schools
Company:         PQI Netherlands
Company:         Practical Management
Company:         Praemittias Group, Inc.
Company:         Praesidium Security Group
Company:         Prairie Pacific Corp
Company:         pras tecnica edilizia srl
Company:         Pratt Foundation
Company:         Prediction Company
Company:         Premier BPO Inc
Company:         premium team Handel & Marketing e.U.
Company:         premium team Handel & Marketing e.U.
Company:         Prenax
Company:         Presbyterian Church USA
Company:         Presbyterian Record Inc.
Company:         Presidio Group
Company:         Pressnet ( Aust ) Pty Ltd
Company:         Pretty Good Consulting
Company:         Prevail Health Consultancy
Company:         Price
Company:         Price Resources LLC
Company:         PricewaterhouseCoopers, LLP
Company:         Primary Action Inc
Company:         Prime International Trading
Company:         PrimeSolutions Investment Advisors
Company:         Primet Precision Materials Inc.
Company:         Primm Investment Inc.
Company:         Primrose Drilling Ventures.com
Company:         Prince George’s Community College
Company:         Princeton American Corp
Company:         Principal Financial Group
Company:         Pripol Pty Ltd
Company:         private
Company:         private
Company:         Private
Company:         Private
Company:         Privy Council Office Canada
Company:         Privy Council Office Canada
Company:         Priwer & Company
Company:         PRO Intelligence
Company:         Production Intercom IOnc.
Company:         Professional Insight
Company:         Profitable Company
Company:         ProfitScore Capital Management, Inc.
Company:         Project Services Intl LLC
Company:         Prometheus Asset Management
Company:         Promineon, Inc
Company:         Promontory Interfinancial
Company:         Property Council of Australia
Company:         Property Tax Experts, Inc.
Company:         Prophecy Consulting Group
Company:         Proskauer Rose LLP
Company:         Prototek Corp
Company:         Prtichard Capital
Company:         Prudential
Company:         PSAM LLC
Company:         PSI
Company:         PSK Management, Inc.
Company:         Pubco Corporation
Company:         Public gas Corporation of Greece
Company:         Public Sector Pension Investment Board
Company:         PUC Minas
Company:         puc-rio
Company:         Pull-A-Part
Company:         Pumpkin Patch
Company:         Purdue University CERIAS
Company:         Putnam Lieb
Company:         PWC Logisitics
Company:         PYPE, INC.
Company:         Qatar Financial Centre Authority
Company:         Qintar Technologies, Inc.
Company:         Qualcomm
Company:         QUALITY PLUS INC
Company:         Quantum Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Quantum North Inc.
Company:         Quest
Company:         QuintilesTransnational Corp
Company:         Quivus Systems
Company:         R D Grant Investments
Company:         R.S. Precision Ind’s Inc.
Company:         Rafael A. Perez, P.A.
Company:         Ragen MacKenzie Incorporated
Company:         rail logistics
Company:         RAINSTONE
Company:         RAMMA Consulting, Inc.
Company:         RAN Science & Technology, LLC
Company:         Rand Merchant Bank
Company:         rarer enterprises
Company:         Raven Global Security, Inc.
Company:         Ray Wave Investments Inc
Company:         RAYA Spa
Company:         raymond james
Company:         Raymond James
Company:         Raymond James
Company:         Raymond James
Company:         raymond james & associates
Company:         Raymond James & Associates
Company:         Raymond James & Associates
Company:         Raymond James & Associates
Company:         Raymond James & Associates, Inc.
Company:         Raymond James 416-7774983
Company:         Raytheon
Company:         Raytheon
Company:         Raytheon
Company:         Raytheon
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         Raytheon Company
Company:         RBC
Company:         RBC Attn Doug Vicic
Company:         RBC Capital Markets
Company:         RBC Dain Rauscher, Inc.
Company:         rbc dominion securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         RBC Dominion Securities
Company:         rbc wealth management
Company:         RBC wealth Management
Company:         RBC Wealth Management
Company:         RBC Wealth Management
Company:         RBS
Company:         RC CONTRACTORS
Company:         RCMP
Company:         RCMP
Company:         REAL ESTATE ASSOC.
Company:         Real Estats
Company:         Recreational Holdings
Company:         Red Flag Investigations
Company:         RED MTG CAP INC
Company:         Redondo & Asociados Public Affairs FIrm
Company:         Redwood Day School
Company:         Redwood Trust
Company:         redzone athletics
Company:         Reel Boss Enterprises
Company:         Reflex Response Management
Company:         REFLEXIONS, Inc.
Company:         Refratechnik Cement GmbH
Company:         Refresh Waters Queensland Pty Ltd.
Company:         Refugee Review Tribunal
Company:         REHAB ORTHO
Company:         Remgro Ltd
Company:         Renaissance Capital
Company:         Renaissance Insurance
Company:         renaissance media group, inc.
Company:         Reperi LLC
Company:         Resort Masters International
Company:         Resource America, Inc.
Company:         Resource Consultants S.A.
Company:         Restricted Access Ltd
Company:         Result Group GmbH
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         Retired
Company:         RETIRED
Company:         Retired — US Navy
Company:         Retired Govt Official
Company:         Retired military
Company:         Retired Teacher
Company:         Retired USAF
Company:         retired/CIA
Company:         Retirement Counselors, Inc.
Company:         Rezidor Hotel Group
Company:         RFE-RL, Inc.
Company:         RFG
Company:         RFK Consultants Ltd
Company:         RHL
Company:         RHP Consultants to Management
Company:         Rice Medical Associates
Company:         RICE University
Company:         Rich Guard & Associates
Company:         Richeberg International
Company:         Rim Rock Capital
Company:         Rimrock Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Rimrock Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Rimrock Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Rio Tinto London Ltd
Company:         riskmat futures ltd
Company:         Rivanna Capital, LLC
Company:         Rivendel Consultants
Company:         Riverford Partners LLC
Company:         Riverside Realty Inc.
Company:         Riviera Pools & Spas
Company:         RKZ Mgmt.
Company:         RLR Resources
Company:         RMG
Company:         RMI Consultants Inc.
Company:         Robert Adams, CPA
Company:         Robert Bosch Mexico
Company:         Robert E. Greenstein Attorney at Law
Company:         Robert Fox
Company:         Robert Justich Bear.com
Company:         Robert Justich Bear.com
Company:         Robert R. Anthony M.D. PC
Company:         Robert Schuman Foundation
Company:         Robert W. Baird
Company:         Roberts Group
Company:         Robinson Financial
Company:         Robinson Koerner International, Inc
Company:         Roby Solutions
Company:         Rockefeller & Co., Inc.
Company:         Rockefeller Foundation
Company:         Rockingham Capital Advisors LLC
Company:         Rockwell Automation
Company:         Rockwell Automation, Inc.
Company:         Rockwell Collins
Company:         ROCKY MOUNT PSYCHOLOGICAL SERVICES
Company:         Rocky Mountain College – President’s Office
Company:         Rogue Expeditions, Inc.
Company:         Rohan LLP
Company:         Rohm and Haas Company
Company:         Rolls-Royce Corporation
Company:         Roosevelt Institute
Company:         Rose Super Fund
Company:         Rosendin Electric, Inc.
Company:         Rosewood Corporation
Company:         Ross Group, Inc.
Company:         Rothbuilt Ltd. Co
Company:         Roundtree Automotive Group
Company:         Royal Bank of Scotland
Company:         Royal LePage
Company:         Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Company:         Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Company:         Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Company:         Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Company:         Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs
Company:         RPM Energy
Company:         RPSA
Company:         RPX Corporation
Company:         RREEF
Company:         RTG & Associates, Inc.
Company:         RTI International
Company:         RTW LONDON LTD
Company:         Rub Music
Company:         Russell
Company:         Russell Investments
Company:         Russian Insight Ltd
Company:         rvcintl
Company:         RWTH Aachen University
Company:         Rx2000 Institute
Company:         Ryerson, Inc.
Company:         S & P Financial Services Inc.
Company:         S. T. Crone, Ltd
Company:         S.A.Baker & Associates
Company:         S.O.C.-S.M.G.
Company:         s.s.corporation
Company:         S„o Paulo School of Politics and Sociology
Company:         S&R Consulting Grioup
Company:         S2A Security Group
Company:         S3
Company:         S4 Inc
Company:         Saab North America
Company:         saachnoff & weaver.ltd.
Company:         Saber Ops
Company:         SABIS Educational Systems Inc.
Company:         Sabre International
Company:         SACHEM
Company:         Safecastle LLC
Company:         Sage Advisory Services
Company:         Sage Financial Advisors Inc.
Company:         SAHE
Company:         SAIC
Company:         SAIC
Company:         SAIC
Company:         SAIC, Inc.
Company:         SAIC, Inc.
Company:         Saieco International Corp.
Company:         SAIL
Company:         Sailfish Capital Partners
Company:         SAIMANI
Company:         Saint Leo University
Company:         Saito Consulting
Company:         SAJBD
Company:         Salget Solutions LLC
Company:         salida capital
Company:         SALOV North America Corp.
Company:         SAM Capital Management LLC
Company:         SAMCO
Company:         Samson International Ltd.
Company:         samsung electronics italia spa
Company:         Samwoo Communications
Company:         San Diego ADVenture
Company:         San Jose
Company:         San Juan Safe Communities Initiative, Inc.
Company:         Sands Capital Mgmt
Company:         Sandwell Engineering
Company:         SANE Management LLC
Company:         sanpalo investments corporation
Company:         Santiam Ballistics
Company:         Sapere Wealth Management
Company:         Sapiens Movement Inc
Company:         Sarasota County Fire Department
Company:         Sardonyx International Ltd
Company:         SAS
Company:         Sasfin Bank
Company:         SATORone
Company:         Saturna Capital
Company:         Satyam
Company:         Saudi Arabia Embassy
Company:         Saudi Aramco
Company:         Saudi Defense Office
Company:         Saunders Norval Nichols & Atkins
Company:         Save the Children – Indonesia
Company:         Sawinsky, Inc.
Company:         Saxo Bank Schweiz AG
Company:         Saye Capital Mgmt
Company:         SBL
Company:         SC JOHNSON & SON, INCE
Company:         scanlan associates
Company:         SCCI
Company:         Schafer Resources, Inc.
Company:         Schellenberg & Evers PC
Company:         Schlindwein Associates, LLC
Company:         schlumberger
Company:         Schlumberger
Company:         Schlumberger
Company:         Schneider Electric
Company:         schnitzius & vaughan
Company:         Schroders
Company:         Science Applications Int’l Corporation
Company:         Sciens Capital
Company:         SCMC
Company:         Scotch College
Company:         ScotiaMcLeod
Company:         Scott & Stringfellow, Inc.
Company:         Scott&Stringfellow, inc.
Company:         Scottish Enterprise
Company:         scottsdale
Company:         SCTY INC
Company:         Seabreeze Books & Charts
Company:         seabulk tankers inc
Company:         Seacor Marine (International) Ltd
Company:         SEACORP Holdings
Company:         SEALORD HOLDINGS
Company:         Seant Pty Ltd
Company:         SECO Manufacturing Company, Inc.
Company:         Second Wind Inc
Company:         Secure Ocean Service LLC
Company:         Secured Perimeters, Inc.
Company:         SecureGroup.org
Company:         Securewest International
Company:         Security Consulting Investigations, LLC
Company:         Security Global Investors
Company:         Security Konsultants Inc. of Nevada
Company:         Security Solutions, Inc
Company:         SecurityWorks
Company:         sef
Company:         SELEX Galileo Ltd
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
Company:         self
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Company:         Self
Company:         Self -employed
Company:         self employed
Company:         self employed
Company:         self employed
Company:         self employed
Company:         self employed
Company:         Self employed
Company:         Self employed
Company:         Self employed
Company:         Self Employed
Company:         Self Employed
Company:         self-emp
Company:         self-employed
Company:         Seligman & Associates LLC
Company:         SEMAR
Company:         Senate of Canada
Company:         Senda Inc
Company:         Seneca Shore Wine Cellars
Company:         Senior Resource Group, LLC
Company:         Sentek Global
Company:         Senter for Strategiske Studier as
Company:         Sentinel Risk Management
Company:         Septa Energy US Limited
Company:         Sequoia North America
Company:         serge wibaut sprl
Company:         Serjical Strike Inc.
Company:         Servicios Administrativos Penoles, SA de CV
Company:         sesac, inc
Company:         Seven Seas Trading, Inc.
Company:         Sewell Realty Services
Company:         SFA Inc.
Company:         SFERS
Company:         SG Hiscock and Co
Company:         SGH Holdings, Inc.
Company:         Sgtgrit.inc
Company:         shaker’s
Company:         Sharp Auto Parts
Company:         Shea Ear Clinic
Company:         Shell
Company:         Shell
Company:         Shell Chemical
Company:         Shell Chemical Co.
Company:         Shell International E&P
Company:         Sherwin Alumina L.P.
Company:         Shilpa Offshore, Inc
Company:         Shodan Security
Company:         Short Side Trading, LLC
Company:         Shultz Investigations
Company:         SICKLE CORP
Company:         SIDERSA
Company:         Siemens
Company:         SIEVERT ELECTRIC SERVICE AND SALES
Company:         SIG
Company:         Sigillum GmbH
Company:         Signature Consultants
Company:         SignatureFD, LLC
Company:         SIL International
Company:         SIL International
Company:         SIL International
Company:         SIL International
Company:         Silver Eagle Consulting, Inc.
Company:         Silver Group, L.L.C.
Company:         Simo Energy LLC
Company:         Simon Hunt Strategic Services Ltd
Company:         Simon International, LLC
Company:         Singapore Press Holdings Library
Company:         Singapore Press Holdings Library
Company:         Singleton Electric, Inc.
Company:         sip enterprise
Company:         Sitrick and Company Inc.
Company:         SJM
Company:         SK Communications
Company:         Skadden Arp
Company:         Skoll Global Threats Fund
Company:         skram cmr
Company:         Slavic Gospel Association
Company:         SLi
Company:         SM&A
Company:         Smadja & Associates
Company:         Smardt Inc
Company:         SMART BUCHAREST PARTNERS SRL
Company:         SMB Media Group
Company:         SMDudin Architects & Engineers
Company:         SMEC International Ltd.
Company:         smersh, inc
Company:         smi
Company:         Smith & Sawyer
Company:         Smith Barney
Company:         Smith Barney
Company:         Smith Barney
Company:         Smith Barney
Company:         Smith Barney
Company:         Smith Barney
Company:         SNM Research, LLC
Company:         Snodgrass plc
Company:         Snohomish Dept of Emergency Mgt
Company:         SOC
Company:         SoftPath, Inc.
Company:         SOG
Company:         sole prop. rancher
Company:         Solios Asset Management
Company:         Solon Mack Capital
Company:         SOLUCIONES INTERACTIVAS EN MM SA
Company:         Soludrex Inc.
Company:         SON Systems
Company:         SONY
Company:         Sony Music / BMG
Company:         Sony Pictures Entertainment
Company:         Soos Global Capital Advisors, LLC
Company:         Sopher Consulting
Company:         SOS Security Incorporated
Company:         SOSi, Ltd.
Company:         SOTT-I LLC
Company:         Sound Carpentry
Company:         South Texas Corpus Christi
Company:         Southwest Aerotrekking Academy
Company:         Southwest Airlines
Company:         SouthWest Gas
Company:         Southwest Properties
Company:         Southwest Torque Tools, Inc.
Company:         Span-O-Matic Inc.
Company:         Sparkhill Global, LLC
Company:         SparkPeople
Company:         Spartacus Security
Company:         Spectrum Asset Management, Inc.
Company:         Spectrum Design West
Company:         Spectrum Management Group, Inc.
Company:         Spengler Trading, LLC
Company:         Spot Trading L.L.C.
Company:         Springbanc
Company:         Squire, Sanders & Dempsey (US) LLP
Company:         SRA International
Company:         SRA International, Inc.
Company:         SRC
Company:         SRD Associates
Company:         SRO Development LLC
Company:         Sronehenge
Company:         SRS Inc.
Company:         SSgA
Company:         SSI
Company:         St Jude Medical
Company:         St Jude Productions
Company:         St. Andrews University (undergraduate student)
Company:         St. Francis Hospital
Company:         St. George Marketing, L.L.C.
Company:         St. Mary’s University, School of Law
Company:         Stallion Oilfield Services
Company:         Stallion Oilfield Services
Company:         Stand Up South Pacific
Company:         Standard Bank
Company:         Standard Chartered Bank
Company:         Standish
Company:         STANLEY H. FLORANCE CONSULTING
Company:         STANLIB Asset Management
Company:         Stanton Marketing Ltd.
Company:         Staples Advantage Canada
Company:         Star Point Star
Company:         Star Quality
Company:         Starbucks
Company:         Starr Marine Agency, Inc.
Company:         Starside Security & Investigation, Inc
Company:         State Bar of California
Company:         State of New Jersey
Company:         STATOIL
Company:         Statoil ASA
Company:         STAVE Worldwide, LLC
Company:         Stealth Forex Systems
Company:         Stein Roe Investment Counsel
Company:         Steketee
Company:         STEP Artillery House  (South)
Company:         Stephen M. Robinson LLC
Company:         Sterling Energy International
Company:         Sterling Sound
Company:         Stern Fisher Edwards Inc
Company:         Sterne, Agee
Company:         Steven M Brooks
Company:         Stewart & Stevenson LLC
Company:         Stifel, Nicolaus
Company:         Stockman’s Casino
Company:         Stoltenberg & Associates
Company:         Stone Works LLP
Company:         Stonehage Limited
Company:         Stonehaven Development, Inc.
Company:         StoneRidge Capital
Company:         Stralem & Company, Inc.
Company:         Strategic Investment Solutions
Company:         Strategic Organization Design, Inc.
Company:         Strategic Underwriters Int’l
Company:         Strategic Workforce
Company:         Strategy 2100
Company:         Strategy Garden
Company:         Stratex Networks
Company:         Stratex Networks Inc
Company:         Stratfor
Company:         Stratfor Customer Service
Company:         Stratfor Customer Service
Company:         Stratfor Employee Accounts
Company:         Stratfor Interns
Company:         STRATIX LTD.
Company:         Streettalk Advisors
Company:         Streettalk Advisors, LLC
Company:         Stubborn Facts
Company:         Subrosa Consulting
Company:         sudan
Company:         Suez Energy Marketing NA
Company:         Suez Energy Marketing NA
Company:         Suez-Tractebel NV/SA
Company:         Sullivan Haave Associates, Inc.
Company:         SullivanSites LLC
Company:         Summit Creek Capital LLC
Company:         Sun Microsystem
Company:         Suncor Energy
Company:         Suncor Energy Inc.
Company:         SuNova Capital
Company:         Sunray Energy LLP
Company:         SunTrust Bank
Company:         SunTrust Bank
Company:         SUNY-Brockport
Company:         superDimension
Company:         Superior Court of New Jersey
Company:         Superior Graphite Company
Company:         SUPERSONIC MOTOR OIL CO., INC
Company:         Surface Treatment Technologies Inc.
Company:         Survival Educators
Company:         Surya Capital
Company:         Sushi Zushi of Texas, Inc
Company:         Sustainable Forest Systems LLC
Company:         Suttle Bros
Company:         SWF
Company:         Swift
Company:         Swift Freight Int’l
Company:         Swiss & Global Asset Management
Company:         Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Company:         Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Company:         Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation
Company:         Swiss Federal Chancellery
Company:         Swiss Reinsurance Company Ltd
Company:         SWORD International
Company:         SWR Consulting
Company:         Sycamore Bank
Company:         Sylvan Research Inc.
Company:         Symphony Asset
Company:         Symphony Capital Partners
Company:         Synergia
Company:         Syngenta International AG
Company:         Synthesys
Company:         Systems Planning and Analysis, Inc.
Company:         T. Rowe Price
Company:         T.H. Fitzgerald & Co.
Company:         TA&MT MURRAY-PRIOR
Company:         TableTop Game & Hobby, Inc.
Company:         Taconic Capital Advisors LP
Company:         TAG Aviation
Company:         Tahoe Partners LLC
Company:         Talas es Tarsa Bt.
Company:         Talisman Energy
Company:         Talon Executive Services, Inc
Company:         Tangent Networks LLC
Company:         Tappenden Holdings Ltd
Company:         TAR Enterprises
Company:         Target Corporation
Company:         Target Corporation
Company:         Tarnbrae Distributing
Company:         Tarrier Steel
Company:         Tartan controls
Company:         Tasman Technology
Company:         TAX ADVISORS, LLC
Company:         Taylor Fresh Foods
Company:         Taylor Investment Associates
Company:         Taylor Woods Capital
Company:         TBS Shipping Services Inc
Company:         TCCM, s.r.o.
Company:         TCE Kids Inc
Company:         TCOM, LP
Company:         TD Bank
Company:         TD Bank Group
Company:         TD Securities
Company:         TD Securities
Company:         TD Securities
Company:         TD Securities
Company:         TD Securities
Company:         TD waterhouse
Company:         TD Waterhouse
Company:         tdt, inc
Company:         TE4 Capital Management, LLC
Company:         Teachers Retirements System of Texas
Company:         TECC sal
Company:         Technology Research Corp.
Company:         Technosoft, LLC
Company:         TechVerity LLC
Company:         Tecnologico de Monterrey
Company:         Tecolote Research
Company:         Tekno Books
Company:         TeleAtlas Africa
Company:         Telegraf
Company:         telekom deutschland gmbh
Company:         Terminus Global Services, Inc.
Company:         TerraConcepts, LLC
Company:         Terry McDaniel & Company
Company:         Tesco HSC
Company:         Tesoro Corporation
Company:         Tesoro Corporation
Company:         Teton Capital Management
Company:         Texas A&M University
Company:         Texas Army National Guard
Company:         texas back institute
Company:         Texas Children’s Hospital
Company:         Texas Department of Banking
Company:         Texas Permanent School Fund
Company:         Texas Realty Capital
Company:         Texas State Auditor’s Office
Company:         Texas Tech University
Company:         Texas Treasury Safekeeping Trust Company
Company:         Texas Woman’s University
Company:         Textron Systems
Company:         The 4th Branch
Company:         The Advocatus Group
Company:         The Alchemind Group
Company:         the alden group
Company:         The Ambient Branding Company Ltd
Company:         The Andarrios Fund
Company:         The Asahi Shimbun
Company:         The Associated Press (AP)
Company:         The Atlantic Council of the United States
Company:         The Bayliss Wealth Managment Group of Wells Fargo Advisors
Company:         The Boeing Company
Company:         The Boeing Company – Long Beach
Company:         The Bollard Group, LLC
Company:         The Bright Light Group, LLC
Company:         The Bush School, Texas A&M University
Company:         The CAPROCK Group
Company:         The CAPROCK Group
Company:         The Central Group
Company:         The Chemical Company
Company:         The Church in Tacoma
Company:         The Coca-Cola Company
Company:         The Coca-Cola Company
Company:         The Concordia Electric Wire and Cable Company Ltd
Company:         The Craig Group, Inc
Company:         The Cromwell Group
Company:         The Devon Group
Company:         The Dilenschneider Group
Company:         The Dow Chemical Company
Company:         The Embassy of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
Company:         The Embassy of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
Company:         The Endowment Office
Company:         The F. L. Emmert Company
Company:         The Fairman Group
Company:         The Farwell Group
Company:         The fedder Company
Company:         The Flexitallic Group, Inc.
Company:         The Galaxy Organization
Company:         The Glenview Trust Company
Company:         The Hamilton Group Inc
Company:         The Happiness Realization Party
Company:         The Helix Group, Inc.
Company:         The Humphreys Group
Company:         The Inkerman Group
Company:         The Karis Group
Company:         The Kayser Group, Inc.
Company:         The Laredo National Bank
Company:         The Law Offices of Terrance W. Stone
Company:         The League Corp
Company:         The Leuthold Group
Company:         The LifeBoat Group
Company:         The Macerich Company
Company:         The Mainichi Newspapers Co.
Company:         The Mauer Group Consultancy
Company:         The McMillen Group
Company:         The McMillen Group, LLC
Company:         The Muse Company
Company:         The National Alliance For Insurance Education & Research
Company:         THE NATIONAL COMMERCIAL BANK
Company:         The Navigators
Company:         The New York Mortgage Company
Company:         The Ostrom Company
Company:         THE PEGASUS GROUP, INC.
Company:         The Ramaro Group, Ltd.
Company:         The Rapidan Group
Company:         The Sandi Group
Company:         The Scotts Company
Company:         The Scowcroft Group
Company:         The Seed Company
Company:         The Seng Company
Company:         The Show Me Group
Company:         The SIGMA Centre Ltd
Company:         The South Financial Group
Company:         The Steele Agency, Inc.
Company:         The Steelman Group, Inc.
Company:         The Stratford Company
Company:         The Stream Companies
Company:         The Thacher School
Company:         The Times
Company:         The Treadstone Group
Company:         The Turing Studio
Company:         The Walt Disney Company
Company:         The Walt Disney Company
Company:         The Warren Group
Company:         The Washington Times
Company:         The Wealth Conservancy
Company:         The Whitewind Co
Company:         The Wilhelm Group, Inc.
Company:         The Witcoff Group LLC
Company:         the womens center pllc
Company:         The Workthreat Group, LLC
Company:         The Yzaguirre Group, L.L.C.
Company:         Thermo King Calgary
Company:         Think Equitly llc
Company:         Thinkwell Development
Company:         Thinkwerk.com
Company:         thint
Company:         Third Hemisphere
Company:         Thomas H Lee Capital LLC
Company:         Thomas M. Smith, Ph.D.
Company:         Thomas Publishing Company
Company:         Thompson, Siegel & Walmsley
Company:         thomson reuters
Company:         Thomson Reuters
Company:         Thoughts of Faith, Inc.
Company:         three
Company:         Thrive Engineering Corporation
Company:         Thrivent Financial
Company:         Thunder Exploration, Inc.
Company:         TIAA-CREF
Company:         Ticaboo
Company:         Tierra Capital
Company:         Tilleke & Gibbins
Company:         Tillman and Co
Company:         TIMA International GmbH
Company:         Time Warner Cable
Company:         Timken Company
Company:         tinker
Company:         TIOUW.com BV
Company:         Titan
Company:         Tiverton Trading
Company:         TML Information Services, Inc
Company:         TML Solutions
Company:         TNCO Inc.
Company:         TNE Capital Management
Company:         TNK-BP
Company:         tns
Company:         To Every Tribe
Company:         To Office / 303.410.2827
Company:         Todd Hanna Biz Dev Comps
Company:         Todd Hanna Biz Dev Comps
Company:         Todd Hanna Biz Dev Comps
Company:         Toll Holdings
Company:         Tomkin Estates Limited
Company:         Tomoco LP
Company:         Tooley Investment Company
Company:         torah academy
Company:         Tortoise Capital
Company:         Total
Company:         Total
Company:         Total Defense Logistics (HKG) Ltd.
Company:         TOTSA Total Oil Trading SA
Company:         Touch Poll of Georgia
Company:         Towers Watson
Company:         Town of Corte Madera
Company:         Town Shoes
Company:         TPH Assetmanagement
Company:         Trabon
Company:         Trademark Financial Management
Company:         Tradesur
Company:         Tradewinds International
Company:         Tradewinds Investment Management
Company:         Tradition Ltd
Company:         Trans-Expedite Inc.
Company:         trans-resources inc
Company:         TRC
Company:         Treasury
Company:         Treasury Board Secretariat
Company:         Trellus Management Co., LLC
Company:         Trend Capture LLC
Company:         TREVOC WORLDWIDE
Company:         Tribalco, LLC
Company:         tribecca properties
Company:         Trident Partners
Company:         Trident Response Group
Company:         TRIM Broker
Company:         Trimmier Law Firm
Company:         Tritium Networks Consulting AB
Company:         Triune Capital Advisors
Company:         Trivandrum Capital
Company:         Tropicana Entertainment LLC
Company:         Troutman Fire and Rescue
Company:         Truffle Hound Capital, LLC
Company:         Truluck’s Restaurant Group
Company:         TRUST COMPANY OF THE WEST (TCW)
Company:         Tuatara Management
Company:         Tudor Pickering
Company:         Turtle Creek Management, LLC
Company:         tuscany advisors
Company:         Tutor Pickering
Company:         TVS & Associates
Company:         TWIN FEATHERS Enterprises
Company:         Two Sigma Investments, LLC
Company:         Tyco International
Company:         Tyrannet, Inc.
Company:         U of Notre Dame
Company:         U S Army
Company:         U. of Pennsylvania
Company:         U.C. San Diego
Company:         U.S Army
Company:         U.S. Air Force
Company:         u.s. army
Company:         U.S. Army
Company:         U.S. Army
Company:         U.S. Army
Company:         U.S. Army, (Ret.)
Company:         U.S. Bank
Company:         U.S. Government
Company:         U.S. House of Representatives
Company:         U.S. Navy
Company:         U.S. Navy
Company:         U.S. Office of Personnel Management
Company:         U.S. Oil Co., Inc.
Company:         U.S.-Ukraine Business Council
Company:         UAB Soft Artis
Company:         UAL Corporation
Company:         UAL Corporation
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS
Company:         UBS Capital
Company:         UBS Financial Services
Company:         UBS Financial Services
Company:         UBS Financial Services, Inc
Company:         UBS Investment Bank
Company:         UBS OConnor Limited
Company:         UFRGS
Company:         UJA Federation of Greater Toronto
Company:         UKATCO
Company:         ULTRAM2 Sa de CV
Company:         umc trauma and burn center
Company:         UN
Company:         Unda Mexico, S.A. de C.V.
Company:         UNDP
Company:         UNDSS
Company:         UNDSS
Company:         Unicom Capital
Company:         Unicom Capital
Company:         UNIFIL – United Nations Interim Forces in Lebanon
Company:         Union Bancaire Privee
Company:         Unipharm,Inc.
Company:         Unisports Sports Medicine
Company:         Unisys Corp.
Company:         Unit International
Company:         United Aerospace Co., Ltd.
Company:         United Capital Partners
Company:         United Church of God
Company:         United Group Consultants SA
Company:         United Hi-tech Preventive Systems
Company:         United Launch Alliance
Company:         United Nations
Company:         United Nations
Company:         United Nations
Company:         United Nations
Company:         UNITED NATIONS
Company:         United Nations Foundation
Company:         United Nations Relief Works Agency
Company:         United Nations, Department of Safety and Security
Company:         United Parcel Service
Company:         United Space Alliance Attn: USK-011
Company:         United States Air Force
Company:         United States Coast Guard Auxiliary
Company:         Unity Resources Group
Company:         Univ of Arizona
Company:         Universal Lighting Technologies
Company:         Universal Risks
Company:         Universidad AutÛnoma metropolitana
Company:         universidad autÛnoma metropolitana, unidad iztapalapa
Company:         Universidade Federal Fluminense
Company:         Universidade Federal Fluminense
Company:         university
Company:         University
Company:         university of arizona
Company:         University of Canberra
Company:         University of Chicago – Student Sub
Company:         University of Colorado at Boulder
Company:         University of Colorado Denver
Company:         University of Florida Investment Corporation
Company:         University of Fribourg
Company:         University of Hawaii-Maui College
Company:         University of Houston Public Policy
Company:         University Of Illinois
Company:         University of Mich
Company:         University of Michigan
Company:         University of Michigan
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Missouri
Company:         University of Notre Dame
Company:         University of Oklahoma
Company:         University of Ottawa
Company:         University of Rhode Island
Company:         University Of South Florida
Company:         University of Toronto
Company:         University of Winnipeg
Company:         University of Wisconsin
Company:         University of Wisconsin School of Medicine
Company:         University of Wyoming
Company:         UNOG
Company:         UNTSO
Company:         UNX Inc.
Company:         UPS
Company:         UPS
Company:         Ur Energy USA
Company:         URBAN CONTRACTORS, LLC
Company:         URS Corp.
Company:         Urso Ltd.
Company:         US – Azerbaijan Chamber of Commerce
Company:         US African Development Foundation and American University
Company:         US Air Force
Company:         us army
Company:         us army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army
Company:         US Army – ARMY NORTH
Company:         US Army Corps of Engineers
Company:         US ARMY MARS TEXAS
Company:         US Army Reserve Command
Company:         US Army Retired
Company:         US Army Spec Ops Command
Company:         US Army, Retired
Company:         US Army, TRADOC, ARCIC, Joint & Army Concepts Development
Company:         US Civil Service
Company:         US Coast Guard
Company:         US Dept of State
Company:         US Dept of State
Company:         US Forest Service
Company:         US Government
Company:         US Govt
Company:         US GOVT/DOT
Company:         US Marine Corps
Company:         US Navy
Company:         US Navy
Company:         US Navy
Company:         US Navy
Company:         US Navy
Company:         US of A
Company:         US Property Valuation, LLC
Company:         USACE-GRD
Company:         USAF
Company:         USAF
Company:         USAF
Company:         USAF
Company:         USAF
Company:         USAF
Company:         usaf (ret)
Company:         USAID
Company:         USAID
Company:         USDOJ
Company:         USFI
Company:         USG
Company:         usmc
Company:         USMC
Company:         USMC
Company:         USMC
Company:         USMC
Company:         USMC
Company:         USNR
Company:         usp
Company:         USSTRATCOM/J722
Company:         UT International Office
Company:         UTC
Company:         Utley Interests Inc
Company:         VA hospital
Company:         Valero
Company:         Valero
Company:         Valero
Company:         Valero
Company:         Valhalla Capital Advisors
Company:         Valor Security Services
Company:         Value Line Publishing
Company:         Value Logic
Company:         van dent pty limited
Company:         Van Norman LLC
Company:         Vanadium Capital
Company:         Vanco Exploration Company
Company:         Vanderbilt
Company:         Vanguard
Company:         vantage consulting group
Company:         Vaultit, Inc.
Company:         VC Experts
Company:         VCU Qatar
Company:         VDB BioMed LLC
Company:         Vector Asset Management LLC
Company:         Vedanta Energy Fund
Company:         Vedette Asset Management, LLC
Company:         Venable LLP
Company:         VenArete Growth Advisors (VGA)
Company:         venisys
Company:         Verboven Immigration
Company:         Verdant Strategies, Inc.
Company:         Verger Corp
Company:         Veritas
Company:         Veritas Targeting
Company:         Verity Investments Inc.
Company:         Verizon Investment Mgmt.
Company:         Verna
Company:         Vertebrae DA
Company:         Vertical Information Systems
Company:         VIA Consulting
Company:         VIACK Corp
Company:         VIAP
Company:         VICCON GmbH
Company:         Vickers Appraisals
Company:         Victory Packaging
Company:         Vietnam Embassy
Company:         VietNamNet Media Company
Company:         Vikstrˆm & Andersson Asset Management AB
Company:         Vindice Consult SRL
Company:         ViP Innovative Solutions, Inc.
Company:         Virchow Krause Wealth Management, LLC
Company:         Virginia Commonwealth University
Company:         Virginia Commonwealth University
Company:         Virginia Peninsula Real Estate
Company:         Viriya Holding BV
Company:         Virtuality Inc.
Company:         Visa International
Company:         Vision Centric, Inc
Company:         Vision Investments
Company:         Vision Space Partners
Company:         Vistage International
Company:         VitalSpark Beheer BV
Company:         VLSI Research
Company:         VMS Ventures Inc.
Company:         Volens Et Potens, LLC
Company:         Volunteer America – 1776
Company:         Volunteer Intelligence
Company:         Volusia County Sheriff’s Office
Company:         Volvo Bus Corporation
Company:         Vostok Nafta Investment Ltd.
Company:         VT Group
Company:         VTS, Inc
Company:         Vulcan Inc
Company:         W. R. Theuer, Company
Company:         W.D. Warth & Associates
Company:         W.T.W.E.
Company:         Wachovia Sec LLC
Company:         Wachovia Securities
Company:         Wachovia Securities
Company:         Wachovia Securities
Company:         Wachovia Securities
Company:         Wachovia Securities
Company:         Walden Media
Company:         Walker Talent Group
Company:         WallStreetWindow
Company:         Walpole Police and LESC, INC
Company:         Walt Disney
Company:         Walter & Haverfield
Company:         Washington Defence Co, LLC
Company:         Washington Group International
Company:         Wasser Financial
Company:         Water Asset Management LLC
Company:         Watlow
Company:         Watson Holdings
Company:         wavecount247
Company:         Wavecrest Asset Management
Company:         WBB Consulting
Company:         WD Music Products. Inc.
Company:         Wealth Management LLC
Company:         Wealth Resources, Inc.
Company:         Weatherhaven
Company:         WEB Aruba NV
Company:         Web Communication Wizards
Company:         WEB Sales Inc.
Company:         Webb Systems LLC
Company:         Weber Shandwick
Company:         Weber-Aries, Inc.
Company:         Weiss & Partner
Company:         Welch Cap
Company:         Welhausen Foundation
Company:         Wells Capital Management
Company:         Wells Fargo
Company:         Wells Fargo
Company:         Wells Fargo Investments
Company:         WER Global Services, LLC
Company:         Werlinich Asset Management
Company:         Wesley Capitol CO Barclays Cap
Company:         West Africa Transport Corporation
Company:         West Central Cooperative
Company:         West Ellis Investment Management
Company:         West End Avenue Advisors LLC
Company:         West Point Grey Academy
Company:         Western Mutual Ins. Grp
Company:         Western Union
Company:         Western Union
Company:         Westfall Surgery Center
Company:         Westford Asset Management LLC
Company:         WestLB
Company:         WESTLB AG LONDON BRANCH
Company:         Weston Capital Management
Company:         Weston County
Company:         WestPac Banking Corp
Company:         WestPan Associates
Company:         Westport Petroleum, Inc
Company:         Wetherby Asset Management
Company:         WGFleming, LLC
Company:         Whatcom County, WA
Company:         White & Case LLP
Company:         White Oak Investment
Company:         White Pines Group
Company:         White Rock, Inc.
Company:         Whitney, Wetzel & Kuether, LLC
Company:         WiJo Capital LLP
Company:         Wild Cat Ranch
Company:         Wilkison Investment Services
Company:         William Blair & Company
Company:         William Fell Consultants
Company:         Williams & Co
Company:         Williams and Williams
Company:         Williamson Research & Solutions
Company:         Willkie Farr & Gallagher
Company:         Willowbend Software
Company:         Willowbridge Associates
Company:         Wilpon Investors
Company:         wilson & associates
Company:         Wilson Financial Group LLC
Company:         Wimco
Company:         Winning Writers
Company:         Winton duPont Films
Company:         Wintonbury Risk Management
Company:         Wipfli, LLP
Company:         Wisconsin University
Company:         Wisuschil & Partner – Rechtsanw‰lte
Company:         WitmarkEnteprises
Company:         WJS Business Consulting Inter
Company:         WMundell Consultores
Company:         woodgundy
Company:         Woodside Capital
Company:         Woodside Energy Ltd
Company:         Woori Investment & Securities
Company:         Woosh Wireless Ltd
Company:         Worcester & Associates
Company:         World Affairs Council of South Texas
Company:         World Airways, Inc.
Company:         World Bank
Company:         World Economic Forum
Company:         World Food Programme of United Nations in Colombia
Company:         World Health Organization
Company:         World Vision
Company:         World Vision
Company:         worldview
Company:         Wright Asset Management
Company:         WSI
Company:         WSI Group
Company:         WSP
Company:         WTCI
Company:         WTF
Company:         Wuethrich, Henz & Co.
Company:         WVM & Associates
Company:         WW Grainger
Company:         http://www.addingvalue4u.com Ltd
Company:         http://www.wooty.com
Company:         Wyeth
Company:         Wysard Inc
Company:         x
Company:         x
Company:         x
Company:         x
Company:         x
Company:         x
Company:         x
Company:         X
Company:         X-RingTrades LLC
Company:         Xanadoo Company
Company:         xecos capital llc
Company:         XTO Energy
Company:         Yale
Company:         Yale – SOM
Company:         Yale University
Company:         Yamotech Inc.
Company:         Yavapai College
Company:         Yellow House Associates, LLC
Company:         yenitan.com.tr
Company:         YENRAB Investing
Company:         Yukon Wealth Mgt.
Company:         Yum!  Brand
Company:         Yum!  Brand
Company:         Z.S.S. CORP.
Company:         Zad Investment Company
Company:         ZFS
Company:         Ziff Brothers Investments
Company:         Ziff Brothers Investments
Company:         Ziff Brothers Investments
Company:         Zinndevco,Inc.
Company:         Zumtobel Lighting Ltd.
Company:         Zurich State Police

TOP-SECRET – (U//FOUO) LulzSec Release: DHS National Socialist Movement NAZI Reference Aid

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/06/DHS-NationalSocialist.png

 

(U) Overview

(U//FOUO) The National Socialist Movement (NSM) USPER is the most active neo-Nazi group operating in the United States. It has grown from a small organization with a limited following confined to the mid-western United States to the preeminent National Socialist group in the nation. Despite having recently suffered a defection of several regional leaders, NSM remains an influential force within white supremacist circles and the only major racist group that eschews all attempts to distance its methods and objectives from those of the Third Reich. NSM has a reputation for conducting numerous public rallies that have triggered a violent response, including a riot in Toledo, Ohio, in October 2005.

(U) Description

(U//FOUO) The National Socialist Movement (NSM) is the largest neo-Nazi organization in the United States. Founded in 1974 by two former members of the American Nazi PartyUSPER, NSM claims that it is the only  “legitimate” Nazi party operating in the United States. Although active since 1974, NSM only became a major player in the white supremacist movement in the late 1990s and has had its greatest period of growth over the past three years. This growth likely resulted from the collapse of other prominent neo-Nazi groups such as the National AllianceUSPER and Aryan NationsUSPER.

(U) Ideology and Objectives

(U//FOUO) NSM promotes the ideology of traditional National Socialism, which is a mix of racism, anti-Semitism, xenophobia, rabid anti-communism, and white supremacy. NSM seeks to transform the United States into a National Socialist state that would deny all rights to Jews, nonwhites, and gays. NSM also advocates the mass deportation of all illegal immigrants, the militarization of the Mexican border, the end of all foreign aid, and the severing of all ties with Israel.

(U) Symbology

(U//FOUO) NSM patterns its uniforms after those of the Third Reich’s Wehrmacht and the Waffen SS. The armbands, shoulder boards, and collar insignia used by NSM are replicas of those worn by the military units and political officers of Nazi Germany. NSM also uses many forms of Nazi symbols and imagery in its propaganda.

(U) Active Membership

(U//FOUO) Although NSM has small chapters operating throughout the country, over half of its estimated active membership is based in the Midwest, primarily in Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, Ohio, and Wisconsin. Another large concentration of NSM members operates in the Southwestern United States, centered mainly in Arizona and Nevada. There are an estimated 300 active NSM members along with a similar number of associates that are active on NSM’s various Internet forums. Online members have little direct involvement with the group.

(U) Financial Support

(U//FOUO) All active NSM members as well as new recruits are required to contribute monthly dues to help sustain the organization. NSM also generates a great deal of its revenue from sponsoring white power rock concerts and from the sale of racist music CDs, DVDs, video games, and other white power paraphernalia. NSM conducts much of their sales through its own music distributor, NSM88Records. The group uses funding to further their political ambitions, propaganda mechanisms, and various commercial enterprises that sell Nazi regalia and memorabilia.

(U) Targets of Actions

(U//FOUO) To date, NSM confines its activities primarily to conducting a series of high profile public rallies and marches targeting minority neighborhoods, illegal immigrants, and U.S. support to Israel. In several instances, these activities have triggered violent confrontations between protestors opposing NSM and law enforcement attempting to preserve public order. During an October 2005 march in Toledo, Ohio, police were unable to prevent local residents from rioting for several hours following the NSM rally. The disturbances resulted in the arrest of 120 rioters and the destruction of several local businesses. Toledo’s mayor was forced to restore order by imposing a curfew.

(U) Criminal Activity

(U//FOUO) There is little or no evidence that NSM, as an organization, is engaged in any organized criminal activity. A large number of current and former members of NSM, however, have engaged in sporadic criminal acts that are unrelated to their involvement with the group. NSM members have committed a wide range of crimes to include: murder, kidnapping, rape, domestic violence, pedophilia, burglary, trespassing, and narcotics possession.

 

DOWNLOAD FULL DOCUMENT HERE

DHS-NationalSocialist

CONFIDENTIAL -Nazi Victims Call for Investigation into Vatican Laundering of Stolen Assets

In this  file photo a nun walks past a branch of Credito Artigiano’s bank in Rome. Italian prosecutors contest claims by the Vatican bank that it is trying to comply with international rules to fight money laundering, saying an investigation that led to the seizure of euros 23 million ($30 million) from a Vatican bank account shows “exactly the opposite,” according to a court document obtained. An Italian court on Wednesday rejected a Vatican request to lift the seizure, leading the Vatican to express “astonishment” at the court’s ruling and indicating the case will not be cleared up quickly, as the Vatican originally predicted. Under the investigation, financial police seized the money Sept. 21 from a Vatican bank account at the Rome branch of Credito Artigiano Spa, after the bank informed the Bank of Italy about possible violations of anti-money laundering norms. (AP Photo/Angelo Carconi/Files)

Nazi Victims Ask EU to Probe Vatican on Looted Assets:

Holocaust survivors from the former Yugoslavia accused the Vatican of helping Nazi allies launder their stolen valuables and have asked the European Commission to investigate their claims.

“We are requesting the commission open an inquiry into allegations of money laundering of Holocaust victim assets by financial organs associated with or which are agencies of the Vatican City State,” Jonathan Levy, a Washington-based attorney for the survivors and their heirs, wrote in a letter to Olli Rehn, the European Union’s economic and monetary affairs commissioner. Levy provided the letter to Bloomberg.

The request follows a decade-long lawsuit in U.S. courts on behalf of Holocaust survivors and their heirs from the former Yugoslavia and Ukraine. That case, basing its claims on a U.S. State Department report on the fate of Nazi plunder, alleged that the Vatican Bank laundered assets stolen from thousands of Jews, gypsies and Serbs killed or captured by the Ustasha, the Nazi-backed regime of wartime Croatia. The Vatican repeatedly denied the charges and the findings of the 1998 U.S. report.

Amadeu Altafaj, Rehn’s spokesman, said in Brussels today that the commission had received Levy’s letter and contacted Vatican authorities about it. Vatican spokesman Father Federico Lombardi declined to comment on Levy’s request to the commission.

Vatican Immunity

The U.S. case, which sought as much as $2 billion in restitution, was dismissed last December by a U.S. appeals court in San Francisco on grounds that the Vatican Bank enjoyed immunity under the 1976 Foreign Service Immunities Act, which may prevent foreign governments from facing lawsuits in the U.S.

The commission should have the authority to probe the Institute for Religious Works, or IOR, as the Vatican Bank is called, according to Levy’s letter. It cites a monetary accord signed on Dec. 17 of last year. Under the agreement the Vatican, which uses the euro and issues euro coins, pledged to implement EU laws against money laundering, counterfeiting and fraud.

Rome prosecutors have also sought to show that the Vatican bank is covered under European law. Last month they seized 23 million euros ($32 million) from an Italian account registered to the IOR as they opened a probe into alleged violations of money-laundering laws by the Vatican Bank.

“We looked at all the places where the Vatican may have surrendered sovereignty,” Levy said in a telephone interview. “The only place we could find was with the euro, where they placed themselves under the jurisdiction of either the European Central Bank or the European Commission.”

Swiss Payout

Levy initially contacted the legal office of the Frankfurt- based ECB and was told to take the claim to the commission, he said. An ECB spokeswoman confirmed that after being contacted by Levy, the central bank advised him to go directly to the EU’s executive arm.

The U.S. lawsuit was first filed in 1999, one year after an official Swiss commission concluded that Switzerland received three times more gold taken from Nazi victims than previously estimated by the U.S. government. The same year, UBS AG and Credit Suisse AG, the biggest Swiss banks, agreed to pay $1.25 billion in compensation to Holocaust survivors and their heirs.

In his letter, Levy said “gold and other valuables” stolen in the “genocidal” murder of 500,000 Serbs, Jews and gypsies “were deposited at the Vatican in 1946,” according to “contemporaneous documents authored by Allied investigators” and “the sworn testimony of former U.S. Special Agent William Gowen.” He interviewed and investigated the Ustasha involved in transferring the loot while stationed in Rome after the war.

UNCENSORED – Topless protest in Ukraine FEMEN euronews 2011 against sex tourism

SECRET – Neo-Nazi Fantasy Border Patrol Pictures

The following photos are taken from the Flickr feed of the U.S. Border Guard, a group with an official-sounding name that is, in reality, comprised of volunteers who patrol the border in Arizona. The group’s patrols are led by J.T. Ready, who has openly defended his views as a neo-Nazi. All titles and captions are taken, unaltered, from the group’s Flickr feed.  Some people believe that J.T. Ready is an FBI informant.

 

The following photos are taken from the Flickr feed of the U.S. Border Guard, a group with an official-sounding name that is, in reality, comprised of volunteers who patrol the border in Arizona. The group’s patrols are led by J.T. Ready, who has openly defended his views as a neo-Nazi. All titles and captions are taken, unaltered, from the group’s Flickr feed.  Some people believe that J.T. Ready is an FBI informant.

U.S.A. parks liberated by USBG

The USBG is liberating terrorist occupied lands so that families, boy & girl scouts, church groups, 4×4 clubs, astronomy stargazing groups, bird watchers, hunters, anglers, ranchers, photographers, and all Americans and legal tourists can once again enjoy our beautiful Sonoran desert.

Calling in Grid Coordinates

Attention to detail is critical in documenting smuggler activity. New “sign” in noted and maps are updated. Law Enforcement officials are provided time sensitive eyes on recon by dedicated USBG volunteers as the fluid situation in the FEBA is constantly changing.

Night Ops

 

USBG volunteers pose for a moment in a cleared area known for heavy smuggler activity.

 

Anti-Gang Operations II

 

Illicit drugs and gangs go hand in hand. Border Rangers document drug and gang activity in the patrol area. Mysteriously, gang claims on public and private property are often found exxed out after USBG Gang Task Force members have been in the vacinity.

 

Cave Reconnaissance

 

USBG deploys individuals with a vast array of skill sets. Covert Operators who may still be employed by various governmental agencies often conceal their identity during photographic documentation of Recon Patrols.

 

Border 12

Narco-Terrorist chemically fueled on meth utilize ski masks even in the arid 115 degree desert temperatures to conceal their identities. Here a USBG border ranger displays one such mask after occupying smuggler camp.

Border 5

Weapons pointed outboard: 11 UDAs are rescued from the seering hot desert and USBG volunteers stand guard until PSCO & Border Patrol arrive after translating that the UDAs had heard a firefight between Narco-Terrorists north of their position.

Border 4

An Apache scout volunteering for the USBG gives much needed hydration to a UDA found abandoned by his human smuggler who had pocketed over $2,000.00 from him.

Smuggler Corridor

 

A group of armed citizens opened back up a national nature monument which the local sheriff had surrendered to the drug cartel’s Narco-Terrorists during: Operation LINE IN THE SAND

 

Taking Back American Soil

 

Recreational areas of the U.S. taken over by Narco-Terrorists and abandoned by U.S. officials is now being taken back by heavily armed US Border Guard Border Rangers during Operation: ANVIL.

 

UDA Pick Up

Border Patrol agent provides a air-conditioned ride to safety for these abandoned UDAs located by US Border Guard recon patrol of this remote area.

Captured UDA

 

3 live UDA smugglers (Undocumented Aliens) were captured and turned over to Border Patrol after receiving emergency medical attention by the Border Rangers.

 

USBG smuggler sniffing dog assists in location

Narco-Terrorists can run, but they will only die tired. The desert is hot, unforgiving, and the relentless Border Rangers will never surrender our land to dangerous foreign criminals.

US Border Guard Night Patrol

 

All night patrols are common sacrifices made by the dedicated US Border Guard team members as well as conducting LRRP- Long Range Reconnaissance Patrols, which may last for days at a time.

 

Dead UDA Smuggler

 

1 UDA smuggler did not make it and the homicide scene was secured by USBG Rangers and Maricopa County Sheriff’s deputies while the corpse turned over to Maricopa County Coroner’s Office.

 

Disarmed UDAs treated Humainly

Narco-Smugglers who discard their arms and surrender accordingly, are treated with human dignity until taken into custody. Narco-Mules are often happy just to be alive. The drug cartel is known to often murder their human mules rather than pay them after their chemical warfare agents (illicit drugs) are smuggled into the country.

Border 11

USBG locates a Narco-Smuggler load site near a road and notifies local law enforcement of the exact location.

USBG works with interesting Agents

 

Identity of multi-ethnic Border Patrol motorized recon scout remains protected by Border Ranger as he proudly poses after an area search for enemy personell and illicit drugs.

CONFIDENTIAL – Purported List of Israeli War Criminals Names and Information

The following information was anonymously published on a website (http://israeliwarcriminals.zzl.org) that is no longer accessible. It was accompanied by the following message:

The following information was received anonymously; presumably from a member of the Israeli Military. It was presented as follows:Underlining the following people is an act of retribution and affront. They are the direct perpetrators, agents for the state of Israel that in Dec.- Jan. 2008- 2009 attacked scores of people in the besieged Gaza. The people listed here held positions of command at the time of the attack therefore not only did they perform on behalf of a murderous state mechanism but actively encouraged other people to do the same. They bear a distinctive personal responsibility. They range from low-level field commanders to the highest echelons of the Israeli army.

All took an active and direct role in the offensive.

In underlining them we are purposefully directing attention to individuals rather than the static structures through which they operate. We are aligning people with actions. It is to these persons and others, Like them, to which we must object and bring our plaints to
bear upon.

This information was pirated. We encourage people to seek out other such similar information, it is readily available in the public sphere and
inside public officials’ locked cabinets. This is a form of resistance that can be effectively sustained for a long while.

This project for one, has only just begun, do your bit so that this virtual list may come to bear upon the physical.

Disseminate widely.

Picture

תמונה

Name

שם

Rank

דרגה

Position

תפקיד

Date of
Birth

תאריך
לידה

ID
Number

מספר
תעודת זהות

Address

כתובת

Agai
Yehezkel

אגאי יחזקאל

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

 

Head of
the Armored Corps

קצין שריון
ראשי

19/04/66
22380406

 

26
Inbar st.

Caesarea

30889

ענבר
26

קיסריה

30889

Aharon
Haliwa

אהרן חליוה

Colonel

אל”מ

Head of
“Bahad 1″ (officer training academy)

מפקד
בית הספר לקצינים בה”ד 1

12/10/67
23050578

Alex
Shakliar

אלכס שקליאר

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Nesher
Field Inteligence Battalion, Squad Commander

גדוד
מודיעין השדה נשר,
מפקד
צוות

12/12/87
304074636
Amir Ulo

אמיר אולו

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Yahalom
Engineering Battalion Commander

מפקד גדוד
ההנדסה יהלם

09/05/71
28542900
62 Hagai
st.

Har Adar

90836

הגיא
62

הר אדר

90836

Amir
Abstein

אמיר אבשטיין

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

7th
Regiment, 75 Romach Battalion Commander

חטיבה
7
מגד
75
רומח

28/03/73 16436917

21
Yahalom st.

Modi’in-Maccabim-Re’ut

71725

יהלום
21

מודיעין
מכבים
רעות

71725

Amir
Shimon Eshel

אמיר שמעון
אשל

 

Major
General

אלוף

Head of
the Planning Directorate

ראש אגף התכנון

04/04/59
55652846
# 78

Kidron

70795

קידרון
78

70795

Amos
Yadlin

עמוס ידלין

Major
General

אלוף

Head of
Intelligence Directorate

ראש אמן

20/11/51 51112027
11
Smadar st.

Karmei
Yosef

99797

סמדר 11

כרמי יוסף

99797

Anna
Strelski

אנה סטרלסקי

Sergeant

סמלת

Bislmach
Infantry Training Academy, Mortar Commander

ביסלמח
(בית
ספר למקצועת החיר),
מפקדת
מרגמות

22/09/88
309313674

 

Anton
Siomin

אנטון סיומין

L:ieutenant
(Reserve)

סגן
(מיל‘)

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Company Deputy Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
סמפ

22/12/84

 

324417930

חיפה

Haifa

Aram
Zehavi

ארם זהבי

Captain

סרן

601
Assaf Engineering Battalion, Company Commander

03/09′/81 43249036

 

Ariel
Brickman

אריאל בריקמן

Colonel

אל”מ

Hazor”
Air Force Base Commander

מפקד בסיס חיל
האוויר חצור

01/01/64
58497306

Machane
Tali

Mizpe
Ramon

80600

מחנה טלי

מצפה רמון

80600

Ariel
Karo

אריאל קארו

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Head of
Field Intelligence Corps

קצין מודיעין
שדה ראשי

01/01/65

 

22136576

73
Herzl st.

Kefar
Sava

44213

הרצל
73

כפר סבא

44213

Ariel
Rifkin

אריאל ריפקין

Sergeant
Major

רסל

601
Assaf engineering Battalion, Heavy Engineering Team Work manager
(D-9 operators)

גדוד
צמ”ה 601
אסף
(מפעילי
D-9),
מנהל
עבודות

19/07/79 37287497
Ariel
Yochanan

אריאל יוחנן

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Paratroopers
101 Peten Batallion Commander (as replacement)

צנחנים,
מגד101
פתן
(ממלא
מקום
)

22/09/73 25244492

#
91 Machane Adi

(Nevatim)

8554

מחנה
עדי 91

(נבטים
)

85540

Arnon
Avital

ארנון אביטל

Lieutenant

סגן

401
Regiment 9 Eshet, Deputy Company Commander

חטיבה
401
גדוד
9
עשת,
סמפ

27/08/85
37079779
Assaf
Bryt

אסף בריט

Captain
(Reserve)

סרן
(מיל‘)

Golani
Reconnaissance Battalion, Squad Commander

גדסר
גולני,
מפקד
צוות

07/11/1979 37414240

Avi
Balut

אבי בלוט

 

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Paratroopers
101 Peten Battalion Commander

צנחנים,
מגד
101
פתן

12/09/74 31795750 66
Yisaschar st.

Modi’in-Maccabim-Re’ut

71724

יששכר
66

מודיעין
מכבים
רעות

71724

Avi
Bnayahu

אבי בניהו

Brigadier
general

תא”ל

Military
Spokesperson

דובר
צהל

11/07/77
33809724

 

Lehavot
Haviva

38835

להבות
חביבה

38835

Avi
Mizrakhi

אבי מזרחי

Major
General

אלוף

Commander
of the Ground Forces

מפקד זרוע
היבשה

26/12/57
55006639

14
Sheshet st.

Zikhron
Ya’akov

30900

ששת
הימים 14

זכרון יעקוב

30900

Avi
Peled

אבי
פלד

 

Colonel

אל”מ

 

Golani
Regiment Commander

מפקד
חטיבת גולני

 

01/11/69
24638306

 

24
Shivtei Israel st.

Modi’in-Maccabim-Re’ut

71700

שבטי
ישראל
24

מודיעיןמכביםרעות

71700

 

Aviad
Perri

אביעד
פרי

Lieutenant

סגן

401
Rregiment 71 Reshef, Platoon Commander

חטיבה401
גדוד
71
רשף,
ממ

27/04/87 300409752
Aviel
Siman-Tov

אביאל
סימןטוב

Captain

סרן

Givati
424 Shaked, Company Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
מפ

19/12/84 36541704 49
Shlomo Hamelech st.

Tel Aviv

64386

שלמה
המלך49

תל אביב

64386

Avihay
Wizman

אביחי ויזמן

Captain

סרן

Golani
12 Barak, Company Commander

גולני
12
ברק,
מפ

27/04/85 21544416
Avihu
Ben Zahar

אביהו בן זכר

Lieutenant

סגן

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
ממ

14/04/87 300751518
Avishay
Levi

אבישי לוי

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Head of
Air Force Intelligence

ראש להק מודיעין
בחיל האוויר

02/12/63 58430992

27
Givat Halevuna st.

Modi’in
Maccabim Re’ut

71799

גבעת
הלבונה 27

מודיעין
מכבים
רעות

71799

Avishay
Shasha

אבישי שאשא

Lieutenant

סגן

 

Nurit”
Artillery Battery, Squad Commander

סוללת
תותחנים נורית“,
מפקד
צוות

15/10/87
301178984

 

Aviv
Edri

אביב עודרי

Captain

סרן

Paratroopers
Reconnaissance Battalion, Squad Commander

גדסר
צנחנים,
מפקד
צוות

20/07/84 66444779
1180
Merhavim st.

Dimona

86176

מרחבים
1180

דימונה

86176

Aviv
Kochavi

אביב כוכבי

Brigadier
general

תא”ל

Head of
the Operations Division

ראש חטיבת
המבצעים

23/04/64
58741323
# 249

Adi

17940

עדי
249

17940

Aviv
Mendelowitz

אביב מנדלוביץ

Major

רס”ן

Gaza
Division, Deputy Commander of Artillery

אוגדת
עזה,
סגן
מפקד הארטילריה

17/01/81
40882888
# 2
Shaked neighborhood

Yerucham

80500

שכונת
שקד 2

ירוחם

80500

Baruch
(Barry) Berlinsky

ברוך
(ברי)
ברלינסקי

 

Second
Lieutenant

סגמ

Golani
Reconnossaince Batallion, Squad Commander

גדסר
גולני
,
מפקד
צוות

16/08/86
300046588
Basam
Alian

בסאם עליאן

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Deputy
Commander of the Northern Regiment in the Gaza division

סגן
מפקד החטיבה הצפונית באוגדת עזה

26/11/73 26458588 Shfaram

20200

שפרעם

20200

Ben-Zion
(Benzi) Gruver

בןציון
(בנצי)
גרובר

Colonel
(reserve)

אל”מ
(מיל‘)

Deputy
Commander of a Reserve Division

סגן מפקד אוגדת
מילואים

02/10/58
55486237

44
Hagefen st.

Efrata

90435

הגפן
44

אפרתה

90435

Bnaya
Sarel

בניה שראל

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Givaati
424 Shaked, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
ממ

24/08/87
301071320

 

66
Bne Beitcha st.

 

Givaat
Hacharsina

 

Kiryat
Arba

90100

בנה
ביתך
66

גבעת
החרסינה

קרית
ארבע

90100

Boaz
Dabush

בועז דבוש

Staff
Sergeant Major

רס”מ

601
Assaf engineering Battalion, Heavy Engineering Team Work manager
(D-9 operators)

גדוד
צמ”ה 601
אסף
(מפעילי
D-9),
מנהל
עבודות

02/08/71

 

28804276
#
10

 

Zeitan

 

71915

 

זיתן
10

71915

Boaz
Rubin

בועז רובין

Captain
(reserve)

סרן
(מיל‘)

Hanegev
Reserve Regiment, Deputy Company Commnader

חטיבת
המילואים הנגב,
סמפ

11/09/77
34233114 4 Stefen
Zweig st.

Tel-Aviv

69642

סטפן
צוויג 4

תל אביב

69642

Boris
Schuster

בוריס שוסטר

Major

רסן

Commander
of a “Dabur” Navy Flotilla

מפקד שייטת
דבורים בחיל הים

12/02/81 309209070 Ashkelon

אשקלון

Dado
Bar-Kalifa

דדו
ברכליפא

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Givati
424 Shaked Battalion Commander

גבעתי,
מגד
424
שקד

20/08/76 33193061 114
Sderot Hagalil st.

Bat-Hefer

42842

שדרות
הגליל 114

בתחפר

42842

Dan
Dolberg

דן דולברג

Second
Lieutenant

סגמ

401
Regiment 46 Shelach, Company Commander

חטיבה
401
גדוד
46
שלח,
ממ

15/04/89

 

300257755

 

Yavne

יבנה

Dan
Harel

דן הראל

Major
general

אלוף

Deputy
Chief of Staff

סגן
הרמטכל

17/02/55

 

53312690
13 Erez
st.

Modi’in-Maccabim-Re’ut

71908

ארז
מר
13

מודיעיןמכביםרעות

71908

Daniel
Kotler

דניאל קוטלר

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Givaati
424 Shaked, Operations Officer

גבעתי
424
שקד,
קצינת
מבצעים

 

10/08/88
301894911
David
Shapira

דוד שפירא

Major

רסן

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Platoon Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
מפ

14/11/78 35716711 6
Shoshana Poliakov st.

Jerusalem

96106

שושנה
פוליאקוב 6

ירושלים

96106

David
Slovozkoi

דוד סלובוצקוי

Captain

סרן

Givati
424 Shaked, Company Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
מפ

 

07/06/85 304511173
David
Zini

דוד
זיני

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Golani,
Commander of Egoz Unit

גולני,
מפקד
יחידת אגוז

09/01/74 25627266
Dvir
Diamond

דביר דיאמונד

Lieutenant

סגן

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Platoon Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
ממ

16/06/86

 

29986791

 

ראס אל עמוד

Ras- El-
Amud

Eden
Atias

עדן אטיאס

Colonel

אלמ

Commander
of Nevatim Air Force Base

מפקד בסיס חיל
האוויר נבטים

09/10/66 22665954
Machane
Adi

(Nevatim)

80700

מחנה עדי

(נבטים)

80700

Efraim
Aviad Tehila

אפרים
אביעד תהילה

Lieutenant

סגן

 

Golani
Egoz, Deputy Company Commander

גולני
אגוז
,
סמפ

31/12/84

39764287 #37

Moshav
Zafria

60932

צפריה
37

,

60932

Efraim
Avni

אפרים אבני

Captain

סרן

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Company Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מפ

06/10/81

43239698
Eitan
Ben-Gad

איתן
בן
גד

Major

רס”ן

Paratroopers,
Operations Officer

צנחנים,
קצין
אג
מ

02/03/75
32273542
29
Aliyat Hanoar st.

Jerusalem

97234

עליית
הנוער
29

ירושלים

97234

Elad
Chachkis

אלעד
צצקיס

Major

רסן

Commander
of the “Hetz” Navy Vessel

מפקד אחי
חץ

20/07/80 40288151

 

Elad
Itzik

אלעד
איציק

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Communications Officer

צנחנים
101
פתן,
קצין
תקשו
ב

27/11/86 29991338
Elad
Shoshan

אלעד שושן

Captain

סרן

Paratroopers
Reconnaissance Unit, Squad Commander

גדסר
צנחנים,
מפקד
צוות

14/10/81
46222980
Elad
Yakobson

אלעד יעקובסון

Captain
(reserve)

סרן
(מיל‘)

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Company Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
מפ

25/03/80 37263308
Eli
Fadida

אלי פדידה

Staf
Sergeant

סמר

402
Reshef Artillery Battalion, Squad Commander

גדוד
תותחנים402
רשף,
מפקד
צוות

23/04/88 200661783
Eli Yafe

אלי יפה

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Head of
the Operations Division

רח”ט מבצעים

11/01/57 54649173 4 Ela
st.

Kokhav
Yair

44864

אלה
4

כוכב יאיר

44864

Eliezer
Alfred Marom (Chiney)

אליעזר
אלפרד מרום (צייני)

Major
General

אלוף

Navy
Commander

מפקד חיל הים

13/11/55
53227492

 

1
Orvanit st.

Zikhron
ya’akov

30900

עורבנית
1

זכרון יעקוב

30900

Eliezer
Shkedi

אליעזר שקדי

Major
General

אלוף

Former
Air force Commander, Co-Authored the Operation

לשעבר
מפקד חיל האוויר,
השתתף
בתכנון המבצע

10/08/57
54898903

 

2 Seora
st.

Yehud

56475

שעורה
2

יהוד

56475

Elik
Sror

אליק סרור

Captain

סרן

 

Givaati
424 Shaked, Company Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
מפ

19/07/83 37747391

Eran
Karisi

ערן קריסי

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

Lahav
603 Engineering Battalion Commander

מפקדגדוד
ההנדסה 603
להב

08/02/75 32264731

Erez
Sa’adon

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

401
Regiment, 52 Habokim Battalion Commander

חטיבה
401,
מגד
52
הבוקעים

21/11/1975 32347890
Eyal Ben
Haim

אייל בן חיים

Major
(Reserve)

רסן
(מיל‘)

500
Regiment, Deputy Company Commander

חטיבה
500,
סמפ

05/02/71 27963461

#
11,

Bizron

60946

ביצרון
11

60946

Eyal
Eizenberg

אייל אייזנברג

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Gaza
Division Commander

מפקד אוגדת
עזה

19/04/63 58018532 # 152

Ben
Shemen

73115

בן
שמן 152

73115

Eyal
Handelman

אייל הנדלמן

Captain

סרן

3rd
Flotilla, Ordnance Officer

שייטת
3,
קצין
נשק

 

20/08/84

66629999

Eyal
Zukowsky

אייל
זוקובסקי

Captain

סרן

Golani
51 Habokim, Company Commander

גולני
51
הבוקעים,
מפ

27/11/83 65922197
Gaby
Ashkenazi

גבי אשכנזי

Leutenant
General

רבאלוף

Chief of
Staff

ראש המטה הכללי

25/02/54 52228764

 

44
Hakarmel st.

Kefar
Sava

44205

הכרמל
44

כפר סבא

44205

Gil Shen

גיל שן

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Commander
of “Maga Hakesem” Helicopter Unit

מפקד
טייסת המסוקים מגע
הקסם

12/10/69 24524589 12
Weizmann av.

Ramat-
Hasharon

47211

שדרות
ויצמן 12

רמת השרון

47211

Gur
Rozenblat

גור רוזנבלט

Captain

סרן

Givaati
435 Rotem, Company Commander

גבעתי
435
רותם,
מפ

05/07/73 25343484
# 335

Revava

44839

רבבה
335

44839

Gur
Schreibmann

גור
שרייבמן

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Givaati,
Reconnaissance Battalion
Commander

מפקד
גדסר
גבעתי

 

11/09/75 32394348

1
Emek Iron st.

Kefat
Sava

44627

עמק עירון 1

כפר סבא

44627

 

Guy
Givoni

גיא גבעוני

 

Lieutenant
(reserve)

סגן
(מיל‘)

Golani
13 Gideon, Artillery Coordination officer

גולני
13
גדעון,
קצין
שיתוף ארטילרי

05/03/85 36834521

Guy
Hazut

גיא חזות

 

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Deputy
Commander of the Paratroopers Regiment

סגן
מפקד חטיבת הצנחנים

03/05/71

 

28454650

Haggai
Amar

חגי עמר

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

401
Regiment, 71 Reshef Battalion Commander

חטיבה
401
מגד71
רשף

16/05/75

31926819

#
228

Halamish

71945

חלמיש
228

71945

Hanan
(Yochanan) Schwartz

חנן
(יוחנן)
שוורץ

Captain

סרן

Givati
432 Zabar, Company Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
מפ

18/11/84 66363664
Harel
Knafo

הראל קנפו

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Southern
Command, Chief of Staff

ראש מטה פיקוד
דרום

31/03/65
59206961

40
Yehuda st.

Modi’in-Maccabim-
Re’ut

71724

יהודה
40

מודיעין
מכבים
רעות

71724

Harel
Naaman

הראל
נעמן

Lieutenant

סגן

Golani
51 Habokim, Platoon Commander

גולני
51
הבוקעים,
ממ

07/08/86 37991189

 

Herzel
(Herzi) Halevi

הרצל
(הרצי)
הלוי

Colonel

אל”מ

Paratroopers
Regiment Commander

מחט
צנחנים

17/12/67
57207771

 

 

Hila
Yafe

הילה יפה

Major

רס”ן

Drone
Company Commander

מפקדת פלוגת
מזל”טים

24/03/82
43547967

 

Idan
Hamo

עידן חמו

Captain

סרן

188
Regiment 71 Reshef, Company Commander

חטיבה
188
גדוד
71
רשף,
מפ

04/03/83 39098843
Ido
Ender

עדו אנדר

Lieutenant

סגן

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Deputy Company Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
סמפ

22/06/86 21965363
Ido
Nechushtan

עדו נחושתן

Major
General

אלוף

Air
Force Commander

מפקד חיל האוויר

18/04/57
54744297

1
Yakionton st.

Yavne

81501

יקינטון
1

יבנה

81501

Ilan
Boger

אילן בוגר

Colonel

אלמ

Commander
of Ramat David Air-Force Base

מפקד
בסיס חיל האוויר רמת דוד

09/12/66 22807341
49 Lehi
st.

Ramat
Hasharon

לחי
49

רמת השרון

Ilan
Dikshtein

אילן דיקשטיין

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Kfir
93 Haruv, Battalion Commander

חרוב
מגד
93
כפיר

11/01/73
25093089
# 45

Eli

44828

עלי
45

44828

Ilan
Malka

אילן
מלכא

Colonel

אלמ

Givaati
Regiment Commander

מפקדחטיבת
גבעתי

21/12/67 23582752
Itamar
Ben Haim

איתמר
בן חיים

 

Major

רס”ן

Paratroopers
101 Peten Deputy Commander

צנחנים,
סמגד
101
פתן

15/07/78 34386045
Itamar
Cohen

איתמר כהן

Lieutenant

סגן

Givaati
435 Rotem, Deputy Company Commander

גבעתי
435
רותם,
סמפ

15/07/85 34592295

 

Itamar
Eitam

איתמר
איתם

Captain

סרן

Golani
51 Habokim, Company Commander

גולני51
הבוקעים,
מפ

18/03/81

 

40558439
# 38

Nov

12921

נוב38

12921

Itamar
Frenkel

איתמר פרנקל

Sergeant

סמל

Kfir
93 Haruv, Platoon Sergeant

כפיר
93
חרוב,
סמל
מחלקה

29/09/88
200756377

 

Itay
Reis

איתי רייס

Bigadier
General

תא”ל

Commander
of Palmachim Air Force Base

מפקד בסיס
פלמחים של חיל האוויר

03/12/63
58495755

25
Hatikva st.

Ramat-
Hasharon

47212

התקוה
25

רמת השרון

47212

Itay
Virob

איתי וירוב

Colonel

אל”מ

Kfir
Regiment Commander

מחט
כפיר

14/04/66
22376974
# 71

Ma’ale
Hagilbo’a

19145

מעלה
הגלבוע 71

.19145

Johnny
Cohen

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

401
Regiment, 46 Shelach Commander

חטיבה
401
מגד46
שלח

Ovda
Military Camp

מחנה עובדה

Lior
Algai

ליאור אלגאי

Captain

סרן

Paratrooper
890 Efee, Company Commander

צנחנים
890
אפעה,
מפ

20/01/76 21510813

Lior
Bialik

ליאור ביאליק

Sergeant

סמל

Nesher
Field Intelligence Batallion, Squad Commander

גדוד
מודיעין השדה נשר,
מפקד
צוות

08/02/88
301535316
Lior
Dadon

ליאור דדון

Sergeant

סמל

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Squad Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מכ

 

13/02/87
300468188
Lior
Shushan

ליאור שושן

Captain

סרן

Kfir 93
Haruv, Operations Officer

כפיר 93
חרוב,
קצין
אגמ

17/01/82

 

49845423
Liran
Luzon

לירן לוזון

Lieutenant

סגן

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
ממ

21/08/87 301092011

Liran
Nachman

לירן נחמן

Lieutenant

סגן

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Deputy Company Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
סמפ

 

03/08/85
36729234
Liron
Padlad

לירון
פדלד

 

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Paratroopers
890 Ef ee, Communications Officer

צנחנים
890
אפעה,
קצין
קשר

31/12/88
302243134

 

Meir
Kalifi

מאיר כליפי

Major
General

אלוף

Prime
Minister’s Military Secretary

המזכיר הצבאי
לראש הממשלה

 

30/04/59
55659486
2
Tarshish st.

Caesarea

30889

 

תרשיש
2

קיסריה

30889

Michael
Heimann

מיכאל היימן

Captain

סרן

605
Hamachatz, Company Commander

גדוד
605
המחץ,
מפ

07/10/81 310666037 Tel Aviv

תל אביב

Michael
Taksyak

מיכאל טקסיאק

 

Lieutenant
(reserve)

סגן
(מיל‘)

46
Reserve Battalion, Platoon Commander

גדוד
מילואים 46,
מפ

26/05/80
306131269
Michaor
Israeli

מיכאור ישראלי

Second
Lieutenant

סגמ

Paratrooperts
101 Peten, Platoon Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
ממ

02/03/87 300712387
Michelle
Ben-Baruch

מישל
בןברוך

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Head of
the Artillery Corps

קצין תותחנים
ראשי

20/11/63

 

69111672
10 Alon
st.

Rosh
Ha’ayn

48560

אלון
10

ראש העין

48560

Miki
Ohayon

מיקי אוחיון

Lieutenant

סגן

Paratroopers
202 Zefa , Deputy Company Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
סמפ

03/12/86 300181906
Mordechai
Kahana

מרדכי כהנא

Colonel

אל”מ

Gaza
Division, Southern Regiment Commander

מפקד החטיבה
הדרומית באוגדת עזה

04/10/70 28059632 14 Livne
st.

Ma’alot
Tarshiha

21521

לבנה
14

מעלות תרשיחא

21521

Moshe
Elrat

משה אלרט

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

Shuali
Marom Reserve Regiment, Battalion Commander

מגד
בחטיבת המילואים שועלי
מרום

06/03/88

23605132

Moshe
(Chico) Tamir

משה
(ציקו)
תמיר

 

Brigadier
General

תאל

Former
Commander of the Gaza Division (co-authored the operation)

מפקד
אוגדת עזה לשעבר
(השתתף
בתכנון המבצע
)

12/08/64

 

58845686
Kfar
Giladi

12210

כפר
גלעדי

12210

Moshe
Zofi

משה צופי

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

Hanegev
Reserve Regiment, Battalion Commander

מגד
בחטיבת המילואים הנגב

06/09/72

29585635

101
Hazvi st.

Be’er-Sheva

84747

הצבי
101

באר שבע

84747

Nadav
Hajbi

נדב
חגבי

 

Colonel

אל”מ

Gaza
Division Deputy Commander

סגן מפקד אוגדת
עזה

10/01/64

 

58455007

Nadav
Musa

נדב
מוסא

Lieutenant

סגן

 

Givati
424 Shaked, Deputy Company Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
סמפ

01/01/86
38031506
Nathan
Be’eri

נתן בארי

Staff
Sergeant

סמר

Golani
12 Barak, Squad Commander

גולני
12
ברק,
מכ

28/05/89
200691061
Nezah
Rubin

נצח רובין

Lieutenant
colonel

סא”ל

 

Head of
Imprisonment Branch of Military Police

ראש ענף כליאה
במשטרה הצבאית

04/06/68 23690159
Nimrod
Schefer

נמרוד שפר

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Head of
the Air Division in the Air Force

ראש להק אוויר בחיל
האוויר

16/03/61 56539208
# 46

Nataf

90804

נטף
46

90804

Nir
Ben-David

ניר בן דוד

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

188
Regiment 74 Saar Battalion Commander

חטיבה
188,
מפקד
74
סער

17/09/73 25243403

Nofit

36001

נופית

36001

Nir
Dupet

ניר דופט

 

Captain

סרן

 

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Company Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
מפ

03/10/82
66238429

 

#
61

Nov

12921

נוב
61

12921

Nir
Ohayon

ניר אוחיון

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
ממ

19/08/87 301073862
Niv
Samban

ניב סאמבן

Staff
Sergeant

סמ”ר

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Platoon Sergeant

צנחנים
101
פתן,
סמל
מחלקה

14/06/88 200345320
Noam
Keshwisky

נועם קשיביצקי

Lieutenant

סגן

401
Reconnaissance Unit, Deputy Company Commander

פלסר
401,
סמפ

23/10/85
21663604

 

Ofek Gal

אופק גל

Sergeant

סמלת

Northern
Regiment of the Gaza Division, Field Intelligence Commander

אוגדת
עזה,
חטיבה
צפונית,
מפקדת
תצפיתניות

03/07/87 300934890
Ofer
Lahad

עופר להד

Staf
Sergeant

סמר

402
Reshef Artillery Battalion, Squad Commander

גדוד
תותחנים402
רשף,
מפקד
צוות

08/10/88

200494623
Ofer
Levi

עופר לוי

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Givati
Regiment, Deputy Commander

סגן מפקד חטיבת
גבעתי

31/03/72 28880656
Ofer
Winter

עופר וינטר

Colonel

אל”מ

Commander
of “Duvdevan” Unit

מפקד
יחידת “דובדבן

03/02/71 27998632 # 107

Mizpe
Netufa

15295

מצפה
נטופה 107

15295

Ofer
Zafrir

עופר צפריר

Colonel

אל”מ

401
Regiment Commander

מפקד
חטיבה401

29/01/66
22280283
Ofir
Edri

אופיר אדרי

Lieutenant

סגן

Kfir 93
Haruv, Deputy Company Commander

כפיר
93
חרוב,
סמפ

30/09/87 301168548
Ohad
Dabush

אוהד דבוש

Second
Lieutenant

סגמ

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
ממ

25/10/87 301105052
Ohad
Girhish

אוהד גירחיש

Second
Lieutenant

סגמ

Golani
51 Habokim, Platoon Commander

גולני 51
הבוקעים,
ממ

02/03/87 300397445

Ohad
Najme

אוהד
נגמה

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

401
Regiment, 9 Eshet Battalion Commander

חטיבה
401
מגד9
עשת

16/03/76
38616751

Omer
Dori

 

עומר
דורי

Second
Lieutenant

 

סג”מ

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Platoon Commander

 

צנחנים101
פתן,
ממ

 

05/12/86
300070612
Omri
Dover

עמרי דובר

Lieutenant

סגן

 

401
Regiment 71 Reshef, Deputy Company Commander

חטיבה401
גדוד71
רשף,
סמפ

28/04/86
32573214

 

Zur
Hadasa 349

99875

צור
הדסה 349

99875

Or
Nelkenbaum

אור נלקנבאום

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Nesher
Field Intelligence Battalion, Squad Commander

גדוד
מודיעין השדה נשר,
מפקד
צוות

11/11/87
301062170

Oren
Bersano

אורן ברסאנו

 

Major

רס”ן

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Company commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מפ

09/05/81
42834044
Oren
Cohen

אורן כהן

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

 

Golani
13 Gideon Battalion Commander

גולני,
מגד
13
גדעון

14/01/73 25092362 7 Agas
st.

Rosh
Hayin

48570

אגס
7

ראש העין

48570

Oren
Kupitz

אורן קופיץ

 

Lieutenant

סגן

 

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Company Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מפ

12/02/87
300374139

 

Oren
Zini

אורן זיני

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Givaati,
432 Tsabar Battalion Commander

גבעת
מפקד 432
צבר

30/08/74 27310176 21
Menachem Usishkin st.

Ashdod

77513

מנחם
אוסישקין 21

אשדוד

77513

Pinkhas
Buchris

פנחס בוכריס

Brigadier
General (reserve)

תא”ל
(מיל‘)

Director
General of the Defense Ministry

מנכל
משרד הביטחון

11/04/56 53305868 7 Maanit
st.

Kefar
Sava

44288

מענית 7

כפרסבא

44288

Ghasan
Alian

עסאן
עליאן

 

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

 

Golani
Reconnossaince Battalion Commander

מפקד
גדס
ר
גולני

21/03/72
29151529

Shfaram

20200

שפרעם

20200

Raz
Sarig

רז שריג

Major

רס”ן

Kfir
Regiment Operations Officer

חטיבת
כפיר,
קצין
אג”מ

22/07/76
33069170
33
Hamigdal st.

Givataim

53447

המגדל
33

גבעתיים

53447

 

Ron
Asherov

רון אשרוב

Colonel

אל”מ

Gaza
Division, Northern Regiment Commander

אוגדת
עזה,
מפקד
החטיבה הצפונית

26/05/69
24417248
11 Ufter
Ya’akov

Tel-Aviv

69362

אפטר
יעקב 11

תלאביב

69362

Ron
Levinger

רון לוינגר

Captain

סרן

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Company Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
מפ

09/05/83 39975230
Ron
Shirto

רון שירטו

Captain
(reserve)

סרן
(מיל‘)

 

Paratroopers,
Coordination Officer

צנחנים,
קצין
תיאום

28/05/78
32970220

 

Ronen
Dan

רונן דן

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Commander
of Tel-Nof Air-Force Base

מפקד
בסיס תל—נוף
של
חיל האוויר

25/04/61

57220790

57
Keshet st.

Modi’in-Maccabim-Re’ut

71908

קשת
57

מודיעיןמכביםרעות

71908

Ronen
Dogmi

רונן דגמי

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

401
Regiment Deputy Commander

סגן
מפקד חטיבה 401

11/01/73 29608882 Sde Yoav

79351

שדה יואב

79351

 

 

Roi
Elkabetz

רועי אלקבץ

Colonel

אל”מ

7th
Regiment Commander

מפקד
חטיבה 7

02/08/68
23668767

Roi
Oppenheimer

רועי אופנהיימר

Major

רס”ן

401
Regiment, 71 Reshef Deputy Commander

חטיבה
401,
סמגד
71
רשף

10/07/77
33802018

 

Roi
Weinberger

רועי ויינברגר

Lieutenant

סגן

 

Givaati
435 Rotem, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
435
רותם,
ממ

26/09/88
301818043
Sahar
Abargel

סהר
אברגיל

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

601
Assaf Battalion Commander

מפקד
גדוד ההנדסה 601
אסף

17/07/75
32433062
16
Yeshaia Hanavi

Modi’in-
Maccabim- Re’ut

71723

ישעיהו
הנביא
16

מודיעין
מכבים
רעות

71723

Shai
Belaich

שי בלאיש

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Commander
of the Shachar Rescue Battalion

מפקד גדוד שחר
לחילוץ והצלה

07/10/74 31938244

16
Hasnunit

Ashkelon

78360

הסנונית
16

אשקלון

78360

Shai
Fargian

שי
פרגיאן

Captain

סרן

Givati
424 Shaked, Deputy Company Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
סמפ

06/01/85 66658964
Shaked
Galin

שקד גלעין

Lieutenant

סגן

Navy
Vessel Commander

מפקד ספינה של
חיל הים

14/10/85
34716712
Sharon
Itach

שרון איטח

Captain

סרן

Sachar
Rescue Battalion, Company Commander

גדוד
החילוץ שחר,
מפ

20/03/82 60125119 58 Ben
Gurion st.

Sderot

87070

בןגוריון
58

שדרות

87070

Shaul
Badusa

שאול בדוסה

Lieutenant

סגן

Kfir 93
Haruv, Platoon Commander

כפיר
93
חרוב,
ממ

03/10/86 300168200
Shay
Unger

שי אונגר

Major

רסן

605
Mahaz Engineering Battalion, Deputy
Commander

סגן
מפקד גדוד ההנדסה 605
מחץ

 

31/12/77

 

34488403

Tel Aviv

תל אביב

Shimon
Siso

שמעון סיסו

 

Lieutenant

סגן

Golani
51 Habokim, Deputy Company Commander

גולני
51
הבוקעים,
סמפ

19/02/86 38140091

Shiran
Mussa

שירן מוסא

Captain

סרן

Nesher
Field Intelligence Battalion, Company Commander

גדוד
מודיעין השדה נשר,
מפ

11/11/84 36625655
Shlomit
Tako

Captain

סרן

Ein
Hasea’ara” Artillery Battery Commander

מפקדת
סוללת התותחים
עין
הסערה

23/04/84

39821459
Tal
Alkobi

טל אלקובי

Lieutenant

סגן

188
Regiment 71 Reshef, Company Commander

חטיבה
188
גדוד
71
רשף,
מפ

10/04/87 300690435
Tal
Bendel

טל בנדל

Sergeant

סמל

Paratroopers
101 Peten Squad Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מכ

10/11/88
301723102

Tal
Kommemi

טל קוממי

Sergeant

סמל

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Squad Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מכ

03/01/88
200375541
Tal Ruso

טל רוסו

Major
General

אלוף

Head of
the Operations Directorate

ראש אגף המבצעים

27/09/59

 

56046295

Tel
Aviv

תל אביב

Tamir
Oren

תמיר אורן

Lieutenant

סגן

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Platoon Commander

צנחנים
202
צפע,
ממ

 

13/11/87
200210961

Tamir
Yadai

תמיר
ידעי

Brigadier
General

תאל

Replaced
the Golani Regiment Commander

מילא
את מקום מחט
גולני

16/12/69 24840340

 

59
Weizman st.

Kefar
Sava

44351

ויצמן
59

כפר סבא

44351

Tom
Cohen

תום כהן

Second
Lieutenant

סגמ

 

188
Regiment, 74 Sa’ar, Platoon Commander

חטיבה
188
גדוד
74
סער,
ממ

20/11/87 301355517
Tomer
Meltzmann

תומר מלצמן

Captain

סרן

Golani
12 Barak, Company Commander

גולני
12
ברק,
מפ

23/11/81 52670791

Geva
Rapp

גבע ראפ

Colonel

אלמ

Reserve
Regiment Commander

מפקד חטיבת
מילואים

15/01/57

54958723

Tslil
Birbir

צליל בירביר

 

Second
Lieutenant

סג”מ

Golani
52 Habokim, Logistics Officer

גולני 52
הבוקעים,
קצינת
תחזוקה

11/07/88
200394310

Udi
Sagie

אודי שגיא

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

Paratroopers
202 Zefa Commander

צנחנים
מגד
202
צפע

Even
Yehuda

אבן יהודה

Uri Ron

אורי רון

Captain

סרן

601
Assaf Engineering Battalion, Company Commander

גדוד
הנדסה 601
אסף,
מפ

29/10/84 66348392
Yair
Keinan

יאיר קינן

Lieutenant

סגן

7th
Regiment Reconnaissance Unit, Squad Commander

פלסר
7,
מפקד
צוות

12/12/85 38029062

Yair
Palay

יאיר
פלאי

Captain

סרן

Golani
Egoz, Company Commander

גולני
אגוז,
מפ

23/02/80
40045981
Keshet
Moshav

12410

מושב קשת

12410

Ya’akov
(Yaki) Dolf

יעקב
(יקי)
דולף

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

Paratroopers
890 Efee Battalion Commander

צנחנים,
מגד
890
אפעה

07/01/76

38374211

 

21
Alterman Natan st.

Tel Aviv

69415

אלתרמן
21

תל אביב

69415

 

Yaniv
Zolicha

יניב זוליכה

 

Second
lieutenant

סג”מ

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Platoon Commander

גבעתי
432
צבר,
ממ

22/09/87
300932365
Yaron
Finkelman

ירון פינקלמן

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Paratroopers
Reconnaissance Battalion Commander

מפקד
גדסר
צנחנים

25/04/75 32172702

37
Hashmonaim

Ra’anana

43255

החשמונאים
37

רעננה

43255

Yaron
Simsulo

ירון סימסולו

Major

רסן

Givati
Reconnaissance Platoon Company

מפקד
פלס
ר
גבעתי

13/05/82 60475142

36
Yehuda Halevi

Herzlia

46490

יהודה
הלוי 36

הרצליה

46490

Yehosua
(Shuki) Ribak

יהושע
(שוקי)
ריבק

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Golani
51 Habokim Battalion Commander

גולנ
מגדי51
הבוקעים

04/05/75 32113557

Ein
Zurim

79510

עין צורים

79510

Yehu
Ofer

יהוא עופר

Colonel

אלמ

Commander
of Sde Dov Air Force Base

מפקד בסיס חיל
האוויר שדה דב

19/06/65

59584607

#
46

Mishmeret

40695

משמרת
46

40695

Yehuda
Fuchs

יהודה פוקס

Colonel

אלמ

Southern
Command Operations Officer

קצין אגמ
פיקוד דרום

10/04/69 24293128 46 Hadas
st.

Matan

45858

הדס
46

מתן

45858

Yehuda
Hacohen

יהודה הכהן

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

Givaati
435 Rotem Commander

גבעתי
מגד435
רותם

.

 

 

Yigal
Slovik

יגאל סלוביק

Colonel

אל”מ

401
Regiment Commander

מפקד
חטיבה 401

16/06/68
23706096

52
Topaz st.

Kefar
Yona

40300

טופז
52

כפריונה

40300

Yigal
Sudri

יגאל סודרי

Major

רסן

Paratroopers
202 Zefa, Deputy Battalion Commander

צנחנים
סמגד
202
צפע

03/09/69 24445801
#48

Megadim

30875

מגדים
48

30875

Yizhar
Yona

יזהר יונה

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Head of
the Field Compounds Team in the Air-land Cooperation Unit

ראש צוות מכלולי
שדה ביחידה לשיתוף פעולה שבחיל האוויר

24/08/66
22244834
11 Arnon
st.

Givataim

53529

ארנון
11

גבעתיים

53529

Yoav
Galant

יואב גלנט

Major
General

אלוף

Head of
the Southern Command

אלוף פיקוד
דרום

08/11/58
55551832

Meshek
33

Amikam

37830

משק
33

עמיקם

37830

Yoav
Gertner

יואב גרטנר

Major
(reserve)

רס”ן
_(מיל‘)

Artillery
Battery Commander

מפקד סוללת
תותחנים

30/01/79
36448439
33
Habashan st.

Ariel

40700

הבשן
33

אריאל

40700

Yoav
Mordechai

יואב
מרדכי

Lieutenant
Colonel

סא”ל

Golani
13 Gideon Battalion Commander (replaced Oren Cohen)

גולני
מג
ד13
גדעון

(החליף
את אורן כהן
)

21/08/72 28893071
# 8

Kedumim

44856

קדומים
8

44856

Yochai
Siemann

יוחאי זימן

Captain

סרן

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Company Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מפ

03/05/82 60631728
Yochanan
Locker

יוחנן לוקר

Brigadier
General

תאל

Airforce
Chief of Staff

ראש מטה חיל
האוויר

17/09/56 54231030
1
Sapir st.

Modi’in
Maccabim Re’ut

71799

 

ספיר
1

מודיעין
מכבים
רעות

71799

 

Yom-Tov
Samia

יוםטוב
סמיה

Major
General

אלוף

Deputy
Head of the Southern Command in Emergency

סגן אלוף פיקוד הדרום
בשעת חירום

18/06/54
52204385
69 Levy
Eshkol st.

Tel-Aviv

69361

לוי
אשכול 69

תלאביב

69361

Yonathan
Barenski

יונתן ברנסקי

Colonel

אל”מ

Negev”
Reserve Regiment Commander

מפקד
חטיבת המילואים הנגב

27/07/71
28649697 Eli

44828

עלי

44828


 

 

Yonathan
Felman

יונתן פלמן

Captain

סרן

401
Regiment 75 Romach, Company Commander

חטיבה
401
גדוד
75
רומח,
מפ

07/08/85
37042801
?
Yoni
Weitzner

יוני וייצנר

Sergeant

סמל

Kfir 93
Haruv, Squad Commander

כפיר 93
חרוב,
מכ

16/11/88
200051209
Yossi
Abuzaglo

יוסי אבוזגלו

Major

רסן

Southern
Command Engineering Operations Officer

פיקוד
דרום,
קצין
אגמ
הנדסה

20/01/76 32380172
Yossi
Bahar

יוסי בכר

Brigadier
General

תאל

Head of
the Infantry Corps

קצין חיר
וצנחנים ראשי

09/04/64 58815218 Be’eri
Kibbutz

קיבוץ בארי

Yossi
Beidaz

יוסי ביידץ

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Military
Intelligence, Head of the Research Division

אמן,
ראש
חטיבת המחקר

14/04/61 5710504 # 332

Kfar
Hess

40692

כפר
הס 332

40692

Yotam
Dadon

יותם דדון

Staff
Sergeant

סמר

Givaati
432 Tsabar, Platoon Sergeant

גבעתי
432
צבר,
סמל
מחלקה

10/10/87 301110466
Yishai
Ankri

ישי אנקרי

Lieutenant

סגן

Givati
424 Shaked, Deputy Company Commander

גבעתי
424
שקד,
סמפ

20/08/86 37991908

Yishai
Green

ישי גרין

 

lieutenant

סגן

 

 

Golani
“Orev” Unit, Squad Commander

גולני
עורב“,
מפקד
צוות

29/12/84
36769156
Yuval
Halamish

יובל חלמיש

Brigadier
General

תא”ל

Head of
the Intelligence Corps

קצין מודיעין
ראשי

20/12/57
55005797

 

Zion
Bramli

ציון ברמלי

Advanced
Staff Sergeant Major

רסר

601
Assaf engineering Battalion, Heavy Engineering Team Work manager
(D-9 operators)

גדוד
צמ”ה 601
אסף
(מפעילי
D-9),
מנהל
עבודות

01/02/79 35721471
Zion
Shankour

ציון שנקור

Major

רסן

Gaza
Division Northern Regiment, Operations Officer

אוגדת
עזה חטיבה הצפונית,
קצין
אגמ

1975 13692462 38
Yisaschar st.

Modi’in-
Maccabim-Re’ut

71724

יששכר
38

מודיעיןמכביםרעות

71724

Ziv
Danieli

זיו דניאלי

 

Staff
Sergeant

סמ”ר

Paratroopers
101 Peten, Squad Commander

צנחנים
101
פתן,
מכ

24/01/88 200361509
Ziv
Trabelsi

זיו טרבלסי

Lietenant
Colonel

סאל

402
Reshef Artillery Battalion Commander

מפקד
גדוד התותחנים402
רשף

15/01/76

 

38316709

# 46

Sharsheret

85391

שרשרת
46

85391

Zuf
Salomon

צוף סלומון

Second
lieutenant

סג”מ

Paratroopers
101 Peten Logistics Officer

צנחנים
101
פתן,
קצין
לוגיסטיקה

 

12/01/90 200959005
Zvi
Fogel

צבי פוגל

Brigadier
General (reserve)

תא”ל
(מיל‘)

Southern
Command, Head of Fire Management

מפקד מרכז האש
בפיקוד דרום

03/11/56 54559059

1
Vered Hagalil st.

Korazim

12933

ורד
הגליל
1

כורזים

12933

Zvi
Yehuda Kelner

צבי יהודה קלנר

 

Lieutenant

סגן

 

Givaati
Reconnaissance Battalion, Squad Commadner

גדסר
גבעתי
,
מפקד
צוות

1

TOP-SECRET – Israel Defense Forces Naksa Violence Presentation

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Report – Congress Approves 2012 Intelligence Authorization

Congress last week enacted the Intelligence Authorization Act for Fiscal Year 2012.

“The legislation we are approving today keeps funding for intelligence essentially flat from fiscal year 2011, representing the a meaningful reduction from the President’s request,” said Senate Intelligence Committee chair Sen. Dianne Feinstein (D-CA) on December 14.

Curiously, Rep. Mike Rogers (R-MI), the chair of the House Intelligence Committee, described the outcome somewhat differently on December 16:  “The bill is significantly below the President’s budget request for fiscal year 2012 and further still below the levels authorized and appropriated in fiscal year 2011.”

In both the House and the Senate action on the bill there was a conspicuous absence of public debate on any issue of intelligence policy.  No dissenting views were expressed.  Nor was there any discussion of or insight into current intelligence controversies.  For that, one must turn to other venues, such as “Secrecy defines Obama’s drone war” by Karen DeYoung in today’s Washington Post.

UNCENSORED – FEMEN in Poland

 

TOP-SECRET from the White House – Spain-Germany Spy Organization 1944

DWONLAOD ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS BELOW

spain-spies-1944

UNCENSORED – North Korea and the “Strangest Show on Earth”

Daytime exterior shots in this series can be as old as August 2010. However, many of the photos are from the recent Arirang Mass Games in Pyongyang in October 2010.  For background on the Arirang Mass Games, see the Guardian’s 2005 article “Welcome to the strangest show on earth” which describes the games as “one of the greatest, strangest, most awe-inspiring political spectacles on earth.”

 

Rehearsals for the October 10th Worker’s Party anniversary parade. Photo by James Huang.

Kim Il Sung welcomes you to Sunan Airport Pyongyang. Photo by James Huang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

One of the two Pyongyang metro stations tourists are allowed to see – Pyongyang, North Korea. Photo by Daniel K.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Propaganda posters at the entrance to the Pyongyang Metro. Photo by efdixon.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by efdixon.

Photo by efdixon.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by James Huang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by Crescent Zhang.

Photo by James Huang.

UNCENSORED – North Korea Kim Jong-il Hysterical Mourner Photos

Pyongyang residents react as they mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/Kyodo

Pyongyang residents react as they mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/Kyodo

Pyongyang residents react as they mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/Kyodo

Pyongyang residents react as they mourn the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. REUTERS/Kyodo

North Koreans cry and scream in a display of mourning for their leader Kim Jong Il at the foot of a giant statue of his father Kim Il Sung in Pyongyang, North Korea, after Kim Jong Il’s death was announced Monday, Dec. 19, 2011. North Korea’s news agency reported that he had died at 8:30 a.m. Saturday after having a heart attack on a train, adding that he had been treated for cardiac and cerebrovascular diseases for a long time. He was 69. (AP Photo/APTN)

Pyongyang residents reacts as they mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. REUTERS/Kyodo

North Koreans mourn the death of their leader Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang on December 21, 2011. North Korea said that millions of grief-stricken people turned out to mourn “Dear Leader” Kim Jong-Il, whose death has left the world scrambling for details about his young successor. AFP PHOTO/Kyodo

Pyongyang residents reacts as they mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/Kyodo

A woman and her son cry as they mourn the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il at a square on Mansu Hill in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/Kyodo

North Korean men cry as they mourn the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang December 19, 2011 in this picture released by the North’s official KCNA news agency on Monday. North Korean leader Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/KCNA

North Koreans mourn in front of a picture of their late leader Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang on December 21, 2011. North Korea said that millions of grief-stricken people turned out to mourn “Dear Leader” Kim Jong-Il, whose death has left the world scrambling for details about his young successor. AFP PHOTO/Kyodo

North Koreans mourn as they pay their respects to their late leader Kim Jong Il in Pyongyang on December 21, 2011. North Korea said that millions of grief-stricken people turned out to mourn “Dear Leader” Kim Jong-Il, whose death has left the world scrambling for details about his young successor. AFP PHOTO/Kyodo

(111220) — BEIJING, Dec. 20, 2011 (Xinhua) — Nationals of the Democratic People’s Republic of Korea (DPRK) in China mourn the death of DPRK top leader Kim Jong Il at the DPRK embassy in Beijing, capital of China, Dec. 20, 2011. (Xinhua/Liu Weibing) (ry)

North Koreans mourn for deceased leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang in this picture released by the North’s official KCNA news agency early December 21, 2011. North Korea was in seclusion on Tuesday, a day after it announced the death of its leader Kim Jong-il, as concern mounted over what would happen next in the deeply secretive nation that is trying to build a nuclear arsenal. REUTERS/KCNA

North Koreans mourn for deceased leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang in this picture released by the North’s official KCNA news agency early December 21, 2011. North Korea was in seclusion on Tuesday, a day after it announced the death of its leader Kim Jong-il, as concern mounted over what would happen next in the deeply secretive nation that is trying to build a nuclear arsenal. REUTERS/KCNA

North Koreans mourn for their deceased leader Kim Jong-il at the Kumsusan Memorial Palace in Pyongyang in this picture taken on December 21, 2011 and released by the North’s KCNA news agency on December 23, 2011. Kim Jong-il, who ruled isolated and impoverished North Korea from 1994, died on December 17, 2011, according to the state’s media. REUTERS/KCNA

Pyongyang residents react as they mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il in Pyongyang, in this photo taken by Kyodo on December 19, 2011. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/Kyodo

Residents kneel down as they mourn the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il during a gathering in a square in Pyongyang in this December 19, 2011 still image taken from video. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme. REUTERS/KCNA

Employees of Pyongyang 326 Electric Wire Factory mourn over the death of North Korean leader Kim Jong-il, as they gather in a conference hall in Pyongyang December 19, 2011 in this still image taken from video. Kim Jong-il died on a train trip on Saturday, state television reported on Monday, sparking immediate concern over who is in control of the reclusive state and its nuclear programme.

TOP-SECRET – TSA Female Suicide Bombers History Overview

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Why Females?

  • Terrorist organizations use females because:
  • Like most suicide operations, it’s usually simple to plan and low costing.
  • In some parts of the world, females have low social status and therefore are considered more expendable.
  • Females tend to be more emotional and therefore easier to indoctrinate.
  • Since bombers will most likely perish in the attack, there is little fear of them divulging information to security forces.
  • Tamil “Black Tigers” carry cyanide pills just in case.
  • Most are deliberately uninvolved in the planning in case of capture.
  • The media coverage is extensive, especially if the attacker is female.
  • Terrorists attempt to embarrass a powerful enemy and show the world that things are desperate that women are now fighting.
  • Most importantly, females have the element of surprise!!
  • Stealthier attack (tend to draw less attention); in fact on several occasions many female bombers spoke English & wore western clothing & makeup during the attack.
  • Sensitivities in searching women (especially in conservative societies).
  • Female stereotype (e.g. perceived as nonviolent, feminine, or motherly).
  • Women increase the number of combatants to a groups’ depleted manpower.
  • There is greater publicity for female bombers (attracts recruits).
  • The psychological fear factor of the target (expect anyone can be a bomber).

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DOWNLOAD ORGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

TSA-FemaleSuicideBombers

Christmas greeting from Louis Armstrong – The Night Before Christmas – Wonderfull !

Uncensored – FEMEN Solidarity message to FEMEN Holland

 

FEMEN Solidarity Video Message to FEMEN Holland

A video created by FEMEN entitled, FEMEN Solidarity Message to FEMEN Holland, caused quite a stare when it was placed on YouTube and then linked to various individual’s Facebook pages.

To some it came as a shock that people would be so upset to see this video because of the message and the aim, to send a message of solidarity to sisters in protest against overconsumption and corporate greed.  It was as if people forgot that there is such a thing as nonsexual nudity.  After all, one can walk into any art museum to find examples. However, this video was flagged on YouTube as obscene.  Since YouTube recognizes non-sexual nudity, the video was not taken down, simply marked as “age-restricted.”

The fact that viewers could be so disgusted and disturbed at the site of women’s breast that they would have to declare “The sky is falling!” is a testament to how little this society has progressed. Some commenter’s on Facebook even went so far as to say that what they women were doing was not a valid form of protest.  Surprising so, many of these commentators were also people who themselves were Occupiers or those who supported the Occupy movement.  The irony being that there are some people who might think Occupiers sleeping outside for days “like animals, without taking baths,” is barbaric behavior; as such comments have been heard on conservative talk radio and read on conservative blogs.  For example: M. James Currier wrote an open letter entitled, “Letter: Occupiers need a bath”, where he said, “The occupiers’ barbaric behavior has changed the national political conversation from “the Democrats have no tea party” to “look at those lazy Democrat occupiers.” Despite these attitudes, many continue to sleep outside, without access to showers, because they believe in their cause. These women are no different. They are utilizing a form of protest that is common in their country because they too believe in their cause.

FEMEN (Фемен) is a Ukrainian protest group based in Kiev, founded in 2008. The organization became internationally known for organizing topless protests against sex tourists, international marriage agencies, sexism and other social, national and international ills. (FEMEN Holland was founded on 12.02.2011.)

The video message is as follows:

We want to express our solidarity with our sisters in Holland. We know this Millionaire Fair is full of unnecessary luxury. Toys for the boys. And women for decoration. The empty-headed spenders, who rather buy a new car, or a new fashion bag every day than spending some time of the day on a deeper thought. Even for once)

this international fair is a slap in the face of all ordinary people who suffer from the financial crisis. Millions of people are at the risk of losing everything in Europe, but here the filthy rich keep on partying. If nothing else outside their glamorous world exists.

But they are the ones who caused the international crisis in the first place. They are part of the international network of high finance. Bankers and investors. Speculators. Corrupt politicians, ‘Businessmen’. Mafia. They all work together in an world-wide, oppressive, financial system. And instead on investing their money in the future of the planet, they prefer to waste it here on useless extravaganza.

They are driven by greed. Destroyers of ordinary peoples live. Gambling with their money. Make them responsible for the debts when it goes wrong. Annexing their houses. Their land. Taking away their jobs. Stealing their future. Making them poor, so they can sit on golden toilets in diamond closets. And shit on the world.

We must stop this world-wide cult of ignorant selfishness. Of intellectual emptiness. Of material waste. Of cultural barbarism. Or it will become the end of civilization as we know it.

 

FUCK YOU OLIGARCHS! 

TOP-SECRET-FBI (U//FOUO) Preliminary Analysis of Christmas Day Underwear Bomb

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(U//FOUO) The Terrorist Explosive Device Analytical Center (TEDAC) conducted a preliminary analysis of the approximately 30 pieces of evidence recovered after the 25 December 2009 attempted bombing of Northwest Airlines flight 253. The evidence consisted of a plastic syringe initiator with traces of Ethyl Glycol, a main charge of 76 grams of Pentaerythritol Tetranitrate (PETN) wrapped in a container made of thin soft “plastic” film-like material and tape and clothing worn by the bomber. The underwear worn by the bomber was modified to provide storage of the main charge which was anatomically congruent, possibly to avoid detection during screening. The underwear sustained thermal damage. Blue jeans worn by the bomber also sustained thermal damage (scorching) on the inside with small spots of melted plastic on the outside surface.

 

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Recommendation – Spy Thriller E-Book Features National Security Archive

 

Washington, DC, December 24, 2011- The new E Books by bestselling thriller writer James Grady features the National Security Archive as the scene of a key plot sequence, and also as the location for Grady’s video introduction to the series.

The E-Book series includes Grady’s classic book SIX DAYS OF THE CONDOR – which became the basis for the acclaimed Robert Redford movie that subtracted three days – and the renamed and re-introduced thriller, THE NATURE OF THE GAME, featuring the Archive as a key source for the investigative journalist protagonist. Also included in the series are the new novella, CONDOR.NET, and the short story THIS GIVEN SKY.

Grady filmed his video introduction to the series, published by Open Road Integrated Media, in the Archive documents reading room this fall, and testifies, “The Archive’s help and support allowed me to make THE NATURE OF THE GAME more than just another thriller. The Archive’s work in revealing truth behind government and political spin is vital for our global culture.”


The Nature of the Game

In this classic thriller, presented with a new introduction by the author, a down-and-out ex-CIA operative runs from his former masters and propels us like a bullet through the secret spy history of America.

Jud is not too drunk to recognize the assassin. How the hit man found him in this hard-bitten roadhouse, Jud isn’t sure, but he’s not going to go down without a fight. His hands shaking too much for close combat, Jud perches himself on the bar’s roof and drops on the assassin when he steps into the darkness. Though Jud only meant to stun, the man is dead. Jud doesn’t care.

Quitting the CIA has not proven as easy as he hoped. Once one of the Agency’s top killers, Jud’s skills have been dulled by civilian life, and his only chance is to go into hiding. Before he disappears off the grid, he makes a call to Nick Kelley, a D.C. journalist who is one of the only men Jud can trust. Between the two of them, they have a shot atstopping the rot at the heart of the CIA. That is, if the rot doesn’t kill them first.

 

 

TOP-SECRET – LulzSec Release: EPIC Language of the Cartels Narco Terminology Report

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The El Paso Intelligence Center DEA/CBP Gang Intelligence Unit has been providing intelligence reports on many National gangs affecting this region such as the Surenos, Mexican Mafia and the Nortenos. These reports are condensed and include a short history of the gang, identifiers and current trends for the purposes of providing quick reference and concise information to the street officer that may encounter these individuals throughout the course of their duty.

In 2009, the National Drug Intelligence Center (NDIC) assessed that Mexican drug trafficking organizations (DTOs) were operating in the U.S. in at least 1, 286 cities spanning nine regions. Moreover, NDIC assesses with high confidence that Mexican DTO’s in at least 143 of these U.S. cities were linked to a specific Mexican Cartel or DTO based in Mexico—the Sinaloa Cartel (at least 75 cities), the Gulf Cartel/Los Zetas (at least 37 cities), the Juárez Cartel (at least 33 cities), the Beltrán-Leyva DTO (at least 30 cities), La Familia Michoacán (at least 27 cities), or the Tijuana Cartel (at least 21 cities). NDIC assesses with high confidence that Mexican DTOs will further expand their drug trafficking operations in the United States. Due to the rise in violence throughout the Southwest Region and Mexico, members of the Cartels, their associates and their families have been suspected of moving into many U.S. cities along the border. As a result, agencies are requesting information on ways to identify those involved with drug trafficking organizations. The information included in this report is not set in stone as many of these criminal organizations are dynamic and will alter their methods and trends frequently to avoid detection by law enforcement.

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DOWNLOAD THE ORGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

EPIC-NarcoLanguage

Confidential – Washington, D.C. Fusion Center: Officer Safety and Intelligence Issues

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SEARCH OF A VEHICLE’S ELECTRONIC MEMORY: Due to the increased sophistication of automobile electronics, criminal investigators should consider establishing probable cause for a search of the automobile’s electronic memory prior to the execution of a search warrant on a suspect’s vehicle. Newer vehicles are commonly installed with Bluetooth technology which allows cellular telephones to link with the automobile and allow for hands free operation of the phone. Bluetooth technology can download or synchronize the cellular handset’s contact list to the vehicle’s electronic memory storage. The contact list/phonebook capacity varies from just over 100 to upwards of 10,000 entries according to the particular system installed. These entries can be stored and accessible even after the phone is no longer linked to the vehicle and after the ignition is disengaged. If a navigation system is also installed in the vehicle, the contact list may have addresses or GPS coordinates associated with the phone number entries. Although Bluetooth technology allows for twoway exchange of data, the Bluetooth Profile implemented in vehicle systems does not allow phonebooks downloaded from one cellular handset to be uploaded to another handset or device. Thus, agents executing a search warrant should be prepared to manually record searched entries. The current trend indicates Bluetooth technology will become more common in vehicles as a means of operating a cellular phone while driving. California, Connecticut, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Washington State, the District of Columbia, and the U.S. Virgin Islands have all adopted laws banning drivers from talking on handheld cellular phones while driving, with momentum building for the passage of laws in other states. Whereas a few years ago, only high end vehicles from luxury manufacturers provided Bluetooth technology as an option, many manufacturers offer Bluetooth technology as a factory installed option on lower end models such as the Ford Focus. MSNBC reports that by 2013, approximately 30 percent of all new car sales will be purchased with handsfree features onboard. Numerous suppliers and manufacturers offer aftermarket kits to install the technology in vehicles lacking factory installation and the kits are selling in the millions. The exploitation of this feature presents investigators with a possible wealth of investigative evidence to be obtained from target’s vehicle by utilizing a search warrant to access the vehicle’s electronic memory. The search of a vehicle’s electronic systems for navigation information or telephone, address, or calendar information stored in a vehicle via a Bluetooth connection implicates the 4th Amendment. A search warrant or an exception to the search warrant requirement, such as exigent circumstances, search incident to arrest, or the vehicle exception may be required to conduct the search.

 

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Confidential – Surenos Special Gang Report about Mexican Gangs

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ORIGIN OF THE SURENOS

California’s Hispanic criminal street gangs are divided into the north (norteno) or south (sureno). The dividing line is generally recognized as being near the city of Delano but others argue the dividing line is Bakersfield or somewhere near the area of Kern County.

Historically, Hispanic gangs north of the dividing line have claimed allegiance to the Nortenos and those to the south claimed allegiance to the Surenos. All California Hispanic criminal street gangs claim allegiance to the Nortenos or Surenos, with the exception of the Fresno Bulldogs. Whether it’s on the streets or in the correctional facilities, the Fresno Bulldogs function independently and do not align themselves with Nortenos or Surenos. The Fresno Bulldogs are a unique California based gang that has the power, strength and a large enough membership to stand on its own and remain free from the politics of the Nortenos and Surenos. All other Hispanic criminal street gangs are forced to choose a side whether they want to join in or not.

SURENO

The word sureno translates to “southerner” in Spanish and the word “sur” translates to the word south. The Sureno gang or gang movement includes the three California “super” gangs–18th Street, Florencia 13 and Mara Salvatrucha–as well as hundreds of other Hispanic gangs. Surenos include all Southern California criminal street gangs except the Maravilla* gangs of East Los Angeles.

The Sureno gang structure is very loose and has no formal rank structure but there are well-known veteranos and “shot callers” who
have influence within the gangs. *The early residents of a lowcost housing project in East L.A. nicknamed the housing project maravillosa (Spanish for marvelous). In the early 1950s various maravillas were responsible for the creation of the Mexican Mafia prison gang. Several of the maravilla gangs members becames disillusioned with the newly-formed Mexican Mafia. Many of these maravilla gang members chose to no longer align themselves to the mafia. A gang that developed nearby called itself Maravilla and with the gang’s believe that due to its history and standing within the community, it should not and would not have a loyalty to the Mexican Mafia. Gang members determined they would not pay taxes as other gangs willingly had done. This blatant act of defiance and disrespect resulted in members of the Maravilla gangs being placed on a gang “green light” list by the Mexican Mafia. As a result of this kill on sight order by the Mexican Mafia, gangs claiming allegiance to the Surenos were bitter enemies with the Maravilla gangs on the street. Once incarcerated, however, Maravilla gang members sought protection to avoid being killed by members of the Mexican Mafia. It was not until recently that the “kill on sight” order against the Maravilla sets was recalled by the leadership of the Mexican Mafia.

Currently there are several gangs in the Maravilla area that are loyal to the Mexican Mafia. There are also several Maravilla gangs in that area that aren’t aligned to the Mexican Mafia that are referred to as Los Maravillosos.They are led by those men that were disillusioned by the
original mafia.

EAST L.A. GANGS

MARAVILLA

The Maravilla (MV) gangs, also called varrios, cover a large part of East Los Angeles and are broken up into various cliques such as Hoyo Mara (the “Hole” because of the lowered terrain it sat in), Ford Mara (after Ford Blvd.), Arizona Mara (a main street in East L.A.), Marillana Mara (MMV, sometimes confused with Mexican Mafia, they were around way before), Rock Mara (after a big rock in the projects), etc.

Maravilla predates the Mexican Mafia but at one time there were a lot of Maravillas in la EME. Joe Morgan, a figurehead for the EME for over 20 years was well known in East Los and Maravilla. There are other Maravilla gangs in the U.S., some may be connected to the East L.A. groups, and others may have just used the same name. Some MV and former EME members did not like the EME trying to tax them and telling them what to do in their own varrio. There was a green light put out by the EME on the MV’s for their rebellion. The MV had to be separated from EME and Sureño sympathizers in the L.A. County jail. To date this green light has not been lifted. One of the shotcallers for la EME is Alfred “Chato” Sandoval from Arizona Maravilla, so there are some MV still loyal to the EME and Sureños.

WHITE FENCE

One of the first barrios in Los Angeles to form its own gang was “White Fence.” The gang was called that because of a white picket fence that ran along much of its territory near railroad tracks near the Los Angeles River and downtown. WF’s original barrio is all of Boyle Heights and WF is still strong along Lorena Street. They allegedly used to have cliques throughout the San Gabriel Valley and Northeast L.A. Maravillas’ original barrio is farther in East L.A. These two gangs have a decades old rivalry, the longest ongoing feud in L.A. Both of these barrios have lost extensive territory and are now midgets compared to their former size, but in actual gang members, they are bigger than ever. There is some evidence that the Hazards, Avenues, Toonerville, and Frogtown were all once cliques off of White Fence, according to veterano members
from White Fence. Kilroy Roybal is with Victory Outreach and was recently in an accident.

PRIMERA FLATS AND 4TH FLATS

These gangs were both historically part of the Aliso Village government housing projects. Primera Flats is of course more notable as far as street
gangs are concerned. It lies approximately three miles east of the Los Angeles City Hall. This area also has street gangs that came into prominence in the early 1940s. It also was originally built for military personnel, but like Hazard, it became a low-income housing project. Primera Flats also had some bitter fights with some of the same gangs that Hazard fought with. It, being closer to downtown, however, also had problems with many of those downtown gangs. Primera Flats, like Maravilla, have fights with street gangs within their own turf.

HAZARD

The government housing project called Ramona Gardens is the oldest type of housing in the East Los Angeles area. It was built for the families of the military in 1941. As World War II waned toward the end of 1945, most of the military families had relocated and families that were either dependent on a stipend from Social Security, or were a low income family started moving in. This “barrio” has actually two separate areas: Big Hazard and Little

Hazard. Hazard got its name from a park at the end of Lancaster Avenue and Soto Street. There also is a street named Hazard. Big Hazard encompasses all the housing area and also the park. Little Hazard, is that area from west of Soto Street along Norfolk and to the railroad tracks across from Lincoln Park. Robert “Robot” Salas (deceased Dec. ’04) was from Hazard and was involved in the first major EME confrontation with the NF at San Quentin Sept. 16, 1968. Old EME shotcaller in the Fed-BOP Adolf “Champ” Reynoso is also from Hazard as is Manuel “Cricket” Jackson. This varrio has also been the focus of much violence over the years. EME David “Big Smilon” Gallardo from Hazard, “Pee-Wee” Aguire from the Aves, and “Cowboy” Therrien from Big Basset were found guilty of killing “Rocky” Luna who was from Hazard and an advisor on the movie by Edward James Olmos, “American Me.” Ana Lizarga, another movie consultant, also was killed. They were angry at her for snitching off a “dope house” and “Charlie Brown” Manriquez for not taking care of business and living like a bum when he got out. “Lives in Hazard” depicts some of these people and also includes a fairly new gang called M.C. Force, or Michigan Criminal Force, named after a street east of there in East L.A. street east of there in East L.A.

HOYO SOTO

Deceased EME shotcaller Benjamin “Topo” Peters claimed this varrio. EME Gilbert “Shotgun” Sanchez (deceased) also lived there. His son “Ray-Ray” dropped out.

VARRIO NUEVO ESTRADA

Hazard Gang also had trouble with Varrio Nuevo Estrada. The Estrada Courts Projects are just off of Olympic Street and just east of Soto Street and west of Lorena. There are many colorful murals in this project. VNE are not found much outside of the Estrada Courts area. Many other L.A. gangs are known even outside of CA. Ray “Mundo” Mendoza and “Eddie Sailor” Gonzales claimed VNE and rolled on the EME in the 70s. VNE has a reputation for being EME informants. EME Jimmy “Smokey” Sanchez is ok at the Bay.

SAN GABRIEL VALLEY (SGV)

The San Gabriel Valley grew tremendously in the 1960s and ’70s. Many families who were originally from East L.A. moved to the SGV. Later, some from SGV moved out to the Inland Empire. Gangs like El Monte Flores, El Monte Hicks, La Puente, Basset Grande, Bolen Parque (Baldwin Park), have been around for decades and have gang members very involved in La EME.

SANGRA

“Sangra” is a very old gang. A former member, “Stumpy” Valencia, was involved in a sanctioned homicide of EME member Alex “Moe” Ferrel. Ferrel had been involved in the rape of a woman outside of Sacramento soon after being paroled. This, combined with his siding with the Nico Velasquez of the Folsom EME faction and against Joe Morgan of the San Quentin faction concerning the BGF war, put him “in the hat.” Velasquez was later killed.

EL MONTE FLORES

El Monte Flores is an old clique that dominated gang activity in the City of Monte for decades. El Monte Hicks is another gang located in the city. David Alvarez from EMH was a SUR/EME rep at the L.A. county jail who would pass green-light lists. Both gangs declared war on North Side Monte and that clique was near the top of the EME green light list for years. Many members of EMF are also EME members. Louie “Pelon” Maciel was a EMF member involved in one of the RICO trails. He was found to be involved in a large drug running group at the L.A. Co. Jail that was busted up in “Operation Hard Candy.” Jo-Jo Perea was a “money man” for the prison gang. “Danger” Validivia was a EMF member who would do hits for La EME and was known to secrete a razor blade under his dentures.

LA PUENTE 13

La Puente or just Puente 13, is another large and old clica. They have since broken up into smaller factions who do not always affiliate with one another. The Happy Homes varrio (not to be confused with Happy Town in Pomona) does affiliate with La Puente on occasion. La Puente can also be found in the Valinda Flats area where they have intruded. Their rivals are Valinda Flats gang members and in recent years there has been violent gang activities in this area. Deceased Folsom EME Nico Velasquez was from La Puente.

BASSET GRANDE

Basset Grande, also known as Big Basset, dates back to the 1950s. The turf boundaries of BG varrio are roughly Fransiquito Blvd. on the north, Don Julian on the south, the 605 Freeway on the west, and Sunquist Blvd. on the east. It has had several members involved with La EME. The Huguez brothers are similar to the Grajeda family in that many of their blood relatives have been involved with La EME. A member named “Cowboy” Therion was involved in a RICO trial in L.A. of EME members. Cowboy has “Mafioso” tattooed across his abdomen and has now dropped out of the prison gang.

BOLEN PARQUE 13

Bolen Parque, in the city if Balwin Park, has several gangs in its area. Local citizens and community activists have resorted to painting dark green ivy murals on major streets to keep the tagging down. Gangs are very active in East Side Bolen Parque.

POMONA VALLEY GANGS

Pomona is a large and isolated city in the extreme East of the San Gabriel Valley in L.A. County. It is home to the L.A. County Fair at the famous Ganesha Park. It is home to many different various gangs. The biggest and oldest is the Pomona 12 Street gang named after a street there. It claims its origins back to the 40s. P12 is also called Sharkies and at one time they had their own “official” park which the city has tried to reclaim back from the gangsters. Their symbol is a shark with a “cherry” in its mouth. P12 has had several  members in the past in La EME. A few P12 are in Oregon, Washington State, and even some in PA! The secondary gang is Cherry Ville, P12’s longtime rivals, which is at least from the 60s. Their territory lies right up to P12 and centers around Hamilton Park. Then there is P Michoacanos, E/S Carnales, W/S Happy Town, Pomona Sur XIII who are also rivals with P12 and many have now moved to the La Puente area or out to Las Vegas. There was a group which is now mostly defunct called North Side Pomona. There is a West Side Pomona who are also in Washington. There is even a Hazard clique, and a Dog Town clique, 18th Street and MS clique there too. Pomona is in L.A. County but closer to the Inland Empire than it is to L.A. so rivals with most varrios in the Inland Empire. Recent suppression efforts by law enforcement have reduced some of the violence.

INLAND EMPIRE GANGS

The San Gabriel Valley grew tremendously in the 1960s and ’70s, just as the Inland Empire did in the 1980s and ’90s. The greater L.A. area is very spread out; many families from East L.A. moved to the San Gabriel Valley, and some from SGV moved out to the Inland Empire past Fontana, Colton, and Rialto as land became more and more scarce, eating up valuable farmland, orchards, and vineyards.

The Ontario Black Angels are infamous for being the clique of disgraced EME shotcaller “Tupie” Hernandez’ varrio. They have junior cliques such as OVS or Ontario Varrio Sur. One member recently tried to make his bones by attempting to shoot at an Ontario cop. There are the Chino Sinners which “Tupie” got in trouble for when he stepped in while the EME wanted a “green light” on them. His mother also got involved in EME politics that resulted in several of his family being assaulted and in combination with his insults about Joe Morgan and not making a phone call for the carnales (brothers), led to him being stabbed in federal detention. Daryl Castrellon had the Black Angels’ reins in California Department of Corrections, but since parole has picked up “the Bible.” There is still a lot of money to be made in the fast growing Inland Empire! Back in Arizona in 1999, Officer Dale Thrush identified, with help from a CI, a Black Angel member named Frank “Smoky” Alcala, as OVS. He was wanted out of California on a parole violation. He had all the other gang members, from different gangs, scared of him  and thinking he was EME. Reports were coming in that he was taxing other members, allegedly for the EME and was a suspect in a home invasion where a stabbing occurred. Alcala was a suspect in a stolen vehicle pursuit then fled on foot and two loaded pistols were left behind. That night he was in the parking lot of a Circle K, having just done a strong arm robbery on a 38th Street gang associate. He was in the process of carjacking the vehicle of a 38th Street gang member. Shots were fired and law enforcement responded. Dale pulled in and was about to exit the vehicle when “Smoky” drove the Dodge Ram right into the driver’s door. Luckily, Dale was able to jump inside. Alcala then rammed the door again. We put 16 rounds into the vehicle and would you believe he was only hit in the arm and butt! These guys are very serious! Along with other tattoos he had a large letter “B” on the back of his left arm and a large letter “A” on his right arm, along with “Ontario” on the back of his neck.

“Spider” Arriaga was an old EME members mistakenly killed a few years ago by his crime partner “Colorado” Arias from Colton (also EME) during a robbery. Members like Roland Berry have been involved in disputes around Bloomas. Recently, there was a police sting operation on EME operating in the IE. Unfortunately, police hit them too late so evidence was minimal. Word is, the EME carnales at Corcoran and Pelican Bay found out what was coming down, got word out and all mail stopped, which just goes to show they have a better network than we do! In Riverside, Casa Blanca, out in Rancho Cucamonga, the Cuca Kings, and Corona has various cliques, the oldest which centers around 6th Street.

Verdugo Gangsters are from San Berdoo (San Bernardino). West Side Verdugo is the predominant gang in the middle of the valley. The major cliques of WSV are 7th Street (CSL), Sur Crazy Ones (SCO), and Little Counts. As a whole though, the entire Verdugo gang has a lot of problems and is constantly being challenged by other gangs from mostly the Los Angeles areas. The two that are currently showing a presence here are Florencia Trece and King Boulevard Stoners (KBS). Then there is the perpetual WSV enemy East Side Trece. We see a lot of LA gang members moving into the area and causing problems, 18th Street being one of them.

NORTH L.A. GANGS

HIGHLAND PARK 13

This gang is located in the area just west of Pasadena. It has a high Hispanic population, and as the case in many of the barrios, a small percentage belong to HP13. They claim origins going back to the early 1940s.

AVENUES

Northeast Los is an old region of LA barrios. Its most famous, and perhaps most infamous gang is the Avenues or Avenidas gang, which is named after the numbered avenues off of Figueroa. They themselves have several cliques such as 43rd Avenue and Cypress Avenues and did not get along at first but later joined together for convenience. The 43rd allegedly broke off of Hazards and the Cypress allegedly broke off Frogtown. The Avenues is a very large gang in numbers and been subject to City/County Community Law Enforcement and Recovery (CLEAR). Alfred “Tigre” Salinas is from the Aves. EME member “Pee-Wee” Aguirre is from La EME. His brother “Lil One” had been causing problems in the L.A. Co. Jail. EME Black Bob Ramirez (deceased Sept. ‘05) claimed Aves and Canta Ranas.

WEST L.A. GANGS

18TH STREET

This gang started on the West Side of Los Angeles around 1965. It was originally made up largely of second generation Hispanic immigrants. As the 18th Street gang began to battle with more established Chicano gangs, they began to recruit outside of the Hispanic community. ILGIA estimates their size in 2006 to be 20,000+ members in over 120 U.S. cities. They are also big in Latin America. According to the Department of Justice, an estimated 60% were illegal immigrants. Colors are often black and grey (Raider colors), dark blue (to show support for SUR13), but they may wear red on the East Coast and beads as well. Common hand signs are forming an “18” or thrown sideways “E” (for Eighteen). Common 18th Street tats include 18, XV3, XVIII, Diesiocho, 666 (=18).

The 18th Street gang has chapters on the North (Hollywood area), in East L.A./County, and in South Central Los Angeles where their traditional enemies are the Florencia 13 gang. They also fight Black P-Stones (R20s) in South Central and in jail. They now have cliques in San Diego, Las Vegas, Inland Empire, the Bay Area, Chicago, Texas Florida, and even a clique in New York. They are big in Portland, Oregon, and in Washington state where they have a web site. They are seen in New Jersey where they fall under La Raza Unida umbrella. They have whole towns claiming allegiance to them in El Salvador, Guatemala, and Mexico with large cliques in Mexico City DF and Tijuana. They even show a clique from Australia on their main 18th Street website!

MARA SALVATRUCHA

When it comes to Sureno gangs, MS13 is not the biggest, but by most accounts is the most violent in the U.S. today. The Mara Salvatrucha (MS) gang was originally made up of  mostly Salvadorans and originated in the Los Angeles area. During and after the civil war that was going on during the 1980s in El Salvador, many Salvadorans migrated to the Pico-Union District around the area of McArthur Park, which has the highest population density in the United States outside of New York City. Other neighborhoods that they moved into in Los Angeles County were Westlake, Hollywood, San Fernando Valley and East L.A. When the MS first started out, many of their members were called “MS Stoners.” They had long hair and would listen to loud heavy metal music and would drive souped-up muscle cars. A common MS handsign is the index finger and pinky finger held up.  Some of the members were also into Satanism and were involved with a Salvadoran National Guard Unit called “Santanas.” There is another MS clique called “Sailor’s” allegedly started by former military members.

Allegedly many MS were initially members of soccer teams. Later, they evolved into a full-fledged gang, in part, to protect themselves from the 18th Street gang that was nearby and victimizing them. This is how Mara Salvatruch was originally translated from Spanish to English by law enforcement when they first learned of this violent gang. “Mara” meant gang, “Salva” was for El Salvador, and “trucha” for beware. However, it turns out that many MS gang members and the Central American community are in agreement that “Mara Salvatrucha” simply means Salvadoran Gang. “Mara” means gang or group, and “Salvatrucha” slang for Salvadoran, hence the meaning Salvadoran Gang. The MS did not consider themselves Sureños for approximately 15 years. Many of the older MS do not have any “13″ markings, just “MS” tattoos. Finally the Mara Salvatrucha joined the Sureño back in 1994, during the Black vs. Brown riots in the Los Angeles County Jail system. Several Mexican Mafia RICO suspects had strong ties to MS and it is now common to see MS13. Their original colors were black from their Santanas roots, but they will also wear blue and white colors, which match the Salvadorian flag. On the East Coast they often wear blue and white beads. The MS have started taxing street vendors, prostitutes, small businesses, and street level drug dealers working in their turf. Failure to pay will most likely result in some type of violence. Mexicans, Guatemalans, Hondurans, and other Central Americans may join MS, but not exclusively.

 

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TOP-SECRET – Vatican Bank May Have Used Clergy as Fronts for Mafia, Corrupt Businessmen

Pope Benedict XVI talks to the head of the Vatican bank Ettore Gotti Tedeschi (R) in this September 26, 2010 file photo. Gotti Tedeschi has been placed under investigation by Rome magistrates for suspected money-laundering by the bank, judicial sources said on September 21, 2010. REUTERS/OSSERVATORE ROMANO/Files

Vatican Bank ‘allowed clergy to act as front for Mafia’ (Indepdendent.co.uk):

The Vatican Bank is under new scrutiny in a case involving money-laundering allegations that led police to seize €23m (£19.25m) in September.

The Vatican calls the seizure of assets a “misunderstanding” and expresses optimism it will be quickly cleared up. But fresh court documents show that prosecutors say the Vatican Bank deliberately flouted anti-laundering laws “with the aim of hiding the ownership, destination and origin of the capital”. The documents also reveal investigators’ suspicions that clergy may have acted as fronts for corrupt businessmen and Mafia.

The documents pinpoint two transactions that have not been reported: one in 2009 involving the use of a false name, and another in 2010 in which the Vatican Bank withdrew €650,000 from an Italian bank account but ignored bank requests to disclose where the money was headed.

The new allegations of financial impropriety could not come at a worse time for the Vatican, already hit by revelations that it sheltered paedophile priests. The corruption probe has given new hope to Holocaust survivors who tried unsuccessfully to sue in the United States, alleging that Nazi loot was stored in the Vatican Bank.

Yet the scandal is hardly the first for the bank, already distinguished from other banks by the fact that its cash machines are in Latin and priests use a private entrance.

In 1986, a Vatican financial adviser died after drinking cyanide-laced coffee in prison. Another, Roberto Calvi, was found dangling from a rope under London’s Blackfriars Bridge in 1982, his pockets stuffed with money and stones. The incidents blackened the bank’s reputation, raised suspicions of ties with the Mafia, and cost the Vatican hundreds of millions of dollars in legal clashes with Italian authorities.

On 21 September, financial police seized assets from a Vatican Bank account. Investigators said the Vatican had failed to furnish information on the origin or destination of the funds as required by Italian law.

The bulk of the money, €20 million, was destined for the American JP Morgan bank branch in Frankfurt, Germany, with the remainder going to Banca del Fucino, an Italian bank.

Vatican Bank mired in laundering scandal (AP):

The Vatican has pledged to comply with EU financial standards and create a watchdog authority. Gianluigi Nuzzi, author of “Vatican SpA,” a 2009 book outlining the bank’s shady dealings, said it’s possible the Vatican is serious about coming clean, but he isn’t optimistic.

“I don’t trust them,” he said. “After the previous big scandals, they said ‘we’ll change’ and they didn’t. It’s happened too many times.”

He said the structure and culture of the institution is such that powerful account-holders can exert pressure on management, and some managers are simply resistant to change.

The list of account-holders is secret, though bank officials say there are some 40,000-45,000 among religious congregations, clergy, Vatican officials and lay people with Vatican connections.

The bank chairman is Ettore Gotti Tedeschi, also chairman of Banco Santander’s Italian operations, who was brought in last year to bring the Vatican Bank in line with Italian and international regulations. Gotti Tedeschi has been on a very public speaking tour extolling the benefits of a morality-based financial system.

“He went to sell the new image … not knowing that inside, the same things were still happening,” Nuzzi said. “They continued to do these transfers without the names, not necessarily in bad faith, but out of habit.”

It doesn’t help that Gotti Tedeschi himself and the bank’s No. 2 official, Paolo Cipriani, are under investigation for alleged violations of money-laundering laws. They were both questioned by Rome prosecutors on Sept. 30, although no charges have been filed.

In his testimony, Gotti Tedeschi said he knew next to nothing about the bank’s day-to-day operations, noting that he had been on the job less than a year and only works at the bank two full days a week.

According to the prosecutors’ interrogation transcripts obtained by AP, Gotti Tedeschi deflected most questions about the suspect transactions to Cipriani. Cipriani in turn said that when the Holy See transferred money without identifying the sender, it was the Vatican’s own money, not a client’s.

Gotti Tedeschi declined a request for an interview but said by e-mail that he questioned the motivations of prosecutors. In a speech in October, he described a wider plot against the church, decrying “personal attacks on the pope, the facts linked to pedophilia (that) still continue now with the issues that have seen myself involved.”

In the scandals two decades ago, Sicilian financier Michele Sindona was appointed by the pope to manage the Vatican’s foreign investments. He also brought in Roberto Calvi, a Catholic banker in northern Italy.

Sindona’s banking empire collapsed in the mid-1970s and his links to the mob were exposed, sending him to prison and his eventual death from poisoned coffee. Calvi then inherited his role.

Calvi headed the Banco Ambrosiano, which collapsed in 1982 after the disappearance of $1.3 billion in loans made to dummy companies in Latin America. The Vatican had provided letters of credit for the loans.

Calvi was found a short time later hanging from scaffolding on Blackfriars Bridge, his pockets loaded with 11 pounds of bricks and $11,700 in various currencies. After an initial ruling of suicide, murder charges were filed against five people, including a major Mafia figure, but all were acquitted after trial.

While denying wrongdoing, the Vatican Bank paid $250 million to Ambrosiano’s creditors.

Both the Calvi and Sindona cases remain unsolved.

CONFIDENTIAL-Mafia, Biker Gang Criminal Cartels Conspire to Control Road Construction Contracts in Quebec

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It’s been whispered about for years, but now the government’s anti-corruption squad says it has proof that organized crime has infiltrated the construction industry and influenced political parties.

The report by former Montreal police chief Jacques Duchesneau and Quebec’s anti-corruption squad and obtained by Radio-Canada and La Presse comes after a year-and-a-half-long investigation.

The UPAC (Unité permanente anticorruption) report, which does not name any firms or individuals, found that prices are regularly hiked by engineering consulting companies and that contractors regularly overrun their costs.

It said Quebec’s Transportation department is laidback about challenging prices, and when it challenges an invoice, the companies often launch a civil suit because they are aware the department will often settle out of court.

Even more damning, the report alleges that Transportation Ministry employees were paid to provide companies with privileged information so those businesses could win government contracts.

Radio Canada released the report in its entirety Thursday evening on its website.

“We have discovered a deeply-rooted and clandestine universe, of an unsuspected scope, that is harmful to our society – in terms of security, the economy, justice and democracy,” the report states.

It claims the road construction industry is run by “a small circle of professionals and business people who specialize in bending the rules in place to enrich themselves at the expense of taxpayers.”

However, it is admitted in the report that the extent of organized crime’s involvement in the industry is difficult to gauge.

“A large number of Quebec construction businesses maintain links with criminal organizations,” it states. “We therefore strongly presume that some among them have an influence on the contracts handed out by the government, and that they have even set foot on the (transport) ministry’s work sites. Even though it is impossible to evaluate the extent of it, we can suspect how much the mafia exerts a presence and its influence in the construction industry.”

Quebec report sheds light on ‘corruption and collusion’ (Globe and Mail):

The report, which was leaked to some media outlets, said that organized crime, biker gangs, construction companies and engineering firms conspired to inflate the cost of road-building projects, devising schemes that also involved kickbacks to political parties.

Cost overruns were planned and became common practice in the industry, according to the report. “Cartels” consisting of the Mafia, biker gangs and construction companies conspired to eliminate competition and manipulate the public-tendering process.

“The suspicions are persistent to the point that a criminal empire was on the verge of being consolidated in the area of road construction,” Mr. Duchesneau wrote in the report’s preamble.

Close ties between Mafia-controlled construction companies and engineering firms and political parties were particularly worrisome, the report said.

“The more contracts they get, the more they give; the more they give, the more influence they have; the more influence they have, the more contracts they get. And the influence is exercised everywhere whether it is by becoming members of foundations or doing fundraising for charity organizations. They become almost untouchable,” a former political aide told the investigators.

The report suggests the Transportation Ministry has lost control over roadwork projects by contracting out work to private firms. In doing so, it said, the ministry lost the expertise to supervise the projects properly, allowing collusion and influence peddling to become rampant.

In one example cited in the report, engineers would say 1,000 truckloads were needed to remove contaminated soil from a construction site, knowing that 100 would do, and the unused money would find its way into the pockets of crime organizations, engineering firms and political parties.

“The Ministry of Transportation has no means to sanction engineering firms who make up wrong cost evaluations and poor plans,” the report stated.

New transport minister won’t release damning document (Montreal Gazette):

A new era of transparency was promised by Pierre Moreau when he took over as transport minister.

But, a week into the job, Moreau has refused to make public a damning report into collusion in Quebec’s construction industry that points the finger at organized crime, construction and engineering firms, Transport Quebec and political parties.

An anti-collusion squad led by former Montreal police chief Jacques Duchesneau prepared the report. Transport Quebec hired him in 2010 to investigate allegations of price-fixing and influence peddling in road contracts.

A handful of media outlets have obtained and published excerpts of Duchesneau’s report. But few have read the entire 78-page document.

On Thursday, Moreau told reporters that when he promised more transparency, he was referring to inspection reports – not a document to be used in criminal probes.

 

Secret from the FBI – Former Union Leader Admits Theft of Union Funds

BUFFALO, NY—U.S. Attorney William J. Hochul, Jr. announced today that former union leader Ellis Woods, 61, of Clarence, N.Y., pleaded guilty to wire fraud before U.S. District Judge Richard J. Arcara. The charge carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison, a $250,000 fine or both.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Russell T. Ippolito, Jr., who is handling the case, stated that the defendant devised a scheme to defraud the Buffalo Educational Support Team (“BEST”). BEST is a union representing more than 900 teacher’s aides and assistants in the Buffalo school district. While working as the elected president of BEST, Woods was provided a union-issued credit card. Between November 18, 2008, and February 7, 2011, Woods used the union credit card to pay for personal expenses, including gambling expenses that he incurred at local area casinos. In total, Woods stole $44,987.70 in union funds.

“Union members contribute hard earned money to benefit the union as a whole, not to line the pockets of union leaders,” said U.S. Attorney Hochul. “Our office will not tolerate such behavior and will vigorously prosecute officials in any organization who seek to take advantage of members.”

The plea is the result of an investigation by the U.S. Department of Labor and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, under the direction of Christopher M. Piehota.

Sentencing is scheduled for April, 19, 2012 at 1:00 p.m. in Buffalo, N.Y. before Judge Arcara.

From the FBI – Convent Employee Charged with Embezzling More Than $100,000 from Catholic Nuns

SAN JOSE, CA—A former lay employee for the Sisters of the Holy Names of Jesus and Mary Catholic Convent (the Convent) in Los Gatos, Calif., was charged yesterday with 14 counts of wire fraud and three counts of mail fraud, United States Attorney Melinda Haag announced. According to the indictment, Linda Gomez (a/k/a Linda Surrett), 65, of Sunnyvale, Calif., used her administrative positions to embezzle cash and to charge personal expenses to a Convent charge card.

According to the indictment, between 1987 and 2010, Gomez worked for the Convent in various administrative capacities, including as the director of food services and the manager of an on-site convenience store. As part of her professional responsibilities, Gomez made purchases for the 75 Catholic nuns and 60 lay employees at the Convent. The Indictment charges that between March 2008 and her resignation in May 2010, Gomez used various methods to embezzle from the Convent, including obtaining fraudulent reimbursements or credits for products she falsely claimed she had purchased for the Convent and its nuns. The Indictment states that Gomez embezzled more than $100,000 from the Convent. In addition to embezzling more than $47,000 in cash, Gomez also fraudulently diverted more than $53,000 of Convent funds for personal expenses such as jewelry, high-end cutlery, purses, shoes, kitchen appliances, and numerous purchases on the QVC and Home Shopping Networks,

The defendant will be issued a summons to make an initial appearance on Jan. 10, 2012, before United States Magistrate Judge Paul S. Grewal. The case is assigned to United States District Court Judge Lucy Koh.

The maximum statutory penalty for wire fraud in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1343, and mail fraud in violation of Title 18, United States Code, Section 1341, is 20 years in prison and a fine of $1 million, plus restitution. Any sentence following conviction would, however, be determined by the court after considering the federal sentencing guidelines, which take into account a number of factors, and would be imposed in the discretion of the court.

Please note: An indictment contains only allegations against an individual and, as with all defendants, Gomez must be presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Joseph Fazioli is prosecuting the case with the assistance of Legal Assistant Kamille Singh. The prosecution is the result of an investigation by the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Further Information:

Case #: CR 11-00955 LHK

TOP-SECRET – Iraq Biometric Automated Toolset (BAT) HIIDE Standard Operating Procedures

Multi-National Forces West Biometric Automated Toolset (BAT) Handheld Interagency Identity Detection Equipment (HIIDE) SOP and TTP

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENTS HERE

MNF-W-HIIDE-SOP

MNF-W-HIIDE-TTP

The FBI reports – Fourteen Citizens of Romania Charged with Participating in Internet Phishing Scheme

David B. Fein, United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut, and Kimberly K. Mertz, Special Agent in Charge of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, today announced the unsealing of an indictment charging 14 Romanian citizens with conspiracy, fraud and identity theft offenses stemming from their alleged participation in an extensive Internet “phishing” scheme.

A phishing scheme uses the Internet to target large numbers of unwary individuals, using fraud and deceit to obtain private personal and financial information such as names, addresses, bank account numbers, credit card numbers, and Social Security numbers. Phishing schemes often work by sending out large numbers of counterfeit e-mail messages, which are made to appear as if they originated from legitimate banks, financial institutions or other companies.

Charged in the indictment are CIPRIAN DUMITRU TUDOR, MIHAI CRISTIAN DUMITRU, BOGDAN BOCEANU, BOGDAN-MIRCEA STOICA, OCTAVIAN FUDULU, IULIAN SCHIOPU, RAZVAN LEOPOLD SCHIBA, DRAGOS RAZVAN DAVIDESCU, ANDREI BOLOVAN, LAURENTIU CRISTIAN BUSCA, GABRIEL SAIN, DRAGOS NICOLAE DRAGHICI, STEFAN SORIN ILINCA and MIHAI ALEXANDRU DIDU, all residents of Romania.

The indictment alleges that, in June 2005, one or more defendants sent a spam e-mail to individuals, including a resident of Madison, Conn., which purported to be from Connecticut-based People’s Bank. The e-mail stated that the recipient’s online banking access profile had been locked and instructed recipients to click on a link to a web page where they could enter information to “unlock” their profile. The web page appeared to originate from People’s Bank, but was actually hosted on a compromised computer unrelated to People’s Bank. Any personal identifying and financial information provided by the individual would be sent by e-mail to one or more of the defendants or to a “collector” account, which was an e-mail account used to receive and collect the information obtained through phishing.

It is alleged that TUDOR, DUMITRU and others used and shared a number of collector accounts, which contained thousands of e-mail messages that contained credit or debit card numbers, expiration dates, CVV codes, PIN numbers, and other personal identification information such as names, addresses, telephone numbers, dates of birth, and Social Security numbers. The co-conspirators then used the personal and financial information to access bank accounts and lines of credit and to withdraw funds without authorization, often from ATMs in Romania.

In addition to People’s Bank, financial institutions and companies allegedly targeted by the defendants included Citibank, Capital One, Bank of America, JPMorgan Chase & Co., Comerica Bank, Regions Bank, LaSalle Bank, U.S. Bank, Wells Fargo & Co., eBay and PayPal.

On January 18, 2007, a federal grand jury sitting in New Haven returned an indictment charging TUDOR, DUMITRU and others with offenses stemming from this phishing scheme. On November 10, 2010, a grand jury returned a second superseding indictment charging TUDOR, DUMITRU and an additional 12 defendants. The second superseding indictment was sealed pending the extradition of the defendants.

Earlier this month, three of the charged defendants were extradited from Romania to the United States. On December 12, 2011, BOLOVAN, 27, appeared before U.S. Magistrate Judge Holly B. Fitzsimmons in Bridgeport, Conn., and the indictment was unsealed at that time. DAVIDESCU, 38, and BUSCA, 26, were arraigned in Bridgeport on December 21, 2011.

Each of the 14 defendants is charged with conspiracy to commit bank fraud, which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of 30 years and a fine of up to $1 million, and conspiracy to commit fraud in connection with access devices, which carries a maximum term of imprisonment of five years and a fine of up to $250,000. Certain defendants, including DAVIDESCU and BUSCA, also are charged with aggravated identity theft, which carries a mandatory consecutive two-year term of imprisonment.

BOLOVAN, DAVIDESCU and BUSCA, who have pleaded not guilty to the charges, are detained pending trial, which is currently scheduled for March 2012.

U.S. Attorney Fein stressed that an indictment is not evidence of guilt. Charges are only allegations, and each defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt.

This matter is being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation in New Haven, Conn., and the Connecticut Computer Crimes Task Force. U.S. Attorney Fein and Special Agent in Charge Mertz also acknowledged the critical assistance provided by the U.S. Department of Justice Office of International Affairs; the FBI Legal Attaché in Bucharest; Interpol in Zagreb and Washington, D.C.; the Romanian National Police; and the United States Marshals Service.

The case is being prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Edward Chang.

Uncensored – FEMEN against KBG

 

Ukrainian girls action against KGB in Belarus
http://nov.io/cLN2kU

From the CIA – The Intelligence Officer’s Bookshelf

DOWNLOAD E-BOOK HERE

Peake-The Intelligence Officers Bookshelf-Vol53 -Sep 08

UNCENSORED AND NEW – Topless women FEMEN protesters

CONFIDENTIAL – FBI Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) Model Memorandum of Understanding

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

FBI-JTTF-MOU

TOP-SECRET – U.S. Army Afghanistan Smart Book, Third Edition

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DOWNLOAD THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

AfghanSmartBook

 

DER “GoMoPa” ADRESSEN-FRIEDHOF BUCHSTABE A UND DIE GEFÄLSCHTEN MITGLIEDERZAHLEN

gomopa-friedhof-adressen-verwaltung

Download Link oben

Die gefälschten Mitgliederzaheln von “GoMoPa”.

Gomopa dürfte ohnehin ein Glaubwürdigkeitsproblem haben, denn der Dienst fiel mit falschen oder fragwürdigen Äußerungen auf. So gibt es laut Website 57 345 Mitglieder (Stand 21. September 2010). Die Mitgliedschaft ist bis auf einen einmonatigen Test kostenpflichtig. Einnahmen aus den Beiträgen beziffert Maurischat in seiner Information aber nur auf um die 5000 Euro. Selbst wenn alle Mitglieder die günstigste Variante gewählt haben, ergäben sich rechnerisch weit weniger als 1000 zahlende Mitglieder. Gomopa äußert sich dazu nicht.

http://www.graumarktinfo.de/gm/aktuell/diskussion/:Gomopa–Anwaelte-als-Finanzierungsquelle/616477.html

TOP-SECRET-European Countries Refuse to Release Information on CIA Rendition Flights

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Romania’s National Registry Office for Classified Information (ORNISS) headquarters building is seen in the background of this image taken in Bucharest, December 9, 2011. International media has reported that between 2003 and 2006, the CIA operated a secret prison from the building’s basement, bringing in high-value terror suspects for interrogation and detention. ORNISS has denied hosting a CIA prison and the CIA has refused to comment.

A majority of 28 mostly European countries have failed to comply with freedom of information requests about their involvement in secret CIA flights carrying suspected terrorists, two human rights groups said Monday.London-based Reprieve and Madrid-based Access Info Europe accused European nations of covering up their complicity in the so-called “extraordinary rendition” program by failing to release flight-traffic data that could show the paths of the planes.

The groups said only seven of 28 countries had supplied the requested information. Five countries said they no longer had the data, three refused to release it and 13 had not replied more than 10 weeks after the requests were made.

Europe’s silence is in contrast to the United States, which handed over Federal Aviation Administration records with data on more than 27,000 flight segments.

The groups’ report said that the U.S. had provided “by far the most comprehensive response” and accused European countries of lagging behind when it came to transparency.

“Is it an access to information problem, or is it a problem with this particular issue? It’s a bit of both,” said Access Info Europe executive director Helen Darbishire. “European countries have not completely faced up to their role here.”

Human rights campaigners have worked for years to piece together information on hundreds of covert flights that shuttled suspected terrorists between CIA-run overseas prisons and the U.S. military base at Guantanamo Bay as part of the post-Sept. 11 “War on Terror.”

The CIA has never acknowledged specific locations, but prisons overseen by U.S. officials reportedly operated in Thailand, Afghanistan, Lithuania, Poland and Romania — where terror suspects including Khalid Sheik Mohammad, mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, were interrogated in the basement of a government building in the capital, Bucharest.

 

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL FILE HERE

Rendition_on_Record_19_December_2011

FEMEN – Against Political Prisoners

 

 

 

 

TOP-SECRET-Asymmetric Warfare Group Guide to Insider Threats in Partnering Environments

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This guide assists in three areas. First, it aides military leaders and all personnel to be aware of the indicators associated with insider threat activity while serving in a partnering environment. Second, this guide informs commanders and other leaders by giving them options on how to deal with insider threat activities. This guide is not all encompassing so there are other options a commander has dependent on their operating environment. Lastly, this guide is meant to generate open dialogue between coalition partners and partner nation personnel. Partnering in itself is a sensitive mission and only by creating trust and having an open dialogue with all forces will the mission be accomplished.

Risk Factors

  • Emotional Vulnerability
  • Dissatisfaction with lack of accepted conflict resolution
  • Personal connection to a grievance
  • Positive view of violence
  • Perceived benefit of political violence
  • Social Networks (tech and non tech)
  • In group de-legitimization of the out-group
  • Placement, Access, and Capability
  • External Support
  • Perceived Threat
  • Conflict
  • Humiliation orloss of honor
  • Competition
  • Social Alienation
  • Quid Pro Quo (services or items wanted or needed by an individual given in exchange for information or action)
  • Disproportionate financial risks
  • Susceptible to blackmail
  • Civilian Casualty (CIVCAS) situations
  • Highly emotional
  • Unfair treatment or equipment differences

Cultural Awareness

  • DO NOT use derogatory terms in any language (even in friendly conversation)
  • DO NOT slander host nation or coalition partners (even if only jokingly)
  • DO NOT physically harm host nation or coalition partners (except in self defense)
  • DO NOT put down or slander any religion
  • ALWAYS be courteous and thankful for host nation and coalition partner hospitalityAsymmetric

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

AWG-InsiderThreats

TOP-SECRET – Joint Center for International Security Force Assistance Iraqi Federal Police Advisor Guide

As the U. S. Defense Department scales back operations in Iraq, one of the most significant questions that remains is whether the Iraqi security forces will be capable of maintaining civil order on their own. This manual was produced by the Joint Center for International Security Force Assistance (JCISFA) to help prepare deploying advisors, trainers, and partner forces that will work directly with Iraqi police. The intent is to provide a basic understanding of the country of Iraq and a solid understanding of the current organization and utilization of the Iraqi police. This manual also provides guidance on what it means to work ” by, with and through” a counterpart, and includes observations and insights learned by your predecessors.

In a stable society, a key component to security is the police. While there has been significant progress in the development of the Iraqi police, there is still much work to be done. Historically, the Iraqi police have been held in lower public regard than other components of the security force infrastructure. The Iraqi public viewpoint toward law enforcement as an agency of public safety, security, and service to the community has been far different than law enforcement in most developed nations. Part of our job is to educate the Iraqi police, and the Iraqi population, about the important role police play in a society governed by the rule of law. Rule of law enables the framework for national sovereignty and provides restraints that serve as a check against abusive use of power. Without effective rule of law, we will never gain the security necessary for democratic institutions to be successful.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

JCISFA-IraqiPolice

SZ – SÜDDEUTSCHE ZEITUNG über STALKING- UND ERPRESSER- METHODEN DER STASI-“GoMoPa”

SZ_03.09.2010_Am_virtuellen_Pranger

 

https://berndpulch.org/2011/09/27/suddeutsche-zeitung-uber-die-kriminellen-machenschaften-der-gomopa-3/

FBI reports – Los Fresnos Man Gets 80 Years in Federal Prison for Child Pornography Convictions

BROWNSVILLE, TX—Mark William Woerner, 55, formerly of Las Vegas, Nev., has been sentenced to 960 months in federal prison for distribution and possession of child pornography, United States Attorney Kenneth Magidson announced today. Woerner was convicted by a federal jury on all five counts with which he was charged in June 2011 following one and a half days of trial and less than five minutes of deliberation.

United States District Court Judge Hilda G. Tagle sentenced Woerner to the maximum sentence of 10 years for each of two counts of possessing child pornography and 20 years on each of three counts of distributing child pornography. All sentences were ordered to run consecutively to each other for a total of 80 years in prison without parole. Judge Tagle also ordered him pay a fine of $25,000 and restitution in the amount of $2,246 to the victims.

Woerner was convicted by a jury on June 21, 2011. During trial, testimony and evidence revealed that during two separate undercover operations out of New York and Illinois in April and May of 2010, multiple images and videos of child pornography were downloaded from an online peer-to-peer file-sharing program. After the IP addresses used in each undercover operation were linked to Woerner at his residence in Los Fresnos, Texas, the leads were forwarded to the FBI for further investigation. The government also presented evidence that Woerner sent more than 1,300 images and 90 videos though his e-mail account over a six-month period. A juvenile witness testified that Woerner had given him a thumb drive containing child pornography and had suggested that the juvenile take it to school to share with other students. Woerner possessed and/or distributed more than 8,000 images, which included minors under the age of 12, as well as material that portrayed sadistic or masochistic conduct or other depictions of violence.

In ordering a sentence of the maximum term of imprisonment, Judge Tagle noted Woerner’s lack of acceptance of responsibility and his history of exploiting children who trusted him. Judge Tagle also took into account the total number of images and videos involved in the offenses and their content. Woerner’s sentence was further enhanced because he had distributed images and videos of child pornography to minors and requested that they send him child pornography in return and because he had engaged in a pattern of activity involving the sexual abuse or exploitation of minors. Judge Tagle also found that Woerner had attempted to obstruct justice during the investigation when he solicited the assistance of a fellow inmate to kill an FBI agent in an effort to prevent him from testifying at trial.

This case, prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorneys Carrie Wirsing and V. LaTawn Warsaw, was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section, Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state, and local resources to better locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.projectsafechildhood.gov.

TOP-SECRET – Taliban Top 5 Most Deadly Tactics Techniques and Procedures

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To gain an understanding of the Top 5 casualty producing Tactics, Techniques and Procedures in Afghanistan

To introduce the Top Threat Groups in Afghanistan and along the Pakistani border

To understand the location of hostile action in Afghanistan

To understand Threat weapon employment

– Attack data
– Technology used
– TTP

To introduce Threat use of Information Warfare (INFOWAR) across Tactics, Techniques, and Procedures

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

USArmy-TalibanTTPs

“GoMoPa”-STASI-STALKING VIDEO

Ex-Capital Chefredakteur Brunowsky entlarvt die STASI-Stalker- und Erpresser-Spekulanten-Methoden der “GoMoPa” am Beispiel WGF

Nepper Schlepper Bauernfänger im Internet

Im Internet tummeln sich seit einiger Zeit Finanzportale, in denen anonyme Schreiber manipulative Texte verfassen. Sie richten sich in der Regel gegen kleine, marktenge Börsenwerte und kooperieren mit Anwälten, die vorgeblich Kapitalanleger schützen wollen und für die notwendigen Zitate gut sind.
Das ganze funktioniert so:  Ein kritischer Text in “www.börsennews.de” oder “www.gomopa.net“, anonym oder unter falschem Namen geschrieben, stellt Fragen, ob das Geld der Anleger sicher sei, ohne diese Frage zu beantworten. Der Schreiber sendet diesen Text anonym an Medien wie das Handelsblatt oder FTD. Ein kooperierender Anwalt spricht dann vielsagend von Gefahren für den Anleger. Die Anleger reagieren natürlich  verunsichert, der Kurs stürzt ab. Leerverkäufer – wahrscheinlich aus dem Umfeld des Trios Finanzportal, Finanjournalist und Anwalt – haben sich rechtzeitig eingedeckt und sahnen einen kräftigen Gewinn ab.

Die größeren Medien sehen angesichts der Kursverluste nun ebenfalls das Unternehmen in Gefahr, berichten darüber und verunsichern die Anleger zusätzlich. Vom Finanzportal “gomopa.net” ist bekannt, dass es anschließend den Betroffenen einen PR-Beratungsvertrag aufdrücken wollte, den diese dann als “Erpressung” ablehnten, wie die Süddeutsche Zeitung am 3.9.2010 berichtete. Auch das  Handelsblatt hat im April vor einiger Zeit über einen ähnlichen Fall berichtet.
Ich erlebe diese Methoden gerade bei einer ähnlichen Kampagne gegen meinen Mandanten WGF AG. Die WGF AG handelt mit Immobilien, entwickelt großartige Projekte und refinanziert sich mit Hypothekenanleihen. Am 15.11. wurde pünktlich die zweite mit 6,35% verzinste  Hypothekenanleihe im Volumen von 30 Millionen Euro entgegen diversen Unkenrufen pünktlich und vollständig zurückgezahlt.
Im Juli war ein Text unter falschem Namen im Finanzportal “Börsennews” mit Zitaten eines Anwalts erschienen, den der Autor weiteren Medien zuspielte. Unmittelbar darauf stürzten die Kurse mehrere Anleihen von 100 auf teilweise bis zu 60 Prozent. Die Kurse erholten sich dann zwar wieder um 10 bis 15 Prozentpunkte, aber nicht so, dass Raum für die Platzierung neuer Anleihen mit einem Ausgabekurs von 100 blieb. Die WGF war dennoch in der Lage, aus dem gut laufenden operativen Geschäft heraus die Rückzahlung der zweiten Anleihe sicher zu stellen. Anfang der Woche, am Tag nach der Rückzahlung erschien wieder ein anonymer Artikel in “gomopa.net”. So geht die Kampagne weiter.
Selbstverständlich müssen alle Geschäftsmodelle kritisch hinterfragt werden. Unternehmen machen Fehler und müssen diese Fehler auch beheben. Es kann aber nicht sein, dass gewissenlose Leute im Internet ihr Unwesen treiben und ganze Unternehmen attackieren, um damit Geld zu verdienen: Der Anwalt, der dazu beiträgt, Unternehmen zu gefährden, um anschließend Klienten für seinen sogenannten Kapitalanlegerschutz zu generieren, ist genauso hinterhältig wie der Journalist, der sich nicht zu seinen Texten bekennt und anonym oder unter falschem Namen schreibt, um an Kursspekulationen mitzuverdienen.

Eingestellt von Ralf-Dieter Brunowsky

http://brunowsky.blogspot.com/2011/11/nepper-schlepper-bauernfanger-im.html#links

 

Über mich

Mein Foto

Cologne, NRW, Germany
2002-today: PR-Agency BrunoMedia GmbH, Köln 1991-2001 Editor in Chief financial magazine CAPITAL 1989-1990 managing editor Impulse 1980-1989 correspondent and managing editor Wirtschaftswoche 1977-1979 editor Berliner Morgenpost 1975-1977 manager retail association 1969-1975 university Berlin 1968-1969 German Navy

New – House Homeland Security Committee Introduces Bill to Create National Cybersecurity Authority

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Members of the House Homeland Security Committee introduced a cybersecurity bill on Thursday that would establish a quasi-governmental entity to oversee information-sharing with the private sector.

Like the other cybersecurity bills offered by the House GOP, the Promoting and Enhancing Cybersecurity and Information Sharing Effectiveness (PrECISE Act) encourages private firms to share information on cyber threats but stops short of mandating new security standards for sectors deemed critical to national security.

“The risk of cyberattack by enemies of the United States is real, is ongoing and is growing,” said Chairman Pete King (R-N.Y.). “The PrECISE Act, in line with the framework set forth by the Speaker’s Cybersecurity Task Force led by Rep. [Mac] Thornberry [R-Texas], protects our critical infrastructure without a heavy-handed and burdensome regulatory approach that could cost American jobs.”

The bill would clearly delineate the cybersecurity functions of the Department of Homeland Security by requiring DHS to evaluate cybersecurity risks for critical infrastructure firms and determine the best way to mitigate them.

“Cybersecurity is truly a team sport, and this bill gives DHS needed authorities to play its part in the federal government’s cybersecurity mission and enables the private sector to play its part by giving them the information and access to technical support they need to protect critical infrastructure,” said House Cybersecurity subcomittee Chairman Dan Lungren (R-Calif.).

 

ORIGINAL DOCUMENT SEE HERE

 

https://docs.google.com/viewer?url=http://homeland.house.gov/sites/homeland.house.gov/files/Cybersecurity.pdf&chrome=true

TOP-SECRET from the FBI – Ashburn Realtor Charged in $7 Million Mortgage Fraud Scheme

ALEXANDRIA, VA—A federal grand jury has charged Nadin Samnang, 29, of Ashburn, Va., with conspiracy and mortgage fraud charges related to his role in alleged fraudulent mortgage loan transactions involving at least 25 homes in northern Virginia and more than $7 million in losses to lenders.

Neil H. MacBride, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia; Daniel Cortez, Inspector in Charge of the Washington Division of the United States Postal Inspection Service; and James W. McJunkin, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, made the announcement.

According to the 12-count indictment, from 2006 to 2008, Samnang is accused of using his position as a realtor and the owner of a title company to engage in a scheme to defraud mortgage lenders and profit from loan proceeds, commissions, and bonus payments.

According to the indictment, Samnang and other members of the conspiracy allegedly recruited unqualified buyers—usually individuals with good credit but insufficient assets or income to qualify for a particular loan—and used them as nominal purchasers in residential real estate transactions. As part of the conspiracy and fraud scheme, Samnang and others are accused of falsifying mortgage loan applications, creating fake documents to support the fraudulent applications, and adding the unqualified buyers as signatories on their bank accounts to make it appear to lenders as though the buyers possessed sufficient assets to qualify for the loans.

If convicted, Samnang faces a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison on each count.

The case is being investigated by the U.S. Postal Inspection Service and the FBI’s Washington Field Office. Assistant United States Attorney Paul J. Nathanson is prosecuting the case on behalf of the United States.

Criminal indictments are only charges and not evidence of guilt. A defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty.

Meridian Capital über die “GoMoPa”-Fälschung Pressreleaser und die Erpressung durch “GoMoPa”

http://meridiancapital.wordpress.com/

Unveiled – The Nixon Administration and the Indian Nuclear Program


Trombay, the site of India’s first atomic reactor (Aspara), the CIRUS reactor provided by Canada, and a plutonium reprocessing facility, as photographed by a KH-7/GAMBIT satellite during February 1966. Provided under lax safeguards, the CIRUS reactor produced the spent fuel that India converted into plutonium for the May 1974 test (the heavy water needed to run the reactor was provided by the United States, also under weak safeguards).

Raja Rammana, director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Center at Trombay, played a key role in the production, development, and testing of the May 1974 Indian “peaceful nuclear explosion.” In the Spring of 1973, John Pinajian, the Atomic Energy Commission’s representative in India, became suspicious that India was preparing for a nuclear test in part because Rammana rebuffed his requests for access to BARC so he could conduct an experiment which had been approved by the Indian Atomic Energy Commission (see document 17A)

The Elephant in the Room: The Soviet Union and the Indian Nuclear Program

For more information on India and the Cold War superpowers, see an extraordinary collection of Hungarian Foreign Ministry documents, edited and translated by Balazs Szalontai, with a substantive “Working Paper,” recently published by the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project. Drawing on archival material from the 1960s through the 1980s, “The Elephant in the Room” provides significant insight into the Soviet Union’s nuclear relations with India. While Moscow was carefully to sell only safeguarded nuclear technology to New Delhi, the priority of maintaining good relations with India sometimes put nonproliferation goals in the backseat. For example, before the May 1974 “peaceful nuclear explosion” the Soviets had tried to discourage the Indians from testing–confirming what has been previously suspected–but once the latter had tested the Soviets did not criticize them. When Canada stopped providing reactor fuel and equipment as a penalty for the test (which Canadian technology had facilitated), the Soviets stepped in to fill the gap. Moreover, when Soviet-Pakistan relations deteriorated after the invasion of Pakistan, Moscow’s anger was so intense that it gave the “green light” to Indian military planning for a strike against Pakistani nuclear facilities. The documents also suggest that it was not until the mid-1980s, when U.S.-Soviet and Sino-Soviet détente were on the upswing, that the Soviets became concerned about India as a nuclear proliferation problem.


 

 

Washington, D.C., December 19, 2011 – India’s “peaceful nuclear explosion” on 18 May 1974 caught the United States by surprise in part because the intelligence community had not been looking for signs that a test was in the works. According to a recently declassified Intelligence Community Staff post-mortem posted today by the National Security Archive and the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project, Nixon administration policymakers had given a relatively low priority to the Indian program and there was “no sense of urgency” to determine whether New Delhi was preparing to test a nuclear device. Intelligence “production” (analysis and reporting) on the topic “fell off” during the 20 months before the test, the analysis concluded.[i]

In early 1972, however—two years before the test—the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) had predicted that India could make preparations for an underground test without detection by U.S. intelligence. Published for the first time today, the INR report warned that the U.S. government had given a “relatively modest priority to … relevant intelligence collection activities” which meant that a “concerted effort by India to conceal such preparations … may well succeed.”

The post-mortem [see document 21], the INR report [see document 2] and other new materials illustrate how intelligence priorities generally reflect the interests and priorities of top policymakers. The Nixon White House was focused on the Vietnam War and grand strategy toward Beijing and Moscow; intelligence on nuclear proliferation was a low priority. Compare, for example, the India case with that of Iraq during 2002-2003, when White House concerns encouraged—some say even compelled—intelligence producers to cherry pick raw information to demonstrate the development of WMD by the Saddam Hussein regime.

INR prepared its India report at a time when secret sources were telling U.S. intelligence that New Delhi was about to test a nuclear device. The “small spate” of reports about a test had such “congruity, apparent reliability, and seeming credibility” that they prompted a review of India’s nuclear intentions by INR and other government offices. In the end, government officials could not decide whether India had made a decision to test although a subsequent lead suggested otherwise.

According to the intelligence community’s post-mortem, obtained through a mandatory review appeal to the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel (ISCAP), one of the problems was that intelligence producers were not communicating with each other, so the “other guy” assumed that someone else was “primarily responsible for producing hard evidence of Indian intentions.” The analysis was especially critical of an August 1972 Special National Intelligence Estimate for its “waffling judgments” on Indian nuclear intentions.

Other declassified documents reproduced here from 1972 through 1974 illustrate the range of thinking on this sensitive topic:

  • An INR report in February 1972 concluded that it could not “rule out a test” in the near future and it was “entirely possible that one or more nuclear devices have actually been fabricated and assembled.”  All the same, “it our judgment that a decision to authorize a test is unlikely in the next few months and may well be deferred for several years.”
  • During March and April 1972, Canadian and British intelligence concluded that they had no evidence that India had made a decision to test a nuclear device. Nevertheless, the Canadians believed that New Delhi could produce a device in less than a year.
  • In June 1972, Japanese diplomat Ryohei Murata argued that the “Indians have decided to go ahead with a nuclear test” and that the Thar Desert in Rajasthan would be the test site. While basically correct, Murata’s estimate was discounted because it did not represent an official Foreign Ministry view.
  • Special National Intelligence Estimate (SNIE) 31-72 published in August 1972 also held that the Indians could produce a device “within a few days to a year of a decision to do so,” but concluded that the chances that India had made a decision to test were “roughly even.”
  • In 1973, the Atomic Energy Commission’s scientific representative in India  told the U.S. consul in Bombay (Mumbai) that several “indications” suggested that India “may well have decided” to test a nuclear device.
  • Five months before the test, the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi reported that the probability of an “early test” was at a “lower level than previous years.”

The rumors that India was going to test emerged in the wake of the South Asian crisis, when the Nixon White House tilted toward Pakistan, India’s archrival. Relations between New Delhi and Washington were already cool during the Nixon administration which treated India as a relatively low priority.  Henry Kissinger’s secret trip to China underlined India’s low priority by suggesting that if New Delhi ever faced a crisis with Beijing it could not count on Washington for help.  Relations became truly frosty during the balance of 1971 when New Delhi signed a friendship treaty with Moscow and India and Pakistan went to war. Later Nixon and Kissinger wanted to improve the relationship, but India’s nuclear intentions were not on their agenda. That India had refused to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty was a non-issue for Nixon and Kissinger, who had little use for the NPT and treated nuclear proliferation as less than secondary. While the State Department cautioned India against nuclear tests in late 1970 [see document 6], concern did not rise to the top of policy hill.[2]

Whatever impact the events of 1971 may have had on India’s decision to test a nuclear device that decision was soon to be made. According to George Perkovich, an authority on the Indian nuclear program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “it may be conjectured that support in principle for developing a nuclear explosive device was solidified by late 1971, that concentrated work on building the vital components began in spring 1972, and that formal prime ministerial approval to make final preparations for a PNE occurred in September 1972.”[3] In this context, the reports collected by U.S. intelligence in late 1971 and early 1972 about a possible test may have been good examples of the old chestnut that “where there’s smoke, there’s fire.”

Yet, the analysts who wrote SNIE 31-72 decided that the smoke had no significance because they saw only a 50-50 chance that New Delhi had made a decision to test (even though New Delhi was closing in on a decision).


The Elephant in the Room: The Soviet Union and the Indian Nuclear Program

The Elephant in the Room: The Soviet Union and the Indian Nuclear Program

For more information on India and the Cold War superpowers, see an extraordinary collection of Hungarian Foreign Ministry documents, edited and translated by Balazs Szalontai, with a substantive “Working Paper,” recently published by the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project. Drawing on archival material from the 1960s through the 1980s, “The Elephant in the Room” provides significant insight into the Soviet Union’s nuclear relations with India. While Moscow was carefully to sell only safeguarded nuclear technology to New Delhi, the priority of maintaining good relations with India sometimes put nonproliferation goals in the backseat. For example, before the May 1974 “peaceful nuclear explosion” the Soviets had tried to discourage the Indians from testing–confirming what has been previously suspected–but once the latter had tested the Soviets did not criticize them. When Canada stopped providing reactor fuel and equipment as a penalty for the test (which Canadian technology had facilitated), the Soviets stepped in to fill the gap. Moreover, when Soviet-Pakistan relations deteriorated after the invasion of Pakistan, Moscow’s anger was so intense that it gave the “green light” to Indian military planning for a strike against Pakistani nuclear facilities. The documents also suggest that it was not until the mid-1980s, when U.S.-Soviet and Sino-Soviet détente were on the upswing, that the Soviets became concerned about India as a nuclear proliferation problem.

adian technology had facilitated), the Soviets stepped in to fill the gap. Moreover, when Soviet-Pakistan relations deteriorated after the invasion of Pakistan, Moscow’s anger was so intense that it gave the “green light” to Indian military planning for a strike against Pakistani nuclear facilities. The documents also suggest that it was not until the mid-1980s, when U.S.-Soviet and Sino-Soviet détente were on the upswing, that the Soviets became concerned about India as a nuclear proliferation problem.
on problem.

Documents

Document 1: “Various recent intelligence reports”

State Department cable 3088 to Embassy New Delhi, 6 January 1972, Secret

Source: U.S. National Archives, Record Group 59, Subject-Numeric Files 1970-1973 [hereinafter RG 59, SN 70-73] Def 12-1 India

For years, the U.S. intelligence establishment had been monitoring India’s nuclear program for signs of a decision to produce nuclear weapons, but in late 1971 and early 1972 it had to consider the possibility that a nuclear test was impending.  Recently collected intelligence about an imminent test led the State Department to send a query to the U.S. Embassy in India for its assessment.

Document 2: “A Concerted Effort by India to Conceal Preparations May Well Succeed”

State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research Intelligence Note, “India to Go Nuclear?” 14 January 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 18-8 India

Before the Embassy sent a full response, a team of analysts at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research produced their evaluation of varied report about India’s nuclear intentions: that it would test a device that month, sometime in 1972, or that the government was undertaking a program to test a “peaceful nuclear explosive.”  According to INR, India had the capability to produce some 20-30 weapons, and it could easily test a device in an underground site, such as an abandoned mine, that would be hard to discover.  Indeed, because the U.S. government had given a “relatively modest priority to … relevant intelligence collection activities” a “concerted effort by India to conceal such preparations … may well succeed.”  What would motivate India to test, the analysts opined, were domestic political pressures and concerns about China and Pakistan.  Nevertheless, the INR analysts saw a test as having more importance as a demonstration of “scientific and technological prowess”; the strategic significance would be “negligible” because India was “years away” from developing a “credible” deterrence against China “its only prospective enemy with a nuclear capability.”
Document 3: “Straws” Suggesting an Underground Test

U.S. Embassy Airgram A-20 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions,” 21 January 1972, Secret, Excised copy

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 18-8 India

In its response to the Department’s query, the Embassy identified a number of reasons that made it unlikely that India would a test a nuclear device in the coming weeks, but saw “straws” suggesting an underground test “sometime in future.” For example, the Government of India had publicly acknowledged ongoing work on the problem of safe underground testing .  Moreover, India might have an interest in making its nuclear capabilities known to “enemies.” Whatever the Indians decided, external pressure would have no impact on a highly nationalist state and society: “we see nothing US or international community can presently do to influence GOI policy directions in atomic field.”

One of the sources mentioned, apparently a CIA asset (the reference is excised), had a connection with the Prime Minister’s secretariat. This may be the same informant, future Prime Minister Moraji Desai, who provided information to the CIA about Prime Minister Gandhi’s intentions during the recent South Asian crisis and whose cover was subsequently blown through press leaks published by Jack Anderson.  He later told the CIA to “go to hell.”[4]
Document 4: “Increased Status of a Nuclear Power”

Memorandum from Ray Cline, Director, Bureau of Intelligence and Research, to Director of Central Intelligence Richard Helms, enclosing “Possibility of an Indian Nuclear Test,” 23 February 1972, Secret

Source: U.S. State Department, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976 Volume E–7, Documents on South Asia, 1969–1972, Document 228

At the request of Undersecretary of State John Irwin, INR prepared an assessment which included a detailed review of Indian’s nuclear facilities and their capacity to produce weapons-grade plutonium as well as capabilities to deliver nuclear weapons to target. While India had signed agreements with Canada and the United States that nuclear reactors were to be used for peaceful purposes, the Indians were likely to claim that an explosive device for “peaceful” purposes was consistent with the agreements.  Whether the Indians were going to test in the near future was in doubt. INR could not “rule out” one in the near future.  Further, the “strongest incentive [to test] may well be the desire for the increased status of a nuclear power.”   All the same, “it our judgment that a decision to authorize a test is unlikely in the next few months and may well be deferred for several years.” Weighing against a test were the financial and diplomatic costs, for example, “India’s full awareness that assistance from the US and other countries (possibly including the USSR) would be jeopardized.”
Document 5: Trudeau’s Warning

U.S. Embassy Canada cable 391 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions,” 7 March 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

With With Canada’s role as a supplier of nuclear technology, including the CIRUS research reactor, senior Canadian officials had close working relationships with their Indian counterpart. James Lorne Gray, the chairman of Canada’s Atomic Energy Board, had recently visited India and U.S. embassy officials interviewed him closely on his thinking about Indian nuclear developments.  Having spoken with Homi Nusserwanji Sethna, Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and other officials, Gray believed that Sethna opposed a test and that as long as Sethna and Indira Gandhi were in office “there was no chance” that India would test a nuclear device, which would take three to four years to prepare.  Gray was mistaken, but was correct to declare that if a decision to test was made, Sethna would “undoubtedly” head the project.  The embassy’s science attaché, Miller N. Hudson, met with other officials with the AECB who had a different take on Indian capabilities; based on their assessment of Indian’s ability to produce weapons grade plutonium, they argued that it would take no more than a year to produce a device.

The Canadians pointed out that about 18 months earlier there had been a “blackout” of statistical information on plutonium production. That led Canadian Prime Minister Pierre-Eliot Trudeau followed by other officials to “directly” warn the “Indians that Canadian plutonium should not be used for any kind of nuclear device.”

Document 6: Unlikely to Test in the “Near Future”

State Department cable 40378 to U.S. Embassy Ottawa, “Indian Nuclear Intentions,” 9 March 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

State Department officers were also consulting with their counterparts at the Canadian embassy in Washington.  During a discussion with the embassy counselor, country desk director David Schneider opined that Indian was unlikely to test a device in the “near future” but he wanted Ottawa’s prognosis. Schneider was also interested in whether the Soviets, with their close relationship with India, might be able to use their influence to “deter” a test.  If India tested, the U.S. could respond with a “strong statement,” but whether “punitive” measures would be taken would depend on whether the test “violated existing agreements.” In October 1970, the State Department had cautioned the Indians that a “peaceful nuclear explosion” was indistinguishable from a weapons test and that the test of a nuclear device would be incompatible with U.S.-Indian nuclear assistance agreements.  That the State Department issued this warning provides a telling contrast with Canada, which treated its admonition as a head of state issue.
Document 7: No Technical or Fiscal Obstacle to a Test

U.S. Embassy Canada cable 430 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions on South Asia Situation,” 14 March 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

Elaborating on his earlier cable and responding to the general issues raised by the Department’s 9 March message, science attaché Hudson questioned Gray’s evaluation of Sethna, suggesting that by combining “guile” and “technical proficiency,” the latter could easily have “easily misled” the Canadian.  Based on consultations with a variety of Canadian insiders with knowledge of and experience with the Indian nuclear program, the Embassy saw no technical or fiscal barriers to an Indian test. Moreover, any pressure on India not to test would increase the “likelihood” of that happening.
Document 8: “Leaving Their Options Open”

State Department cable 50634 to U.S. Embassy Canada, “Indian Nuclear Intentions,” 24 March 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

Further discussions with the Canadian embassy counselor disclosed Ottawa’s view that it had no evidence of Indian intentions to test a nuclear weapon or a PNE. The Indians were “leaving their options open.”  If they decided to test, however, it would be “impossible” for them to move forward “without revealing some indication of their intentions.”
Document 9: British See No Evidence of a Decision

State Department cable 59655 to U.S. Embassy United Kingdom, “Indian Nuclear Intentions, 7 April 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

The British Government was taking the same view as the Canadians, seeing no evidence that the Indians had made a decision to test, although they had the “capability.”
Document 10:  “Apparent Reliability and Seeming Credibility”

State Department cable 69551 to U.S. Embassy United Kingdom, “Indian Nuclear Intentions, 22 April 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

The Canadian embassy had asked the State Department for information on the intelligence reports from earlier in the year that an Indian nuclear test was “imminent.”  The State Department denied the request, but informed the Canadians that the reports were so numerous and their “congruity, apparent reliability, and seeming credibility” so striking that it had become necessary to update official thinking about Indian intentions.
Documents 11A-C: “The Indians Have Decided to Go Ahead”

A. State Department cable 113523 to U.S. Embassy India, “Japanese Views Regarding Indian Nuclear Plans,” 23 June 1972, Secret

B.  U.S. Mission Geneva cable 2755 to State Department, “Japanese-Pakistani Conversations Regarding Indian Nuclear Plans,” 26 June 1972, Secret

C. U.S. Embassy Tokyo cable 67912 to State Department, “Japanese View Regarding Indian Nuclear Plans,” 27 June 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

This group of telegrams discloses that one Japanese diplomat made a good guess about what was happening in India, but also illuminates the problem of verifying intelligence information. In response to a request from the State Department, Ryohei Murata[5], an official at the n officer from the Japanese embassy, reported that the Japanese government believed that for prestige reasons and as a “warning” to others, the “Indians have decided to go ahead with a nuclear test” which could occur at “any time;” The Thar Desert in Rajasthan would be the test site. Murata was correct on the latter point and close to correct on the decision: only weeks before the Indian AEC had begun work on building the components for a test device.[6] The cables that followed this report, however, raised doubts about Murata’s assessment.
Document 12: Request for a NSSM

Henry Kissinger to President Nixon, “Proposed NSSM on the Implications of an Indian Nuclear Test,” n.d., with cover memorandum from Richard T. Kennedy, 4 July 1972, Secret

Source: Nixon Presidential Library, National Security Council Institutional Files, box H-192, NSSM-156 [1 of 2]

Months after the initial flurry of intelligence reports, national security assistant Henry Kissinger asked President Nixon to approve a national security study memorandum [NSSM] on the implications of an Indian nuclear test for U.S. interests.  The next day, 5 July 1972, Kissinger sent the agencies a request for a study which became NSSM 156.
Document 13: No Evidence of a Decision

U.S. Embassy India cable 9293 to State Department, “Indian Nuclear Intentions,” 26 July 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73 Def 1 India

In an update of its thinking about the possibility of a test, the Embassy acknowledged that India had the “technical know-how and possibly materials to develop [a] simple nuclear device within period of months after GOI decision to do so.”  Nevertheless, it saw no evidence that a decision had been made to test a device. Moreover, capabilities to deliver nuclear weapons were limited, with no plans in sight to “develop [a] missile launch system.”
Document 14: “Roughly Even”

Special National Intelligence Estimate 31-72, “Indian Nuclear Developments and their Likely Implications,”3 August 1972, Secret

Source: Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976 Volume E–7, Documents on South Asia, 1969–1972, Document 298

Prepared as part of the NSSM 156 policy review, the 1974 post-mortem criticized this SNIE as “marred by waffled judgments.”  The SNIE concluded that the chances of India making a decision to test were “roughly even,” but the post-mortem analysis [see document 21] argued that based on its own findings,  the conclusion ought to have been 60-40 in favor of a decision to test.  In its analysis of the pros and cons of testing, the SNIE found that the “strongest factors impelling India to set off a test are: the “belief that it would build up [its] international prestige; demonstrate India’s importance as an Asian power; overawe its immediate South Asian neighbors; and bring enhanced popularity and public support to the regime which achieved it.”  The drafters further noted that a test would be “extremely popular at home, where national pride is riding high” and that supporters of a test believed that it would make the world see India as “one of the world’s principal powers.” The arguments against a test included adverse reactions from foreign governments that provided economic assistance, but the estimate noted that foreign reactions were “becoming less important” to India.
Document 15: “No Firm Intelligence”

Memorandum of Conversation, “Indian Nuclear Developments,” 21 September 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 12 India

A meeting between British Foreign Office and State Department officials on the Indian nuclear problem occurred the same month that Indian Prime Minister Gandhi approved the “final preparations for a PNE.”[7]  Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Christopher T. Van Hollen (the father of the future Maryland Congressman) and his colleagues followed the approach taken by the SNIE, which was close to that taken by the British Joint Intelligence Committee.   According to country director David Schneider, the “odds were about even” that India would make a decision, but once it was made, India could test very quickly.  There was “no firm intelligence” that a “go-ahead signal” to prepare for a test had been made.   Schneider reviewed bilateral and multilateral steps, proposed in the NSSM 156 study, that the U.S. and others could take to try to discourage an Indian test and the range of reactions that would be available if India went ahead.  A “weak” U.S. reaction, Schneider observed, would suggest that Washington would “acquiesce” if other countries followed India’s example.
Document 16: “A Set-Back to Nonproliferation Efforts”

H. Daniel Brewster to Herman Pollack, “Indian Nuclear Developments,” 16 January 1973, enclosing “Summary,” 1 September 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 6 India

The interagency group prepared a response to NSSM 156 on 1 September 1972 and it was sent to Kissinger at whose desk it would languish, suggesting the low priority that the Nixon White House gave to nuclear proliferation issues.  The summary of the study reproduced here includes the conclusion that an Indian test would be “a set-back to nonproliferation efforts” and that Washington should “do what [it] can to avert or delay” one.   Thus, recommendations included a number of unilateral and multilateral actions that the United States government could take, noting that “given the poor state” of Indo-American relations, an “overly visible” U.S. effort would more likely speed up an Indian decision to test a device,  Even non-US efforts were likely not to “be per se effective.”
Documents 17A-B: India “May Well Have Decided”

A. Bombay consulate cable 705 to Department of State, “India’s Nuclear Position,” 4 April 1973, Confidential

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 1 India

B.  U.S. Embassy India cable 5797 to State Department forwarding Bombay consulate cable 983, “India’s Nuclear Position,” 17 May 1973, Confidential

Source: AAD 1973

The possibility that the GOI had made a decision to test surfaced in a message from the U.S. consulate in Bombay (Mumbai) signed off by Consul David M. Bane.  The latter reported that Oak Ridge Laboratory scientist John J. Pinajian, then serving as the Atomic Energy Commission’s scientific representative in India, had pointed out several “indications”—notably his lack of access to key individuals and facilities in India’s atomic establishment–suggesting that India “may well have decided” to test a nuclear device.  While stating that Pinajian’s evaluation was “subjective and impressionistic,” Consul Bane agreed that the atomic energy establishment did not want this American poking around because he might find out too much. Bane further observed that a nuclear test “in the not too distant future” could meet the GOI’s political goals and help attain “greater recognition major power status.”

Raja Rammana, the director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Center, one of the organizations that Pinajian was trying to contact, played a key role in directing the PNE project so his suspicions were on target.[8]  In any event, a month later, Pinajian got some access to BARC, but noticed the absence of personnel responsible for experimental work.  Moreover, he was getting cooperation from the Institute for Fundamental Research to conduct an experiment.  Whether Pinajian remained suspicious needs to be learned, but the authors of the 1974 post-mortem pointed to the Consulate report as evidence that should have been considered (although it is worth noting that Secretary of State William Rogers was aware of the report and asked for more information).
Document 18: “The Likelihood of an Early Test [at] a Lower Level than Previous Years”

U.S. Embassy India cable 0743 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions,” 18 January 1974, Confidential

Source: http://static.history.state.gov/frus/frus1969-76ve08/pdf/d156.pdf

The embassy concluded that “deeper economic problems,” among other considerations militated against a nuclear test in the near future, even though the Indian government had the capabilities to produce and test a device.  While there were no rumors about a test as there had been in 1972, “we know little about relevant internal government debate.” All in all, the embassy believed that economic conditions “tip the likelihood of an early test to a lower level than previous years.”  Russell Jack Smith, previously the deputy director for intelligence at the CIA, and then serving as special assistant to the ambassador (station chief), was one of the officials who signed off on this cable.[9]
Document 19: “Rebound to their Credit Domestically”

U.S. Embassy India cable 6598 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Explosion: Why Now?” 18 May 1974, Secret

Source: AAD

Having written off an early test, the day that it took place the Embassy scrambled to come up with an explanation. Deputy Chief of Mission David Schneider signed off on the telegram because Moynihan was in London. While the Embassy had no insight on the decision-making, it saw domestic politics and “psychological” explanations for the test: the need to offset domestic “gloom” and the need for India to “be taken seriously.” According to the telegram, “the decision will appeal to nationalist feeling and will be widely welcomed by the Indian populace.”
Document 20: “Enough Plutonium for Some 50-70 Nuclear Weapons”

State Department cable 104613 to Consulate, Jerusalem, “India Nuclear Explosion,” 18 May 1974, Secret

Source: State Department MDR release

The day of the test, INR rushed to update Kissinger, then in the Middle East negotiating with Israel and Syria.  INR provided background on what had happened, how the United States and Canada had inadvertently helped India produce plutonium for the test device, earlier U.S. and Canadian demarches against “peaceful nuclear explosions,” and India’s capabilities to produce and deliver nuclear weapons.  The report did not state whether India had made a decision to produce weapons, but it forecast that two large unsafeguarded reactors under construction could eventually “produce enough plutonium for 50-70 nuclear weapons.”

Document 21: “No Sense of Urgency in the Intelligence Community”

Intelligence Community Staff, Post Mortem Report, An Examination of the Intelligence Community’s Performance Before the Indian Nuclear Test of May 1974, July 1974, Top Secret, Excised copy

Source: Mandatory review request; release by ISCAP

After the test, policymakers in and out of the intelligence establishment wanted to know why the CIA and its sister agencies had missed it. As Jeffrey Richelson has observed, this was not an “epic failure,” but it was serious enough to produce a post-mortem investigation to determine what had gone wrong.[10]  The partial release of the July 1974 post-mortem provides some answers, even if the full picture is denied because of massive excisions.  Readers already know from the previous release published on the Archive’s Web site that two problems were especially important: 1) the lack of priority given to the Indian nuclear program for intelligence collection (further confirmed by the January 1972 INR report), and 2) the lack of communication between intelligence producers (analysts and estimators) and intelligence collectors (spies, NRO, etc.).  The low priority meant that intelligence production “fell off” during the 20 months before the test (from October 1972 to May 1974).  Moreover, there may have been a lack of communication between producers, with the “other guy” assuming that someone else was “primarily responsible for producing hard evidence of Indian intentions.”

Trying to explain the lack of follow-up on relevant “raw intelligence,” e.g. Pinjanians’s surmises about the Indian nuclear program, the post-mortem saw no “sense of urgency” in the intelligence community, which may have “reflected the attitudes of the policymakers.” Another problem was that the intelligence community focused more on “capabilities” than on “intentions,” which implicitly raised the difficult issue of breaching the nuclear establishment or Indira Gandhi’s small circle of decision-making.

The substantive discussion of satellite photography has been excised, but the recommendations were left intact, including the point that “The failure of production elements to ask NPIC [National Photographic Intelligence Center] to exploit photography that had been specifically requested from the National Reconnaissance Office suggests a weakness in the imagery requirements system.”  The implication was that NRO satellites had imagery of the Thar Desert that could have been scrutinized for suspect activity, but no one asked NPIC to look into it.  In any event, this and other failures fed into a number of recommendations, including the broader point that nuclear proliferation intelligence receive “much higher priority.”
Document 22: “India may not yet have decided whether to proceed with …. [the] development of a weapons capability”

Special National Intelligence Estimate 4-1-74, “Prospects for Further Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,”23 August 1974, Top Secret, Excised Copy

Source: MDR release by CIA

A few months after the Indian test, the intelligence community prepared an overall estimate of the global nuclear proliferation situation.  Such an estimate had not been prepared since the 1960s, no doubt because of the White House’s lack of interest. This estimate, SNIE 4-1-74, has been released before but this version includes more information, mainly a section on the Indian nuclear program, which had previously been withheld.  While finding it “likely” that India would launch a covert program to produce a few weapons, the analysts were not sure that such a decision had been made and suggested that Moscow or Washington might be able to persuade the Indians from moving in that direction.  The hypothesis about a covert program was mistaken because the Government of India did not make a basic decision to produce nuclear weapons until the 1980s.
Document 23: Whether the “Intelligence Community is Adequately Focused on Proliferation Matters”

Intelligence Community Staff, Director of Performance Evaluation and Improvement, to Deputy to the Director of Central Intelligence for the Intelligence Community, “Nuclear Proliferation and the Intelligence Community,” 12 October 1976, Top Secret, Excised copy

Source: CIA Research Tool [CREST], National Archives Library, College Park, MD

As this report indicates, the recommendations made in the 1974 post-mortem had little impact. The authors identified a basic disconnect between “national level users”—the top policymakers—and those who “set analytical and collection priorities in the intelligence community.” The latter were not sure how high a priority that the policymakers had given to nuclear proliferation intelligence.  Moreover, a study for the Defense Department produced by MIT chemistry professor (and future DCI) John Deutch questioned whether the intelligence community “is adequately focused and tasked on proliferation matters.” This would be a recurring problem for the CIA and other intelligence agencies.


Notes

[i] For background, see Jeffrey Richelson, Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea (New York: W.W. Norton, 2006), 218-235.

[1] For background, see Jeffrey Richelson, Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea (New York: W.W. Norton, 2006), 218-235.

[2] For U.S.-India relations during the Nixon administration, see Dennix Kux, India and the United States: Estranged Democracies, 1941-1991 (Washington, D.C.: National Defense University Press, 1993), 279-314, and Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb, 162-166.  For the impact of Kissinger’s trip, see Andrew B. Kennedy, “India’s Nuclear Odyssey: Implicit Umbrellas, Diplomatic Disappointments, and the Bomb,” International Security 36 (2011): 136-139.

[3] Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb, 172.

[4] Thomas Powers, The Man Who Kept the Secrets: Richard Helms & the CIA (New York: Knopf, 1979), 206-207; Mark Feldstein, Poisoning the Press: Richard Nixon, Jack Anderson, and the Rise of Washington’s Scandal Culture, (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010), 171.

[5] Murata would later rise to vice foreign minister and in 2009 revealed significant details about secret U.S.-Japanese understandings on nuclear weapons issues during the Cold War. http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090630a2.html

[6] Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb, 171.

[7] Ibid. 172.

[8] Ibid, 172.

[9] Russell J. Smith, The Unknown CIA: My Three Decades with the Agency (Washington, D.C.: Pergamon-Brassey, 1989, 124.

[10] Richelson, Spying on the Bomb, 233.

Sources – Iran Reportedly Arrests Twelve CIA Agents

Senior Iranian parliamentary officials announced that the country has arrested 12 agents of the American Central Intelligence Agency.Member of the Iranian Parliament’s National Security and Foreign Policy Commission Parviz Sorouri said that the agents had been operating in coordination with Israel’s Mossad and other regional agencies, and targeted the country’s military and its nuclear program.

“The US and Zionist regime’s espionage apparatuses were trying to damage Iran both from inside and outside with a heavy blow, using regional intelligence services,” Sorouri told the Islamic republic news agency on Wednesday.

“Fortunately, with swift reaction by the Iranian intelligence department, the actions failed to bear fruit,” Sorouri said.

The lawmaker did not specify the nationality of the agents, nor when or where they had been arrested.

This current announcement follows the unraveling by Lebanon’s Hezbollah of a CIA spy ring in that country.

Hezbollah Leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah revealed in June on television he had unmasked at least two CIA spies who had infiltrated the low ranks of the organization.

Though the US Embassy in Lebanon officially denied the accusation, American officials later confirmed Nasrallah’s announcement.

US officials confessed on Tuesday that Iranian intelligence forces and Hezbollah have unraveled the CIA’s spy network in Iran and Lebanon and arrested dozens of informants, severely damaging the intelligence agency’s reputation and ability to gather vital information on the two countries at a sensitive time in the region.

US officials said several foreign spies working for the CIA had been captured by Hezbollah in recent months. The blow to the CIA’s operations in Lebanon came after top agency managers were alerted last year to be especially careful handling informants in the Middle East country.

Separately, counterintelligence officers in Iran also succeeded in uncovering the identities of at least a handful of alleged CIA informants, Washington officials said.

A CIA-led program in the Middle East is up in the air after officials confirmed to news organizations today that paid informants in Iran and Lebanon working for the US government have disappeared while attempting to infiltrate Hezbollah.

During the past year, leaders of both Iran and Hezbollah have publicly announced the successes of their security and counterintelligence forces in uncovering CIA informants.

Iranian intelligence minister Heidar Moslehi announced in May that more than 30 US and Israeli spies had been discovered and he quickly took to Iranian television to broadcast information explaining the methods of online communication that the agents would use to trade intel. Only a month later, Hezbollah leader Seyed Hassan Nasrallah announced that two high-ranking officers within his own organization had been identified as CIA spies. Just now, however, does the US government confirm that not only is this information true, but they believe that the rest of their Hezbollah-targeted operations in the Middle East have been compromised.

TOP SECRET from the FBI Las Vegas – Sixteen Persons Charged in International Internet Fraud Scheme

LAS VEGAS—Federal charges have been unsealed against 16 individuals for their involvement in an international Internet scheme that defrauded online purchasers of purported merchandise such as automobiles and other items, announced Daniel G. Bogden, United States Attorney for the District of Nevada.

The defendants are charged with wire fraud, conspiracy to commit wire fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering, and criminal forfeiture. Thirteen of the defendants were arrested in Las Vegas yesterday, December 14, 2011. Most of those defendants appeared before United States Magistrate Judge Robert J. Johnston yesterday, and pleaded not guilty to the charges. Several other defendants are scheduled for initial court appearances today beginning at 3:00 p.m. One individual was arrested at Washington Dulles International National Airport in Virginia, and appeared before a federal magistrate judge there, and the remaining two defendants have not yet been arrested.

According to the allegations in the indictment, from about December 2008 to December 2011, conspirators situated outside of the United States listed and offered items for sale on Internet sites (such as Craigslist and Autotrader) and occasionally also placed advertisements in newspapers. The items offered for sale included automobiles, travel trailers and watercraft. The conspirators typically offered the items at attractive prices and often stated that personal exigencies, such as unemployment, military deployment, or family emergencies, required that they sell the offered items quickly. To gain the confidence of prospective buyers, conspirators posing as owners of the items instructed buyers that the transactions were to be completed through eBay, Yahoo!Finance, or similar online services, which would securely hold the buyers’ funds until the purchased items were delivered. The conspirators sent e-mails to buyers which appeared or purported to be from eBay, Yahoo!Finance, or other such entities, and which instructed buyers to remit payment to designated agents of those entities who were to hold the purchase money in escrow until the transactions was concluded. In reality, the entire transaction was a sham: the conspirators did not deliver any of the items offered for sale; neither eBay, Yahoo!Finance, nor any similar entity participated in these transactions; and the purported escrow agents designated to receive buyers’ purchase money were actually participants in the scheme who received the funds fraudulently obtained from buyers on behalf of the conspiracy.

Relying on the schemers fraudulent representations, scores of buyers agreed to purchase items that the schemers offered online and in newspaper advertisements. The conspirators kept and converted the fraudulently obtained purchase money for their own purposes. The defendants and their associates allegedly obtained more than $3 million through the fraud scheme, which they distributed among the conspirators both inside and outside the United States.

Defendants:

  • Eduard Petroiu, 28, Las Vegas resident
  • Vladimir Budestean, 24, Las Vegas resident
  • Bertly Ellazar, 27, Las Vegas resident
  • Radu Lisnic, 25, Las Vegas resident
  • Evghenii Russu, 25, Las Vegas resident
  • Evgeny Krylov, 24, Las Vegas resident
  • Eugeni Stoytchev, 35, Las Vegas resident
  • Iavor Stoytchev, 28, Las Vegas resident
  • Christopher Castro, 27, Las Vegas resident
  • Delyana Nedyalkova, 23, Las Vegas resident
  • Oleh Rymarchuk, 21, Las Vegas resident
  • Melanie Pascua, 25, Las Vegas resident
  • Manuel Garza, 23, Las Vegas resident
  • Ryne Green, 25, Las Vegas resident
  • Michael Vales, 22, Las Vegas resident
  • Edelin Dimitrov, 20, Las Vegas resident

The indictment identifies Eduard Petroiu as a leader of the conspiracy, and six others, including Vladimir Budestean, Bertly Ellazar, Radu Lisnic, Evghenii Russu, and Eugeni Stoytechev, as subordinate managers of the conspiracy.

If convicted, the defendants face up to 60 years in prison and fines of up to $1 million.

The arrests result from a joint investigation by the FBI and the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police Department as part of its Nevada Cyber Crime and Southern Nevada Eastern European Organized Crime Task Forces. The case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Timothy S. Vasquez.

The public is reminded that an indictment contains only charges and is not evidence of guilt. The defendants are presumed innocent and entitled to a fair trial at which the government has the burden of proving guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.

Anyone with information regarding these individuals is urged to call the FBI in Las Vegas at (702) 385-1281 or, to remain anonymous, call Crime Stoppers at (702) 385-5555 or visit http://www.crimestoppersofnv.com. Tips directly leading to an arrest or an indictment processed through Crime Stoppers may result in a cash reward.

UNCENSORED – Women Protest Worldwide Photos 10

[Image]Egyptian army soldiers rear arrest a woman protester wearing the Niqab during clashes near Cairo’s downtown Tahrir Square, Egypt, Friday, Dec. 16, 2011. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers severely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in outside the Cabinet building. (Ahmed Ali)
[Image]Egyptian army soldiers beat a protester wearing a Niqab, an Islamic veil, during clashes near Cairo’s downtown Tahrir Square, Egypt, Friday, Dec. 16, 2011. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers severely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in outside the Cabinet building. At background graffiti depicts members of the military ruling council and Arabic reads: “Killer”. (Ahmed Ali)
[Image]Egyptian protesters threw rocks at military police during clashes near Cairo’s downtown Tahrir Square, Egypt, Friday, Dec. 16, 2011. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers severely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in outside the Cabinet building. (Ahmed Ali)

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[Image]Egyptian army soldiers arrest a woman protester during clashes with military police near Cairo’s downtown Tahrir Square, Egypt Friday, Dec. 16, 2011. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers severely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in outside the Cabinet building.
[Image]Egyptian army soldiers arrest a woman protester during clashes with military police near Cairo’s downtown Tahrir Square, Friday, Dec. 16, 2011. Activists say the clashes began after soldiers severely beat a young man who was part of a sit-in outside the Cabinet building.
[Image]Egyptian soldiers arrested a female protester during the second day of clashes in Tahrir Square in Cairo on Saturday.  Reuters
[Image]A woman is taken away by the Egyptian army during clashes in central Cairo on Dec. 16, 2011. (Khaled Elfiqi)
[Image]Egyptian anti-army protesters throw stones at pro-army protesters (not pictured) during clashes, in central Cairo, Egypt, 16 december 2011. EPA
[Image]Egyptian soldiers clash with protesters near Cairo’s Tahrir Square on December 16, 2011 after demonstrators threw petrol bombs and set fire to furniture in front of the nearby parliament. AFP

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[Image]Anti-government protesters react to tear gas fired by riot police during clashes Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011, in Abu Saiba village west of the capital of Manama, Bahrain. It was the third straight day of clashes along a main highway where protesters have been trying to stage sit-ins against the government. (Hasan Jamali)
[Image]Protestors supporting Pfc. Bradley Manning gather outside Ft. Meade, Md., Saturday, Dec. 17, 2011, where military prosecutors are presenting their case against him as the source for the WikiLeaks website’s collection of U.S. military and diplomatic secrets. Manning, 24-year-old today, is blamed for the largest leak of classified material in American history. The purpose of the hearing is to determine whether prosecutors have enough evidence to bring Manning to trial. (Jose Luis Magana)
[Image]Activist of women’s movement FEMEN stand atop a fence during their protest in front of the cabinet of the Ministers building in Kiev on December 16, 2011. The young Ukrainian women climbed up a fence in front of the Cabinet of Ministers building and protested against the lack of women in the Prime Minister Mykola Azarov’s government. Getty

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[Image]Anti-government protesters gesture toward riot police (unseen) Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, along a northern highway by the entry to the Shiite village of Saar, Bahrain, site of an opposition sit-in that was dispersed by police with tear gas and sound bombs. (Hasan Jamali)
[Image]Protestors hold on to a rope, forming a human chain, while marching to the finance ministry Thursday, Dec. 15 2011, in Lisbon. Civil servants’ unions organized the demonstration to protest the government’s austerity measures. Portugal needed a euro78 billion ($103 billion) bailout earlier this year as its high debt load pushed it close to bankruptcy and the government is enacting an austerity program of pay cuts and tax hikes. Banners read “Don’t rob the future”. (Armando Franca)
[Image]In this photo taken Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011, villagers chant slogans as they gather for a protest in Wukan village of Lufeng, China’s Guangdong province. China’s government is trying to defuse a revolt in the small fishing village, offering to investigate the land seizures that touched off the rebellion and vowing to punish leaders of the uprising. The village of Wukan has for months been the site of simmering protests by locals who say officials sold farmland to developers without their consent.
[Image]Thousands of Lebanese private and public school teachers hold protest in front of the government building in downtown Beirut, Lebanon, Thursday, Dec. 15, 2011, to demand higher wages. The protest comes a week after the government approved a salary raise that many employees considered too low . (Bilal Hussein)
[Image]Indian farmers stage a sit in protest as they demand adequate compensation for their farm land acquired for different government projects in Lucknow, India, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. India’s transformation from a largely agrarian nation into a global economic power hinges on a steady supply of land for new factories, call centers, power plants and homes. As cities spill over their seams with ever more people, the government is increasingly seizing the farms around them for private development.
[Image]Dozens of peasants and activists protest demanding the government to recognize them as victims of the country’s internal conflict, outside the Congress in Bogota, Colombia, Wednesday, Dec. 14, 2011. (William Fernando Martinez)
[Image]Protesters with Occupy Seattle march to the Pat the Port of Seattle, Monday afternoon, Dec. 12, 2011 as part of a national effort to disrupt West Coast port traffic. Organizers called for the protests, hoping the day of demonstrations would cut into the profits of the corporations that run the docks and send a message that their movement was not over. (Mark Harrison)

TOP-SECRET – Taash Communications Network: Iranian Green Movement Support Plan

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Among the lessons learned from the revolutions in Egypt and Tunisia is the value and affect of unencumbered access to information and communications technology (ISCT), including but not limited to independent information and social networking across multiple platforms, such as mobile, internet, web-based, and satellite broadcast.

The current ICT available in and outside Iran remain largely silod platforms (i.e. lacking technology that facilitates convergence of information and interactivity). In general, the younger generation that support reform and actively oppose the regime from within have not been able to effectively access newer technologies or have been dissuaded from participating in communications programs operated by less legitimate traditional opposition parties from outside. Most these platforms are either state sponsored, like VOA and BBC, or are exile opposition websites and channels out of Los Angeles with a political agenda and low tolerance for alternative viewpoints. Most have failed to stay up to date with the language, trends, mentality, culture, and sociopolitical situation of the today Iran. The partisan nature of the older generation opposition groups further limit their ability to reach the younger demographic.

The traditional opposition groups based outside Iran do not maintain the legitimacy, technical capability, or political synergies to collaborate with the new generation of civil society organizations in Iran. Moreover, none of the existing available communication platforms effectively leverage digital content and networking by combining interactive mobile, internet, web, and satellite based secure communications vehicles.

The Democracy Council, in response to requests from prominent activists and organizations representing the Green Movement and other emerging sectors of civil society to collaboratively develop and deploy a “virtual sanctuary” for reform – minded Iranians to communicate, inform, network, organize, and advocate with each other and the larger Iranian society as well as the outside world. Currently, a significant amount of digital networking and content is produced by organizations affiliated with the Green Movement and independent civil society organizations (CSOs) in and outside Iran. However, distribution and leveraging f such content is limited by: 1. Technology available to CSOs, 2. Unaccommodating regional distribution platforms, internet, web and satellite based, 3. Lack of resources or skills to circumvent censorship and security regimes, 4. Lack of shared practices and resources. TCN will provide solutions to these four issues. In addition, CSOs and activists will merge their communications’ operations into the TCN platform to facilitate immediate and leveraged impact in Iran and the Persian-speaking world. For example, TCN will leverage the databases, mailing lists, and informal and formal marketing and advocacy operations through the single branded portal. These individual CSOs and independent producers would continue to manage their networking and marketing operations through the larger platform.

Taash Communications Network (TCN), developed by the Democracy Council (the Council) in collaboration with the leading representatives from the Green Movement, will help to meet this demand by providing the first robust, multilevel (internet, web, mobile, and satellite broadcast) communications channel for regionally produced progressive (uncensored) content and communications. TCN will operate as branded technological distribution portal (platform) made available to independent content and communications produced by and for progressive and reform – minded Iranians.

TCN will be the Facebook, twitter, NPR, and C-Span of Persian media under one roof with a focus on social and political issues concerning the Iranian public inside the country, in the region, and abroad. It will be a uniting factor that is demand-driven (commercially sustainable).

TCN will not produce content but provide technical services for the benefit of Iranian civil society.

SUMMARY PROGRAM DESCRIPTION:

Developed in coordination with prominent civil society figures in Iran, including representatives of the Green Movement, TCN would serve as a secure, robust, multilevel communications platform by which civil society members can deliver Persian content through:

· Interactive Website
· Advanced online (e.g. social networking) and mobile tools to secure unfettered access, availability, and interactivity to the content.
· Branded Persian Language video broadcast platform TCN would be owned by the nonprofit TCN Foundation registered in a European country, such as Denmark. The foundation’s mission would be to make available an independent, branded Persianlanguage communications platform that is available for high-quality user-generated programming.

TCN will serve as an independent distribution platform without production activities and distributing largely “homegrown” content. TCN would not produce or fund any content itself. Content will be broadly through independently produced user-generated local and regional programming. These contents will be supplemented by the purchase of Persian rights to acquisition of online or TV entertainment programming, with progressive themes from Hollywood to Bollywood. TCN will be an independently-owned multi layer open platform for progressive, reform-minded or “edgy” programming without censorship. A number of civil society organizations and other groups, such as prominent figures in the Green Movement have already expressed an interest and are committed in producing programming and
content for distribution by many different TCN platforms.

For example, TCN has received written expressions of support and pledges to produce content from a broad spectrum of independent individuals and organizations, such as:
· Mohsen Sazegara, a leading dissident and one of the original founders of the Iranian Revolutionary Guard
· Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan
· Shideh Rezaei, co-founder of Iran-Rooyan
· Ahmad Batebi, Human Rights Activists
· Mohammad Sadeghi Esfahlani, founder and administrator of Mir Hossein Mousavi’s and Zahra Rahnavard’s Supporters’ Network on Facebook,

This informative, educational, and entertaining medium will actively engage, inform, inspire, and link Iranians without censorship. To meet the demand of the target market, foreign films, generally illegal in Iran for containing progressive themes, would be acquired and dubbed to augment the original programming. Such content would be distributed and made accessible through multiple mediums: a secure website that contains social networking applications, and utilizes mobile and circumvention tools, and a robust satellite broadcast channel.

TCN would work collaboratively with local and regional CSO’s to design and deploy a strategic audience acquisition program leveraging new technologies and viral techniques. Each independent producer would manage their own networking and advocacy component as a back end to their own regular internet or TV programming. TCN provides the technical background to ensure high penetration, distribution, and secure accessibility.

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TCN-Concept

CONFIDENTIAL – IMF, EU, European Central Bank “Troika” Greece Debt Sustainability Analysis October 21, 2011

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GreeceDebtSustainability

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This draft analysis by the so-called “troika” of the IMF, European Commission, and the European Central Bank was leaked.

Since the fourth review, the situation in Greece has taken a turn for the worse, with the economy increasingly adjusting through recession and related wage-price channels, rather than through structural reform driven increases in productivity. The authorities have also struggled to meet their policy commitments against these headwinds. For the purpose of the debt sustainability assessment, a revised baseline has been specified, which takes into account the implications of these developments for future growth and for likely policy outcomes. It has been extended through 2030 to fully capture long term growth dynamics, and possible financing implications.

The assessment shows that debt will remain high for the entire forecast horizon. While it would decline at a slow rate given heavy official support at low interest rates (through the EFSF as agreed at the July 21 Summit), this trajectory is not robust to a range of shocks. Making debt sustainable will require an ambitious combination of official support and private sector involvement (PSI). Even with much stronger PSI, large official sector support would be needed for an extended period. In this sense, ultimately sustainability depends on the strength of the official sector commitment to Greece.

3. Under these assumptions, Greece’s debt peaks at very high levels and would decline at a very slow rate pointing to the need for further debt relief to ensure sustainability. Debt (net of collateral required for PSI) would peak at 186 percent of GDP in 2013 and decline only to 152 percent of GDP by end-2020 and to 130 percent of GDP by end-2030. The financing package agreed on July 21(especially lower rates on EFSF loans) does help the debt trajectory, but its impact is more than offset by the revised macro and policy framework. Greece would not return to the market until 2021 under the market access assumptions used, and cumulatively official additional financing needs (beyond what remains in the present program, and including the eventual rollover of existing official loans) could amount to some €252 billion from the present through to 2020.

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Das renommierte unabhängige und objektive Handelsblatt über die kriminellen “GoMoPa”-Betrüger

http://www.handelsblatt.com/finanzen/boerse-maerkte/boerse-inside/finanzaufsicht-untersucht-kursachterbahn-bei-wirecard/3406252.html

 

Zitat: “Es ist allerdings nicht das erste Mal, dass Gomopa-Vertreter ins Zwielicht geraten. 2006 wurden Vornkahl und Mitgründer Klaus Maurischat wegen Betrugs an einem Anleger verurteilt. Maurischat gab gestern gegenüber dem Handelsblatt weitere Verurteilungen zu. Es habe sich dabei jedoch nicht um Anlagebetrug gehandelt.”

Tribute to a Legend – Christopher Hitchens: Whisky, Cigs & Jefferson

2006: Hitchens at D.G.Wills Books, 7461 Girard Avenue, La Jolla, Ca. 92037

http://www.vanityfair.com/online/daily/2011/12/In-Memoriam-Christopher-Hitche… Vanity Fair In Memoriam: Christopher Hitchens, 1949–2011, by Juli Weiner, Dec 15th 2011.

Christopher Hitchens—the incomparable critic, masterful rhetorician, fiery wit, and fearless bon vivant—died today at the age of 62. Hitchens was diagnosed with esophageal cancer in the spring of 2010, just after the publication of his memoir, Hitch-22, and began chemotherapy soon after. “My chief consolation in this year of living dyingly has been the presence of friends,” he wrote in the June 2011 issue. He died in their presence, too, at the MD Anderson Cancer Center in Houston, Texas. May his 62 years of living, well, so livingly console the many of us who will miss him dearly
——
Christopher Eric Hitchens (born 13 April 1949) is an Anglo-American author and journalist whose books, essays, and journalistic career span more than four decades. He has been a columnist and literary critic at The Atlantic, Vanity Fair, Slate, World Affairs, The Nation, Free Inquiry, and became a media fellow at the Hoover Institution in September 2008. He is a staple of talk shows and lecture circuits and in 2005 was voted the world’s fifth top public intellectual in a Prospect/Foreign Policy poll. He’s known for his admiration of George Orwell, Thomas Paine, and Thomas Jefferson and for his excoriating critiques of, among others, Mother Teresa, Bill and Hillary Clinton, and Henry Kissinger. His confrontational style of debate has made him both a lauded and controversial figure. As a political observer, polemicist and self-defined radical, he rose to prominence as a fixture of the left-wing publications in his native Britain and in the United States. His departure from the established political left began in 1989 after what he called the “tepid reaction” of the Western left following Ayatollah Khomeini’s issue of a fatwa- calling for the murder of Salman Rushdie. The 11 September 2001 attacks strengthened his internationalist embrace of an interventionist foreign policy, and his vociferous criticism of what he called “fascism with an Islamic face.” His numerous editorials in support of the Iraq War caused some to label him a neoconservative, although Hitchens insists he is not “a conservative of any kind”

TOP-SECRET from the CIA- Ronald Reagan: Intelligence and the End of the Cold War

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Ronald Reagan became the 40th president of the United States more than thirty years ago, and ever since he stepped down to return to California eight years later, historians, political scientists, and pundits of all stripes have debated the meaning of his presidency. All modern presidents undergo reappraisal after their terms in office. Reagan has undergone a similar reappraisal. The old view, exemplified by Clark Clifford’s famous characterization that Reagan was “an amiable dunce,” posited Reagan as a great communicator, to be sure, but one without substance, a former actor who knew the lines others wrote for him, but intellectually an empty suit. Reagan, in the old narrative, simply could not be the architect of anything positive that happened while he was president. That perspective has changed forever and is marked by the continually improving regard historians have for Reagan.

 

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Reagan booklet

SECRET – “Godfather” of Colombian Army Intelligence Acquitted in Palace of Justice Case

 

 

 

Washington, D.C. , December 18, 2011 – A Colombian army general acquitted today in one of the country’s most infamous human rights cases “actively” collaborated with paramilitary death squads responsible for dozens of massacres, according to formerly secret U.S. records obtained under the Freedom of Information Act by the National Security Archive.

Once the third-highest-ranking officer in the Colombian military and later a top adviser to President Álvaro Uribe’s Department of Administrative Security (DAS), Iván Ramírez Quintero was acquitted today in the torture and disappearance of Irma Franco, one of several people detained by the army during the November 1985 Palace of Justice disaster.

The exoneration comes despite substantial evidence, including declassified U.S. embassy cables, linking Ramírez to the disappearances. Among the documents are reports that the missing individuals were “tortured and killed” by members of the Charry Solano Brigade, the unit led by Ramírez at that time.

Two former senior army officers, Col. Alfonso Plazas Vega and Gen. Jesús Armando Arias Cabrales, have already been convicted in the Palace of Justice disaster and remain the only people sentenced in the now more than 25-year-old case. More than 100 people, including 11 Supreme Court justices, perished during military operations to retake the Palace of Justice from M-19 insurgents who seized the building in November 1985. A document previously published by the Archive blamed “soldiers under the command of Col. Alfonso Plazas Vega” for the deaths of individuals detained by the army following the raid.

The declassified file on Gen. Iván Ramírez Quintero, the so-called “godfather of army intelligence,” portrays him as a shrewd and corrupt spymaster who shared sensitive intelligence with illegal militia groups, cultivated relationships with drug traffickers and notorious paramilitary figures, and engaged in “scare tactics” to take down his political enemies.

“Portrait of a Corrupt General”

The declassified reports focus on ties between Ramírez, narco-traffickers, and the country’s illegal paramilitary groups in the 1990s, particularly while he was in charge of the army’s First Division, along Colombia’s Atlantic coast, where he maintained “direct links with paramilitaries,” according to intelligence sources cited in a 1996 Embassy cable. The following year, a special Defense Intelligence Agency report pictured Ramírez beneath the heading, “Portrait of a Corrupt General,” and next to a picture of “Drug Trafficker-Backed Paramilitary Forces.”

U.S. Ambassador Myles Frechette spoke with at least two different Colombian defense ministers about the general’s “suspected ties to narcotraffickers and paramilitaries.” In a November 1997 meeting with Colombian minister of defense Gilberto Echeverri, Frechette cited “more evidence suggesting that Ramirez is passing military intelligence to the paramilitaries, and that the intelligence is being used against the guerrillas.” Frechette had good reason for concern. A new U.S. law linking foreign military assistance to human rights performance had heightened the embassy’s focus on abusive officers, and Ramírez, despite pressure from the U.S. over his human rights record, had just been designated as the next army inspector general. Frechette bluntly told the defense minister “that if Ramirez were to attain higher rank or position, it would seriously compromise the USG’s [United States Government’s] ability to cooperate with the Colombian military.”

“Godfather of army intelligence”

U.S. contacts in the Colombian military took a similarly dim view of Ramírez. One former colonel said he was “convinced [that Ramírez] has gone far beyond the passive phase with paramilitaries and is actively supporting them.” The colonel was “concerned about the potential direction the Colar [Colombian army] could take if Ramirez abuses his position as IG [inspector general] or, worse, if he is allowed to rise to even higher positions in the armed forces hierarchy.” Ramírez is repeatedly characterized as the “godfather of army intelligence” with influence “so pervasive within the military intelligence community” that he maintained control over intelligence assignments even from non-intelligence posts.

Another retired Colombian officer told the Embassy that Ramírez had been the “godfather” of Colombia’s “intelligence mafia” for more than 20 years. The general “surrounded himself with loyal subordinates who ‘covered up for him'” and was connected to “shady elements” inside the army’s 20th Military Intelligence Brigade,” according to a cable reporting on the meeting.

The 20th Brigade was established in 1990 on the recommendations of a U.S. intelligence team, and Ramírez was its first commander. “Fundamentally designed for covert operations,” the brigade’s members were attached to army units across the country, according to a U.S. Army report (See page 79.). Personnel worked “undercover and in civilian clothes,” reporting only to division commanders and other intelligence officers.

The brigade became the most visible symbol of Colombia’s corrupt and abusive intelligence establishment, and was tied to political assassinations, the torture of suspected guerrillas, and Colombia’s brutal paramilitary forces. The State Department’s human rights report for 1997 singled out the intelligence brigade for “death squad activity,” a charge also leveled by Ambassador Frechette as he left the Bogotá post late that year.

Pulling the strings was the “godfather” Ramírez. One report addressed to the State Department’s under secretary for political affairs, Thomas Pickering, asserted that “Ramirez and some elements of the Bogota-based 20th Intelligence Brigade actively collaborate with paramilitaries by providing intelligence and other support.” The CIA connected Ramírez to Carlos Castaño, notorious head of the powerful United Self-defense Forces of Córdoba and Urabá (ACCU). A U.S. Embassy report from 1998 noted the army’s “new-found effectiveness in curbing the paramilitaries” since Ramírez had been removed from the First Division, adding that it seemed “more than coincidental that the recent anti-paramilitary actions have all taken place since the departure from northern Colombia of military personnel believed to favor paramilitaries.”

In May 1998, shortly before Colombia announced plans to dismantle the 20th Brigade, the State Department cancelled Ramírez’s U.S. visa. In an unusually passionate memo on the moral dilemma faced by U.S. policymakers in Colombia, the State Department’s desk officer for Andean Affairs, David Passage, made a rhetorical plea for self-reflection on the part of the Colombian army and the military intelligence system in particular. Colombia needed to develop “credible and defensible intelligence gathering techniques instead of 12-volt batteries and rubber hoses,” Passage asserted, strongly implying the Colombian military’s penchant for torture techniques.

Yes, we know the Colombian military doesn’t control all the paramilitary organizations – but we also know there are enough ties between many of them and Colombian military officers that it becomes impossible for us to turn a blind eye. NO, we’re not going to identify them; you know who they are. Heal yourselves before you ask us for help!  If you don’t understand why we withdrew Gen Ivan Ramirez’s visa, then we’re too far apart to be able to cooperate with each other.

Three months later, a Washington Post report detailed extensive ties between Ramírez and paramilitary groups and also identified him as a “liaison and paid informant for the Central Intelligence Agency,” charges that he angrily denied. The damage done, Ramírez was passed up for promotion in 1999 and sent out of the country to serve as military attaché in Chile.

Never charged for his alleged paramilitary ties, Ramírez was appointed by President Álvaro Uribe as a special adviser to the country’s top civilian intelligence organization, the Administrative Department of Security (DAS) in 2006. The spy agency was subsequently found to be running a Watergate-style illegal-wiretapping operation targeting journalists, judges and human rights defenders.

Arrested for disappearances in the Palace of Justice case in 2008, Ramírez spent more than three years in preventive detention pending investigation and trial. Jailed former paramilitary chief Salvatore Mancuso has testified that both Ramírez and former DAS agents collaborated with his illegal forces.

The revelations about Gen. Ramírez are drawn from Colombia and the United States: Political Violence, Narcotics, and Human Rights, 1948-2010, a recent addition to the Digital National Security Archive. Edited by Michael Evans and published by ProQuest, the set consists of more than 3,000 declassified diplomatic and intelligence documents on Colombia’s decades-old conflict.

Confidential -Los Angeles Fusion Center: Detecting and Mitigating Cyber Threats

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(U//FOUO) US citizens and assets – including the White House, the Central Intelligence Agency, InfraGard, the state of Arizona, and major defense contracting companies – experienced high-profile cyber threats and attacks in the first half of 2011. Most of the tactics and techniques used were not new, however the increase in attacks during the past few months exemplifies the growth of cyber incursions and reinforces the need to be aware of risks and mitigation techniques associated with cyber threats. Appendices A, B and C contain detailed lists of threats, potential indicators of attacks, and possible remedies; some areas may contain overlap.

(U) Different Actors, Different Motives, Different Threats

(U) Recent reporting has largely centered on attacks by “hacktivist” groups – loose collectives that conduct cyberactions to raise awareness regarding particular grievances or causes.ii These attacks generally garner significant media attention. While they are annoying, embarrassing, and disruptive to victims, they seldom result in meaningful losses or damage, beyond costs associated with website repair. More worrisome are sophisticated probes and attacks that exfiltrate sensitive data for malicious use, or plant software designed to disable systems. Attacks such as these may be conducted by state-sponsored actors or organized criminal enterprises, and may inflict greater damage and losses.

(U//FOUO) On 23 June, hacker group LulzSec released information taken from the Arizona Department of Public Safety – including personal information of law enforcement officers – to protest a controversial immigration law.

(U) A multi-phase attack between March and June 2011 against RSA, a secure token provider, and three major defense contractors, saw hackers use stolen and cloned token keys to breach and remove data from networks at the defense firms.

(U) The mid-2009 targeted Stuxnet virus temporarily disabled a uranium enrichment plant in Iran.

(U) Different Targets, Different Methods

(U//FOUO) A successful cyber attack can be detrimental to targeted systems, computers or individuals. Hackers may install programs that steal personal information, flood a browser with pop-up advertising, slow Internet connections, fill e-mail with advertisements and/or crash the system. They may take control of a computer, commit fraud or identity theft, or cause an individual to lose all data stored on that system. This can impact both personal and work systems, and can affect all aspects of an individual’s life.

(U//FOUO) Cyber threats can involve any aspect of communications and data infrastructure, but can be broadly categorized as threats to users, systems, and access devices, including mobile devices.

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LAJRIC-CyberThreats

CONFIDENTIAL – (U//FOUO) FBI Threat to Law Enforcement From “Doxing”

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(U//FOUO) The FBI assesses with high confidence a that law enforcement personnel and hacking victims are at risk for identity theft and harassment through a cyber technique called “doxing.” “Doxing” is a common practice among hackers in which a hacker will publicly release identifying information including full name, date of birth, address, and pictures typically retrieved from the social networking site profiles of a targeted individual.

(U//FOUO) In response to law enforcement activities that have occurred against Anonymous and LulzSecc since January 2011, members of these groups have increased their interest in targeting law enforcement in retaliation for the arrests and searches conducted. Hackers and hacktivists—hackers who commit a computer crime for communicating a socially or politically motivated message—have been openly discussing these activities on Twitter and posting information pertaining to law enforcement on their Twitter accounts and Internet Relay Chat (IRC) channels.

• (U//FOUO) In June 2011 members of Anonymous and LulzSec discussed an identified FBI agent in the IRC channel #lulzsec. The detailed information included when he or she started working for the FBI, training, assignments, and previous employment. FBI analysis suggests that this information was derived from a 2009 affidavit that was available on the Wired.com Web site.

• (U//FOUO) On 26 July 2011 the Twitter account OpMonsanto, an account used by members of Anonymous, warned of the intention to “dox” FBI agents following the 19 July 2011 arrests of 16 individuals for their presumed role in Anonymous’ activities: “OpMonsanto: To any FBI agent involved in the continued unjust raiding of peaceful Anons: Expect us. You are no longer entitled to your privacy.”

• (U) On 31 July 2011 more than 70 law enforcement Web sites were hacked and large amounts of confidential data was exfiltrated. These Web sites included state and local police departments that were not associated with the takedowns. The data consisted of email addresses, usernames, Social Security numbers, home addresses, phone numbers, password dumps, internal training files, informant lists, jail inmate databases, and active warrant information. Operation AntiSecd claimed that the intrusion was in response to “bogus, trumped-up charges” against the individuals associated with Anonymous’ attacks on PayPal.

(U//FOUO) Recently, Anonymous members have also “doxed” the employees of companies that were victims of their previous attacks, who are perceived as working with law enforcement.

• (U) In July 2011 a sealed search warrant affidavit pertaining to the 19 July takedown was available on the Internet. The affidavit contained the personal information of employees of two US companies, as well as FBI personnel. The personal information consisted of names, units, and job titles.

(U) Outlook and Implications

(U//FOUO) The 19 July takedown of Anonymous and LulzSec members has increased members’ interest in targeting law enforcement in retaliation for the arrests and searches conducted. As more arrests are made against suspected members of Anonymous and LulzSec, the FBI expects hacking activities and “doxing” that targets law enforcement and government interests will continue. This could compromise investigations and result in harassment and identity theft of the individuals named in the “dox.”

(U//FOUO) Precautionary measures to mitigate potential harassment and identity theft risk to being “doxed” include:

o Safeguarding material containing personal information pertaining to officers and named victims;
o Changing passwords and do not reuse passwords for multiple accounts;
o Using strong passwords;
o Monitoring credit reports;
o Monitoring online personal information, including what others post about you on services such as social networking sites;
o Being careful when giving out contact information; and
o Being aware of social engineering tactics aimed at revealing sensitive information.

 

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

FBI-Doxing

Confidential-Statement by Director General Israel Atomic Energy Commission To the International Atomic Energy Agency

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Mme President,

Distinguished Delegates,

Mme President, let me begin by congratulating you, on being elected President of the General Conference. I can assure you the fullest cooperation of the delegation of Israel, in carrying out your important and responsible tasks. I also wish to congratulate the kingdom of Cambodia and the Republic of Rwanda as new members of the Agency. Yesterday, the General Conference has confirmed Ambassador Yukiya Amano of Japan, to the most professional and distinguished post of IAEA’s Director General. Israel has known Ambassador Amano’s professional qualifications and personal integrity over the years, and looks forward to working with him in this new capacity. We wish Ambassador Amano much success in guiding the work of the Agency.

Mme President,

In my address, I intend to dwell mainly on two issues: The new prospects for civil nuclear energy, and the risks associated with it. The risks include diversion of nuclear materials to military programs; nuclear terror; and safety and security of nuclear installations.

The nuclear industry has recently begun witnessing the emergence of a world-wide renaissance. While the intensive development of nuclear energy is highly desirable, it is imperative to minimize proliferation risks – especially risks which are associated with nuclear fuel cycle technologies. The characteristics of these technologies are that they are inherently dual use in their nature. It is the firm view and the policy of Israel, that the right to use nuclear energy for peaceful purposes is based on the absolute duty of each state not to abuse this right.

Mme President,

Israel attaches great importance to the nuclear non-proliferation regime. The regime has recently been under growing pressure, from within, by states that are parties to the NPT. Despite the geo-political realities in the Middle East, it has been Israel’s long standing policy of supporting, and wherever possible, joining arms control and other international treaties. In doing so, we are very appreciative of those who are conscious and mindful of Israel’s narrow security margins. In recent years, Israel has actively followed developments in the fields of nonproliferation and arms control. This includes a renewed interest in multilateral nuclear arms control and disarmament led by US President Barak Obama. Israel has continued to contribute to the global non-proliferation regime, through its policy of responsible behavior and restraint in the nuclear domain. Israel has repeatedly stated that it will not be the first to introduce nuclear weapons in to the Middle East. It is therefore regrettable that the outgoing Director General of the
IAEA, repeatedly mispresented Israel’s long standing policy in this regard. The continuous growth of Israel’s energy needs, coupled with its total dependence on foreign energy sources, poses a complex national challenge. Israel possesses advanced nuclear expertise and know-how that will play an impressive role when it comes to the future development of Israel’s energy sources.

Mme President,

I would like to address Israel’s vision and policy, regarding the transformation of the Middle East to a zone free of weapons of mass destruction. It has always been the position of Israel that the nuclear issue, as well as all other security issues, could only be realistically addressed within the regional context. The African Nuclear Weapon Free Zone Treaty, which has recently entered into force, provides an excellent example of such an approach.

It is our vision and policy, to establish the Middle East as a mutually verifiable zone free of weapons of mass destruction and their delivery systems. We have always emphasized, that such a process, through direct negotiations, should begin with confidence building measures. They should be followed by mutual recognition, reconciliation, and peaceful relations. Consequently conventional and non-conventional arms control measures will emerge. Israel’s long-term goals for Middle East regional security and arms control were approved by the Israeli Government. As the international community has accepted and recognized in other regions, the establishment of such a zone can only emanate from within the region.

In our view, progress towards realizing this vision cannot be made without a fundamental change in regional circumstances, including a significant transformation in the attitude of states in the region towards Israel. The constant efforts by member states in the region to single out the State of Israel in blatantly anti-Israeli resolutions in this General Conference, is a clear reflection of such hostile attitude.

Mme President,

Significant and grave developments regarding nuclear proliferation have taken place in the recent years. I want to emphasize, that the most widely recognized cases of non-compliance with legally binding non-proliferation obligations, have occurred in the Middle East, by states that are parties to the NPT. Grave and covert violations by Iran and Syria had been detected and then formally reported by the IAEA. The Agency’s investigations in these two countries have been hampered by continued lack of cooperation, denial of access, and efforts to conceal and mislead the inspectors.

Israel is following these developments in our region, with profound concern. We all hope that the IAEA investigations will get to the bottom of these activities. In so doing it will assist the international community in its efforts to prevent dangerous proliferation of nuclear weapons, and the abuse of the right to peaceful nuclear energy.

We believe that it is crucial to improve and enhance the IAEA verification and inspection capabilities. We are also of the firm view, that IAEA investigations should be conducted free of any extraneous influences. Above all, the activities of those countries that breach their international commitments and obligations must be met with concrete and immediate international measures. Violations cannot go unpunished.

Mme President,

Another important issue, which poses many challenges to the international community, is nuclear safety and security. Adequate safety and physical security measures are crucial to ensure international acceptance of the nuclear civil industry. It is the long standing policy of the Israel Atomic Energy Commission, to pursue uncompromising standards of safety in its two nuclear research centers.

Mme President, Distinguished delegates.

The threat of radiological and nuclear materials in the hand of terrorists, confronts us all. In a world of global terrorist networks supported by rogue regimes, a secret and sudden attack, with a weapon of mass destruction, has become a chilling reality. None of us can confront this global threat alone. We must work together to secure the materials terrorists would need to build a radiological or improvised nuclear device. In this regard, we commend the IAEA for addressing the prevention of illicit trafficking of radioactive and nuclear materials. In view of these realities, Israel has joined the US-Russia led Global Initiative to Combat Nuclear Terrorism (GICNT). It has also joined the Megaport Initiative led by the US Department of Energy to prevent possible illicit trafficking of radioactive and nuclear materials. We believe that no effort and resources should be spared worldwide, in denying terrorists these materials. In this spirit, the Government of Israel welcomes President Obama’s initiative, to host a Global Summit on Nuclear
Security next year.

Mme President,

Given the global realities we all face, the peaceful uses of nuclear energy, should have been the main topics of this Annual General Conference. Regrettably, instead, some countries are imposing on this General Conference politically motivated agenda items. These efforts are either designed to single out the State of Israel, or to divert attention from violations and real issues of non-compliance by certain Middle East states.

First among these, is Agenda item 22 entitled “Israeli Nuclear Capabilities”. This Agenda item is no more than a version of an old agenda item that was removed by agreement in 1993, and never acted upon. Among the sponsors of this draft resolution are countries that do not recognize the State of Israel, and even call for its annihilation. I wonder what moral standing they possess as they criticize Israel
for pursuing policies designed to secure its very existence.

Mme President,

The second is agenda item 21 entitled: “The application of IAEA Safeguards in the Middle East”. Israel has joined the consensus on this Agenda Item for 14 consecutive years. We have done so notwithstanding our grave reservations, regarding the modalities included in the resolution’s text, and the relevance of this forum in addressing the establishment of the Middle East as a nuclear weapon free zone. As I mentioned before, such a zone can only emanate from within the region on the basis of arrangements freely arrived at through direct negotiations, between all the states concerned. No IAEA Forum could replace direct negotiations between the regional parties.

Unfortunately, since 2006, the consensus on the Middle East issues was broken. The only reason for this setback is the uncompromising attitude of the sponsors of these two draft resolutions who are aiming at extraneous political goals. This raises also doubts whether the promotion of the Middle East into a nuclear weapon free zone, is indeed the aim of the sponsors.

During recent months, Israel has approached Egypt directly and through other Governments, hoping to reach an agreed language on Middle East issues in this General Conference. In the same spirit, Israel has responded positively in the recent days to sincere efforts by several delegations and the President of the Conference to work together towards a positive outcome. It is my firm belief that it is not too late to reach consensus based on our respective positions. I can assure you all of our fullest cooperation in trying to reach consensus based on negotiations in good faith.

Mme President,

Iran’s initiative to promote Agenda item 24 on “The Prohibition of Armed Attack or threat of Attack against Nuclear Installations” is a clear case of hypocrisy. Iran is driven by wishful thinking, that the international community will condone Iran’s violations of its commitments and obligations, and its deception campaign over many years. No diplomatic smoke screen and maneuvering in the IAEA’s General Conference can obscure the real facts and findings. Let me remind all delegates that the Director General, in his recent address to the Board of Governors, provided an account of Iran’s non-cooperation with the Agency and said: “If this information is real”, “there is a high probability that nuclear weaponization activities have taken place”. The Government of Israel and many others assess, that the information available to the Agency is accurate and real. Iran, which is systematically violating several United Nations Security Council Resolutions, is seeking the sympathy of the same international community whose authority it flouts. I call on all delegations, to reject Iran’s transparent and cynical move.

Mme President,

The international community is at a critical crossroad in confronting a fundamental challenge. We should work together in promoting peaceful uses of nuclear energy, while preventing the spread of nuclear weapons and proliferation of sensitive technologies and materials.

Mme President, Distinguished delegates.

This coming Friday is the eve of the Jewish New Year 5770. In our prayers we say: “Here ends a year with its maledictions and a new year begins with its blessings”.

We hope that this year holds blessings and peace for all.

Thank you Mme President.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

Statement2009-9-15

Uncensored – Bradley Manning Protest 16 December 2011

[Image]Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, left, is escorted out of a courthouse at Fort Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, after the first day of a military hearing that will determine if he should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. (Cliff Owen)
[Image]Army Pfc. Bradley Manning is escorted in handcuffs out of a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, after the first day of a military hearing that will determine if he should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. (Cliff Owen)
[Image]Pfc. Bradley Manning is escorted from his his Article 32 hearing December 16, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty
[Image]Army security offices stand watch moments before Army Pfc. Bradley Manning is escorted out of a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, after the first day of a military hearing that will determine if he should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. (Cliff Owen)
[Image]In this courtroom sketch, Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, second from left, sits as his attorney, David E. Coombs, speaks during a military hearing in Fort Meade, Md. , Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, that will determine if Manning should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. AP
[Image]David E. Coombs, attorney for Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, right, leaves a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md. , Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, during a recess in a military hearing that will determine if Manning should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. AP
[Image]Protestors supporting Pfc. Bradley Manning march outside the gate of Ft. Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, where Manning will be attending a hearing to determine if he will be court martialed. (Susan Walsh)
[Image]Protestors supporting Pfc. Bradley Manning gather outside Ft. Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, where Manning will be attending a hearing to determine if he will be court martialed. The U.S. military is making its case for why Manning should be court-martialed on charges of endangering national security by stealing and leaking an enormous trove of government secrets. (Susan Walsh)
[Image]Protestors supporting Bradley Manning gather outside Ft. Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, where Manning will be attending a hearing to determine if he will be court martialed. (Susan Walsh)
[Image]Richard Ochs of Baltimore, Md., protests outside of Ft. Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, to support Pfc. Bradley Manning who will be attending a hearing to determine if he will be court martialed. (Susan Walsh)
[Image]A soldier stands guard at a roadblock outside of a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, during a military hearing that will determine if Army Pfc. Bradley Manning should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. (Patrick Semansky)
[Image]Dave Eberhardt of Baltimore, Md., protests outside Ft. Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, in support Pfc. Bradley Manning. The U.S. military is making its case for why Manning should be court-martialed on charges of endangering national security by stealing and leaking an enormous trove of government secrets. (Susan Walsh)
[Image]Supporters of Pfc. Bradley Manning walk away after attending his Article 32 hearing, on December 16, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty
[Image]Military police talk to supprters of Pfc. Bradley Manning after they attended his Article 32 hearing December 16, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Pfc. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty
[Image]People walk into a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md., Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, for a military hearing that will determine if Army Pfc. Bradley Manning should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history. (Patrick Semansky)

[Image]

 

[Image]Police officers from U.S. Army Fort George G. Meade walk outside the base gates to talk with journalists and demonstrators protesting in supprt of U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning December 18, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty

[Image]Supporters of U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning, an Army intelligence analyst, hold vigil outside the gates of U.S. Army Fort George G. Meade where Manning’s Article 32 preliminary hearing will begin December 18, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty
[Image]A helicopter from the Anne Arundel County Sheriff’s Office circles above supporters of U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning, an Army intelligence analyst, as they hold vigil outside the gates of U.S. Army Fort George G. Meade, where Manning’s Article 32 preliminary hearing is being held, December 18, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty
[Image]A military personnel directs a group of people outside the courthouse at Fort Meade, Maryland during the U.S. vs Private Bradley E. Manning Article 32 hearing December 16, 2011. An Army intelligence analyst suspected in the biggest leak of classified U.S. documents in history makes his first court appearance on Friday accused of multiple charges including aiding the enemy, which could bring life imprisonment. Reuters
[Image]Supporters of U.S. Army Private Bradley Manning, an Army intelligence analyst, hold vigil outside the gates of U.S. Army Fort George G. Meade where Manning’s Article 32 preliminary hearing will begin December 18, 2011 in Fort Meade, Maryland. Manning is accused of disclosing more than 260,000 diplomatic cables, more than 90,000 intelligence reports on the war in Afghanistan and one video of a military helicopter attack to WikiLeaks, a Web site dedicated to publishing secret documents. Getty
[Image]Journalists stand outside the courthouse at Fort Meade, Maryland during the U.S. vs Private Bradley E. Manning Article 32 hearing December 16, 2011. An Army intelligence analyst suspected in the biggest leak of classified U.S. documents in history makes his first court appearance on Friday accused of multiple charges including aiding the enemy, which could bring life imprisonment. Reuters
[Image]David E. Coombs, attorney for Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, leaves a courthouse in Fort Meade, Md. , Friday, Dec. 16, 2011, during a recess in a military hearing that will determine if Manning should face court-martial for his alleged role in the WikiLeaks classified leaks case. Manning is suspected of being the source in one of the largest unauthorized disclosures of classified information in U.S. history.

TOP – SECRET – (U//FOUO) U.S. Marine Corps Afghan Drone Operations in Regional Command Southwest (RC (SW))

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(U) Purpose: To inform Deputy Commandants (DCs) Aviation, Combat Development and Integration (CD&I), Plans, Policies, and Operations (PP&O), Installations and Logistics (I&L), Commanding General (CG), Training and Education Command (TECOM), Director of Intelligence, operating forces, and others on results of a Marine Corps Center for Lessons Learned (MCCLL) collection conducted April – May 2011 to document lessons and observations regarding unmanned aerial systems (UAS) operations in support of Regional Command Southwest (RC (SW)) during Operation Enduring Freedom (OEF).

Bottom Line up Front

(U//FOUO) The RQ-7B Shadow UAS employed by the Marine Corps is a U. S. Army program of record. Because it is an Army program the Shadow has very high frequency (VHF) but no ultra-high frequency (UHF) retransmission capability. UHF is the primary means of communication between key elements of the Marine air command and control system (MACCS), airborne Marine Corps aviation assets, and Marine joint terminal attack controllers (JTAC) and forward air controllers (FAC). Developing a UHF retransmission capability for an organic USMC UAS was regarded as a primary need.

(U//FOUO) USMC units were dependent on joint assets for armed UAS missions and competed with virtually every other combat unit in OEF to schedule armed UAS sorties. Developing an organic armed USMC UAS was regarded as a priority.

(U//FOUO) Third Marine Aircraft Wing (MAW) Forward (Fwd) conceived and initiated a staff organization called the Marine air ground task force (MAGTF) Aerial Reconnaissance Coordination Cell (MARCC). The intent of the MARCC was to ensure that all aviation combat element (ACE) intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR) capabilities, manned and unmanned, were coordinated and employed to maximum effectiveness.

(U//FOUO) The establishment of the MARCC initially generated operational friction between the RC (SW) ACE and the ground combat element (GCE). The ACE regarded the MARCC as a more efficient means of conducting command and control of ACE assets. However, the GCE had been accustomed to a greater degree of autonomy in employing UASs and perceived the establishment of the MARCC as an impediment to responsiveness and their ability to dynamically retask UASs as desired.

(U//FOUO) As the ground scheme of maneuver evolved, establishing and supporting UAS “hubs” and “spokes” in proximity to ground forces posed a significant challenge to 3d MAW (Fwd) planners. [MCCLL Note: A hub is a UAS airfield base of operations used to launch and recover UASs and a spoke is a scalable outlying UAS control site supported by the hub.] In addition to requiring facilities suitable for the launch, recovery, and maintenance of UASs, a key consideration was the appropriate manning of each hub and spoke. A significant limiting factor in the MAW’s ability to establish hubs and spokes was a lack of trained intelligence analysts, UAS mission commanders, and maintenance personnel (this included contract maintenance support for the ScanEagle UAS due to contractor habitability mandates subject to that contract).

(U//FOUO) The volume of UAS sorties and their importance to the MAGTF is expected to increase in the future, including the development of a logistics support UAS and a new small tactical unmanned aerial system (STUAS). This has generated a need to determine where UAS assets would best be located within the ACE of the MAGTF. The Marine Unmanned Aerial Vehicle Squadron ONE and TWO (VMU-1 / VMU-2) commanding officers believed they should be located within a Marine aircraft group (MAG) just as all USMC aviation squadrons. [MCCLL Note: The VMUs are located within the Marine air control group (MACG) in garrison. During OEF deployment the VMUs were located directly within the MAW (Fwd) because there were no deployed MAGs and the MACG was composed of a small detachment.]

Key Points:

(U//FOUO) The MARCC worked to incorporate all ACE ISR capabilities into overall ISR planning done by RC (SW), advised RC (SW) planners and leaders on which aviation assets could best fill ISR requirements and requests, ensured air tasking order (ATO) development included the RC (SW) commander’s prioritization for tasking of ISR assets, streamlined information flow regarding these assets in order to build situational awareness throughout the MACCS, and facilitated the dynamic retasking of ISR platforms as necessary.

(U//FOUO) VMU-1 established a “hot weather schedule” during the summer months due to temperatures that could reach as high as 135 degrees Fahrenheit on the runway. This extreme heat could cause the Shadow’s wings to swell and vent fuel. However, the ScanEagle did not have this significant a problem with the heat and has longer endurance, so, the VMU scheduled ScanEagle sorties earlier in the day but still sufficient to cover the hottest time of day and Shadow sorties in the morning or evening. This enabled the VMU to maintain coverage throughout the fly-day. VMU-1 also erected a large area maintenance shelter for aircraft maintenance (LAMS-A) in order to keep aircraft and personnel out of the heat.

(U//FOUO) UAS technologies and capabilities continue to be developed and fielded. Training and education of UAS users, including unit air officers, intelligence officers, FACs, JTACs, and joint fires observers (JFO), regarding new capabilities and how best to employ UASs is vital. In order to support this, sufficient UAS assets must be made available during pre-deployment training.

(U//FOUO) The Marine Corps has recently fielded the Satellite Wide-Area Network version 2 (SWANv2) that will be included in the VMU organic table of equipment. Unlike the Digital Video Broadcasting Return Channel via Satellite (DVB-RCS) system currently being used, SWANv2 is a Marine Corps program of record that will enable the VMUs to disseminate full-motion video (FMV) signals more effectively.

(U//FOUO) In July, 2010, a contract was awarded to Boeing subsidiary Insitu, Inc. for development and production of the STUAS. STUAS will be used by the U.S. Navy and Marine Corps to provide persistent maritime and land-based tactical reconnaissance, surveillance, and target acquisition (RSTA) data collection and dissemination. Unlike the current ScanEagle and Shadow UASs, STUAS will have a UHF retransmission capability and the modularity to carry “plug-and-play” mission payloads such as hyper-spectral imaging sensors, synthetic aperture radar sensors, and potentially small precision-guided munitions (PGM) among others.

(U//FOUO) The establishment of the MARCC initially created the perception within the GCE of two separate procedures for requesting UAS support – one procedure for requesting organic support and a different procedure for requesting joint support. However, the 3d MAW (Fwd) Future Operations Officer said that, the team that developed the MARCC specifically avoided creating any new procedures for the end users.

(U//FOUO) The MARCC officer-in-charge (OIC) developed a comprehensive kneeboard card that had information regarding all of the unmanned assets that were going to be airborne during a particular fly-day. This provided aircrew with situational awareness that was critical to safety of flight and helped reduce the chance of mid-air collisions. The kneeboard card also provided time, location, and contact frequency information that could be used to more effectively and efficiently employ or retask UASs.

(U//FOUO) The RC (SW) ISR officer noted that they were building a “collection strategy playbook” that would describe different tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTP) that have proved successful in integrating different intelligence collections effects. For example: layering ground-moving-target-indicator data with dismounted-moving-target-indicator assets (two different kinds of radar) and integrating those with a wide-area surveillance sensor (such as a UAS, Ground Based Operational Surveillance System (GBOSS), or Aerostat balloon) in support of real-time operations.

(U//FOUO) The fact that there is no primary military occupational specialty (MOS) designator for UAS officers degraded the ability of the VMUs to retain corporate knowledge and experience within the UAS community. Instead, officers were assigned to VMUs for 18 – 24 month tours of duty, a substantial portion of which was spent in training, and usually never returned to the UAS community after transferring out.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

MCCLL-UAS-RC-SW

Victims-Opfer.com zeigen – Fake CV of Klaus Maurischat Pseudoym Siegfried Siewert-Gefälschter Lebenslauf von Klaus Maurischat-Pseudoym Siegfried Siewert

http://www.victims-opfer.com/?p=19611

BÖRSE ONLINE ÜBER DIE GEFÄLSCHTEN MITGLIEDERZAHLEN VON STASI-“GoMoPa”

Gomopa dürfte ohnehin ein Glaubwürdigkeitsproblem haben, denn der Dienst fiel mit falschen oder fragwürdigen Äußerungen auf. So gibt es laut Website 57 345 Mitglieder (Stand 21. September 2010). Die Mitgliedschaft ist bis auf einen einmonatigen Test kostenpflichtig. Einnahmen aus den Beiträgen beziffert Maurischat in seiner Information aber nur auf um die 5000 Euro. Selbst wenn alle Mitglieder die günstigste Variante gewählt haben, ergäben sich rechnerisch weit weniger als 1000 zahlende Mitglieder. Gomopa äußert sich dazu nicht.

http://www.graumarktinfo.de/gm/aktuell/diskussion/:Gomopa–Anwaelte-als-Finanzierungsquelle/616477.html

UNCENSORED – NEW – FEMEN protestes EURO 2012

 

STASI – Codes für noch nicht enttarnte STASI-Agenten

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020260407440;99;99;99;;::;;;2805,00

201066400619;99;99;99;;::;;;2800,00

200967418715;99;99;99;;::;;;2795,00

291067422432;99;99;99;;::;;;2775,00

090466400731;99;99;99;;::;;;2775,00

300667407123;99;99;99;;::;;;2775,00

050537515397;99;99;99;;::;;;2760,01

180567416010;99;99;99;;::;;;2820,00

180967430030;99;99;99;;::;;;2700,00

200567403119;99;99;99;;::;;;2700,00

200667407934;99;99;99;;::;;;2700,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

CONFIDENTIAL – Amazon Location Tracking and Future Destination Prediction Patent

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This patent was submitted by Amazon on December 6, 2011. It describes a method of tracking individuals through mobile phone GPS location data and then using the information to predict future shopping destinations to present more specifically targeted advertising.

Mobile device users may be tracked either via mobile-signal triangulation or via Global Positioning Satellite information. A mobile device user’s recent movements may be analyzed to determine trails or traffic patterns for device user among various locations. Mobile device trail information, either for an individual user or aggregated for multiple users, may be analyzed to determine a next destination for the user. Electronic advertising content, such as advertisements, coupons and/or other communications, associated with the next destination may be sent to an electronic device likely to be viewed by the mobile device user. Additionally, the identity of the mobile device user may be known and the advertisements or coupons may be tailored according to demographic information regarding the mobile device user. In addition, destinations may be recommended to mobile device users based on the recent locations the users have visited.

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SUMMARY

The movements of mobile device users may be detected, recorded, tracked and analyzed in order to direct advertising content to the mobile device users based on the users’ predicted destinations. For example, location dependent advertising content may be provided to mobile device users based on a current and/or predicted location that the mobile device user is likely to visit. In some embodiments, mobile device users’ current and past travel patterns may be analyzed to determine a predicted next destination. For instance, by analyzing the recent movements of a mobile device user among stores in a shopping mall, it may be determined that a particular store is a predicted next destination for the mobile device user. Thus, advertising content for the predicted destination, such as coupons, may be sent to the mobile device user.

In some embodiments, a mobile device user’s travel or traffic patterns (e.g., a set of locations and the order in which those location are visited) may be analyzed to predict a next likely location or destination. Various types of advertising content, such as electronic coupons, and other advertisements may be directed to the mobile device user based on the predicted destination. For example, a mobile device user may be tracked as she shops at various stores in a shopping mall. Based on the stores she has recently visited, a traffic pattern analysis system may determine a next most likely store or other destination that the mobile device user may visit. The system may then send advertisements, coupons, or other commercial communication to the user’s mobile device or to another electronic display device, such as to offer a discount or other shopping benefit to the mobile device user if she visits the predicted destination.

For instance, in one embodiment, a mobile device user may be tracked as she visits several of the clothing stores in a shopping mall. Based on the type and location of the stores visited, the system may determine that she is likely to visit another clothing store in another part of the shopping mall. In response to determining a store that the mobile device user is likely to visit, the system may send advertising content, such as an electronic coupon good for 10% off any purchases made at the store that day, to the mobile device user. Thus, the mobile device user may be more likely to visit the store because of the added enticement of the discount.

DOWNLOAD THE DOCUMENT HERE

AmazonTrackingPatent

INSIDER – Congress Approves Insider Threat Detection Program to Combat Leakers

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Congress ordered the Secretary of Defense to establish an information security program for detecting “unauthorized access to, use of, or transmission of classified or controlled unclassified information.”  The provision was included by the FY2012 defense authorization act that was approved in conference this week (section 922).

The insider threat detection program, conceived as a response to WikiLeaks, is intended to “allow for centralized monitoring and detection of unauthorized activities.”  Among other things, it is supposed to employ technology solutions “to prevent the unauthorized export of information from a network or to render such information unusable in the event of the unauthorized export of such information.”

H.R. 1540, NATIONAL DEFENSE AUTHORIZATION ACT FOR FISCAL YEAR 2012, SEC. 922. INSIDER THREAT DETECTION (Federation of American Scientists):

(a) Program Required.–The Secretary of Defense shall
establish a program for information sharing protection and
insider threat mitigation for the information systems of the
Department of Defense to detect unauthorized access to, use
of, or transmission of classified or controlled unclassified
information.
(b) Elements.–The program established under subsection (a)
shall include the following:
(1) Technology solutions for deployment within the
Department of Defense that allow for centralized monitoring
and detection of unauthorized activities, including–
(A) monitoring the use of external ports and read and write
capability controls;
(B) disabling the removable media ports of computers
physically or electronically;
(C) electronic auditing and reporting of unusual and
unauthorized user activities;
(D) using data-loss prevention and data-rights management
technology to prevent the unauthorized export of information
from a network or to render such information unusable in the
event of the unauthorized export of such information;
(E) a roles-based access certification system;
(F) cross-domain guards for transfers of information
between different networks; and
(G) patch management for software and security updates.
(2) Policies and procedures to support such program,
including special consideration for policies and procedures
related to international and interagency partners and
activities in support of ongoing operations in areas of
hostilities.
(3) A governance structure and process that integrates
information security and sharing technologies with the
policies and procedures referred to in paragraph (2). Such
structure and process shall include–
(A) coordination with the existing security clearance and
suitability review process;
(B) coordination of existing anomaly detection techniques,
including those used in counterintelligence investigation or
personnel screening activities; and
(C) updating and expediting of the classification review
and marking process.
(4) A continuing analysis of–
(A) gaps in security measures under the program; and
(B) technology, policies, and processes needed to increase
the capability of the program beyond the initially
established full operating capability to address such gaps.
(5) A baseline analysis framework that includes measures of
performance and effectiveness.
(6) A plan for how to ensure related security measures are
put in place for other departments or agencies with access to
Department of Defense networks.
(7) A plan for enforcement to ensure that the program is
being applied and implemented on a uniform and consistent
basis.
(c) Operating Capability.–The Secretary shall ensure the
program established under subsection (a)–
(1) achieves initial operating capability not later than
October 1, 2012; and
(2) achieves full operating capability not later than
October 1, 2013.
(d) Report.–Not later than 90 days after the date of the
enactment of this Act, the Secretary shall submit to the
congressional defense committees a report that includes–
(1) the implementation plan for the program established
under subsection (a);
(2) the resources required to implement the program;
(3) specific efforts to ensure that implementation does not
negatively impact activities in support of ongoing operations
in areas of hostilities;
(4) a definition of the capabilities that will be achieved
at initial operating capability and full operating
capability, respectively; and
(5) a description of any other issues related to such
implementation that the Secretary considers appropriate.
(e) Briefing Requirement.–The Secretary shall provide
briefings to the Committees on Armed Services of the House of
Representatives and the Senate as follows:
(1) Not later than 90 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, a briefing describing the governance structure
referred to in subsection (b)(3).
(2) Not later than 120 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, a briefing detailing the inventory and status of
technology solutions deployment referred to in subsection
(b)(1), including an identification of the total number of
host platforms planned for such deployment, the current
number of host platforms that provide appropriate security,
and the funding and timeline for remaining deployment.
(3) Not later than 180 days after the date of the enactment
of this Act, a briefing detailing the policies and procedures
referred to in subsection (b)(2), including an assessment of
the effectiveness of such policies and procedures and an
assessment of the potential impact of such policies and
procedures on information sharing within the Department of
Defense and with interagency and international partners.
(f) Budget Submission.–On the date on which the President
submits to Congress the budget under section 1105 of title
31, United States Code, for each of fiscal years 2014 through
2019, the Secretary of Defense shall submit to the
congressional defense committees an identification of the
resources requested in such budget to carry out the program
established under subsection (a).

STUDY- U.S. Corporate Executives Received a Pay Raise of 27-40% Last Year

 

 

Chief executive pay has roared back after two years of stagnation and decline. America’s top bosses enjoyed pay hikes of between 27 and 40% last year, according to the largest survey of US CEO pay. The dramatic bounceback comes as the latest government figures show wages for the majority of Americans are failing to keep up with inflation.

America’s highest paid executive took home more than $145.2m, and as stock prices recovered across the board, the median value of bosses’ profits on stock options rose 70% in 2010, from $950,400 to $1.3m. The news comes against the backdrop of an Occupy Wall Street movement that has focused Washington’s attention on the pay packages of America’s highest paid.

The Guardian’s exclusive first look at the CEO pay survey from corporate governance group GMI Ratings will further fuel debate about America’s widening income gap. The survey, the most extensive in the US, covered 2,647 companies, and offers a comprehensive assessment of all the data now available relating to 2010 pay.

Last year’s survey, covering 2009, found pay rates were broadly flat following a decline in wages the year before. Base salaries in 2009 showed a median increase of around 2%, and annual cash compensation increased just over 1.5%. The troubled stock markets took their toll, and added together CEO pay declined for the third year, though the decrease was marginal, less than three-tenths of a percent. The decline in the wider economy in 2007, 2008 and 2009 far outstripped the decline in CEO pay.

This year’s survey shows CEO pay packages have boomed: the top 10 earners took home more than $770m between them in 2010. As stock prices began to recover last year, the increase in CEO pay outstripped the rise in share value. The Russell 3000 measure of US stock prices was up by 16.93% in 2010, but CEO pay went up by 27.19% overall. For S&P 500 CEOs, the largest companies in the sample, total realised compensation – including perks and pensions and stock awards – increased by a median of 36.47%. Total pay at midcap companies, which are slightly smaller than the top firms, rose 40.2%.

 

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL STUDY HERE

GMI_CEOPay2011_122011

A-Z- 2.000 STASI OFFIZIERE IM BESONDEREN EINSATZ OibE – “SCHLÄFERLISTE DER STASI IN WESTDEUTSCHLAND”- STASI-SLEEPER LIST A-Z

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True Information is the most valuable resource and we ask you to give back.

The list was published earlier here:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

A link from the “Stasi Victim” offer leads to a website in the USA (www.jya.com), which also deals with the practices of secret services. There you could find earlier the “Fipro list”, the detailed “financial project” of the Stasi, made in the last days of the GDR in order to be able to prove the pension claims of the approximately 100,000 full-time employees of the MfS even after the collapse of the system. The “Fipro list” has been known for a long time and was used at the beginning of the nineties to identify the so-called OibE officers on special missions. This & nbsp; List “Officers on special operations” appeared in 1991 & nbsp; in the “ taz .

Zimmermann, Bernd; 07.08.39; HVA; 961500; 1080; 458/63, A belongs to the “GoMoPa” camarilla of former Stasi agents.

Continue reading “A-Z- 2.000 STASI OFFIZIERE IM BESONDEREN EINSATZ OibE – “SCHLÄFERLISTE DER STASI IN WESTDEUTSCHLAND”- STASI-SLEEPER LIST A-Z”

TOP-SECRET – U.S. Treasury Strategic Direction Fiscal Years 2009-2011

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The Intelligence Authorization Act of Fiscal Year 2004 created the Treasury Department’s Office of Intelligence and Analysis (OIA) and made it responsible for the receipt, analysis, collation, and dissemination of intelligence related to the operation and responsibilities of the Treasury Department. OIA was created to support the formulation of policy and the execution of Treasury authorities by providing expert analysis and intelligence production on financial and other support networks for terrorist groups, proliferators, and other key national security threats. In addition, OIA was charged with providing timely, accurate, and focused intelligence on the full range of economic, political, and security issues. On April 28, 2004, the Secretary of the Treasury established the Office of Terrorism and Financial Intelligence (TFI), which includes OIA, the Office of Terrorist Finance and Financial Crimes (TFFC), the Office of Foreign Assets Control (OFAC), the Financial Crimes Enforcement Network (FinCEN), and the Treasury Executive Office for Asset Forfeiture (TEOAF). TFI brings a wide range of intelligence and enforcement authorities together under a single umbrella to strategically target a number of threats. Since its creation in 2004, OIA has accomplished a great deal in the course of meeting ever growing demands from its customers. In its first year of operation, OIA focused on establishing a current intelligence process to meet the day-to-day information needs of decision makers in the Department, while also supporting the intelligence needs of the designation process under EO 13224.

• In 2005, President Bush signed EO 13382 aimed at freezing the assets of proliferators of weapons of mass destruction and their supporters; OIA expanded its analytic efforts in order to support implementation of the EO.

• In 2006, OIA enhanced its strategic analytic capability and began producing allsource intelligence assessments on terrorist finance and rogue state proliferation networks that leveraged Treasury’s unique expertise and perspective.

• In 2007, OIA expanded the breadth and depth of its analytic cadre to meet increased demand from policymakers.

• In 2008, OIA initiated a research program to examine the systemic issues behind the financing of national security threats, such as cash courier networks, informal remittance systems, and terrorist use of the Internet.

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ADDRESSING THE GLOBAL FINANCIAL NETWORK:
A COMPREHENSIVE APPROACH TO FINANCIAL
INTELLIGENCE

Building on its accomplishments of the past several years, OIA plans to launch a comprehensive approach to financial intelligence that will allow us to better confront national security challenges by strengthening our understanding of the global financial network. The global financial network encompasses four areas: the financial underpinnings of national security threats, our adversaries’ financial vulnerabilities, the impact of targeted financial measures, and threats to international financial stability.

1. Assess Financial Underpinnings of National Security Threats: Terrorists, WMD proliferators, rogue states, and other nefarious actors require financial resources to support their activities. Without ready access to such resources, these actors are unable to indoctrinate, recruit, and train personnel; buy weapons, technology, and equipment; circulate propaganda; bribe officials; support the global networks of operatives essential to their existence; or launch attacks. The flow of funds to activities that threaten national security may not be shut off completely, but impeding the activities of these networks makes operating costlier, harder, and riskier for these threats.

2. Identify Adversaries’ Financial Vulnerabilities: The US Government is relying more heavily on targeted financial measures aimed at specific actors engaged in illicit conduct, as opposed to broad-based economic sanctions. Targeted financial measures allow decision makers to apply financial pressure and isolate terrorists, proliferators, and others whose goal is to undermine US security. They also allow US leaders to take punitive action against threats without resorting to military force. Applying targeted financial measures effectively, however, requires indepth knowledge of an adversary’s economic or financial well-being: its strengths, weaknesses, connectivity to global markets, and key dependencies.

3. Evaluate the Impact of Targeted Financial Measures: As targeted financial measures become an increasingly important policy tool, measuring their effectiveness is imperative. This area of inquiry involves questions such as: What impact have the measures had on the target’s economy and financial system? How is the target reacting? Are the measures having the desired effect on the target’s behavior? What steps is the target taking to evade or avoid the measures? Moreover, have the measures had any unintended consequences or caused any collateral damage?

4. Monitor Threats to International Financial Stability: The US financial system and the economic well-being of every American are inexorably linked to the health and stability of the international financial system. Globalization and convergence in the world economy only underscore this fact. Identifying threats to the global financial system’s integrity and to sustainable growth and development therefore is essential to America’s own security.

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

us-treasury-strategic-directions-2008

TOP-SECRET from the Worldbank – Interim Strategy Note for the Republic of Iraq 2009-2011

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INTERIM STRATEGY NOTE FOR IRAQ (FY09-FY11)

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

i. Recent positive developments suggest that Iraq has made important progress towards political and economic stabilization, although the situation remains fragile and reversible. Recent months have seen a sharp decline in incidents of violence, especially in the Baghdad area, and a corresponding decrease in the rate of internal displacement of the population. This reflects improved security as well as successful initial steps towards political reconciliation. Macroeconomic performance has also improved although growth has been volatile.

ii. The Government is signaling its commitment to reform and reconstruction, indicating that continued engagement with Iraq may produce further concrete results. The Government has succeeded in sharply reducing inflation and containing recurrent spending, while increasing capital expenditures to accelerate the recovery process. In addition, the machinery of government is slowly reviving as Iraq emerges from conflict. A more proactive and confident government is likely to devote more attention to the economy. Finally, high oil prices and – to a lesser extent – an increase in production produced an estimated US$70 billion of revenues in 2008, although a deterioration in Iraq’s fiscal balance is expected during part of the ISN period in view of
the recent declining trend in oil prices.

iii. However, results from past and ongoing reform efforts remain far from meeting the needs and expectations of the Iraqi people. Unemployment remains extremely high and access to basic services severely limited. Electricity supply is unreliable and is far exceeded by demand; access to clean water and sanitation is the lowest in the Region. Recent improvements in access to education and health services have not yet translated into significant welfare gains on the part of the people of Iraq.

iv. Iraq is resource rich and has benefited from a substantial increase in oil revenues over the past few years. At the same time, it is still subject to conflict, insecurity, political instability and revenue volatility. These features highlight Iraq’s uniqueness. As a conflict-affected, IBRD-eligible middle-income country, Iraq is clearly not the typical aid-dependent post-conflict country. The main challenge for the country – in addition to security and political stability – is to mobilize and effectively use its own
vast resources to improve the welfare of the Iraqi people and rebuild its infrastructure. The main role for the international community, including the World Bank Group, is therefore to help Iraq use its own resources more effectively.

v. Working in Iraq has been very challenging for the Bank Group and other donors. While some notable successes have been achieved, the effectiveness of assistance has been hampered by issues related to both the country’s operating environment and the approach followed by the donors. Operating environment issues – which also affect the Government’s ability to execute its own investment budget – include: the fragile political and security situation; the unstable policy and institutional environment; the Government’s weakened institutional capacity, and weaknesses in Iraq’s banking system. Issues related to the approach of the Bank to Iraq include the selectivity of assistance as well as business processes and fiduciary arrangements which have been unfamiliar to Iraqi counterparts and are challenging for Ministries with limited capacity.

vi. The design of this third Interim Strategy Note benefited from a stocktaking of the Bank Group’s engagement with Iraq to date. The goal of the stocktaking exercise was to identify the key bottlenecks for the implementation of the previous ISNs and extract lessons for this ISN. This exercise informed the design of this ISN: (i) the continuing centrality of institution building; (ii) the critical importance of interest and engagement on the part of ministries and implementing agencies; (iii) the need for increased selectivity in terms of the ability to identify and seize opportunities as they arise to achieve concrete results; (iv) the need to focus on reform efforts that do not overtax Iraq’s existing capacity and that more clearly reflect the country’s current political and security situation; and (v) the need for increased flexibility in the design and programming of Bank assistance and for experimentation with alternative implementation arrangements for the Bank’s assistance program for Iraq.

vii. The ISN also benefited from extensive consultations with the Government of Iraq, the donor community, and other stakeholders, including representatives from private sector and civil society organizations. These consultations were extremely helpful in identifying the country priorities, defining promising engagement arrangements to maximize Bank assistance results, and highlighting the centrality of donor coordination. Some of the main priority areas identified during the consultations include:

(i) public financial management; (ii) banking sector reform; (iii) support to planning processes and strategy design (not only at the central level, but also at the sectoral and provincial levels); (iv) private sector development; and (v) energy and services.

viii. Given Iraq’s unique characteristic of a well resource endowed Middle Income Country (MIC) with a fragile environment, this ISN is proposed for a longer time horizon than the typical ISN. The time horizon for this ISN is proposed to be from mid-FY09 through FY11, to be updated to a full Country Assistance Strategy if and when circumstances allow. This interim strategy contains lessons and principles of engagement. The work program beyond FY09 would be kept up to date through Annual Business Planning, jointly with the Iraqi Government to ensure it meets the evolving needs of the Government as well as evolving opportunities for engagement.

ix. The central guiding principle of this ISN is that Iraq is well-endowed with natural and financial resources, and that the main role for the World Bank in this context is to help Iraq use its resources more effectively and transparently. This principle impacts both the form and the content of the proposed work program for the next two years. However, it needs to be tempered by recent developments in the global economy and their impact on Iraq’s projected oil revenues for the next few years and its increasing need for external financing in the short-to-medium term. Hence, this ISN anticipates IBRD financial support as requested by the Iraqi authorities.

x. Regarding the form of the assistance, the main instruments of Bank Group support under this ISN include: (i) operational support to accelerate implementation of the current portfolio, totaling about US$1 billion; (ii) advisory services in selected sectors and areas; (iii) IBRD financial support in priority sectors to be selected on the basis of funding needs and implementation capacity; (iv) IFC investment and advisory services products; and (v) MIGA’s political risk guarantee products. Under this ISN, an IBRD envelope of US$500 million can be committed for investments projects over FY09-11. The Bank is currently administering 16 active grants funded from the Iraq Trust Fund, totaling US$471.6 million to provide textbooks, schools, health clinics, improved social safety nets, water supply and sanitation, irrigation and drainage, and a comprehensive household survey. The ongoing IDA portfolio consists of five projects, worth US$508.5 million, in the areas of education, roads, electricity, and water supply. IFC will support PSD through prioritized investments and advisory services in key sectors. The Bank’s Analytical and Advisory Activities (AAA) program will support the Government in its efforts to enhance its ability to effectively use its oil revenues to the benefit of the Iraqi people. Key analytical work undertaken since re-engagement in 2003 includes a study on subnational public financial management (2007), a joint IFC/IBRD Construction Industry study (2008), a Country Economic Memorandum (2006), a pension reform study (2005), a report on Iraq’s Public Distribution System (2005), an investment climate report (2004), and a study on stateowned
enterprise reform (2004). The Government has also expressed interest in borrowing from IBRD as the need arises, increasing IFC support, and getting MIGA guarantees that could leverage private financing. Other instruments include the State and Peace Building Fund, and possibly, Treasury services.

xi. With respect to the content of the assistance, activities under this ISN will fall under at least one of three thematic areas of engagement: (i) continuing to support ongoing reconstruction and socio-economic recovery; (ii) improving governance and the
management of public resources, including human, natural and financial; and (iii) supporting policies and institutions that promote broad-based, private-sector-led growth, with the goal of revitalizing the private sector and facilitating job creation. IFC and MIGA will play a key role particularly (but not exclusively) with respect to the third thematic area. New activities under the ISN will be chosen on the basis of criteria for selectivity reflecting opportunities to achieve concrete results on the ground.

xii. The three thematic areas are closely linked with the key goals of the International Compact with Iraq. The first ISN theme responds to the goals of the International Compact with Iraq (ICI) which are related to Iraq’s reconstruction and recovery efforts, including strengthening the energy sector and developing a stable, competitive and sustainable agriculture. The second ISN theme responds to the ICI goals of improving public financial management as well as strengthening institutions and improving governance. The third ISN theme responds to the ICI goals of implementing economic reform to create an enabling environment for private investments as a driver for broad-based growth.

xiii. To achieve tangible results in a relatively short term, the Bank Group will place a renewed emphasis on how this ISN will be implemented. Building on lessons learned from the implementation of the previous Interim Strategy Notes and the various
consultations held, this ISN will aim to: (a) enhance the effectiveness of instittion building and analytical and advisory activities; (b) strengthen the implementation of the current portfolio; (c) introduce more flexibility in the Bank Group’s programming and ability to experiment with alternative implementation arrangements; and (d) foster donor coordination. For planning purposes, this ISN is based on the assumption that progress in the security situation over the next two to three years would continue to be slow and incremental, with a risk of reversal.

xiv. Risks. There are high risks to the World Bank Group’s program in Iraq. The most important risk pertains to the political and security situation, which remains fragile, as does the country’s operating environment. To mitigate this risk, the strategy emphasizes flexibility, and the Bank will adjust its activities as appropriate. Given the current limitations on mobility within the country, maintaining a vibrant dialogue with counterparts on issues of policy reform as well as implementation, and ensuring adherence to core fiduciary and safeguard requirements will remain challenging. These risks are substantial despite the Bank’s mitigating measures, which include capacity building, local oversight capacity, and prudent financial management procedures.

 

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

Iraq ISN_02-02-09

WIE AUCH Sie STASI-“GoMoPa”-Rufmordopfer werden können

http://www.victims-opfer.com/?p=15282

FBI – Three Maryland Men Indicted for Alleged Pension Plan Fraud

ALEXANDRIA, VA—Three Maryland men have been indicted for engaging in a scheme to steal nearly $10 million from Vienna-based Southern Management Corporation’s employee pension plan.

Neil H. MacBride, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia, and James W. McJunkin, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, made the announcement.

Robert Fulton Rood IV, 44, of Potomac, Md., Nikolaos M. Hepler, 31, of Gaithersburg, Md., and Lloyd M. Mallory, Jr., 49, of Silver Spring, Md., were charged in a 16-count indictment of conspiracy to commit wire fraud, wire fraud and theft from an employee benefit plan. If convicted, each defendant faces a maximum penalty of 20 years on the conspiracy and each wire fraud count and five years in prison on each theft count.

According to the indictment, Rood conceived and led a scheme to defraud Southern Management Corporation Retirement Trust (“SMCRT”), a pension plan established by SMC for its employees. As of December 31, 2010, the plan’s assets were over $30 million, and prior to April 2006 SMCRT generally managed its own investments, which included short term (one year), high interest loans to real estate developers.

The indictment alleges that in April 2006, Rood persuaded SMC’s President and CEO to let Rood locate borrowers, negotiate loans to them, prepare the loan agreements, promissory notes and trust deeds and present loan application packages to the SMCRT loan committee, which would decide whether to purchase the proposed loans. If the committee decided to do so, it would wire the money to purchase the loan to a settlement company designated by Rood. Rood would use the money from SMCRT to fund the loan and would obtain from the borrower an executed loan agreement, promissory note and trust deed, which he would assign to SMCRT. In most cases, the borrowers were not aware of SMCRT’s involvement in the process.

Rood allegedly represented to both SMCRT and the borrowers that he would set up escrow accounts for the payment of interest to SMCRT and for construction payments to the borrowers. Instead, the indictment alleges that the moneys from all the loans were co-mingled into Rood’s principal bank account. When the project was finished and sold, the borrower was to pay back the amount borrowed to SMCRT.

From April 2006 to around October 2007, Rood allegedly sold to SMCRT approximately 32 mortgage loans that he had originated, of which 24 went into default after they were funded by SMCRT. According to the indictment, one loan, referred to as the “K Street” loan, never closed because the title company was unable to clear title to the property, and Rood is accused of simply keeping the money that SMCRT paid him to purchase the loan. Two other loans referenced in the indictment—the “Eastern Shore” and “Accom” loans—involved SMCRT loans that the borrowers refinanced with different lenders and sent their payoffs to Rood, who allegedly kept the payoff monies. In each case, Rood, assisted by Nikolaos M. Hepler, his employee, is accused of misrepresenting to SMCRT that the loans were in place and performing satisfactorily, including Rood’s making of the monthly interest payments to SMCRT on the nonexistent loans.

The indictment states that SMCRT requested an independent review of Rood’s accounts, and in February 2008, Rood engaged Mallory to perform a review of the loans, loans, disbursements and escrows. The accountant allegedly issued a report which falsely showed the status of the loans and the funds held by Rood.

This case was investigated by FBI’s Washington Field Office. Assistant United States Attorneys Michael E. Rich and Uzo Asonye are prosecuting the case on behalf of the United States.

Criminal indictments are only charges and not evidence of guilt. A defendant is presumed to be innocent until and unless proven guilty.

A copy of this press release may be found on the website of the United States Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia at http://www.justice.gov/usao/vae. Related court documents and information may be found on the website of the District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia at http://www.vaed.uscourts.gov or on https://pcl.uscourts.gov.

FAZ über die Wirtschaftskriminellen der “GoMoPa”

https://berndpulch.org/faz-frankfurter-allgemeine-zeitung-uber-gomopa/

TOP-SECRET – (U//FOUO) U.S. Army Guide to Political Groups in Afghanistan

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https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/afghan-political-parties.pngPolitical Parties in Afghanistan

  • Most political groupings in Afghanistan are based on alliances that were formed during the military struggles of 1979-2002
    • Many have connections with ex-Mujahideen factions
  • During the 2005 presidential election, since parties‟ identification was not allowed for candidates, party based coalition could not function in parliament
    • In the 2009 presidential election, political parties could support a candidate who was a member
  • In Afghanistan, political parties are seen as controversial and are not seen as a potential positive force by the government or the public
  • The Political Parties Law of 2003 requires all political parties to be registered with the Ministry of Justice and observe the precepts of Islam
    • Some 82 parties have gained such recognition as of the end 2007; but hundreds of political groups claim to be active in the country today, the majority of which have little to no political power
  • The government fears that encouraging political parties will fuel civil tensions and contribute to the existing deteriorating security
    • The government places emphasis on building national unity and preventing groups from forming in Parliament on the basis of ethnicity, language, region or any other potentially divisive factors1
  • For most parties, particularly the new or smaller ones without well known leaders, their information is not known or widely disseminated
  • There are numerous reasons why parties formed and are forming but two main raisons stand out:
    • New opportunity
  • Especially after the fall of the Taliban
    • Disputes with current leadership
  • Political groups in Afghanistan are very fluid, coalitions, fronts and political alliances form and dissolve quickly
    • Allegiances between groups shift according to the convictions of their leaders rather than by ideology
  • Individual parties split, reunify and/or rename themselves constantly, leading to confusion in party existence and names

Major Pro-government Parties

  • Islamic Society of Afghanistan (Hezb-e-Jamihat-e-Islami-e-Afghanistan)
  • Afghanistan‟s Islamic Mission Organization (Tanzim Dawat-e-Islami-e-Afghanistan)
  • Islamic Unity Party of Afghanistan (Hezb-e-Wahdat-e-Afghanistan)
  • National Islamic Front of Afghanistan (Hezb-e-Mahaz-e-Mili Islami-e-Afghanistan)
  • Afghanistan National Liberation Front (Hezb-e-Tanzim Jabha Mili Nejat-e Afghanistan)
  • Afghan Social Democratic Party (Hezb-e-Afghan Melat)
  • National Movement of Afghanistan (Nahzat-e-Mili Afghanistan)

Major Opposition Parties

  • The United National Front – UNF (Jabhe-ye-Motahed-e-Mili)
  • New Afghanistan (Hezb-e-Afghanistan-e-Naween)
  • Hezb-e-Islami Gulbuddin – HiG
  • Party of Islam – HiK (Hezb-e-Islami)
  • Party of Islamic Unity of The People of Afghanistan (Hezb-e-Wahdat-e Islami Mardom Afghanistan)
  • National Movement of Afghanistan (Nahzat-e-Mili Afghanistan)

Other Political Parties

  • Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan (RAWA)
  • Rome Group
  • Freedom Party of Afghanistan(Hezb-e Azadee-e-Afghanistan)
  • The National Understanding Front-NUF (Jabahai Tafahim Millie)
  • National Youth Union of Afghanistan (Hezb-e Hambastagi-yi Milli-yi Jawanan-i Afghanistan)

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

 

USArmy-AfghanPoliticalGroups

Video – Syrian Officers Had Shoot-to-kill Orders

The group Human Rights Watch has named Syrian commanders and officials who it says authorized or ordered the killing or torture of anti-government protesters. HRW put the name of Syrian President Bashar Assad on the list.

TOP-SECRET from the FBI – Lawyer for Preeminent Firms Pleads Guilty in $37 Million Insider Trading Scheme

A corporate lawyer who previously worked at four prominent international law firms admitted today to participating in an insider trading scheme that lasted for 17 years, relied on information he stole from his law firms and their clients, and netted more than $37 million in illicit profits, U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey Paul J. Fishman announced.

Matthew Kluger, 50, of Oakton, Va., pleaded guilty to all four counts charged in the information against him: conspiracy to commit securities fraud, securities fraud, conspiracy to commit money laundering and obstruction of justice. Kluger entered his guilty plea before U.S. District Judge Katharine S. Hayden in Newark federal court.

“Not only did Matthew Kluger defraud the investing public, he betrayed the colleagues and clients who depended on his confidentiality in some of the biggest deals of the last decade,” said U.S. Attorney Fishman. “In order to be confident in our markets, investors must have comfort that those with inside information won’t abuse positions of trust for personal gain.”

“In this time of economic uncertainty, securities fraud remains a top investigative priority for the FBI,” said Michael B. Ward, special agent in charge of the Newark Division of the FBI. “Millions of investors have entrusted their life savings to the integrity of the financial markets and the belief of a level playing field. Insider trading, such as the conduct attributable to Matthew Kluger, corrupts the process and tilts the playing field in favor of those privileged few with access to information not available to the public, and at the expense of unsuspecting and unknowing investors.”

According to documents filed in this case and statements made in court:

Kluger and two co-conspirators—Garrett D. Bauer, 44, of New York, and Kenneth Robinson, 45, of Long Beach, N.Y.,—engaged in an insider trading scheme that began in 1994. Kluger admitted that he passed inside information to Bauer and Robinson that the men used to trade ahead of more than 30 different corporate transactions.

During the scheme, Kluger worked at four of the nation’s premier mergers and acquisitions law firms. From 1994 to 1997, he worked first as a summer associate and later as a corporate associate at Cravath Swaine & Moore in New York. From 1998 to 2001, he worked at Skadden, Arps, Slate, Meagher & Flom in New York and Palo Alto, Calif., as an associate in their corporate department. From 2001 to 2002, Kluger worked as a corporate associate at Fried, Frank, Harris, Shriver & Jacobson LLP in New York. From Dec. 5, 2005, to March 11, 2011, Kluger worked at Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati as a senior associate in the mergers & acquisitions department of the firm’s Washington, D.C., office.

While at the firms, Kluger regularly stole and disclosed to Robinson material, nonpublic information regarding anticipated corporate mergers and acquisitions on which his firms were working. Early in the scheme, Kluger disclosed information relating to deals on which he personally worked. As the scheme developed, and in an effort to avoid law enforcement detection, Kluger took information which he found primarily by viewing documents on his firms’ computer systems.

Kluger admitted that once he provided the inside information to Robinson, Robinson passed it to Bauer. Bauer then purchased shares for himself, Kluger and Robinson in Bauer’s trading accounts, then sold them once the relevant deal was publicly announced and the stock price rose. Bauer gave Robinson and Kluger their shares of the illicit profits in cash—often tens or hundreds of thousands of dollars per deal—that Bauer withdrew in multiple transactions from ATM machines.

The three conspirators took greater efforts to prevent detection of their insider trading scheme after Kluger joined Wilson Sonsini. Among other techniques, they used pay phones and prepaid cellular phones that they referred to as “throwaway phones” to discuss the scheme.

Kluger also admitted that, after Robinson told him that the FBI and (Internal Revenue Service) had searched Robinson’s house and had asked questions about the illicit scheme, Kluger destroyed multiple pieces of evidence, including an iPhone and a computer. Kluger also instructed Robinson to destroy a prepaid phone.

As part of his guilty plea, Kluger agreed to forfeit $415,000, which is the approximate amount that he obtained from recent transactions in the scheme.

The maximum potential penalties Kluger faces per count are as follows:

Count Charge Maximum Potential Penalty
1 Conspiracy to commit securities fraud Five years in prison; $250,000 fine, or twice the aggregate loss to victims or gain to the defendants
2 Securities fraud 20 years in prison; $5 million fine
3 Conspiracy to commit money laundering 20 years in prison; $500,000 fine, or twice the value of the property involved in the transaction
4 Obstruction of justice 20 years in prison; $500,000 fine

Judge Hayden scheduled Kluger’s sentencing for April 9, 2012.

Bauer and Robinson have both pleaded guilty in connection with the scheme. Bauer is scheduled to be sentenced on March 13, 2011. Robinson is scheduled to be sentenced on March 6, 2012.

U.S. Attorney Fishman credited special agents of the FBI, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Ward in Newark, for the investigation. He also thanked special agents of the IRS, under the direction of Special Agent in Charge Victor W. Lessoff, and the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission’s Market Abuse Unit and Philadelphia Regional Office, under the direction of Daniel M. Hawke.

The government is represented by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Matthew E. Beck of the U.S. Attorney’s Office Economic Crimes Unit; Judith H. Germano, Chief of the Economic Crimes Unit; and Lakshmi Srinivasan Herman of the office’s Asset Forfeiture Unit in Newark.

This case was brought in coordination with President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated, and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

CONFIDENTIAL – DARPA Wants to Make $500 Million Space-Based Spy Telescope

A visualization of the MOIRE system provided by DARPA.

 

If the U.S. military wants live video of a missile launcher vehicle halfway around the world, it must rely on spy planes or drones in danger of being shot down. Tomorrow, the Pentagon wants space telescopes hovering in geosynchronous orbit that could take real-time images or live video of any spot on Earth.Contrary to Hollywood’s ideas, today’s spy satellites that orbit the Earth at fast speeds and relatively lower altitudes can only snap photos for the U.S. military and intelligence agencies. Taking live video of a single location would require satellites to hover by matching the Earth’s rotation in geosynchronous orbit about 22,000 miles (36,000 kilometers) high — but creating and launching a space telescope with the huge optics arrays capable of seeing ground details from such high orbit has proven difficult.

As a solution, DARPA — the Pentagon’s research arm — envisions a lightweight optics array made of flexible membrane that could deploy in space. Ball Aerospace has just completed an early proof-of-concept review as part of a DARPA contract worth almost $37 million.

“The use of membrane optics is an unprecedented approach to building large aperture telescopes,” said David Taylor, president and chief executive officer of Ball Aerospace in Boulder, Colo.

DARPA eventually wants a space telescope with a collection aperture (light-collecting power) of almost 66 feet (20 meters) in diameter. By comparison, NASA’s next-generation James Webb Space Telescope is designed to have an aperture of 21 feet (6.5 m).

Such a telescope should be able to spot missile launcher vehicles moving at speeds of up to 60 mph on the ground, according to the DARPA contract. That would also require the image resolution to see objects less than 10 feet (3 m) long within a single image pixel.

But first, Ball Aerospace must create and test a 16-foot (5 m) telescope in the DARPA project’s second phase. Phase three would involve launching a 32-foot (10 m) telescope for flight tests in orbit.

Watching for Scuds from Space:

MOIRE is intended to demonstrate technology for persistent, tactical, full-motion video surveillance from geosynchronous orbit. After delivery to GEO, the satellite would unfurl a micron-thin diffractive-optics membrane, to form a massive segmented lens.

With a target cost of less than $500 million a copy, the objective space telescope would have a 20-meter-dia. lens. It would be able to image an area greater than 100 x 100 km with a video update rate of at least one frame a second, providing a 99% chance of detecting a Scud-class missile launch.

 

Membrane Optical Imager for Real-Time Exploitation:

To meet national security requirements around the world, it would be optimal to have real-time images and video of any place on earth at any time—a capability that doesn’t currently exist. Today, aircraft are used for some imagery requirements. Because of the huge quantity of aircraft needed, and because aircraft do not fly high enough to see into denied territories, spacecraft are also used for imagery requirements.

Spacecraft, however, face different challenges in providing persistent coverage.  The size (aperture) of the optics needed, and the limitations of producing and launching extremely large precision glass optics means it is infeasible to place such a system in geosynchronous earth orbit (GEO), approximately 36,000 kilometers high, where it could provide persistent coverage.MOIRE is a GEO-based system that uses a lightweight membrane optic etched with a diffractive pattern. The diffractive pattern is used to focus light on a sensor.  The MOIRE program seeks to enable the technologies required for these very large optics for space platforms. The program aims to demonstrate the manufacturability of large membranes (up to 20 meters), large structures to hold the optics flat, and also demonstrate the secondary optical elements needed to turn a diffraction-based optic into a wide bandwidth imaging device.

The MOIRE program began in March 2010 and encompasses multiple phases: Phase 1 (proof of concept), Phase 2 (system design) and an option for a Phase 3 (system demonstration). The program is currently in Phase 1 and plans to transition to Phase 2 in Fall 2011.

New – Congress Authorizes Offensive Military Action in Cyberspace

Congress has given the U.S. military a green light to conduct offensive military activities in cyberspace.

“Congress affirms that the Department of Defense has the capability, and upon direction by the President may conduct offensive operations in cyberspace to defend our Nation, allies and interests,” said the FY 2012 defense authorization act that was adopted in conference this week (section 954).

The blanket authorization for offensive cyber operations is conditional on compliance with the law of armed conflict, and the War Powers Resolution, which mandated congressional consultation in decisions to go to war.

“The conferees recognize that because of the evolving nature of cyber warfare, there is a lack of historical precedent for what constitutes traditional military activities in relation to cyber operations and that it is necessary to affirm that such operations may be conducted pursuant to the same policy, principles, and legal regimes that pertain to kinetic capabilities,” the conference report on the defense authorization act said.

“The conferees also recognize that in certain instances, the most effective way to deal with threats and protect U.S. and coalition forces is to undertake offensive military cyber activities, including where the role of the United States Government is not apparent or to be acknowledged.”

“The conferees stress that, as with any use of force, the War Powers Resolution may apply.”

This is an odd formulation which suggests that the War Powers Resolution may also not apply.  In any case, the Resolution is a weak reed that has rarely been used by Congress to constrain executive action.

According to the Congressional Research Service, “Debate continues on whether using the War Powers Resolution is effective as a means of assuring congressional participation in decisions that might get the United States involved in a significant military conflict.”

Proven – The Bloody History of Communism

Communism was the bloodiest ideology that caused more than 120 million innocent deaths in the 20th century. It was a nightmare which promised equality and justice, but which brought only bloodshed, death, torture and fear. This three-volume documentary displays the terrible savagery of communism and its underlying philosophy. From Marx to Lenin, Stalin, Mao or Pol Pot, discover how the materialist philosophy transforms humans into theorists of violence and masters of cruelty.

UNCENSORED News from FEMEN

Желание украинцев узнать источники их финансирования. Система оптимизации поиска Google.ua на запрос “кто финансирует” выделяет топ-тройку деятелей, чьи источники финансирования хотели бы знать украинцы. Топ-3 запроса “кто финансирует» выглядит следующим образом: первое место – FEMEN, второе – Гитлер, третье – Яценюк. Абсолютно не понятно, как малобюджетная женская организация затесалась в компанию таких финансовых монстров, как национал-социалистическая рабочая партия фюрера и Фронт Змiн Яценюка). Парадоксально, но людей больше интересует, где FEMEN  берет деньги на краски и ватманы, чем источники финансирования солдат Вермахта и школьников Яценюка.
А вот москалей интересуют масоны проплачивающие футбол и развал России.

 

Ein Statement für den Gesamt-Markt: ETHIK BANK: “GoMoPa” IST TABU

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TOP-SECRET-FBI-Eight Former Senior Executives and Agents of Siemens Charged in Alleged $100 Million Foreign Bribe Scheme

WASHINGTON—Eight former executives and agents of Siemens AG and its subsidiaries have been charged for allegedly engaging in a decade-long scheme to bribe senior Argentine government officials to secure, implement and enforce a $1 billion contract with the Argentine government to produce national identity cards, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division, U.S. Attorney Preet Bharara for the Southern District of New York and Ronald T. Hosko, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI, Washington Field Office’s Criminal Division.

The defendants charged in the indictment returned late yesterday are:

  • Uriel Sharef, a former member of the central executive committee of Siemens AG;
  • Herbert Steffen, a former chief executive officer of Siemens Argentina;
  • Andres Truppel, a former chief financial officer of Siemens Argentina;
  • Ulrich Bock, Stephan Signer, and Eberhard Reichert, former senior executives of Siemens Business Services (SBS); and
  • Carlos Sergi and Miguel Czysch, who served as intermediaries and agents of Siemens in the bribe scheme.

The indictment charges the defendants and their co-conspirators with conspiracy to violate the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (FCPA) and the wire fraud statute, money laundering conspiracy and wire fraud.

“Today’s indictment alleges a shocking level of deception and corruption,” said Assistant Attorney General Breuer. “The indictment charges Siemens executives, along with agents and conduits for the company, with committing to pay more than $100 million in bribes to high-level Argentine officials to win a $1 billion contract. Business should be won or lost on the merits of a company’s products and services, not the amount of bribes paid to government officials. This indictment reflects our commitment to holding individuals, as well as companies, accountable for violations of the FCPA.”

“As alleged, the defendants in this case bribed Argentine government officials in two successive administrations and paid off countless others in a successful effort to secure a billion dollar contract,” said U.S. Attorney Bharara. “When the project was terminated, they even sought to recover the profits they would have reaped from a contract that was awarded to them illegitimately in the first place. Bribery corrupts economic markets and creates an unfair playing field for law-abiding companies. It is critical that we hold individuals as well as corporations accountable for such corruption as we are doing today.”

“Backroom deals and corrupt payments to foreign officials to obtain business wear away public confidence in our global marketplace,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge Hosko of the Washington Field Office’s Criminal Division. “The investigation into this decades-long scheme serves as an example that the FBI is committed to curbing corruption and will investigate those who try to advance their businesses through foreign bribery.”

According to the indictment, the government of Argentina issued a tender for bids in 1994 to replace an existing system of manually created national identity booklets with state of the art national identity cards (the DNI project). The value of the DNI project was $1 billion. In 1998, the Argentine government awarded the DNI project to a special-purpose subsidiary of Siemens AG.

The indictment alleges that during the bidding and implementation phases of the project, the defendants and their co-conspirators caused Siemens to commit to paying nearly $100 million in bribes to sitting officials of the Argentine government, members of the opposition party and candidates for office who were likely to come to power during the performance of the project. According to the indictment, members of the conspiracy worked to conceal the illicit payments through various means. For instance, Bock made cash withdrawals from Siemens AG general-purpose accounts in Germany totaling approximately $10 million, transported the cash across the border into Switzerland and deposited the funds into Swiss bank accounts for transfer to officials. Bock, Truppel, Reichert, and other conspirators also allegedly caused Siemens to wire transfer more than $7 million in bribes to a bank account in New York disguised as a foreign exchange hedging contract relating to the DNI project. Over the duration of the conspiracy, the conspirators allegedly relied on at least 17 off-shore shell companies associated with Sergi, Czysch and other intermediaries to disguise and launder the funds, often documenting the payments through fake consulting contracts.

In May 1999, according to the indictment, the Argentine government suspended the DNI project, due in part to instability in the local economy and an impending presidential election. When a new government took power in Argentina, and in the hopes of getting the DNI project resumed, members of the conspiracy allegedly committed Siemens to paying additional bribes to the incoming officials and to satisfying existing obligations to officials of the outgoing administration, many of whom remained in influential positions within the government.

When the project was terminated in May 2001, members of the conspiracy allegedly responded with a multi-faceted strategy to overcome the termination. According to the indictment, the conspirators sought to recover the anticipated proceeds of the DNI project, notwithstanding the termination, by causing Siemens AG to file a fraudulent arbitration claim against the Republic of Argentina in Washington, D.C. The claim alleged wrongful termination of the contract for the DNI project and demanded nearly $500 million in lost profits and expenses. Members of the conspiracy allegedly caused Siemens to actively hide from the tribunal the fact that the contract for the DNI project had been secured by means of bribery and corruption, including tampered witness statements and pleadings that falsely denied the existence of corruption.

In related actions, the indictment also alleges that members of the conspiracy continued the bribe scheme, in part to prevent disclosure of the bribery in the arbitration and to ensure Siemens’ ability to secure future government contracts in Argentina and elsewhere in the region. In four installments between 2002 and 2007, members of the conspiracy allegedly caused Siemens to pay approximately $28 million in further satisfaction of the obligations. Conspirators continued to conceal these additional payments through various means. For example, Sharef, Truppel and other members of the conspiracy allegedly caused Siemens to transfer approximately $9.5 million through fictitious transactions involving a Siemens business division that had no role in the DNI project. They also caused Siemens to pay an additional $8.8 million in 2007 under the legal cover of a separate arbitration initiated in Switzerland by the intermediaries to enforce a sham $27 million contract from 2001 between SBS and Mfast Consulting, a company controlled by their co-conspirator intermediaries, which consolidated existing bribe commitments into one contract. The conspirators caused Siemens to quietly settle the arbitration, keeping all evidence of corruption out of the proceeding. The settlement agreement included a provision preventing Sergi, Czysch and another intermediary from testifying in, or providing information to, the Washington arbitration.

Siemens’s corrupt procurement of the DNI project was not exposed during the lifespan of the conspiracy, and, in February 2007, the arbitral tribunal in Washington sided with Siemens AG, awarding the company nearly $220 million on its DNI claims, plus interest. On Aug. 12, 2009, following Siemens’ corporate resolutions with the U.S. and German authorities—new management of Siemens caused Siemens AG to forego its right to receive the award and, as a result, the company never claimed the award money.

The indictment charges the defendants with conspiracy to violate the anti-bribery, books and records and internal control provisions of the FCPA; conspiracy to commit wire fraud; conspiracy to commit money laundering; and substantive wire fraud.

The charges announced today follow the Dec. 15, 2008, guilty pleas by Siemens AG and its subsidiary, Siemens S.A. (Siemens Argentina), to criminal violations of the FCPA. As part of the plea agreement, Siemens AG and Siemens Argentina agreed to pay fines of $448.5 million and $500,000, respectively.

In a parallel civil action, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) announced charges against executives and agents of Siemens. The department acknowledges and expresses its appreciation of the significant assistance provided by the staff of the SEC during the course of these parallel investigations.

Today’s charges follow, in large part, the laudable actions of Siemens AG and its audit committee in disclosing potential FCPA violations to the department after the Munich Public Prosecutor’s Office initiated an investigation. Siemens AG and its subsidiaries disclosed these violations after initiating an internal FCPA investigation of unprecedented scope; shared the results of that investigation; cooperated extensively and authentically with the department in its ongoing investigation; and took remedial action, including the complete restructuring of Siemens AG and the implementation of a sophisticated compliance program and organization.

The department and the SEC closely collaborated with the Munich Public Prosecutor’s Office in bringing this case. The high level of cooperation, including sharing information and evidence, was made possible by the use of mutual legal assistance provisions of the 1997 Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Convention on Combating Bribery of Foreign Public Officials in International Business Transactions.

The case is being prosecuted by Principal Deputy Chief Jeffrey H. Knox of the Criminal Division’s Fraud Section, and by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Jason P. Hernandez and Sarah McCallum of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York. The Fraud Section of the Justice Department’s Criminal Division and the Complex Frauds Unit of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Southern District of New York are handling the case. The case was investigated by FBI agents who are part of the Washington Field Office’s dedicated FCPA squad. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs provided significant assistance in this matter.

Secret – USAF Operating Next-Generation Remotely Piloted Aircraft for Irregular Warfarehttp://publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/USAF-RemoteIrregularWarfare.png

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The United States Air Force has long envisioned a strategic role for remotely piloted and autonomous aircraft. As early as May 1896, Samuel Pierpont Langley developed an unpiloted heavier-than-air vehicle which flew over the Potomac River. On V-J Day in August 1945, General Hap Arnold, US Army Air Forces, observed:

“We have just won a war with a lot of heroes flying around in planes. The next war may be fought by airplanes with no men in them at all … Take everything you’ve learned about aviation in war, throw it out of the window, and let’s go to work on tomorrow’s aviation. It will be different from anything the world has ever seen.”

Since these early days, extended range, persistence, precision, and stealth have characterized remotely piloted aircraft (RPA) advancements. RPAs have been employed in multiple combat roles and increasingly contested environments. This year, for the first time in history, the President’s budget proposed a larger investment in RPAs than manned aircraft. A seemingly insatiable operational appetite for RPAs, however, has led to an Air Force manning bottleneck. This is exacerbated by a lack of common ground stations, unsatisfactory integration with civilian and international airspace, and vulnerabilities in communications and command and control links. Further complicating efforts, yet essential in irregular warfare, are directives to minimize civilian casualties. General David Petraeus sees this need as a direct way to support a key center of gravity:

“…We must fight the insurgents, and will use the tools at our disposal to both defeat the enemy and protect our forces. But we will not win based on the number of Taliban we kill, but instead on our ability to separate insurgents from the center of gravity – the people …”

Our Panel conducted an extensive set of visits and received numerous briefings from a wide range of key stakeholders in government, industry, and academia. Taking a human-centered, evidence-based approach, our study seeks to address operational challenges as well as point to new opportunities for future RPAs. That RPAs will be a foundational element of the Air Force’s force structure is no longer debatable. The real question is how to maximize their current and future potential. Our intention is that this study will help provide both vector and thrust in how to do so in the irregular warfare context, as well as other applications.

RPAs are revolutionary surveillance and weapons delivery systems – changing the way the Air Force builds situation awareness and engages enemy forces – but their full potential has yet to be realized. To begin to address this issue, the Air Force initiated this study to review the state-of-the-art in RPA operations, focusing on control and connectivity in an irregular warfare (IW) environment. The Panel was specifically tasked to identify RPA architectures and operational concepts centered on human-systems integration, distributed systems operations, and effective command and control – a cluster of concepts and technologies we subsequently labeled as “mission management” enablers. The Panel was also tasked to recommend mid- to far-term S&T development roadmaps for advancing these technologies to improve the flexibility and capability of RPA operations. The study terms of reference (TOR) identified a number of core issues which were further articulated by the Study Panel to include:

1. Issue #1: Manning and personnel shortfalls are concerns in RPA deployment. Exploiters represent the largest manning dependency (39 percent), exacerbated by expected significant exploiter growth from new sensor suites (e.g., ARGUS-IS, Gorgon Stare). Current sensors (e.g., Constant Hawk and Angel Fire) and expected sensors (e.g., ARGUS-IS) produce data at rates of 10 to over 1000 times projected communications data transmission capacities, and will far exceed human analytic capacity.

2. Issue #2: Manually intensive airspace management and integration requiring exclusion zones and Certificates of Authorization (COAs) make inefficient use of national and international airspace, will not scale to accommodate future RPA growth, hampers manned/unmanned integration, and presents special challenges for small RPAs.

3. Issue #3: Minimizing collateral damage (CD) and fratricide is not a requirement unique to RPA strike operations. For manned and unmanned platforms, the lack of positive ID (PID) and tactical patience are the most significant causes of civilian casualties (CIVCAS) in current conflicts (8 percent CIVCAS compared with 66 percent caused by insurgents). Persistence; up-close access; highresolution intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR); improved situation awareness; and improved mission management will permit RPAs to minimize CD/fratricide. Small-focused lethality munitions and non-lethal options
for RPAs promise to further minimize CD and CIVCAS (e.g., as low as 5 percent).

4. Issue #4: In spite of current low RPA losses, inexpensive physical threats (e.g., MANPADS, low-end SAMs, air-to-air missiles) and electronic threats (e.g., acoustic detectors, low cost acquisition radars, jammers) threaten future operations.

2.3 Issue (3): Minimizing Collateral Damage/Fratricide

A third issue identified by the Study Panel was collateral damage/fratricide (Figure 2-8). RPAs, originally developed for ISR operations, have become important weapons platforms for tactical and special strike missions in IW. Their expanded use in CAS missions in the future requires technology improvements for mission management to minimize fratricide, collateral damage (CD), and civilian casualties (CIVCAS).
In IW, success requires winning the “hearts and minds” of the population in the face of an adaptable and agile adversary hiding amongst them. A missile fired (e.g. Hellfire missile) from a RPA is no different from a Hellfire missile fired from other platforms like the AH-64 Apache. Causing collateral damage is not an issue unique to RPAs. Data obtained from the Afghanistan AOR17 confirms that insurgents have caused approximately two thirds of CIVCAS. The exact number of CIVCAS caused by US forces was not reported, but an estimate from available data suggests the figure to be less than 10 percent. Of these CIVCAS, approximately half were caused by air-to-ground munitions, but the role of RPAs in these CIVCAS was also not reported. In the majority of these CIVCAS, inadequate acquisition and maintenance of positive target
identification (PID) was the primary cause, and the ability to provide tactical patience during operations would have improved mission success and minimized CIVCAS. In an article by the Washington Post, it was reported that within a recent 15-month period, the CIA conducted 70 RPA strikes using the low collateral damage focused lethality Scorpion weapon, killing 400 terrorists and insurgents while causing 20 CIVCAS. This CIVCAS figure was based on the use of RPAs to conduct pre-strike ISR and post-strike battle damage assessments. Because of precision targeting and focused lethality, CIVCAS is now primarily dependent on the human intelligence and situation awareness upon which the targeting decision is based.

3.3.4 Encryption and Potential C2 Link Vulnerabilities

Historically, sensor/data downlinks for some RPAs have not been encrypted or obfuscated. Unencrypted sensor data (e.g., FMV) is beneficial because the downlink is used to feed ROVER systems used by Joint Terminal Attack Controllers (JTAC) and other ground personnel, including uncleared coalition members and contractors. This is a life-saving capability. Nevertheless, not protecting against interception of sensor data has been criticized. “Fixing” this security issue by mandating NSA Type 1 encryption is likely to lead to an unacceptable key management burden because of the large number of users of RPA data that have a wide variety of access rights. However, commercial-grade, NSA-approved cryptography is available (“Suite B”). Commercial cryptography of this kind does not require the same degree of rigor in handling key material and encryption devices, and is not limited in operation to cleared personnel. There is relevant Department of Defense (DOD) activity in this general area.

Encryption has generally been used on C2 messages because the risks associated with compromise are higher (loss of the vehicle), and there is a greatly reduced need for sharing of the C2 data as compared with sensor data. However, crypto issues will likely be exacerbated when doing coalition/joint swarming across platforms that require shared C2 across security domains – a capability that is desired to fully exploit the potential of networked RPA operations.

 

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USAF-RemoteIrregularWarfare

CONFIDENTIAL – British Police Testing Non-Lethal Laser Rifle That Temporarily Blinds Rioters

A rendering of the SMU 100 from a Photonic Security Systems brochure.

 

A shoulder-mounted laser that emits a blinding wall of light capable of repelling rioters is to be trialled by police under preparations to prevent a repeat of this summer’s looting and arson.

The technology, developed by a former Royal Marine commando, temporarily impairs the vision of anyone who looks towards the source.It has impressed a division of the Home Office which is testing a new range of devices because of the growing number of violent situations facing the police.

The developer, British-based Photonic Security Systems, hopes to offer the device to shipping companies to deter pirates. Similar devices have been used by ISAF troops in Afghanistan to protect convoys from insurgents.

The laser, resembling a rifle and known as an SMU 100, can dazzle and incapacitate targets up to 500m away with a wall of light up to three metres squared. It costs £25,000 and has an infrared scope to spot looters in poor visibility.

Looking at the intense beam causes a short-lived effect similar to staring at the sun, forcing the target to turn away.

A Home Office spokesman said scientists at its Centre for Applied Science and Technology believe the use of lasers “has merit” and that it will be piloted by at least one police force. However, they will have to be satisfied the technology does not cause long-term health damage before it can be approved by the Home Secretary.

Other technology being studied includes ‘wireless electronic interceptors’ that can be fired a greater distance than Tasers, and long-range chemical irritant projectiles.

The STASI role model – Cheka and NKVD Marxist holocaust

 

Uploaded by on Nov 17, 2009

“Let the enemies of the working class remember that any person who is arrested with a gun in his hands, without the corresponding permission and identification, is subject to immediate execution, and any person who dares to talk against Soviet power will be immediately arrested and put in a concentration camp. The members of the bourgeoise must feel the heavy hand of the working class. All capitalist robbers, marauders, and speculators will be sent to compulsory public works, their property will be confiscated, and persons involved in counter-revolutionary plots will be destroyed and smashed by the heavy hammer of the revolutionary proletariat.”
~Vice Chairman Peters of the Cheka.

TOP-SECRET – (U//FOUO/LES) Los Angeles Fusion Center: Methods to Defeat Law Enforcement Crowd Control

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(U//FOUO//LES) The purpose of this bulletin is officer awareness. Officers should know that instigators involved in violent demonstrations might be familiar with, and might try to apply, techniques from the “Crowd Control and Riot Manual.” The handbook, from Warrior Publications teaches protestors how to defeat law enforcement crowd control techniques. Although it does not address specific groups or organizations, the information is widely applicable.

(U) Anti-Crowd Control Measures

(U) The handbook addresses methods used by police to control crowds and countermeasures to defeat them. Figure 1, from the chapter Riot Training, illustrates police protective gear, and then identifies its potential vulnerabilities. The chapter goes on to recommend effective weapons for rioters to carry, offers tactical guidelines, and suggests ways to counter tactical operations by police:

• (U) While an officer’s uniform contains fire retardant material, it may still be set on fire if fuel lands upon it
• (U) Although specialized gear provides protection against projectile and baton strikes, it can limit mobility on hot days; constant running and maneuvering with this gear may cause intense
• (U) Lightly equipped riot police may be vulnerable to projectile and baton strikes
• (U) Patrol vehicles may be damaged with projectiles, destroyed with Molotov cocktails, blinded with paint bombs or disabled with cut/punctured tires; these tactics are also effective against armored vehicles
• (U) Barricades (including those made with burning tires) may be used to limit vision and mobility
• (U) When encountering small arms open fire, return fire may be the best counter • (U) The best response to a baton charge is a heavy barrage of projectiles and the use of barricades
• (U) If an arrest squad (also called a “snatch squad”) is identified, they should be targeted with a heavy barrage of projectiles when they exit police lines
• (U) The use of individual riot weapons is important; primary targets are commanders, ARWEN gunners, snatch squads and K-9 units, as none of these typically carry shields (see
Figure 2)
•  (U) Against riot police, the 3’ long Hambo (also known as a long baton) is a preferred weapon to break through Plexiglas shields and visors: metal pipes or aluminum baseball bats are also good, as they have solid impact against riot armor
•  (U) Pepper/bear spray is good against police not wearing gas masks, as well as vigilante citizens
• (U) Slingshots are useful against both vehicles and police; when used against people, they should be aimed at the face
• (U) Improvised paint bombs (condoms, empty eggs, spray paint cans) are effective when thrown at masks, visors or shields
• (U) Additional effective projectiles include concrete/bricks, flares, fireworks, bottles and rocks
• (U) Projectiles should be thrown from the front of a crowd to avoid injuring cohorts
• (U) In order to escape arrest, team members should practice and rehearse holds, locks, strikes and escaping from holds and locks; individuals should fight back and attempt escape
• (U) Ambushes can be laid for police if the opportunity arises; assailants can hide behind a corner, vehicle, in a building entrance, roof-top, overhanging bridge, etc.

 

 

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LAJRIC-DefeatCrowdControl

Zyklon B – Das Mittel für den Massenmord – Dokumentation

 

Die Dokumentation zeigt die erste Hinrichtung eines Menschen durch Giftgas, wie das Zyklon B an Menschen und Tieren getestet – und schließlich gegen die Juden eingesetzt wurde.Mit dem vom Frankfurter IG-Farben-Konzern produzierten Granulat Zyklon B ermordeten die Nazis unzählige Menschen.Getestet wurde die verheerende Wirkung von Zyklon B bereits 1941 an Kriegsgefangenen.Die streng geheimen Informationen über die Giftgasproduktion in Deutschland wurden schon früh an die Amerikaner verraten.
Am 3. September 1941 führte die SS im Konzentrationslager Auschwitz ein streng geheimes Experiment durch, das den Beginn des Holocaust markierte.Mehrere Hundert Kriegsgefangene wurden mit Zyklon B ermordet, einem Granulat, das hochgiftige Blausäure freisetzt.Wenige Wochen später übergab der Repräsentant des deutschen IG-Farben-Konzerns in der Schweiz in seiner Villa am Vierwaldstätter See amerikanischen Kurieren streng geheime Dokumente über Hitlers Giftgasproduktion, auch über das von den IG Farben produzierte Zyklon B.Gelangten auf diesem Wege schon früh Informationen über die geplante sogenannte “Endlösung der Judenfrage” in die USA?
In den USA war Blausäure schon 1924 zur Exekution von Menschen eingesetzt worden. Damals starb im Staatsgefängnis von Nevada erstmals ein Straftäter durch das Giftgas.In den 30er Jahren forschte das amerikanische Chemieunternehmen Du Pont über Blausäure als Insektenkiller, aber auch als Mittel der Wahl für Hinrichtungen in der Gaskammer.Du Pont stand dabei in engem Informationsaustausch mit den Experten des IG-Farben-Konzerns in Frankfurt. Diese Beziehungen blieben sogar bestehen, nachdem Amerika im Dezember 1941 in den Krieg gegen Hitler-Deutschland eingetreten war.Der deutsche Wirtschaftsberater Erwin Respondek, der erst an den Kartellvereinbarungen zwischen IG Farben und Du Pont beteiligt war, dann zum Spion wurde versorgte die Amerikaner mit Geheimnissen über Hitlers Giftgasproduktion.

TOP-SECRET – (U//FOUO) U.S. Army Intelligence Officer’s Handbook

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OVERVIEW

1-1. The intelligence warfighting function is one of six warfighting functions. A warfighting function is a group of tasks and systems (people, organizations, information, and processes) united by a common purpose that commanders use to accomplish missions and training objectives (FM 3-0).

1-2. The intelligence warfighting function is the related tasks and systems that facilitate understanding of the operational environment. It includes tasks associated with intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance operations and is driven by the commander (FM 3-0). Intelligence is more than just collection; it is a continuous process that involves analyzing information from all sources and conducting operations to develop the situation. The intelligence warfighting function includes the following tasks:

• Support to force generation.
• Support to situational understanding.
• Conduct intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance (ISR).
• Provide intelligence support to targeting and information superiority.

INTELLIGENCE CATEGORIES

1-6. As discussed in FM 2-0, Army unit intelligence staffs produce and receive, directly or indirectly, six categories of intelligence support from the U.S. intelligence community. Intelligence categories are distinguishable primarily by their intelligence product purposes. The categories can overlap and the same intelligence can be used in each category. Intelligence organizations use specialized procedures to develop these categories. The following information describes each category and the responsible organization:

• Indications and warning (I&W). Analysis of time-sensitive information that could involve a threat to U.S. and multinational military forces, U.S. political or economic interests, or to U.S. citizens. While the G-2/S-2 produces I&W intelligence, every Soldier, such as the one conducting a presence patrol, contributes to the I&W through awareness of the CCIRs and by reporting related information.
• Current intelligence. The G-2/S-2 produces accurate reporting on the current threat situation— which becomes a portion of the common operational picture (COP)—projects the threat’s anticipated situation and the implication to friendly operations.
• General military intelligence (GMI). GMI focuses on the military capabilities of foreign countries, organizations, or on topics relating to Armed Forces capabilities, including threat characteristics (previously order of battle factors) and area or terrain intelligence. The G-2/S-2 develops initial intelligence preparation of the battlefield (IPB) products from various GMI databases, and then develops and maintains the unit’s GMI database on potential threat forces and areas of concern based on the commander’s guidance. This database supports the unit’s plan, preparation, execution, and assessment of operations.
• Target intelligence. The analysis of threat units, dispositions, facilities, and systems to identify and nominate specific assets or vulnerabilities for attack, reattack, or exploit.
• Scientific and technical intelligence (S&TI). The collection, evaluation, and interpretation of foreign engineering science and technology with warfare potential, including military systems, weapons, weapons systems, materiel, research and development, and production methods. The G-2/S-2 establishes instructions in standing operating procedures (SOPs), orders, and plans for handling and evacuating captured enemy material for S&TI exploitation.
• Counterintelligence (CI). Identifying and recommending countermeasures against threats by foreign intelligence services and the ISR activities of nonstate entities, such as organized crime, terrorist groups, and drug traffickers.

INTELLIGENCE DISCIPLINES

1-7. Intelligence disciplines are categories of intelligence functions. There are nine major intelligence disciplines:

• All-source intelligence.
• CI.
• Human intelligence (HUMINT).
• Geospatial intelligence (GEOINT).
• Imagery intelligence (IMINT).
• Measurement and signature intelligence (MASINT).
• Open-source intelligence (OSINT).
• Signals intelligence (SIGINT).
• Technical intelligence (TECHINT).

 

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USArmy-IntelHandbook

UNCENSORED – Women Protest Worldwide Photos 9

[Image]Russian nationalists rally at Bolotnaya Square, on an island in the Moscow River adjacent to the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011.Russian nationalists are rallying in downtown Moscow, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]Russian nationalists shout holding old Russian imperial flags during their rally in St.Petersburg, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011. Russian nationalists are rallying in Moscow and St.Petersburg, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]A woman wearing fake horns holds a banner during a demonstration against bullfighting in Mexico City December 10, 2011. More than hundred demonstrators took part in a protest against bullfighting in the country. Bullfighting has been one of the most popular sport in Mexico for the last 400 years, according to local media. The banner reads “Torture”. Reuters
[Image]French Occupy protesters participate in a rally as part of the 63rd anniversary of the Universal Declaration of the Human Rights, on December 10, 2011 in center Paris. The activists, angered by state spending cuts that hurt ordinary people and high unemployment have called for a nationwide protest. Placard reads : ‘Time for Outrage. Getty
[Image]Women dressed in violet clothes march from El Zocalo Square to the Revolution monument along Juarez Avenue on December 10, 2011 in Mexico City to protest against violence The activity called ‘The Rally of the One Thousand Women’ promotes to put an end to the discrimination and violence against women. Getty
[Image]Member of the Association of Parents of Disappeared Persons (APDP) hold portraits of missing relatives during a demonstration to mark International Human Rights Day in Srinagar on December 10, 2011. Demonstrations were held in Srinagar to protest against alleged human rights violations by Indian security forces on Kashmiris. Rights groups say as many as 8,000 people, mostly young men, have ‘disappeared’ by security forces in India-administered Kashmir since an armed insurgency erupted in the Muslim-majority region. Getty
[Image]In this photo taken with a fisheye lens protesters gather during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. The sign reads “No vote”. More than ten thousands people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]An elderly demonstrator holds a poster showing an edited photo of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and signed “2050. No” during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011.
[Image]Demonstrators shout during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Demonstrators shout during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Protesters light flares during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011.Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Pavel Golovkin)

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[Image]A supporter of Ivory Coast Prime Minister and leader of news forces the former rebel groupe looks on during a legislative election meeting in Ferkessedougou, north of Ivory Coast, on December 9, 2011. The December 11 polls are boycotted by former Ivorian President Laurent Gbagbo’s Ivorian Popular Front party (FPI) and its allies in protest against his arrest and transfer to the International Criminal Court in The Hague. Nearly 1,000 candidates are in the fray for the 255 parliamentary seats. Getty
[Image]People protest in the halls of the venue of UN Climate Talks on December 9, 2011, to demand that nations not sign a “death sentence” during the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Durban. Standing side-by-side with delegates from some of the world’s most vulnerable countries, civil society representatives sang traditional South African freedom songs and chanted slogans like, “Listen to the People, Not the Polluters. In the last 48 hours, over 700,000 people have signed petitions calling on major emitters to stand with the nations of Africa and resist any attempts to delay climate action until 2020. UN climate talks entered their second week entangled in a thick mesh of issues with no guarantee that negotiators and their ministers will be able to sort them out. The 194-nation process is facing, for the second time in two years, the prospect of a bustup, even as scientists warn against the mounting threat of disaster-provoking storms, droughts, flood and rising seas made worse by global warming. Getty
[Image]Journalists demonstrate during a protest against the murders of their counterparts outside the Presidential house in Tegucigalpa December 9, 2011. 17 journalists have been shot dead in Honduras since 2010, making the small Central American nation one of the world’s most dangerous places for reporters, according human rights groups. Reuters
[Image]Bahraini women watch as hundreds of anti-government protesters (unseen) run Friday, Dec. 9, 2011, through the Musalla area of Manama, Bahrain, toward an area that had been the hub of Bahrain’s spring uprising and is now a heavily militarized zone that protesters seek to reclaim. The protesters were forced back by riot police just short of the area. Writing on the wall reads “freedom” above pictures of political prisoners. (Hasan Jamali)
[Image]Russian opposition leader Sergei Udaltsov’s wife Anastasia, left, speaks to the media as environmental activist and leader of the Khimki forest defenders Yevgenia Chirikova looks at her during a news conference in Moscow, Russia, Friday Dec. 9, 2011. Energized activists and anxious authorities are bracing for anti-government protests planned across Russia’s sprawling expanse Saturday that promise to be the largest demonstration of public outrage since the dying days of the Soviet Union.
[Image]Occupy Boston Protestors reacted to the announcement that their downtown encampment would not be evicted on December 9, 2011, in Boston, Massachusetts. Boston Mayor Thomas M. Menino set a midnight deadline for Occupy Boston protestors to leave their downtown encampment in Dudley Square, or face eviction. In response, many of the protestors chose to take down their tents, and by the midnight deadline much of the camp was gone. At approximately 1:15AM on December 9, 2011, the Boston police announced that they would not evict the protestors from Dudley Square. Protestors took to the street in celebration, and further protest. Getty
[Image]Worker Pat Revell pickets outside Unilever’s Port Sunlight factory on the Wirral, Merseyside on December 9, 2011 in Port Sunlight, England. The workers are on strike in protest against the company’s plan to axe their final salary pension scheme. The strike is the first in the history of the consumer goods manufacturer who lists PG Tips tea and Persil washing detergent amongst its products. Getty
[Image]Supporters of the Serbian Radical Party stand in front of policemen while holding posters with a picture of party leader Vojislav Seselj during a protest against Serbia’s efforts to become an official candidate for the European Union membership in front of Serbia’s Presidency building in Belgrade December 9, 2011. The posters read, “We don’t want in the European Union” (L), and “Tadic don’t humiliate Serbs”. Reuters
[Image]People sit as others lay on the ground as they watch a movie in the main entrance of Germans Trias i Pujol hospital during a protest against spending cuts in Catalonia’s public healthcare system, in Badalona, near Barcelona city, Spain, Friday Dec. 9, 2011. The leaders of the 17 countries that use the euro, plus six others, have tentatively agreed to a new treaty that enforces stricter budget rules seen as crucial to solving Europe’s debt crisis and holding the currency-bloc together. An agreement on fiscal discipline is considered a critical first step before the European Central Bank, the International Monetary Fund and others would commit more financial aid to help countries like Italy and Spain, which have large debts and unsustainable borrowing costs. AP
[Image]Members of the Red Shirt movement joke with a Thai police officer as they gather to protest against former Thai Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva outside Metropolitan Police headquarters in Bangkok, Thailand Friday, Dec. 9, 2011. Abhisit was called in to give information to a police investigation team on the government’s crackdown on red-shirt demonstrators last year during which 91 people were killed. (Apichart Weerawong)
[Image]Panamanian people protest against the return of former General Manuel Noriega to Panama, in Panama City on December 09,2011. Noriega returns to Panama without the trappings of political or military clout, but with something of incalculable value — detailed knowledge of the skeletons that lurk in the Central American nation’s closet. Getty
[Image]Thousands of people gather outside the main courthouse during the first trial of 22 leftist students who were jailed after they staged a demonstration to protest a police crackdown on anti-government demonstrators in the northern town of Hopa, Black Sea, ahead of general elections in June, in Ankara, Turkey, Friday, Dec. 9, 2011. (Burhan Ozbilici)
[Image]Activists of the Ukrainian women’s movement FEMEN stage a performance in front of the Christ the Saviour Cathedral in Moscow, on December 9, 2011, to protest against alleging mass fraud in the Russian December 4 parliamentary polls and demanding Russia’s Prime Minister Vladimir Putin that he stop his political activities. Putin, who became premier in 2008 after serving two Kremlin terms, filed this week his application to stand in the March elections. Getty
[Image]Activists of Ukraine’s protest group Femen, protest outside the Christ the Saviour cathedral in Moscow, Russia, Friday, Dec. 9, 2011. The post-election protests in Moscow drew thousands and continued for several days in the biggest ever challenge to Putin, reflecting a growing public frustration with his rule that may complicate his bid to reclaim the presidency in next March’s vote. (Ivan Sekretarev)

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[Image]Medical workers rally at the Latvian Saeima (Parliament) building to protest budget cuts in health care on December 8, 2011 in Riga. The protesters are holding black balloons and various placards, urging the government to care for medical workers and warning that many health care workers may leave Latvia. Placards read: ‘Left country. Everyone has rights to receive health care’. Getty
[Image]Demonstrators protest about high inflation and low interest rates outside the Bank of England in the City of London December 8, 2011. The Bank of England voted on Thursday to stick to its four-month programme to pump an extra 75 billion pounds of quantitative easing into the rapidly slowing economy. Reuters
[Image]Pakistani protesters carry national flags as they march during a demonstration in Islamabad on December 8, 2011 against the cross-border NATO air strike on Pakistani troops. Several hundred journalists, labour leaders and traders on December 8, took to streets to condemn a recent air strike by NATO on Pakistani military checkposts that killed 24 soldiers. Pakistan shut the only supply route in Khyber tribal region for international troops in Afghanistan, boycotted the Bonn conference and announced to revisit policy towards the US in protest against the attack. Getty
[Image]Fundamentalist Christians protest on December 8, 2011 in Paris, near the Rond-Point theatre where Argentina-born author Rodrigo Garcia’s play ‘Golgota Picnic’ is performed which they judge ‘blasphemous’. Getty
[Image]People pose with a protester wearing a mock mask depicting Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. More than five hundred people protested in St.Petersburg against Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]Occupy Boston protester Heather McCann, of Watertown, Mass., center, loads a crate of books into a truck at the Dewey Square encampment while dismantling the camps library, in Boston, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. Boston Mayor Thomas Menino said Thursday that Occupy Boston protesters must leave their encampment in the city’s financial district by midnight Thursday or face eviction by police. (Steven Senne)
[Image]A veiled Kashmiri government employee participates in a protest against the government in Srinagar, India, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. Dozens of government employees demanded release of arrears and regularization of jobs for daily wage workers. (Dar Yasin)
[Image]Protesters march to join fellow protesters who camped out outside a Catholic church near the Presidential Palace in Manila, Philippines Thursday Dec. 8, 2011 to await news of the scheduled execution of a Filipino man convicted in China for drug trafficking. Philippine officials said, the Filipino man, who was convicted on drug trafficking, was executed in China on Thursday despite an appeal for clemency from President Benigno Aquino III on humanitarian grounds. (Bullit Marquez)
[Image]Kashmiri government employees participate in a protest against the government in Srinagar, India, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. Dozens of government employees demanded release of arrears and regularization of jobs for daily wage workers. (Dar Yasin)
[Image]A small group of demonstrators screams slogans demanding UN protection for Iranian dissidents in Camp Ashraf, Iraq, as they protest outside the Dutch Foreign Ministry during U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton’s visit in The Hague, Netherlands, Thursday Dec. 8, 2011. (Peter Dejong)
[Image]Police officers detain an opposition activist during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. More than five hundreds people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]French far-right leader Marine Le Pen arrives at their demonstration in Paris Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. The demonstration was to oppose a bill on which the Senate were voting Thursday afternoon, a private members bill calling for the right for foreigners to be able to vote in French municipal elections. (Jacques Brinon)
[Image]People living near nuclear plant sites shout slogans during an anti-nuclear protest in New Delhi, India, Thursday, Dec. 8, 2011. The protesters demanded scrapping of projects that endanger people’s safety and threaten livelihoods, according to a press release. Placard reads “Stop displacement of people in the name of development.” (Manish Swarup)
[Image]An Israeli musician covers her face in protest, as she performs during a rally against gender segregation, in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011. Hundreds of women and women’s rights activists gathered in central Jerusalem Wednesday night for a rally organized by the New Israel Fund, themed “women will be seen and heard”, to protest discrimination against women in Israel. (Sebastian Scheiner)
[Image]Nepalese Buddhist monks and nuns take out a protest in Katmandu, Nepal, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011. Hundreds of Buddhists demonstrated in Nepal’s capital to protest the appointment of Maoist party chief Pushpa Kamal Dahal to head a project to develop the area where Buddha was believed born in southern Nepal. The protestors demanded that there should not be any political involvement in the project to develop Lumbini, located 150 miles (240 kilometers) southwest of Katmandu. AP
[Image]A Libyan girl holds a placard that reads in Arabic ‘Thank you our brave rebels, but now let us live in peace’ during a protest in Tripoli’s landmark Martyrs Square on December 7, 2011 against former rebels who toppled Moamer Kadhafi but are still camping out in the capital and still have their weapons. Getty
[Image]Members of the Canadian Youth Delegation stage a protest as Canada’s Minister of Environment Peter Kent addresses the United Nations Climate Change Conference (COP17) in Durban in this handout picture released by the Canada Youth Delegation, December 7, 2011. Reuters
[Image]Two protesters look at each other as they await processing after being arrested by Washington DC Metropolitan Police during an Occupy DC protest in Washington, December 7, 2011. Police arrested economic protesters in Washington on Wednesday as they blocked streets and disrupted traffic in an area famous as a center for the offices of lobbyists. Reuters
[Image]An Occupy DC demonstrator sits on a chair as demonstrators blocked an intersection on K St., in Washington, Wednesday, Dec. 7, 2011. (Evan Vucci)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street activists carry house warming gifts to a house warming party during a tour of foreclosed homes in the East New York neighborhood of the Brooklyn borough of New York, Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2011. Finding it increasingly difficult to camp in public spaces, Occupy protesters across the country are reclaiming foreclosed homes and boarded-up properties, signaling a tactical shift for the movement against wealth inequality.
[Image]A Colombian woman living in Panama holds a Colombian national flag during a protest march against the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (FARC), in Panama City December 6, 2011. Outraged by the killing of four captives by FARC rebels, Colombians protested on Tuesday to demand an end to half a century of guerrilla violence and kidnapping. The words on the flag read: “Release them”. Reuters
[Image]Colombian demonstrators take part in a protest march against Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia FARC rebels in Cali December 6, 2011. Outraged by the execution of four captives by FARC rebels, tens of thousands of Colombians protested across the nation on Tuesday to demand an end to half a century of guerrilla violence and kidnapping. Reuters
[Image]In this Nov. 2, 2011 file photo, occupy Oakland protesters march through the Port of Oakland in Oakland, Calif. Protesters want to shut down ports up and down the U.S. West Coast on Monday, Dec.12,2011, to gum up the engines of global commerce. But organizers who are partly billing this effort as a show of solidarity with longshoremen have not won the support of the powerful union representing thousands of dock workers. (Noah Berger)

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[Image]An activist of a local women’s rights watchdog FEMEN, with writing “I am independent” and Ukraine’s’ national flag on her belly, seen during celebrities on the occasion of Ukraine’s 19th Independence in Kiev, Ukraine, Tuesday, Aug. 24, 2010. (Efrem Lukatsky)

STASI-STALKING- “DIE WELT” ÜBER DIE DIFFAMIERUNGSMETHODEN DER STASI – VORBILD FÜR “GoMoPa”

http://www.welt.de/print-wams/article145822/Wie_die_Stasi_Strauss_diffamierte.html

UNCENSORED – Women Protest Worldwide Photos 8

[Image]Kashmir Sutherland huddles with other protesters for warmth in Shemanski Park after police told them to take down tents or be kicked out Monday, Dec. 5, 2011, in Portland, Ore. The Oregonian reports the demonstrators agreed to take down a tent to stay in the park Sunday night. On Saturday night police arrested 19 demonstrators setting up structures in the South Park blocks. Police evicted demonstrators on Nov. 13 from two downtown parks.
[Image]A woman shouts slogans during a rally in Moscow, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Several thousand people have protested in Moscow against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. A group of several hundred then marched toward the Central Elections Commission near the Kremlin, but were stopped by riot police and taken away in buses. (Sergey Ponomarev)
[Image]A blind woman rests in front of a police line during a protest by Greek blind people outside Parliament in Athens, on Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. Dozens of people took part in the demonstration, to protest against government welfare spending cuts. Greece is in the throes of an acute financial crisis and has implemented a harsh austerity programme in exchange for international rescue loans. (Petros Giannakouris)
[Image]Occupy DC protesters stand inside a structure set up overnight in McPherson Square, Sunday, Dec. 4, 2011 in Washington. Protesters are refusing to dismantle the unfinished wooden structure erected in the park. (Manuel Balce Ceneta)
[Image]In this Nov. 17, 2011 file photo, students clash with police during a demonstration in Milan, Italy, as university students protest against budget cuts and a lack of jobs, hours before new Italian Premier Mario Monti reveals his anti-crisis strategy in Parliament. Europe’s sovereign-debt crisis, which has dragged on for more than two years, is entering a pivotal week, as leaders across the continent converge to prevent a collapse of the euro and a financial panic from spreading.
[Image]A female activist carries a sign promoting gender equality as protesters march through downtown Rabat calling for greater democracy. Moroccan pro-democracy activists called for a day of rage on Dec. 4, 2011, a week after legislative elections but few turned out. (Paul Schemm)
[Image]Animal rights activists of the AnimaNaturalis international organization stage a naked protest in the middle of the Plaza de Espana square in the centre of Madrid on December 4, 2011, to denounce the slaying of animals to make fur coats. The men and women, covered in red paint that resembled blood, lay down and curled up against each other under a sunny sky in the busy square which is home to several cinemas, cafes and restaurants. Placard reads ‘How many lives for a coat?’. Getty
[Image]Participants attend the Slutwalk Singapore event held at the Speakers’ Corner on December 4, 2011. Supporters of the global SlutWalk movement against sexual violence held a rally in Singapore, attracting dozens to a rare protest in the strictly policed city-state. Getty
[Image]Russian police officers detain opposition demonstrators during an unsanctioned rally in downtown Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 4, 2011. The rally was staged by a few dozen activists of the Left Front opposition group to protest against Sunday’s elections. (Misha Japaridze)

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[Image]Police officers try to arrest activists of the Ukrainian women’s movement FEMEN as they protest on December 3, 2011 against a meeting of opposition parties in Kiev. FEMEN activists protested against the event, saying that peeple came to the meeting because its organizers promised them money.
[Image]Body-painted environmental activists demonstrate outside the United Nations Climate Change conference (COP17) in Durban December 3, 2011. The protest march was part of a Global Day of Action to demand a fair climate change deal. Reuters
[Image]An opponent of reelected Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega holds a banner reading ‘Fraud=Poverty’, as she takes part in a protest called ”march against fraud” in Managua on December 3, 2011. About five thousand people marched in Nicaragua denouncing electoral fraud in past November 6 elections in Nicaragua and demanding a new election with foreign observers. Getty
[Image]Occupy LA protesters march from Pershing Square to the Los Angeles County Men’s Central Jail where protesters, who were arrested on Wednesday, were being held, in Los Angeles, on Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. (David Zentz)
[Image]Andean people protest against Newmont Mining’s Conga gold project during a march near the Cortada lagoon at Peru’s region of Cajamarca, November 24, 2011. Peru’s prime minister on December 2, 2011, said Newmont Mining must set aside money to finance social projects and any environmental damage as a precondition for moving forward on a stalled $4.8 billion gold mine project. Opponents of Newmont Mining’s $4.8 billion Conga project refused to end their rallies on November 30, 2011, saying Peru must permanently cancel the proposed mine after temporarily halting work on it to avert violence. Protesters and farmers say the mine would cause pollution and hurt water supplies by replacing a string of alpine lakes with artificial reservoirs. Picture taken November 24, 2011.
[Image]A woman protester join others as they shout slogans during the observance of World Climate Day Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011 near the U.S. Embassy in Manila, Philippines. The protest coincided with the annual climate talks of the Conference of Parties (COP17) in Durban, South Africa. (Pat Roque)
[Image]A woman holds aplacard during a protest march against the war in Afghanistan on December 3, 2011 in the western German city of Bonn where a major international conference on December 5 will discuss the country’s future beyond 2014, when NATO-led international combat troops will leave. Getty
[Image]A survivor of the Bhopal gas tragedy lies on a railway track as others sit around to stop train movement during a protest in Bhopal, India, Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011. Thousands of survivors of the world’s worst industrial accident blocked trains through a central Indian city on Saturday to demand more compensation.
[Image]Female Iranian demonstrators hold posters showing supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, left in the posters, and late revolutionary founder Ayatollah Khomeini, during a demonstration to welcome Iranian diplomats expelled from London in retaliation for attacks on British compounds in Tehran, at the Mehrabad airport in Tehran, Iran, early Saturday, Dec. 3, 2011.
[Image]Students are arrested during a protest against the government to demand changes in the public state education system in Santiago, December 2, 2011. Chilean students have been protesting against what they say is profiteering in the state education system. Reuters
[Image]Demonstrators walk on a protest march in central London November 30, 2011. Teachers, nurses and border guards walked out on Wednesday as up to two million state workers staged Britain’s first mass strike for more than 30 years in a growing confrontation with a deficit-cutting coalition government. Reuters
[Image]Thousands of Bulgarians gather in front of the Bulgarian parliament to protest against government austerity measures in Sofia, Wednesday, Nov 30, 2011. Thousands joined a mass rally on Wednesday to protest government-proposed austerity measures that include raising the retirement age by one year. (Valentina Petrova)

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[Image]Activists of Ukrainian women movement FEMEN hold placards reading ‘EURO-2012 without prostitution’, ‘UEFA attacked our gates’ and others during a protest in front of the Olimpisky Stadium in Kie, a few hours prior the UEFA EURO-2012 Final Draw ceremony on December 2, 2011. Getty
[Image]Hundreds of workers on strike block the entrance gate of Hi-P International factory during a protest in a suburban area of Shanghai December 2, 2011. More than 200 workers at a Singapore-owned electronics plant in the commercial hub of Shanghai went on strike for a third day on Friday to protest against planned layoffs, the latest sign of labour unrest in the world’s second-largest economy. Reuters
[Image]A police officer detains a topless woman protesting against alleged attempts to legalize prostitution during the Euro 2012 in Ukraine prior to the final draw for the Euro 2012 soccer tournament in Kiev, Ukraine, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. Ukrainian women’s rights activists staged a topless demonstration at Kiev’s Olympic Stadium to protest what they say are attempts to legalize prostitution during the 2012 European Championship. (Ferdinand Ostrop)
[Image]Survivors of the Bhopal gas tragedy, the world’s worst industrial disaster in India, along with other supporters shout slogans during a protest against a sponsorship deal with Dow Chemicals for the 2012 Olympics, in Bhopal, India, Friday, Dec. 2, 2011. Friday’s protests come on the eve of the 27th anniversary of a lethal gas leak from a Union Carbide pesticide plant in Bhopal where an estimated 15,000 people died and tens of thousands were maimed in 1984.
[Image]Iranian dissidents hold banners as they protest in Brussels, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. The protesters called for prevention of compulsory displacement of the Camp Ashraf residents inside Iraq and the annulment of the deadline for closure of Camp Ashraf by the end of December. Camp Ashraf, an enclave in eastern Iraq that houses more than 3,000 people, many of whom are dedicated to overthrowing the government of Iran.
[Image]Afghan girls hold placards during a demonstration in Kabul December 1, 2011. Hundreds of Afghans from the Solidarity Party of Afghanistan took to the streets of Kabul on Thursday to protest against plans for a long-term partnership deal with the United States. Reuters
[Image]A woman disguised as muppet character Miss Piggy takes a mud bath in front of the House of Representatives in The Hague on December 1, 2011 during a protest with Dutch environmental organization Milieudefensie against the expansion of livestock farming. Getty
[Image]A protester is detained by police during a march demanding education reform in Santiago, Chile, Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. Chilean students clashed with police on Thursday during a protest demanding more funding for public education, while students in Colombia and Argentina also took to the streets in simultaneous demonstrations.(Luis Hidalgo)
[Image]Protesters shout anti-austerity slogans during a 24-hour general strike in Athens on Thursday, Dec. 1, 2011. Thousands of protesters bitterly opposed to government austerity measures marched through the Greek capital Thursday, as another general strike closed schools and public services, left hospitals functioning on reduced staff and confined ferries to port. (Petros Giannakouris)
[Image]An Occupy Raleigh protester shouts during a speech by John Stumpf, the CEO and president of Wells Fargo, on Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011, in Raleigh, N.C. Stumpf was about 30 minutes into his speech when protesters interrupted him as he talked about the importance of small business. (Chuck Liddy)
[Image]A protester from Portland, Maine, warms her hand with her breath while eating a sandwich at the Occupy Boston encampment, in Boston on Wednesday, Nov. 30, 2011. In the past few weeks police broke up encampments in Portland, Ore., Oakland, Calif., and New York, where the sit-down protests against social inequality and corporate excesses began in mid-September. Protesters remain in place in Boston and Washington, which each had camps of about 100 tents Wednesday. (Steven Senne)
[Image]A woman is led away in handcuffs by police after being removed from Panton House in central London November 30, 2011. Demonstrators broke into an office building used by mining company Xstrata in central London on Wednesday and hung protest banners on the roof before police regained control of the building. A group of about 60 from the “Occupy” movement entered the offices in Haymarket in protest at the pay of the company’s chief executive, Occupy said in a statement. Reuters
[Image]A female protestor displays her hands with Yemen’s flag and writing Arabic that reads,”you will prosecuted,” during a demonstration demanding the prosecution of Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis are demonstrating across the country to demand President Ali Abdullah Saleh face trial for charges ranging from corruption to deadly crackdowns on protests. (Hani Mohammed)
[Image]Supporters of Sri Lanka’s main opposition United National Party (UNP) protest in Colombo on November 29, 2011. They were protesting the jailing of the former army chief Darath Fonseka, a business take over bill and the government’s 2012 budget proposals. Getty
[Image]Members of India’s National Domestic Workers Movement from the southern state of Andhra Pradesh (AP) region are watched by co-ordinator Sister Mea Yaragani (2L) as they sign a sheet while participating in a protest meet and signature campaign in Hyderabad on November 29, 2011. The protesors are demanding the ratification of the 189th International Labour Organization (ILO) convention by the Indian government and their inclusion in the Sexual Harassment Bill 2010. There are between 120000-150000 domestic workers in the state. Getty
[Image]Workers protest as they shout slogans demanding higher wages in front of Indonesia’s presidential palace in Jakarta, November 29, 2011. Indonesia has been hit by a series of strikes in recent months and is expected to see more labour disputes, as workers demanded a greater share of profits in one of Asia’s fastest growing economies. Reuters
[Image]Miss Water South Africa Kirsten Dukes poses in front of a banner during a protest by environmental activists outside the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change Conference of the Parties meeting (COP17) in Durban, November 29, 2011. The gathering runs until December 9. Reuters
[Image]Student, wearing niqabs, protest on November 29, 2011 in the building housing the office of the dean of the Faculty of Arts at the University of Manuba, 25 kms west of Tunis. Several hundred people gathered at the university to demand the right for female students to wear full face veils in class and pass exams. A group of Salafists disrupted classes on November 28 at the university, demanding a stop to mixed-sex classes and for female students to wear full face veils. Getty
[Image]Workers take part in a rally during a protest against government austerity measures organized by the PAME Communist-affiliated union in central Athens Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. The 17 finance ministers of the countries that use the euro converged on EU headquarters Tuesday in a desperate bid to save their currency – and to protect Europe, the United States, Asia and the rest of the global economy from a debt-induced financial tsunami. AP
[Image]Supporters of Pakistan Tehreek-i-Insaf (Pakistan’s Movement for Justice) pray after a demonstration against NATO cross-border attack in Lahore November 29, 2011. Pakistan’s government confirmed it would not attend an international conference on the future of Afghanistan in Bonn next week to protest against a NATO cross-border attack that killed two dozen Pakistani soldiers. Reuters
[Image]Riot police detain two students inside the national congress during a protest against the government to demand changes in the public state education system in Valparaiso city, about 121 km (75 miles) northwest of Santiago, November 29, 2011. Chilean students have been protesting against what they say is the profiteering in the state education system. Reuters
[Image]Pakistani protesters rally to condemn NATO strikes on Pakistani soldiers, in Lahore, Pakistan, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Pakistan pulled out of an upcoming meeting in Germany on the future of Afghanistan to protest the deadly attack by U.S.-led forces on its troops, widening the fallout on Tuesday from an incident that has sent ties between Washington and Islamabad into a tailspin. Placard at right reads “run NATO and wake Pakistan army”. (K.M. Chaudary)
[Image]A demonstrator holds a sign that reads in Portuguese: “The fight on the forest starts in the streets”, during a protest against the approval of the new Brazilian forest code in Brasilia, Brazil, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Brazil’s lower house in May approved changes to the law that would ease environmental restrictions in the Amazon and other regions in Brazil. Brazil’s Senate is expected to approve the measure this week, though President Dilma Rousseff has promised to veto some parts of the bill.
[Image]Female Iranian protesters attend a demonstration in front of the British Embassy, as one of them holds a poster of supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, in Tehran, Iran, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Dozens of hard-line Iranian students stormed the British Embassy in Tehran on Tuesday, bringing down the Union Jack flag and throwing documents from windows in scenes reminiscent of the anger against Western powers after the 1979 Islamic Revolution.
[Image]An elderly protestor flashes the victory sign during a demonstration demanding the prosecution of Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa, Yemen, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Hundreds of thousands of Yemenis are demonstrating across the country to demand President Ali Abdullah Saleh face trial for charges ranging from corruption to deadly crackdowns on protests. (Hani Mohammed)
[Image]Mariachi musicians perform as Greenpeace activists demand Brazil’s President Dilma Rousseff protect the Amazon as they protest outside Brazil’s embassy in Mexico City, Tuesday Nov. 29, 2011. Brazil’s government has authorized the construction of one the world’s largest hydroelectric dams, the Belo Monte dam, in the state of Para, and the federal prosecutors’ office in Para has said they will go to the Supreme Court to appeal the ruling.
[Image]Malaysian lawyers hold placards as they shout slogans during a protest in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. Hundreds of Malaysian lawyers staged a rare protest march Tuesday demanding that the government abandon plans for a law that will forbid street rallies. (Lai Seng Sin)
[Image]Protesters shout slogans as they hold candles with placards reading “Invalidity, FTA between South Korea and the U.S.” during a candle rally, denouncing the passing of a bill on ratification of a South Korea-U.S. free trade agreement in Seoul, South Korea, Tuesday, Nov. 29, 2011. South Korea’s president on Tuesday signed a slew of laws needed to implement the country’s free trade deal with the United States, amid growing protests denouncing the accord at home. (Lee Jin-man)
[Image]UCLA students walk past a line of demonstrators lying on the Quad outside a meeting of the Board of Regents at the University of California, on the campus at UCLA in Los Angeles, Monday, Nov. 28, 2011. The regents were originally scheduled to meet in mid-November at the San Francisco-Mission Bay campus, but the session was scrapped when law enforcement warned that protests could turn violent. (Reed Saxon)
[Image]Supporters of Progressive Organization of Women raise slogans during a protest rally in New Delhi, India, Monday, Nov. 28, 2011. The protesters demanded introduction of a bill in the ongoing session of parliament for a separate statehood of Telangana region from the existing Andhra Pradesh state in southern India. (Gurinder Osan)
[Image]Police officers stand during a demonstration by security forces in Tunis, Monday, Nov.28, 2011. Security forces are protesting against police officers sued on trial for their alleged role in the revolution. On armband reads: “Stop, break the silence”. (Hassene Dridi)
[Image]Members of Occupy Philly, from right to left, Shawn Grant, Brianne Murphy, and Diane Isser, demonstrate at Dilworth Plaza, in Philadelphia, on Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, in defiance of the city’s 5 p.m. eviction order. (Joseph Kaczmarek)
[Image]A member of Occupy Philly who identified herself as Laura watches the demonstration at Dilworth Plaza, in Philadelphia, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011, held in defiance of the city’s 5 p.m. eviction order. (Joseph Kaczmarek)

STASI – Strahlen-Opfer wurden bewusst verseucht und getötet – von Peter Wensierski

für Staatssicherheit (MfS) herum, es gehöre „zum Apparat“ im Nebenzimmer. Die wenigen Mitglieder des Geraer Bürgerkomitees, die an jenem 27. Dezember 1989 den berüchtigten Stasi-Knast in der Rudolf-Diener-Straße betraten, sahen dort aber zunächst einmal nichts Besonderes.

Vor einer weißen Pappwand befand sich ein Stuhl aus der Gestapo-Zeit. Er ließ sich durch eine Hebelmechanik um genau 90 Grad drehen. So konnten die Wärter von den darauf sitzenden Gefangenen die üblichen Sträflingsfotos schießen: einige von vorn, einige von der Seite, jeweils mit Registriernummer. Ansonsten standen im Raum noch Scheinwerfer und Stative, mehr nicht.

Aber hinter der Pappwand war noch ein Vorhang. Als der aufgezogen wurde, entdeckten die Bürgerrechtler – in Kopfhöhe hinter dem Stuhl – ein merkwürdiges Röntgengerät. Die Besucher waren zwar befremdet, fotografierten den Raum und stellten noch Fragen nach Sinn und Zweck des mysteriösen Apparats, doch in den turbulenten Wendetagen ging die Sache am Ende unter. Bei einer späteren Besichtigung war das Gerät spurlos verschwunden.

Für einige der damals Beteiligten ist die Aufklärung des bizarren Fundes jetzt, zehn Jahre später, jedoch wieder höchst aktuell. So war der Landesbeauftragte für Stasi-Unterlagen in Mecklenburg-Vorpommern, Jörn Mothes, Ende März auf Spurensuche im Geraer Stasi-Gefängnis, das noch immer als Haftanstalt dient. Mothes fordert, daß Staatsanwälte endlich seine Strafanzeige wegen „missbräuchlicher Anwendung von Röntgengeräten durch das „MfS“ verfolgten, bevor das Gefängnis samt Fotoraum demnächst wie geplant abgerissen wird.

Eine Reihe von Indizien spricht seiner Ansicht nach dafür, daß mit der Strahlenkanone missliebige Häftlinge im Rahmen von „MfS-Zersetzungsmaßnahmen“ unbemerkt verseucht wurden – um ihnen langfristig Schäden zuzufügen. Eine Theorie wie aus einem James-Bond-Film.

Aber drei der prominentesten DDR-Dissidenten sind in den letzten Jahren in der Tat an seltenen Arten von Krebsleiden erkrankt. So starb Rudolf Bahro 1997 an einem Non-Hodgkin-Lymphom, vergangenes Jahr verstarb der Leipziger Liedermacher Gerulf Pannach ebenfalls an Krebs. Letzte Woche erlag schließlich der Schriftsteller Jürgen Fuchs, erst 48 Jahre alt, einer seltenen Blutkrebskrankheit, dem Plasmozytom. „Jürgen Fuchs hegte die Vermutung, daß seine tödliche Krankheit nicht gottgewollt war, sondern menschengemacht“, so der Bürgerrechtler und Fuchs-Freund Wolf Biermann […].

Alle drei Krebsopfer saßen längere Zeit in Stasi-Haft. Einige Oppositionelle mögen ihr Schicksal nicht als Zufall abtun: Eindeutige Belege für Langzeitmordanschläge sind in den Akten der Betroffenen zwar nicht zu finden, doch es gibt Indizien. Auch lässt sich beweisen, daß die Stasi überlegte, wie Menschen durch Strahlen geschädigt werden können – etwa durch eine Ausarbeitung, die 1988 bei der Stasi-nahen „Sektion Kriminalistik“ der Ost-Berliner Humboldt-Universität entstand.

Auf 911 Seiten wird da unter dem Studien-Titel „Toxdat“ jede nur erdenkliche Möglichkeit angeführt, wie man Menschen durch Gift ums Leben bringen kann. Die Studie nennt mehr als 200 toxische und strahlende Substanzen und beschreibt detailliert, wie sie eingesetzt werden könnten.

Im Kapitel „Schädigung durch Beibringung radioaktiver Stoffe“ werden dem Toxdat-Papier Radionuklide besonderer Gefährlichkeit genannt, von Strontium-90 bis Plutonium-238 – aber auch „Mikromengen abgebrannter Brennstäbe“ aus Kernkraftwerken. Solche Stoffe würden beim Menschen eine „kombinierte Schädigung“ hervorrufen, „da der resultierende biologische Effekt aus einer chemischen (Gift) und einer physikalischen (Energie) Wirkung resultiert“. Beigebracht, „beispielsweise in Speisen und Getränken“, bewirkten sie „zu Siechtum führende Blut/ Knochenmarkschäden und Krebs“.

Diese Wirkungen ließen sich bereits mittels „Dosen im Mikro- bis Milligrammbereich“ erzielen. Aus der langen Zeit zwischen Attacke und Ausbruch von tödlichen Krankheiten ergebe sich ein „hohes Verschleierungspotenzial“. Schon „während der langen Latenzzeit manifestieren sich irreversible Schäden“, ohne daß der Betroffene etwas davon wahrnehme.

Bereits in den siebziger Jahren waren Stasi-Mitarbeiter zudem im Umgang mit radionukliden und in „nichtmedizinischer Röntgentechnik“ ausgebildet worden. Das geht aus einem anderen Dokument hervor, dem MfS-Jahresbericht der „Hauptabteilung XXII“ von Januar 1979. Die Stasi-Leute arbeiteten – laut einer „Aufgabenstellung des Dienstbereiches 2“ – „an der Anwendung radioaktiver Isotope“.

Ausgerechnet die MfS-Bezirksverwaltung Gera, Betreiberin der Strahlenkanone, zeigte sich nachweislich nicht zimperlich im Umgang mit radioaktiver Materie. Ihre „Abteilung 26“ übergab im Dezember 1978 in der Geraer Stasi-Zentrale strahlendes Material an einen aus Jena angereisten MfS-Mann. Der benutzte es, um einem im Kombinat Carl Zeiss Jena tätigen Physiker kontaminierte Akten unterzuschieben. Der Agent sollte den Wissenschaftler mit Hilfe radioaktiver Spuren der Spionage überführen können. Er selbst durfte nur 20 Minuten Kontakt zu den gefährlich strahlenden Papieren haben.

Den Verdacht, daß die Strahlenkanone im berüchtigten Gefängnis der Geraer Stasi gegen missliebige Bürger eingesetzt worden sein könnte, nährt auch die kaum glaubhafte Aussage des dortigen letzten Stasi-Chefs Michael Trostorff. Im Dezember 1989 beantwortete er die Frage nach dem Zweck der Anlage damit, daß sie „zum Kontrollieren von West-Paketen an die Untersuchungshäftlinge gedient“ habe. Die Geraer Gefangenen bekamen aber nicht gerade massenhaft West-Pakete. Außerdem erinnert sich der Jenaer Bürgerrechtler Thomas Auerbach ebenso wie andere Häftlinge: „Wenn etwas von draußen kam, erhielten wir die Sachen stets ausgepackt in einer offenen Holzkiste.“ Warum sollte die Stasi Pakete durchleuchten, die sie ohnehin öffnet? Und warum sollte sie ein Gerät zur Postkontrolle dort verstecken, wo Häftlinge fotografiert wurden?

Ein Geraer Röntgentechniker sah sich in den Wendetagen die Anlage genauer an, bevor sie für immer verschwand. Der Fachmann entdeckte, daß es sich keineswegs um ein Industrie-Serienprodukt handelte, sondern um unorthodox „zusammengestellt Komponenten“ auf Basis „eines Generators TuR DE 824501“. Die Anlage verstieß gegen DDR-Gesetze, war illegal und nicht angemeldet beim DDR-Amt für Atomsicherheit und Strahlenschutz. Durch „die fehlende Fixierung des Strahlers“ konnte der „auf den ca. einen Meter davor befindlichen fest am Boden verschraubten Stuhl in Kopfhöhe ausgerichtet“ werden.

Wurde der Primärstrahl auf einen Menschen gerichtet, der auf dem Stuhl saß, betrug die Dosis bei einstündiger Bestrahlung 1,1 Gray. Krebspatienten erhalten in der Strahlentherapie 40 bis 60 Gray pro vierwöchigen Behandlungszyklus. Die Geraer maschine war somit viel zu schwach, um zu töten, dazu bedarf es intensiver Ganzkörperbestrahlung. Auch um einen heftigen Strahlenkater, Hautrötung oder Haarausfall zu erzeugen, hätte das Opfer mindestens zehn Stunden damit traktiert werden müssen. Aber mit dem Gerät konnten die Stasi-Leute Opfern Strahlendosen verpassen, die hoch genug waren, um nach einigen Jahren möglicherweise Blutkrebs auszulösen.

Schriftliches zum Einsatz der Strahlenkanone hat die Stasi in Gera kaum hinterlassen. Zu finden sind ein paar Einmeßprotokolle der Anlage, die beweisen, daß sie zwischen 1976 und 1983 in Betrieb war. Die nach der Entdeckung befragten Stasi-Leute gaben an, der Apparat sei „höchstens zehnmal benutzt“ worden, seit einem Defekt 1983 dann nicht mehr – angeblich, so ein Stasi-Mann, „weil der bestellte Monteur bis zur Auflösung des MfS 1989 nicht gekommen“ sei.

Man konnte den Apparat auch von außen einschalten, und es war üblich, daß Strafgefangene allein im Fotoraum warten mussten. Dissident Auerbach erinnert sich noch genau, daß er einmal drei Stunden auf dem Stuhl sitzen musste – ohne daß jemand anders den Raum betrat. „Es gab recht häufig Fototermine, die sich meist eine Weile hinzogen, selbst kurz vor meiner Abschiebung 1983 saß ich auf dem Stuhl“, sagt auch der ehemalige Gera-Häftling Roland Jahn, Bürgerrechtler aus Jena.

Bei Sitzungen des „Runden Tischs“ und unter Stasi-Auflösern kursierten im Januar 1990 Berichte darüber, daß in den Fotoräumen anderer Haftanstalten zwar keine kompletten Geräte mehr zu finden seien, jedoch noch Reste: ein Sockel etwa, eine Bleiglasscheibe, ein Dosimeter.

Handfeste Belege gibt es dafür allerdings nicht – weder in Magdeburg noch in Berlin-Hohenschönhausen, wo Jürgen Fuchs neun Monate einsaß. Als er wegen seines Blutkrebses Strahlentherapie erhielt, erinnerten ihn die Nebenwirkungen an die „schlagartigen Gesundheitsveränderungen“ bei Stasi-Fototerminen, die ihn „körperlich reduzierten“. Damals habe er angeschnallt auf dem Stuhl gesessen und ein sehr lautes Lampengeräusch vernommen.

Alles Einbildung? Möglicherweise. Nur wurde im Mai 1990 hinter einem Vorhang im Regal des Fotoraums von Hohenschönhausen ein Lehrbuch für Strahlenkunde entdeckt.

Sehr konkret sind die Erinnerungen des Geraers Wolfgang Schatzberg an den Stasi-Knast in Chemnitz. Er durfte sich auf dem dortigen Fotostuhl nicht rühren: „Hinter mir gab es, kaum war ich allein, ein seltsames Geräusch. Ich traute mich zuerst nicht, dann hob ich den Vorhang etwas an und sah einen Röntgenapparat.“ Sein Schreck war groß, ihm dämmerte: „Das war gefährlich. Ich dreht mich von der Kante des Stuhles zum Boden hin, versuchte, meinen Kopf in Deckung zu bringen, wollte wenigstens aus dem Hauptstrahlenbereich heraus.“ Schatzberg hat inzwischen Strafanzeige erstattet.

Die Mitarbeiter der Magdeburger „Gedenkstätte Moritzplatz“ wollen es ihm jetzt nachtun. Ehemalige Insassen des dortigen Gefängnisses berichten, sie seien auffallend oft unmotiviert geröntgt worden. Eine weitere Strafanzeige ging bereits bei der Berliner Staatsanwaltschaft ein, vom Jenaer Maler Frank Rub. Der Freund und Mitstreiter von Fuchs erhofft sich etwa durch Untersuchungen der Räume in Gera und in Berlin-Hohenschönhausen neue Hinweise.

Daß es kaum Dokumente über mörderische „Zersetzungsmaßnahmen“ gab, hatte System, das belegt ein Stasi-Protokoll von 1988. Darin forderten Mitarbeiter freie Hand: Sie wollten die übliche Bürokratie umgehen, um keine Spuren zu hinterlassen. Es ging, so das Protokoll, „um die Orientierung, alles allein zu entscheiden, es darf keiner wissen, keine Hinweise auf Abstimmung/ Bestätigung“.

Daher wurde, so ein leitender Berliner MfS-Mann laut Protokoll, „entschieden, alle Aufzeichnungen/ Unterlagen zu vernichten“, denn: „Das Zeug musste weg.“ Ein anderer MfS-Offizier, spezialisiert auf die Bekämpfung von Bürgerrechtlern wie Ralf Hirsch und Roland Jahn, sagte, worum es ging: „Zum Beispiel hatten wir Gedankengänge, Ralf Hirsch, der viel trank, in einer strengen Winternacht Alkohol einzuflößen, daß er erfriert; weitere Vorstellungen an Zersetzungsmaßnahmen bestanden im Anbohren der Bremsleitung von Autos, in Paket enthaltene Flaschen was reinmischen.“

Dabei war den Stasi-Leuten etwa im Fall Hirsch (Operativvorgang „Blauvogel“) laut Protokoll „unklar, wie weit man bei Zersetzungsmaßnahmen gehen kann“, wenn schriftliche Genehmigungen und Unterschriften von Diensthöheren fehlen. „Es muß aber was gemacht werden“, so das Fazit der Offiziere, also: „Jeder macht etwas nach seinem Gefühl.“

Quelle: Der Spiegel, 20/ 1999, S. 42-44.

STASI – Tödliche Strahlung – von Paul Leonhard

Was die wohl mit dem Zeug wollen? Vielleicht hat sich der Mann diese Frage einmal gestellt, sie aber dann als einen lästigen Gedanken beiseite gewischt. Schließlich war er als Gesellschaftlicher Mitarbeiter (GMS) auf das Ministerium für Staatssicherheit eingeschworen. Regelmäßig empfing Karl J., Leiter der Hauptabteilung Radioaktive Präparate des Zentralinstituts für Kernforschung Rossendorf, die Mielke-Männer und händigte ihnen die gewünschten radioaktiven Stoffe aus. Das war schließlich rechtens, in einem Vertrag geregelt, den die Stasi 1971 mit dem bei Dresden ansässigen Forschungszentrum geschlossen hatte. Es sei für ihn noch heute undenkbar, daß radioaktive Stoffe entgegen den gesetzlichen Bestimmungen an Menschen eingesetzt werden, sagt der inzwischen als Fachbereichsleiter in Rossendorf tätige J.

Bereits im Mai 1999 war das Kernforschungsinstitut in die Schlagzeilen geraten. Damals berichtete eine Boulevard-Zeitung über geheime Lieferungen. Wir haben Flüssigkeitspräparate-Kobalt 58, Scandium 46 in Zehn-Milliliter-Ampullen an die Stasi geliefert, bestätigte J. am 21. Mai gegenüber der Bild-Zeitung. Da stand der ungeheuerliche Verdacht bereits im Raum: Waren DDR-Dissidenten durch die Staatssicherheit heimlich verstrahlt worden? Der Spiegel hatte über entsprechende Hinweise berichtet und der Jenaer Maler Frank Rub Strafanzeige bei der Berliner Staatsanwaltschaft gestellt. Auslöser war der Tod seines Freundes, des Regimegegners und Schriftstellers Jürgen Fuchs. Dieser war Anfang Mai 1999 im Alter von 48 Jahren einem Plasmozytom erlegen, einer seltenen Blutkrebsart, die durch Strahlung verursacht werden kann.

Bürgerrechtler fordern seit Jahren Aufklärung

Jürgen Fuchs hegte die Vermutung, daß seine tödliche Krankheit nicht gottgewollt war, sondern menschengemacht, erinnerte sein Freund Wolf Biermann. Ein Mord auf Raten? Den Verdacht, Fuchs und andere Dissidenten seien im berüchtigten Stasi-Knast Berlin-Hohenschönhausen mit Röntgenstrahlen traktiert worden, äußerten mehrere ehemalige Bürgerrechtler. Seit einem Jahr fordern sie rückhaltlose Aufklärung.

Zu den bald ermittelten Spuren gehörte ein unorthodox konstruiertes Röntgengerät, das Mitglieder eines Bürgerkomitees Ende Dezember 1989 im Stasi-Untersuchungsgefängnis Gera entdeckt hatten. Die Strahlenkanone stand hinter einem Vorhang versteckt im Fotoraum der Anstalt. Der Strahler habe sich etwa in Kopfhöhe des davor sitzenden Gefangenen befinden, erinnern sich Zeugen. Ähnliche Geräte gab es auch im Magdeburger, Chemnitzer und Bautzner Stasi-Knast. In Hohenschönhausen wurde 1990 im Fotoraum ein verstecktes Lehrbuch für Strahlenkunde entdeckt.

In seinem Schlüsselroman “Magdalena” hatte Jürgen Fuchs aus einer Veröffentlichung der Stasi-nahen Sektion Kriminalistik der Humboldt-Universität Berlin zitiert. Da ging es um radioaktive Gifte und darum, wie man diese spurlos gegen Menschen einsetzen kann. Nach Fuchs’ Tod gewann das Thema auch deswegen Brisanz, weil bereits im Mai 1998 Gerulf Pannach (48), früherer Liedermacher und Texter der DDR-Rockband Renft, an Nierenkrebs, und ein Jahr zuvor der Regimegegner Rudolf Bahro (61), Verfasser des Buches “Die Alternative”, an einem Non-Hodgkin-Lymphom gestorben waren. Alle drei hatten 1976/77 in Hohenschönhausen gesessen.

Wurden mißliebige Häftlinge im Rahmen von MfS-Zersetzungsmaßnahmen mittels Strahlenkanone unbemerkt verseucht, um ihnen langfristig Schaden zuzufügen? Es gibt zwar keine Beweise, dafür aber genug Indizien.

Mielkes Männer experimentierten nachweislich seit den siebziger Jahren mit strahlenden Substanzen. Akten beweisen, daß sie im Umgang mit Radionukliden und nichtmedizinischer Röntgentechnik ausgebildet wurden. Eine ganze Liste besonders gefährlicher Substanzen ist beispielsweise im Jahresplan 1979 des Dienstbereiches 2 unter der Rubrik “Schädigung durch Beibringen radioaktiver Stoffe” aufgelistet. Auch an der Anwendung radioaktiver Isotope arbeiteten die Stasi-Experten.

Eine über 900 Seiten starke Studie der Humboldt-Universität unter dem Titel “Toxdat” führt jede erdenkliche Art auf, wie Menschen mit Gift umgebracht werden können. Die für die Stasi entstandene Ausarbeitung aus dem Jahr 1988 nennt mehr als 200 toxische und strahlende Substanzen und beschreibt detailliert, wie diese eingesetzt werden könnten. Im Kapitel “Schädigung durch Beibringung radioaktiver Stoffe” werden besonders gefährliche Radionuklide genannt: von Strontium-90 bis Plutonium-238, aber auch Mikromengen abgebrannter Brennstäbe aus Kernkraftwerken.

Aus den Papieren erfuhren die Geheimdienstler, welche Wirkung ein Einsatz dieser Stoffe beim Menschen hätte. Von einer kombinierten Schädigung war die Rede. Der biologische Effekt resultiere aus einem chemischen Gift und einer physikalischen Wirkung. Beigebracht in Speisen und Getränken könnten sie zu Siechtum führende Blut-/Knochenmarkschäden und Krebs bewirken. Das sei natürlich abhängig gewesen von der psycho-physischen Reaktion der Einzelperson, sagte Fuchs in einem Interview, in dem er die Möglichkeit einschloß, daß durch Strahlung gesundheitliche Schäden verursacht werden können, nicht bei allen Gefangenen, aber bei denen, von denen man glaubt, es machen zu müssen, zu sollen, zu dürfen, auf Befehl. Die Wissenschaftler der Humboldt-Uni nannten das eine Liquidationsmethode mit hohem Verschleierungspotential durch spät einsetzende unspezifische Initialsymptomatik.

Mielke-Ministerium wollte Strahlenunfälle herbeiführen

Fuchs selbst waren Dokumente in die Hände gefallen, in denen ein handliches Gamma-Gert polnischer Herkunft eine Rolle spielte, das punktförmig Neutronenstrahlen aussendet. Sein Einsatz, bei dem das biologische Gewebe beschädigt wurde, hinterließ keine Spuren, später würde es diffuse, aber bedrohliche Erkrankungen erzeugen. Experten bestätigen inzwischen, daß die Strahlendosis der Röntgengeräte in den Stasi-Gefängnissen bei einstündiger Bestrahlung 1,1 Gray betragen haben könnte. Damit wären die Geräte zwar viel zu schwach, um einen Menschen zu töten, aber die möglichen Strahlendosen hätten ausgereicht, um nach einigen Jahren bei den Opfern Blutkrebs auszulösen.

Die Stasi beschäftigte sich ebenfalls mit Möglichkeiten, kleine Atomminen in Westdeutschland einzusetzen und Kernkraftwerke zu beschädigen, um Strahlenunfälle herbeizuführen. Erst im vergangenen Jahr stieß die Gauck-Behörde auf Unterlagen der Stasi-Abteilung Operativ-Technischer Sektor. Damit war der Beweis erbracht, daß das Mielke-Ministerium mit dem Einsatz radioaktiven Materials experimentierte, um alles mögliche zu überwachen.

Grundlage dafür bot die Kooperation mit den Kernforschern in Rossendorf. Hier fanden die Bestrahlungen im Reaktor statt. Hier wurden Stoffe aktiviert wie Stecknadeln, die später Regimegegnern an die Kleidung geheftet wurden. Einem der Stasi verdächtigen Physiker im Kombinat Carl Zeiss Jena wurden 1978 radioaktiv präparierte Dokumente untergeschoben. Manuskripte von Bürgerrechtlern wurden mit flüssigem nuklearen Material beschichtet. Auch wurden Autos markiert, indem per Luftgewehr radioaktive Munition auf die Reifen geschossen wurde. Man überlegte, wie man Personen bespritzen könnte, um sie später wiederzufinden, beschrieb Joachim Gauck, Leiter der Stasi-Akten-Behörde, in einem Interview die Methoden. Fest steht, daß das Manuskript von Bahros “Alternative” radioaktiv markiert wurde. Die Stasi wollte so den Versandwegen nachspüren und Adressaten ausfindig machen.

Aber nicht nur gegen Dissidenten wurden radioaktive Stoffe eingesetzt. So verschickte die Stasi in einem Fall radioaktiv-markiertes Westgeld, um herauszufinden, wer in einem Postamt aus Briefen Geldscheine stiehlt. Wenn jemand drei dieser Scheine einsteckte, konnte das durchaus gesundheitliche Folgen haben, schätzt Gauck ein.

Insgesamt hat es in den siebziger Jahren hundert Markierungsfälle jährlich gegeben. In den achtziger Jahren sind es 50. Die Stasi benutzte 21 verschiedene Substanzen von Caesium-137 bis zu Kobalt-59 oder Silber-110. Erschreckend sei, daß beteiligte Wissenschaftler bis heute schweigen würden und einen guten Ruf hätten, sagte Gauck im März. Diese Spezialisten hätten aber der Stasi in Kenntnis möglicher Gesundheitsgefahren geholfen. Zwar gibt es bisher nach Aussage Gaucks keinen Beweis, der den schlimmen Verdacht bewußter radioaktiver Bestrahlung in Haftanstalten bestätigt, aber unter dem Decknamen “Wolke” setzten die Mielke-Leute radioaktive Substanzen zur Markierung von Personen und Gegenständen ein. Gesundheitliche Schäden wurden dabei billigend in Kauf genommen. Ein Markierungseinsatz konnte den heute geltenden Grenzwert um das 267fache überschreiten, ermittelte ein im Auftrag der Gauck-Behörde tätiger Gutachter.

Vorwürfe von Fuchs an die bundesdeutsche Justiz

Die Aktionen überschritten selbst die Sicherheitsnormen der DDR. Auch im Fall des Geraer Röntgengerätes, das zumindest zwischen 1976 und 1983 im Stasi-Knast eingesetzt wurde und nach der Wende spurlos verschwand. Es verstieß schon dadurch gegen die DDR-Gesetze, daß es nicht beim Amt für Strahlenschutz gemeldet war.

Man habe die Bedeutung von Zersetzung nicht begriffen, warf Fuchs kurz vor seinem Tod der BRD-Justiz vor. Es werde nicht wahrgenommen, daß ein System wie das der DDR mit einer historischen Mission in Andersdenkenden ideologische Feinde sah, bei deren Ausschaltung jedes Mittel vom Zweck geheiligt ist. Ein Betroffener ist vielleicht in der Lage, die letzten, die allerletzten Beweise zu bringen, wenn er gestorben ist und eine Knochenanalyse vorgenommen wird, sagte er bezüglich der Nachforschungen für den Einsatz radioaktiver Stoffe in den Haftanstalten.

Wie vor den Kopf geschlagen zeigt sich angesichts der jüngsten Enthüllungen auch der Rossendorfer Kernforscher J.: Eine Anwendung an Menschen, die nicht der medizinischen Diagnose oder Therapie dient, verurteile er mit aller Schärfe.

DDR-Regimegegner Rudolf Bahro: Das Manuskript seines Buches “Die Alternative” wurde von der Stasi radioaktiv verstrahlt

von Paul Leonhard

TOP-SECRET-American Nazi Party E-Mails hacked

 

A sends:

Remember the idiot bloggers saying “Nazis throw support at OWS”? They were talking about these guys, all they did was tweet.

http://antiracistaction.org/?q=node%2F149#tehemails
http://nsoldguard.blogspot.com/

Mirror to the zip archive download

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http://www.filesonic.fr/file/4127147645/john.t.bowles.anp.hacked.emails.zip
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CONFIDENTIAL – Russia Has Lost More Than $500 Billion to Illicit Money Outflows Since 2000

 

Capital flight from Russia, already at $64 billion this year, is likely to intensify in coming months as a weak showing by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s United Russia party in parliamentary elections heightens political uncertainty, economists said.The net capital outflow, blamed on European banks and wealthy Russians concerned about a government shake-up, is now expected to exceed $85 billion in 2011, acting Finance Minister Anton Siluanov said late Monday.

The bearish forecast came as Fitch Ratings warned about political uncertainty in Russia, a day after voting ended in the Duma election, with Putin’s United Russia getting less than 50% of the vote. Mr. Putin on Tuesday said he sees “serious and substantial renewals” in government personnel after presidential elections set for March of next year–which he is still expected to win handily.

“People at the moment don’t have an idea which officials will be around next year and who will be gone,” said Julia Tsepliaeva, chief economist at BNP Paribas in Moscow. “If you’re a businessman or a company that has an arrangement with a certain bureaucrat, this lack of clarity may lead you to move capital abroad.”

The exodus of capital this year has weighed on the ruble, which has weakened by more than 15% from its peak this year, even as the average price for Russia’s oil this year is higher than ever before. UniCredit SpA’s Moscow unit sent at least $5.5 billion abroad in the third quarter through loans to non-Russian banks, including other units of UniCredit, as European lenders sought additional liquidity amid a debt scare linked to Greece and other euro-zone nations. Politics aside, a steep drop in oil prices or a worsening of the debt crisis in Europe could suck even more cash out of Moscow.

NEW – UNCESONDERD – FEMEN – Dnepr

VORSICHT ! STASI ! Juricon über “GoMoPa”

https://berndpulch.org/juricon-uber-gomopa-inklusive-stasi-verbindung/

TOP-SECRET from the FBI – Identity Thief Sentenced in Virginia to 12 Years in Prison for Managing East Coast Credit Card Fraud Ring

WASHINGTON—A Brooklyn, N.Y., man was sentenced today in U.S. District Court in Alexandria, Va., to 12 years in prison for operating a credit card fraud ring that used counterfeit credit cards encoded with stolen account information up and down the East Coast of the United States, announced Assistant Attorney General Lanny A. Breuer of the Criminal Division and U.S. Attorney Neil H. MacBride for the Eastern District of Virginia.

Jonathan Oliveras, 26, was sentenced by U.S. District Judge Gerald Bruce Lee. In addition to his prison term, Oliveras was ordered to forfeit $770,646 and to serve three years of supervised release. Oliveras pleaded guilty on Aug. 10, 2011, to one count of wire fraud and one count of aggravated identity theft.

In his plea, Oliveras admitted that he managed a ring of co-conspirators who used stolen credit card account information in New York, New Jersey and the Washington, D.C., area. According to court documents, Oliveras sent payments to individuals he believed to be in Russia for the stolen account information. Oliveras then distributed the stolen account information, which was re-encoded onto plastic cards and used to purchase gift cards. The gift cards were used to buy merchandise that ultimately was returned for cash.

Federal and local law enforcement executing a search warrant in July 2010 at Oliveras’ apartment found, among other things, credit card encoding equipment and more than 2,300 stolen credit card numbers. According to court documents, credit card companies have identified thousands of fraudulent transactions using the account numbers found in Oliveras’ possession, totaling more than $750,000.

The case was prosecuted by Michael Stawasz, a Senior Counsel in the Criminal Division’s Computer Crime & Intellectual Property Section and Special Assistant U.S. Attorney in the Eastern District of Virginia, and Assistant U.S. Attorney Ryan Dickey of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Virginia. The case was investigated jointly by the Washington Field Offices of both the U.S. Secret Service and the FBI, with assistance from the New York and New Jersey Field Offices of both agencies.

UNCENSORED – Topless in Vatican: FEMEN strips against ‘Catholic witch-hunt’

UNCENSORED – Russia Protest Photos


11 December 2011

[Image]http://varlamov.me/img/–/planeta_miting.jpg
[Image]Russian nationalists hold a banner reads as “All for one and one for all” and wave old Russian imperial flags during their rally at Bolotnaya Square, on an island in the Moscow River adjacent to the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011.Russian nationalists are rallying in downtown Moscow, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]Russian nationalists rally at Bolotnaya Square, on an island in the Moscow River adjacent to the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011.Russian nationalists are rallying in downtown Moscow, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]Russian nationalists shout holding old Russian imperial flags during their rally at Bolotnaya Square, on an island in the Moscow River adjacent to the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011.Russian nationalists are rallying in downtown Moscow, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]A young masked Russian nationalist holds a banner in front of a police officer during their rally at Bolotnaya Square, on an island in the Moscow River adjacent to the Kremlin in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011. Russian nationalists are rallying in downtown Moscow, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]Russian police troops patrol near closed Red Square, with St. Basil Cathedral at the background, in Moscow, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011. Russian nationalists are rallying in downtown Moscow, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Misha Japaridze)

[Image]


10 December 2011

[Image]In this photo taken Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011, protesters gather to protest near the Kremlin, background, against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia. Tens of thousands of people held the largest anti-government protests that post-Soviet Russia has ever seen to criticize electoral fraud and demand an end to Vladimir Putin’s rule. (Dmitriy Chistoprudov)
[Image]In this photo taken Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011, protesters gather to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia. Tens of thousands of people held the largest anti-government protests that post-Soviet Russia has ever seen to criticize electoral fraud and demand an end to Vladimir Putin’s rule. (Dmitriy Chistoprudov)
[Image]Police cars and trucks block a square where demonstrators gather together during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power.
[Image]Protesters gather together to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Pavel Golovkin)
[Image]Protesters gather together to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr)
[Image]Protesters hold a red banner reads as “Rot Front” shouting anti-Putin slogans during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011, with the Kremlin is the background. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections and the country’s ruling party took part in protests Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest, eight time zones away.
[Image]A protester holds an old Russian flag with the words “We are Russians, God with us” and shows a V-sing during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011, with the Kremlin is the background. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections and the country’s ruling party took part in protests Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest, eight time zones away.
[Image]Protesters gather together to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr)
[Image]People stand on the bridge as they attend a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Many thousands of Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. The banner on the bridge reads: “Crooks Give Us the Election Back.”
[Image]Protesters gather together to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]Protesters shout anti-Putin slogans during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr)
[Image]Demonstrators shout during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Protesters light flares during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011.Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Pavel Golovkin)
[Image]Demonstrators stand in front of police line during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Opposition leader Edouard Limonov shouts anti-Putin slogans during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Many thousands of Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power.
[Image]An elderly demonstrator holds a poster showing an edited photo of Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and signed “2050. No” during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011.
[Image]Protesters listen to an orator during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power.(Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr)
[Image]Protesters seen during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Many thousands of Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Sergey Ponomarev)
[Image]Masked protesters seen during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Pavel Golovkin)
[Image]A protester shouts slogans in front of police line during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Protesters light flares holding an Old Russian flags during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Name)
[Image]Police guards the Red Square area during a mass protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Many thousands of Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power. (Sergey Ponomarev)
[Image]Police vehicles seen on a Zamoskvoretsky bridge during a mass rally to protest against alleged vote rigging in Russia’s parliamentary elections in Moscow, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. Many thousands of Russians angered by allegedly fraudulent parliamentary elections are protesting Saturday in cities from the freezing Pacific Coast to the southwest of Russia, eight time zones away, a striking show of indignation, challenging Prime Minister Vladimir Putin’s hold on power.(Ivan Sekret)

 

St Petersburg


11 December 2011

[Image]Russian nationalists shout holding old Russian imperial flags during their rally in St.Petersburg, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011. The poster reads: “One for all and all for one”. Russian nationalists are rallying in Moscow and St.Petersburg, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]Russian nationalists shout holding old Russian imperial flags during their rally in St.Petersburg, Russia, Sunday, Dec. 11, 2011. Russian nationalists are rallying in Moscow and St.Petersburg, demanding a bigger say for ethnic Russians in the country’s politics and marking the first anniversary of a violent nationalist riot just outside the Kremlin.(Dmitry Lovetsky)

10 December 2011

[Image]In this photo taken with a fisheye lens protesters gather during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. The sign reads “No vote”. More than ten thousands people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]Protesters shout slogans during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. More than ten thousands people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]A protester walks in smoke of a smoke bomb during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. The sign [not shown] reads “Such election is a spit at people’s face”. More than 10,000 people have protested in St. Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers say was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]A protester holds a badminton racket as he shouts slogans during a rally in St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. More than 10,000 people are protesting in St. Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers say was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]An opposition activist fights with a police officer during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. More than ten thousand people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]Riot police detain a protester during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. More than ten thousands people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)
[Image]Protesters seen during a rally in downtown St.Petersburg, Russia, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2011. The sign reads “No vote”. More than ten thousands people have protested in St.Petersburg against Prime Minister Vladimir Putin and his party, which won the largest share of a parliamentary election that observers said was rigged. (Dmitry Lovetsky)

CONFIDENTIAL – DHS TRIPwire Domestic IED OSINT Report October 2011

The following is an example of a monthly report released through the Department of Homeland Security’s TRIP program that documents bomb threats and other incidents related to the domestic use of improvised explosive devices. The report is compiled from open source information gathered around the country.  The reports are not released publicly.

 

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

DHS-Tripwire-IED

FBI-Alleged Terrorist Indicted in New York for the Murder of Five American Soldiers

NEW YORK—Today, a federal grand jury in Brooklyn, N.Y., returned an indictment charging Faruq Khalil Muhammad ‘Isa, 38, aka “Faruk Khalil Muhammad ‘Isa,” “Sayfildin Tahir Sharif” and “Tahir Sharif Sayfildin,” with aiding in the murder of five American soldiers in a suicide-bomb attack in Iraq in April 2009.

Specifically, he is charged with the murders of Staff Sergeant Gary L. Woods, 24, of Lebanon Junction, Ky.; Sergeant First Class Bryan E. Hall, 32, of Elk Grove, Calif.; Sergeant Edward W. Forrest Jr., 25, of St. Louis; Corporal Jason G. Pautsch, 20, of Davenport, Iowa; and Army Private First Class Bryce E. Gaultier, 22, from Cyprus, Calif.

The indictment also charges the defendant with conspiring to kill Americans abroad and providing material support to that terrorist conspiracy to kill Americans abroad.

In January 2011, the defendant was arrested and detained in Canada after he was charged by a federal complaint in the Eastern District of New York. The United States is seeking the defendant’s extradition from Canada in relation to the federal complaint in the Eastern District of New York. He remains in custody, and the defendant’s extradition hearing in Canada is currently scheduled for Jan. 30 to Feb. 1, 2012.

The charges were announced by Loretta E. Lynch, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of New York; Lisa Monaco, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; and Janice K. Fedarcyk, Assistant Director in Charge of the New York Field Office of the FBI.

The government’s investigation is being conducted by the FBI New York Joint Terrorism Task Force, with assistance provided by the Department of Defense, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the government of Tunisia.

If convicted, the defendant faces a maximum sentence of life in prison.

The government’s case is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Zainab Ahmad, Carter H. Burwell and Berit W. Berger, with assistance provided by Mary Futcher and Stephen Ponticiello of the Counterterrorism Section in the Department of Justice’s National Security Division. The Criminal Division’s Office of International Affairs also provided assistance in this matter.

The charges in the indictment are merely allegations, and the defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty.

SCRET-JFIIT Intelligence Surveillance and Reconnaissance (ISR) Systems Handbook

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The purpose of the JFIIT Tactical Leaders Handbook (version 5) is to provide ground maneuver commanders, battle staffs, and soldiers with information regarding Joint Intelligence, Surveillance, and Reconnaissance (ISR) and attack systems and how to leverage these combat multipliers during planning, preparation, and execution of military operations. JFIIT publishes a classified version of this document on the SIPRNET. The For Official Use Only (FOUO) Web version can be located at the NIPRNET address listed below.

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DWONLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

JFIIT-Handbook

The FBI-Mafia Family Fraud The Case of the Stolen Company

Money in pocket

It’s a criminal’s dream—owning a financial company that can be looted at will. That’s just what 13 individuals—including two with ties to organized crime families—are accused of in a federal indictment announced last month in New Jersey.

Among those charged in the 25-count indictment is Nicodemo Scarfo—a member of the Lucchese crime family and son of Nicodemo Scarfo Sr., the imprisoned former boss of the Philadelphia La Cosa Nostra (LCN) crime family. Also charged were Salvatore Pelullo—an associate of the Lucchese and Philadelphia LCN families—and 11 others…all in connection with an alleged criminal takeover of FirstPlus Financial Group (FPFG), a publicly held company based in Texas. The takeover resulted in honest FPFG shareholders losing at least $12 million; the company ultimately filed for bankruptcy.

The group was charged with various crimes in connection with this racketeering conspiracy, including securities fraud; wire, mail, and bank fraud; extortion; money laundering; and obstruction of justice. In addition to Scarfo and Pelullo, other members of the criminal enterprise included five attorneys, a certified public accountant, and Scarfo’s wife.

How did they do it? According to the indictment, members of the criminal enterprise devised a plan in 2007 to take over FPFG by replacing its board of directors and management with individuals who would serve at the direction of Scarfo and Pelullo. To accomplish this, they allegedly accused board members of financial improprieties that, if brought to light, would result in costly lawsuits. Eventually, through threats and intimidation, every member of the board and executive management left.

After gaining control of the company, the looting began:

  • The new board approved the acquisition of “companies” owned by Scarfo and Pelullo for millions of dollars and several hundred thousand shares of FPFG stock—except that these companies were really nothing more than shell corporations and had virtually no value. Proceeds from the sale of the companies ended up in the pockets of the criminal conspirators.
  • The new board also approved a number of “consulting” agreements for hundreds of thousands of dollars. This consulting work was never performed, and the proceeds went to the criminals.

Scarfo and Pelullo allegedly purchased items like expensive homes, luxury vehicles, yachts, and jewelry. And like any good mob soldiers, they also allegedly purchased weapons.

Since FPFG was a public company, it was obligated to file reports with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). The indictment alleges that, in order to conceal the involvement of former felons Scarfo and Pelullo in the company, their henchman at FPFG filed fraudulent paperwork. Scarfo is also accused of concealing his involvement in FPFG from his probation officer—at the time of the scheme, he had been released from prison and was under federal supervision.

In addition, the indictment alleges that the Scarfo-Pelullo conspiracy was operated with the assistance and direction of members and associates of La Cosa Nostra and that some of the financial proceeds from the scheme ended up in the hands of the LCN.

This multi-year investigation was very complex and required not only using sensitive investigative techniques, but also carefully analyzing voluminous financial records and following the money trail through various financial accounts. And we didn’t do it alone—we worked with the Department of Labor’s Inspector General; the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, Explosives; and the SEC.

UNCENSORED – FEMEN – A PORTRAIT

 

 

OPFER ÜBER DIE PLEITE-FIRMEN DER FINGIERTEN SCHEISSHAUSFLIEGEN-“GoMoPa” (Eigenbezeichnung) SEIT JAHREN INSOLVENT

http://www.victims-opfer.com/?page_id=10194

TOP-SECRET-U.S. Army Taliban Insurgent Syndicate Intelligence Operations Report

Download

 

 

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL REPORT HERE

 

USArmy-TalibanIntel

TOP-SECRET-(U//FOUO) Asymmetric Warfare Group Afghan Key Leader Engagement (KLE) Reference Card

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CONFIDENTIAL-Council of Europe Committee of Ministers Declaration in Support of Whistleblowing Websites

December 9, 2011 in Council of Europe

The following statement was released on December 7, 2011 by the Council of Europe Committee of Ministers.

Declaration of the Committee of Ministers on the protection of freedom of expression and freedom of assembly and association with regard to privately operated Internet platforms and online service providers

(Adopted by the Committee of Ministers on 7 December 2011 at the 1129th meeting of the Ministers’ Deputies)

1. Freedom of expression and the right to receive and impart information and its corollary, freedom of the media, are indispensable for genuine democracy and democratic processes. Through their scrutiny and in the exercise of their watchdog role, the media provide checks and balances to the exercise of authority. The right to freedom of expression and information as well as freedom of the media must be guaranteed in full respect of Article 10 of the European Convention on Human Rights (ETS No. 5, hereinafter “the Convention”). The right to freedom of assembly and association is equally essential for people’s participation in the public debate and their exercise of democratic citizenship, and it must be guaranteed in full respect of Article 11 of the Convention. All Council of Europe member States have undertaken, in Article 1 of the Convention, to “secure to everyone within their jurisdiction the rights and freedoms” protected by the Convention (without any online/offline distinction).

2. People, notably civil society representatives, whistleblowers and human rights defenders, increasingly rely on social networks, blogging websites and other means of mass communication in aggregate to access and exchange information, publish content, interact, communicate and associate with each other. These platforms are becoming an integral part of the new media ecosystem. Although privately operated, they are a significant part of the public sphere through facilitating debate on issues of public interest; in some cases, they can fulfil, similar to traditional media, the role of a social “watchdog” and have demonstrated their usefulness in bringing positive real-life change.

3. In addition to opportunities, there are challenges to the effective exercise of freedom of expression and to the right to impart and receive information in the new media ecosystem. Direct or indirect political influence or pressure on new media actors may lead to interference with the exercise of freedom of expression, access to information and transparency, not only at a national level but, given their global reach, also in a broader international context. Decisions concerning content can also impinge on the right to freedom of assembly and association.

4. Distributed denial-of-service attacks against websites of independent media, human rights defenders, dissidents, whistleblowers and other new media actors are also a matter of growing concern. These attacks represent an interference with freedom of expression and the right to impart and receive information and, in certain cases, with the right to freedom of association. Companies that provide web hosting services lack the incentive to continue hosting those websites if they fear that the latter will come under attack or if their content may be regarded as sensitive. Furthermore, the companies concerned are not immune to undue interference; their decisions sometimes stem from direct political pressure or from politically motivated economic compulsion, invoking justification on the basis of compliance with their terms of service.

5. These developments illustrate that free speech online is challenged in new ways and may fall victim to action taken by privately owned Internet platforms and online service providers. It is therefore necessary to affirm the role of these actors as facilitators of the exercise of the right to freedom of expression and the right to freedom of assembly and association.

6. Interference with content that is released into the public domain through these means or attempts to make entire websites inaccessible should be judged against international standards designed to secure the protection of freedom of expression and the right to impart and receive information, in particular the provisions of Article 10 of the Convention and the related case law of the European Court of Human Rights. Furthermore, impediments to interactions of specific interest communities should be measured against international standards on the right to freedom of assembly and association, in particular the provisions of Article 11 of the Convention and the related case law of the European Court of Human Rights.

7. The Committee of Ministers, therefore:

– alerts member States to the gravity of violations of Articles 10 and 11 of the European Convention on Human Rights which might result from politically motivated pressure exerted on privately operated Internet platforms and online service providers, and of other attacks against websites of independent media, human rights defenders, dissidents, whistleblowers and new media actors;

– underlines, in this context, the necessity to reinforce policies that uphold freedom of expression and the right to impart and receive information, as well as the right to freedom of assembly and association, having regard to the provisions of Articles 10 and 11 of the Convention and the related case law of the European Court of Human Rights;

– confirms its commitment to continue to work to address the challenges that these matters pose for the protection of freedom of expression and access to information.

VIDEO – FEMEN DSK PARIS

Wkipedia entry – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FEMEN

FEMEN (Ukrainian:Фемен) is a Ukrainian protest group based in Kiev, founded in 2008. The organisation became internationally known for organizing topless protests against sex tourists, international marriage agencies, sexism and other social, national and international ills.[1][4][5][6][7][8][9] Some of the goals of the organisation are: “To develop leadership, intellectual and moral qualities of the young women in Ukraine” and “To build up the image of Ukraine, the country with great opportunities for women”.[3]

The organisation

Female university students between 18 and 20 years old form the backbone of the movement.[2] In Kiev, there are about 300 active participants in the movement.[10] There are few male members of FEMEN.[1] The group comprises some 20 topless activists and 300 fully clothed members.[11][12] Most of its demonstrations are staged in Kiev,[4][8] but FEMEN has also held actions in cities like Odessa,[13] Dnipropetrovsk[14] and Zaporizhia.[15] While most of the protests have been ‘topless’ in 2010 one FEMEN protester exposed her buttocks outside a locked toilet in a demonstration to protest about the lack of public toilets in Kiev.[11]

The goals of the organization is “to shake women in Ukraine, making them socially active; to organize in 2017 a women’s revolution.”[10] The group has stated it has enjoyed limited success in pushing its agenda.[16] As of late April 2010 the organisation is contemplating becoming a political party to run for seats in the next Ukrainian parliamentary election.[1][10]

FEMEN justifies its provocative methods stating “This is the only way to be heard in this country. If we staged simple protests with banners, then our claims would not have been noticed”.[17] The organisation plans to become the biggest and the most influential feminist movement in Europe.[3][10]

Some members claim their involvement in FEMEN caused their families to become alienated from them.[10][18]

FEMEN receives small financial backing by individuals[10][11][19] (including DJ Hell[18]).

Facebook initially blocked the FEMEN page because it suspected it was pornographic.[18]

Late April 2011 the organization claimed it was setting up international branches in Warsaw, Zurich, Rome, Tel Aviv and Rio de Janeiro.[20][21] They also claimed that after the early 2010 election of President Viktor Yanukovych the Security Service of Ukraine has attempted to intimidate the FEMEN activists.[18]

FEMEN occasionally holds rallies outside Ukraine.[22][23][24][25]

FEMEN protest in Kiev during the 2010 Ukrainian presidential election

The movement was founded in 2008 by Anna Hutsol (born 1983, most FEMEN members are younger[2]) after she became attuned to the sad stories of Ukrainian woman duped by false promises from abroad:[2] “I set up FEMEN because I realised that there was a lack of women activists in our society; Ukraine is male-oriented and women take a passive role.”[26] Since then the organization has staged noticeable erotically-flavored rallies (among others) near the building of the Cabinet of Ministers, at Maidan Nezalezhnosti, the Turkish embassy in Ukraine[2] and in front of the Iranian embassy to oppose the expected execution of Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani.[27]

Hutsol is adamantly opposed to legalizing prostitution in Ukraine.[2] FEMEN proposed the introduction of criminal responsibility for the use of sex industry services late in May 2009.[28]

A demonstration by a group called RU FEMEN in the Russian capital Moscow late April 2011[29] was immediately denounced as a fake offspring of FEMEN.[20][21] FEMEN accused Russian political party United Russia of having set up this RU FEMEN.[20][21]

Cultural and political image

FEMEN’s actions received criticisms in Ukraine for “being meaningless” or “being outright tasteless”.[11] According to Ukrainian gender studies expert Tetyana Bureychak most Ukrainian women are unimpressed by FEMEN.[30] According to sociologist Oleh Demkiv of the Lviv University FEMEN does not enjoy popular support.[31]

According to Reuters “Femen represents — albeit on a modest scale — one of the few regular street protest movements”.[12] In Ukraine the FEMEN activists have been labeled “girls Tymoshenko” and/or “Putin‘s agents[10][relevant?discuss]; some parents of FEMEN activists have wondered if they were addicted to drugs.[10] But the organization claims to be an independent organization “Beyond politics and beyond religion”.[10]

The group’s actions have been reported in news-outlets such as CNN, BBC News,[6] Der Spiegel, Die Welt, Independent.ie,[3] France 24,[26] on Euronews,[27] Kyiv Post,[32] Mizozo,[33] USA Today,[34] Reuters[12] and The Washington Post.

PERVERS – DIE METHODEN DER ANAL-FIXIERTEN “GoMoPa”-SCHEISSHAUS-FLIEGEN (EIGENBEZEICHNUNG)

http://www.victims-opfer.com/?p=22299

DIE FÄLSCHER – Meridian Capital about GoMoPa STASI-FÄLSCHUNGEN DER “GoMoPa”

https://berndpulch.org/meridian-capital-about-gomopa-stasi-falschungen-der-%E2%80%9Cgomopa%E2%80%9D/

OPFER IM FOKUS – DIE LISTE DER OPFER DER “GoMoPa”-STASI-Stalker

http://www.victims-opfer.com/?page_id=15672

Warnung vor STASI-“GoMoPa”-Trojaner Facebook

https://www.taz.de/sonntaz-Interview-mit-Stasi-Aktenchef-Jahn/!83422/

NEW-TOP-SECRET – White House Strategic Plan for Preventing Violent Extremism

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aw enforcement and government officials for decades have understood the critical importance of building relationships, based on trust, with the communities they serve. Partnerships are vital to address a range of challenges and must have as their foundation a genuine commitment on the part of law enforcement and government to address community needs and concerns, including protecting rights and public safety. In our efforts to counter violent extremism, we will rely on existing partnerships that communities have forged with Federal, State, and local government agencies. This reliance, however, must not change the nature or purpose of existing relationships. In many instances, our partnerships and related activities were not created for national security purposes but nonetheless have an indirect impact on countering violent extremism (CVE).

At the same time, this Strategic Implementation Plan (SIP) also includes activities, some of them relatively new, that are designed specifically to counter violent extremism. Where this is the case, we have made it clear. It is important that both types of activities be supported and coordinated appropriately at the  local level.

Current Activities and Efforts

The Federal Government has held a series of consultative meetings with communities, local government and law enforcement, civil society organizations, foundations, and the private sector to better understand how it can facilitate partnerships and collaboration. This leverages a key strength identified in the National Strategy for Empowering Local Partners: “The Federal Government, with its connections to diverse networks across the country, has a unique ability to draw together the constellation of previously unconnected efforts and programs to form a more cohesive enterprise against violent extremism.” Examples of this include the following:

  • DHS Secretary Napolitano tasked her Homeland Security Advisory Council (HSAC) to develop recommendations on how the Department can best support law enforcement and communities in their efforts to counter violent extremism. An HSAC CVE Working Group convened multiple meetings with local law enforcement, local elected officials, community leaders (including faith-based leaders), and academics. The working group released its recommendations in August 2010, highlighting the importance of: (1) research and analysis of violent extremism; (2) engagement with communities and leveraging existing partnerships to develop information-driven, community-based solutions to violent extremism and violent crime; and (3) community oriented policing practices that focus on building partnerships between law enforcement and communities.
  • DHS and NCTC began raising awareness about violent extremism among private sector actors and foundations and connected them with community civic activists interested in developing programs to counter violent extremism. DHS is now working with a foundation to pilot resiliency workshops across the country that address all hazards, including violent extremism.

We also began exploring how to incorporate CVE as an element of programs that address broader public safety, violence prevention, and resilience issues. This has the advantage of leveraging preexisting initiatives and incorporates CVE in frameworks (such as safeguarding children) used by potential local partners who may otherwise not know how they fit into such efforts. For example, although many teachers, healthcare workers, and social service providers may not view themselves as potentially contributing to CVE efforts, they do recognize their responsibilities in preventing violence in general. CVE can be understood as a small component of this broader violence prevention effort. Departments and agencies will review existing public safety, violence prevention, and resilience programs to identify ones that can be expanded to include CVE as one among a number of potential lines of effort.

  • As an example, the Federal Government helped support a community-led initiative to incorporate CVE into a broader program about Internet safety. The program addressed protecting children from online exploitation, building community resilience, and protecting youth from Internet radicalization to violence.

Future Activities and Efforts

Planned activities to expand support to local partners include the following:

  • The Federal Government will help broker agreements on partnerships to counter violent extremism between communities and local government and law enforcement to help institutionalize this locally focused approach. (Lead: DHS)
  • DHS and DOJ will work to increase support for local, community-led programs and initiatives to counter violent extremism, predominantly by identifying opportunities within existing appropriations for incorporating CVE as an eligible area of work for public safety, violence prevention, and community resilience grants. (Leads: DHS and DOJ)
  • DHS is working to increase funding available to integrate CVE into existing community-oriented policing efforts through FY12 grants. (Lead: DHS)
  • DHS is establishing an HSAC Faith-Based Community Information Sharing Working Group to determine how the Department can: (1) better share information with faith communities; and (2) support the development of faith-based community information sharing networks. (Lead: DHS)
  • DHS is developing its Hometown Security webpage to include resources such as training guidance, workshop reports, and information on CVE for both the general public and law enforcement. (Lead: DHS)
  • The Treasury will expand its community outreach regarding terrorism financing issues. (Lead: Treasury; Partners: State, DOJ, DHS, FBI, and the U.S. Agency for International Development)3
  • Depending on local circumstances and in consultation with the FBI, U.S. Attorneys will coordinate, as appropriate, any efforts to expand connections and partnerships at the local level for CVE, supported by the National Task Force where needed. (Lead: DOJ; Partners: All)
  • Departments and agencies will expand engagement with the business community by educating companies about the threat of violent extremism and by connecting them to community civic activists focused on developing CVE programs and initiatives. (Lead: DHS; Partner: NCTC)

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

WhiteHouse-DomesticExtremism

NEW AND UNCENSORED – FEMEN Ukraine

http://pics.livejournal.com/femen/pic/00056stf

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5KGgWcTV7F4&feature=relmfu&oref=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.youtube.com%2Fwatch%3Fv%3DAJkGKD0Xz6w%26feature%3Dchannel_video_title

TOP-SECRET FROM THE NSA-U.S. ESPIONAGE AND INTELLIGENCE

U.S. ESPIONAGE AND INTELLIGENCE
Aerial reconnaissance photograph of Severodvinsk Shipyard, the largest construction facility in the Soviet Union, taken by a KH4-B spy satellite on February 10, 1969.
Organization, Operations, and Management, 1947-1996

In the aftermath of World War II, with the Cold War looming on the horizon, the United States began the process of developing an elaborate peacetime intelligence structure that would extend across a number of government departments. The operations of the U.S. intelligence community during the Cold War would range from running single agents, to marshaling the talents of thousands to build and deploy elaborate spy satellites.

The end of the Cold War brought major changes, but not the end of the U.S. government’s requirement for an elaborate intelligence structure. A number of intelligence organizations have been consolidated or altogether eliminated. New organizations have been established to provide more coherent management of activities ranging from military espionage, to imagery collection, to the procurement of airborne intelligence systems. The end of the Cold War has brought about the declassification of much information about intelligence organization and espionage activities that took place prior to the collapse of the Soviet Union.

Focus of the Collection

CIA Headquarters, Langley, VirginiaU.S. Espionage and Intelligence: Organization, Operations, and Management, 1947-1996 publishes together for the first time recent unclassified and newly declassified documents pertaining to the organizational structure, operations, and management of the U.S. intelligence community over the last fifty years, cross-indexed for maximum accessibility. This set reproduces on microfiche 1,174 organizational histories, memoranda, manuals, regulations, directives, reports, and studies, representing over 36,102 pages of documents from the Office of the Director of Central Intelligence, the Central Intelligence Agency, National Reconnaissance Office, National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, military service intelligence organizations, National Security Council and other organizations. U.S. Espionage and Intelligence presents a unique look into the internal workings of America’s intelligence community. The documents gathered here shed further light on U.S. intelligence organization and activities during the Cold War, and describe the consolidation and reevaluation of the intelligence community in the post-Cold War era. They are drawn from diverse sources, including the National Archives, manuscript collections in the Library of Congress, court files of major espionage prosecutions, presidential libraries, and most importantly, Freedom of Information Act requests. The result of this effort is an authoritative documents publication which, together with the National Security Archive’s previous collection on the structure and operations of the U.S. intelligence community,

U.S. Espionage and Intelligence provides a wealth of information and documentation on key aspects of intelligence organization and operations during and after the Cold War, including such extraordinary topics as:

  • the evolution of the CIA
  • the development and operation of key reconnaissance systems (SR-71, CORONA)
  • the consolidation of Defense Department intelligence
  • intelligence performance during the Persian Gulf War
  • damage assessments of Aldrich Ames’ espionage activities

Significance of the Collection

The U.S. intelligence community has played a key role in advising presidents from Harry Truman to Bill Clinton on the intentions and activities of the Soviet Union, as well as of other nations. It also came to absorb a significant portion of the federal budget, reaching an approximate high of $30 billion in the late 1980s.

U.S. Espionage and Intelligence allows scholars direct access to the newly declassified, detailed primary documents that contain the history of the military, diplomatic, and intelligence components of the Cold War, and which go far beyond what is available in secondary sources. This new information is essential for reaching an accurate understanding of what was happening behind the scenes and how it related to the more public aspects of Cold War policy and operations.

The material contained in this set concerning the post-Cold War era is crucial in assessing the intelligence community’s performance in critical areas such as the Persian Gulf War and the Aldrich Ames case. The material is also vital in understanding the evolution of the intelligence community since the end of the Cold War and its possible future–for that evolution may significantly influence the ability of the intelligence community to deal with critical threats such as proliferation of weapons of mass destruction and terrorism.

One-Stop Access to Critical Documents

It would take a monumental effort, as well as many thousands of dollars, to duplicate the information contained in this collection. U.S. Espionage and Intelligenceallows a researcher– whether interested in the CIA, military intelligence, intelligence performance in the Persian Gulf War, or post-Cold War intelligence reform–to use one source at one location to access the thousands of pages of declassified material on the U.S. intelligence community available in this set.

Through U.S. Espionage and Intelligence the researcher gains access to a wide variety of documents: internal histories of the CIA and a variety of military intelligence organizations; program histories of the SR-71 and CORONA; director of central intelligence and Department of Defense directives establishing organizations such as the National Reconnaissance Office and the National Imagery and Mapping Agency; plans for the consolidation and reform of Defense intelligence organizations after the Cold War and memoranda implementing the reforms; and assessments of intelligence community performance in a number of areas.

In-depth Indexing Makes Every Document Accessible

The National Security Archive prepares extensive printed finding aids for its collections. In- depth indexing offers users remarkable ease and precision of access to every document in the set. The printed Index provides document-level access to subjects, individuals, and organizations, and represents a major research contribution in itself. Important transactions within each document are indexed individually using a controlled subjects vocabulary.

The Guide includes an essay, events chronology, glossaries of key individuals, organizations, and terms, document catalog, and a bibliography of secondary sources.

Research Vistas

With its depth of documentary detail, the collection enables researchers to explore

  • U.S. intelligence performance
  • Cold War history
  • evolution of the U.S. intelligence community and its components
  • U.S. intelligence collection activities

The Collection is a Necessity For:

  • Scholars and students of
    • intelligence
    • national security organization and operations
    • Cold War history
  • Journalists
  • Librarians and bibliographers
  • Concerned citizens

Sample Document Titles

01/15/62 Legal Basis for Cold-War Activities, Lawrence Houston, [Classification Excised] Memorandum

03/27/64 Directive 5105.23, National Reconnaissance Office, Department of Defense, Top Secret Directive 05/23/67 Report on Plots to Assassinate Fidel Castro, Central Intelligence Agency, Secret Memorandum

07/00/73 Allen Welsh Dulles as Director of Central Intelligence, 26 February 1953-29 November 1961, Central Intelligence Agency, Top Secret Biographic Sketch

00/00/82 History of the Navy HUMINT Program, United States Navy, Top Secret History

03/15/91 Plan for Restructuring Defense Intelligence, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Command, Control, and Communication Intelligence, Secret Report

01/06/92 Task Force Report on Greater CIA Openness, Director of Central Intelligence, [Classification Excised] Memorandum

06/01/92 DCID 2/9, Management of National Imagery Intelligence, Director of Central Intelligence, Secret Intelligence Directive

09/00/92 Appendixes A, B, and C to the Final Report: National Reconnaissance Program Task Force for the Director of Central Intelligence, National Reconnaissance Program Task Force, Secret Report

12/18/92 Directive 5200.37, Centralized Management of Department of Defense Human Intelligence (HUMINT) Operations, Department of Defense, [Classification Unknown] Directive

08/00/93 Intelligence Successes and Failures in Operations Desert Shield/Storm, House Committee on Armed Services, [Classification Unknown] Report

01/21/94 A Description of Procedures and Findings Related to the Report of the U.S. Environmental Task Force, King Publishing, Paper

12/07/95 Statement of the Director of Central Intelligence on the Clandestine Services and the Damage Caused by Aldrich Ames, Director of Central Intelligence, Statement

03/01/96 Preparing for the 21st Century: An Appraisal of U.S. Intelligence, Commission on the Roles and Capabilities of the United States Intelligence Community, Report

12/19/96 United States of America v. Harold J. Nicholson, Superseding Indictment, U.S. District Court, Eastern District of Virginia, Indictment

Overview

Title
U.S. Espionage and Intelligence: Organization, Operations, and Management, 1947-1996

Content
Reproduces on microfiche 1,174 U.S. government records totaling 36,102 pages of documentation concerning the organizational structure, operations, and management of the intelligence community from World War II to the present.
Materials were identified, obtained, assembled, and indexed by the National Security Archive.

Series
The Special Collections

Arrangement
Microfiche are arranged chronologically. For ease of use, each document bears a unique accession number to which all indexing is keyed.

Standards
The documents are reproduced on 35mm silver halide archivally permanent positive microfiche conforming to NMA and BSI standards. Any microfiche found to be physically substandard in any way will be replaced free of charge.

Indexing
A printed Guide and Index accompanies the microfiche collection. The Guide contains an events chronology, glossaries, chronological document catalog and a bibliography of secondary sources. The Index provides in-depth, document level access to subjects and individuals.

U.S. Espionage and Intelligence Project Staff

Project Director

Dr. Jeffrey T. Richelson, project director, is a senior fellow at the National Security Archive and coordinates the Archive’s projects on U.S. policy toward China and ongoing documentation on U.S. intelligence issues. He previously edited the Archive’s collections on presidential national security documents, the history of the U.S. intelligence community, and the military uses of space. A former associate professor at American University, he received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Rochester. Among his many books are Sword and Shield: Soviet Intelligence and Security Apparatus (1986), American Espionage and the Soviet Target (1988), America’s Secret Eyes in Space (1990), and A Century of Spies: Intelligence in the Twentieth Century (1995). His articles have appeared in a wide variety of professional journals and in publications ranging from Scientific American to the Washington Post. He is a regular commentator on intelligence and military issues for national television and radio.

Project Staff

Michael Evans, Research Assistant
Jane Gefter, Research Assistant
Michael Watters, Research Assistant

U.S. Espionage and Intelligence Advisory Board

Christopher Andrew, Corpus Christi College, University of Cambridge author, For the President’s Eyes Only

Loch Johnson, Department of Political Science, University of Georgia author, Secret Agencies: U.S. Intelligence in a Hostile World

David Wise, author, Nightmover: How Aldrich Ames Sold the CIA to the KGB for $4.6 Million

Praise for U.S. Espionage and Intelligence, 1947-1996

“Serious students of the structure and operations of American intelligence rely on the work of the National Security Archive. The new collection of intelligence documents, compiled for the Archive by Jeffrey T. Richelson, helps to pierce the labyrinth.”

David Wise
Author of Nightmover: How Aldrich Ames Sold the CIA to the KGB for $4.6 Million

“An invaluable supplement to the National Security Archive’s previous collection, The U.S. Intelligence Community 1947-1989, this brings the most recently declassified documents to the reader. Jeffrey Richelson’s useful introduction also serves to detail changes that have occurred in the structure of the U.S. espionage establishment.”

John Prados
Author of Presidents’ Secret Wars

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TOP-SECRET FROM THE NSA-The Soviet Estimate: U.S. Analysis of the Soviet Union, 1947-1991

IMAGE
The Soviet Estimate:
U.S. Analysis of the Soviet Union,
1947-1991

Focus of the Collection

The Soviet Estimate: U.S. Analysis of the Soviet Union, 1947- 1991, publishes together for the first time the highest-level U.S. intelligence assessments of the Soviet Union, cross- indexed for maximum use. This set reproduces on microfiche more than 600 intelligence estimates and reports, representing nearly 14,000 pages of documentation from the office of the Director of Central Intelligence, the National Intelligence Council, the Central Intelligence Agency, the Defense Intelligence Agency, and other organizations. The set includes several hundred pages of debriefing transcripts and other documentation related to Colonel Oleg Penkovskii, the most important human source operated by the CIA during the Cold War, who later was charged with treason and executed by the Soviet Union. Also published here for the first time is the Pentagon’s Top Secret 1,000-page internal history of the United States-Soviet Union arms race.

The Soviet Estimate presents the definitive secret history of the Cold War, drawn from many sources: the hundreds of documents released by the CIA to the National Archives in December 1994, comprising the most important source of documents for the set, including intelligence estimates from 1946 to 1984; documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act from the Pentagon, the CIA, the DIA, State Department, Pacific Command, and other agencies; and documents obtained from the National Archives and from various presidential libraries. The result of this effort is the most extensive and authoritative collection of declassified primary-source materials documenting the intelligence community’s effort to gather information on Soviet foreign policy, nuclear weapons, military policy and capabilities, weapons systems, the economy, science and technology, and the Soviet domestic political situation.

The Soviet Estimate provides a wealth of information and documentation on key intelligence issues, including:

  • The missile gap controversy, which helped John F. Kennedy to win the presidency in 1960
  • The “Team A”/”Team B” intelligence report controversy in 1976
  • Whether the CIA foresaw the decline of the Soviet economy
  • Advance warning from the CIA to President Bush about the hard-line coup attempt against Gorbachev in 1991.

Significance of the Collection

(54398) 1961/05/27

The Soviet Union was the major concern of U.S. national security decisionmakers for more than 40 years, and represented the most important single target of all U.S. intelligence collection efforts. The ultimate policies adopted by the U.S. during the Cold War were the result of many factors, not the least of which was an understanding of Soviet objectives and capabilities, shaped and influenced by the intelligence reports included in this set.

Until recently scholars have had to address issues such as the performance of U.S. intelligence analysis with respect to the Soviet Union or the impact of intelligence on policy without access to most of the key documents. Prior to December 1994, all of the National Intelligence Estimates related to the birth and death of the so-called “missile gap” were classified; scholars were often forced to rely either on other government documents that reproduced some of the information in estimates (for example, Department of Defense posture statements), or unofficial sources. The Soviet Estimate, with its diverse sources, permits scholars direct reference to the primary documents used in formulating much Cold War policy.


One-Stop Access to Critical Intelligence Documents

It would take an enormous effort, and many thousands of dollars, to duplicate the information contained in this collection. The Soviet Estimate allows a researcher– whether interested in the Soviet military, the Soviet economy, or Soviet internal politics–to use one source at one location to access the thousands of pages of declassified U.S. intelligence documents on the Soviet Union.

Through The Soviet Estimate the researcher gains access to a wide variety of documents, including National Intelligence Estimates, Special National Intelligence Estimates, National Intelligence Council memoranda, interagency intelligence studies, Defense Intelligence Estimates, and intelligence reports produced by DIA, military service, and unified command intelligence organizations.

Among the specific areas covered in the collection are:

  • Developments in Soviet nuclear forces from the early 1950s to the 1980s
  • The deteriorating political and economic situation under Mikhail Gorbachev in the late 1980s
  • Soviet relations with the United States, European countries, and other nations
  • The Soviet space program and developments in science and technology
  • The Soviet economic system and economy

In-depth Indexing Makes Every Document Accessible

The National Security Archive prepares extensive printed finding aids for its collections. In-depth indexing offers users remarkable ease and precision of access to every document in the set. The printed Index provides document- level access to subjects, individuals, and organizations, and represents a major historical contribution itself. Important transactions within each document are indexed individually using a controlled subjects vocabulary.

The Guide includes an events chronology, glossaries of key individuals and organizations, chronological document catalog, and a bibliography of relevant secondary sources.


Research Vistas

With its depth of documentary detail and balance of perspectives, this collection enables researchers to explore in greater detail:

  • Soviet studies
  • Cold War history
  • U.S. intelligence performance
  • The intelligence-policy relationship

The Collection is a Necessity for:

  • Scholars and students of
    • The Soviet Union
    • The history of the Cold War
    • The U.S. intelligence community
    • Policy formation
  • Policy analysts
  • Journalists
  • Concerned citizens
  • Librarians and bibliographers

Sample Document Titles

4/6/50 ORE 91-49
Estimate of the Effects of the Soviet Possession of the Atomic Bomb Upon the Security of the U.S. 
10/5/54 NIE 11-6-54
Soviet Capabilities and Probable Programs in the Guided Missile Field 
9/21/61 NIE 11-8/1-61
Strength and Deployment of Soviet Long-Range Ballistic Missile Forces, September 21, 1961 
3/2/67 NIE 11-1-67
The Soviet Space Program 
2/19/70 SNIE 11-16-70
Soviet Attitudes Toward SALT 
6/76 United States Air Force
A History of Strategic Arms Competition, 1945-1972: Volume 3: A Handbook of Selected Soviet Weapon and Space Systems (May-Steinbruner-Wolfe Report) 
12/76 NIO M 76-021J
Soviet Strategic Objectives: An Alternative View (“Team B” Report) 
5/27/81 SNIE 11-2-81
Soviet Support for International Terrorism and Revolutionary Violence 
7/7/81 M/M NIE 11-4-78
Soviet Goals and Expectations in the Global Power Arena 
4/83 NIC M 83-10006
Dimensions of Civil Unrest in the Soviet Union 
3/6/84 NIE 11-3/8-83
Soviet Capabilities for Strategic Nuclear Conflict, 1983-93 
4/89 CIA
Rising Political Instability Under Gorbachev: Understanding the Problem and Prospects for Resolution 
4/25/91 CIA, Office of Soviet Analysis
The Soviet Cauldron  

Overview

Title:

The Soviet Estimate: U.S. Analysis of the Soviet Union, 1947 – 1991
Content:
Reproduces on microfiche more than 600 intelligence estimates and reports, representing nearly 14,000 pages of documentation recording the intelligence community’s effort to gather information on Soviet foreign policy, nuclear weapons, military policy and capabilities, weapons systems, the economy, science and technology, and the Soviet domestic political situation.
Arrangement and Access:
Documents are arranged chronologically. For ease of use, the unique identification numbers assigned to the documents are printed in eye-legible type at the top right-hand corner and precede each document on the microfiche strip.
Standards:
Documents are reproduced on silver halide positive- reading microfiche at a nominal reduction of 24x in envelopes. They are archivally permanent and conform to AIIM, BSI, and ANSI standards. Any microfiche found to be substandard will be replaced free of charge.
Indexing:
A printed Guide and Index totaling over 390 pages accompanies the microfiche collection. The Guide contains an essay; an events chronology; glossaries of acronyms and abbreviations, names, organizations, and technical terms; and a bibliography of secondary sources. The Index provides in-depth, document-level access to subjects, individuals, and organizations.
Date of Publication:
December 1995
Orders and Inquiries

The National Security Archive

Founded in 1985, the National Security Archive has developed a reputation as the most prolific and successful nonprofit user of the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA). Through its FOIA expertise, the Archive has built what the Christian Science Monitor called “the largest collection of contemporary declassified national security information outside the United States government.” Located at The George Washington University, the Archive serves librarians, scholars, journalists, members of Congress, policymakers, public interest groups, and the general public. Foundation grants and publication royalties underwrite the Archive’s budget.

The Archive’s editorial process focuses on high-level policy-making and implementation, with special attention to inter-agency decisionmaking processes. Archive analysts target all U.S. government documents used by policymakers during the period covered by the collection, as well as other significant materials of direct relevance to the subject.

This research establishes a roadmap for future scholarship and “freezes” the documentary record with official requests for declassification before normal governmental document destruction process can diminish the historical record. The result is an “unusual” series of publications, as Microform Review noted, which make available documents “from the twilight zone between currently released government information, and normal declassification” periods.

Accompanied by highly sophisticated item-level catalogs, indexes, and other finding aids–which Government Publications Review hailed as “gold mines in and of themselves”–the Archive’s collections, according to the Washington Journalism Review, constitute “a ‘Nexis’ of national security . . . [a] state-of-the-art index to history.”


Praise for The Soviet Estimate

“The National Security Archive has performed a valuable service by compiling the most extensive and authoritative file of declassifed, official U.S. National Intelligence Estimates on the Soviet Union. The compilation The Soviet Estimate is a gold mine for analyzing Soviet developments on the Cold War, and no less important, contemporary American intelligence assessments of those developments. With the benefit of hindsight and new information, the validity of those estimates can be studied, and their impact on U.S. policy and the Cold War evaluated. ”
–Raymond Garthoff,
Senior Fellow, Foreign Policy Studies Program, Brookings Institution, former U.S. Ambassador to Bulgaria, veteran of the U.S. Department of State and Central Intelligence Agency, and author of many publications, including Deterrence and the Revolution in Soviet Military Doctrine (1990), The Great Transition: American-Soviet Relations and the End of the Cold War (1994), and Détente and Confrontation: American-Soviet Relations from Nixon to Reagan (1994).


The National Security Archive Soviet Estimate Project Staff

Project Editor
Jeffrey T. Richelson, Ph.D., Project Editor, is a senior fellow at the National Security Archive and coordinates the Archive’s projects on U.S. policy toward China and ongoing documentation on U.S. Intelligence issues. He previously edited the Archive’s collections on presidential national security documents, the history of the U.S. intelligence community, and the military uses of space. A former associate professor at American University, he received his Ph.D. in political science from the University of Rochester. Among his many books are Sword and Shield: Soviet Intelligence and Security Apparatus (1986), American Espionage and the Soviet Target (1988), America’s Secret Eyes in Space (1990), and A Century of Spies: Intelligence in the Twentieth Century (1995). His articles have appeared in a wide variety of professional journals and in publications ranging from Scientific American to the Washington Post. He is a regular commentator on intelligence and military issues for national television and radio. 
Project Staff
Jane Gefter, Research Assistant
Ian Stevenson, Research Assistant
Kristin Altoff, Intern

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STASI “GoMoPa” handelt nach dem alten Göring-Motto:”Wo gehobbelt wird, da fallen Späne “-BÖRSE ONLINE berichtet

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UNCENSORED- Alexandra – FEMEN

TOP-SECRET-ISAF Afghanistan Detainee Operations Standard Operating Procedures

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/ISAF-DetaineeSOP.png

1. Reference G is the current operational level guidance on detention issues. This TACSOP gives further direction and guidance to commanders and staff responsible for detention operations within Afghanistan. Commanders at all levels are to ensure that detention operations are conducted in accordance with applicable international law and human rights standards and that all detainees are treated with respect and dignity at all times. The strategic benefits of conducting detention operations in a humanitarian manner are significant. Detention operations that fail to meet the high standards mandated herein will inevitably have a detrimental impact on the ISAF Mission. All ISAF Detention operations will be subject to internal and external scrutiny.

2. The policy contained within this TACSOP applies to actions taken by ISAF troops under the ISAF Mission. It does not apply to PW or to persons indicted for war crimes (PIFWC) pursuant to the lawful exercise of authority by the International Criminal Court or other lawfully constituted tribunals. It does, however, give direction to Regional Commands on the reporting of detainees taken within their AOO by troops operating under the Counter-Terrorist mandate (Reference H refers) or by ANSF operating jointly with ISAF.

DEFINITIONS

3. The following definitions are used throughout this SOP.

a. NATO Holding Facility / NATO Detention Facility. This term refers to any facility used, designed or adapted to facilitate the detention of individuals.
b. ISAF Detention Authority. This is defined in the main body of this SOP as a specified individual authorised to make detention decisions. These individuals are listed in Para 6 below.
c. Period of Detention. This is regarded as the period of detention, not to exceed 96 hours, which starts on arrest (ie; the act by which a non-ISAF person is deprived of his liberty by ISAF personnel) until the moment a detainee is handed over to the ANSF or GOA officials or is released by ISAF.
d. ANSF. The abbreviation ANSF stands for Afghan National Security Forces and includes, Afghan National Army (ANA), Afghan National Police (ANP), Afghan Border Police, Afghan Highway Police, Afghan Counter-Narcotics Police and any authorised Afghan national or regional government agency involved with security or detention facilities.
e. Age / Date of Birth. Consideration must be given to the fact that in many areas, individuals may not know their age or date of birth. For the purpose of this SOP, the following definitions are used:

(1) Adult. An adult is considered to be any person aged 18 or over.
(2) Juvenile. A juvenile is considered to be between the age of 15 up to 18.
(3) Child A child is considered to be below the age of 15.

LEGAL APPLICATIONS

4. Authority to Detain. The only grounds upon which a person may be detained under current ISAF Rules of Engagement (ROE) are: if the detention is necessary for ISAF force protection; for the self-defence of ISAF or its personnel; for accomplishment of the ISAF mission.

5. Detention. If an arrest and/or detention is effected by ANSF with ISAF support, then the individual is not considered to be an ISAF detained person and the provisions of this TACSOP do not apply. An individual will not be considered as an ISAF detained person until and unless ISAF assumes control and places that individual into detention. In all cases of detention HQ ISAF is to be informed. The current policy for ISAF is that Detention is permitted for a maximum of 96 hours after which time an individual is either to be released or handed into the custody of the ANSF / GOA.

6. Detention Authority. As soon as practicable after an detention has taken place, the decision to continue to detain must be considered by an appropriate authority. The ISAF Detention authority must be able to support the grounds by a reasonable belief in facts. The requirement for detention must be kept under continuous review. The following persons may act as an ISAF Detention Authority to determine if the grounds set out in paragraph 4 are met:

a. COMISAF2;
b. A Regional Commander (RC);
c. A National Contingent Commander;
d. The Theatre Task Force Commander;
e. A Battalion Commander;
f. A Provincial Reconstruction Team (PRT) Commander;
g. Base Commander;
h. An On-Scene Commander; and
i. Commander of the Theatre Detention Facility.

7. The powers of the Detention Authority. A Detention Authority may authorize detention for up to 96 hours following initial detention. Should the Detention Authority believe that continued detention beyond 96 hours is necessary then, prior to the expiration of the 96-hour period, the Detention Authority shall refer the matter via the chain of command to HQ ISAF.

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ISAF-DetaineeSOP

The FBI-Former Illinois Governor Rod R. Blagojevich Sentenced to 14 Years in Prison for Corruption in Office

CHICAGO—Former Illinois Gov. Rod R. Blagojevich was sentenced today to 14 years in federal prison following his conviction at trials in 2010 and 2011 on 18 felony counts of corruption during his tenure as governor, including his effort in 2008 to illegally trade the appointment of a United States Senator in exchange for $1.5 million in campaign contributions or other personal benefits. Blagojevich was also sentenced for shaking down the chief executive of a children’s hospital for $25,000 in campaign contributions in exchange for implementing an increase to pediatric reimbursement rates; holding up the signing of a bill to benefit the Illinois horse racing industry in an attempt to illegally obtain $100,000 in campaign contributions; and lying to the FBI in 2005.

Blagojevich, who will turn 55 on Dec. 10, was ordered to surrender to the U.S. Bureau of Prisons on Feb. 16, 2012, to begin serving his sentence. The prison term is the longest-ever imposed on a former governor in the Northern District of Illinois.

“When it is the governor who goes bad, the fabric of Illinois is torn, disfigured and not easily repaired,” U.S. District Judge James Zagel said in imposing the sentence after a two-day hearing. “The harm here is not measured in the value of money or property . . . the harm is the erosion of public trust in government,” he said.

The judge imposed a fine of $20,000 and two years of supervised release after incarceration. Blagojevich also must pay a special assessment of $1,800, or $100 on each count of conviction.

During the sentencing hearing, Judge Zagel agreed with the government that the properly calculated advisory federal sentencing guidelines provided for a sentencing range of 30 years to life. He also agreed with the government that the range was not appropriate within the context of this case, and found an “effective” guideline range of 188 to 235 months in prison, which was proximate to the government’s recommended sentence of 15 to 20 years. The judge further reduced the range to 151 to 188 months after finding that Blagojevich accepted responsibility for his crimes at sentencing.

In sentencing papers, the government contended that “Blagojevich’s criminal activity was serious, extended, and extremely damaging.” The crimes proven at trial were not isolated incidents, but, instead, were part of an approach to public office that Blagojevich adopted from the moment he became governor after he was first elected in 2002 on the heels of gubernatorial corruption and running on a campaign to end “pay-to-play” politics.

“Blagojevich betrayed the trust and faith that Illinois voters placed in him, feeding great public frustration, cynicism and disengagement among citizens. People have the right to expect that their elected leaders will honor the oath they swear to, and this sentence shows that the justice system will stand up to protect their expectations,” said Patrick J. Fitzgerald, United States Attorney for the Northern District of Illinois.

“The sentence handed down today represents a repayment of the debt that Blagojevich owes to the people of Illinois. While promising an open and honest administration, in reality, the former governor oversaw a comprehensive assault on the public’s trust,” said Robert D. Grant, Special Agent in Charge of the Chicago Office of the Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Thomas P. Brady, Inspector in Charge of the U.S. Postal Inspection Service in Chicago, said: “The United States Postal Inspection Service is proud to be one of the federal law enforcement agencies to help ferret out this type of political corruption in Illinois. The Inspection Service is committed to increasing the public’s trust and confidence through our investigations of fraudulent activity. While the sentencing today closes one chapter, we must adhere to a renewed standard of accountability to ensure that the citizens of our state are not victimized by political corruption and greed.”

Alvin Patton, Special Agent in Charge of the Internal Revenue Service Criminal Investigation Division in Chicago, said: “Today’s sentence sends a loud message that public corruption will not be tolerated. The IRS Criminal Investigation Division, together with the U.S. Attorney’s Office and our law enforcement partners, will continue to aggressively pursue violators of the public trust. Regardless of political office or position, no one is above the law.”

James Vanderberg, Special Agent in Charge of the Chicago Regional Office of the U.S. Department of Labor, Office of Inspector General, said: “This sentence sends a clear message that public officials cannot engage in corruption for personal benefit in exchange for political favors.

Blagojevich, a lawyer and former state prosecutor, state legislator, and U.S. Representative, was arrested on Dec. 9, 2008, while serving his second term as governor. He was accused of using his office in numerous matters involving state appointments, business, legislation and pension fund investments to seek or obtain such financial benefits as money, campaign contributions, and employment for himself and others, in exchange for official actions, including trying to leverage his authority to appoint a United States Senator to replace then President-Elect Obama.

Blagojevich went to trial in the summer of 2010 and was convicted of lying to FBI agents when he falsely told them in an interview on March 16, 2005, that he did not track, or want to know, who contributed to him or how much money they contributed to him, but the jury was deadlocked on all remaining counts.

He went to trial again in the spring of 2011 and was convicted on 17 additional counts, including 10 counts of wire fraud, two counts of attempted extortion, two counts of conspiracy to commit extortion, one count of soliciting bribes, and two counts of conspiracy to solicit and accept bribes.

The prosecution was part of Operation Board Games, a public corruption investigation of pay-to-play schemes, including insider-dealing, influence-peddling and kickbacks involving private interests and public duties. The investigation began in 2003 and has resulted in convictions against 15 defendants, including two former chiefs of staff for Blagojevich while he was governor.

The government is being represented in the Blagojevich case by Assistant U.S. Attorneys Reid Schar, Carrie Hamilton and Christopher Niewoehner.

TOP-SECRET FROM THE NSA-Info Age requires rethinking 4th Amendment limits and policies,

Washington, D.C., December 8, 2011 – The largest U.S. spy agency warned the incoming Bush administration in its “Transition 2001” report that the Information Age required rethinking the policies and authorities that kept the National Security Agency in compliance with the Constitution’s 4th Amendment prohibition on “unreasonable searches and seizures” without warrant and “probable cause,” according to an updated briefing book of declassified NSA documents posted today on the World Wide Web.

Wiretapping the Internet inevitably picks up mail and messages by Americans that would be “protected” under legal interpretations of the NSA’s mandate in effect since the 1970s, according to the documents that were obtained through the Freedom of Information Act by Dr. Jeffrey Richelson, senior fellow of the National Security Archive at George Washington University.

The NSA told the Bush transition team that the “analog world of point-to-point communications carried along discrete, dedicated voice channels” is being replaced by communications that are “mostly digital, carry billions of bits of data, and contain voice, data and multimedia,” and therefore, “senior leadership must understand that today’s and tomorrow’s mission will demand a powerful, permanent presence on a global telecommunications network that will host the ‘protected’ communications of Americans as well as targeted communications of adversaries.”

The documents posted today also include a striking contrast between the largely intact 1998 NSA organizational chart for the Directorate of Operations and the heavily redacted 2001 chart for the Signals Intelligence Directorate (as the operations directorate was renamed), which contains no information beyond the name of its director. “The 2001 organization charts are more informative for what they reveal about the change in NSA’s classification policy than for what they reveal about the actual structure of NSA’s two key directorates,” commented Dr. Richelson. The operations directorate organization chart was provided within three weeks of its being requested in late 1998. In contrast, the request for the Signals Intelligence Directorate organization chart was made on April 21, 2001, and NSA did not provide its substantive response until April 21, 2004 – three years instead of three weeks.

Introduction

The National Security Agency (NSA) is one of the most secret (and secretive) members of the U.S. intelligence community. The predecessor of NSA, the Armed Forces Security Agency (AFSA), was established within the Department of Defense, under the command of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, on May 20, 1949. In theory, the AFSA was to direct the communications intelligence and electronic intelligence activities of the military service signals intelligence units (at the time consisting of the Army Security Agency, Naval Security Group, and Air Force Security Service). In practice, the AFSA had little power, its functions being defined in terms of activities not performed by the service units. (Note 1)

The creation of NSA resulted from a December 10, 1951, memo sent by Walter Bedell Smith to James B. Lay, Executive Secretary of the National Security Council. The memo observed that “control over, and coordination of, the collection and processing of Communications Intelligence had proved ineffective” and recommended a survey of communications intelligence activities. The proposal was approved on December 13, 1951, and the study authorized on December 28, 1951. The report was completed by June 13, 1952. Generally known as the “Brownell Committee Report,” after committee chairman Herbert Brownell, it surveyed the history of U.S. communications intelligence activities and suggested the need for a much greater degree of coordination and direction at the national level. As the change in the security agency’s name indicated, the role of the NSA was to extend beyond the armed forces. (Note 2)

In the last several decades some of the secrecy surrounding NSA has been stripped away by Congressional hearings and investigative research. In the late 1990s NSA had been the subject of criticism for failing to adjust to the post-Cold War technological environment as well as for operating a “global surveillance network” alleged to intrude on the privacy of individuals across the world. The following documents provide insight into the creation, evolution, management and operations of NSA, including the controversial ECHELON program.  Also included are newly released documents (11a – 11g) that focus on the restrictions NSA places on reporting the identities of U.S. persons – including former president Jimmy Carter and first lady Hillary Clinton, and NSA Director Michael Hayden’s unusual public statement (Document 24) before the House Intelligence Committee.

Some of the documents that appear for the first time in this update shed additional light on the history of NSA. They concern the NSA’s participation in the space reconnaissance program (Document 3), NSA’s success in deciphering Soviet communications in the 1960s (Document 4), the efficacy of NSA activities in the late mid-to-late 1960s (Document 5), and Israel’s attack on the USS Liberty during the 1967 war (Document 10). Others provide new insight on NSA’s assessment of key issues in the new century (Document 21, Document 23), on NSA’s attempts to adapt to the changing world and communications environment, (Document 22), on the agency’s regression to old policies with regard to organizational secrecy (Document 26a, Document 26b), and on NSA activities before and after the events of 9/11 (Document 25).

Several of these documents also appear in either of two National Security Archive collections on U.S. intelligence. The U.S. Intelligence Community: Organization, Operations and Management: 1947-1989 (1990) and U.S. Espionage and Intelligence: Organization, Operations, and Management, 1947-1996 (1997) publish together for the first time recently declassified documents pertaining to the organizational structure, operations and management of the U.S. Intelligence Community over the last fifty years, cross-indexed for maximum accessibility. Together, these two sets reproduce on microfiche over 2,000 organizational histories, memoranda, manuals, regulations, directives, reports, and studies, totalling more than 50,000 pages of documents from the Office of the Director of Central Intelligence, the Central Intelligence Agency, National Reconnaissance Office, National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, military service intelligence organizations, National Security Council, and other official government agencies and organizations.
Documents
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Document 1:  NSCID 9, “Communications Intelligence,” March 10, 1950

National Security Council Intelligence Directives have provided the highest-level policy guidance for intelligence activities since they were first issued in 1947.

This document establishes and defines the responsibilities of the United States Communications Intelligence Board. The Board, according to the directive, is to provide “authoritative coordination of [the] Communications Intelligence activities of the Government and to advise the Director of Central Intelligence in those matters in the field of Communications Intelligence for which he is responsible.”

The particularly sensitive nature of communications intelligence (COMINT) activities was highlighted by paragraph 6, which noted that such activities should be treated “in all respects as being outside the framework of other or general intelligence activities.” Thus, regulations or directives pertaining to other intelligence activities were not applicable to COMINT activities.

Document 2a:  Memorandum from President Harry S. Truman to the Secretary of State, the Secretary of Defense, Subject: Communications Intelligence Activities, October 24, 1952

Document 2b:  National Security Council Intelligence Directive No. 9, Communications Intelligence, December 29, 1952

President Truman’s memorandum revokes the provisions of NSCID 9 with regard to the composition, responsibilities, and procedures of the U.S. Communications Intelligence Board. It establishes the USCIB as an entity “acting for and under” a newly created Special Committee of the National Security Council for COMINT, consisting of the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense.

More significantly, Truman’s memo, along with a Department of Defense directive, established NSA, and transformed communications intelligence from a military activity divided among the three services to a unified national activity. (Note 3) Thus, the first sentence states that “The communications intelligence (COMINT) activities of the United States are a national responsibility.”

The memorandum instructs the Special Committee to issue a directive to the Secretary of Defense which defines the COMINT mission of NSA as being to “provide an effective, unified organization and control of the communications intelligence activities of the United States conducted against foreign governments.” Thus, “all COMINT collection and production resources of the United States are placed under his operational and technical control.”

The directive provided the NSA director with no authority regarding the collection of electronic intelligence (ELINT)—such as intelligence obtained from the interception of the emanations of radarsor of missile telemetry. Responsibility for ELINT remained with the military services.

NSCID 9 of December 1952 replaces its 1950 predecessor as mandated by Truman’s directive. Often using identical language to that in the Truman directive, it revises the responsibilities of the United States Communications Intelligence Board as well as defining the role of the newly created National Security Agency and enumerating the responsibilities of its director.

New Document 3: Memorandum of Agreement Concerning NSA Participation in the (S) National Reconnaissance Office, August 1, 1962. Top Secret

The National Reconnaissance Office was established in September 1961 to provide a central coordinating authority for the nation’s overhead reconnaissance activities, which included efforts by the Central Intelligence Agency, Air Force, and Navy. An early issue was the division of responsibilities for the development and operation of satellite systems. At a conference in May 1962, it was agreed by CIA and NRO officials that the National Security Agency, despite its responsibility for signals intelligence activities, would not be allowed to develop SIGINT satellites as part of the national reconnaissance program. Herbert Scoville, the CIA’s deputy director for research, argued that the Secretary of Defense was the government’s executive agent for SIGINT activities and since he had chosen to assign the mission to the NRO, the NSA was excluded from undertaking such development activities. (Note 4)

The Secretary’s decision did not mean, however, that NSA, was to play no role in the development and operation of signals intelligence satellites. This represents the first agreement specifying how NSA would be permitted to participate in the National Reconnaissance Program.

New Document 4: Richard Bissell, Review of Selected NSA Cryptanalytic Efforts, February 18, 1965 Top Secret Codeword

Richard Bissell joined the CIA in 1954, serving first as the special assistant to CIA Director Allen Dulles, and then as the agency’s Deputy Director (Plans). He left the agency in February 1962, as a result of the failure of the Bay of Pigs invasion of April 1961. Before and during his tenure as the CIA’s operations chief Bissell directed the development and operation of several key technical collection systems – including the U-2 and OXCART aircraft, and the CORONA reconnaissance satellite.

In his memoirs he reported that, in October 1964, “I accepted a brief assignment from John McCone at the CIA, which involved looking into very highly classified business of another agency of the government. My job was to write a report on what I had learned from visits and interviews with authorities on the problem.” (Note 5) Bissell provided no further information.

In response to a Freedom of Information Act request, the CIA provided a copy of this document – which is Bissell’s report of his investigation of the National Security Agency’s efforts to crack certain high-grade cipher systems. Although the identity of the nation whose ciphers were being attacked is deleted throughout the report, the target country is clearly the Soviet Union. The report discusses the prospects of breaking into high-level Soviet codes and concludes with three principal recommendations – which concern the extent of the overall cryptologic effort, the desirability of reallocating some cryptologic resources, and the possibility of a systematic comparison of the intelligence produced via the successful exploitation of two different components of the cryptanalytic effort.

New Document 5: Letter, Frederick M. Eaton to Richard M. Helms, Director of Central Intelligence, August 16, 1968, Top Secret Codeword w/TS Codeword attachment

This letter, along with the attachment, represents the report of the four-member group, which included Eaton, a New York lawyer and banker, General Lauris Norstad, the Defense Department’s Eugene Fubini, and ambassador Livingston T. Merchant, that was commissioned by DCI Richard Helms in September 1967 to examine the national signals intelligence effort.

The topics examined by the group included program guidance, the DCI and the National Intelligence Resources Board, central review and coordination, management of the cryptologic community, NSA staff organization, COMINT, Telemetry, and ELINT resources, and the communications and dissemination of the information. The letter from Eaton to Helms conveys the group’s nineteen recommendations and the conclusion that
“there must be no slackening in the US cryptologic effort if essential military and other national needs are to be met.”

According to James Bamford’s The Puzzle Palace, Eaton was forced to write the conclusions himself when “many of the staff turned in their pens” because Eaton “recommended no reductions and concluded that all of NSA’s programs were worthwhile,” despite “accumulated substantial evidence that much of the NSA’s intelligence collection was of little or marginal uses to the various intelligence consumers in the community.” (Note 6)

Document 6:  Memo to President Johnson, September 6, 1968

This memo, from national security adviser Walt Rostow to President Johnson, provides information concerning North Vietnamese/Viet Cong military and political strategy during the last months of Johnson’s presidency. The last item in the memo notes that its conclusions were partly a function of the author’s access to relevant intercepted communications.

The memo specifically notes unusual, high-priority message traffic between Hanoi and subordinate units directing forces in South Vietnam as well as urgent messages from the Military Affairs Committee of COSVN (Central Office for South Vietnam) to subordinates. It does not reveal how extensively the U.S. was able to decrypt the messages.

Document 7:  Department of Defense Directive S-5100.20, “The National Security Agency and the Central Security Service,” December 23, 1971

Originally classified Secret, this directive remains in effect today, with minor changes. Key portions of the directive specify the NSA’s role in managing the signals intelligence effort for the entire U.S. government, the role of the Secretary of Defense in appointing and supervising the work of the NSA’s director, the authorities assigned to the director of NSA, and the relationships that NSA is expected to maintain with other components of the government.

Among the specific responsibilities assigned to the director are preparation of a consolidated SIGINT program and budget for Defense Department SIGINT activities, the “exercise of SIGINT operational control over SIGINT activities of the United States,” and the production and dissemination of SIGINT “in accordance with the objectives, requirements, and priorities established by the Director of Central Intelligence.”

The directive reflects the 1958 addition of electronic intelligence to NSA’s responsibilities, making it the national authority for both components of signals intelligence.

Document 8a:  NSCID 6, “Signals Intelligence,” February 17, 1972

Document 8b:  Department of Justice, “Report of the Inquiry into CIA-Related Electronic Surveillance Activities,” 1976, pp. 77-9

NSCID 6 is the most recently available NSCID concerning SIGINT. It was still in effect at least as late as 1987. An earlier version of the directive was issued in 1958, when NSA was first assigned responsibility for electronics intelligence.

The version released by the NSC in 1976 contains little more than the definitions for COMINT and ELINT. However, a Justice Department report obtained by author James Bamford while researching his book, The Puzzle Palace, quoted additional portions of the directive.

The directive specifies that the Director of NSA is to produce SIGINT in response to the objectives, requirements and priorities of the Director of Central Intelligence. It also empowers the director to issue direct instructions to any organizations engaged in SIGINT operations, with the exception of certain CIA and FBI activities, and states that the instructions are mandatory.

Document 9a:  NSA COMINT Report, “Capital Projects Planned in India,” August 31, 1972

Document 9b:  NSA, “India’s Heavy Water Shortages,” October 1982

These two documents provide examples of NSA reporting, as well as demonstrating that NSA’s collection targets have included Indian atomic energy programs. Portions of each document that discuss or reveal the contents of the intercepts have been redacted. However, the classification of the documents indicates that high-level communications intelligence was used in preparing the report. UMBRA is the highest-level compartment of the three compartments of Special Intelligence—the euphemism for COMINT. The lower level compartments are MORAY and SPOKE.

The classification (either TSU [TOP SECRET UMBRA] or MORAY) of the 25 reports which Document 6b was derived from indicate that the report relied extensively on COMINT. The report also demonstrates how NSA, often to the annoyance of the CIA, has gone far beyond its formal collection and processing responsibilities and into the analysis of the data it has collected. (Note 7)

New Document 10: William D. Gerhard and Henry W. Millington, National Security Agency, Attack on a SIGINT Collector, the USS Liberty, 1981. Top Secret Umbra

One of the most controversial events in the history of U.S.-Israeli relations was the attack by Israeli aircraft, during the midst of the Six-Day War of June 1967, on the USS Liberty, a ship assigned to gather signals intelligence on behalf of the National Security Agency. The attack left thirty-four Americans dead and 171 wounded.

In additional to internal studies conducted by both countries there have been numerous books, portions of books, and articles that have sought to review the events and assess blame. The most controversial issue has been whether Israel knowingly attacked a ship it knew to belong to the U.S., which was cruising in international waters off the Sinai Peninsula, to prevent it from monitoring Israeli actions in the midst of the war. Authors have reached diametrically opposite conclusions on this issue. (Note 8)

This extensive report, written by a former head of the NSA element that produced studies of SIGINT crisis situations and the former head of the NSA library, examines the political-military background, consideration’s leading to the ship’s deployment, deployment to the Mediterranean, the attack, Israel’s explanation, recovery and initial assessment, reviews of the incident, and “a final look.” In their conclusion, the authors deal with the issues of possible Israeli foreknowledge of the ship’s nationality and possible Israeli motivations for an attack. They report that a CIA assessment prepared within week of the attack, drawing heavily on communications intercepts, concluded (p. 64) that Israeli forces had not deliberately attacked a ship they knew to be American.

Document 11a:  United States Signals Intelligence Directive [USSID] 18, “Legal Compliance and Minimization Procedures,” July 27, 1993

While NSCIDs and DoD Directives offer general guidance on the activities of NSA and the United States SIGINT System (USSS), far more detailed guidance is provided by the director of NSA in the form of United States Signals Intelligence Directives (USSIDs). The directives fall into at least nine different categories: policy, collection, processing, analysis and reporting, standards, administration, training, data processing, and tasking.

In the aftermath of revelations in the 1970s about NSA interception of the communications of anti-war and other political activists new procedures were established governing the interception of communications involving Americans. (Note 9) The version of USSID 18 currently in force was issued in July 1993 and “prescribes policies and procedures and assigns responsibilities to ensure that the missions and functions of the United States SIGINT System (USSS) are conducted in a manner that safeguards the constitutional rights of U.S. persons.” Section 4 (“Collection,” pp.2-6) specifies the circumstances under which U.S. SIGINT activities may intercept communications of or about U.S. persons, as well as the authorities of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Court, the Attorney General, and the Director of NSA to approve the collection of such information.

Section 5 (“Processing,” pp.6-7) focuses on the restrictions on processing intercepted communications involving U.S. persons–including domestic communications collected during foreign communications collection operations. Section 6 (“Retention,” p.8) deals with the retention of intercepted communications about U.S. persons. Section 7 (“Dissemination,” pp.8-10) concerns restrictions on dissemination. It requires that all SIGINT reports be written “so as to focus solely on the activities of foreign entities and persons and their agents.” It also specifies some of the conditions under which U.S. persons can be identified in SIGINT reports–for example, when the communications indicate the person is an agent of a foreign power.

Document 11b:  NSA, “USSID 18: Dissemination of U.S. Government Organizations and Officials (U)–INFORMATION MEMORANDUM,” February 5, 1993

This NSA memo indicates that the conditions for identification of U.S. officials by title in NSA reporting varies depending on whether or not the individual is a member of the executive branch. Senior officials of the executive branch may be identified by title, without prior approval from higher authority, when the official’s title is necessary to understand or assess foreign intelligence. In contrast, officials from the legislative and judicial branches cannot be identified by title, even if that information is necessary to understand foreign intelligence, unless approval is obtained from higher authority. The memo implies that, under the assumed conditions, the use of names is not permitted.

Document 11c:  NSA, “USSID 18: Reporting Guidance on References to the First Lady,” July 8, 1993

This memo followed a U.S. Court of Appeals ruling that  Hillary Clinton was a full-time government official. It notes that she could be identified in reports by title (Chairperson of the President’s Task Force on National Health Care Reform) without prior approval when that title was necessary to understand or assess foreign intelligence and when the information related to her official duties. The memo also contains guidance on reports containing information about information concerning Mrs. Clinton that is not clearly foreign intelligence.

Document 11d:  National Security Agency/Central Security Service, “U.S. Identities in SIGINT,” March 1994

This 48-page document is intended to provide detailed guidance concerning on the use of U.S. identities in SIGINT reports as well as the dissemination of U.S. identities to consumers outside the United States SIGINT System. It consists of 12 sections (including ones on requests for U.S. identities, accountability, dissemination, and collection and processing), and five appendices (including those on approved generic references and USSID 18 criteria for dissemination).

Document No. 11e:  NSA, USSID 18: Reporting Guidance on Former President Carter’s Involvement in the Bosnian Peace Process (U)– Information Guidance, December 15, 1994

The issue of when the identity or even title of a U.S. citizen can be included in reporting based on communications intercepts is a major focus of USSID 18. This NSA memo was prepared in response to the invitation to former President Carter to travel to Bosnia and Herzegovina to participate in efforts to end the war. It specifies that as long as Carter is acting as a private citizen he may be referred to only as a “U.S. person” in any reports.

Document 11f:  NSA, “Understanding USSID 18 and Contextual Identifications,” September 30, 1997

The issue of identification by context is the subject of this memo. It notes that, in describing U.S. entities, analysts are required, in general, to substitute sufficiently generic terms for the entities–terms that do not “directly lead to the identification of a U.S. entity even though the identity has been obscured in the report.” Violation of the “contextual identification rule” requires that the report “must be cancelled, reworded and reissued to eliminate the identifying information.” The guidance clearly does not apply to those cases where inclusion of more specific information is necessary to evaluate foreign intelligence.

Document 11g: NSA, “USSID 18 Guide,” February 1998

The introduction to this document notes that it is an informal guide to the provisions of USSID 18 with respect to the issue of the COMINT collection and and dissemination of U.S. identities. One section focues on USSID 18 issues with respect to threat situations, including when an individual is held captive by a foreign power or group or when an intercept reveals a threat to a U.S. person. The section on non-threat situations contains guidance on the disposition of the inadvertent intercept of communciations between U.S. persons, on processing and reporting of incidentally intercepted communications of a U.S. person during foreign intelligence collection, and the handling of U.S. identities in reports.

Document 12:  Director of Central Intelligence Directive (DCID) 6/1, “SIGINT Committee,” May 12, 1982

The SIGINT Committee, now known as the National SIGINT Committee, was first established in 1958 to oversee key aspects of U.S. SIGINT activities—the identification of collection requirements, evaluation of how well U.S. and allied SIGINT activities satisfy requirements, and the production of recommendations concerning SIGINT arrangements with foreign governments. This directive is the most recent available version of DCID 6/1. While the directive remains formally classified, the full text of the document has been published previously in scholarly works and on the world wide web. (Note 10)

The SIGINT Committee operated for many years with two permanent subcommittees—the SIGINT Requirements Validation and Evaluation Subcommittee (SIRVES) and the SIGINT Overhead Reconnaissance Subcommittee (SORS). In the mid-1990s two new groups were established: The Weapons and Space Systems Advisory Group, to “coordinate SIGINT on foreign weapons and space systems,” and the National Emitter Intelligence Subcommittee, which focuses on SIGINT production concerning foreign radars and other non-communications signals. (Note 11)

Document 13:  NAVSECGRU Instruction C5450.48A, Subj: Mission, Functions and Tasks of Naval Security Group Activity (NAVSECGRUACT) Sugar Grove, West Virginia, September 3, 1991

While NSA directs and manages U.S. SIGINT activities, almost all collection activity is actually carried out by the military service SIGINT units—including the Naval Security Group Command. The role of the unit at Sugar Grove in intercepting the international leased carrier (ILC) communications passing through INTELSAT satellites was first revealed in James Bamford’s The Puzzle Palace. (Note 12)

The regulation reveals that Sugar Grove is associated with what has become a highly controversial program in Europe, North America, Australia, and New Zealand. The program, codenamed ECHELON, has been described as a global surveillance network that intercepts and processes the world’s communications and distributes it among the primary partners in the decades-old UKUSA alliance—the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, Australia, and New Zealand. (Note 13)

In reality, ECHELON is a more limited program, allowing the UKUSA allies to specify intelligence requirements and automatically receive relevant intercepts obtained by the UKUSA facilities which intercept satellite communications (but not the U.S. facilities that receive data from SIGINT satellites). It is also limited by both technological barriers (the inability to develop word-spotting software so as to allow for the automatic processing of intercepted conversations) and the limitations imposed on collection activities by the UKUSA allies—at least as regards the citizens of those countries. (Note 14) Thus, the NAVSECGRU instruction also specifies that one of the responsibilities of the commander of the Sugar Grove site is to “ensure the privacy of U.S. citizens are properly safeguarded pursuant to the provisions of USSID 18.”

Document 14:  Farewell from Vice Admiral William O. Studeman to NSA Employees, April 8, 1992

This address by the departing director of NSA, William Studeman, examines NSA’s post-Cold War mission, likely budgetary limitations, and other challenges facing the agency. Reflecting the increasing emphasis on “support to military operations,” Studeman notes that “the military account is basic to NSA as a defense agency, and the lack of utter faithfulness to this fact will court decline.” He also observes that “the demands for increased global access are growing” and that “these business areas (SMO and global access) will be the two, hopefully strong legs on which NSA must stand.” He also argues that “technical and operational innovation to deal with a changing and changed world must continue to dominate.”

Document 15:  Letter, Stewart A. Baker, General Counsel, NSA to Gerald E. McDowell, Esq., September 9, 1992

In the wake of disclosures about the role of the Banca Nazionale del Lavoro (BNL), particularly its Atlanta branch, in the provision of financial assistance to the regime of Saddam Hussein, questions were raised about whether the intelligence community was providing sufficient support to law enforcement.

This letter, from NSA’s general counsel, answers a series of questions from the Justice Department pertaining to NSA’s knowledge of, or involvement in, BNL activities. The responses appear to indicate that NSA had not derived any intelligence concerning BNL activities from its intercept operations. The letter also stresses NSA’s sensitivity to the issue of the privacy of American citizens (noting that “NSA improperly targeted the communications of a number of Americans opposed to the Vietnam War”) and the restrictions on reporting information concerning U.S. citizens or corporations.

Document 16: “Activation of Echelon Units,” from History of the Air Intelligence Agency, 1 January – 31 December 1994, Volume I (San Antonio, TX: AIA, 1995)

The first extract from the Air Intelligence Agency’s 1994 annual history provides additional information on the ECHELON network. ECHELON units include components of the AIA’s 544th Intelligence Group. Detachment 2 and 3 are located at Sabana Seca, Puerto Rico and Sugar Grove, West Virginia respectively. The second reference to Detachment 3 is apparently a typo that should read Detachment 4 (located at Yakima, Washington). The deleted words appear to be “civilian communications,” “NAVSECGRU” and “NSA.”

The second extract notes that AIA’s participation in a classified activity “had been limited to LADYLOVE operations at Misawa AB [Air Base], Japan.” The Misawa LADYLOVE activity was initiated during the Cold War to intercept Soviet military communications transmitted via satellite—along with similar operations at Menwith Hill, UK; Bad Aibling, Germany; and Rosman, North Carolina. This extract suggests that both Guam and Misawa have, at the least, been considered as possible sites for ECHELON operations.

Document 17:  NSA Point Paper, “SIGINT Reporting on Murders of Michael DeVine in 1990 and the Disappearance of Efraín Bamaca in 1992 in Guatemala,” March 24, 1995

On March 23, 1995, Rep. Robert Torricelli, a member of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, charged that the CIA had been withholding from Congress information it had obtained regarding the deaths of Michael DeVine, an American innkeeper living in Guatemala, and Efraín Bámaca Velásquez, a Guatemalan guerrilla leader and husband of an American lawyer. Both murders, according to Torricelli, were linked to a Guatemalan army colonel, Julio Roberto Alpírez, a paid intelligence asset of the CIA. (Note 15)

The revelations set off a firestorm of criticism and caused the Clinton administration to order a government-wide investigation over these and other cases of torture and murder attributed to Guatemalan security forces. While the CIA was the main target of such criticism, Torricelli had also reportedly received an anonymous fax from someone inside the NSA alleging that documents pertaining to the Bámaca and DeVine cases were being destroyed. (Note 16)

This Top Secret NSA position paper responds to these allegations. NSA claims that SIGINT reporting related to these cases is limited to “Guatemalan government reaction to U.S. and international human rights concerns,” and does not include specific information regarding the circumstances of death or the involvement of Colonel Alpírez. The document is one of only a handful of declassified records in which the NSA even acknowledges specific SIGINT activities or reports.

Document 18: Memorandum, Daniel C. Kurtzer, Acting Assitant Secretary, Bureau of Intelligence and Research to Vice Admiral J.M. McConnell, Director, National Security Agency, Subject: Proposed Declassification of the “Fact of” Overhead SIGINT Collection, September 6, 1995

In 1978, President Jimmy Carter acknowledged that the U.S. employed reconnaissance satellites to collect imagery of foreign targets. Early in 1995, President Clinton declassified details concerning early satellite imagery programs such as CORONA. However, even the existence of SIGINT satellites remained classified until late 1995 when Director of Central Intelligence John Deutch authorized the official acknowledgement of space-based SIGINT operations. (Note 17)

The process involved soliciting the opinions of U.S. government departments whose interests might be affected by disclosure. The State Department’s memo expressed concern about the impact in certain countries. Despite the deletions, it is clear that the department was anxious about the impact in the foreign countries where the U.S. operates ground stations for SIGINT satellites—the United Kingdom (at Menwith Hill), Germany (at Bad Aibling), and Australia (at Pine Gap). The memo also indicates that the proposal for declassification emanated from the National Reconnaissance Office.

Document 19: NSA, Recent Classification Decisions, June 2, 1998. Confidential

The increased openness at NSA in the late 1990s extended to historical as well as contemporary matters. In addition to memos announcing individual declassification decisions, summary memos were also issued on occasion. This one covers declassification decisions with regard to a number of categories, including signals intelligence targeting, NSA’s presence abroad, the use of airborne platforms for SIGINT collection, and the codenames used to indicate intelligence obtained from communications or electronic intelligence collection.

Document 20: Organization Chart, NSA Operations Directorate, November 6, 1998

The organization chart of NSA’s Directorate of Operations is notable for several reasons. Traditionally, such information was not released by NSA, which under the provisions of Public Law 86-36 is not required to release even unclassified organizational information. In recent years, however, NSA has released more information about organization and administrative matters, and acknowledged the use of a variety of aircraft for SIGINT collection.

The organization chart also shows how the operations directorate has been reorganized since the end of the Cold War. Throughout much of the Cold War, the directorate consisted of three key regional groups—A (Soviet Bloc), B (Asian Communist), and G (All Other). After the Soviet collapse the regional groups were reduced to one for European nations and one for all other. The new organizational structure reflects the increasing empahsis on transnational activities, which cut across nations and regions.

New Document 21: James R. Taylor, Deputy Director of Operations, Subject: Thoughts on Strategic Issues for the Institution, April 9, 1999. Secret

This memorandum was written early in the tenure of NSA Director Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden, when much attention was being directed to the requirement for NSA to adapt to a new environment – which included new targets, communications technologies, and the availability of advanced encryption techniques.

Taylor notes that money and technology, while among the top five issues facing NSA, are not among the first three. The first and most important issue, according to Taylor, was NSA’s need to reform the management and leadership system. His discussion foreshadowed Hayden’s reorganization of NSA to clearly establish the primacy of the two components – the directorates for signals intelligence and information assurance – responsible for carrying out NSA’s fundamental missions.

A second key issue identified in the memo is the “strengthening and leveraging of [NSA’s] strategic alliances.” This includes NSA’s relationships with foreign SIGINT services, the CIA, and the service cryptologic elements (SCE’s) that carry out much of the collection work for NSA. The discussion of NSA’s relationship with the CIA indicates the increasing importance of human intelligence support to NSA – which can come in the form of acquisition of cipher materials or the clandestine placement of eavesdropping equipment.

The third issue identified is the need to properly staff “our two missions and to spot and nurture talent and leadership for the future.”

New Document 22: Lt. Gen. Jim Clapper, NSA Scientific Advisory Board, Panel on Digital Network Intelligence (DNI), Report to the Director, June 28, 1999, Secret Comint

This study, a complement to another study on conventional collection, is another example of NSA’s attempt to address the changing communication environment. Digital network intelligence is defined as “the intelligence from intercepted digital data communications transmitted between, or resident on, networked computers.”

The study, which has been heavily redacted prior to release, notes an imperative to “re-tool: organizationally, programmatically, and technologically” and examines issues concerning the access and collection of digital network intelligence, processing and extraction of intelligence from the data collected, analysis and reporting, and dissemination.

New Document 23: SSO [Special Security Office], DIA Subject: Implementation Guidance for Elimination of Codewords, October 22, 1999. Unclassified

During the Cold War, as an extension of the system developed in World War II to protect the security of communications intelligence operations, the U.S. established the category of Special Intelligence (SI). Within SI were a number of compartments, which corresponded to the different degrees of sensitivity attached to communications intelligence activities and products. In 1960, with the launch of the first reconnaissance satellites, the U.S. also established the TALENT-KEYHOLE (TK) system, with compartments for satellite imagery (RUFF), satellite ELINT (ZARF), and aerial imagery from the U-2, and later, SR-71.

This message reflects the attempt to simplify the system by eliminating three key codenames from the SI category and one from the TK system.

Document 24: Statement for the Record of NSA Director Lt Gen Michael V. Hayden, USAF before the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, April 12, 2000

In a rare public appearance by the NSA director, Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden outlines the regulatory safeguards and oversight mechanisms that are in place to ensure that the agency’s electronic surveillance mission does not infringe upon the privacy of U.S. persons, and to respond to recent allegations that NSA provides intelligence information to U.S. companies.

The agency may only target the communications of U.S. persons within the United States after obtaining a federal court order suggesting that the individual might be “an agent of a foreign power.” The number of such cases have been “very few” since the passage of the Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act in 1978. In cases where the NSA wishes to conduct electronic surveillance on U.S. persons overseas, the agency must first obtain the approval of the Attorney General, who must have probable cause to believe that the individual “is an agent of a foreign power, or a spy, terrorist, saboteur, or someone who aides or abets them.” With regard to the unintentional collection of communications to, from, or about U.S. citizens, Hayden stresses that such information is not retained “unless the information is necessary to understand a particular piece of foreign intelligence or assess its importance.”

In response to other allegations, Hayden asserts that NSA cannot request that another country “illegally” collect intelligence on U.S. persons on their behalf, and also that the agency “is not authorized to provide signals intelligence information to private U.S. companies.”

New Document 25: National Security Agency, Transition 2001, December 2000. Secret

This document, prepared for the incoming administration of George W. Bush, was intended to provide a background on NSA’s organization and mission, as well as of the issues facing NSA in the years ahead. Its main sections include those devoted to management, external process, budget, and personnel, policy/issues.

In the discussion of major policy issues, the document notes the changing environment in which the “analog world of point-to-point communications carried along discrete, dedicated voice channels” is being replaced by communications that are “mostly digital, carry billions of bits of data, and contain voice, data and multimedia.” In addition, it states that “global networks leave US critical information infrastructure more vulnerable to foreign intelligence operations and to compromise by a host of non-state entities.” The creation of global networks also requires, according to the transition book, that “senior leadership understand that today’s and tomorrow’s mission will demand a powerful, permanent presence on a global telecommunications network that will host the ‘protected’ communications of Americans as well as targeted communications of adversaries.”

New Document 26a: Organization Chart, Signals Intelligence Directorate

New Document 26b: Organization Chart, Information Assurance Directorate

These two heavily redacted organization charts are more informative for what they reveal about the change in NSA’s classification policy than for what they reveal about the 2001 organizational structure of NSA’s two key directorates.

In contrast to Document 19, the largely intact 1998 organization chart for the Directorate of Operations, Document 26a, the chart for the Signals Intelligence Directorate (as the operations directorate was renamed) contains no information beyond the name of its director. The late 1990s was a period when NSA significantly loosened restrictions on information – not only historical information, but then current organizational information. As a result the operations directorate organization chart was provided within three weeks of its being requested in late 1998. In contrast, the request for the Signals Intelligence Directorate organization chart was made on April 21, 2001 and NSA provided its substantive response on April 21, 2004.

Similarly, in the late 1990s, NSA released detailed organizational information on its Information Security directorate, in contrast to the small amount of it detail it has released on the successor Information Assurance Directorate.

Document 27: Statement for the Record by Lieutenant General Michael V. Hayden, Director, National Security Agency/Central Security Service Before the Joint Inquiry of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence and the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence, October 17, 2002, Unclassified

Hayden, in his testimony to the joint committee intelligence performance prior to the terrorist attacks on New York and Washington of September 11, 2001, addresses three major questions: what did NSA know prior to September 11, what did NSA learn in retrospect, and what had NSA done in response? In his conclusions, Hayden addresses a number of issues – including the relationship between SIGINT and law enforcement, and the line between the government’s need for counterterrorism information and the privacy interests of individuals residing in the United States.
Notes

1. Report to the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense by a Special Committee Appointed Pursuant to Letter of 28 December 1951 to Survey Communications Intelligence Activities of the Government, June 13, 1952, pp. 47-48, 119; RG 457, SR-123, Military Reference Branch, NARA; The National Cryptologic School, On Watch: Profiles from the National Security Agency’s Past 40 Years (Ft. Meade, Md.: NCS, 1986), p. 17.

2. Walter Bedell Smith, “Proposed Survey of Communications Intelligence Activities,” December 10, 1951; Report to the Secretary of State and the Secretary of Defense by a Special Committee, p. 118; U.S. Congress, Senate Select Committee to Study Governmental Operations with Respect to Intelligence Activities, Final Report, Book III: Foreign and Military Intelligence (Washington, D.C.: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1976), p. 736; National Security Agency/Central Security Service, NSA/CSS Manual 22-1 (Ft. Meade, MD: NSA, 1986), p. 1.

3. National Security Agency, NSA/CSS Manual 22-1 (Ft. Meade, Md.: NSA, 1986), p. 7.

4. Jeffrey T. Richelson, The Wizards of Langley: Inside the CIA’s Directorate of Science and Technology (Boulder, Co.: Westview, 2001), p. 60.

5. Richard M. Bissell Jr. with Jonathan E. Lewis and Frances T. Pudlo, Reflections of a Cold Warrior: From Yalta to the Bay of Pigs (New Haven, Ct.: Yale University Press, 1996), p. 239.

6. James Bamford, The Puzzle Palace: A Report on NSA, America’s Most Secret Agency (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1982), p. 334.

7. Stansfield Turner, Secrecy and Democracy: The CIA in Transition (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1985), pp. 235-236.

8. James Bamford, Body of Secrets: Anatomy of the Ultra-Secret National Security Agency (New York: Doubleday, 2001), pp. 185-239; A. Jay Cristol, The Liberty Incident: The 1967 Israeli Attack on the U.S. Navy Spy Ship (Washington, D.C.: Brassey’s 2002); James M. Ennes Jr., Assault on the Liberty: The True Story of the Israeli Attack on an American Intelligence Ship (New York: Ivy, 1979).

9. Bob Woodward, “Messages of Activists Intercepted,” Washington Post, October 13, 1975, pp. A1, A14.

10. See Jeffrey T. Richelson, The U.S. Intelligence Community (Cambridge: Ballinger, 2nd ed., 1989/Boulder: Westview Press, 3rd ed., 1995; 4th ed., 1999); See also the World Wide Web site of the Federation of American Scientists, http://fas.org/irp/offdocs/dcid16.htm

11. Lois G. Brown, “National SIGINT Committee,” NSA Newsletter, February 1997, p. 2.

12. James Bamford, The Puzzle Palace: A Report on NSA, America’s Most Secret Agency (Boston, MA: Houghton-Mifflin, 1982), p. 170.

13. Patrick S. Poole, ECHELON: America’s Secret Global Surveillance Network (Washington, D.C.: Free Congress Foundation, October 1998).

14. Duncan Campbell, Interception Capabilities 2000 (Luxembourg: European Parliament, 1999); Jeffrey T. Richelson, “Desperately Seeking Signals,” Bulletin of the Atomic Scientists, Vol. 56, No. 2, pp. 47-51.

15. Dana Priest, “Torricelli Admits Violating House Secrecy Oath,” Washington Post, April 8, 1995, p. A7.

16. Kim Masters, “Truth or Consequences; Rep. Bob Torricelli Leaked the Goods on the CIA. Was It Loyalty or Betrayal?” Washington Post, April 17, 1995, p. C1.

17. DIRNSA, “Fact of Overhead SIGINT Collection,” January 4, 1996.

SECRET- Tracking Cell Phones and Vehicles: The Legal Context

A new report from the Congressional Research Service explores ongoing legal debates over the tracking of private cell phones and vehicles by law enforcement agencies.

“It is undeniable that… advances in technology threaten to diminish privacy,” the CRS report says.  “Law enforcement’s use of cell phones and GPS devices to track an individual’s movements brings into sharp relief the challenge of reconciling technology, privacy, and law.”

The 22 page CRS report provides a survey of relevant Fourth Amendment law, federal electronic surveillance statutes and case law, pending GPS-vehicle tracking cases, and electronic surveillance legislation that is before Congress.

“The primary debate surrounding cell phone and GPS tracking is not whether they are permitted by statute but rather what legal standard should apply: probable cause, reasonable suspicion, or something less,” the report says.

A copy of the CRS report was obtaine.  See “Governmental Tracking of Cell Phones and Vehicles: The Confluence of Privacy, Technology, and Law,” December 1, 2011.

Download Original Document here

R42109

CONFIDENTIAL-UNCENSORED – Greece Riot Photos December 2011

Riot police try to avoid molotov cocktails and stones trown by demonstrators outside parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011 during a demonstration to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ LOUISA GOULIAMAKI
A masked youth throws a petrol bomb at police in Athens’ Syntagma (Constitution) square during clashes December 6, 2011. Greek police fired tear gas on Tuesday at dozens of black-clad protesters in Athens who hurled petrol bombs and stones, while hundreds marched to parliament to mark the 2008 shooting of a student by police. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
Youths clash with riot police outside the parliament during a demonstration in Athens on December 6, 2011, to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ Angelos Tzortzinis
A protester throws looks towards riot police by the parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011 during a demonstration to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ LOUISA GOULIAMAKI
A protester carries a petrol bomb during a protest at the northern port city of Thessaloniki, Greece, Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2011. Protesting high school students hurled rocks and bottles during a rally to mark the third anniversary of the fatal police shooting of a teenager in central Athens. (AP Photo/Nikolas Giakoumidis)
A youth gathers stones near the parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011 during a demonstration to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ LOUISA GOULIAMAKI
Riot police look on as a molotov cocktail thrown by youths exploeds in front of the parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011 during a demonstration to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ARIS MESSINIS
Riot police chase a youth during clashes outside the parliament on December 6, 2011, as about 1,000 school pupils marched to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO / ARIS MESSINIS
Youths clash with riot police outside the parliament during a demonstration on December 6, 2011, to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO / ARIS MESSINIS
Youths clash with riot police outside the parliament during a demonstration on December 6, 2011, to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO / ARIS MESSINIS
A protester throws a petrol bomb against riot police guarding the parliament in Athens’ Syntagma (Constitution) square during clashes December 6, 2011. Greek police fired tear gas on Tuesday at dozens of black-clad protesters in Athens who hurled petrol bombs and stones, while hundreds marched to parliament to mark the 2008 shooting of a student by police. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
ATHENS, GREECE – DECEMBER 6: Cars are parked in front of graffiti displayed on a building on December 6, 2011 in Athens, Greece. Graffiti artists throughout the city are expressing the effects of austerity measures that have plagued the community as Greece continues to struggle in debt while lawmakers today are set to pass next year’s budget. (Photo by Milos Bicanski/Getty Images)
Riot police walk past burning debris outside the parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011, during demonstrations to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ Angelos Tzortzinis
A protester throws a petrol bomb towards riot police guarding the parliament in Athens’ Syntagma (Constitution) square during evening clashes December 6, 2011. Fresh clashes broke out between demonstrators and Greek police outside parliament on Tuesday evening, hours after police fired teargas to disperse youths hurling petrol bombs at them.Protesters, many dressed in black, threw makeshift bombs and stones at police, who responded with teargas and formed a cordon outside parliament. Inside, lawmakers were in the final stages of a debate on the 2012 budget packed with unpopular austerity measures. REUTERS/Yannis Behrakis
A protestor throws a stone at riot police outside the parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011, during demonstrations to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis. AFP PHOTO/ Angelos Tzortzinis
A protestor throws a molotov cocktail at riot police outside the parliament in Athens on December 6, 2011, during demonstrations to commemorate the police killing of a student three years ago which sparked violent riots lasting weeks. Pupils and students marched to mark the December 6, 2008 death of Alexis Grigoropoulos, 15, shot by police as Greece first came under pressure from the eurozone debt crisis.

FEMEN-UNCUT-UNCENSORED-Stop Raping Ukraine!

Members of the activist group FEMEN protest at what they see as the manipulation of the democratic system at a polling station in Kiev, Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010. The signs read “The War Begins Here” and “Stop Raping the Country.”
http://www.tsn.ua

TOP-SECRET-CIA Bucharest Prison Eyeball

In northern Bucharest, in a busy residential neighborhood minutes from the center of Romania’s capital city, is a secret that the Romanian government has tried for years to protect.

For years, the CIA used a government building — codenamed Bright Light — as a makeshift prison for its most valuable detainees. There, it held al-Qaida operatives Khalid Sheik Mohammad, the mastermind of 9/11, and others in a basement prison before they were ultimately transferred to Guantanamo Bay in 2006, according to former U.S. intelligence officials familiar with the location and inner workings of the prison.

The existence of a CIA prison in Romania has been widely reported but its location has never been made public until a joint investigation by The Associated Press and German public television, ARD Panorama. The news organizations located the former prison and learned details of the facility where harsh interrogation tactics were used. ARD’s program on the CIA prison will air Dec 8.

The Romanian prison was part of a network of so-called black sites that the CIA operated and controlled overseas in Thailand, Lithuania and Poland. All the prisons were closed by May 2006, and the CIA’s detention and interrogation program ended in 2009.

Unlike the CIA’s facility in Lithuania’s countryside or the one hidden in a Polish military installation, the CIA’s prison in Romania was not in a remote location. It was hidden in plain sight, a couple blocks off a major boulevard on a street lined with trees and homes, along busy train tracks.

The building is used as the National Registry Office for Classified Information, which is also known as ORNISS. Classified information from NATO and the European Union is stored there. Former intelligence officials both described the location of the prison and identified pictures of the building.


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Google Mapshttp://bit.ly/vDKcPW

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CIA Prisoner Unloading Route via Side Street According to AP. 2005 Aerial Photo (Google Earth).[Image]
Following oblique views by Bing.com/maps: http://binged.it/vAOoi0
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“Kinder-Portal” und Analwahn – “GoMoPa” und der “Scheisshausfliegenblog” – Vorbestrafte Betrüger und STASI-Schergen

Bernd Pulch GoMoPa und der Scheisshausfliegenblog   Vorbestrafte Betrüger im negativen Anal Wahn

Liebe Leser,

über 4.000 Menschen und Firmen wurden und werden von STASI-”GoMoPa” gestalkt und erpresst. Nunmehr auch und vor allem der Berliner Justizsenator Braun.

Offensichtlich bewegen sich die STASI-Schergen von STASI-Oberst Ehrenfried Stelzer und seiner Nachfolger in Berlin und Ostdeutschland wie weiland der Nationalsozialistische Untergrund unbehelligt von der Polizei und Justiz – die STASI-Seilschaften in der SED-Nachfolge-Organisation “Linke” sowie ein Netzwerk in Medien, Blogs – aber anscheinend auch in der Justiz und der Polizei und bei Google unterstützen sie dabei mutmasslich.

Ihr “Kinder-Portal” mit Sexualaufklärung für Kinder, Tausende von Rufmorden und Erpressungen, mysteriöse Todesfälle all das hat es so bisher noch nie weltweit in einer kriminellen Organisation gegeben.

Dies hat zu einem – so erste Schätzungen von Schadensexperten – Schaden von über € 1 Milliarde geführt, nimmt man als Berechnungsgrundlage

die im Falle von Meridian Capital geforderte Erpressungssumme.

Der immaterielle Schäden durch zerstörte menschliche Leben und Schicksale, dieser “Dämonen im Internet” (Eigenbezeichnung von Ober-Stalker “Klaus Maurischat”) ist noch viel höher und nur mit dem von der DDR-Gestapo angerichteten Schaden vergleichbar, deren Nachfolgeorganisation die fingierten “Goldman, Morgenstern u. Partner” – “GoMoPa” zweifelsohne sind.

Darunter sind auch etliche Todesfälle und viele Personen und Firmen, die nicht auf der 4.000 Fälle umfassenden “Warnliste”, besser Stalking, Betrugs- und Erpresserliste auftauchen.

Organisierte Kriminalität im ganz grossen Stil.

Müssen erst Opfer mit gezielt mit Schüssen Bomben attackiert werden ´, bevor der Verfassungsschutz und andere Behörden in Gang  kommen?

Im Ausland schüttlet man über Deutschland mittlerweile den Kopf und niemand versteht, wie so etwas möglich ist.

Herzlichst Ihr

Bernd Pulch

Magister Artium der Publizistik, Germanistik und Komparatistik

TOP-SECRET – NSA- THE NRO DECLASSIFIED


n September 1992 the Department of Defense acknowledged the existence of the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO), an agency established in 1961 to manage the development and operation of the nation’s reconnaissance satellite systems.  The creation of the NRO was the result of a number of factors.

On May 1, 1960 Francis Gary Powers took off from Peshawar, Pakistan on the U-2 mission designated Operation GRAND SLAM.  The flight was planned to take him over the heart of the Soviet Union and terminate at Bodo, Norway.  The main target was Plesetsk, which communications intercepts had indicated might be the site of an ICBM facility.1  When the Soviet Union shot down his plane and captured him alive, they also forced President Dwight Eisenhower to halt aerial overflights of Soviet territory.

At that time the U.S. had two ongoing programs to produce satellite vehicles that could photograph Soviet territory.  Such vehicles would allow far more frequent coverage than possible with manned aircraft.  In addition, they would avoid placing the lives of pilots at risk and eliminate the risks of international incidents resulting from overflights.

The Air Force program, designated SAMOS, sought to develop a number of different satellite systems–including one that would radio its imagery back to earth and another that would return film capsules.  The CIA program, CORONA, focused solely on developing a film return satellite.

However, both the CIA and Air Force programs were in trouble.  Launch after launch in the CORONA program, eleven in all by May 1, 1960, eight of which carried cameras, had resulted in failure–the only variation was in the cause.  Meanwhile, the SAMOS program was also experiencing difficulties, both with regard to hardware and program definition.2

Concerns over SAMOS led President Eisenhower to direct two groups to study both the technical aspects of the program as well as how the resulting system would be employed.  The ultimate result was a joint report presented to the President and NSC on August 25, 1960.3

As a result of that meeting Eisenhower approved a first SAMOS launch in September, as well as reorientation of the program, with the development of high-resolution film-return systems being assigned highest priority while the electronic readout system would be pursued as a research project.  With regard to SAMOS management, he ordered that the Air Force institute special management arrangements, which would involve a direct line of authority between the SAMOS project office and the Office of the Air Force Secretary, bypassing the Air Staff and any other intermediate layers of bureaucracy.4

Secretary of the Air Force Dudley C. Sharp wasted little time creating the recommended new structure and procedures.  On August 31st Sharp signed Secretary of the Air Force Order 115.1, establishing the Office of Missile and Satellite Systems within his own office to help him manage the SAMOS project. With Order 116.1, Sharp created a SAMOS project office at the Los Angeles headquarters of the Air Force Ballistic Missile Division (AFBMD) as a field extension of the Office of the Secretary of the Air Force to carry out development of the satellite.5

The impact of the orders, in practice, was that the director of the SAMOS project would report directly to Under Secretary of the Air Force Joseph V. Charyk, who would manage it in the Secretary’s name. In turn, Charyk would report directly to the Secretary of Defense.6

The changes would not stop there.  The urgency attached to developing a successful reconnaissance satellite led, ultimately, to the creation of a top secret program and organization to coordinate the entire national reconnaissance effort.

Several of the documents listed below also appear in either of two National Security Archive microfiche collections on U.S. intelligence.  The U.S. Intelligence Community: Organization, Operations and Management: 1947-1989 (1990) and U.S. Espionage and Intelligence: Organization, Operations, and Management, 1947-1996 (1997) publish together for the first time recently declassified documents pertaining to the organizational structure, operations and management of the U.S. Intelligence Community over the last fifty years, cross-indexed for maximum accessibility.  Together, these two sets reproduce on microfiche over 2,000 organizational histories, memoranda, manuals, regulations, directives, reports, and studies, totaling more than 50,000 pages of documents from the Office of the Director of Central Intelligence, the Central Intelligence Agency, National Reconnaissance Office, National Security Agency, Defense Intelligence Agency, military service intelligence organizations, National Security Council, and other official government agencies and organizations.

Document 1
Joseph Charyk, Memorandum for the Secretary of Defense
Management of the National Reconnaissance Program
24 July 1961
Top Secret
1 p.

The organizational changes resulting from the decisions of August 25, 1960 and their implementation left some unsatisfied.  In particular, James Killian and Edwin Land, influential members of the President’s intelligence advisory board pushed for permanent and institutionalized collaboration between the CIA and Air Force.  After the Kennedy administration took office the push to establish a permanent reconnaissance organization took on additional life.  There was a strong feeling in the new administration, particularly by Secretary of Defense Robert McNamara and his deputy, Roswell Gilpatric, that a better, more formalized relationship was required.7

On July 24, 1961, Air Force Undersecretary Joseph Charyk sent a memorandum to McNamara attaching two possible memoranda of agreement for creation of a National Reconnaissance Program, along with some additional material.

Document 2
Memorandum of Understanding
Management of the National Reconnaissance Program (Draft)
20 July 1961
Top Secret
5 pp.

This memo specified establishment of a National Reconnaissance Program (NRP) consisting of “all satellite and overflight reconnaissance projects whether overt or covert,” and including “all photographic projects for intelligence, geodesy and mapping purposes, and electronic signal collection projects for electronic signal intelligence and communications intelligence.”

To manage the NRP, a National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) would be established on a covert basis. The NRO director (DNRO) would be the Deputy Director for Plans, CIA (at the time, Richard Bissell) while the Under Secretary of the Air Force would serve as Deputy Director (DDNRO). The DNRO would be responsible for the management of CIA activities, the DDNRO and the Air Force for Defense Department activities.  The DoD, specifically the Air Force acting as executive agent, would be primarily responsible for technical program management, scheduling, vehicle operations, financial management and overt contract administration, while the CIA would be primarily responsible for targeting each satellite.  The office would operate under streamlined management procedures similar to those established in August 1960 for SAMOS.

Document 3
Memorandum of Understanding
Management of the National Reconnaissance Program (Draft)
21 July 1961
Top Secret
4 pp.

This secondary memorandum was prepared at the suggestion of Defense Department General Counsel Cyrus Vance.  It offered a quite different solution to the problem.  As with the primary memo, it established a NRP covering both satellite and aerial reconnaissance operations.  But rather than a jointly run program, it placed responsibility for management solely in the hands of a covertly appointed Special Assistant for Reconnaissance, to be selected by the Secretary of Defense.  The office of the Special Assistant would handle the responsibilities assigned to the NRO in the other MOU.  The CIA would “assist the Department of Defense by providing support as required in areas of program security, communications, and covert contract administration.”

Document 4
Memorandum
Pros and Cons of Each Solution
Not dated
Top Secret
2 pp.

The assessment of pros and cons favored the July 20 memorandum, listing five pros for the first solution and only two for the second.  The first solution would consolidate responsibilities into a single program with relatively little disruption of established management, represented a proven solution, would require no overt organizational changes, would allow both agencies to retain authoritative voices in their areas of expertise, and provided a simplified management structure.  The two cons noted were the division of program responsibility between two people, and that “successful program management depends upon mutual understanding and trust of the two people in charge of the NRO.”  It would not be too long before that later observation would take on great significance.

In contrast, there were more cons than pros specified for the second solution.  The only two points in its favor were the consolidation of reconnaissance activities into a single program managed by a single individual and the assignment of complete responsibility to the agency (DoD) with the most resources.  Foremost of the six cons was the need for DoD to control and conduct large-scale covert operations, in as much as it was an entity “whose normal methods are completely foreign to this task.”

Document 5
Roswell Gilpatric, Letter to Allen Dulles
Management of the National Reconnaissance Program
6 September 1961
Top Secret
4 pp.

On July 28, 1961, four days after receiving Charyk’s memorandum and draft memoranda of understanding, McNamara instructed Air Force Undersecretary Joseph Charyk to continue discussions with the key officials and advisers in order to resolve any organizational difficulties that threatened to impede the satellite reconnaissance effort.  The ultimate result was this letter from Deputy Secretary of Defense Roswell Gilpatric to Dulles, which confirmed “our agreement with respect to the setting up of the National Reconnaissance Program.”

The letter specified the creation of a NRP.  It also established the NRO, a uniform security control system, and specified that the NRO would be directly responsive to the intelligence requirements and priorities specified by the United States Intelligence Board.  It specified implementation of NRP programs assigned to the CIA through the Deputy Director for Plans.  It designated the Undersecretary of the Air Force as the Defense Secretary’s Special Assistant for Reconnaissance, with full authority in DoD reconnaissance matters.

The letter contained no specific assignment of responsibilities to either the CIA or Defense Department, stating only that “The Directors of the National Reconnaissance Office will … insure that the particular talents, experience and capabilities within the Department of Defense and the Central Intelligence Agency are fully and most effectively utilized in this program.”

The letter provided for the NRO to be managed jointly by the Under Secretary of the Air Force and the CIA Deputy Director for Plans (at the time, still Richard Bissell).  A May 1962 agreement between the CIA and Defense Department established a single NRO director.  Joseph Charyk was named to the directorship shortly afterward.

Document 6
Joseph Charyk
Memorandum for NRO Program Directors/Director, NRO Staff
Organization and Functions of the NRO
23 July 1962
Top Secret
11 pp.

This memorandum represents the fundamental directive on the organization and functions of the NRO.  In addition to the Director (there was no provision for a deputy director), there were four major elements to the NRO–the NRO staff and three program elements, designated A, B, and C.  The staff’s functions included assisting the director in dealing with the USIB and the principal consumers of the intelligence collected.

The Air Force Office of Special Projects (the successor to the SAMOS project office) became NRO’s Program A.  The CIA reconnaissance effort was designated Program B, while the Navy’s space reconnaissance effort, at the time consisting of the Galactic Radiation and Background (GRAB) satellite, whose radar ferret mission involved the collection of Soviet radar signals, became Program C.  Although the GRAB effort was carried out by the Naval Research Laboratory, the director of the Office of Naval Intelligence would serve as Program C director until 1971.8

Document 7
Agreement between the Secretary of Defense and the Director of Central Intelligence on Management of the National Reconnaissance Program
13 March 1963
Top Secret
6 pp.

In December 1962, Joseph Charyk decided to leave government to become president of the COMSAT Corporation.  By that time a number of disputes between the CIA and NRO had contributed to Charyk’s view that the position of the NRO and its director should be strengthened.  During the last week of February 1963, his last week in office, he completed a revision of a CIA draft of a new reconnaissance agreement to replace the May 1962 agreement (which had replaced the September 6, 1961 agreement).  Charyk took the revision to Deputy Secretary of Defense Roswell Gilpatric.  It appears that some CIA-suggested changes were incorporated sometime after Charyk left office.  On March 13, Gilpatric signed the slightly modified version on behalf of DoD.  It was sent to the CIA that day and immediately approved by DCI John McCone, who had replaced Allen Dulles in November 1961.9

The new agreement, while it did not include all the elements Charyk considered important, did substantially strengthen the authority of the NRO and its director.  It named the Secretary of Defense as the Executive Agent for the NRP.  The program would be “developed, managed, and conducted in accordance with policies and guidance jointly agreed to by the Secretary of Defense and the Director of Central Intelligence.”

The NRO would manage the NRP “under the direction, authority, and control of the Secretary of Defense.”  The NRO’s director would be selected by the Defense Secretary with the concurrence of the DCI, and report to the Defense Secretary.  The NRO director was charged with presenting to the Secretary of Defense “all projects” for intelligence collection and mapping and geodetic information via overflights and the associated budgets, scheduling all overflight missions in the NRP, as well as engineering analysis to correct problems with collection systems.  With regard to technical management, the DNRO was to “assign all project tasks such as technical management, contracting etc., to appropriate elements of the DoD and CIA, changing such assignments, and taking any such steps he may determine necessary to the efficient management of the NRP.”

Document 8
Department of Defense Directive Number TS 5105.23
Subject: National Reconnaissance Office
27 March 1964
Top Secret
4 pp.

This directive replaced the original June 1962 DoD Directive on the NRO, and remains in force today. The directive specifies the role of the Director of the NRO, the relationships between the NRO and other organizations, the director’s authorities, and security. It specified that documents or other material concerning National Reconnaissance Program matters would be handled within a special security system (known as the BYEMAN Control System).

Document 9
President’s Foreign Intelligence Advisory Board
Memorandum for the President
Subject: National Reconnaissance Program
2 May 1964
Top Secret
11 pp.

The 1963 CIA-DoD agreement on the NRP did not end the battles between the CIA and NRO–as some key CIA officials, including ultimately DCI John McCone, sought to reestablish a major role for the CIA in the satellite reconnaissance effort.  The continuing conflict was examined by the PFIAB.

The board concluded that “the National Reconnaissance Program despite its achievements, has not yet reached its full potential.”  The fundamental cause for the NRP’s shortcomings was “inadequacies in organizational structure.”  In addition, there was no clear division of responsibilities and roles between the Defense Department, CIA, and the DCI.

The recommendations of the board represented a clear victory for the NRO and its director.  The DCI should have a “large and important role” in establishing intelligence collection requirements and in ensuring that the data collected was effectively exploited, according to the board.  In addition, his leadership would be a key factor in the work of the United States Intelligence Board relating to the scheduling of space and airborne reconnaissance missions.

But the board also recommended that President Johnson sign a directive which would assign to NRO’s Air Force component (the Air Force Office of Special Projects) systems engineering, procurement, and operation of all satellite reconnaissance systems.

Document 10
Agreement for Reorganization of the National Reconnaissance Program
13 August 1965
Top Secret
6 pp.

Despite the recommendations of the May 2, 1964 PFIAB report, which were challenged by DCI John McCone, no action was taken to solidify the position of the NRO and its director.  Instead prolonged discussions over a new agreement continued into the summer of 1965.  During this period the CIA continued work on what would become two key satellite programs–the HEXAGON/KH-9 imaging and RHYOLITE signals intelligence satellites.

In early August, Deputy Secretary of Defense Cyrus Vance and CIA official John Bross reached an understanding on a new agreement, and it was signed by Vice Adm. William F. Raborn (McCone’s successor) and Vance on August 13, 1965.  It represented a significant victory for the CIA, assigning key decision-making authority to an executive committee, authority that was previously the prerogative of the NRO director as the agent of the Secretary of Defense.

The Secretary of Defense was to have “the ultimate responsibility for the management and operation of the NRO and the NRP,” and have the final power to approve the NRP budget.  The Secretary also was empowered to make decisions when the executive committee could not reach agreement.

The DCI was to establish collection priorities and requirements for targeting NRP operations, as well as establish frequency of coverage, review the results obtained by the NRP and recommend steps for improving its results if necessary, serve on the executive committee, review and approve the NRP budget, and provide security policy guidance.

The NRP Executive Committee established by the agreement would consist of the DCI, Deputy Secretary of Defense, and Special Assistant to the President for Science and Technology.  The committee was to recommend to the Secretary of Defense the “appropriate level of effort for the NRP,” approve or modify the consolidated NRP and its budget, approve the allocation of responsibility and the corresponding funds for research and exploratory development for new systems.  It was instructed to insure that funds would be adequate to pursue a vigorous research and development program, involving both CIA and DoD.  The executive committee was to assign development of sensors to the agency best equipped to handle the task.

The Director of the NRO would manage the NRO and execute the NRP “subject to the direction and control of the Secretary of Defense and the guidance of the Executive Committee.”  His authority to initiate, improve, modify, redirect or terminate all research and development programs in the NRP, would be subject to review by the executive committee.  He could demand that all agencies keep him informed about all programs undertaken as part of the NRP.

Document 11
Analysis of “A $1.5 Billion Secret in Sky” Washington Post, December 9, 1973
Not dated
Top Secret
33 pp.

Throughout the 1960s, the United States operation of reconnaissance satellites was officially classified, but well known among specialists and the press.  However, it was not until January 1971 that the NRO’s existence was first disclosed by the media, when it was briefly mentioned in a New York Times article on intelligence and foreign policy.

A much more extensive discussion of the NRO appeared in the December 9, 1973 Washington Post as a result of the inadvertent mention of the reconnaissance office in a Congressional report.  The NRO prepared this set of classified responses to the article, clearly intended for those in Congress who might be concerned about the article’s purported revelations about the NRO’s cost overruns and avoidance of Congressional oversight.

Document 12
E.C. Aldridge, Jr. (Director, NRO)
Letter to David L. Boren, Chairman,
Senate Select Committee on Intelligence
21 November 1988
Secret
3 pp.

The late 1980s saw the beginning of what eventually would be a wide-ranging restructuring of the NRO.  In November 1988 NRO director Edward “Pete” Aldridge wrote to Senator David Boren, Chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence, concerning the findings of an extensive study (the NRO Restructure Study) of the organizational structure of the NRO.

Aldridge proceeded to report that, after having discussed the study’s recommendations with Secretary of Defense Frank Carlucci and Director of Central Intelligence William Webster, he was directing the development of plans to implement the recommendations.  Specific changes would include the creation of a centralized systems analysis function “to conduct cross-system trades and simulations within the NRO,” creation of a “User Support” function to improve NRO support to intelligence community users as well as to the growing number of operational military users, and the dispersal of the NRO Staff to the new units, with the staff being replaced by a group of policy advisers.  In addition, Aldridge foresaw the establishment of an interim facility “to house the buildup of the new functions and senior management.”  The ultimate goal, projected for the 1991-92 period, would be the “collocation of all NRO elements [including the Los Angeles-based Air Force Office of Special Projects] . . . in the Washington, D.C. area.”

Document 13
Memorandum of Agreement
Subject: Organizational Restructure of the National Reconnaissance Office
15 December 1988
Secret
2 pp.

This memorandum of agreement, signed by the Director of the NRO and the directors of the NRO’s three programs commits them to the restructuring discussed in Edward Aldridge’s November 21 letter to Senator Boren.

Many changes recommended by Aldridge, who left office at the end of 1988, were considered by a 1989 NRO-sponsored review group and subsequently adopted.

Document 14
Report to the Director of Central Intelligence
DCI Task Force on The National Reconnaissance Office, Final Report
April 1992
Secret
35 pp.

This report was produced by a panel chaired by former Lockheed Corporation CEO Robert Fuhrman, whose members included both former and serving intelligence officials.  It focused on a variety of issues other than current and possible future NRO reconnaissance systems.  Among the issues it examined were mission, organizational structure, security and classification.

One of its most significant conclusions was that the Program A,B,C structure that had been instituted in 1962 (see Document 6) “does not enhance mission effectiveness” but “leads to counterproductive competition and makes it more difficult to foster loyalty and to maintain focus on the NRO mission.”  As a result, the panel recommended that the NRO be restructured along functional lines with imagery and SIGINT directorates.  This change was made even before the final version of the report was issued.

The report also noted that while the NRO’s existence was officially classified it was an “open secret” and that seeking to attempt to maintain such “open secrets … weakens the case for preserving ‘real’ secrets.”  In addition, such secrecy limited the NRO’s ability to interact with customers and users.  The group recommended declassifying the “fact of” the NRO, as well as providing information about the NRO’s mission, the identities of senior officials, headquarters locations, and the NRO as a joint Intelligence Community-Defense Department activity.

Document 15
National Security Directive 67
Subject: Intelligence Capabilities: 1992-2005
30 March 1992
Secret
2 pp.

NSD 67 directed a number of changes in U.S. intelligence organization and operations.  Among those was implementation of the plan to restructure the NRO along functional lines–eliminating the decades old Program A (Air Force), B (CIA), and C (Navy) structure and replacing it with directorates for imaging, signals intelligence, and communication systems acquisition and operations–as recommended by the Fuhrman panel.  As a result, Air Force, CIA, and Navy personnel involved in such activities would now work together rather than as part of distinct NRO components.

Document 16
Email message
Subject: Overt-Covert-DOS-REP-INPUT
27 July 1992
Secret
1 p.

In addition to the internal restructuring of the NRO, 1992 saw the declassification of the organization, as recommended by the Fuhrman report (Document 14), for a number of reasons–to facilitate interaction with other parts of the government, to make it easier for the NRO to support military operations, and in response to Congressional pressure to acknowledge the obvious.  As part of the process of considering declassification NRO consulted Richard Curl, head of the Office of Intelligence Resources of the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research–the office which provides INR with expertise and support concerning technical collection systems.  Curl recommended a low-key approach to declassification.

Document 17
Memorandum for Secretary of Defense, Director of Central Intelligence
Subject: Changing the National Reconnaissance Office (NRO) to an Overt Organization
30 July 1992
Secret
3 pp.

w/ attachments:
Document 17a: Mission of the NRO, 1 p.

Document 17b:  Implications of Proposed Changes, 4 pp. (Two versions)
Version One
Version Two

These memos, from Director of the NRO Martin Faga, represent key documents in the declassification of the NRO. The memo noted Congressional pressure for declassification and that Presidential certification that declassification would result in “grave damage to the nation … would be difficult in this case.”

Faga reported that as a result of an NRO review he recommended declassifying the fact of NRO’s existence, issuing a brief mission statement, acknowledging the NRO as a joint DCI-Secretary of Defense endeavor, and identifying top level NRO officials. He also noted that his recommendations attempted to balance concerns about classifying information that realistically could not be protected, while maintaining an ability to protect matters believed to require continued protection.

Secretary of Defense Richard Cheney, DCI Robert Gates, and President Bush approved the recommendations in September and a three-paragraph memorandum to correspondents acknowledging the NRO and NRP was issued on September 18, 1992.

Document 17b comes in two versions, representing different security reviews.  Material redacted from the first version includes provisions of National Security Directive 30 on space policy, expression of concern over “derived disclosures,” and the assessment that the “high degree of foreign acceptance of satellite reconnaissance, and the fact that we are not disclosing significant new data,” would not lead to any significant foreign reaction.  Another redacted statement stated that “legislation . . . exempting all NRO operational files from [Freedom of Information Act] searches” was required.

Document 18
Final Report: National Reconnaissance Program Task Force for the Director of Central Intelligence
September 1992
Top Secret
15 pp.

The end of the Cold War and collapse of the Soviet Union required the U.S. intelligence community and NRO to reconsider how U.S. overhead reconnaissance systems were employed and what capabilities future systems should possess.  To consider these questions DCI Robert Gates appointed a task force, chaired by his eventual successor, R. James Woolsey.

The final report considers future needs and collection methods, industrial base considerations, procurement policy considerations, international industrial issues, and transition considerations.  Its recommendations included elimination of both some collection tasks as well as some entire types of present and planned collection systems.

Document 19
NRO Protection Review, “What is [BYEMAN]?”
6 November 1992
Top Secret
18 pp.

Traditionally, the designations of Sensitive Compartmented Information (SCI) compartments–such as UMBRA to indicate particularly sensitive communications intelligence and RUFF to intelligence based on satellite imagery–have themselves been classified.  In recent years, however, the NSA and CIA have declassified a number of such terms and their meaning. One exception has been the term “BYEMAN”– the BYEMAN Control System being the security system used to protect information related to NRO collection systems (in contrast to their products) and other aspects of NRO activities, including budget and structure.  Thus, the term BYEMAN has been deleted in the title of the document and throughout the study–although the term and its meaning has become known by specialists and conveys no information beyond the text of any particular document.

This study addresses the use of the BYEMAN classification within the NRO, its impact on contractors and other government personnel, and the consequences of the current application of the BYEMAN system.  The study concludes that placing information in the highly restrictive BYEMAN channels (in contrast to classifying the information at a lower level) may unduly restrict its dissemination to individuals who have a legitimate need to know.

Document 20
NRO Strategic Plan
18 January 1993
Secret
19 pp.

A study headed by James Woolsey (Document 18), President Clinton’s first DCI, heavily influenced the contents of this early 1993 document.  The plan’s introduction notes that while some collection tasks will no longer be handled by overhead reconnaissance the “uncertain nature of the world that is emerging from the end of the ‘cold war’ places a heavy premium on overhead reconnaissance.”  At the same time, “this overhead reconnaissance challenge must be met in an era of a likely reduced national security budget.”

The strategic plan is described in the introduction, as “the ‘game plan’ to transition current overhead collection architectures into a more integrated, end-to-end architecture for improved global access and tasking flexibility.”

The document goes on to examine the strategic context for future NRO operations, NRO strategy, strategic objectives, and approaches to implementation.  Strategic objectives include improving the responsiveness of NRO systems by developing an architecture that spans the entire collection and dissemination process, from the identification of requirements to dissemination of the data collected.

Document 21
National Reconnaissance Office: Collocation Construction Project, Joint DOD and CIA Review Report
November 1994
Unclassified
28 pp.

In an August 8, 1994 press conference, Senators Dennis DeConcini (D-Az.) and John Warner (R-Va.), the chairman and vice chairman of the Senate Select Committee on Intelligence accused the NRO of concealing from Congress the cost involved in building a new headquarters to house government and contractor employees.  Previously NRO activities in the Washington area were conducted from the Pentagon and rented space in the Washington metropolitan area.  The collocation and restructuring decisions of the late 1980s and early 1990s had resulted in a requirement for a new headquarters facility.10

The accusations were followed by hearings before both the Senate and House intelligence oversight committees–with House committee members defending the NRO and criticizing their Senate colleagues.  While they noted that some of the documents presented by the NRO covering total costs were not presented with desirable clarity, the House members were more critical of the Senate committee for inattention to their committee work.11

This joint DoD and CIA review of the project, found “no intent to mislead Congress” but that “the NRO failed to follow Intelligence Community budgeting guidelines, applicable to all the intelligence agencies,” that would have caused the project to be presented as a “New Initiative,” and that the cost data provided by the NRO “were not presented in a consistent fashion and did not include a level of detail comparable to submissions for . . . intelligence community construction.”

Document 22
Memorandum for Director of Central Intelligence
Subject: Small Satellite Review Panel
Unclassified
July 1996

The concept of employing significantly smaller satellites for imagery collection was strongly advocated by Rep. Larry Combest during his tenure (1995-97) as chairman of the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.  As a result the DCI was instructed to appoint a panel of experts to review the issue.12

Panel members included former NRO directors Robert Hermann and Martin Faga; former NRO official and NSA director Lew Allen; scientist Sidney Drell and four others.  The panel’s report supported a radical reduction in the size of most U.S. imagery satellites.  The panel concluded that “now is an appropriate time to make a qualitative change in the systems architecture of the nation’s reconnaissance assets,” in part because “the technology and industrial capabilities of the country permit the creation of effective space systems that are substantially smaller and less costly than current systems.”  Thus, the panel saw “the opportunity to move towards an operational capability for . . . imagery systems, that consists of an array of smaller, cheaper spacecraft in larger number with a total capacity which is at least as useful as those currently planned and to transport them to space with substantially smaller and less costly launch vehicles.”13

The extent to which those recommendations have influenced NRO’s Future Imagery Architecture plan is uncertain–although plans for large constellations of small satellites have not usually survived the budgetary process.

Document 23
Defining the Future of the NRO for the 21st Century, Final Report, Executive Summary
August 26, 1996
Unclassified
30 pp.

This report was apparently the first major outside review of the NRO conducted during the Clinton administration, and the first conducted after the NRO’s transformation to an overt institution and its restructuring were firmly in place.

Among those conducting the review were former Vice Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, Adm. David E. Jeremiah, former NRO director Martin Faga, and former Deputy Director of Central Intelligence John McMahon.  Issues studied by the panel included, inter alia, the existence of a possible alternative to the NRO, NRO’s mission in the 21st Century, support to military operations, security, internal organization, and the relationship with NRO’s customers.

After reviewing a number of alternatives, the panel concluded that no other arrangement was superior for carrying out the NRO mission.  It did, however, recommend, changes with regards to NRO’s mission and internal organization.  The panel concluded that where the NRO’s current mission is “worldwide intelligence,” its future mission should be “global information superiority,” which “demands intelligence capabilities unimaginable just a few years ago.”  The panel also recommended creation of a fourth NRO directorate, which was subsequently established, to focus solely on the development of advanced systems, in order to “increase the visibility and stature of technology innovation in the NRO.”

NEO-STASI-OPFER: LKA BAYERN ERMITTELT GEGEN “GoMoPa” UND DEREN KRIMINELLE PARTNER

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CONFIDENTIAL – Georgia Tech Helps to Develop System That Will Detect Insider Threats from Massive Data Sets

 

[Image]

Georgia Tech DARPA ADAMS leaders

[Image]

Georgia Tech DARPA ADAMS team

[Image]

Data collection environment

When a soldier in good mental health becomes homicidal or a government employee abuses access privileges to share classified information, we often wonder why no one saw it coming. When looking through the evidence after the fact, a trail often exists that, had it been noticed, could have possibly provided enough time to intervene and prevent an incident.

With support from the Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) and the Army Research Office, researchers at the Georgia Institute of Technology are collaborating with scientists from four other organizations to develop new approaches for identifying these “insider threats” before an incident occurs. The two-year, $9 million project will create a suite of algorithms that can detect multiple types of insider threats by analyzing massive amounts of data — including email, text messages and file transfers — for unusual activity.

The project is being led by Science Applications International Corporation (SAIC) and also includes researchers from Oregon State University, the University of Massachusetts and Carnegie Mellon University.

“Analysts looking at the electronically recorded activities of employees within government or defense contracting organizations for anomalous behaviors may now have the bandwidth to investigate five anomalies per day out of thousands of possibilities. Our goal is to develop a system that will provide analysts for the first time a very short, ranked list of unexplained events that should be further investigated,” said project co-principal investigator David A. Bader, a professor with a joint appointment in the Georgia Tech School of Computational Science and Engineering and the Georgia Tech Research Institute (GTRI).

Under the contract, the researchers will leverage a combination of massively scalable graph-processing algorithms, advanced statistical anomaly detection methods and knowledge-based relational machine learning algorithms to create a prototype Anomaly Detection at Multiple Scales (ADAMS) system. The system could revolutionize the capabilities of counter-intelligence community operators to identify and prioritize potential malicious insider threats against a background of everyday cyber network activity.

The research team will have access to massive data sets collected from operational environments where individuals have explicitly agreed to be monitored. The information will include electronically recorded activities, such as computer logins, emails, instant messages and file transfers. The ADAMS system will be capable of pulling these terabytes of data together and using novel algorithms to quickly analyze the information to discover anomalies.

“We need to bring together high-performance computing, algorithms and systems on an unprecedented scale because we’re collecting a massive amount of information in real time for a long period of time,” explained Bader. “We are further challenged because we are capturing the information at different rates — keystroke information is collected at very rapid rates and other information, such as file transfers, is collected at slower rates.”

In addition to Bader, other Georgia Tech researchers supporting key components of this program include School of Interactive Computing professor Irfan Essa, School of Computational Science and Engineering associate professor Edmond Chow, GTRI principal research engineers Lora Weiss and Fred Wright, GTRI senior research scientist Richard Boyd, and GTRI research scientists Joshua L. Davis and Erica Briscoe.

“We look forward to working with DARPA and our academic partners to develop a prototype ADAMS system that can detect anomalies in massive data sets that can translate to significant, often critical, actionable insider threat information across a wide variety of application domains,” said John Fratamico, SAIC senior vice president and business unit general manager.

Research News & Publications Office
Georgia Institute of Technology
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 314
Atlanta, Georgia 30308 USA

Media Relations Contacts: Abby Robinson (abby[at]innovate.gatech.edu; 404-385-3364) or John Toon (jtoon[at]gatech.edu; 404-894-6986)

Writer: Abby Robinson

Scandal – FEMEN attacked Paris Hilton in Kiev

TOP-SCRET FROM THE HOMELAND SECURITY- Anonymous Upcoming U.S. Operations Overview

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/12/NCCIC-AnonOps.png

(U) The loosely organized hacking collective known as “Anonymous” has announced through several mediums that they plan on conducting cyber attacks, peaceful protests, and other unspecified activity targeting a variety of organizations. The purpose of this product is to judge the likelihood of occurrence for these events, as well as the potential impact.

(U//FOUO) Occupy Wall Street (OWS): DHS/NCCIC assesses that it is likely peaceful protests will occur on Wall Street on 17 September 2011. These protests may be accompanied by malicious cyber activity conducted by Anonymous.

(U//FOUO) Operation FaceBook (OPFB): DHS/NCCIC assesses that it is unlikely that a coordinated or sophisticated cyber attack will be conducted by Anonymous (at large) targeting FaceBook.com (FB) on 5 November 2011. However, there remains the possibility that low-level or lone-wolf attempts may occur.

(U//FOUO) Project Mayhem (PM): DHS/NCCIC assesses that a combination of inconsequential physical mischief and potentially disruptive malicious cyber activity will be conducted leading up to the culmination date of 21 December 2012. At this point, specific tactics, techniques and procedures (TTP) are unknown.

(U//FOUO) Operation Halliburton: Little is known about this potential upcoming operation. DHS/NCCIC assesses that targeting US corporations is consistent with past Anonymous targets.

(U) Anonymous has devoted resources to creating new cyber attack and exploitation tools:

(U) Anonymous claimed publicly it will be deploying a new DDoS tool called #RefRef in September. There have been several publicly disclosed tools claiming to be versions of #RefRef however there has been nothing to validate these claims.

(U//FOUO) The recent release of a distributed denial of service (DDOS) tool known as “Apache Killer,” that could be leveraged by Anonymous poses a significant risk to organizations that are operating vulnerable internet facing Apache web servers.

(U//FOUO) DHS/NCCIC’S OWS ASSESSMENT: The ideologies set forth by Adbusters seem to align at a basic level with the stated intent of Anonymous’ newly adopted Hacktivist agenda. These protests are highly likely to occur due to the high level of media attention garnered by the partnership between Adbusters and Anonymous, and due to the heightened media response to the San Francisco BART protests. Though the protests will likely to be peaceful in nature, like any protest, malicious individuals may use the large crowds as cover to conduct illegal activity such as vandalism. Judging based on past behaviors by the group, Anonymous’ participation in these protests may include malicious cyber activity, likely in the form of DDOS attacks targeting financial institutions and government agencies.

(U) Several racist, homophobic, hateful, and otherwise maliciously intolerant cyber and physical incidents throughout the past decade have been attributed to Anonymous, though recently, their targets and apparent motivations have evolved to what appears to be a hacktivist agenda.

(U) Anonymous utilizes a crude target nomination procedure, outlined below, that is coordinated on one of several communications mediums – IRC, websites (#chan, etc), insurgency wiki, or anonymous meme themed website:

1. An individual on the communications medium posts an appeal to Anonymous leadership requesting members to target a victim;
2. Those individuals who agree, follow suit with vague details given as to intentions and/or tactics;
3. “Lulz ensue,” or they don’t;
4. If “lulz ensue,” go back to step 2 and see if more people join the action, or;
5. Lose interest.

(U) Anonymous utilizes several tactics to humiliate victim individuals and organizations. The most common involve:

  • “Dropping someone’s docs,” or exfiltrating information from a compromised system and posting it publicly;
  • Pranks targeting victims in real life (IRL) leveraging stolen personally identifiable information (PII), such as unwanted pizza delivery, telephone or fax machine harassment, and other tactics;
  • Defacing websites or social network profile pages to embarrass and/or annoy organizations; DOS / DDOS attacks.

DOWNLOAD THE ORGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

NCCIC-AnonOps

MERIDIAN CAPITAL – “GoMoPa” in detention

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FREI ERFUNDENE LÜGEN DER FINGIERTEN STASI-“GoMoPA”- FALL MINISTER STELTER

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TOP-SECRET from the FBI-Sheets, Sails, and Dormer Lights: The Case of the Pearl Harbor Spy


Pearl Harbor image with Bernard Kuehn inset

On February 21, 1942, just 76 days after the tragic attack on Pearl Harbor, Bernard Julius Otto Kuehn (pictured) was found guilty of spying and sentenced to be shot “by musketry” in Honolulu. What was a German national doing in Hawaii in the days leading up to the attack? What exactly did Kuehn do to warrant such a sentence? Here’s the story…

Bed sheets on clothes lines. Lights in dormer windows. Car headlights. A boat with a star on its sail.

Otto Kuehn had a complex system of signals all worked out. A light shining in the dormer window of his Oahu house from 9 to 10 p.m., for example, meant that U.S. aircraft carriers had sailed. A linen sheet hanging on a clothes line at his home on Lanikai beach between 10 and 11 a.m. meant the battle force had left the harbor. There were eight codes in all, used in varying combinations with the different signals.

In November 1941, Kuehn had offered to sell intelligence on U.S. warships in Hawaiian waters to the Japanese consulate in Hawaii. On December 2, he provided specific—and highly accurate—details on the fleet in writing. That same day, he gave the consulate the set of signals that could be picked up by nearby Japanese subs.

Kuehn—a member of the Nazi party—had arrived in Hawaii in 1935. By 1939, the Bureau was suspicious of him. He had questionable contacts with the Germans and Japanese. He’d lavishly entertained U.S. military officials and expressed interest in their work. He had two houses in Hawaii, lots of dough, but no real job. Investigations by the Bureau and the Army, though, never turned up definite proof of his spying.

Not until the fateful attack of December 7, 1941. Honolulu Special Agent in Charge Robert Shivers immediately began coordinating homeland security in Hawaii and tasked local police with guarding the Japanese consulate. They found its officials trying to burn reams of paper. These documents—once decoded—included a set of signals for U.S. fleet movements.

All fingers pointed at Kuehn. He had the dormer window, the sailboat, and big bank accounts. Kuehn was arrested the next day and confessed, though he denied ever sending coded signals. His sentence was commuted—50 years of hard labor instead of death “by musketry”—and he was later deported.

Today, his story reminds us how much damage espionage can do to our country. And why the FBI continues to rank counterintelligence as a top investigative priority.

Secret-The FBI about Pearl Harbor Legacy – Remembering Robert Shivers

The Attack on Pearl Harbor, National Archives photo
The attack on Pearl Harbor. Photo courtesy of the National Archives.

12/07/09

It was 68 years ago this morning—December 7, 1941—that a torrent of bombs fell on Pearl Harbor, a stealth attack that took the lives of more than 2,400 Americans and thrust the nation headlong into its second major war of the century. It was a day—filled with sacrifices and heroism—that will never be forgotten.

The contributions of one man who made a major impact in the aftermath of the attack should also not be forgotten. His name is Robert L. Shivers, and he was the special agent in charge of our office in Honolulu on that fateful day.

Shivers had been handpicked by Director J. Edgar Hoover to run the Honolulu office precisely because of his leadership skills. Smart and genteel, Shivers was minted as a special agent in 1920. After serving across the South and Midwest and in New York, the Tennessee native was tapped to lead field offices in Pittsburgh, Buffalo, and Miami. But because of nagging health issues, he went on restricted duty in the late 1930s.

Special  Agent in Charge Robert L. Shivers

Special Agent in Charge Robert L. Shivers

In the summer of 1939, however, Europe was on the verge of war, and with the U.S. supporting the Allied cause, the FBI was plenty busy trying to prevent espionage and sabotage at home. In August, Hoover turned to Shivers to re-open the now strategically important FBI division in Honolulu.

Shivers got to work. Within a few months, he developed strong relationships with local police as well as with Army and Navy forces, and he also began making contacts in the islands’ Japanese communities. These deepened when he and his wife began caring for a Japanese schoolgirl named Shizue Kobatake (later Suzanne or Sue). Despite the differences in their backgrounds, they became like a family.

Then came December 7. Within minutes of the attack, Shivers alerted Director Hoover, who quickly put the Bureau’s contingency war plans into effect.

For his part, Shivers—who had already made progress in sorting out the FBI’s division of intelligence and security responsibilities with the Navy—immediately placed the Japanese Consulate under police guard, both to protect the diplomats from retaliation and to prevent their escape. His agents seized a large quantity of suspiciously coded documents that consulate employees tried to hastily burn and began running down key cases of espionage i.e.of  Otto Kuehn.

Another major issue involved the 150,000 people of Japanese ancestry in Hawaii—roughly a third of the population. Some argued that they should be taken into custody. Shivers and key members of the armed services and territorial government strongly disagreed and made a vital difference in preventing the kind of mass internment that happened on the mainland (which Director Hoover opposed, but that’s another story). Only a few thousand Japanese nationals considered a security risk ended up being detained.

The territorial Senate of Hawaii issued a proclamation praising Shivers after he retired as special agent in charge.

Shivers soon gained respect across the island, earning significant authority from its military governor. His only critic was a local U.S. Attorney, who thought he dealt with the Japanese on the islands “too leniently.”

History has taken a different view—and so did Shivers’ contemporaries. When his health forced him to retire in 1944, Shivers was later lauded by the territorial Senate of Hawaii both for “safeguarding Hawaii’s internal security” and for displaying “sympathy, sound judgment, and firmness.”

TOP-SECRET – THE FBI and PEARL HARBOR

Image of attack on Pearl Harbor, December 7, 1941.

Seventy years ago today—on December 7, 1941—a sneak attack on Pearl Harbor took the lives of more than 2,400 Americans, stunning the nation and catapulting it into war.

For the FBI, the attack and the onset of war opened a new chapter in national security. Even as Japanese bombs rained down, FBI Special Agent in Charge Robert Shivers in Honolulu was patched through via telephone to Director J. Edgar Hoover, who immediately put the Bureau on a 24/7 wartime footing according to its already well-made plans. In the days and months that followed, the FBI diligently and successfully worked to protect the American homeland from spies and saboteurs, building important new capabilities along the way.

Pearl Harbor Attack Mobilizes FBI War Plans

On December 7, 1941—as bombs fell on American battleships at Pearl Harbor—Robert L. Shivers, Special Agent in Charge of the FBI’s Honolulu office, was on the phone. Headquarters relayed his anxious call to New York, where Director Hoover was visiting.

“The Japanese are bombing Pearl Harbor. It’s war,” Shivers said. “You may be able to hear it yourself. Listen!”

Director Hoover immediately flew back to Washington, mindful of the plans that his agency had made for this eventuality. Some 2,400 brave U.S. sailors had already died in the early hours of that fateful Sunday.

The attack was a surprise; that Japan was readying war against America was not. Contingency plans had been made throughout the U.S. government, and they were immediately implemented to ensure American security in the weeks, months, and years after the surprise attack.

And what about FBI plans? What had the Bureau set in place in the event of war?

  • It had made the investigation of sabotage, espionage, and subversion a top priorityand agents made surveys of industrial plants that were vital to American security in order to prevent sabotage and espionage.
  • It had expanded its intelligence programs, including undercover work in South and Central America to identify Nazi spies.
  • It had performedand continued to performexhaustive background checks on federal workers, to keep enemy agents from infiltrating the government.
  • It had been directed to draw up plans for a voluntary board, turned over to and headed by a newspaperman, to review media stories in order to prevent information from being released that might harm American troops. Mindful of free speech protections, this independent board operated with the voluntary cooperation of the media.
  • It had expanded the number of professionally trained police through its National Academy program to aid the Bureau in times of crisis. This cadre of professionals effectively forestalled well-meaning but overzealous civilian plans to “help” law enforcement with vigilantism. The FBI had learned a lesson from World War I when groups like the American Protective League abused the civil rights of Americans in its efforts to identify German spies, draft resisters, and other threats.
  • And it had identified German, Italian, and Japanese aliens who posed a clear threat to the United States in the event of war so that when President Roosevelt ordered itand he did, on the evening of December 7the Bureau could immediately arrest these enemies and present them to immigration for hearings (represented by counsel) and possible deportation. A fewlike Bernard Julius Otto Kuehn, the German national involved in signaling the Japanese invasion fleet headed for Pearl Harborwere arrested and prosecuted for espionage and other crimes against the U.S.
  • Now, on December 7, it immediately implemented a 24/7 schedule at Headquarters and in its field operations.

What was the upshot? By war’s end the FBI had captured hundreds of Axis agents, investigated more than 16,000 sabotage cases, and handled all of its other criminal responsibilities besides. It had played a significant role in keeping Americans safe and free.

FBI – CONFIDENTIAL-Alpha Natural Resources, Inc. and Department of Justice Reach $209 Million Agreement Related to Upper Big Branch Mine Explosion

WASHINGTON—Alpha Natural Resources Inc. has agreed to make payments and safety investments totaling $209 million in connection with the criminal investigation of the April 5, 2010, explosion at the Upper Big Branch mine (UBB) in Montcoal, W.Va., announced Attorney General Eric Holder, U.S. Attorney R. Booth Goodwin II for the District of West Virginia and officials with the FBI and Department of Labor’s Office of Inspector General.

The explosion at the UBB mine claimed the lives of 29 coal miners and injured two others. At the time of the explosion, the mine was owned by Massey Energy Company, whose operations came under Alpha’s control in a June 1, 2011, merger.

“The tragedy at Upper Big Branch will never be forgotten, and the families affected by it will never be made completely whole again. Today’s agreement represents the largest-ever resolution in a criminal investigation of a mine disaster and will ensure appropriate steps are taken to improve mine safety now and will fund research to enhance mine safety in the future,” said Attorney General Holder. “While we continue to investigate individuals associated with this tragedy, this historic agreement—one of the largest payments ever for workplace safety crimes of any type—will help to create safer work environments for miners in West Virginia and across the country.”

“There should never be another UBB, and this announcement is aimed squarely at that goal. For far too long, we’ve accepted the idea that catastrophic accidents are an inherent risk of being a coal miner. That mindset is unacceptable,” said U.S. Attorney Goodwin. “Collectively, these requirements will set a new standard for what can and should be done to protect miners. We look forward to a future in which coal mining is as safe as any other occupation.”

As part of the non-prosecution agreement, Alpha will invest at least $80 million in mine safety improvements at all of its underground mines, including those formerly owned by Massey. Alpha will also place $48 million in a mine health and safety research trust, to be used to fund academic and non-profit research that will advance efforts to enhance mine safety. In addition, the company will pay criminal restitution of $1.5 million to each of the families of the 29 miners who died at UBB and to the two individuals who were injured, for a total restitution payment of $46.5 million. Alpha also will pay a total of up to $34.8 million in penalties owed to the Mine Safety and Health Administration (MSHA), including all penalties that arise from the UBB accident investigation.

The remedial safety measures included in the agreement include the following:

  • Installation of digital monitoring systems in all its underground mines to continuously monitor compliance with ventilation requirements and to ensure mines are free of potentially explosive methane gas;
  • Implementation of a plan to ensure that each of its underground mines has the personnel and resources necessary to meet all legal requirements concerning incombustible material and accumulations of coal dust and loose coal;
  • Purchase state-of-the-art equipment to monitor its mines for explosive concentrations of coal dust and use that equipment in all its underground mines;
  • Purchase next-generation rock dusting equipment (pending MSHA approval), further enhancing its ability to combat explosion hazards;
  • Installation of oxygen cascading systems to help miners make their way to safety if a serious accident should occur; and
  • Building of a state-of-the-art training facility and implementation of a full training curriculum to train Alpha miners, which will be available to other mining companies.

The agreement announced today is the largest-ever resolution in a criminal investigation of a mine disaster. It addresses only the corporate criminal liability of the former Massey, not potential criminal charges for any individual. The criminal investigation of individuals associated with Massey remains ongoing.

E-BOOK – DOWNLOAD – “Seduced by Secrets” by Kristie Macrakis – The STASI inside

Seduced-by-Secrets-Inside-the-Stasis-Spy-Tech-World-2008-Macrakis

Click on Download Link above

More fascinating than fiction, Seduced by Secrets takes the reader inside the real world of one of the most effective and feared spy agencies in history. The book reveals, for the first time, the secret technical methods and sources of the Stasi (East German Ministry for State Security) as it stole secrets from abroad and developed gadgets at home, employing universal, highly guarded techniques often used by other spy and security agencies.

Seduced by Secrets draws on secret files from the Stasi archives, including CIA-acquired material, interviews and friendships, court documents, and unusual visits to spy sites, including “breaking into” a prison, to demonstrate that the Stasi overestimated the power of secrets to solve problems and created an insular spy culture more intent on securing its power than protecting national security. It recreates the Stasi’s secret world of technology through biographies of agents, defectors, and officers and by visualizing James Bond-like techniques and gadgets.

In this highly original book, Kristie Macrakis adds a new dimension to our understanding of the East German Ministry for State Security by bringing the topic into the realm of espionage history and exiting the political domain.

  • Reveals previously secret methods and sources used by all spy agencies
  • Reveals formulas and methods for invisible ink for the first time
  • Includes visits to spy sites

Studie-BKA-Historie und die NS-Einflüsse

Knapp drei Jahre lang hat ein unabhängiges Wissenschaftlerteam unter Leitung des Historikers Patrick Wagner von der Universität Halle alte Personal- und Ermittlungsakten des BKA analysiert, dazu Memoranden, Vermerke und Papiere in diversen Archiven.

Die Auftragsarbeit steht in einer Reihe von jüngst erschienenen Publikationen über die NS-Belastung von Ministerien und Behörden. Das Bundesverkehrsministerium etwa veröffentlichte 2007 einen schmalen Band über seine Vorgängerinstitution, ebenso das Verbraucherschutzministerium. Die vor über einem Jahr erschienene umstrittene Studie über das Auswärtige Amt sorgt immer noch für Diskussionen.

Einen ähnlichen Aufruhr wird die BKA-Studie kaum verursachen, weil sich die Autoren im Gegensatz zu ihren Kollegen mit allzu steilen Thesen zurückhalten und ihre Folgerungen gut belegen.

Doch erfreulich für den Auftraggeber ist das Ergebnis nicht. Denn die Historiker präsentieren keine Erfolgsgeschichte. Sicherlich seien die braunen Traditionen nach und nach verblasst, befinden die Wissenschaftler, doch ohne aktives Zutun von Belasteten. Statt eines Lernprozesses, so Historiker Wagner, habe man nur einen “Prozess des institutionalisierten Vergessens” feststellen können.

http://www.spiegel.de/panorama/justiz/0,1518,802215,00.html

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

110406VortragProfDrWagner

CONFIDENTIAL-The Nixon Administration and the Indian Nuclear Program, 1972-1974

U.S. Post-Mortem on 1974 Indian Test Criticized Intelligence Community Performance for “Waffling Judgments” and Not Following Up Leads

National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 367

 


Click for Larger View
Trombay, the site of India’s first atomic reactor (Aspara), the CIRUS reactor provided by Canada, and a plutonium reprocessing facility, as photographed by a KH-7/GAMBIT satellite during February 1966. Provided under lax safeguards, the CIRUS reactor produced the spent fuel that India converted into plutonium for the May 1974 test (the heavy water needed to run the reactor was provided by the United States, also under weak safeguards).

Raja Rammana, director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Center at Trombay, played a key role in the production, development, and testing of the May 1974 Indian “peaceful nuclear explosion.” In the Spring of 1973, John Pinajian, the Atomic Energy Commission’s representative in India, became suspicious that India was preparing for a nuclear test in part because Rammana rebuffed his requests for access to BARC so he could conduct an experiment which had been approved by the Indian Atomic Energy Commission (see document 17A)

Washington, D.C., December 7, 2011 – India’s “peaceful nuclear explosion” on 18 May 1974 caught the United States by surprise in part because the intelligence community had not been looking for signs that a test was in the works. According to a recently declassified Intelligence Community Staff post-mortem posted today by the National Security Archive and the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project, Nixon administration policymakers had given a relatively low priority to the Indian program and there was “no sense of urgency” to determine whether New Delhi was preparing to test a nuclear device. Intelligence “production” (analysis and reporting) on the topic “fell off” during the 20 months before the test, the analysis concluded.[i]

In early 1972, however—two years before the test—the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research (INR) had predicted that India could make preparations for an underground test without detection by U.S. intelligence. Published for the first time today, the INR report warned that the U.S. government had given a “relatively modest priority to … relevant intelligence collection activities” which meant that a “concerted effort by India to conceal such preparations … may well succeed.”

The post-mortem [see document 21], the INR report [see document 2] and other new materials illustrate how intelligence priorities generally reflect the interests and priorities of top policymakers. The Nixon White House was focused on the Vietnam War and grand strategy toward Beijing and Moscow; intelligence on nuclear proliferation was a low priority. Compare, for example, the India case with that of Iraq during 2002-2003, when White House concerns encouraged—some say even compelled—intelligence producers to cherry pick raw information to demonstrate the development of WMD by the Saddam Hussein regime.

INR prepared its India report at a time when secret sources were telling U.S. intelligence that New Delhi was about to test a nuclear device. The “small spate” of reports about a test had such “congruity, apparent reliability, and seeming credibility” that they prompted a review of India’s nuclear intentions by INR and other government offices. In the end, government officials could not decide whether India had made a decision to test although a subsequent lead suggested otherwise.

According to the intelligence community’s post-mortem, obtained through a mandatory review appeal to the Interagency Security Classification Appeals Panel (ISCAP), one of the problems was that intelligence producers were not communicating with each other, so the “other guy” assumed that someone else was “primarily responsible for producing hard evidence of Indian intentions.” The analysis was especially critical of an August 1972 Special National Intelligence Estimate for its “waffling judgments” on Indian nuclear intentions.

Other declassified documents reproduced here from 1972 through 1974 illustrate the range of thinking on this sensitive topic:

  • An INR report in February 1972 concluded that it could not “rule out a test” in the near future and it was “entirely possible that one or more nuclear devices have actually been fabricated and assembled.”  All the same, “it our judgment that a decision to authorize a test is unlikely in the next few months and may well be deferred for several years.”
  • During March and April 1972, Canadian and British intelligence concluded that they had no evidence that India had made a decision to test a nuclear device. Nevertheless, the Canadians believed that New Delhi could produce a device in less than a year.
  • In June 1972, Japanese diplomat Ryohei Murata argued that the “Indians have decided to go ahead with a nuclear test” and that the Thar Desert in Rajasthan would be the test site. While basically correct, Murata’s estimate was discounted because it did not represent an official Foreign Ministry view.
  • Special National Intelligence Estimate (SNIE) 31-72 published in August 1972 also held that the Indians could produce a device “within a few days to a year of a decision to do so,” but concluded that the chances that India had made a decision to test were “roughly even.”
  • In 1973, the Atomic Energy Commission’s scientific representative in India  told the U.S. consul in Bombay (Mumbai) that several “indications” suggested that India “may well have decided” to test a nuclear device.
  • Five months before the test, the U.S. Embassy in New Delhi reported that the probability of an “early test” was at a “lower level than previous years.”

The rumors that India was going to test emerged in the wake of the South Asian crisis, when the Nixon White House tilted toward Pakistan, India’s archrival. Relations between New Delhi and Washington were already cool during the Nixon administration which treated India as a relatively low priority.  Henry Kissinger’s secret trip to China underlined India’s low priority by suggesting that if New Delhi ever faced a crisis with Beijing it could not count on Washington for help.  Relations became truly frosty during the balance of 1971 when New Delhi signed a friendship treaty with Moscow and India and Pakistan went to war. Later Nixon and Kissinger wanted to improve the relationship, but India’s nuclear intentions were not on their agenda. That India had refused to sign the Nuclear Nonproliferation Treaty was a non-issue for Nixon and Kissinger, who had little use for the NPT and treated nuclear proliferation as less than secondary. While the State Department cautioned India against nuclear tests in late 1970 [see document 6], concern did not rise to the top of policy hill.[2]

Whatever impact the events of 1971 may have had on India’s decision to test a nuclear device that decision was soon to be made. According to George Perkovich, an authority on the Indian nuclear program at the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, “it may be conjectured that support in principle for developing a nuclear explosive device was solidified by late 1971, that concentrated work on building the vital components began in spring 1972, and that formal prime ministerial approval to make final preparations for a PNE occurred in September 1972.”[3] In this context, the reports collected by U.S. intelligence in late 1971 and early 1972 about a possible test may have been good examples of the old chestnut that “where there’s smoke, there’s fire.”

Yet, the analysts who wrote SNIE 31-72 decided that the smoke had no significance because they saw only a 50-50 chance that New Delhi had made a decision to test (even though New Delhi was closing in on a decision).


The Elephant in the Room: The Soviet Union and the Indian Nuclear Program

For more information on India and the Cold War superpowers, see an extraordinary collection of Hungarian Foreign Ministry documents, edited and translated by Balazs Szalontai, with a substantive “Working Paper,” recently published by the Nuclear Proliferation International History Project. Drawing on archival material from the 1960s through the 1980s, “The Elephant in the Room” provides significant insight into the Soviet Union’s nuclear relations with India. While Moscow was carefully to sell only safeguarded nuclear technology to New Delhi, the priority of maintaining good relations with India sometimes put nonproliferation goals in the backseat. For example, before the May 1974 “peaceful nuclear explosion” the Soviets had tried to discourage the Indians from testing–confirming what has been previously suspected–but once the latter had tested the Soviets did not criticize them. When Canada stopped providing reactor fuel and equipment as a penalty for the test (which Canadian technology had facilitated), the Soviets stepped in to fill the gap. Moreover, when Soviet-Pakistan relations deteriorated after the invasion of Pakistan, Moscow’s anger was so intense that it gave the “green light” to Indian military planning for a strike against Pakistani nuclear facilities. The documents also suggest that it was not until the mid-1980s, when U.S.-Soviet and Sino-Soviet détente were on the upswing, that the Soviets became concerned about India as a nuclear proliferation problem.

Documents

Document 1: “Various recent intelligence reports”

State Department cable 3088 to Embassy New Delhi, 6 January 1972, Secret

Source: U.S. National Archives, Record Group 59, Subject-Numeric Files 1970-1973 [hereinafter RG 59, SN 70-73] Def 12-1 India

For years, the U.S. intelligence establishment had been monitoring India’s nuclear program for signs of a decision to produce nuclear weapons, but in late 1971 and early 1972 it had to consider the possibility that a nuclear test was impending.  Recently collected intelligence about an imminent test led the State Department to send a query to the U.S. Embassy in India for its assessment.

Document 2: “A Concerted Effort by India to Conceal Preparations May Well Succeed”

State Department Bureau of Intelligence and Research Intelligence Note, “India to Go Nuclear?” 14 January 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 18-8 India

Before the Embassy sent a full response, a team of analysts at the State Department’s Bureau of Intelligence and Research produced their evaluation of varied report about India’s nuclear intentions: that it would test a device that month, sometime in 1972, or that the government was undertaking a program to test a “peaceful nuclear explosive.”  According to INR, India had the capability to produce some 20-30 weapons, and it could easily test a device in an underground site, such as an abandoned mine, that would be hard to discover.  Indeed, because the U.S. government had given a “relatively modest priority to … relevant intelligence collection activities” a “concerted effort by India to conceal such preparations … may well succeed.”  What would motivate India to test, the analysts opined, were domestic political pressures and concerns about China and Pakistan.  Nevertheless, the INR analysts saw a test as having more importance as a demonstration of “scientific and technological prowess”; the strategic significance would be “negligible” because India was “years away” from developing a “credible” deterrence against China “its only prospective enemy with a nuclear capability.”
Document 3: “Straws” Suggesting an Underground Test

U.S. Embassy Airgram A-20 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions,” 21 January 1972, Secret, Excised copy

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 18-8 India

In its response to the Department’s query, the Embassy identified a number of reasons that made it unlikely that India would a test a nuclear device in the coming weeks, but saw “straws” suggesting an underground test “sometime in future.” For example, the Government of India had publicly acknowledged ongoing work on the problem of safe underground testing .  Moreover, India might have an interest in making its nuclear capabilities known to “enemies.” Whatever the Indians decided, external pressure would have no impact on a highly nationalist state and society: “we see nothing US or international community can presently do to influence GOI policy directions in atomic field.”

One of the sources mentioned, apparently a CIA asset (the reference is excised), had a connection with the Prime Minister’s secretariat. This may be the same informant, future Prime Minister Moraji Desai, who provided information to the CIA about Prime Minister Gandhi’s intentions during the recent South Asian crisis and whose cover was subsequently blown through press leaks published by Jack Anderson.  He later told the CIA to “go to hell.”[4]
Document 4: “Increased Status of a Nuclear Power”

Memorandum from Ray Cline, Director, Bureau of Intelligence and Research, to Director of Central Intelligence Richard Helms, enclosing “Possibility of an Indian Nuclear Test,” 23 February 1972, Secret

Source: U.S. State Department, Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976 Volume E–7, Documents on South Asia, 1969–1972, Document 228

At the request of Undersecretary of State John Irwin, INR prepared an assessment which included a detailed review of Indian’s nuclear facilities and their capacity to produce weapons-grade plutonium as well as capabilities to deliver nuclear weapons to target. While India had signed agreements with Canada and the United States that nuclear reactors were to be used for peaceful purposes, the Indians were likely to claim that an explosive device for “peaceful” purposes was consistent with the agreements.  Whether the Indians were going to test in the near future was in doubt. INR could not “rule out” one in the near future.  Further, the “strongest incentive [to test] may well be the desire for the increased status of a nuclear power.”   All the same, “it our judgment that a decision to authorize a test is unlikely in the next few months and may well be deferred for several years.” Weighing against a test were the financial and diplomatic costs, for example, “India’s full awareness that assistance from the US and other countries (possibly including the USSR) would be jeopardized.”
Document 5: Trudeau’s Warning

U.S. Embassy Canada cable 391 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions,” 7 March 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

With Canada’s role as the supplier of the CANDU reactor, senior Canadian officials had close working relationships with their Indian counterpart. Lauren Gray, the chairman of Canada’s Atomic Energy Board, had recently visited India and U.S. embassy officials interviewed him closely on his thinking about Indian nuclear developments.  Having spoken with Homi Nusserwanji Sethna, Chairman of the Atomic Energy Commission, and other officials, Gray believed that Sethna opposed a test and that as long as Sethna and Indira Gandhi were in office “there was no chance” that India would test a nuclear device, which would take three to four years to prepare.  Gray was mistaken, but was correct to declare that if a decision to test was made, Sethna would “undoubtedly” head the project.  The embassy’s science attaché, Miller N. Hudson, met with other officials with the AECB who had a different take on Indian capabilities; based on their assessment of Indian’s ability to produce weapons grade plutonium, they argued that it would take no more than a year to produce a device.

The Canadians pointed out that about 18 months earlier there had been a “blackout” of statistical information on plutonium production. That led Canadian Prime Minister Pierre-Eliot Trudeau followed by other officials to “directly” warn the “Indians that Canadian plutonium should not be used for any kind of nuclear device.”

Document 6: Unlikely to Test in the “Near Future”

State Department cable 40378 to U.S. Embassy Ottawa, “Indian Nuclear Intentions,” 9 March 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

State Department officers were also consulting with their counterparts at the Canadian embassy in Washington.  During a discussion with the embassy counselor, country desk director David Schneider opined that Indian was unlikely to test a device in the “near future” but he wanted Ottawa’s prognosis. Schneider was also interested in whether the Soviets, with their close relationship with India, might be able to use their influence to “deter” a test.  If India tested, the U.S. could respond with a “strong statement,” but whether “punitive” measures would be taken would depend on whether the test “violated existing agreements.” In October 1970, the State Department had cautioned the Indians that a “peaceful nuclear explosion” was indistinguishable from a weapons test and that the test of a nuclear device would be incompatible with U.S.-Indian nuclear assistance agreements.  That the State Department issued this warning provides a telling contrast with Canada, which treated its admonition as a head of state issue.
Document 7: No Technical or Fiscal Obstacle to a Test

U.S. Embassy Canada cable 430 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions on South Asia Situation,” 14 March 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

Elaborating on his earlier cable and responding to the general issues raised by the Department’s 9 March message, science attaché Hudson questioned Gray’s evaluation of Sethna, suggesting that by combining “guile” and “technical proficiency,” the latter could easily have “easily misled” the Canadian.  Based on consultations with a variety of Canadian insiders with knowledge of and experience with the Indian nuclear program, the Embassy saw no technical or fiscal barriers to an Indian test. Moreover, any pressure on India not to test would increase the “likelihood” of that happening.
Document 8: “Leaving Their Options Open”

State Department cable 50634 to U.S. Embassy Canada, “Indian Nuclear Intentions,” 24 March 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

Further discussions with the Canadian embassy counselor disclosed Ottawa’s view that it had no evidence of Indian intentions to test a nuclear weapon or a PNE. The Indians were “leaving their options open.”  If they decided to test, however, it would be “impossible” for them to move forward “without revealing some indication of their intentions.”
Document 9: British See No Evidence of a Decision

State Department cable 59655 to U.S. Embassy United Kingdom, “Indian Nuclear Intentions, 7 April 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

The British Government was taking the same view as the Canadians, seeing no evidence that the Indians had made a decision to test, although they had the “capability.”
Document 10:  “Apparent Reliability and Seeming Credibility”

State Department cable 69551 to U.S. Embassy United Kingdom, “Indian Nuclear Intentions, 22 April 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

The Canadian embassy had asked the State Department for information on the intelligence reports from earlier in the year that an Indian nuclear test was “imminent.”  The State Department denied the request, but informed the Canadians that the reports were so numerous and their “congruity, apparent reliability, and seeming credibility” so striking that it had become necessary to update official thinking about Indian intentions.
Documents 11A-C: “The Indians Have Decided to Go Ahead”

A. State Department cable 113523 to U.S. Embassy India, “Japanese Views Regarding Indian Nuclear Plans,” 23 June 1972, Secret

B.  U.S. Mission Geneva cable 2755 to State Department, “Japanese-Pakistani Conversations Regarding Indian Nuclear Plans,” 26 June 1972, Secret

C. U.S. Embassy Tokyo cable 67912 to State Department, “Japanese View Regarding Indian Nuclear Plans,” 27 June 1972, Secret

Source:  RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 1 India

This group of telegrams discloses that one Japanese diplomat made a good guess about what was happening in India, but also illuminates the problem of verifying intelligence information. In response to a request from the State Department, Ryohei Murata[5], an official at the n officer from the Japanese embassy, reported that the Japanese government believed that for prestige reasons and as a “warning” to others, the “Indians have decided to go ahead with a nuclear test” which could occur at “any time;” The Thar Desert in Rajasthan would be the test site. Murata was correct on the latter point and close to correct on the decision: only weeks before the Indian AEC had begun work on building the components for a test device.[6] The cables that followed this report, however, raised doubts about Murata’s assessment.
Document 12: Request for a NSSM

Henry Kissinger to President Nixon, “Proposed NSSM on the Implications of an Indian Nuclear Test,” n.d., with cover memorandum from Richard T. Kennedy, 4 July 1972, Secret

Source: Nixon Presidential Library, National Security Council Institutional Files, box H-192, NSSM-156 [1 of 2]

Months after the initial flurry of intelligence reports, national security assistant Henry Kissinger asked President Nixon to approve a national security study memorandum [NSSM] on the implications of an Indian nuclear test for U.S. interests.  The next day, 5 July 1972, Kissinger sent the agencies a request for a study which became NSSM 156.
Document 13: No Evidence of a Decision

U.S. Embassy India cable 9293 to State Department, “Indian Nuclear Intentions,” 26 July 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73 Def 1 India

In an update of its thinking about the possibility of a test, the Embassy acknowledged that India had the “technical know-how and possibly materials to develop [a] simple nuclear device within period of months after GOI decision to do so.”  Nevertheless, it saw no evidence that a decision had been made to test a device. Moreover, capabilities to deliver nuclear weapons were limited, with no plans in sight to “develop [a] missile launch system.”
Document 14: “Roughly Even”

Special National Intelligence Estimate 31-72, “Indian Nuclear Developments and their Likely Implications,”3 August 1972, Secret

Source: Foreign Relations of the United States, 1969–1976 Volume E–7, Documents on South Asia, 1969–1972, Document 298

Prepared as part of the NSSM 156 policy review, the 1974 post-mortem criticized this SNIE as “marred by waffled judgments.”  The SNIE concluded that the chances of India making a decision to test were “roughly even,” but the post-mortem analysis [see document 21] argued that based on its own findings,  the conclusion ought to have been 60-40 in favor of a decision to test.  In its analysis of the pros and cons of testing, the SNIE found that the “strongest factors impelling India to set off a test are: the “belief that it would build up [its] international prestige; demonstrate India’s importance as an Asian power; overawe its immediate South Asian neighbors; and bring enhanced popularity and public support to the regime which achieved it.”  The drafters further noted that a test would be “extremely popular at home, where national pride is riding high” and that supporters of a test believed that it would make the world see India as “one of the world’s principal powers.” The arguments against a test included adverse reactions from foreign governments that provided economic assistance, but the estimate noted that foreign reactions were “becoming less important” to India.
Document 15: “No Firm Intelligence”

Memorandum of Conversation, “Indian Nuclear Developments,” 21 September 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 12 India

A meeting between British Foreign Office and State Department officials on the Indian nuclear problem occurred the same month that Indian Prime Minister Gandhi approved the “final preparations for a PNE.”[7]  Deputy Assistant Secretary of State Christopher T. Van Hollen (the father of the future Maryland Congressman) and his colleagues followed the approach taken by the SNIE, which was close to that taken by the British Joint Intelligence Committee.   According to country director David Schneider, the “odds were about even” that India would make a decision, but once it was made, India could test very quickly.  There was “no firm intelligence” that a “go-ahead signal” to prepare for a test had been made.   Schneider reviewed bilateral and multilateral steps, proposed in the NSSM 156 study, that the U.S. and others could take to try to discourage an Indian test and the range of reactions that would be available if India went ahead.  A “weak” U.S. reaction, Schneider observed, would suggest that Washington would “acquiesce” if other countries followed India’s example.
Document 16: “A Set-Back to Nonproliferation Efforts”

H. Daniel Brewster to Herman Pollack, “Indian Nuclear Developments,” 16 January 1973, enclosing “Summary,” 1 September 1972, Secret

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, AE 6 India

The interagency group prepared a response to NSSM 156 on 1 September 1972 and it was sent to Kissinger at whose desk it would languish, suggesting the low priority that the Nixon White House gave to nuclear proliferation issues.  The summary of the study reproduced here includes the conclusion that an Indian test would be “a set-back to nonproliferation efforts” and that Washington should “do what [it] can to avert or delay” one.   Thus, recommendations included a number of unilateral and multilateral actions that the United States government could take, noting that “given the poor state” of Indo-American relations, an “overly visible” U.S. effort would more likely speed up an Indian decision to test a device,  Even non-US efforts were likely not to “be per se effective.”
Documents 17A-B: India “May Well Have Decided”

A. Bombay consulate cable 705 to Department of State, “India’s Nuclear Position,” 4 April 1973, Confidential

Source: RG 59, SN 70-73, Def 1 India

B.  U.S. Embassy India cable 5797 to State Department forwarding Bombay consulate cable 983, “India’s Nuclear Position,” 17 May 1973, Confidential

Source: AAD 1973

The possibility that the GOI had made a decision to test surfaced in a message from the U.S. consulate in Bombay (Mumbai) signed off by Consul David M. Bane.  The latter reported that Oak Ridge Laboratory scientist John J. Pinajian, then serving as the Atomic Energy Commission’s scientific representative in India, had pointed out several “indications”—notably his lack of access to key individuals and facilities in India’s atomic establishment–suggesting that India “may well have decided” to test a nuclear device.  While stating that Pinajian’s evaluation was “subjective and impressionistic,” Consul Bane agreed that the atomic energy establishment did not want this American poking around because he might find out too much. Bane further observed that a nuclear test “in the not too distant future” could meet the GOI’s political goals and help attain “greater recognition major power status.”

Raja Rammana, the director of the Bhabha Atomic Research Center, one of the organizations that Pinajian was trying to contact, played a key role in directing the PNE project so his suspicions were on target.[8]  In any event, a month later, Pinajian got some access to BARC, but noticed the absence of personnel responsible for experimental work.  Moreover, he was getting cooperation from the Institute for Fundamental Research to conduct an experiment.  Whether Pinajian remained suspicious needs to be learned, but the authors of the 1974 post-mortem pointed to the Consulate report as evidence that should have been considered (although it is worth noting that Secretary of State William Rogers was aware of the report and asked for more information).
Document 18: “The Likelihood of an Early Test [at] a Lower Level than Previous Years”

U.S. Embassy India cable 0743 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Intentions,” 18 January 1974, Confidential

Source: http://static.history.state.gov/frus/frus1969-76ve08/pdf/d156.pdf

The embassy concluded that “deeper economic problems,” among other considerations militated against a nuclear test in the near future, even though the Indian government had the capabilities to produce and test a device.  While there were no rumors about a test as there had been in 1972, “we know little about relevant internal government debate.” All in all, the embassy believed that economic conditions “tip the likelihood of an early test to a lower level than previous years.”  Russell Jack Smith, previously the deputy director for intelligence at the CIA, and then serving as special assistant to the ambassador (station chief), was one of the officials who signed off on this cable.[9]
Document 19: “Rebound to their Credit Domestically”

U.S. Embassy India cable 6598 to State Department, “India’s Nuclear Explosion: Why Now?” 18 May 1974, Secret

Source: AAD

Having written off an early test, the day that it took place the Embassy scrambled to come up with an explanation. Deputy Chief of Mission David Schneider signed off on the telegram because Moynihan was in London. While the Embassy had no insight on the decision-making, it saw domestic politics and “psychological” explanations for the test: the need to offset domestic “gloom” and the need for India to “be taken seriously.” According to the telegram, “the decision will appeal to nationalist feeling and will be widely welcomed by the Indian populace.”
Document 20: “Enough Plutonium for Some 50-70 Nuclear Weapons”

State Department cable 104613 to Consulate, Jerusalem, “India Nuclear Explosion,” 18 May 1974, Secret

Source: State Department MDR release

The day of the test, INR rushed to update Kissinger, then in the Middle East negotiating with Israel and Syria.  INR provided background on what had happened, how the United States and Canada had inadvertently helped India produce plutonium for the test device, earlier U.S. and Canadian demarches against “peaceful nuclear explosions,” and India’s capabilities to produce and deliver nuclear weapons.  The report did not state whether India had made a decision to produce weapons, but it forecast that two large unsafeguarded reactors under construction could eventually “produce enough plutonium for 50-70 nuclear weapons.”

Document 21: “No Sense of Urgency in the Intelligence Community”

Intelligence Community Staff, Post Mortem Report, An Examination of the Intelligence Community’s Performance Before the Indian Nuclear Test of May 1974, July 1974, Top Secret, Excised copy

Source: Mandatory review request; release by ISCAP

After the test, policymakers in and out of the intelligence establishment wanted to know why the CIA and its sister agencies had missed it. As Jeffrey Richelson has observed, this was not an “epic failure,” but it was serious enough to produce a post-mortem investigation to determine what had gone wrong.[10]  The partial release of the July 1974 post-mortem provides some answers, even if the full picture is denied because of massive excisions.  Readers already know from the previous release published on the Archive’s Web site that two problems were especially important: 1) the lack of priority given to the Indian nuclear program for intelligence collection (further confirmed by the January 1972 INR report), and 2) the lack of communication between intelligence producers (analysts and estimators) and intelligence collectors (spies, NRO, etc.).  The low priority meant that intelligence production “fell off” during the 20 months before the test (from October 1972 to May 1974).  Moreover, there may have been a lack of communication between producers, with the “other guy” assuming that someone else was “primarily responsible for producing hard evidence of Indian intentions.”

Trying to explain the lack of follow-up on relevant “raw intelligence,” e.g. Pinjanians’s surmises about the Indian nuclear program, the post-mortem saw no “sense of urgency” in the intelligence community, which may have “reflected the attitudes of the policymakers.” Another problem was that the intelligence community focused more on “capabilities” than on “intentions,” which implicitly raised the difficult issue of breaching the nuclear establishment or Indira Gandhi’s small circle of decision-making.

The substantive discussion of satellite photography has been excised, but the recommendations were left intact, including the point that “The failure of production elements to ask NPIC [National Photographic Intelligence Center] to exploit photography that had been specifically requested from the National Reconnaissance Office suggests a weakness in the imagery requirements system.”  The implication was that NRO satellites had imagery of the Thar Desert that could have been scrutinized for suspect activity, but no one asked NPIC to look into it.  In any event, this and other failures fed into a number of recommendations, including the broader point that nuclear proliferation intelligence receive “much higher priority.”
Document 22: “India may not yet have decided whether to proceed with …. [the] development of a weapons capability”

Special National Intelligence Estimate 4-1-74, “Prospects for Further Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons,”23 August 1974, Top Secret, Excised Copy

Source: MDR release by CIA

A few months after the Indian test, the intelligence community prepared an overall estimate of the global nuclear proliferation situation.  Such an estimate had not been prepared since the 1960s, no doubt because of the White House’s lack of interest. This estimate, SNIE 4-1-74, has been released before but this version includes more information, mainly a section on the Indian nuclear program, which had previously been withheld.  While finding it “likely” that India would launch a covert program to produce a few weapons, the analysts were not sure that such a decision had been made and suggested that Moscow or Washington might be able to persuade the Indians from moving in that direction.  The hypothesis about a covert program was mistaken because the Government of India did not make a basic decision to produce nuclear weapons until the 1980s.
Document 23: Whether the “Intelligence Community is Adequately Focused on Proliferation Matters”

Intelligence Community Staff, Director of Performance Evaluation and Improvement, to Deputy to the Director of Central Intelligence for the Intelligence Community, “Nuclear Proliferation and the Intelligence Community,” 12 October 1976, Top Secret, Excised copy

Source: CIA Research Tool [CREST], National Archives Library, College Park, MD

As this report indicates, the recommendations made in the 1974 post-mortem had little impact. The authors identified a basic disconnect between “national level users”—the top policymakers—and those who “set analytical and collection priorities in the intelligence community.” The latter were not sure how high a priority that the policymakers had given to nuclear proliferation intelligence.  Moreover, a study for the Defense Department produced by MIT chemistry professor (and future DCI) John Deutch questioned whether the intelligence community “is adequately focused and tasked on proliferation matters.” This would be a recurring problem for the CIA and other intelligence agencies.


Notes

[i] For background, see Jeffrey Richelson, Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea (New York: W.W. Norton, 2006), 218-235.

[1] For background, see Jeffrey Richelson, Spying on the Bomb: American Nuclear Intelligence from Nazi Germany to Iran and North Korea (New York: W.W. Norton, 2006), 218-235.

[2] For U.S.-India relations during the Nixon administration, see Dennix Kux, India and the United States: Estranged Democracies, 1941-1991 (Washington, D.C.: National Defense University Press, 1993), 279-314, and Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb, 162-166.  For the impact of Kissinger’s trip, see Andrew B. Kennedy, “India’s Nuclear Odyssey: Implicit Umbrellas, Diplomatic Disappointments, and the Bomb,” International Security 36 (2011): 136-139.

[3] Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb, 172.

[4] Thomas Powers, The Man Who Kept the Secrets: Richard Helms & the CIA (New York: Knopf, 1979), 206-207; Mark Feldstein, Poisoning the Press: Richard Nixon, Jack Anderson, and the Rise of Washington’s Scandal Culture, (New York: Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2010), 171.

[5] Murata would later rise to vice foreign minister and in 2009 revealed significant details about secret U.S.-Japanese understandings on nuclear weapons issues during the Cold War. http://search.japantimes.co.jp/cgi-bin/nn20090630a2.html

[6] Perkovich, India’s Nuclear Bomb, 171.

[7] Ibid. 172.

[8] Ibid, 172.

[9] Russell J. Smith, The Unknown CIA: My Three Decades with the Agency (Washington, D.C.: Pergamon-Brassey, 1989, 124.

[10] Richelson, Spying on the Bomb, 233.

UNCENSORED – FEMEN Cyber War against Sex Tourism

FEMEN fights sex-tourism with BORDEL.NET programme for the Internet. Report by 1+1

FBI – Former Prince George’s County Executive Jack Johnson Sentenced to Over Seven Years in Federal Prison for Federal Extortion and Bribery

GREENBELT, MD—U.S. District Judge Peter J. Messitte sentenced former Prince George’s County Executive Jack B. Johnson, age 62, of Mitchellville, Maryland, today to 87 months in prison followed by three years of supervised release for his leadership role in an extortion conspiracy wherein in exchange for bribes, Jack Johnson corruptly used his public office to engage in fraudulent actions including steering millions of dollars in federal and local funds to favored developers; and tampering with a witness and evidence. Judge Messitte also ordered that Jack Johnson pay a $100,000 fine and forfeit $78,000 and an antique Mercedes Benz.

The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein; Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; and Acting Special Agent in Charge Jeannine A. Hammett of the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation, Washington, D.C. Field Office.

“Jack Johnson could have been a role model for integrity, but he chose to be a poster child for greed,” said U.S. Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein. “The facts of this case read like a dime novel because the defendant acted as if corruption was the normal way of doing business. It is our responsibility to prove him wrong.”

“Identifying and investigating public corruption remains one of our highest priorities,” stated FBI Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely. “We hope today’s sentencing reaffirms the federal government’s proactive stance to stamp out corruption by those elected officials who have betrayed the public trust.”

“Public officials, whether elected or appointed, hold positions of trust in the eyes of the public. That trust is broken when these officials commit crimes,” said Acting IRS Special Agent in Charge Jeannine Hammett. “Today’s sentencing sends a clear message that no public official gets a free pass to ignore the laws.”

Jack Johnson was Prince George’s County Executive from 2002 to December 2010. Prior to 2002, Jack Johnson was the county’s State’s Attorney, and spent nearly a decade as an attorney for the IRS Office of Chief Counsel.

In September 2009, Jack Johnson appointed James Johnson to serve as the Director of DHCD, which administered the HOME Investment Partnerships program to provide federal grants to states and localities to fund the construction, purchase and/or rehabilitation of affordable housing for rent or home-ownership. Patrick Ricker is a developer in Prince George’s County, and had an interest in Greenbelt Metropark, which sought to build a mixed-use project near the Greenbelt Metro Station, called Greenbelt Station. Mirza Baig is a physician and a commercial and residential developer in the County since at least 1992. Leslie Johnson was an elected County Councilwoman and Jack Johnson’s wife.

According to Jack Johnson’s guilty plea and court documents, from 2003 through at least November 12, 2010, Jack Johnson orchestrated a conspiracy in which Baig, Ricker and other business persons offered bribes, including money, trip expenses, meals, drinks, hotel rooms, airline tickets, rounds of golf, employment, mortgage payments, and monetary and in-kind campaign contributions to Jack and James Johnson and other state and local government officials. Baig and James Johnson pleaded guilty to being part of the conspiracy from 2006 through 2010, and Ricker pleaded guilty to being part of the conspiracy from about 1997 through at least September 11, 2008. According to court documents, the amount of bribes extorted by Jack Johnson and his co-conspirators total over $1.6 million.

In exchange for the bribes, Jack Johnson, James Johnson, and other County officials performed and agreed to perform favorable official actions for Baig, Ricker and other developers, business owners and their companies. The official acts included obtaining a waiver of a HOME Program regulation, securing millions of dollars in HOME funds; assisting in the acquisition of surplus property and land from the County for development by certain developers, including Baig and Ricker; providing the conspirators with non-public County information; obtaining necessary state and local approvals and permits for certain developments and businesses in the County, including Greenbelt Station, one of Ricker’s projects; obtaining employment with the County; obtaining management rights for County bond funds; obtaining County funding for certain developments and businesses in the County; assisting with state and County legislation regarding liquor store hours; influencing certain County officials to approve and/or facilitate County business; and, securing County commitments to lease property from certain developers at developments in the County. According to court documents, the value of the benefits received by the individuals paying the bribes totaled $10,098,496.

According to court documents, Jack Johnson intended to continue his corrupt scheme after his term of office ended, through his wife’s new position on the County Council and through other candidates for county offices. In meetings with Baig which were recorded by the FBI, Jack Johnson is heard promising to have Leslie Johnson use her position on the County Council to “take care of things” for Baig. Jack Johnson was also overheard in recorded conversations with county officials, a lobbyist, a developer and other business owners to extort donations for Leslie Johnson’s campaign for a county council seat and another candidate’s campaign for county executive. During the course of the scheme, Jack Johnson also regularly sought payments and employment that were to be awarded to him once he left office, in return for Jack Johnson providing official assistance while he was still county executive.

Additionally, just prior to his arrest on November 12, 2010, Jack Johnson and his wife Leslie Johnson exchanged a series of telephone calls. During one of those calls, as federal agents were knocking on the door of Johnsons’ home to execute a search warrant, Jack told Leslie to destroy the $100,000 check provided to him by Baig and to hide cash that he had hidden in their home. Specifically, Jack Johnson told Leslie to flush the check down the toilet and hide the cash in her underwear. Federal agents entered the home and recovered approximately $79,600 from Leslie who had hidden the cash in her underwear.

Leslie Johnson pleaded guilty on June 30, 2011 to conspiracy to commit witness and evidence tampering in order to obstruct a federal corruption investigation. As part of her plea agreement, Leslie Johnson will forfeit proceeds of the scheme, including $79,600 in cash. She faces a maximum sentence of 20 years in prison and a $250,000 fine at her sentencing scheduled for December 9, 2011 at 10:30 a.m.

Former Director of the Prince George’s County Department of Housing and Community Development (DHCD) James Edward Johnson, age 66, of Temple Hills, Maryland, pleaded guilty on January 28, 2011 to conspiracy to commit extortion. James Johnson and Jack Johnson are not related. Dr. Mirza Hussain Baig, age 67, of Burtonsville, Maryland, pleaded guilty on April 11, 2011 to conspiracy to commit extortion in connection with paying bribes to Jack Johnson and James Johnson. Patrick Q. Ricker, age 52, of Bowie, Maryland, pleaded guilty on December 30, 2009 to conspiring to commit honest services fraud and to make false statements to the Federal Election Commission; and to tax evasion.

James Johnson and Mirza Baig face a maximum sentence of five years in prison for the conspiracy to commit extortion at their sentencing scheduled for March 12 and 19, 2012, respectively. Patrick Ricker faces a maximum sentence of five years in prison for honest services fraud, false statements conspiracy and tax evasion at his sentencing scheduled for March 23, 2012.

A total of 15 defendants have been convicted to date in the related investigations of corruption in Prince George’s County.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein praised the FBI and IRS-CI for their work in the investigation. Mr. Rosenstein thanked Assistant United States Attorneys James A. Crowell IV, A. David Copperthite, Sujit Raman and Christen A. Sproule, who are prosecuting these cases.

Hubertus Knabe, Chef der STASI-Gedenkstätte Hohenschönhausen: “Rufmord an Justizsenator ist STASI-Racheakt”

http://www.morgenpost.de/berlin/article1845985/Hubertus-Knabe-vermutet-Stasi-Seilschaften.html

Uncensored – New – FEMEN Video

TOP-SECRET – U.S. Army Commander’s Guide to Female Engagement Teams

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Complex operations often require the development of specialized teams with multidisciplinary perspectives. Examples of these groups include human terrain teams, provincial reconstruction teams, and, most recently, female engagement teams (FETs). These specialized programs are tasked with engaging local populations to ascertain information on civil-society needs and problems; address security concerns; and to form links between the populace, military, and interagency partners.

History has taught us that most insurgent fighters are men. But, in traditional societies, women are extremely infl uential in forming the social networks that insurgents use for support. Co-opting neutral or friendly women — through targeted social and economic programs — builds networks of enlightened self-interest that eventually undermines the insurgents. To do this effectively requires your own female counterinsurgents. Win the women, and you own the family unit. Own the family, and you take a big step forward in mobilizing the population on your side.

Men, women, and children are part of the triangle of knowledge that must be targeted for information collection. In Afghanistan, we observe rather consistent themes. Men interpret information and tell you what they think you want to hear. Women see and hear what goes on behind the walls. Children run free in the community and see, watch, and are involved in nearly every activity in the community.

Initial Female Engagement Team Concept

FETs are not a new concept in Afghanistan. They have existed in one form or another for more than nine years. Civil affairs teams have performed this type of mission on a regular basis for years in both Afghanistan and Iraq, along with countries like Bosnia and Kosovo, but not under that name. The Marines picked up on the FET concept and employed it on a large scale well before the Army and they have had great success using it. Currently, there is little consistency in the FET programs between deployed Army brigade combat teams (BCTs) in Afghanistan. The BCTs are having varying degrees of success in contributing to the information repository covering the total Afghan population that is required to be understood as part of the COIN environment. The Army has been slow picking up on the FET concept; it is now being codifi ed and an Army wide FET training program is being developed based on the U.S. Army Special Operations Command (USASOC) Cultural Support Team (CST) program.

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CALL-FETs

CONFIDENTIAL – STUDY – State Department Exploring Women’s Roles in Afghanistan

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StateDepartment-AfghanWomen

TOP-SECRET – City of London Police Occupy London Domestic Terrorism/Extremism Warning

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These are photos and the text of a bulletin disseminated to local businesses by the City of London Police warning of possible extremist/terrorist threats arising from the Occupy London protests.

Terrorism/Extremism update for the City of London Business community
2 December 2011

The threat to the UK from international terrorism is SUBSTANTIAL.
The threat to Great Britain from Irish Republican Terrorism is SUBSTANTIAL.

UK/International

Columbia:  The Revolutionary Armed Forces of Columbia (FARC) killed four of its longest held captives on Saturday during combat with Columbian forces.  A fifth hostage allegedly survived after fleeing into the jungle after being held captive for 12 years, in what has been reported as a failed rescue attempt.  It is FARC policy to kill prisoners if rescue attempts are made.

Al Qaeda/Pakistan: Al Qaeda has reportedly been holding Warren Weinsten, a 70-year-old American aid worker, hostage in Pakistan for three months.  The al Qaeda leader, Ayman al-Zawahiri has said in a video that Weinstein would be released only if the US ceases its air strikes on Pakistan and Afghanistan and frees prisoners.  The video offered no evidence that the aid worker is still alive.

Belarus: Two men have been sentenced to death for bombing the underground railway in the capital, Minsk, earlier this year.  The attack on 11 April killed 15 people and wounded hundreds of others.  Dmity Konovalov, 25, was found guilty of carrying out the explosion and Vladislav Kovalyov, also 25, of assisting in an act of terrorism.  They were also found guilty of involvement in three earlier bomb attacks in 2005 and 2008, which together injured more than 100 people.

Domestic

Occupy London, ongoing

The Occupy London sites at St Paul’s Cathedral and Finsbury Square remain in place with the number of protesters present remaining fairly consistent.  The majority of peaceful demonstrators from the St Paul’s camp appear to have moved on to the other camps.  Demonstrations originating from the camp have decreased and lacked the support and momentum of earlier actions.

There are now three ‘Occupations’ by activists in or near the City of London.  As the worldwide Occupy movement shows no sign of abating, it is likely that activists aspire to identify other locations to occupy, especially those they identify capitalism.  City of London Police has received a number of hostile reconnaissance reports concerning individuals who would fit the anti-capitalist profile.

All are asked to be vigilant regarding suspected reconnaissance, particularly around  empty buildings.  Any signs of access or new markings should also be reported.  You may encounter an increase in persons filming for the purpose of national or activist media.  All are  reminded that any encounters with suspected activists could be recorded and then uploaded or live-streamed to the internet.

Intelligence suggests that urban explorers are holding a discussion at the Sun Street squat.  This may lead to an increase in urban exploration activity at abandoned or high profile sites in the capital.

Suspected hostile reconnaissance should be reported to the City of London Police immediately.

Climate Justice Collective, 3 December
‘Stand Up for Climate Justice’ is holding a vigil on the bank of the Thames from 11.30pm to 1.00am Friday Night, as well as climate prayers at 11.30am Saturday morning at St. Mary Le Bow church, Cheapside.

Saturday continues with a ‘Walk of Shame’ past alleged environmental and economic justice offenders along with a ‘teach-out’. This meets at St Paul’s at 10.30am, and is followed by a march to Parliament, meeting at Blackfriars Bridge at 12.00pm. Around 2.30pm the march will congregate outside Parliament. The event is planned to finish around 3.30pm.

The Canary Wharf Experience, 6 December
Occupy London will meet at St Paul’s around 4.15opm, from which they will attend and ‘tour’ Canary Wharf.

Electrician’s Strike, 7 December
Electricians will be takingindustrial action at Balfour Beatty sites across the country.

SHAC ‘Santa SHAC Supplier Shakedown week of action’, 5-11 December
Stop Huntingdon Animal Cruelty has advertised a week of action between these dates. It is expected that SHAC protesters will visit the customary targets during the period.

Ensure that your own security arrangements are adequate and robust at all times. Report any suspicious activity to Police immediately.

Confidential Anti Terrorist Hotline: 0800 789 321 or dial 999

 

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UNCENSORED AND UNCUT – FEMEN Do you want me?

Creative idea explanation: The goal of the ‘Do you want me?’ project was to draw attention of the international web-community to a problem of sex-tourism in Ukraine, and to show that, as mentioned by Femin activists, ‘Ukraine is no brothel’.. Website do-you-want.me gives every user a chance to find himself in an urban den of inquity, pick a girl or a guy (tastes differ) for a paid ‘one time pleasure’. Before the erotic dance starts, the user must prove his solvency by activating the webcam and showing a banknote. Onlyafter the virtual character sees the money, will the story continue. Few will like the way the story goes – a trivial plot, so it seems… evolves into a naked truth(both literally and metaphorically) – we see how our paid sex-partner is being beaten up and addicted to drugs.

VERLEUMDUNGSKAMPAGNEN DER NEO-STAZI “GoMoPa” GEGEN JUSTIZSENATOR BRAUN, MINISTER STELTER UND MICH SOWIE WEITERE KOLLEGEN

Liebe Leser,

es ist offensichtlich, welches Spiel die NEO-STAZI “GoMoPa” spielt: Aus Angst davor, dass es Ihnen, die viel besser  organisiert sind und viel gefährlicher sind, als der “Nationalsozialistische Untergrund” endlich an den Kragen geht, starten sie die Verleumdungskampagnen gegen ihre Gegner, Justizsenator Braun, Ex-Minister Stelter und mich sowie weitere Kollegen.

Die Frechheit der anyomen Scheisshausfliegen ist dabei schon aberwitzig, vor allem da sie mittlerweile nicht mehr “anonym” sind.

Herzlichst Ihr

Bernd Pulch, Magister Artium der Publizistik, Germanistik und Komparatistik

TOP-SECRET – Detainee Provisions in the National Defense Authorization Bills

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Both House and Senate bills competing to become the National Defense Authorization Act for FY2012 contain a subtitle addressing issues related to detainees at the U.S. Naval Station at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and more broadly, hostilities against Al Qaeda and other entities. At the heart of both bills’ detainee provisions appears to be an effort to confirm or, as some observers view it, expand the detention authority that Congress implicitly granted the President via the Authorization for Use of Military Force (AUMF, P.L. 107-40) in the aftermath of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.

H.R. 1540, as passed by the House of Representatives on May 26, 2011, contains provisions that would reaffirm the conflict and define its scope; impose specific restrictions on the transfer of any non-citizen wartime detainee into the United States; place stringent conditions on the transfer or release of any Guantanamo detainee to a foreign country; and require that any foreign national who has engaged in an offense related to a terrorist attack be tried by military commission if jurisdiction exists.

Shortly before H.R. 1540 was approved by the House, the White House issued a statement regarding its provisions. While supportive of most aspects of the bill, it was highly critical of those provisions concerning detainee matters. The Administration voiced strong opposition to the House provision reaffirming the existence of the armed conflict with Al Qaeda and arguably redefining its scope. It threatened to veto any version of the bill that contains provisions that the Administration views as challenging critical executive branch authority, including restrictions on detainee transfers and measures affecting review procedures.

In June, the Senate Armed Services Committee reported its initial version of the bill, S. 1253. The bill included many provisions similar to the House bill, but also included a provision requiring the military detention of certain terrorist suspects. After the White House and the chairs of other Senate committees objected to some of the provisions, Senate Majority Leader Reid delayed consideration of S. 1253 pending a resolution of the disputed language. The Senate Armed Services Committee reported a second version of the authorization bill on November 15, 2011, addressing some, but not all of the concerns. The new bill, S. 1867, would authorize the detention
of certain categories of persons and require the military detention of a subset of them; regulate status determinations for persons held pursuant to the AUMF, regardless of location; regulate periodic review proceedings concerning the continued detention of Guantanamo detainees; and continue current funding restrictions that relate to Guantanamo detainee transfers to foreign countries. Unlike the House bill, the Senate bill would not bar the transfer of detainees into the United States for trial or perhaps for other purposes.

Despite the revisions to the detainee provisions, the Administration threatened to veto “any bill that challenges or constrains the President’s critical authorities to collect intelligence, incapacitate dangerous terrorists, and protect the Nation.”

This report offers a brief background of the salient issues raised by H.R. 1540 and S. 1867 regarding detention matters, provides a section-by-section analysis of the relevant subdivision of each bill, and compares the bills’ approaches with respect to the major issues they address.

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R41920

CONFIDENTIAL-Carrier IQ Cellular Phone Intelligence Software Training Materials

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The following presentation was included in a collection of materials related to Trevor Eckhart’s research into the “mobile service intelligence” software produced by Carrier IQ.  The document was specifically mentioned in a cease and desist order that the company sent to Eckhart demanding that he remove their “confidential training materials” and take down his analysis of the company’s software.  Though the company later withdrew the legal complaint, this presentation remains unavailable from its original location and is only available via a number of mirrors at file-hosting sites.  Cryptome is offering a full mirror of Eckhart’s research, which includes this presentation.

DOWNLOAD ORIGIAL DOCUMENT HERE

CarrierIQ-Training

VIDEO – CIA Archives: What Was the Katyn Massacre? (1973)

UNCENSORED AND UNCUT – FEMEN US

VERLEUMDUNGSKAMPAGNE DER FINGIERTEN STASI-“GoMoPa” GEGEN BERLINER JUSTIZMINISTER

Liebe Leser,

lesen Sie hier mehr über die STASI-“GoMoPa”, ihre Hintermänner, dubiosen Methoden und Ziele sowie Aktuelles zu dem Rufmord an dem Berliner Justizminister Braun.

http://www.victims-opfer.com/?p=24687

Diese Kampagne soll den Berliner Justiz-Minister Michael Braun an einem Vorgehen gegen “GoMoPa” und deren mutmassliche Hintermänner Resch, Maurischat, Bennewirtz, Ehlers & Co. hindern – nach dem alten STASI-Grundsatz “Rufmord ist die beste STASI-Verteidung”

Der CDU-Politiker wies die Vorwürfe zurück. ‘Ich habe als Notar nicht zu beurteilen, ob eine Immobilie werthaltig ist oder nicht’, sagte Braun. Er habe sich keine Verfehlung vorzuwerfen. ‘Das ist von einer Gruppe initiiert, die in engem Kontakt zur Stasi stand.”

Ich füge hinzu: “STEHT und genauso arbeitet !”

Herzlichst Ihr

Bernd Pulch, Magister Artium der Publizistik, Germanistik und Komparatistik

UNCENSORED – FEMEN against bribing of voters

VIDEO – Nazi Concentration and Prison Camps: WW2 Documentary Film (1945)

CONFIDENTIAL – El Dorado County Sheriff’s Department Use of Force Policy

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

EDCSD-Use_of_Force_Policy

VIDEO – Neo-Nazis Take Over German Village

FBI – Virginia Man Pleads Guilty to Providing Material Support to Terrorist Organization

ALEXANDRIA, VA—Jubair Ahmad, 24, a native of Pakistan and resident of Woodbridge, Va., pleaded guilty today to providing material support to Lashkar-e-Tayyiba (LeT), a designated foreign terrorist organization.

Neil H. MacBride, U.S. Attorney for the Eastern District of Virginia; Lisa Monaco, Assistant Attorney General for National Security; and James W. McJunkin, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Washington Field Office, made the announcement after the plea was accepted by U.S. District Judge T.S. Ellis III.

Ahmad faces a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison when he is sentenced on April 13, 2012.

“Foreign terrorist organizations such as LeT use the Internet as part of well-orchestrated propaganda campaigns to radicalize and recruit individuals to wage violent jihad and to promote the spread of terror,” said U.S. Attorney MacBride. “Today’s conviction of Jubair Ahmad demonstrates that we will aggressively investigate and prosecute anyone who provides material support to a terrorist organization in whatever form it takes.”

“This prosecution sheds light on some of the methods terrorist organizations employ to produce and publish their extremist propaganda,” said Assistant Attorney General Monaco. “Today, Jubair Ahmad is being held accountable for his role in providing this form of material support to Lashkar-e-Tayyiba.”

“By preparing and posting a graphic video that glorified violent extremism, Mr. Ahmad directly supported the mission of a designated terrorist organization,” said FBI Assistant Director in Charge McJunkin. “The FBI will track down and disrupt those who communicate with terrorist groups for the purpose of recruiting others to inflict harm on the U.S. and its interests overseas.”

LeT, or “Army of the Pure,” serves as the military arm of the political movement Markaz al-Dawa wal-Irshad in Pakistan. The mission of LeT is to conduct and promote violent jihad against those considered to be the enemies of Islam. On Dec. 24, 2001, the U.S. Department of State designated LeT as a foreign terrorist organization. The focus of LeT operations has been attacks on the neighboring country of India, in particular the disputed region of Kashmir between Pakistan and India.

According to a statement of facts filed with the plea agreement, Ahmad was born and raised in Pakistan and in 2007, after receiving a visa from the U.S. Department of State, Ahmad moved from Pakistan to the United States with his family.

Ahmad admitted today that in September 2010, while at his residence in Woodbridge, he engaged in a series of communications with an individual named Talha Saeed, who was in Pakistan. Talha Saeed is the son of Hafiz Muhammad Saeed, the leader of LeT. Talha Saeed requested Ahmad to prepare a video that would contain a prayer by Hafiz Saeed calling for the support of jihad and the mujahideen. In addition, Talha Saeed instructed Ahmad to present a variety of violent images on the video while Hafiz Saeed’s prayer is heard in the background.

Talha Saeed directed Ahmad to begin the LeT video with a number of pictures of Hafiz Saeed, then show scenes where atrocities have been inflicted on Muslims, followed by the activities of the mujahideen conducting attacks in Kashmir. At one point, Ahmad asked Talha Saeed if he wanted to include an image of the Mumbai attack to show the power of LeT. This is a reference to LeT’s operation against the city of Mumbai, India, on Nov. 26, 2008, which resulted in the death of over 160 people, including six Americans. Talha replied that he should not use anything referring to Mumbai.

Ahmad admitted that Talha Saeed told him to search for “Lashkar-e-Taiba” on YouTube to find additional images of mujahideen operations to include in the video. Talha Saeed further stated that the video will be popular in Pakistan and will run continuously on significant media programs and presentations.

On Sept. 25, 2010, Ahmad completed the LeT video and uploaded it to a YouTube account on the Internet. The next day, Ahmad sent a communication to another person overseas in which he explained that “Hafiz Saeed’s son Talha Saeed” had requested him to prepare the video. Forensic examination by the FBI subsequently confirmed that Ahmad had constructed the LeT video on his computer.

This case is being investigated by the FBI’s Washington Field Office. Assistant U.S. Attorney Stephen M. Campbell from the National Security and International Crimes Unit of the Eastern District of Virginia and Trial Attorney John T. Gibbs from the Counterterrorism Section of the National Security Division in the U.S. Department of Justice are prosecuting the case on behalf of the United States.

From the FBI – Ten Years Later: The Enron Case

Enron boxes in office suite
More than 3,000 boxes of evidence and more than four terabytes of digitized data were collected by agents in the weeks after Enron declared bankruptcy Dec. 2, 2001.

It was 10 years ago this month that the collapse of Enron precipitated what would become the most complex white-collar crime investigation in the FBI’s history.

Top officials at the Houston-based company cheated investors and enriched themselves through complex accounting gimmicks like overvaluing assets to boost cash flow and earnings statements, which made the company even more appealing to investors. When the company declared bankruptcy in December 2001, investors lost millions, prompting the FBI and other federal agencies to investigate.

The sheer magnitude of the case prompted creation of the multi-agency Enron Task Force, a unique blend of investigators and analysts from the FBI, the Internal Revenue Service-Criminal Investigation Division, the Securities and Exchange Commission, and prosecutors from the Department of Justice.

Agents conducted more than 1,800 interviews and collected more than 3,000 boxes of evidence and more than four terabytes of digitized data. More than $164 million was seized; to date about $90 million has been forfeited to help compensate victims. Twenty-two people have been convicted for their actions related to the fraud, including Enron’s chief executive officer, the president/chief operating officer, the chief financial officer, the chief accounting officer, and others.

“The Enron Task Force’s efforts resulted in the convictions of nearly all of Enron’s executive management team,” said Michael E. Anderson, assistant special agent in charge of the FBI’s Houston Division, who led the FBI’s Enron Task Force in Houston. “The task force represented a model task force—the participating agencies selflessly and effectively worked together in accomplishing significant results. The case demonstrated to Wall Street and the business community that they will be held accountable.”

CONFIDENTIAL-California Peace Officer Standards and Training Crowd Management and Civil Disobedience Guidelines

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Penal Code Section 13514.5 requires the Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training to establish guidelines and training for law enforcement’s response to crowd management and civil disobedience.

These guidelines contain information for law enforcement agencies to consider when addressing the broad range of issues related to crowd management and civil disobedience. The guidelines do not constitute a policy, nor are they intended to establish a standard for any agency. The Commission is sensitive to the needs for agencies to have individualized policies that reflect concern for local issues. The Commission intends these guidelines to be a resource for law enforcement executives that will provide maximum discretion and flexibility in the development of individual agency policies.

In the United States all people have the right of free speech and assembly guaranteed by the First Amendment of the Federal Constitution and California State Constitution. Law enforcement recognizes the right of free speech and actively protects people exercising that right.

The rights all people have to march, demonstrate, protest, rally, or perform other First Amendment activities comes with the responsibility to not abuse or violate the civil and property rights of others. The responsibility of law enforcement is to protect the lives and property of all people. Law enforcement should not be biased by the opinions being expressed nor by the race, gender, sexual orientation, physical disabilities, appearances, or affiliation of anyone exercising his/her lawful First Amendment rights. Law enforcement personnel must have the integrity to keep personal, political or religious views from affecting their actions.

When it becomes necessary to control the actions of a crowd that constitutes an unlawful assembly, the commitment and responsibility of law enforcement is to control lawfully, efficiently, and with minimal impact upon the community. A variety of techniques and tactics may be necessary to resolve a civil disobedience incident. Only that force which is objectively reasonable may be used to arrest violators and restore order.

All agencies should familiarize themselves with the terms, definitions, and guidelines set forth in this document. These are the generally accepted principles by which agencies respond to lawful and unlawful assemblies. The material in this document is designed to assist law enforcement executives in addressing the broad range of issues surrounding civil disobedience.

Guideline #9: Use of Force: Force Options

Agencies should develop use of force policies, procedures, and training for managing crowds and civil disobedience.

Discussion:

When dealing with crowds and civil disobedience situations, law enforcement must be a disciplined and well-organized control force. The decisions to use force and the force options that may be applied in response to these incidents range from law enforcement presence to deadly force. Peace officers need not use the least intrusive force option, but only that force which is objectively reasonable under the totality of the circumstances (Scott v. Henrich, 39 F. 3d 912, 9th Cir. 1994, and Forrester v. City of San Diego, 25 F. 3d 804 9th Cir. 1994). Graham v. Connor, 490 U.S. 386, 109 S. Ct. 1865, 104 L. Ed. 2d 443 (1989). The reasonableness of the force used to affect a particular seizure is analyzed under the Fourth Amendment and determined by balancing the nature and quality of the intrusion on the individual’s Fourth Amendment interests against the governmental interests at stake.

Prior to an event, agencies should continually review their use of force alternatives in response to potential actions by protesters. Training should reflect reasonable use of force alternatives in order that officers are prepared to consider the tactics/force options available. Chew v. Gates, 27 F. 3d 1432, 1443 (9th Cir. 1994).

* A Sampling of Use of Force Considerations:

  • Determine compliance or non-compliance of crowd
  • Physically moving non-compliant offenders
  • Anticipate possible actions of demonstrators
  • Identify criminal violations involved
  • Develop arrest protocol
  • Develop use of pain compliance protocol
  • Plan for disabled, elderly, and children demonstrators
  • Determine availability of personnel
  • Evaluate availability of other public safety resources
  • Include protection devices for involved personnel
  • Plan for the safety of bystanders
  • Evaluate mobility of suspects/protestors
  • Determine avenues of controlled departure
  • Anticipate potential for medical resources
  • Establish protocols for less lethal munitions

* A Sampling of Force Options:

  • Law enforcement presence
  • Verbalization
  • Firm grip
  • Compliance techniques
  • Control devices
  • Nonlethal chemical agents
  • Electrical control devices
  • Impact weapons/batons
  • Less lethal (i.e., sting balls, grenades, bean bags)
  • Deadly force

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

CA-Use_of_Force

UNCENSORED – NEW FEMEN VIDEO – Femen травили шкідливих комах на мітингу Фронту змін

CONFIDENTIAL-California Bluebook Law Enforcement Mutual Aid Plan

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As you read this, somewhere in California one law enforcement agency is providing mutual aid to another. Mutual aid is an everyday occurrence in a state as large and diverse as California. This is the continuation of the decades-long process of “neighbor helping neighbor.” The law enforcement mutual aid system is an ongoing cooperative effort among law enforcement agencies to ensure an effective and organized response to a wide range of emergencies. There is a misconception that mutual aid is something used only during a riot or disaster. The mutual aid system has been used successfully for many other situations, including large criminal investigations, deployment of special teams such as Special Weapons and Tactics Teams, Bomb Squads, etc.

How will your agency use the mutual aid system? Planning, preparation and operational activities of law enforcement agencies in support of the mutual aid system must be consistent with each department’s policies and procedures and must also comply with the Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS) and the National Incident Management System (NIMS).

All law enforcement executives, administrators, managers and field supervisors should familiarize themselves with this plan and its application. The personnel of the Cal EMA Law Enforcement Division are career peace officers and are available to assist you with planning, training and when necessary, emergency response coordination. It is important to note however, that Cal EMA does not “own” the mutual aid system. It is a part of California law enforcement, and those that participate each benefit – and bear part of the burden – of “neighbor helping neighbor.”

State of War Emergency

“State of War Emergency” means the condition which exists immediately, with or without a proclamation thereof by the Governor, whenever this state or nation is attacked by an enemy of the United States, or upon receipt by the state of a warning from the federal government indicating that such an enemy attack is probable or imminent. (Section 8558 (a) GC) During a state of war emergency, the Governor has complete authority over all agencies of state government and the right to exercise within the area or regions designated, all police power vested in the state by the Constitution and laws of the State of California (GC, Article 12, Section 8620 and Article 13, Section 8627, “California Emergency Services Act”). During a state of war emergency, mutual aid is mandatory. (Discussed later in the Plan.)

State of Emergency

“State of Emergency” means the duly proclaimed existence of conditions of disaster or of extreme peril to the safety of persons and property within the state caused by such conditions as air pollution, fire, flood, storm, epidemic, riot, drought, sudden and severe energy shortage, plant or animal infestation or disease, the Governor’s warning of an earthquake or volcanic prediction, or an earthquake, complications resulting from the Year 2000 Problem, or other conditions, other than conditions resulting from a labor controversy or conditions causing a “state of war emergency,” which, by reason of their magnitude, are or are likely to be beyond the control of the services, personnel, equipment, and facilities of any single county, city and county, or city and require the combined forces of a mutual aid region or regions to combat, or with respect to regulated energy utilities, a sudden and severe energy shortage requires extraordinary measures beyond the authority vested in the California Public Utilities Commission. (Section 8558 (b)(GC))

During a state of emergency, the Governor has complete authority over all agencies of state government and the right to exercise within the area or regions designated, all police power vested in the state by the Constitution and laws of the State of California (GC, Article 12, Section 8620 and Article 13, Section 8627, “California Emergency Services Act”). During a state of emergency, mutual aid is mandatory. (Discussed later in the Plan)

DOWNLOAD DOCUMENT HERE

CA-MutualAid

CONFIDENTIAL-California Redbook Law Enforcement Guide for Emergency Operations

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The California Emergency Management Agency’s original Law Enforcement Guide for Emergency Operations was developed in response to the need for standardization and uniformity of organization and response on the part of law enforcement agencies involved in major multi-jurisdictional and multi-agency incidents such as a civil disorder, technological disaster, or natural disaster.

The revised and expanded 2009 Law Enforcement Guide for Emergency Operations is designed to be a practical field-oriented guide to assist law enforcement personnel throughout the State of California with implementation of the Field Level Incident Command System. The intended primary users of this guide are watch commanders and field supervisors. The guide can also be an excellent emergency response tool for law enforcement managers, as well as line officers and deputies.

This updated edition incorporates the concept and statutory requirement of the Standardized Emergency Management System (SEMS). Additionally, the Law Enforcement Incident Command System (LEICS), as approved by the SEMS Law Enforcement Specialist Committee, is presented in this publication. Please disregard earlier editions of this guide. The Law Enforcement Guide for Emergency Operations is organized in a user-friendly format consisting of overview text, diagrams, organization charts, checklists, forms, and a glossary. Several sections are suitable for photocopying and distribution to field personnel. Our ultimate goal is to provide practical guidance for California law enforcement agencies in using the SEMS and LEICS organizational framework for efficient and safe response, management, and coordination of major emergencies and disasters.

 

DOWNLOAD ORGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

CA-EmergencyOps

UNCENSORED – FEMEN-protesters arrested – Kiev Euro 2012 stadium opening ceremony

Topless women were arrested at the opening ceremony for the Euro 2012 stadium in Kiev after they invaded the pitch as part of a feminist protest.

One woman had to be carried off the pitch by a steward, wearing only a pair of black leggings with two footballs painted over her breasts.

The Ukrainian activists, Femen – who have a history of getting their kit off to promote their causes – believe the tournament will increase sex tourism in their country.

Bare with me: A steward drags a topless activist off the pitch at the Euro 2012 opening ceremony in KievBare with me: A steward drags a topless activist off the pitch at the Euro 2012 opening ceremony in Kiev
Final whistle: Stewards carry the blonde protester out of the Olympiyskiy StadiumFinal whistle: Stewards carry the blonde protester out of the Olympiyskiy Stadium

The demonstrators said in a statement: ‘Femen demands that UEFA initiate an explanatory campaign for football fans about the impermissibility of sex tourism and funding the sex industry, and the Ukrainian authorities criminalise the visiting of prostitutes.’

Dressed for impact: A topless Ukrainian feminist is escorted away after her pitch invasionDressed for impact: A topless Ukrainian feminist is escorted away after her pitch invasion

It is believed that four women were arrested after police arrived at the Olympiisky National Sports Complex, which will host some games during next year’s tournament.

Their ‘Euro without prostitution’ protest followed a more modest performance by Colombian pop star Shakira and a whopping 2,000 other artists in front of 60,000 fans.

The group, many of whom are students, have previously stripped in front of Paris Hilton and at the Miss Ukraine beauty contest to show their belief that the beauty industry is a form of prostitution.

Femen also once organised mud wrestling competitions in the capital’s main square to protest against what they called the ‘dirty’ politics of president Viktor Yushchenkos.

Their actions are reminiscent of the controversial feminist ‘SlutWalks’, in which women dress provocatively for anti-rape demonstrations.

The reconstructed stadium’s opening ceremony came as teams from around Europe compete in qualifiers for the competition, which will take place in Ukraine and Poland.

Prostitution in Ukraine is illegal but reports say the country remains one of the main suppliers of prostitutes to Western Europe.

UEFA chief Michel Platini arrived last Monday for an inspection of the 70,000-seat building, and was at yesterday’s event alongside the Ukrainian president.

Mr Yanukovich said before the celebrations: ‘It’s a holiday for the whole of Ukraine.

‘The stadium’s successful renovation is undoubtedly an exhibition project for Ukraine’s image.’

But there was more embarrassment when fireworks set fire to some of the stage props, forcing the evacuation of the two central sectors.

v
j

Skilful moves: The sex tourism protesters gave stewards at the football stadium the runaround

Stadium staff hurried to put the flames out before spectators were allowed to return to their seats for the rest of the show.

Critics also claim the Olympiskiy’s estimated £300million reconstruction was overpriced and the costs were not transparent.

The first official football match at the new stadium is scheduled for November 11, when Ukraine will host Germany in a friendly match.

FEMEN-VIDEO -Roma Landyk – Go to Prison

TOP-SECRET-IMF Bermuda Anti-Money Laundering and Terrorist Financing Report

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This assessment of the anti-money laundering (AML) and combating the financing of terrorism (CFT) regime of Bermuda is based on the Forty Recommendations 2003 and the Nine Special Recommendations on Terrorist Financing 2001 of the Financial Action Task Force (FATF).  It was prepared using the AML/CFT assessment Methodology 2004, as updated in June 2006. The assessment team considered all the materials supplied by the authorities, the information obtained on-site during their mission from May 7 to 23, 2007, and other information subsequently provided by the authorities soon after the mission. During the mission, the assessment team met with officials and representatives of all relevant government agencies and the private sector. A list of the bodies met is set out in Annex 1 to the detailed assessment report.

The assessment was conducted by a team of assessors composed of staff of the International
Monetary Fund (IMF) and three expert(s) acting under the supervision of the IMF. The evaluation
team consisted of: Manuel Vasquez (LEG, team leader and financial sector expert); Antonio
Hyman-Bouchereau (LEG, legal expert); Ross Delston (legal expert under LEG supervision,
lawyer); and John Abbott (expert under LEG supervision, Designated Non-Financial Businesses
and Professions) (DNFBP). The assessors reviewed the institutional framework, the relevant
AML/CFT laws, regulations, guidelines and other requirements. The mission also reviewed the
regulatory and other institutional systems in place to counter money laundering (ML) and the
financing of terrorism (FT) through financial institutions (FIs) and DNFBP. The assessors also
examined the capacity, implementation, and effectiveness of all these systems.

This report provides a summary of the AML/CFT measures in place in Bermuda at the time
of the mission and shortly thereafter. It describes and analyzes those measures, sets out Bermuda’s
levels of compliance with the FATF 40+9 Recommendations (see Table 1) and provides
recommendations on how certain aspects of the system could be strengthened (see Table 2). The
report was produced by the IMF as part of the assessment of Bermuda under the Offshore Financial
Center Assessment Program (OFC). It was presented to the Caribbean Financial Action Task Force
(CFATF) and endorsed by this organization at ministerial meeting in November, 2007.

Preventive Measures–—Financial Institutions

9. The scope of the AML regulatory framework does not address CFT issues, and does
not cover key areas of the financial sector, including life insurance business and certain
elements of the investment/mutual funds sector. The lack of coverage in these areas constitutes
an important deficiency in Bermuda’s AML/CFT regime, particularly in light of its role in the
international financial system, even though life insurance does not account for the largest share of
this sector. The POC Regulations and GNs remain practically unchanged since the last IMF
assessment mission in 2003; this in spite of the weaknesses previously identified, a major upgrade of the international AML/CFT standards in 2003, and continued growth in the financial services
industry. At the time of the mission, the authorities had prepared draft new Regulations and were
contemplating amending the GNs, pending passage of proposed new legislation that was passed
subsequent to the mission in June 2007.

….

3.4 Financial institution secrecy or confidentiality (R.4)

3.4.1 Description and Analysis

Legal Framework:

337. Inhibition of Implementation of FATF Recommendations (c. 4.1): Bermuda has no general statutory law on secrecy other than with respect to the regulatory laws discussed below and the common law
principles of confidentiality that apply to the customers of banks and other FIs. The authorities have cited the leading precedent on confidentiality, an English Court of Appeal case, Tournier v. National Provincial and Union Bank of England [1924] 1KB461 which, according to a leading text on the issue, held that – “. . . a bank owes to its customer an implied contractual duty to keep his affairs secret, but that the duty is qualified. The duty arises at the commencement of the relationship and continues after the customer has closed his account in relation to information gained during the period of the account. It covers information about the customer’s affairs gained by virtue of the banking relationship and is not limited to information from or about the account itself.”

R. G. Toulson and C. M. Phipps, Confidentiality, 2nd ed. (Sweet & Maxwell, 2006), p. 257.

338. There are four qualifications, or exceptions to this duty:

(a) Where disclosure is under compulsion by law; (b) where there is a duty to the public to disclose; (c) where the interests of the bank require disclosure; (d) where the disclosure is made by the express
or implied consent of the customer.

Tournier, at 471-472 and 473, cited in Toulson and Phipps, p. 258.

339. According to the authorities, Bermudian case law has followed this precedent, one example being Brian Lines v. Lines Overseas Management Ltd. [2006] Bda LR 43, 236, at 242.

340. The exception relating to disclosure under compulsion by law is embodied in a number of places in Bermudian statutory law. All of the five regulatory laws (the only exception being the MSB Regulations)
provide for confidentiality of information with gateways to the authorities. The Banks and Deposit Companies Act 1999 is typical: Section 52(1) provides that “no person who under or for the purposes of this Act receives information relating to the business or other affairs of any person; and . . . no person who obtains such information directly or indirectly from a person who has received it as aforesaid, shall disclose the information without the consent of the person to whom it relates and (if different) the person from whom it was received as aforesaid.” Disclosure of information in contravention of the statute is a criminal offense with penalties of up to $100,000 and five years imprisonment or both, under Section 52(3). Subsequent sections have a series of gateways allowing disclosure of information to the BMA, the Minister of Finance, the DPP and police, as well as disclosures by them to foreign authorities. See Sections 53 – 55. See also Sections 52, 52A, 52B, 52C of the Insurance Act 1978, Sections 78 – 81 of the Investment Business Act 2003, Sections 68 – 71 of the Investment Funds Act 2006, and Sections 48 – 51 of the Trusts (Regulation of Trust Business) Act 2003.

341. However, there is no explicit gateway in any of these laws for disclosures to the FIA, since it was not in existence at the time those laws were enacted and therefore consideration should be given to remedying this deficiency by amending relevant laws.

352. Obtain Originator Information for Wire Transfers (applying c. 5.2 & 5.3 in R.5, c.VII.1):

Customer identification for one-off transactions below the equivalent of US$10,000 (BD$10,000) are not covered by CDD (identification) requirements in the regulations or otherwise. Consequently, wire transfers between the equivalent of US$1,000 and US$9,999 are not subject to customer identification requirements and hence FIs are not required to obtain and maintain full originator information. For wire transactions above US$10,000, the non-mandatory Guidance Notes (G94 to G98) set out the type of detail records that should be maintained to identify a customer, but do not specify such details to include account numbers, address or other substitute information as allowed for by SRVII. G98 only states that FIs should retain records of electronic payments with “sufficient detail” to enable them to establish the identity of the remitting customer and as far as
possible the identity of the ultimate recipient. While not specific to wire transfers, such detail may be available
in the Guidance Notes under Methods of Verification (G56 to G70) which include address, date of birth and
other information. In discussions with banks, there appears to be no restrictions in law or practice on the
inclusion of names and account numbers in outgoing wire transfers.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL REPORT HERE

Bermuda_3rd_Round_MER_(Final)_English

CBS – The murder of an American Nazi

Lesley Stahl reports on the murder of a neo-Nazi leader – killed by his 10-year-old son – and captures a growing subculture of hate playing out in America’s backyards and alongside the border.

VICTIMS: STASI”GoMoPa” and Neo-Nazi Murder Gang Linked To German Intelligence

TOP-SECRET-United Kingdom “Contest” Strategy for Countering Terrorism 2011

1.1 This is the third published version of the United Kingdom’s counter-terrorism strategy, CONTEST. This new strategy reflects the changing terrorist threat and incorporates new Government policies on counter-terrorism.

1.2 The aim of CONTEST is to reduce the risk to the UK and its interests overseas from terrorism, so that people can go about their lives freely and with confidence.

Strategic context

1.3 Last year, over 10,000 people were killed by terrorists around the world. But international law enforcement and military collaboration are changing the threats we face.

1.4 The leadership of Al Qa’ida is now weaker than at any time since 9/11. It has played no role in recent political change in North Africa and the Middle East. Its ideology has been widely discredited and it has failed in all its objectives. Continued international pressure can further reduce its capability. But Al Qa’ida continues to pose a threat to our own security; and groups affiliated to Al Qa’ida – notably in Yemen and Somalia – have emerged over the past two years to be a substantial threat in their own right.

1.5 Al Qa’ida is responsible for only a small fraction of terrorist attacks. Other groups, independent from Al Qa’ida but broadly sympathetic to its aims, continue to emerge and to conduct attacks around the world.

1.6 We judge that four factors will continue to enable terrorist groups to grow and to survive: conflict and instability; aspects of modern technology; a pervasive ideology; and radicalisation.

1.7 The threats we face here reflect global trends. Al Qa’ida, groups affiliated to Al Qa’ida, other terrorist groups and lone terrorists have all tried to operate in this country. Some have planned attacks here which we have disrupted. Others have recruited people for attacks overseas, spread propaganda and raised funds.

1.8 The threat level in the UK from international terrorism has been SEVERE for much of the period, meaning that we judge a terrorist attack in the UK to be ‘highly likely’. Threat levels continue to be set independently by JTAC.

1.9 For much of this period the greatest threat to the UK has come from terrorist groups based in Pakistan. British nationals (amongst hundreds of other Europeans) are training or operating in Pakistan and some intend to travel to Afghanistan. But over the past 12 months, the threat to UK interests from terrorists in Yemen and Somalia has significantly increased. People from the UK are also travelling to these countries to engage in terrorist related activity; some are returning to the UK to plan and conduct terrorist operations.

1.10 Over the past two years the threat from Northern Ireland Related Terrorism (NIRT) has also grown: there were 40 terrorist attacks in Northern Ireland in 2010 and there have been 16 terrorist attacks in Northern Ireland up to 30 June 2011.1 The threat from NIRT to Great Britain has increased.

1.11 Between January 2009 and December 2010 over 600 people were arrested for terrorist related activity in the UK. This is more than in any other European country. 67 people have been prosecuted and 58 people convicted for terrorist related offences.

Our response

1.12 Our counter-terrorism strategy will continue to be organised around four workstreams, each comprising a number of key objectives
• Pursue: to stop terrorist attacks;
• Prevent: to stop people becoming terrorists or supporting terrorism;
• Protect: to strengthen our protection against a terrorist attack; and
• Prepare: to mitigate the impact of a terrorist attack.

1.13 The Strategic Defence and Security Review (SDSR) emphasises the need to tackle the root causes of instability. This approach is reflected in contest. For terrorism we need to address not only the immediate threat of attacks but the longer term factors which enable terrorist groups to grow and flourish. Some of these factors cannot be addressed within a counter-terrorism strategy and are much wider Government priorities. Coordination between CONTEST and other government programmes is essential. Working closely with other countries will remain a priority.

1.14 CONTEST will reflect our fundamental values and, in particular, our commitment not only to protect the people of this country and our interests overseas but to do so in a way that is consistent with and indeed advances our commitment to human rights and the rule of law. Our strategy will be proportionate to the risks we face and only engage in activity which is necessary to address those risks. It will be transparent: wherever possible and consistent with national security we will seek to make more information available in order to help the public to hold the Government to account over its policy and spending decisions.

1.15 We recognise that success has been achieved through international collaboration. That will continue to be the case in future.

Pursue

1.16 The purpose of Pursue is to stop terrorist attacks in this country and against our interests overseas. This means detecting and investigating threats at the earliest possible stage, disrupting terrorist activity before it can endanger the public and, wherever possible, prosecuting those responsible.

1.17 In 2011-2015 we want to:

• Continue to assess our counter-terrorism powers and ensure they are both effective and proportionate;
• Improve our ability to prosecute and deport people for terrorist-related offences;
• Increase our capabilities to detect, investigate and disrupt terrorist threats;
• Ensure that judicial proceedings in this country can better handle sensitive and secret material to serve the interests of both justice and national security; and
• Work with other countries and multilateral organisations to enable us to better tackle the threats we face at their source.

2.48 Terrorists continue to use new technologies to communicate propaganda. While radicalisation continues to primarily be a social process involving contact between vulnerable people and radicalisers (not least because internet penetration in many countries with a high incidence of terrorism is still low) – the internet provides radicalisers with a vast range of materials to use once the process of radicalisation has begun. It allows for secure communication between private communities in which extremist ideas are shared and become normalised within that community. The internet also extends the reach of ideologues overseas, enabling them to preach to groups and reinforce messages of violence.

2.49 Use of social networking sites and video sharing is now commonplace. There have been a number of attempts by terrorist and extremist groups to ‘invade’ Facebook. Twitter will be used to repost media or forum articles enabling extremist content to be shared more quickly, widely and amongst people who would not normally search for extremist content. Estimates of the number of terrorism-related websites, made by experts in the field, range from several hundred to several thousand. It is clear that a few dozen are highly influential and frequented by terrorists.

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UK-CT-Contest

TOP-SECRET-Israel’s Dubai Assassination in Photos

A man identified by police as Evan Dennings of Ireland is seen in this handout released February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
A woman identified by police as Gail Folliard of Ireland is seen in this handout released to Reuters Dubai February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
A man identified by police as James Leonard Clarke of the United Kingdom is seen in this handout released February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
A man identified by police as Melvyn Adam Mildiner of the United Kingdom is seen in this handout released to Reuters Dubai February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
A man identified by police as Kevin Daveron of Ireland is seen in this handout released to Reuters Dubai February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
A man identified by police as Jonathan Louis Graham of the United Kingdom is seen in this handout released to Reuters Dubai February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
This undated photo released by the Dubai Ruler’s Media Office on Monday, Feb. 15, 2010, is claimed by Dubai’s Police Chief to show a man named Peter Elvinger of French nationality, who the Dubai Police Chief identified as one of eleven suspects wanted in connection with the killing of a Hamas commander, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in his Dubai hotel room last month. (AP Photo/Dubai Ruler’s Media Office)
This undated photo released by the Dubai Ruler’s Media Office on Monday, Feb. 15, 2010, is claimed by Dubai’s Police Chief to show a man named Michael Bodenheimer of German nationality, who the Dubai Police Chief identified as one of eleven suspects wanted in connection with the killing of a Hamas commander, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in his Dubai hotel room last month. (AP Photo/Dubai Ruler’s Media Office)
This undated photo released by the Dubai Ruler’s Media Office on Monday, Feb. 15, 2010, is claimed by Dubai’s Police Chief to show a man named Michael Lawrence Barney of British nationality, who the Dubai Police Chief identified as one of eleven suspects wanted in connection with the killing of a Hamas commander, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in his Dubai hotel room last month. (AP Photo/Dubai Ruler’s Media Office)
A man identified by police as Stephen Daniel Hodes of the United Kingdom is seen in this handout released to Reuters Dubai February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, a senior Hamas military commander, is seen in this undated handout image. Israel has assassinated Mabhouh, in Dubai on Jan. 20, who played a major role in a Palestinian uprising in the 1980s, an official in the Islamist group said on January 29, 2010. Israeli officials had no immediate comment. REUTERS/Handout
Palestinian Hamas militants participate a rally for the memory of Hamas commander Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, seen in the portrait, in town of Beit Lahiya, northern Gaza Strip, Wednesday, Feb. 17, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said Wednesday there was no reason to assume the Mossad assassinated Mahmoud al-Mabhouh in Dubai, even as suspicions mounted that the country’s vaunted spy agency made the hit using the identities of Israelis with European passports. (AP Photo/Khalil Hamra)
The mother of Palestinian militant Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, who was recently killed, holds up a photo of him at their home in the Jebaliya refugee camp, northern Gaza Strip, Friday, Jan. 29, 2010. Hamas claimed on Friday that Israeli agents assassinated one of the Palestinian militant group’s veteran operatives in a killing allegedly carried out last week in Dubai, and vowed to retaliate. (AP Photo/Hatem Moussa)
Father of senior Hamas military commander Mahmoud al-Mabhouh poses with his son’s picture at his family house in the northern Gaza Strip January 29, 2010. Israel assassinated al-Mabhouh, who played a major role in a Palestinian uprising in the 1980s, in Dubai, an official in the Islamist group said on Friday. Israeli officials had no immediate comment. REUTERS/Mohammed Salem
Three suspects in the killing of Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh are shown in this CCTV handout from Dubai police February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. Handout dated February 15, 2010. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout
Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh (ringed), is shown arriving at his hotel in this CCTV handout from Dubai police February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match. Handout dated February 15, 2010. REUTERS/Dubai Police/Handout

Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh (bottom), is shown being followed by his alleged killers in this CCTV handout from Dubai police February 15, 2010. Israel’s foreign minister said on Wednesday the use of the identities of foreign-born Israelis by a hit squad suspected of killing Hamas militant, Mahmoud al-Mabhouh, in Dubai did not prove the Mossad spy agency assassinated him. Men with the same names as seven of the 11 suspects whose European passport photos were distributed by Dubai live in Israel, and those reached by reporters insisted their identities had been stolen and noted the pictures were not a match.

TOP-SECRET – Mossad Dubai Assassins Travel Routes Maps

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https://publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2010/03/dubaimossad1-1024x686.png

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dubaimossadroutes2

UNCENSORED – FEMEN: Акция “Изыди”

TOP-SECRET – IMF Report on Switzerland Fiscal Transparency

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I. INTRODUCTION

1. This report provides an assessment of the fiscal transparency practices of Switzerland against the requirements of the IMF Code of Good Practices on Fiscal Transparency (2007). The first part is a description of practices, prepared by IMF staff on the basis of discussions with the authorities and their responses to the fiscal transparency questionnaire, and drawing on other available information. The second part is an IMF staff commentary on fiscal transparency in Switzerland. The two appendices summarize the staff’s assessments, comment on the observance of good practices, and document the public availability of information.

2. This assessment focuses primarily on fiscal transparency at the central
government (confederation) level. Given the unique character of political economy and
fiscal federalism in Switzerland, and that less than a third of general government expenditure
or revenue is accounted for by the confederation, this does not give a complete picture.
Cantons are responsible for important areas of economic and social policy, and have a strong
influence on the composition and impact of public spending, and the overall stance of fiscal
policy. Further work would be needed to prepare a comprehensive assessment of fiscal
transparency and fiscal risk covering the whole of general government.

II. DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF PRACTICE

A. Clarity of Roles and Responsibilities

Definition of government activities

3. General government is defined consistently with Government Finance Statistics
(GFS) principles and is well covered in the budget process. 1.1.1
General government is defined in accordance with the principles of the Government Finance
Statistics Manual (GFSM 2001) and comprises four main sectors (Box 1): The federal
government comprises seven departments and related offices, the federal chancellery, and
four special funds. The special funds cover (i) railway projects; (ii) infrastructure;
(iii) technical universities; and (iv) the alcohol board. There are 26 cantonal governments.
The cantons are sovereign states with considerable autonomy. There are 2715 communes,
which likewise have considerable autonomy. The four social security institutions cover
(i) old age and survivors protection schemes; (ii) the disability protection scheme;
(iii) income compensation allowances in case of mandatory service and maternity; and
(iv) unemployment insurance. These schemes operate essentially on a pay-as-you-go basis.

swiss

Box 2. The SNB’s Support for UBS as a Quasi-Fiscal Activity

The SNB has justified its recent support of UBS in relation to its role as lender-of-the-last resort. This explanation rests on three considerations, namely: that UBS is a systemically important institution; could provide sufficient collateral; and was solvent. On the last point, the SNB obtained advice from the Federal Banking Commission that UBS was solvent, enabling it to provide emergency support. It did so by funding 90 percent of the purchase price of distressed assets to the value of US$60 billion.1 These assets were valued by external assessors, and transferred to a Special Purpose Vehicle (SPV) under the SNB’s control. To reduce the risks of not fully recovering the funds of the SPV, the SNB has set up several safeguards against potential losses. UBS’ equity contribution to the stabilization fund, amounting to 10 percent of the assets purchased, serves as the primary loss protection. In the case of a loss on the SNB loan, the SNB’s warrant for 100 million UBS shares serves as secondary loss protection. This transaction should be classified as a QFA given the risk that the SNB may fail to recover all of its investment. In this case, the profits of the SNB distributed to the federal government would be lower, with a negative impact on the budget.
________________________
1/ On February 10, 2009, it was announced that the stabilization fund would acquire UBS assets for a lower
maximum amount than originally planned (approximately US$ 40 billion).

68. There are some areas, however, where the authorities could consider taking
further measures, in consultation with parliament where appropriate, to enhance fiscal
transparency and the presentation and management of fiscal risks. These are summarized
below.

Disclosure of additional fiscal information by the federal government

69. Support provided by the federal government and the SNB to UBS and other
financial institutions affected by the global crisis is reported in, respectively, the
confederation’s and the SNB’s financial statements, supplemented by quarterly updates
by the SNB. However, in order to provide a comprehensive assessment, the federal
government should consider publishing in its financial statements information on the SNB’s
support operations alongside the report of its own activities.

70. The government should publish its findings on tax expenditures and regularly
update them. Tax expenditures do not need to be appropriated each year, thereby escaping
scrutiny and the need to compete with other fiscal priorities in the budget process. Over time,
tax expenditures can result in insidious erosion of the tax base. The volume of tax
expenditures is significant, as a recent study by the FTA indicates. The government is aware
of the importance of keeping tax expenditures in check. It could consider publishing an
annual tax expenditure statement with the annual budget.36

71. The government should make an effort to disclose information on specific fiscal
risks, including contingent liabilities and QFAs, with the budget, in line with the IMF’s
Guidelines for Fiscal Risk Disclosure and Management, and eventually publish a single
statement of fiscal risks.37 In particular, the universal services provided by Swiss Post, Swiss
Rail, and others are partly financed through cross-subsidies, which represent a form of
interpersonal redistribution, and taxes and transfer payments from the budget are considered
more desirable to support such activities from a transparency perspective. QFAs are
disclosed only to a very limited extent.

72. The Social Security Funds should be clearly distinguished. Apart from the
unemployment insurance scheme, the other three funds are jointly operated. The old age and
disability pension funds are cross-financing each other, with the first fund running persistent
surpluses that are used to finance the deficits of the second. Clearly, separating the three
funds would make the financial health of each of them more transparent and facilitate the
necessary policy discussion about the sustainability of current policies. Parliament has
already passed a bill to separate the old-age and disability pension funds into two separate
funds. A referendum on the issue will be held in September 2009. In addition, an overview of
the finances of the social security sector and its relationship with the budget in the short to
medium term, in the context of an assessment of long-term fiscal sustainability, should be
included in the budget documents. More forward-looking information on the finances of the special funds would also be useful. Together, these measures would provide a better basis for
assessing the sustainability of current fiscal policy.

73. More information should be published on the sensitivity of the budget to changes
in macroeconomic variables and an alternative macroeconomic and fiscal scenario,
building on the useful analysis already published by the government. This would provide
a better basis for assessing the uncertainties surrounding the budget.38 In addition, the federal
government could consider extending and formalizing the process of external review of
macroeconomic forecasts and assessments of economic developments.

74. An overview of the finances of public corporations could also be provided in the
budget. Some corporations receive significant funding from the budget, and others conduct
QFAs, making it important to consider their financial position and profitability in the context
of fiscal policy.

75. Additional information should be reported on public debt management, namely,
the debt management strategy and performance against it, and the impact of parameter
changes on debt-servicing costs.

76. A summary statement of all new policy measures that are reflected in the budget
proposals, with an estimate of their fiscal impact, should be published, to supplement the
summary data on expenditure by tasks already provided in Volume 3 of the budget
documents.

77. Each federal government department should be encouraged to publish an
annual report that summarizes relevant information concerning their goals and objectives,
strategic priorities, operational risks, financial results, and nonfinancial performance. This
would be in line with practice in many OECD countries.

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sm09164

INISDE VIEW – FBI’s Largest Division Provides Information to Protect the Nation

 

CJIS building
The FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division, or CJIS, is located in West Virginia.

A Year of Records for CJIS
Part 1: FBI’s Largest Division Provides Information to Protect the Nation

 

 

The FBI’s Criminal Justice Information Services Division—better known as CJIS—provides critical information to help our partners fight crime and protect the nation. Whether it’s answering a patrolman’s request for a subject’s criminal record during a traffic stop, verifying that a potential gun buyer is not a felon, or ensuring that a local municipality is not hiring a teacher who is a registered sex offender, CJIS receives millions of electronic requests every day for criminal information records and returns responses with amazing speed and accuracy.

 

David Cuthbertson
David Cuthbertson,
assistant director of CJIS.

FBI.gov recently spoke with Special Agent David Cuthbertson, the newly appointed assistant director of CJIS, about the division’s accomplishments in 2011 and what to expect from the FBI’s largest division in the future.

 

Q: CJIS has been described as a lifeline to law enforcement. What are some of the division’s main programs?

 

Cuthbertson: The term “lifeline” aptly describes what we do day in and day out at CJIS. Our main programs include NCIC—the National Crime Information Center—and the Interstate Identification Index, which is the nation’s criminal history repository. NCIC is searched by law enforcement nearly 8 million times every day. And those requests—related to stolen property and information on wanted, missing, and unidentified persons—are returned to officers on the street within fractions of a second. NICS—the National Instant Criminal Background Check System—helps keep guns out of felons’ hands. In the last fiscal year, NICS conducted more than 15.9 million background checks in accordance with federal law, and more than 76,000 gun transfers were denied based on buyers’ criminal records. Our Law Enforcement National Data Exchange—N-DEx—provides a secure, online national information-sharing system for records related to bookings, arrests, probation, and parole report data. More than 4,100 agencies contribute to N-DEx, and the system has more than 124 million searchable records. And, of course, CJIS maintains the largest collection of fingerprint records in the world. During the last fiscal year, the Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System—IAFIS—identified more than 307,000 fugitives. These programs are only part of the important work we do at CJIS. Our recently released annual report highlights other programs and many of our record-setting accomplishments.

 

Q: Does CJIS share information with partners outside of law enforcement?

 

Cuthbertson: Absolutely. We provide information to the U.S. intelligence community for national security matters, and our data is also relied upon for civil uses such as criminal checks for employment and licensing. Teachers and school bus drivers, for example, are subject to background checks as required by state law, and CJIS systems provide that information to authorized users.

 

Q: Given the vast number of records in CJIS databases, how do you safeguard Americans’ privacy and civil liberties?

 

Cuthbertson: We balance civil liberties with everything we do. It’s important to remember that we only retain information related to a person’s criminal history based on lawful contacts with law enforcement. We don’t retain files on employment checks, for instance. By law, even gun background checks that come to us through NICS are destroyed every night—unless the purchase was lawfully denied. There are many similar protections in place to protect the privacy of American citizens.

 

Next: Biometrics and continued growth.

CONFIDENTIAL – Money Laundering Banks Fuel Mexican Drug Cartels

Bank notes part of a seizure of more than 15 million US dolars during a presentation to the press on November 22, 2011 in Mexico City. The money was sized to alleged members of the Guzman Loera drug cartel, led byf Joaquin “El Chapo Guzman”, during the regional “Operation Fox” in Tijuana last November 18. AFP PHOTO/ Yuri CORTEZ

International banks have aided Mexican drug gangs (Los Angeles Times):

Money launderers for ruthless Mexican drug gangs have long had a formidable ally: international banks.

Despite strict rules set by international regulatory bodies that require banks to “know their customer,” make inquiries about the source of large deposits of cash and report suspicious activity, they have failed to do so in a number of high-profile cases and instead have allowed billions in dirty money to be laundered.

And those who want to stop cartels from easily moving their money express concern that banks that are caught get off with a slap on the wrist.

Banking powerhouse Wachovia Corp. last year agreed to pay $160 million in forfeitures and fines after U.S. federal prosecutors accused it of “willfully” overlooking the suspicious character of more than $420 billion in transactions between the bank and Mexican currency-exchange houses — much of it probably drug money, investigators say.

Federal prosecutors said Wachovia failed to detect and report numerous operations that should have raised red flags, and continued to work with the exchange houses long after other banks stopped doing so because of the “high risk” that it was a money-laundering operation.

Wachovia was moving money on behalf of the exchange houses through wire transfers, traveler’s checks, even large hauls of bulk cash, investigators said. Some of the money was eventually traced to the purchase of small airplanes used to smuggle cocaine from South America to Mexico, they said.

“Wachovia’s blatant disregard for our banking laws gave international cocaine cartels a virtual carte blanche to finance their operations,” U.S. Atty. Jeffrey H. Sloman said in announcing the case last year, hailed at the time by authorities as one of the most significant in stopping dirty money from contaminating the U.S. financial system.

Mexico seeks to fill drug war gap with focus on dirty money

Tainted drug money runs like whispered rumors all over Mexico’s economy — in gleaming high-rises in beach resorts such as Cancun, in bustling casinos in Monterrey, in skyscrapers and restaurants in Mexico City that sit empty for months. It seeps into the construction sector, the night-life industry, even political campaigns.Piles of greenbacks, enough to fill dump trucks, are transformed into gold watches, showrooms full of Hummers, aviation schools, yachts, thoroughbred horses and warehouses full of imported fabric.

Officials here say the tide of laundered money could reach as high as $50 billion, a staggering sum equal to about 3% of Mexico’s legitimate economy, or more than all its oil exports or spending on prime social programs.

Mexican leaders often trumpet their deadly crackdown against drug traffickers as an all-out battle involving tens of thousands of troops and police, high-profile arrests and record-setting narcotics seizures. The 5-year-old offensive, however, has done little to attack a chief source of the cartels’ might: their money.

Even President Felipe Calderon, who sent the army into the streets to chase traffickers after taking office in 2006, an offensive that has seen 43,000 people die since, concedes that Mexico has fallen short in attacking the financial strength of organized crime.

“Without question, we have been at fault,” Calderon said during a meeting last month with drug-war victims. “The truth is that the existing structures for detecting money-laundering were simply overwhelmed by reality.”

Experts say the unchecked flow of dirty money feeds a widening range of criminal activity as cartels branch into other enterprises, such as producing and trading in pirated merchandise.

UNCENSORED – FEMEN vs UEFA EURO 2012

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

FEMEN activists take off clothing, so they can begin their protest.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Topless FEMEN activists hold signs with football balls hanging from their underwear.

Arrests begin.

Arrests begin.

Topless FEMEN activists are arrested and placed in police vehicles.

Topless FEMEN activists are arrested and placed in police vehicles.

Topless FEMEN activists are arrested and placed in police vehicles.

SECRET-DHS Wants to Create a “Federated Information Sharing System”

To understand the extent of the Federated Information Sharing System proposal, see our overview of just one of the databases maintained by a DHS component agency: Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s ICEPIC system which contains over 332,000,000 records on more than 254,000,000 entities as of early 2011.

The Department Of Homeland Security Wants All The Information It Has On You Accessible From One Place (Forbes):

Information sharing (or lack thereof) between intelligence agencies has been a sensitive topic in the U.S. After 9/11, there was a push to create fusion centers so that local, state, and federal agencies could share intelligence, allowing the FBI, for example, to see if the local police have anything in their files on a particular individual. Now the Department of Homeland Security wants to create its own internal fusion center so that its many agencies can aggregate the data they have and make it searchable from a central location. The DHS is calling it a “Federated Information Sharing System” and asked its privacy advisory committee to weigh in on the repercussions at a public meeting in D.C. last month.

The committee, consisting of an unpaid group of people from the world of corporate privacy as well as the civil liberty community, were asked last December to review the plan and provide feedback on which privacy protections need to be put in place when info from DHS components (which include the TSA, the Secret Service, and Immigration Services, to name a few) are consolidated. The committee raised concerns about who would get access to the data given the potentially comprehensive profile this would provide of American citizens.

Oversharing Is Never a Good Thing, Especially When it’s With DHS (ACLU):

Sometimes sharing is bad. Don’t worry. We don’t plan to rush into kindergartens across America and break the news to all the 5-year-olds, but it’s true. Especially when it comes to national security and your privacy, it may be necessary to collect and use certain information, but wrong to share it. When a federal government advisory committee recently revealed that the Department of Homeland Security (which contains both the Secret Service and the TSA) is in the “process of creating a policy framework and technology architecture for enhancing DHS’s information-sharing capabilities,” it immediately raised these types of concerns and today we sent a letter to DHS outlining those concerns.

At this point details are very scarce. But we do know DHS’s 230,000 employees collect enormous amounts of information every day. A small sampling includes:

  • benefit information from the Federal Emergency Management Agency,
  • traveler information from Customs and Border Patrol and TSA,
  • work history from the E-Verify program,
  • permit and payment information from the Coast Guard,
  • naturalization records from the Citizenship and Immigration Service, and
  • personal information like social security number, date of birth and email address from a wide variety of sources.

Privacy Office – DHS Data Privacy and Integrity Advisory Committee Membership (dhs.gov):

Chairman: Richard V. Purcell,Chief Executive Officer, Corporate Privacy Group, Nordland, Wash. Mr. Purcell runs an independent privacy consulting group, focusing on policies, practices, and education. He is currently Chairman of TRUSTe and was formally the Chief Privacy Officer for the Microsoft Corporation.

Ana I. Anton, Professor of Computer Science at North Carolina State University, Raleigh, N.C. Dr. Anton is a distinguished research professor in the software engineering field and is the Director of privacy research team that is partially funded by the National Science Fund comprised of researchers at three universities. She has extensive professional expertise with research concerning privacy and security.

Ramon Barquin, President, Barquin International, Washington, D.C. Dr. Barquin has extensive technical and policy experience in data mining, system interoperability, and computer ethics. He worked at IBM for many years in both management and technical assignments prior to starting his own business developing information system strategies for public and private sector enterprises.

J. Howard Beales III, Associate Professor of Strategic Management and Public Policy, The George Washington University, Arlington, Va. Mr. Beales recently stepped down from his position as Director of Consumer Protection at the Federal Trade Commission, where privacy was a key initiative during his tenure.

Renard Francois, Attorney, Data Protection and Policy, Caterpillar, Inc., Peoria, Ill. Mr. Francois is in the firm’s Regulatory-Data Privacy, Legal Services Division where he works on privacy investigations. Prior to joining Caterpillar Inc., he was an attorney at Bass, Berry & Sims in Nashville, Tenn., where he worked in the firm’s Litigation Department on corporate internal investigations. He also has an LL.M. in Information Technology and Privacy Law.

A. Michael Froomkin, Professor of Law and Director of Faculty Development in the University of Miami’s School of Law. Professor Froomkin’s current research explores the legal and technical aspects of identification and authentication. Professor Froomkin also serves on the Electronic Frontier Foundation’s Advisory Board.

Joanna L. Grama, Information Security Policy and Compliance Director for Purdue University. Ms. Grama leads the University’s information technology policy and compliance activities related to security and privacy of personally identifiable information.

David A. Hoffman, Director of Security Policy and Global Privacy Officer, Intel Corporation, Hillsboro, Ore. Mr. Hoffman has experience in privacy policy issues at the business and technical level, working on issues of interoperability, improved data quality, and data retention. He serves on the board of directors for the non-profit privacy compliance organization, TRUSTe.

Lance Hoffman, Distinguished Research Professor, The George Washington University, Washington, D.C. Professor Hoffman is a professor of Computer Science and founded and leads the George Washington University computer security program.

Joanne McNabb, Chief, Office of Privacy Protection, California Department of Consumer Affairs, Sacramento, Calif. Ms. McNabb provides consumer education and practice recommendations on privacy issues to California state residents, businesses and government.

Lisa S. Nelson, Assistant Professor, Graduate School of Public and International Affairs, University of Pittsburgh, and Affiliated Assistant Professor, University of Pittsburgh School of Law. Professor’s Nelson research focuses on the implications of biometric technology for privacy, autonomy, and policy.

Greg Nojeim, Director, Project on Freedom, Security, & Technology, Center for Democracy and Technology. Mr. Nojeim is a former legislative counsel for the American Civil Liberties Union responsible for national security, immigration, and privacy.

Charles Palmer, Chief Technology Officer, Security and Privacy, Associate Director of Computer Science Research at IBM, Yorktown Heights, N.Y. Dr. Palmer manages the Security, Networking, and Privacy Departments at the IBM Thomas J. Watson Research Center, where various teams around the world are developing privacy-related technology and exploring how technology can help preserve privacy while improving data quality.

Lydia Parnes, Partner, Wilson Sonsini Goodrich & Rosati, P.C. Ms. Parnes leads the firm’s Privacy and Consumer Regulatory Practice Group. She served as Director of the Federal Trade Commission’s Bureau of Consumer Protection from 2004-2009 and as Deputy Director from 1992-2004.

Christopher Pierson, Chief Privacy Officer and Senior Vice President, Citizens Financial Group, Inc. (Royal Bank of Scotland- RBS). Dr. Pierson was President and Chairman of the Board of the Intraguard Phoenix Member’s Alliance, Inc., from 2003-2007 and served on the Arizona Office of Homeland Security’s Homeland Security Coordinating Council from 2003-2006.

Jules Polonetsky, Co-Chair and Director, Future Privacy Forum. Mr. Polonetsky focuses on privacy issues posed by new technologies and new uses of personal data, including government use of Web 2.0 technologies. He was formerly Vice President, Integrity Assurance, at America Online, Inc., and Chief Privacy Officer and Special Counsel at DoubleClick.

John Sabo, Director, Global Government Relations, CA Technologies, Washington D.C. Mr. Sabo has over 17 years experience addressing privacy, cybersecurity, and trust issues with both CA Technologies and the Social Security Administration. He is President of the International Security Trust and Privacy Alliance and board member of the Information Technology – Information Sharing and Analysis Center.

Ho Sik Shin, General Counsel and Chief Privacy Officer, Millennial Media, Inc. Mr. Shin is an Adjunct Professor in the Georgetown University Sports Industry Management Program, and was formerly General Counsel for Octagon Athletes & Personalities and General Counsel for Advertising.com, Inc.

Lisa J. Sotto, Partner at Hunton & Williams, New York, N.Y. Ms. Sotto heads the firm’s Privacy & Information Management Practice and works extensively with the firm’s Center for Information Policy Leadership on topics ranging from improved privacy notices to responsible pattern analysis. She is a member of the family of a 9/11 victim.

Barry Steinhardt, Senior Advisor, Privacy International. From 1993-2009 Mr. Steinhardt served in various leadership roles in the American Civil Liberties Union, most recently as Director of the ACLU’s Technology and Liberty Project working on issues including airline passenger screening, video surveillance, database privacy, and border security.

Video-FEMEN DSK PARIS

FEMEN – Video – Roma Landyk – Go to Prison

CONFIDENTIAL – Banks Profited from Trillions in Secret Fed Bailout Programs

JPMorgan Chase chief Jamie Dimon speaks to a lunchtime gathering of the Portland Business Alliance, Thursday, Nov. 3, 2011 at the Portland Hilton in Portland, Ore. As CEO of JP Morgan Chase, he told shareholders that his bank used the Fed’s Term Auction Facility “at the request of the Federal Reserve to help motivate others to use the system.” He neglected to mention that the bank’s total TAF borrowings were almost twice its cash holdings. (AP Photo/The Oregonian, Randy L. Rasmussen)

Secret Fed Loans Helped Banks Net $13B (Bloomberg):

The Federal Reserve and the big banks fought for more than two years to keep details of the largest bailout in U.S. history a secret. Now, the rest of the world can see what it was missing.

The Fed didn’t tell anyone which banks were in trouble so deep they required a combined $1.2 trillion on Dec. 5, 2008, their single neediest day. Bankers didn’t mention that they took tens of billions of dollars in emergency loans at the same time they were assuring investors their firms were healthy. And no one calculated until now that banks reaped an estimated $13 billion of income by taking advantage of the Fed’s below-market rates, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its January issue.

Saved by the bailout, bankers lobbied against government regulations, a job made easier by the Fed, which never disclosed the details of the rescue to lawmakers even as Congress doled out more money and debated new rules aimed at preventing the next collapse.

A fresh narrative of the financial crisis of 2007 to 2009 emerges from 29,000 pages of Fed documents obtained under the Freedom of Information Act and central bank records of more than 21,000 transactions. While Fed officials say that almost all of the loans were repaid and there have been no losses, details suggest taxpayers paid a price beyond dollars as the secret funding helped preserve a broken status quo and enabled the biggest banks to grow even bigger.

The amount of money the central bank parceled out was surprising even to Gary H. Stern, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis from 1985 to 2009, who says he “wasn’t aware of the magnitude.” It dwarfed the Treasury Department’s better-known $700 billion Troubled Asset Relief Program, or TARP. Add up guarantees and lending limits, and the Fed had committed $7.77 trillion as of March 2009 to rescuing the financial system, more than half the value of everything produced in the U.S. that year.

“TARP at least had some strings attached,” says Brad Miller, a North Carolina Democrat on the House Financial Services Committee, referring to the program’s executive-pay ceiling. “With the Fed programs, there was nothing.”

Bankers didn’t disclose the extent of their borrowing. On Nov. 26, 2008, then-Bank of America (BAC) Corp. Chief Executive Officer Kenneth D. Lewis wrote to shareholders that he headed “one of the strongest and most stable major banks in the world.” He didn’t say that his Charlotte, North Carolina-based firm owed the central bank $86 billion that day.

“When you see the dollars the banks got, it’s hard to make the case these were successful institutions,” says Sherrod Brown, a Democratic Senator from Ohio who in 2010 introduced an unsuccessful bill to limit bank size. “This is an issue that can unite the Tea Party and Occupy Wall Street. There are lawmakers in both parties who would change their votes now.”

The size of the bailout came to light after Bloomberg LP, the parent of Bloomberg News, won a court case against the Fed and a group of the biggest U.S. banks called Clearing House Association LLC to force lending details into the open.

The Treasury Department relied on the recommendations of the Fed to decide which banks were healthy enough to get TARP money and how much, the former officials say. The six biggest U.S. banks, which received $160 billion of TARP funds, borrowed as much as $460 billion from the Fed, measured by peak daily debt calculated by Bloomberg using data obtained from the central bank. Paulson didn’t respond to a request for comment.

The six — JPMorgan, Bank of America, Citigroup Inc. (C), Wells Fargo & Co. (WFC), Goldman Sachs Group Inc. (GS) and Morgan Stanley — accounted for 63 percent of the average daily debt to the Fed by all publicly traded U.S. banks, money managers and investment-services firms, the data show. By comparison, they had about half of the industry’s assets before the bailout, which lasted from August 2007 through April 2010. The daily debt figure excludes cash that banks passed along to money-market funds.

TARP and the Fed lending programs went “hand in hand,” says Sherrill Shaffer, a banking professor at the University of Wyoming in Laramie and a former chief economist at the New York Fed. While the TARP money helped insulate the central bank from losses, the Fed’s willingness to supply seemingly unlimited financing to the banks assured they wouldn’t collapse, protecting the Treasury’s TARP investments, he says.

“Even though the Treasury was in the headlines, the Fed was really behind the scenes engineering it,” Shaffer says.

Congress, at the urging of Bernanke and Paulson, created TARP in October 2008 after the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers Holdings Inc. made it difficult for financial institutions to get loans. Bank of America and New York-based Citigroup each received $45 billion from TARP. At the time, both were tapping the Fed. Citigroup hit its peak borrowing of $99.5 billion in January 2009, while Bank of America topped out in February 2009 at $91.4 billion.

Lawmakers knew none of this.

They had no clue that one bank, New York-based Morgan Stanley (MS), took $107 billion in Fed loans in September 2008, enough to pay off one-tenth of the country’s delinquent mortgages. The firm’s peak borrowing occurred the same day Congress rejected the proposed TARP bill, triggering the biggest point drop ever in the Dow Jones Industrial Average.  The bill later passed, and Morgan Stanley got $10 billion of TARP funds, though Paulson said only “healthy institutions” were eligible.

Mark Lake, a spokesman for Morgan Stanley, declined to comment, as did spokesmen for Citigroup and Goldman Sachs.

Had lawmakers known, it “could have changed the whole approach to reform legislation,” says Ted Kaufman, a former Democratic Senator from Delaware who, with Brown, introduced the bill to limit bank size.

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE WR-ZI – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – WR-ZI

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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040451427928;14;08;00;;ZEISZIG, WOLFGANG:;;;22707,50
090262409523;06;00;53;;ZEISZLER, JUERGEN:;;;20625,00
120567408411;17;00;00;;ZEISZLER, RALF:;;;13670,00
181167409246;99;43;00;;ZEITLER, ANDREAS:;;;9675,00
160841430264;30;84;00;;ZEITLER, GUENTER:;;;21600,00
231246416017;09;14;00;;ZEITSCH, WOLFGANG:;;;25500,00
060657419315;18;71;20;;ZEITSCHEL, MATTHIAS:;;;22022,50
060948424990;13;20;00;;ZEITSCHEL, WOLFGANG:;;;30250,00
260870407627;18;80;00;;ZEITZ, MARIO:;;;6780,00
291166430112;98;84;00;;ZEKALLE, TORSTEN:;;;15822,00
181169413038;94;03;00;;ZELAZO, MARCO:;;;9510,00
280246400411;01;06;20;;ZELCK, FRIEDRICH-WILHE:;;;24000,00
200868500414;01;80;00;;ZELCK, MANUELA:;;;12675,00
020770400417;01;69;00;;ZELCK, TORSTEN:;;;2896,61
050340405610;18;27;30;;ZELDER, WERNER:;;;20886,25
270564407468;99;78;00;;ZELL, CHRIS:;;;17490,00
170168403619;03;20;00;;ZELL, HOLGER:;;;5375,00
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120563407411;96;15;22;;ZELL, UTZ:;;;16500,00
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280637422829;98;82;00;;ZELLER, SIEGFRIED:;;;27000,00
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180236420111;11;00;46;;ZELLMANN, GUENTER:;;;29250,00
041255429832;90;65;40;3620/77,;ZELLMER, BERND;1136;CHARLOTTENSTR. 10;
160440403425;03;80;00;;ZELLMER, GUENTER:;;;20550,80
130171403728;18;33;00;;ZELLMER, TORSTEN:;;;2795,00
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080337424412;13;00;48;;ZEMMRICH, WOLFGANG:;;;27000,00
080148402126;02;00;41;;ZENGEL, ERWIN:;;;25500,00
290457405529;04;06;00;;ZENGEL, FRANK:;;;19435,00
070658405512;18;28;00;;ZENGEL, JOERG:;;;23460,00
100238412219;07;19;00;;ZENGERLING, ALFRED:;;;38250,00
140350428938;97;01;00;;ZENGERLING, HELMUT:;;;33000,00
300658412262;07;08;00;;ZENGERLING, HILMAR:;;;18572,50
260570426519;18;28;00;;ZENGERLING, RENE:;;;10514,84
211161412246;07;09;00;;ZENGERLING, RONALD:;;;20185,00
100468425015;18;32;00;;ZENK, RAINER:;;;10725,00
100968412253;07;55;00;;ZENKE, DIRK:;;;12406,46
160467405236;04;80;00;;ZENKE, FERNANDO:;;;11158,00
191069424994;05;69;00;;ZENKE, KAI-UWE:;;;3220,00
250342405223;04;60;00;;ZENKE, ULRICH:;;;31437,50
300453429888;30;80;00;;ZENKER, ALEXEY:;;;23460,00
010965427223;14;30;00;;ZENKER, ANDRE:;;;14094,00
241051427321;14;00;52;;ZENKER, ANDREAS:;;;14795,00
071256430154;15;08;00;;ZENKER, ANDREAS:;;;20700,00
210264425029;13;03;00;;ZENKER, BRANKO:;;;17160,00
240651424015;12;19;00;;ZENKER, EBERHARD:;;;26562,00
301250422891;12;30;00;;ZENKER, FRANK:;;;23040,00
210367409523;94;30;00;;ZENKER, HEIKO:;;;16146,00
280940417555;97;08;00;;ZENKER, HELMUT:;;;28500,00
040841427229;14;00;50;;ZENKER, JUERGEN:;;;22320,00
070356518415;15;06;00;;ZENKER, KARIN:;;;19952,50
020253422845;12;19;00;;ZENKER, KARL-HEINZ:;;;21600,00
221144424930;30;32;00;;ZENKER, LOTHAR:;;;21390,00
311254522792;12;00;53;;ZENKER, UTE:;;;16355,88
130451418422;15;15;00;;ZENKER, WOLFGANG:;;;28260,00
260251423628;99;14;00;;ZENNER, JOACHIM:;;;22320,00
160355403420;99;02;00;;ZENT, DIETMAR:;;;22267,50
070742419829;11;08;00;;ZENTGRAF, EGON:;;;26250,00
300133403013;03;51;00;;ZENTNER, ARNOLD:;;;27000,00
280841400897;01;29;00;2254/84, :;ZENTSCH, PETER;2500;STRANDSTR. 2;
280841400897;01;29;00;2254/84, :;ZENTSCH, PETER;2500;STRANDSTR. 2;
050962430052;94;03;00;;ZENTSCH, RONALD:;;;18231,61
290447421314;99;02;00;;ZENTSCH, UWE:;;;26062,50
051270404026;18;31;00;;ZEPERNICK, HEIKO:;;;2795,00
010155513912;97;22;00;;ZEPERT, GUDRUN:;;;25012,50
110252427424;97;22;00;;ZEPERT, KARL-ERNST:;;;20880,00
121130401916;02;00;43;;ZEPEZAUER, PAUL:;;;38129,04
051159401919;99;09;00;;ZEPEZAUER, PETER:;;;21562,50
221157408526;06;09;00;;ZEPEZAUER, THOMAS:;;;22110,00
190340417712;09;65;00;;ZEPNEK, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;24437,50
120362402761;02;06;00;;ZEPPELIN, KERSTEN:;;;16540,34
010170401564;01;06;22;;ZEPPER, FRANK:;;;9510,00
290839407239;05;99;20;;ZEPTER, HERMANN:;;;26250,00
120341507222;05;80;00;;ZEPTER, LUCIE:;;;18180,00
010749403817;04;06;00;;ZERAHN, MANFRED:;;;19215,00
010362404022;03;08;00;;ZERBE, DIRK:;;;15922,50
010540425003;30;32;00;;ZERBE, FRIEDMAR:;;;20160,00
240455403364;03;00;44;;ZERBE, JOACHIM:;;;16450,00
210371414827;18;35;00;;ZERBE, MAIK:;;;2795,00
200171429726;03;69;00;;ZERBEL, ALF:;;;2870,00
031068430011;03;69;00;;ZERBEL, ARIAN:;;;10142,50
250471424017;18;38;00;;ZERBS, HEIKO:;;;2795,00
140457415125;99;43;00;;ZERBSTER, HELMUT:;;;20010,00
150951423912;13;00;44;;ZERBSTER, MAX:;;;26542,50
300751415126;98;83;00;;ZERBSTER, PETER:;;;21647,15
020669427148;94;65;00;;ZERFASS, THOMAS:;;;9510,00
080969417755;18;34;00;;ZERFASS, TORSTEN:;;;6736,77
161241417773;09;08;00;;ZERFASS, WALDEMAR:;;;27750,00
141240505618;99;43;00;;ZERFOWSKI, ERIKA:;;;13918,06
230557406946;05;60;00;;ZERFOWSKI, JOERG:;;;20010,00
230837405614;04;00;50;;ZERFOWSKI, WERNER:;;;23760,00
150539427137;14;06;00;;ZERGE, GUENTER:;;;21875,00
151057530152;99;77;00;;ZERGIEBEL, ANDREA:;;;19507,34
070736419021;98;19;00;;ZERGIEBEL, HELMUT:;;;30750,00
021268414228;18;35;00;;ZERN, ANDREAS:;;;9675,00
191249530030;99;53;00;;ZERN, CHRISTIANE:;;;25616,67
080150429811;99;77;00;;ZERN, RUEDIGER:;;;36000,00
180470429747;18;31;00;;ZERN, TORSTEN:;;;9195,00
260340409211;30;51;00;;ZERNA, WOLFGANG:;;;13860,00
311058422786;12;80;00;;ZERNDT, KARLHEINZ:;;;16905,00
260541430041;99;51;00;;ZERNIKOW, GUENTER:;;;37500,00
300568430168;18;31;00;;ZERNIKOW, STEFFEN:;;;9590,00
031142411514;07;06;00;;ZERNITZ, GERHARD:;;;21750,00
081167414733;10;08;00;;ZERRENNER, KARSTEN:;;;14460,00
190970414727;10;69;00;;ZERRENNER, RAIK:;;;3220,00
131041422212;18;29;00;;ZERRENNER, SIEGMAR:;;;27000,00
160247412231;07;26;00;;ZERSON, HANSI:;;;26447,50
190157506127;17;00;00;;ZERULL, ANTJE:;;;15089,69
300155511728;99;40;00;;ZERULL, GERLINDE:;;;20599,36
310850406144;17;00;00;;ZERULL, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;21600,00
171249506112;17;00;00;;ZERULL, MARION:;;;13146,63
131163406157;04;06;00;;ZERULL, MICHAEL:;;;15180,00
220745400841;01;19;69;;ZERULL, NORBERT:;;;24750,00
031269400812;01;06;26;;ZERULL, RENE:;;;8350,00
020854406189;17;00;00;;ZERULL, UDO:;;;18285,00
241049426952;14;19;00;;ZESCH, OLAF:;;;23760,00
181245406922;09;03;00;;ZESCHMAR, WALTER:;;;23437,50
181055422788;99;77;00;;ZESEWITZ, JOACHIM:;;;18156,63
280459422710;12;51;00;;ZESEWITZ, PETER:;;;19435,00
100857421317;99;09;00;;ZESSACK, ANDREAS:;;;21562,50
280856416816;97;01;00;;ZESSIN, PETER:;;;19492,50
220331430039;98;18;00;;ZETSCHE, WOLFGANG:;;;28500,00
300644428992;14;00;54;;ZETTEL, BERND:;;;24480,00
140554507128;05;06;00;;ZETTIER, BAERBEL:;;;18180,00
171140429758;08;08;00;;ZETTIER, DIETER:;;;28500,00
200240530044;08;78;00;;ZETTIER, HELENE:;;;22500,00
090337407320;05;07;00;;ZETTIER, HORST:;;;27000,00
200452407128;05;06;00;;ZETTIER, JUERGEN:;;;19837,50
220266430082;99;77;00;;ZETTIER, MARCEL:;;;15930,00
090368530049;97;01;00;;ZETTIER, SIMONE:;;;2527,42
090958407518;05;40;00;;ZETTIER, UWE:;;;25702,50
310349429780;97;01;00;;ZETTL, BERND:;;;22500,00
241049502417;97;22;00;;ZETTL, ILSE:;;;22038,94
210764427944;14;00;51;;ZETTL, PETER:;;;18645,00
180330530210;98;83;00;;ZETTL, RUTH:;;;21375,00
200351403419;99;53;00;;ZETTLER, WOLFGANG:;;;23040,00
060351422220;97;01;00;;ZETTLITZ, ULRICH:;;;27835,00
050544402120;95;45;00;;ZETTWITZ, DIETER:;;;21000,00
090440402130;02;06;00;;ZETTWITZ, HORST:;;;21187,50
281054428297;96;15;05;;ZETZL, HEINZ:;;;20340,00
090162419724;11;02;00;;ZETZMANN, ANDRE:;;;19140,00
100861419738;94;64;00;;ZETZMANN, BERND:;;;16830,00
151066419712;98;85;00;;ZETZMANN, CARSTEN:;;;16038,00
151269419712;11;69;00;;ZETZMANN, HEIKO:;;;9555,00
131169414756;99;43;00;;ZETZMANN, HEIKO:;;;9510,00
281170401323;18;34;00;;ZETZMANN, VOLKER:;;;2795,00
160559530034;18;77;00;;ZETZSCHE, ANNEKATRIN:;;;19691,66
200553422116;97;01;00;;ZETZSCHE, BERND:;;;19440,00
141248515319;08;60;00;;ZETZSCHE, CHRISTA:;;;20437,50
200543415369;08;11;00;;ZETZSCHE, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;28500,00
270963423836;30;62;00;;ZETZSCHE, JOERG:;;;15925,16
161052426929;90;65;40;1753/80,;ZETZSCHE, JU(E)RGEN;1144;EHM-WELK-STR. 44;
161052426929;90;65;40;1753/80,;ZETZSCHE, JU(E)RGEN;1144;EHM-WELK-STR. 44;
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231253424429;94;65;00;;ZEUG, HARTMUT:;;;20880,00
010651417778;11;78;00;;ZEUGHARDT, MANFRED:;;;22252,50
020151426562;94;03;00;;ZEUGNER, HANS-ULLRICH:;;;27102,50
020350526320;94;03;00;;ZEUGNER, KARIN:;;;21574,59
151133400115;01;43;00;;ZEUMER, CARL-AUGUST:;;;23125,00
170143529725;94;30;00;;ZEUN, BAERBEL:;;;24000,00
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200734429720;15;00;42;;ZEUN, HARDY:;;;30750,00
040739429711;97;06;00;;ZEUN, HARTMUT:;;;24750,00
190530530011;94;94;00;;ZEUN, LEONORE:;;;24000,00
031055427227;14;00;50;;ZEUN, THOMAS:;;;24500,00
111049422833;12;06;00;;ZEUN, WERNER:;;;20062,50
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270252422757;30;53;00;;ZEUNER, FRANK:;;;12164,00
100850417729;98;27;00;;ZEUNER, GUENTER:;;;24975,00
160164422231;30;70;00;;ZEUNER, HARTMUT:;;;15441,74
080369418519;18;33;00;;ZEUNER, HEIKO:;;;9555,00
290934419625;99;40;00;;ZEUNER, JOHANNES:;;;27000,00
291067428914;18;35;00;;ZEUNER, MARIO:;;;9675,00
210762424416;94;64;00;;ZEUNER, MICHAEL:;;;18177,50
270670428019;18;28;00;;ZEUNER, MIKE:;;;2720,00
260160509514;98;85;00;;ZEUSCHNER, INGRA:;;;16555,97
310857413427;98;27;00;;ZEUSCHNER, UDO:;;;17940,00
020952403854;03;51;00;;ZEUSKE, HARTMUT:;;;19440,00
100650423630;94;03;00;;ZEYNER, GUNTER:;;;22080,00
160338412210;07;80;00;;ZGODZAJ, HELMUT:;;;24750,00
280963422242;99;43;00;;ZGODZAJ, MARIO:;;;19195,00
101169416922;09;69;00;;ZGODZINSKI, ROY:;;;9510,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

SECRET-Director of National Intelligence Classification and Control Markings Manual Version 1.2

The following Classification and Control Markings Manual gives descriptions of every major classification and control marking used in the U.S. Intelligence Community along with its legal justifications and goes with the Authorized Classification and Control Markings Register.  Newer versions of the manual have been released via FOIA requests, however they contain a number of redactions.

(U) Authority

(U) DCID 6/6 dated 13 July 2001, mandates a classification marking system for the Intelligence Community (IC). This system uses a uniform list of security classification and control markings authorized for all dissemination of classified national intelligence information by components of the IC. This marking system augments and further defines the markings requirements established in Executive Order 12958, as amended, for portion markings and overall classification. This system does not stipulate or modify the classification authority information required by EO 12958, as amended.

(U) These classification and control markings, and their authorized abbreviations and portion markings, are compiled in the Authorized Classification and Control Markings Register maintained by the Controlled Access Program Coordination Office (CAPCO) (hereafter, referred to as the CAPCO Register) of the Director of National Intelligence Special Security Center (DNI SSC) pursuant to DCID 6/11.

(U) Purpose

(U) The Implementation Manual is a companion document developed to provide amplifying and explanatory guidance on the syntax and use of the markings contained in the CAPCO Register. While not the policy basis for individual agencies’ use of any particular marking, the Implementation Manual cites the applicable authority and sponsor for each marking. Some of the Dissemination Controls and Non-Intelligence Community Dissemination Control Markings are restricted to use by certain agencies. They are included to provide guidance on handling documents that bear them. Their inclusion in the manual does not authorize other Agencies to use these markings. Non-US Classification and Joint Classification Markings are restricted to the respective countries or international organizations.

(U) Certain unpublished controlled access program markings or markings that only determine addressing or routing of information are not included in the Implementation Manual per the CAPCO Register. The unpublished markings are contained in a separate unpublished Register maintained by CAPCO. Contact the CAPCO staff if you have questions regarding these items.

Unveiled – FEMEN Paris – Revisited

CONFIDENTIAL from the FBI – Silver Spring Man Sentenced to 20 Years in Prison for Distributing Child Pornography

GREENBELT, MD—U.S. District Judge Alexander Williams, Jr. sentenced Gary Callis, age 42, of Silver Spring, Maryland, today to 20 years in prison, followed by supervised release for life, for two counts of distributing child pornography. Judge Williams ordered Callis to pay approximately $24,000 in restitution to one of the victims of his sexual abuse for treatment and counseling expenses. Finally, Judge Williams ordered that upon his release from prison, Callis must register as a sex offender in the place where he resides, where he is an employee, and where he is a student, under the Sex Offender Registration and Notification Act (SORNA).

The sentence was announced by United States Attorney for the District of Maryland Rod J. Rosenstein; Special Agent in Charge Richard A. McFeely of the Federal Bureau of Investigation; Colonel Marcus L. Brown, Superintendent of the Maryland State Police; and Montgomery County State’s Attorney John McCarthy.

According to Callis’ plea agreement, in November and December, 2009, two separate FBI undercover operations in San Diego and Richmond, respectively, used file-sharing programs to download images from a user, later determined to be Callis, which depicted minors engaged in sexually explicit conduct. The Richmond undercover agent also engaged Callis in a chat, during which Callis stated he looked forward to trading images and that he “had some boy relations” with boys aged 6 to 14 and was presently looking for 14- to 20-year-old boys. Callis specifically described to the undercover agent his molestation of a boy from the time the child was 6 years old until he was 12 years old.

On February 26, 2010, law enforcement executed a search warrant at Callis’ residence in Silver Spring, and seized three external hard drives, two laptop computer, a computer tower and a memory card. A subsequent forensic examination of the digital media revealed that Callis possessed over 866,000 images and 8,100 movies portraying the sexual abuse of children. Agents found that the collection was highly organized, divided into folder titles with a number or letter, then further subdivided by a child’s name or a description of the contents. Callis’ computers also revealed that his primary means of trading child pornography was through the file-sharing program where the FBI undercover officers discovered Callis.

Callis was present during the search of his residence and admitted to investigators that in 2000 he had sexually molested a teenaged neighbor who was visiting his house, and in 2003 had begun molesting the son of his girlfriend, who was 7 years old at the time.

As part of the plea agreement, Callis has also agreed to plead guilty in a related case in Montgomery County Circuit Court, and agreed that the Circuit Court shall impose a sentence of 17 years in prison in that case, to run concurrent with Callis’ federal sentence. Callis remains detained.

This case was brought as part of Project Safe Childhood, a nationwide initiative to combat the growing epidemic of child sexual exploitation and abuse launched in May 2006 by the Department of Justice. Led by United States Attorneys’ Offices and the Criminal Division’s Child Exploitation and Obscenity Section (CEOS), Project Safe Childhood marshals federal, state and local resources to better locate, apprehend and prosecute individuals who exploit children via the Internet, as well as to identify and rescue victims. For more information about Project Safe Childhood, please visit www.projectsafechildhood.gov. Details about Maryland’s program are available at http://www.justice.gov/usao/md/Safe-Childhood/index.html.

United States Attorney Rod J. Rosenstein commended the FBI, Maryland State Police, and Montgomery County State’s Attorney’s Office for their work in this investigation and prosecution. Mr. Rosenstein thanked Special Assistant U.S. Attorney LisaMarie Freitas and Assistant U.S. Attorney Stacy Dawson Belf, who prosecuted the case.

TOP-SECRET from the NSA -CHILEAN JUDGE REQUESTS EXTRADITION OF U.S. MILITARY OFFICIAL IN “MISSING” CASE

Charles Horman Frank Teruggi

CHILEAN JUDGE REQUESTS EXTRADITION OF U.S. MILITARY OFFICIAL IN “MISSING” CASE

Capt. Ray Davis Indicted in Chile for alleged role in murder of Charles Horman, Frank Teruggi

Declassified U.S. Documents Used Extensively in Court Indictment

Archive Posts Documents cited in Indictment, including FBI Intelligence Reports Containing Teruggi’s Address in Chile

Washington D.C., November 30, 2011 –Thirty-eight years after the military coup in Chile, a Chilean judge has formally indicted the former head of the U.S. Military Group, Captain Ray Davis, and a Chilean intelligence officer, Pedro Espinoza for the murders of two American citizens in September 1973. The judge, Jorge Zepeda, said he would ask the Chilean Supreme Court to authorize an extradition request for Davis as an “accessory” to the murders of Charles Horman and Frank Teruggi.

Both Horman and Teruggi were seized separately at their homes in Santiago by Chilean soldiers and subsequently executed while in detention. Their murders, and the seeming indifference of U.S. officials, were immortalized in the Oscar-award winning movie “Missing” which focused on the search by Horman’s wife and father for him in the weeks following the U.S.-supported coup.

The indictment accused the U.S. MilGroup of passing intelligence to the Chilean military on the “subversive” activities of Teruggi that contributed to his arrest; it stated that Davis “was in a position” to stop the executions “given his coordination with Chilean agents” but did not do so.

In his indictment, Judge Zepeda cited a number of declassified U.S. government documents as the basic foundation for the case-although none of them tie Davis or Espinoza to the crimes. “These documents are providing the blocks for building a case in these famous killings,” said Peter Kornbluh who directs the Chile Documentation Project at the Archive, “but they do not provide a smoking gun.” To successfully advance court proceedings as well as a successful extradition request, according to Kornbluh, the judge will have to present concrete evidence of communications between U.S. and Chilean military officers regarding Horman and Teruggi prior to their detentions and their deaths.

The Archive today posted a number of the documents cited in the indictment, including key FBI memos that contained Frank Teruggi’s Santiago address, as well as other records relevant to the Horman and Teruggi case. The documents derive from an indexed collection: Chile and the United States: U.S. Policy toward Democracy, Dictatorship, and Human Rights, 1970-1990. The collection, just published this week by the Archive and Proquest, contains over 180 documents on the Horman and Teruggi case.


Read the Documents:

Document 1
Department of State, SECRET Memorandum, “Charles Horman Case,” August 25, 1976

This memo by three state department officers implies that the U.S. government could have prevented the murder of Charles Horman. The memo, written after a review of the files on the case, explains that there is “circumstantial evidence” to suggest “U.S. intelligence may have played an unfortunate part in Horman’s death. At best, it was limited to providing or confirming information that helped motivate his murder by the GOC. At worst, U.S. intelligence was aware the GOC saw Horman in a rather serious light and U.S. officials did nothing to discourage the logical outcome of GOC paranoia.” When this document was initially declassified pursuant to a FOIA lawsuit filed by the Horman family, this critical passage was blacked out. The document was released without redaction in 1999. It was not cited in Judge Zepeda’s indictment, but appears to reflect the judicial argument he is pursuing.

Document 2
Department of State, SECRET, “Charles Horman Case: Gleanings,”(Undated but written in August 1976)

This detailed chronology, based on a review of files available to the State Department, contains key information on what the U.S. knew and did in the case of Charles Horman. It also evaluates the possible role of the U.S. in the murder. The document cites the admissions of a Chilean intelligence agent, Rafael Gonzalez, who told U.S. reporters the story of Horman being interrogated in General Augusto Lutz’s office and then killed because “he knew too much.” Gonzalez claimed there was an American in the room when the interrogation took place, but decades later he would recant that story. In January 2004, he was indicted by Judge Zepeda in the Horman case as an “accessory to murder” for his role in the interrogation, death and secret burial of Charles Horman.

Document 3
United States Embassy, Unclassified Notice, “Missing United States Citizen,” October 9, 1973

This document cited in the indictment, states that the U.S. government has received a note from the Chilean Foreign Office dated October 3, 1973, recording that Charles Horman was detained at the National Stadium on September 20 for a curfew violation but had been released on September 21 for “lack of merit.” The document includes a photograph of Horman, his date of birth, address in Chile, and fingerprint classification. Horman was actually detained at his home on September 17, 1973.

Document 4
Department of State, Memorandum (classification excised), “Film by Charles Horman,” April 12, 1974

In this memo to Assistant Secretary Harry Shlaudeman, State Department officer George Lister describes the film work of Charles Horman. A film that he apparently worked on before the coup was completed after the coup by friends titled “Chile: With Poems and Guns.” (The document leaves the impression that Charles “made” the film, but clearly he did not work on it following the coup.) The film describes Chilean history, and the achievements of the Allende government, along with alleged atrocities of the coup and U.S. involvement. Lister goes so far as to imply that Horman’s film making in Chile could have been what “led to his death.”

Document 5
Chilean Armed Forces, Memorandum, “Antecedentes sobre Fallecimiento de 2 ciudadanos norteamericanos,” Octobeer 30, 1973

Chief of Chilean Military Intelligence Service General Augusto Lutz reports on the death of Charles Horman and Frank Teruggi. He asserts that Horman and Teruggi were political extremists attempting to discredit Chilean junta. While he acknowledges that they were both detained by the Chilean military, he maintains that they were later released and that the Chilean military was not involved in their deaths. The document is the only information known to have been provided by the Chilean military to the U.S. embassy after the disappearance of Horman and Teruggi.

Document 6
U.S. Military Group Chile, Memorandum (classification unknown), “Case of Charles Horman,” January 14, 1975

Ray Davis forwards a list of documents on the interactions of the U.S. Military Group in Chile with Charles Horman to be provided to the General Accounting Office. The documents raise the issue of the role of embassy officials in the disappearance and death of Horman, and make “certain allegations and statements about members of the Navy Mission, in Valparaiso; comments about a ride given by COMUSMILGP, Captain Davis.”

Document 7
Department of State, CONFIDENTIAL Memorandum, “Horman Case,” April 20, 1987

This memorandum of conversation reports on an informant who has appeared at the Embassy to give testimony on the death of Charles Horman. According to this informant, Horman was seized by Chilean intelligence units and taken to the Escuela Militar for questioning. He was then transferred to the National Stadium, where they determined he was an extremist. He was forced to change clothes, shot three times, and his body was dumped on the street to appear he had died in a confrontation. The informant said that “the person at the stadium who made the decision on who was to die was Pedro Espinoza, of later DINA fame.” The document is the first to tie Pedro Espinoza to the Horman case. He was involved in military intelligence and detainees at the time of the coup. However, the commander of the National Stadium at the time was another military officer named Jorge Espinosa Ulloa.

Document 8
United States Embassy Santiago, CONFIDENTIAL cable, ‘[Excised] Reports on GOC Involvement in Death of Charles Horman, Asks Embassy for Asylum and Aid,’ April 28, 1987

In a report on the informant’s information, the Embassy cables Washington with his account of Horman’s death. Horman was picked up in a routine sweep, the informant suggests, and was found in possession of “extremist” materials. He was then taken the National Stadium where he was interrogated and later executed on the orders of Pedro Espinoza. Embassy officials note that his story “corresponds with what we know about the case and the [Chilean government] attempt to cover up their involvement,” suggesting that the informant is probably telling the truth. In later cables, the Embassy begins to question the credibility of the informant who is never identified.

Document 9
FBI, SECRET Memorandum, [Frank Teruggi’s Contact with Anti-War Activist], October 25, 1972

This FBI report cites information provided by “another U.S. government agency” on Frank Teruggi’s contacts with an anti-war activist who resides in West Germany. The report also contains his address in Santiago. The document was generated by surveillance of a U.S. military intelligence unit in Munich on an American anti-war dissident who was in contact with Teruggi. The FBI subsequently decides to open a file on Teruggi. This series of FBI documents were cited by Judge Zepeda in his indictment which infers-but offers no proof– that intelligence from them was shared with Chilean military intelligence in the days following the coup.

Document 10
FBI, SECRET Memorandum, “Frank Teruggi,” October 25, 1972

This FBI memorandum requests investigation of Frank Teruggi and the Chicago Area Group for the Liberation of Americas of which he was a member nearly a year prior to his death following the Chilean coup.

Document 11
FBI, SECRET Memorandum, “[Excised] SM- Subversive,” November 28, 1972

This FBI document again requests investigation on Teruggi based on his contact with a political activist in West Germany. The document mentions that Teruggi is living in Chile editing a newsletter “FIN” of Chilean information for the American left, and that he is closely affiliated with the Chicago Area Group for the Liberation of Americas.

Document 12
FBI, Memorandum (classification unknown), “Frank Teruggi,” December 14, 1972

This FBI memorandum demonstrates ongoing efforts to gather information on Frank Teruggi in the year proceeding the Chilean coup. Here, the FBI reports on his attendance at a conference of returned Peace Corps volunteers and his membership in political organizations supporting socialism and national liberation movements in Latin America.

TOP-SECRET – (U//FOUO) Director of National Intelligence Classification Markings Register Version 1.2

Redacted Version Unredacted Version

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE:

DNI-Classifications

Unveiled – FEMEN Paris

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE WL-WR – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – WL-WR

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

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290860515111;08;00;45;;WORCH, SABINE:;;;15510,00
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061234429743;97;06;00;;WORF, FRITZ:;;;20500,00
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030450429826;18;27;00;;WORM, GUENTER:;;;26730,00
090644424999;98;18;00;;WORM, HELMUT:;;;27000,00
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190354407259;17;00;00;;WORM, UWE:;;;24420,00
100154409522;99;02;00;;WORM, WINFRIED:;;;25494,19
091264406160;97;08;00;;WORONIECKI, BURKHARD:;;;16089,00
310149412220;07;19;00;;WORRACK, RALF:;;;30285,00
040652429866;15;19;00;;WORSCH, EBERHARD:;;;24840,00
180356519618;15;80;00;;WORSCH, ELKE:;;;26565,00
140754529911;97;08;00;;WORSCH, ELKE:;;;21390,00
280948429710;94;11;00;339/73, :;WORSCH, JU(E)RGEN;1140;HEINRICH-RAU-STR. 66;
280948429710;94;11;00;339/73, :;WORSCH, JU(E)RGEN;1140;HEINRICH-RAU-STR. 66;
040249530200;96;15;00;339/73/2, E:;WORSCH, URSULA;1140;HEINRICH-RAU-STR. 66;
150555429933;15;00;42;;WORSCH, WOLFGANG:;;;28800,00
290861400826;01;06;24;;WORSCHECH, UDO:;;;15618,00
050965404319;97;06;00;;WORTHA, HOLGER:;;;11016,00
171246430167;99;55;00;;WORTMANN, INGO:;;;32250,00
090936402716;02;51;00;;WOSCHNICK, HORST:;;;20250,00
131052407536;30;42;00;;WOSCHOFIUS, HEINZ:;;;21872,50
010363428923;14;00;47;;WOSCIDLO, EKKEHARD:;;;21725,00
200270408015;02;69;00;;WOSCIDLO, JAN:;;;9655,50
280563406948;95;45;00;;WOSINEK, JOERG:;;;16739,52
250151427438;30;48;00;;WOSIPIWO, HEINZ:;;;22990,00
230968407011;18;34;00;;WOSNIZEK, ULF:;;;12300,00
121169404858;04;06;00;;WOTHE, UWE:;;;12000,00
260969424611;97;06;00;;WOTSCHADLO, UWE:;;;14175,00
090663500862;01;20;00;;WOTT, BA(E)RBEL:;;;13149,42
280461400860;01;08;00;;WOTT, HOLGER:;;;18150,00
231050407012;05;03;00;;WOTZINSKI, GUENTER:;;;22350,00
270747401544;01;00;40;3391/89, :;WOTZKA, JO(E)RG-MICHAEL;2520;STEPHAN-JANTZEN-RING 40;
270747401544;01;00;40;3391/89, :;WOTZKA, JO(E)RG-MICHAEL;2520;STEPHAN-JANTZEN-RING 40;
220440406193;04;06;00;;WOTZLAW, DIETRICH:;;;28250,04
190471506344;99;77;00;;WOTZLAW, JANA:;;;3620,00
030248506146;04;06;00;;WOTZLAW, RUTH:;;;20820,00
260461407052;18;27;30;;WOYCZESCHKE, HEIKO:;;;23100,00
200571404421;18;32;00;;WOYDA, THOMAS:;;;2795,00
110759406913;99;12;00;;WOYDE, BERND:;;;19682,50
030962530151;99;02;00;;WOYE, GUNHILD:;;;15600,48
181056404514;04;00;50;;WOYE, HARTMUT:;;;15812,50
060950404825;99;02;00;;WOYTHE, BERND:;;;24420,00
030747419311;10;06;00;;WOYWODT, REINER:;;;20010,00
240549530233;98;83;00;;WOZNIAK, ANDREA:;;;19440,00
181039406198;99;77;00;;WOZNIAK, BRUNO:;;;25500,00
130142529719;94;30;00;;WOZNIAK, ELKE:;;;21500,00
260944429723;94;30;00;;WOZNIAK, FRITZ:;;;21500,00
181039506172;99;77;00;;WOZNIAK, HERTA:;;;21750,00
100461404836;18;33;00;;WOZNIAK, RONALD:;;;19305,00
071069430036;15;69;00;;WOZNIAK, TORSTEN:;;;13010,00
240248430132;30;58;00;;WOZNIAK, WOLFGANG:;;;20125,00
230369415378;18;38;00;;WOZNY, MIRKO:;;;9675,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

FEMEN Roma against Berlusconi

Femen EuroTour
directed by Alain Margot

CONFIDENTIAL – FBI – Fugitive N.J. Man Arrested in Death of 2-Year-Old Daughter

Arthur Morgan (captured)

Arthur E. Morgan III was arrested Tuesday in San Diego, according to the Monmouth County Prosecutor’s Office. He wanted for his alleged involvement in the death of his 2-year-old daughter. On November 22, 2011, the body of a 2-year-old child, still strapped in her car seat, was found partially submerged in a stream in Shark River Park in Monmouth County, New Jersey.

Morgan was supposed to return the child to her mother on November 21 following a custody visit. When Morgan failed to return the child, he was charged in the Ocean County Superior Court with endangering the welfare of a child and interference with child custody, and a state warrant was issued for his arrest. Once the child’s body was discovered, Morgan was charged with homicide.

Video – FEMEN in the Ghost House La Chaux-de-Fonds 2011

Femen in the Ghost House
La Chaux-de-Fonds 2011
directed by Alain Margot

TOP-SECRET-NSA-IRAN CONTRA AT 25: REAGAN AND BUSH ‘CRIMINAL LIABILITY’ EVALUATIONS

President Reagan motioning to Ed Meese at the White House Press Briefing announcing the Iran-Contra connection. 11/25/86.

 

Washington D.C., November 25, 2011 –President Ronald Reagan was briefed in advance about every weapons shipment in the Iran arms-for-hostages deals in 1985-86, and Vice President George H. W. Bush chaired a committee that recommended the mining of the harbors of Nicaragua in 1983, according to previously secret Independent Counsel assessments of “criminal liability” on the part of the two former leaders posted today by the National Security Archive.

Twenty-Five years after the advent of the “Iran-Contra affair,” the two comprehensive “Memoranda on Criminal Liability of Former President Reagan and of President Bush” provide a roadmap of historical, though not legal, culpability of the nation’s two top elected officials during the scandal from the perspective of a senior attorney in the Office of Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh. The documents were obtained pursuant to a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request filed by the National Security Archive for the files compiled during Walsh’s six-year investigation from 1987-1993.

The posting comes on the anniversary of the November 25, 1986, press conference during which Ronald Reagan and his attorney general, Edwin Meese, informed the American public that they had discovered a “diversion” of funds from the sale of arms to Iran to fund the contra war, thus tying together the two strands of the scandal which until that point had been separate in the public eye. The focus on the diversion, as Oliver North, the NSC staffer who supervised the two operations wrote in his memoirs, was itself a diversion. “This particular detail was so dramatic, so sexy, that it might actually-well divert public attention from other, even more important aspects of the story,” North wrote, “such as what the President and his top advisors had known about and approved.”

Ronald Reagan with Caspar Weinberger, George Shultz, Ed Meese, and Don Regan discussing the President’s remarks on the Iran-Contra affair, Oval Office. 11/25/86.

Source credit: Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

The criminal liability studies were drafted in March 1991 by a lawyer on Walsh’s staff, Christian J. Mixter (now a partner in the Washington law firm of Morgan Lewis), and represented preliminary conclusions on whether to prosecute both Reagan and Bush for various crimes ranging from conspiracy to perjury.

On Reagan, Mixter reported that the President was “briefed in advance” on each of the illicit sales of missiles to Iran. The criminality of the arms sales to Iran “involves a number of close legal calls,” Mixter wrote. He found that it would be difficult to prosecute Reagan for violating the Arms Export Control Act (AECA) which mandates advising Congress about arms transfers through a third country-the U.S. missiles were transferred to Iran from Israel during the first phase of the operation in 1985-because Attorney General Meese had told the president the 1947 National Security Act could be invoked to supersede the AECA.

As the Iran operations went forward, some of Reagan’s own top officials certainly believed that the violation of the AECA as well as the failure to notify Congress of these covert operations were illegal-and prosecutable. In a dramatic meeting on December 7, 1985, Secretary of Defense Caspar Weinberger told the President that “washing [the] transaction thru Israel wouldn’t make it legal.” When Reagan responded that “he could answer charges of illegality but he couldn’t answer charge that ‘big strong President Reagan passed up a chance to free hostages,” Weinberger suggested they might all end up in jail. “Visiting hours are on Thursdays,” Weinberger stated. As the scandal unfolded a year later, Reagan and his top aides gathered in the White House Situation Room the day before the November 25 press conference to work out a way to protect the president from impeachment proceedings.

On the Contra operations, Mixter determined that Reagan had, in effect, authorized the illegal effort to keep the contra war going after Congress terminated funding by ordering his staff to sustain the contras “body and soul.” But he was not briefed on the resupply efforts in enough detail to make him criminally part of the conspiracy to violate the Boland Amendment that had cut off aid to the Contras in October 1984.

Mixter also found that Reagan’s public misrepresentations of his role in Iran-Contra operations could not be prosecuted because deceiving the press and the American public was not a crime.

On the role of George Herbert Walker Bush, Mixter reported that the Vice President’s “knowledge of the Iran Initiative appears generally to have been coterminous with that of President Reagan.” Indeed, on the Iran-Contra operations overall, “it is quite clear that Mr. Bush attended most (although not quite all) of the key briefings and meetings in which Mr. Reagan participated, and therefore can be presumed to have known many of the Iran/Contra facts that the former President knew.” But since Bush was subordinate to Reagan, his role as a “secondary officer” made it more difficult to hold him criminally liable.

Mixter’s detailed report on Bush’s involvement does, however, shed considerable light on his role in both the Iran and Contra sides of the scandal. The memorandum on criminal liability noted that Bush had a long involvement in the Contra war, chairing the secret “Special Situation Group” in 1983 which “recommended specific covert operations” including “the mining of Nicaragua’s rivers and harbors.” Mixter also cited no less than a dozen meetings that Bush attended between 1984 and 1986 in which illicit aid to the Contras was discussed.

Despite the Mixter evaluations, Independent Counsel Lawrence Walsh continued to consider filing criminal indictments against both Reagan and Bush. In a final effort to determine Reagan’s criminal liability and give him “one last chance to tell the truth,” Walsh traveled to Los Angeles to depose Reagan in July 1992. “He was cordial and offered everybody licorice jelly beans but he remembered almost nothing,” Walsh wrote in his memoir, Firewall, The Iran-Contra Conspiracy and Cover-Up. The former president was “disabled,” and already showing clear signs of Althzeimers disease. “By the time the meeting had ended,” Walsh remembered, “it was as obvious to the former president’s counsel as it was to us that we were not going to prosecute Reagan.”

The Special Prosecutor also seriously considered indicting Bush for covering up his relevant diaries, which Walsh had requested in 1987. Only in December 1992, after he had lost the election to Bill Clinton, did Bush turn over the transcribed diaries. During the independent counsel’s investigation of why the diaries had not been turned over sooner, Lee Liberman, an Associate Counsel in the White House Counsel’s office, was deposed. In the deposition, Liberman stated that one of the reasons the diaries were withheld until after the election was that “it would have been impossible to deal with in the election campaign because of all the political ramifications, especially since the President’s polling numbers were low.”

In 1993, Walsh advised now former President Bush that the Independent Counsel’s office wanted to take his deposition on Iran-Contra. But Bush essentially refused. In one of his last acts as Independent Counsel, Walsh considered taking the cover-up case against Bush to a Grand Jury to obtain a subpoena. On the advice of his staff, however, he decided not to pursue an indictment of Bush.

Among the first entries Bush had recorded in his diary (begun in late 1986) was his reaction to reports from a Lebanese newspaper that a U.S. team had secretly gone to Iran to trade arms for hostages. “On the news at this time is the question of the hostages,” he noted on November 5, 1986. “I’m one of the few people that know fully the details. This is one operation that has been held very, very tight, and I hope it will not leak.”


Read the Documents:

Document 1, Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4
Office of the Independent Counsel, C.J. Mixter to Judge Walsh, “Criminal Liability of Former President Reagan,” March 21, 1991, 198 pages.

In this lengthy evaluation, Christian Mixter, a lawyer on the staff of the Independent Counsel, provides Lawrence Walsh with a comprehensive evaluation of the legal liability of President Ronald Reagan in the Iran-Contra operations. The memorandum reviews, in great detail, not only the evolution of the operations, but Reagan’s central role in them. It includes “a summary of facts” on both the sale of arms to Iran, in order to free American hostages held in Lebanon, and the evolution of the illicit contra resupply operations in Central America, as well as the connection between these two seemingly separate covert efforts. The report traces Reagan’s knowledge and authorization of the arms sales, as well as his tacit authorization of the illegal contra resupply activities; it also details his role in obtaining third country funding for the Contras after Congress terminated U.S. support in 1984. The document further evaluates Reagan’s responses in two official inquiries to determine whether they rise to the level of perjury. For a variety of reasons, Mixter’s opinion is that “there is no basis for a criminal prosecution” of Reagan in each of the areas under scrutiny, although he notes that it is a “close legal call” on the issue of arms sales to Iran.

 

Document 2
Office of the Independent Counsel, C.J. Mixter to Judge Walsh, “Criminal Liability of President Bush,” March 21, 1991, 89 pages.

In this assessment, Mixter traces then-Vice President Bush’s involvement in both sides of the Iran-Contra operations, including his meeting with a high Israeli official on the sales of arms to Iran in July 1986, and his presence at no fewer than a dozen meetings during which illicit assistance to the Contras was discussed. The legal evaluation also contains a detailed overview of Bush’s role in arranging a quid pro quo deal with two Presidents of Honduras in order to garner Honduran support for allowing the Contras to use that country as a base of operations against the Sandinistas in Nicaragua. “It is quite clear that Mr. Bush attended most (although not quite all) of the key briefings and meetings in which Mr. Reagan participated, and therefore can be presumed to have known many of the Iran/Contra facts that the former President knew.” But since Bush was subordinate to Reagan, his role as a “secondary officer” rendered him less likely to be criminally liable for the actions he took.

The Mixter memo on Bush was written before the existence and cover-up of the Vice President’s diaries became known in late 1992. The Independent Counsel’s office did launch an investigation into why the diaries were not previously turned over and considered bringing charges against the former Vice President for illegally withholding them.


More – The Top 5 Declassified Iran-Contra Historical Documents:

Document 1
NSC, National Security Planning Group Minutes, “Subject: Central America,” SECRET, June 25, 1984

At a pivotal meeting of the highest officials in the Reagan Administration, the President and Vice President and their top aides discuss how to sustain the Contra war in the face of mounting Congressional opposition. The discussion focuses on asking third countries to fund and maintain the effort, circumventing Congressional power to curtail the CIA’s paramilitary operations. In a remarkable passage, Secretary of State George P. Shultz warns the president that White House adviser James Baker has said that “if we go out and try to get money from third countries, it is an impeachable offense.” But Vice President George Bush argues the contrary: “How can anyone object to the US encouraging third parties to provide help to the anti-Sandinistas…? The only problem that might come up is if the United States were to promise to give these third parties something in return so that some people could interpret this as some kind of exchange.” Later, Bush participated in arranging a quid pro quo deal with Honduras in which the U.S. did provide substantial overt and covert aid to the Honduran military in return for Honduran support of the Contra war effort.

 

Document 2
White House, Draft National Security Decision Directive (NSDD), “U.S. Policy Toward Iran,” TOP SECRET, (with cover memo from Robert C. McFarlane to George P. Shultz and Caspar W. Weinberger), June 17, 1985

The secret deals with Iran were mainly aimed at freeing American hostages who were being held in Lebanon by forces linked to the Tehran regime. But there was another, subsidiary motivation on the part of some officials, which was to press for renewed ties with the Islamic Republic. One of the proponents of this controversial idea was National Security Advisor Robert McFarlane, who eventually took the lead on the U.S. side in the arms-for-hostages deals until his resignation in December 1985. This draft of a National Security Decision Directive, prepared at his behest by NSC and CIA staff, puts forward the argument for developing ties with Iran based on the traditional Cold War concern that isolating the Khomeini regime could open the way for Moscow to assert its influence in a strategically vital part of the world. To counter that possibility, the document proposes allowing limited amounts of arms to be supplied to the Iranians. The idea did not get far, as the next document testifies.

 

Document 3
Defense Department, Handwritten Notes, Caspar W. Weinberger Reaction to Draft NSDD on Iran (with attached note and transcription by Colin Powell), June 18, 1985

While CIA Director William J. Casey, for one, supported McFarlane’s idea of reaching out to Iran through limited supplies of arms, among other approaches, President Reagan’s two senior foreign policy advisers strongly opposed the notion. In this scrawled note to his military assistant, Colin Powell, Weinberger belittles the proposal as “almost too absurd to comment on … It’s like asking Qadhafi to Washington for a cozy chat.” Richard Armitage, who is mentioned in Powell’s note to his boss, was an assistant secretary of defense at the time and later became deputy secretary of state under Powell.

 

Document 4
Diary, Caspar W. Weinberger, December 7, 1985

The disastrous November HAWK shipment prompted U.S. officials to take direct control of the arms deals with Iran. Until then, Israel had been responsible for making the deliveries, for which the U.S. agreed to replenish their stocks of American weapons. Before making this important decision, President Reagan convened an extraordinary meeting of several top advisers in the White House family quarters on December 7, 1985, to discuss the issue. Among those attending were Secretary of State Shultz and Secretary of Defense Weinberger. Both men objected vehemently to the idea of shipping arms to Iran, which the U.S. had declared a sponsor of international terrorism. But in this remarkable set of notes, Weinberger captures the president’s determination to move ahead regardless of the obstacles, legal or otherwise: “President sd. he could answer charges of illegality but he couldn’t answer charge that ‘big strong President Reagan passed up chance to free hostages.'”

 

Document 5
NSC, Oliver L. North Memorandum, “Release of American Hostages in Beirut,” (so-called “Diversion Memo”), TOP SECRET/SENSITIVE, April 4, 1986

At the center of the public’s perception of the scandal was the revelation that the two previously unconnected covert activities — trading arms for hostages with Iran and backing the Nicaraguan Contras against congressional prohibitions — had become joined. This memo from Oliver North is the main piece of evidence to survive which spells out the plan to use “residuals” from the arms deals to fund the rebels. Justice Department investigators discovered it in North’s NSC files in late November 1986. For unknown reasons it escaped North’s notorious document “shredding party” which took place after the scandal became public.

Source credit: Courtesy Ronald Reagan Library

TOP-SECRET- Robert Kennedy Murder – Sirhan Sirhan Hypno-Programmed Assassin Innocence Plea Documents

The following court documents were filed on November 20, 2011 by the attorney of Sirhan Sirhan, the alleged assassin of Robert F. Kennedy.  The documents claim that Sirhan was a hypno-programmed assassin and that another person fired the gun that killed Kennedy.

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/SirhanSirhanPlea_Page_001-765x1024.jpg

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/SirhanSirhanPlea_Page_023-765x1024.jpg

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/SirhanSirhanPlea_Page_030-765x1024.jpg

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/SirhanSirhanPlea_Page_031-765x1024.jpg

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT BELOW

SirhanSirhanPlea

 

FEMEN ROMA BY NIGHT – Exclusive Photos

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE WEL-WI – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – WEL-WI

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

110271408536;18;32;00;;WELCHER, FRANK:;;;2795,00
280469430271;18;35;00;;WELDER, CHRISTIAN:;;;9675,00
220442429743;97;08;00;;WELDER, FRIEDRICH:;;;28500,00
110835406166;04;29;00;;WELDER, SIGESMUND:;;;37687,50
091049413755;08;00;56;;WELK, HARTMUT:;;;29187,50
161147411922;07;00;57;;WELK, MANFRED:;;;24300,00
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130453501529;94;03;00;;WELK, SUSANNE:;;;17448,38
200150401548;94;03;00;;WELK, WERNER:;;;5130,00
150170429748;18;33;00;;WELKE, ALEXANDER:;;;2720,00
200657407615;99;02;00;;WELKE, BURKHARD:;;;19492,50
061152504113;97;01;00;;WELKE, EDELTRAUD:;;;21600,00
210370417313;18;32;00;;WELKE, JENS:;;;10600,00
240671413727;18;35;00;;WELKE, MARCUS:;;;2795,00
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040770407545;18;33;00;;WELKISCH, MICHAEL:;;;3920,00
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110163405936;96;15;00;1047/82, M:;WELLER, JO(E)RG;1092;LENINALLEE 237;
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101159403837;97;01;00;;WELLER, JOERG:;;;23922,50
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020167409214;06;00;43;;WELLER, MAIK:;;;13158,00
300631400712;97;01;00;;WELLER, MARTIN:;;;37500,00
220567423935;99;40;00;;WELLER, MICHAEL:;;;11016,00
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230968418917;10;69;00;;WELLER, MIKE:;;;9675,00
090640428941;14;31;00;;WELLER, PETER:;;;31625,04
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201060428928;97;01;00;;WELLER, UWE:;;;24894,19
190833429711;98;20;00;;WELLER, WOLFGANG:;;;30750,00
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201159430147;99;13;00;;WETZEL, PETER:;;;21792,50
120250429783;98;20;00;;WETZEL, RAINER:;;;25920,00
310855419024;10;80;00;;WETZEL, REINHARD:;;;17991,25
160449418623;10;06;00;;WETZEL, ROLAND:;;;26062,50
010557417536;09;00;51;;WETZEL, SIEGMUND:;;;22770,00
020256506112;99;10;00;;WETZEL, SIGRID:;;;15508,94
130339428970;96;15;22;;WETZEL, STEFFEN:;;;27937,50
101067417553;09;69;00;;WETZEL, TORSTEN:;;;3475,83
300866404515;98;27;00;;WETZEL, ULRICH:;;;11016,00
070745417415;08;18;00;;WETZEL, ULRICH:;;;25920,00
271050519758;11;80;00;;WETZEL, URSEL:;;;15510,00
151059413929;99;14;00;;WETZEL, WOLF:;;;21217,50
301269411914;07;96;00;;WETZIG, BJOERN:;;;12500,00
131243426529;14;20;00;;WETZIG, HELMAR:;;;29937,50
301269411922;18;71;20;;WETZIG, LARS:;;;9600,00
200370429315;14;69;00;;WETZIG, RENE:;;;12085,00
050969426566;14;69;00;;WETZIG, STEFFEN:;;;11845,83
141264407254;05;26;00;;WETZLING, OLAF:;;;16115,00
291270407916;18;32;00;;WETZORKE, AXEL:;;;2795,00
190661402714;02;06;00;;WEWETZER, ANDREAS:;;;17820,00
120270402422;94;65;00;;WEWETZER, OLAF:;;;9510,00
301047511418;30;83;00;;WEYER, BEATE:;;;33469,71
200558418423;94;30;00;;WEYER, DETLEF:;;;20414,35
140741530075;30;83;00;;WEYER, HELGA:;;;35184,42
160742430269;99;77;00;;WEYER, JOACHIM:;;;44437,50
291254418439;97;01;00;;WEYER, UDO:;;;20332,50
250961402216;02;06;00;;WEYER, WILFRIED:;;;17820,00
050171417919;09;69;00;;WEYERS, LARS:;;;2911,13
130946512218;07;18;00;;WEYH, GABRIELE:;;;18943,84
270868420119;96;15;22;;WEYH, MARIO:;;;9195,00
171267420013;11;06;20;;WEYH, RENE:;;;13295,00
061244412232;07;26;00;;WEYH, UWE:;;;25687,50
030454426323;14;26;00;;WEYHE, FALK:;;;25200,00
290345414711;08;00;56;;WEYHRAUCH, GERD:;;;34615,00
101053428382;18;35;00;;WEYMANN, FRANK:;;;31680,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

TOP-SECRET – U.K. Embassies Preparing for Collapse of Euro

As the Italian government struggled to borrow and Spain considered seeking an international bail-out, British ministers privately warned that the break-up of the euro, once almost unthinkable, is now increasingly plausible.

Diplomats are preparing to help Britons abroad through a banking collapse and even riots arising from the debt crisis.

The Treasury confirmed earlier this month that contingency planning for a collapse is now under way.

A senior minister has now revealed the extent of the Government’s concern, saying that Britain is now planning on the basis that a euro collapse is now just a matter of time.

“It’s in our interests that they keep playing for time because that gives us more time to prepare,” the minister told.

Recent Foreign and Commonwealth Office instructions to embassies and consulates request contingency planning for extreme scenarios including rioting and social unrest.

Greece has seen several outbreaks of civil disorder as its government struggles with its huge debts. British officials think similar scenes cannot be ruled out in other nations if the euro collapses.

Diplomats have also been told to prepare to help tens of thousands of British citizens in eurozone countries with the consequences of a financial collapse that would leave them unable to access bank accounts or even withdraw cash.

Fuelling the fears of financial markets for the euro, reports in Madrid yesterday suggested that the new Popular Party government could seek a bail-out from either the European Union rescue fund or the International Monetary Fund.

CONFIDENTIAL – California Commission on Peace Officer Standards and Training Use of Force Workbook

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https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/CA-Use_of_Force_Page_02-791x1024.jpghttps://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/CA-Use_of_Force_Page_08-791x1024.jpg

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/CA-Use_of_Force_Page_09-791x1024.jpg

The following document is the standard handbook used to train California police officers in the use of force.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

CA-Use_of_Force

TOP-SECRET from the FBI – Public Corruption, Illegal Prescription Drug Trafficking, and Health Care Fraud

Gwendolyn Washington, M.D., age 67, was sentenced today to 120 months’ imprisonment for public corruption, health care fraud, and conspiring to illegally distribute prescription drugs, United States Attorney Barbara L. McQuade announced. McQuade was joined in the announcement by Andrew G. Arena, Special Agent in Charge, Federal Bureau of Investigation, Detroit Field Division, and Lamont Pugh, III, Special Agent in Charge, Department of Health and Human Services, Office of Inspector General. Dr. Washington was sentenced by the Honorable Paul D. Borman.

On March, 7, 2011, Dr. Washington pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud and defrauding the Detroit Public School (“DPS”) system of over $3.3 million. Dr. Washington, along with her sister Sherry Washington, and others doing business as “Associates for Learning” paid kickbacks to Stephen Hill, former DPS Executive Director of Risk Management, who authorized their submission to DPS and payment by DPS of grossly inflated invoices for services allegedly rendered to DPS in the form of a wellness program.

On July 28, 2011, Dr. Washington pleaded guilty to four felony counts involving drug trafficking and health care fraud. At her plea, Washington admitted that between 2004 and 2010, she performed unnecessary ultrasounds, nuclear cardiac stress tests, balance tests, sleep tests, and nerve conduction tests on patients, who were urged to return to Washington’s office every few months for repeat tests, even though initial results were normal. Washington billed Medicare and Blue Cross and Blue Shield more than $5 million for these tests, some of which were potentially harmful to patients. Most significantly, Dr. Washington ordered unnecessary and actively harmful nuclear stress tests for her patients at a frequency beyond that of any other medical practice in the country. Because each of these tests is the radiation equivalent of at least 80 to120 chest x-rays and because excess radiation creates a greater risk of cancer, Dr. Washington exposed her patients to a substantial risk of cancer.

Dr. Washington also admitted that she solicited and received kickbacks from home health care agencies and diagnostic testing facilities in return for referring patients to them for medical services. Washington referred patients to home health agencies, falsely certifying them as being confined to the home, in return for payments from home health care agencies of $200 to $500 per patient. In return for ordering nuclear stress tests, Dr. Washington received $200 per test. In total, Washington received $350,000 in total kickback payments. Medicare paid approximately $2.8 million to agencies receiving the fraudulent referrals. Washington received another $250,000 directly from Medicare for false certifications of patients for home health services.

Dr. Washington also admitted to committing two counts of controlled substances offenses. In February 2010, when Medicare suspended payments to Washington, resulting in a drastic reduction in her income, she began writing prescriptions for tens of thousands of doses of OxyContin, Opana ER, and Roxicodone, highly addictive pain medications that have a significant “street value” on the illicit market. Washington sometimes wrote prescriptions for individuals who were not her patients, without an examination or determination of medical necessity, and without an appropriate diagnosis or entry in a patient chart. Washington then provided these illegal prescriptions to Virginia Dillard, her niece and codefendant. Dillard filled the prescriptions at various pharmacies in Highland Park, Warren, and Detroit. After filling the illegal prescriptions, Virginia Dillard delivered the controlled substances to prescription drug dealers in exchange for money. Dillard sold each filled prescription in amounts ranging from $1,000 to $2,200, and shared the proceeds with Washington. Dillard was sentenced, on October 20, 2011, to 112 months’ imprisonment.

United States Attorney Barbara L. McQuade stated, “Dr. Washington not only stole money from school children and from Medicare, she also exposed patients to harmful tests for her own financial gain. We hope that this sentence deters other health care providers from stealing public funds and risking the health of their patients.”

Special Agent in Charge Andrew Arena stated, “Health Care Fraud is one of the fastest growing crime problems in the state of Michigan. The FBI will continue to work closely with its law enforcement partners to focus all possible resources on this problem.”

“Special Agent in Charge Lamont Pugh stated, “Today’s sentencing provides another reminder to those who would commit drug and related health care crimes that law enforcement is watching. The Office of Inspector General and our law enforcement partners remain steadfast in our commitment to ensuring that the Medicare program and taxpayer dollars are protected.”

U.S. Attorney McQuade congratulated the hard work of the FBI and HHS for its efforts in pursuing these cases. The public corruption case was prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Michael Buckley. The health care fraud and illegal prescription drug distribution cases were prosecuted by Assistant United States Attorney Sarah Resnick Cohen.

UNCENSORED – FEMEN USA Photos at the Wall Street

FEMEN-USA

 

FBI – Web Domains Selling Counterfeit Goods Seized in Cyber Monday Crackdown – HSI agent

HSI agent

Seizure orders have been executed against 150 domain names of commercial websites engaged in the illegal sale and distribution of counterfeit goods and copyrighted works as part of Operation In Our Sites. The seized domains are in the custody of the federal government. Visitors to the sites will now find a seizure banner that notifies them that the domain name has been seized by federal authorities and educates them that willful copyright infringement is a federal crime.

During the operation, federal law enforcement agents made undercover purchases of a host of products, including professional sports jerseys, golf equipment, DVD sets, footwear, handbags and sunglasses, representing a variety of trademarks from online retailers who were suspected of selling counterfeit products. In most cases, the goods were shipped directly into the United States from suppliers in other countries.

The operation was conducted by the Department of Justice, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI), the ICE-led National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center (IPR Center), and the FBI Washington Field Office.

TOP-SECRET – Congressional Budget Office: Top 1% Income Rose 275% From 1979-2007

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From 1979 to 2007, real (inflation-adjusted) average household income, measured after government transfers and federal taxes, grew by 62 percent. During that period, the evolution of the nation’s economy and the tax and spending policies of the federal government and state and local governments had varying effects on households at different points in the income distribution: Income after transfers and federal taxes (denoted as after-tax income in this study) for households at the higher end of the income scale rose much more rapidly than income for households in the middle and at the lower end of the income scale. In particular:

  • For the 1 percent of the population with the highest income, average real after-tax household income grew by 275 percent between 1979 and 2007 (see Summary Figure 1).
  • For others in the 20 percent of the population with the highest income (those in the 81st through 99th percentiles), average real after-tax household income grew by 65 percent over that period, much faster than it did for the remaining 80 percent of the population, but not nearly as fast as for the top 1 percent.
  • For the 60 percent of the population in the middle of the income scale (the 21st through 80th percentiles), the growth in average real after-tax household income was just under 40 percent.
  • For the 20 percent of the population with the lowest income, average real after-tax household income was about 18 percent higher in 2007 than it had been in 1979.

As a result of that uneven income growth, the distribution of after-tax household income in the United States was substantially more unequal in 2007 than in 1979: The share of income accruing to higher-income households increased, whereas the share accruing to other households declined. In fact, between 2005 and 2007, the after-tax income received by the 20 percent of the population with the highest income exceeded the aftertax income of the remaining 80 percent.

To assess trends in the distribution of household income, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) examined the span from 1979 to 2007 because those endpoints allow comparisons between periods of similar overall economic activity (they were both years before recessions). The growth in average income for different groups over the 1979–2007 period reflects a comparison of average income for those groups at different points in time; it does not reflect the experience of particular households. Individual households may have moved up or down the income scale if their income rose or fell more than the average for their initial group. Thus, the population with income in the lowest 20 percent in 2007 was not necessarily the same as the population in that category in 1979.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

CBO-HouseholdIncome

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE WE-WEL – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – WE-WEL

 

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070461521229;12;00;48;;WEBEL, ELKE:;;;11216,31
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230951520333;99;43;00;;WEBEL, PETRA:;;;104,51
200644418948;10;00;42;;WEBER, ALBERTO:;;;19875,00
171132417730;30;35;00;;WEBER, ALBRECHT:;;;22680,00
201267424537;18;32;00;;WEBER, ANDREAS:;;;9625,00
190458406146;17;00;00;;WEBER, ANDREAS:;;;18601,25
250952506427;94;03;00;;WEBER, ANGELIKA:;;;17488,44
120746427212;97;01;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;29250,00
110254411127;07;03;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;20589,00
181041412239;07;08;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;22500,00
120747428129;14;00;60;;WEBER, BERND:;;;23812,50
090355423834;13;80;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;16955,00
230847426216;99;43;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;22500,00
280352410015;99;55;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;21840,00
020452406442;18;32;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;22380,00
190256403422;99;40;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;23450,00
130552415386;01;96;31;;WEBER, BERND:;;;20880,00
060957407244;94;03;00;;WEBER, BERND:;;;22770,00
271247430132;15;00;50;;WEBER, BERND-JUERGEN:;;;35250,00
190459523811;13;78;00;;WEBER, BIRGIT:;;;17583,50
220466530184;94;65;00;;WEBER, BIRGIT:;;;2025,60
120643529726;94;11;00;;WEBER, BRIGITTE:;;;18010,20
260969418326;10;69;00;;WEBER, CARSTEN:;;;3550,00
211043515375;08;08;00;;WEBER, CHRISTA:;;;22500,00
120149500629;05;06;00;;WEBER, CHRISTEL:;;;22095,00
311239415315;08;02;00;;WEBER, CHRISTIAN:;;;3062,50
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200267517536;99;40;00;;WEBER, CORNELIA:;;;14233,70
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220452414529;97;06;00;;WEBER, DETLEF:;;;23040,00
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160649424833;96;15;00;1779/71, F:;WEBER, DIETER;1120;AM STEINBERG 104D;
160649424833;96;15;00;1779/71, F:;WEBER, DIETER;1120;AM STEINBERG 104D;
090140429745;94;65;00;;WEBER, DIETER:;;;33000,00
200259406940;94;03;00;;WEBER, DIETER:;;;19390,91
190142412291;07;80;00;;WEBER, DIETMAR:;;;18900,00
290851409122;06;00;54;;WEBER, DIETMAR:;;;21287,50
131062418714;10;00;49;;WEBER, DIETMAR:;;;16494,68
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260966417520;99;12;00;;WEBER, DIRK:;;;16254,00
150757507418;99;77;00;;WEBER, DORIS:;;;21006,45
120165416937;09;00;47;;WEBER, ECKHARD:;;;20460,00
191227430012;99;43;00;;WEBER, EDMUND:;;;30750,00
030344406751;99;99;99;::;WEBER, EKKEHARD;5020;JURI-GAGARIN-RING 72;
290727430143;30;47;00;;WEBER, ERICH:;;;25740,00
310165421012;99;43;00;;WEBER, FALK:;;;16830,00
201067417770;09;65;00;;WEBER, FALK:;;;13225,00
050967413913;99;43;00;;WEBER, FALKO:;;;14311,00
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061050422846;12;00;41;XII/2668/87, :;WEBER, FRANK;8270;HEINRICH-RAU-STR. 3B;
010263406145;04;06;00;;WEBER, FRANK:;;;19250,00
280870424214;99;49;00;;WEBER, FRANK:;;;4200,00
271048414623;17;00;00;;WEBER, FRANK:;;;20160,00
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021246408417;99;02;00;;WEBER, FRED:;;;30750,00
020765430021;96;15;00;3383/85, Q:;WEBER, GERD;1090;BIESENBROWER STR. 70;
230954429893;15;08;00;;WEBER, GERD:;;;21600,00
251153407013;97;06;00;;WEBER, GERD:;;;23040,00
240249430118;30;62;00;;WEBER, GERD:;;;18540,00
160451413987;94;03;00;;WEBER, GERD:;;;23760,00
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030834401339;01;06;26;;WEBER, GERHARD:;;;23250,00
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130851524742;97;08;00;;WEBER, GERLINDE:;;;15840,00
150248415363;08;00;56;;WEBER, GUENTHER:;;;30875,00
110743417722;96;15;00;192/73, X:;WEBER, HANS;1130;SCHULZE-BOYSEN-STR. 27;
110743417722;96;15;00;192/73, X:;WEBER, HANS;1130;SCHULZE-BOYSEN-STR. 27;
290945404437;03;19;00;;WEBER, HANS-ULLRICH:;;;26460,00
060552416417;09;06;00;;WEBER, HARALD:;;;21960,00
041240412210;07;20;00;;WEBER, HARTMUT:;;;26250,00
190542429738;99;43;00;;WEBER, HARTMUT:;;;26250,00
080247429738;97;08;00;;WEBER, HARTMUT:;;;25500,00
180668411526;18;33;00;;WEBER, HEIKO:;;;9600,00
270870429323;18;31;00;;WEBER, HEIKO:;;;6705,00
040239430302;94;30;00;;WEBER, HEINZ:;;;27004,03
230959428128;14;00;61;;WEBER, HENRIK:;;;23578,21
240543414418;08;00;56;;WEBER, HERBERT:;;;22087,50
151229413156;30;38;00;;WEBER, HERRMANN:;;;15120,00
171267422801;17;00;00;;WEBER, HOLGER:;;;8950,00
260136406910;05;00;43;;WEBER, HORST:;;;27000,00
090741427315;97;01;00;;WEBER, HUBERT:;;;30750,00
061257506123;17;00;00;;WEBER, ILONA:;;;19004,68
120137529715;99;12;00;;WEBER, INGE:;;;30000,00
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250736515310;08;40;00;;WEBER, INGEBURG:;;;26250,00
090855511128;07;96;00;;WEBER, INGELORE:;;;14335,40
260969428110;14;69;00;;WEBER, INGO:;;;12085,00
101165417514;09;09;00;;WEBER, INGO:;;;4888,00
211157405916;04;00;40;;WEBER, INGOLF:;;;21945,00
301167404115;17;00;00;;WEBER, JAN:;;;9815,33
020265428136;98;20;00;;WEBER, JENS:;;;19745,00
270763403718;14;15;00;;WEBER, JENS:;;;13860,00
270562426817;99;43;00;;WEBER, JENS:;;;17600,00
090271404433;18;32;00;;WEBER, JENS:;;;2795,00
070968411221;94;30;00;;WEBER, JENS:;;;14400,00
120259400821;30;43;00;;WEBER, JENS:;;;17700,00
010968427333;18;29;30;;WEBER, JENS:;;;8950,00
170153416046;11;19;00;;WEBER, JENS-ULRICH:;;;23920,00
051249423820;99;43;00;;WEBER, JOACHIM:;;;22275,00
310850415403;97;06;00;;WEBER, JOERG:;;;26640,00
280856406722;05;14;00;;WEBER, JOERG:;;;18572,50
220568424921;18;29;30;;WEBER, JOERG:;;;8950,00
040551422825;05;40;00;;WEBER, JUERGEN:;;;25920,00
010362429254;14;00;54;;WEBER, JUERGEN:;;;26400,00
030649427211;97;08;00;;WEBER, JUERGEN:;;;16830,00
030349418532;10;06;00;;WEBER, KARL:;;;22437,50
150445412217;01;06;22;;WEBER, KARL-GU(E)NTHER:;;;19767,50
280257430106;94;03;00;;WEBER, KARLHEINZ:;;;21217,50
120146418419;10;06;00;;WEBER, KARL-HEINZ:;;;24000,00
151252425024;99;43;00;;WEBER, KARL-HEINZ:;;;19440,00
081270527111;18;25;00;;WEBER, KATHRIN:;;;2932,67
070451404440;03;55;00;;WEBER, KLAUS:;;;24735,00
020249400715;99;53;00;;WEBER, KLAUS:;;;24187,50
200848422711;99;40;00;;WEBER, KLAUS:;;;26250,00
100554418946;10;09;00;;WEBER, KLAUS:;;;23040,00
130338403616;30;45;00;;WEBER, KLAUS-PETER:;;;24120,00
020762430106;94;65;00;;WEBER, KNUT:;;;17186,61
010143428147;99;53;00;;WEBER, KURT:;;;36000,00
101167403714;14;40;00;;WEBER, LARS:;;;10015,00
051234517728;09;20;00;;WEBER, LISA:;;;23562,50
031247403836;03;19;00;;WEBER, LOTHAR:;;;36720,00
101266406822;99;43;00;;WEBER, MAIK:;;;14518,65
180360413920;98;19;00;;WEBER, MANFRED:;;;21946,45
250528412210;07;53;00;;WEBER, MANFRED:;;;26250,00
261253407538;02;40;00;;WEBER, MANFRED:;;;22367,50
090651414414;94;03;00;;WEBER, MANFRED:;;;19560,00
150170411062;01;69;00;;WEBER, MARC:;;;2896,61
190338503638;03;19;00;;WEBER, MARGOT:;;;22500,00
100767414527;94;03;00;;WEBER, MARIO:;;;14946,00
231053503624;03;29;00;;WEBER, MARITA:;;;17665,99
251155418242;96;15;07;;WEBER, MARKUS:;;;15000,00
011154405746;99;26;00;;WEBER, MARTIN:;;;22920,00
121268417312;18;34;00;;WEBER, MATTHIAS:;;;10410,00
021270402744;99;26;00;;WEBER, MATTHIAS:;;;2700,00
031159420740;97;22;00;;WEBER, MATTHIAS:;;;21332,50
040649428256;98;84;00;;WEBER, MICHAEL:;;;20160,00
041254429822;96;15;06;;WEBER, MICHAEL:;;;24840,00
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Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

UNCENSORED – Occupy Wall Street NYC Photos

Liberty Park is encircled with tied-together barricades, with only two points of entry to the park, one each along Liberty and Cedar Streets.[Image]
Green-vested “guards” are numerous. These outnumber the few police outside the park.
Some of the guards appear to be undercover cops, perhaps all of them.[Image]
The guard-cop at left ordered a visitor to remove coffee and food from a bench.[Image]
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Books coming in to replace those trashed by Bloomberg.
No ban on books so in large numbers they may be used as materials to fabricate shelter.[Image]
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[Image]These gents appear leery of being photographed, and rightly so, due to persistent infiltration and photography by cops. Or could be undercover cops.

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Giant sculptures are now barricaded.[Image]
Barricades along Wall Street at the New York Stock Exchange have been reduced.[Image]
Horses have replaced heavily armed cops for tourist appeal, long pretending to protect the stock exchange.[Image]
The original Wall Street occupiers at Wall Street and Broadway protesting the folly over 200 years later.[Image]

	

Video – FEMEN attacked Paris Hilton in Kiev

Topless FEMEN activist Alexandra Shevchenko attacked Paris Hilton during her press-conference in Kiev. FEMEN say that they protested against prostitution in the fashion and model industry in Ukraine.

UNCENSORED – Women Protest Worldwide Photos 7

[Image]Supporters of Bharatiya Mazdoor Sangh, or Indian Workers Group, raise slogans at a protest rally in New Delhi, India, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. The supporters demanded that the government protect workers rights in the ongoing economic reform process as well as the financial crisis. (Gurinder Osan)
[Image]Yemenis protest against President Ali Abdullah Saleh during a rally after the weekly Friday noon prayers in Sanaa on November 25, 2011. Opponents and supporters of Yemen’s embattled president held rival rallies in the capital after pre-dawn fighting between rival security forces dashed hopes an exit deal for the president would end the violence. Getty
[Image]Women perform prayers at the Taghyeer (Change) Square, where anti-government protesters have been camping for around ten months to call for the ouster and trial of Yemen’s President Ali Abdullah Saleh, in Sanaa November 27, 2011. Reuters
[Image]Yemeni women and anti-government protesters shout slogans during a demonstration demanding the trial of Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh in Sanaa on November 26, 2011. Getty
[Image]Demonstrators gather during protests against a nuclear waste transport in Dannenberg, northern Germany, Saturday Nov. 26, 2011. The shipment of nuclear waste reprocessed in France is on its way to a controversial storage site in Gorleben that protesters say is unsafe. It is the first such shipment from France to Germany since Berlin decided to shut all its nuclear plants by 2022, following the disaster at Japan’s Fukushima plant. The transport is due to arrive at the storage site on Sunday.
[Image]A demonstrator dressed as a clown stands between police officers during protests against a shipment of nuclear waste to the storage facility in Gorleben, in Hitzacker, northern Germany Sunday Nov. 27, 2011. (Axel Heimken)
[Image]People demonstrate during a protest against violence in Mexico City, Sunday, Nov. 27, 2011. Demonstrators wore skull masks or painted their faces as skulls to symbolize the victims of violence in Mexico. Over 50,000 people have died since Mexican President Felipe Calderon launched his offensive against organized crime in 2006. (Marco Ugarte)
[Image]Libyan Amazigh Berbers protest outside the prime minister’s office in Tripoli on November 27, 2011 as they step up pressure for the minority group to to be represented in the government. Getty
[Image]Environment activists Hanna Schwarz, right, and Heiko Mueller-Ripke, have chained themselves inside a pyramid with concrete inside, they claim, on the tracks near Hitzacker, Sunday Nov. 27, 2011. Police has difficulties for hours, to unchain the protesters without injuring them. The activists protest against a nuclear waste transport from France to a storage in Gorleben. (Axel Heimken)
[Image]Members of the Ethiopian community block the entrance to Israel’s Ministry of Immigrant Absorption during a protest in Jerusalem November 27, 2011. About 400 Israelis of Ethiopian descent took part in the protest on Sunday calling on the government to grant permission for their relatives living in Ethiopia to immigrate. Reuters
[Image]Demonstrators drum on barrels with a nuclear sign, during protests against a nuclear waste transport in Dannenberg, northern Germany, Saturday, Nov. 26, 2011. The shipment of nuclear waste reprocessed in France is on its way to a controversial storage site in Gorleben that protesters say is unsafe. It is the first such shipment from France to Germany since Berlin decided to shut all its nuclear plants by 2022, following the disaster at Japan’s Fukushima plant.
[Image]Oxfam (a confederation of 15 organizations working together to find lasting solutions to poverty and injustice) activists make a protest aimed at 17th Conference of the Parties (COP17) under the UN Framework Convention on Climate Change (UNFCCC) in Durban on November 27, 2011. Inspired by the Occupy Wall St. movement, protesters calling for ‘climate justice’ are set to gather on November 28 at the opening of UN climate talks in Durban, South Africa, organisers say. Getty
[Image]In tihis picture taken Saturday Nov. 26, 2011 police carries an environment activist away from the tracks near Harlingen, northern Germany. German police say they cleared a sit-in of about 3,500 protesters attempting to block a shipment of nuclear waste with security forces temporarily detaining 1,300 of them. (Philipp Guelland)
[Image]South Korean police say nearly 40 officers were injured during a rally opposing the ratification of the country’s free trade deal with the United States.Hundreds of protesters have been staging near-daily demonstrations since the ruling party railroaded the U.S. trade deal last week. The protesters believe the deal favors Washington over South Korean workers. About 2,200 people rallied in Seoul on Saturday evening, November 26, 2011.
[Image]Sarah Elbaroudy, age seven, from Long Island, stands during a collaborative protest between the Occupy Wall Street movement and people supporting the 2011 Egyptian Revolution and the current social unrest throughout Egypt, near the Egyptian Embassy to the United States, at the intersection of East 44th Street and Second Avenue, in New York, November 26, 2011. Reuters
[Image]A woman dressed as the Grim Reaper attends a protest against shale gas exploration and production in Sofia on November 26, 2011. Bulgaria gave in July a licence to the United States energy major Chevron for the exploration of an area in the north-eastern part of Bulgaria. Getty
[Image]A young Romanian woman wearing make up to suggest she is a victim of domestic violence takes part in a protest in Bucharest, Romania, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Dozens of women gathered in protest on the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women demanding the introduction of the restraining order in Romanian legislation. Romania is a European Union member state but has no proper legal framework to combat domestic violence against women.
[Image]Israelis covered in red color demonstrates as part of the International Anti-fur Coalition protest in Tel Aviv. Friday. Nov. 25, 2011. The demonstration was part of an international protest against fur trade.(Dan Balilty)
[Image]An Egyptian girl holds an anti-Israel banner during a protest at al Azhar mosque, the highest Islamic Sunni institution, after Friday prayers in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. The Muslim brotherhood demonstration was to denounce Israeli control over Jerusalem’s Al Aqsa Mosque, one of the holiest sites in Islam. Arabic and Hebrew reads ” Death for Israel”. (Amr Nabil)
[Image]An Egyptian woman holds up an infant during a rally in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Tens of thousands of protesters chanting, “Leave, leave!” filled Cairo’s Tahrir Square in a massive demonstration to force Egypt’s ruling military council to yield power. The Friday rally is dubbed by organizers as “The Last Chance Million-Man Protest,” and comes one day after the military offered an apology for the killing of nearly 40 protesters in clashes on side streets near Tahrir Square.
[Image]Filipino women activists stage a play to symbolize human rights violations during a demonstration to mark the International Day of Action on Violence Against Women near the Malacanang presidential palace in Manila, Philippines, Friday Nov. 25, 2011. The women’s group held the rally to raise public awareness and encourage continuing action to eliminate violence against women. (Aaron Favila)
[Image]Students march demanding an education reform in Bogota, Colombia, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Protesters are demanding more funding and other changes to the public education system.(Fernando Vergara)
[Image]Protesters are hit with water from a police water canon during a march for education reform in Santiago, Chile, Thursday Nov. 24, 2011. Protesters have demanded more funding and other changes to the public education system. The annual budget is due to be approved by Nov. 30. (Luis Hidalgo)
[Image]Pro-Syrian regime protesters shout pro-Syrian President Bashar Assad slogans during a protest against the Arab League meeting, in Damascus, Syria, Thursday Nov. 24, 2011. An Arab League committee has given Syria 24 hours to agree to allow an observer mission into the country or it could face sanctions. (Bassem Tellawi)
[Image]A woman cycles past a group of petitioners holding red scarves as they protest outside the Ministry of Civil Affairs in Beijing, China, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. About 30 petitioners who they said were infected with HIV from blood transfusions held up a chain of red scarves to symbolize their demands the government to provide compensation for their children’s treatment, in conjunction of the upcoming World AIDS Day, which falls on Dec. 1. (Andy Wong)
[Image]A woman protester attempts to dismantle a barbed wire barricade, newly erected by the Egyptian army, near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. International criticism of Egypt’s military rulers is mounting after five days of clashes between police and protesters demanding the generals relinquish power immediately. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]A protester takes a break during clashes with Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Egyptian police are clashing with anti-government protesters for a fifth day in Cairo. Tens of thousands of protesters in Tahrir Square have rejected a promise by Egypt’s military ruler to speed up a presidential election to the first half of next year.
[Image]A woman blocks the entrance to Congress as riot police stand guard in Guatemala City, Wednesday Nov. 23, 2011. Protesters are demanding that Congress approve the Ley de Vivienda, or Housing Act, which would allow them to attain legal titles to the lands where they built their homes. (Rodrigo Abd)
[Image]A protester affiliated with the Occupy Toronto movement shouts support to fellow protesters inside a barricaded pavilion in their camp in St. James Park in Toronto on Wednesday Nov. 23, 2011, as police and city officials enforce an eviction notice. (Chris Young)
[Image]Police officers detain opposition demonstrators during an unsanctioned rally in downtown Moscow, Russia, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Several dozen people were detained in central Moscow where they were protesting against the lack of alternatives in the upcoming parliamentary and presidential elections. (Alexander Zemlianichenko)
[Image]Anti-government protesters shout during a rally organized by the 20th February, the Moroccan Arab Spring movement in Casablanca, Morocco, Sunday, Nov 20, 2011, in a mass popular call to bring more democracy into this North African kingdom. Thousands of Moroccans from the pro-democracy movement braved pouring rain and high winds in Casablanca to make a final call to boycott upcoming elections. (Abdeljalil Bounhar)

SECRET – State Department Uganda Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament Report to Congress

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The Lord’s Resistance Army Disarmament and Northern Uganda Recovery Act, Public Law 111-172, requires the Secretary of State to submit a report to Congress on implementation of the President’s strategy to support disarmament of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and assistance provided toward a lasting solution to the conflict in northern Uganda.

The United States has worked over the last year with our bilateral and multilateral partners to advance the President’s strategy. With our encouragement, the African Union (AU) and United Nations (UN) are working to enhance regional coordination toward addressing the LRA threat. We have also continued to support regional efforts to increase diplomatic and military pressure on the LRA. We have deployed U.S. military personnel to the region to serve as advisors to regional militaries pursuing the LRA. Meanwhile, we continue work with partners in the region to increase civilian protection, facilitate LRA defections, and address humanitarian needs, while also supporting the recovery of northern Uganda.

The United States remains committed to pursuing the multi-year, comprehensive strategy submitted to Congress last year. Any reduction in regional cooperation or military pressure could enable the LRA to regroup and rebuild its forces. However, the extent of U.S. efforts to implement the strategy remains a function of available and consistent resources. Given our budget constraints, we continue to encourage other members of the international community to join this effort and help fill funding gaps. We co-chair the International Working Group on the LRA, a mechanism established to enhance coordination among all donors.

Enhancing Regional Efforts to Apprehend LRA Top Commanders

Over the last year, the United States has worked with regional governments to enhance their military operations to apprehend or remove top LRA commanders from the battlefield. We continue to provide critical logistical support and nonlethal equipment to assist the Ugandan military’s counter-LRA operations. With our encouragement, the government of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has deployed a U.S. trained and equipped battalion to participate in counter-LRA efforts in the LRA’s area of operations in the DRC. As the Central African Republic (CAR) and South Sudan increase their efforts to counter the LRA, we are engaging with and supporting their militaries. We have provided some equipment to the CAR forces deployed to the LRA-affected area.

Although regional militaries have reduced the LRA’s numbers to an estimated 200 core fighters and an unknown number of accompanying children and abductees, the LRA will remain a serious regional threat as long as Joseph Kony and the LRA’s top leaders remain in place. Over the last year, sustained military pressure has limited the LRA’s opportunities to regroup and rearm. Abductees and low-level fighters have continued to escape and reintegrate into their communities. Nonetheless, the LRA is still terrorizing communities and undermining regional security across a broad swath of central Africa. According to the UN, there have been over 250 attacks attributed to the LRA this year alone.

In line with the President’s strategy, we have reviewed how we can improve our support to the coalition of LRA-affected countries to increase the likelihood of successful operations to apprehend or remove LRA top commanders from the battlefield and bring them to justice. On October 14, the President reported to Congress that he had authorized a small number of U.S. forces to deploy to the LRA-affected region, in consultation with the regional governments, to act as advisors to the regional militaries that are pursuing the LRA. These advisors will enhance the capacity of regional militaries to coordinate and fuse intelligence with effective operational planning. The U.S. forces will not themselves engage directly against LRA forces unless necessary to defend themselves.

This is a short-term deployment with clear goals and objectives. We believe the U.S. advisors can address critical capabilities gaps to help the regional forces succeed. Additionally, our advisors are sensitive to civilian protection considerations and will work closely with our embassies to ensure they remain cognizant of local and regional political dynamics. The State Department has deployed a Civilian Response Corps officer to the region to work with the advisors in this regard. We will regularly review and assess whether the advisory effort is sufficiently enhancing the regional effort to justify continued deployment. Our embassies will also continue to consult with the regional governments and ensure their consent as we move forward. Continued deployment is conditional on regional governments’ sustained commitment and cooperation to bring an eventual end to the LRA threat.

Supporting Post-Conflict Recovery and Reconciliation in Northern Uganda Finally, the United States remains committed to supporting efforts to promote comprehensive reconstruction, transitional justice, and reconciliation in northern Uganda, where the LRA carried out its brutal campaign for nearly two decades. In Fiscal Year 2011, USAID provided approximately $102 million in assistance to northern Uganda, including:

• $2 million to assist internally-displaced persons (IDPs) and returnees to secure durable return solutions;
• $2.1 million to enhance accountability and administrative competence of local governance institutions, including the civilian police and judiciary;
• $4.2 million to help former LRA combatants with vocational education and employment opportunities; and
• $15 million to promote rural rehabilitation and food security.

Northern Uganda has undergone a visible transformation since the LRA’s departure from Uganda in 2005, especially in terms of infrastructure and social services. The population is able to move freely, stores are open, and fields are being cultivated. According to UNHCR, an estimated 95 percent of people once living in IDP camps have moved from camps to transit sites or returned home.

According to the Ugandan Bureau of Statistics, poverty in northern Uganda declined from 60.7 percent to 46.2 percent between 2005/6 and 2009/10, representing the largest decline in poverty of all regions in Uganda during that period. Yet, even with this impressive decline, the north remains the poorest region in the country. Furthermore, land issues, tensions between tribes and subtribes in the region, and widespread psycho-social trauma, among other issues, need to be addressed to ensure the sustainability of peace in northern Uganda.

From 2009 to 2011, the Government of Uganda (GoU) contributed approximately $ 110 million to its Peace, Recovery and Development Plan for Northern Uganda (PRDP). This is less than the government’s original pledge to provide 30 percent of the PRDP’s total budget, but GoU officials state that they will continue to earmark funds for northern Uganda’s recovery. During this period, non-USG donors have provided significant funding in support of the PRDP.

DOWNLOAD THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

StateDepartment-LRA

CONFIDENTIAL – U.C. Davis Police Department Use of Force Policy

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This policy recognizes that the use of force by law enforcement requires constant evaluation. Even at its lowest level the use of force is a serious responsibility. The purpose of this policy is to provide officers of this department with guidelines on the reasonable use of force. While there is no way to specify the exact amount or type of reasonable force to be applied in any situation, each officer is expected to use these guidelines to make such decisions in a professional, impartial, and safe manner.

The use of force by law enforcement personnel is a matter of critical concern both to the public and to the law enforcement community. Officers are involved on a daily basis in numerous and varied human encounters and, when warranted, may use force in carrying out their duties.

Officers must have an understanding of, and true appreciation for, the limitations of their authority. This is especially true with respect to officers overcoming resistance while engaged in the performance of their duties.
This department recognizes and respects the value of human life and dignity without prejudice to anyone. It is also understood that vesting officers with the authority to use reasonable force and protect the public welfare requires a careful balancing of human interests.

It is the policy this Department that officers will use only that amount of force that reasonably appears necessary, given the facts and circumstances perceived by the officer at the time of the event, to effectively bring an incident under control. “Reasonableness” of the force used must be judged from the perspective of a reasonable officer on the scene at the time of the incident. Any interpretation of “reasonableness” must allow for the fact that police officers are often forced to make split-second decisions – in circumstances that are tense, uncertain, and rapidly evolving – about the amount of force that is necessary in a particular situation.

II. Non-Lethal Force Applications

A. Any application of force that is not reasonably anticipated to result in death will be considered non-lethal force. Each officer is provided with equipment, training, and skills to assist in the apprehension and control of suspects as well as protection of officers and the public. Non-lethal force applications may include, but are not limited to, Electronic Devices, Body and Leg Restraints, and other Less Lethal Control Devices.

B. Given that no policy can realistically predict every possible situation an officer might encounter in the field, it is recognized that each officer must be entrusted with well-reasoned discretion in determining the appropriate use of force in each incident. While it is the ultimate objective of every law enforcement encounter to minimize injury to everyone involved, nothing in this policy requires an officer to actually sustain physical injury before applying reasonable force.

C. The University Of California, Davis Police Department authorizes the use of less lethal force applications by officers and supervisors.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

UCD-Use_of_Force

FEMEN NEW PHOTOS UNCENSORED

Не заставляя Азарова долго ждать, FEMEN отвечают:

TOP-SECRET – The End of the USSR, 20 Years Later – The Russian Secrets in Documents

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Washington D.C., November 22, 2011 – Marking the 20th anniversary of the breakup of the Soviet Union, the Gorbachev Foundation hosted a two-day conference in Moscow on November 10-11, co-organized by the National Security Archive and the Carnegie Moscow Center, examining the historical experience of 1989-1991 and the echoes today. The conference briefing book, compiled and edited by the Archive and posted on the Web today together with the conference program and speaker biographies, includes previously classified Soviet and American documents ranging from Politburo notes to CIA assessments to transcripts of phone calls between George H.W. Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev in the final months of the Soviet Union.

At the Moscow event, panels of distinguished eyewitnesses, veterans and scholars discussed Gorbachev’s political reforms of the 1980s, the crisis in the Soviet economy, the origins and impact of the “new thinking,” the role of society and social movements, and the ways the history is used and abused in current political debates. While Gorbachev himself was unable to participate for health reasons, he subsequently met with the conference organizers to give his reactions and retrospective analysis.

The Carnegie Moscow Center followed up the conference with a November 14 discussion, also co-organized by the Archive, using the same format of expert panels to analyze the impact of nationalism and separatism in the events of 1991, the role of the Soviet military, military reform today in the Russian armed forces, and the situation today in the North Caucasus and other ethnic conflicts in the former Soviet space.

At the Gorbachev Foundation conference, the panel on political reform debated the role of leaders as opposed to structural forces in the decline of the USSR, the competition between Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin especially in 1991, the particular Yeltsin factor including his arrangement with the presidents of Ukraine and Belarus in December 1991 to dissolve the USSR, and in the big picture, the declining legitimacy of the Soviet system over the duration of the Cold War.

The panel on economics discussed various options for modernizing the Soviet economy in the 1980s, whether the system was even reformable, the efforts of the Communist apparat to sabotage even modest reforms, the barriers in Western thinking that prevented any significant foreign aid to the Soviet Union in its last years, and the role of international financial institutions.

The panel on “new thinking” analyzed the dramatic changes in Soviet foreign policy under Gorbachev, the ultimately failed efforts at integrating Russia with Europe, the successes in U.S.-Soviet cooperation for settling regional conflicts, and the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1988-89. This discussion also sparked a debate within the audience about the Gorbachev-Reagan ideas of nuclear abolition and their relevance for today.

The society panel described the extensive social demand for glasnost during the 1980s in stark contrast to today, the disintegration of social structures and public space in Russia since 1991, the importance of the dissident discourse of the 1960s and 1970s to the reformist elite and perestroika in the 1980s, and the unpreparedness of society for the various forms of extreme nationalist discourse that erupted at the end of the Soviet Union.

Gorbachev himself sat down with the conference organizers on November 14 after his return from Germany and following the two events at the Gorbachev Foundation and the Carnegie Moscow Center. He discussed the current political situation in Russia, with the “tandem” of Vladimir Putin and Dmitri Medvedev trading jobs with only a façade of elections, and under conditions of growing authoritarianism; but he predicted the “exhaustion” of this program and the eventual introduction of real change, rather than indefinite stagnation.

Gorbachev also commented on the issue of the lack of Western aid for his project of perestroika and glasnost – transforming the Soviet Union into a demilitarized, social democratic state that would work with the U.S. and other countries to resolve regional conflicts and build a “common home” in Europe and cooperative security arrangements globally. Coming back “empty-handed” from the G-7 meeting in the summer of 1991, Gorbachev commented, undermined his reform efforts, helped precipitate the August coup attempt, and undercut any possibility of gradual transition for the USSR. Participating in the discussion with Gorbachev were Pulitzer-Prize winners William Taubman and David Hoffman, Professor Jane Taubman, and National Security Archive representatives Tom Blanton, Malcolm Byrne, and Svetlana Savranskaya.

DOWNLOAD THE ORGINAL RUSSIAN DOCUMENTS HERE

1) 1989.01.24 Excerpt from Politburo Session

2) 1989.02.16 Excerpt from Politburo Session

3) 1989.03.28 Excerpt from Politburo Session

4) 1989.08.26 Excerpt from Poltiburo Session, Situation in the Soviet Baltic Republics

5) 1989.11.18 Excerpt from Politburo Session, Additional Measures in the Sphere of Information

5) 1989.11.18 Excerpt from Politburo Session, Additional Measures in the Sphere of Information

6) 1990.01.02 Excerpt from Politburo Session, On the Events in Europe and the USSR’s Position

7) 1990.01.29 Excerpt from Politburo Session

8) 1990.02.17 Excerpt from Politburo Session, Upcoming Elections in Nicaragua

9) 1990.03.22 Excerpt from Politburo Session

10) 1990.06.02 A.N. Yakovlev’s Note to M.S. Gorbachev on the Changing Situation in the Country

11) 1990.10.13 Excerpt from Politburo Session

12) 1991.04.02 Analytical Note from A.N. Yakovlev to M.S. Gorbachev

13) 1991.04.30 Letter from A.N. Yakovlev to M.S. Gorbachev, On the Danger of a Conservative Comeback

14) 1991.05.15 CC CPSU Secretariat Resolution

15) 1991.06.25 A.N. Yakovlev’s Note to M.S. Gorbachev on the Draft CPSU Program

16) 1991.08.16 A.N. Yakovlev’s Open Letter to Communists

17) 1991.08.21 Emergency Session of the RSFSR Supreme Soviet, First Meeting

18) 1991.10.18 Letter from M.S. Gorbachev to George Bush (Oct 18 1991)

19) 1991.11.04 Session of the State Council

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE W-WE – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – W-WE

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Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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041140429744;97;06;00;;WASCHKOWSKI, WERNER:;;;24000,00
070242428956;10;06;00;;WASCHNEWSKI, DETLEF:;;;21187,50
030662430220;99;43;00;;WASCHOW, FRANK:;;;13782,00
160630430010;96;15;10;;WASCHOW, GUENTER:;;;29250,00
110368412232;07;19;00;;WASCHULL, JENS:;;;13832,00
180247400415;01;06;20;;WASCHULL, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;19737,50
200139412211;07;60;00;;WASCHULL, REINHOLD:;;;33750,00
150571427129;18;33;00;;WASCHUNI, KLAUS:;;;2795,00
211170431211;99;43;00;;WASIC, MIRKO:;;;8955,00
200162430055;15;08;00;;WASICK, WOLFGANG:;;;18480,00
131050424017;13;00;45;;WASILEWSKI, GERD:;;;17163,75
190469408710;18;32;00;;WASILGE, THORSTEN:;;;9675,00
090668422760;18;31;00;;WASINSKI, MICHAEL:;;;9825,00
210439403623;04;53;00;;WASMUND, DIETER:;;;23437,50
200751500410;09;06;00;;WASMUND, EVELIN:;;;17307,50
060242429714;97;01;00;;WASMUND, GEORG:;;;28437,50
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150553522819;94;03;00;;WASNICK, HELGA:;;;22980,00
050840421828;97;06;00;;WASNICK, LUTZ:;;;27000,00
300562525035;13;00;40;;WASSEL, BIRGIT:;;;15103,68
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Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

CONFIDENTIAL – Sacramento County Sheriff’s Department Use of Force Policy

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

SCSD-Use_of_Force

LIVE AND UNCENSORED – Egypt Protest Photos 4


[Image]Thousands of Egyptians perform Friday prayers during a rally in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011. Tens of thousands of protesters chanting, “Leave, leave!” are rapidly filling up Cairo’s Tahrir Square in what promises to be a massive demonstration to force Egypt’s ruling military council to yield power. The Friday rally is dubbed by organizers as “The Last Chance Million-Man Protest,” and comes one day after the military offered an apology for the killing of nearly 40 protesters.
[Image]Egyptian protesters carry a giant Egyptian flag with Arabic writing that reads, in part, “Egypt is greater than you,” in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Protesters, including a wounded man, chant slogans and wave Egyptian national flags during a rally in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Egyptians, including a man perched on a lamp post, perform Friday prayers during a rally in Cairo’s Tahrir square, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Pro-reform leader and Nobel peace laureate Mohamed El-Baradei, center, is surrounded by protesters during his arrival for Friday prayers in Cairo’s Tahrir square, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Egyptian women pray during Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Protesters, including a man holding tear gas cannisters, chant slogans and wave national flags during a rally in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Egyptian men pray next to a t-shirt vendor during Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian woman stands next to a cotton candy vendor before Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]A man holds up a shoe, which is seen as a sign of disrespect, with pictures of Egyptians including Gamal Mubarak, center, during Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]A veiled Egyptian woman waits for Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian protester wears a safety mask around his neck as he performs Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian girl stands as protesters perform Friday prayers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.[Image]
[Image]A protester displays an Egyptian flag in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]A protester reads a newspaper in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Friday, Nov. 25, 2011.
[Image]Demonstrators chant slogans as thousands spend the night in Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011.

UNCENSORED – Occupy Wall Street NYC Photos, 15 November 2011

[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters gather to listen to speakers after being allowed back into Zuccotti Park, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 in New York. State Supreme Court Justice Michael Stallman upheld the city’s eviction of the protesters after an emergency appeal by the National Lawyers Guild. If crowds of demonstrators return to the park, they will not be allowed to bring tents, sleeping bags and other equipment that turned the area into a makeshift city of dissent. (Henny Ray Abrams) [Hi-res (1.6MB)]
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters return to Zuccotti Park on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 in New York. State Supreme Court Justice Michael Stallman upheld the city’s eviction of the protesters after an emergency appeal by the National Lawyers Guild. If crowds of demonstrators return to the park, they will not be allowed to bring tents, sleeping bags and other equipment that turned the area into a makeshift city of dissent. (Bebeto Matthews)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters return to Zuccotti Park with strict police enforced rules on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 in New York. State Supreme Court Justice Michael Stallman upheld the city’s eviction of the protesters after an emergency appeal by the National Lawyers Guild. (Bebeto Matthews)

[Image]Occupy Wall Street Encampment at Zuccotti Park seen is empty of demonstrators, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 in New York. The National Lawyers Guild obtained a court order allowing the protesters to return with their tents to the park, where they have camped for two months. The guild said the injunction prevents the city from enforcing park rules on the protesters. (Mary Altaffer)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters hold a general assembly meeting inside an enclosed site near Canal Street on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. Hundreds of police officers in riot gear before dawn Tuesday raided the New York City park where the Occupy Wall Street protests began, evicting and arresting hundreds of protesters from what has become the epicenter of the worldwide movement protesting corporate greed and economic inequality. (Seth Wenig) [Photo taken and transmitted before Seth Wenig was arrested along with the protestors.]
[Image]Police prepare to enter an enclosed site near Canal Street where Occupy Wall Street protesters gathered on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. Hundreds of police officers in riot gear before dawn Tuesday raided the New York City park where the Occupy Wall Street protests began, evicting and arresting hundreds of protesters from what has become the epicenter of the worldwide movement protesting corporate greed and economic inequality. (Seth Wenig)

[Image]Occupy Wall Street activists gain entrance in to Duarte Square to protest after police removed the protesters early in the morning from Zuccotti Park on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Getty
[Image]NYPD officers standoff with Occupy Wall Street activists after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Getty
[Image]NYPD officers clear out Occupy Wall Street activists after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Getty [AP journalist Karen Matthews is at upper right in light blue jacket (and in earlier photos below). She was arrested with AP photographer Seth Wenig in following photo.]

[Image][Image]
Cryptome photos, 3 October 2011.

[Image]Seth Wenig, a photographer for The Associated Press, was arrested on Thursday near Trinity Church. (Ozier Muhammad) [Wenig handcuffed with backpack at center in following photo, back to camera.]
[Image]NYPD officers arrest Occupy Wall Street activists after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City.  Getty
[Image]NYPD officers arrest an Occupy Wall Street activist after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Getty
[Image]NYPD officers attempt to arrest an Occupy Wall Street activist after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Getty
[Image]NYPD officers arrest an Occupy Wall Street activist after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Getty
[Image]NYPD officers arrest Occupy Wall Street activists after they gained entrance in to the private park next to Duarte Square to protest on November 15, 2011 in New York City. Police removed the protesters early in the morning from their encampment in Zuccotti Park. Hundreds of protesters, who rallied against inequality in America, have slept in tents and under tarps since September 17 in Zuccotti Park, which has since become the epicenter of the global Occupy movement. The raid in New York City follows recent similar moves in Oakland, California, and Portland, Oregon. Getty

[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters return to Zuccotti Park on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 in New York. After an early police raid removing protesters, hundreds returned to Zuccotti Park carrying photocopies of a court order they say gives them the right to return to the park. The National Lawyers Guild obtained a court order allowing the protesters to return with their tents to the park, where they have camped for two months. The guild said the injunction prevents the city from enforcing park rules.
[Image]Police arrest an Occupy Wall Street protester at Zuccotti Park on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 in New York. After an early police raid removing protesters, hundreds returned to Zuccotti Park carrying photocopies of a court order they say gives them the right to return there.
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters rally in a small park on Canal Street in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. Police officers evicted the protesters from their base in Zuccotti Park overnight. The National Lawyers Guild obtained a court order allowing the protesters to return with their tents to the park, where they have camped for two months. The guild said the injunction prevents the city from enforcing park rules on the protesters. (Seth Wenig)
[Image]A police officer watches from the grounds of City Hall as Occupy Wall Street protesters linked hands to block media from attending a news conference held by Mayor Michael Bloomberg in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. The protesters eventually dispersed peacefully.
[Image]An empty and closed Zuccotti Park is seen in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. Police officers evicted Occupy Wall Street protesters from the park overnight. The National Lawyers Guild obtained a court order allowing the protesters to return with their tents to the park, where they have camped for two months. The guild said the injunction prevents the city from enforcing park rules on the protesters. (Seth Wenig)
[Image]A pedestrian takes a picture of an empty and closed Zuccotti Park in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. Police officers evicted Occupy Wall Street protesters from the park overnight. The National Lawyers Guild obtained a court order allowing the protesters to return with their tents to the park, where they have camped for two months. The guild said the injunction prevents the city from enforcing park rules on the protesters. (Seth Wenig)

[Image]An Occupy Wall Street protestor draws contact from a police officer near Zuccotti Park after being ordered to leave the longtime encampment in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011, in New York, after police ordered demonstrators to leave their encampment in Zuccotti Park.

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[Image]

[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters clash with police at Zuccotti Park after being ordered to leave their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (Craig Ruttle)
[Image]An Occupy Wall Street protestor is arrested on the ground by police near Zuccotti Park after being ordered to leave their longtime encampment in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011, in New York, after police ordered demonstrators to leave their encampment in Zuccotti Park.
[Image]A demonstrator yells at police officers as they order Occupy Wall Street protesters to leave Zuccotti Park, their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (Mary Altaffer)
[Image]An Occupy Wall Street protester yells out at police after being ordered to leave Zuccotti Park, their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (Mary Altaffer)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters clash with police near Zuccotti Park after being ordered to leave their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (John Minchillo)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters are pushed by police near the encampment at Zuccotti Park in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous.
[Image]Demonstrators clash with police after being ordered to leave the Occupy Wall Street encampment at Zuccotti Park in New York on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. Police handed out notices earlier from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (Craig Ruttle)
[Image]An Occupy Wall Street protester is arrested by police near the encampment at Zuccotti Park in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents.
[Image]An Occupy Wall Street protestor is arrested during a march on Broadway, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011, in New York, after police ordered demonstrators to leave their encampment in Zuccotti Park. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (John Minchillo)
[Image]An Occupy Wall Street protester is detained by police officers after being ordered to leave Zuccotti Park, their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (John Minchillo)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters are detained by police officers after being ordered to leave Zuccotti Park, their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (John Minchillo)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street demonstrators are arrested after being ordered to leave Zuccotti Park, their longtime encampment in New York, early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (Mary Altaffer)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters march through the streets after they were evicted from Zuccotti Park on November 15, 2011 in New York. Hundreds of police in riot gear dismantled the Occupy Oakland camp Monday, evicting and arresting protesters in the second such US move in as many days as authorities get tough against the two-month-old protest movement. Getty
[Image]A police officer carries trash through Zuccotti Park, the longtime encampment for Occupy Wall Street protesters in New York, as the cleanup effort begins early Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011. At about 1 a.m. Tuesday, police handed out notices from the park’s owner, Brookfield Office Properties, and the city saying that the park had to be cleared because it had become unsanitary and hazardous. Protesters were told they could return, but without sleeping bags, tarps or tents. (John Minchillo)
[Image]Two protesters and their dog, who said they have stayed slept with other protesters for the last 56 nights, sit along a police barricade at the edge of Zuccotti Park in New York, Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 after the Occupy Wall Street encampment was cleared from the park in the early morning hours after a nearly two month occupation,wa;;w and before the park reopened. (Craig Ruttle)
[Image]New York City sanitation crews clean Zuccotti Park after city officials evicted the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ protest from the park in the early morning hours of November 15, 2011 in New York. Occupy Wall Street protestors most feared the coming winter, but it was on the mildest of nights, when activists slept soundly in their tents, that New York police sprang a surprise operation to end the eight-week demonstration. Getty
[Image]People walk past New York Police Department officers guarding a closed Zuccotti Park after city officials evicted the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ protest from the park in the early morning hours of November 15, 2011 in New York. Getty

FBI – Two More Involved in Internet Sports Gambling Ring Sentenced

PHOENIX, AZ—On Monday, U.S. District Judge David G. Campbell sentenced two men for their involvement in an Internet sports gambling conspiracy.

Oscar (“Paul”) Barden, 37, of Scottsdale, was sentenced to three years’ probation and 150 hours of community service and Richard Michael DiCapua, 69, of Scottsdale, was sentenced to two years’ probation and 100 hours of community service.

On April 13, 2011, Barden pleaded guilty to Conspiracy in Transmission of Wagering Information and Operating an Illegal Gambling Business. Additionally, on July 13, 2011, DiCapua pleaded guilty to Misprision of a Felony for his role in concealing the gambling operation. In their plea agreements, the defendants admitted to being involved from March 2007 to August 2009, in an extensive sports wagering operation led by Daniel Meisel, the principal bookmaker who acted as the bank or house for the operation. He had a number of “agents” working under him who all had bettors that they serviced. An earlier-sentenced Defendant, Christopher Robert Finn acted both at the direction of Meisel and had his own sub-operation as part of the overall gambling ring and multiple defendants were involved to varying degrees, reporting to either Meisel or Finn.

The illegal gambling operation used Internet-based offshore sports books located in Costa Rica for making and tracking bets on sporting events. The Costa Rican sports books did not have an interest in the outcome of the wagers, but charged a fee for managing each bettor’s account. The defendants paid out or collected cash in person from each bettor.

The remaining defendants and their respective sentences or dispositions are as follows:

  • Daniel Meisel is a fugitive and remains at large. Although Meisel has been indicted, that raises no inference of guilt and he is presumed innocent until competent evidence is Presented to a jury that establishes guilt beyond a reasonable doubt.
  • On October 26, 2011, Judge Campbell sentenced six other defendants involved in this conspiracy: James Lee Baker, 42, of Peoria; Fred Guaragna, 60, of Scottsdale; Blaine Taylor Moore, 39, of Sedona; Diane Beck, 54, of Scottsdale; and Bradley Mark Smothermon, 50, of Cave Creek. All previously pleaded guilty to one count of Conspiracy in Transmission of Wagering Information and Operating an Illegal Gambling Business and all were sentenced to three years of probation and 150 hours of community service.
  • Christopher Robert Finn, 39, of Phoenix, also pleaded guilty to Conspiracy in Transmission of Wagering Information and Operating an Illegal Gambling Business, and one count of aiding and abetting an Illegal Gambling Business. In addition to a four year probation term, Finn was sentenced on October 26, 2011 to eight months of home confinement and 200 hours of community service.
  • Todd Kaplan, 38, of Scottsdale, pleaded guilty to Misprision of a Felony and was sentenced on November 10, 2011, to three years’ probation by visiting U.S. District Judge David C. Norton.

The investigation in this case was conducted by the Scottsdale Police Department, the Internal Revenue Service, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The prosecution is being handled by Peter Sexton, Paul Bullis, and James Morse Jr., Assistant United States Attorneys, District of Arizona, Phoenix.

CASE NUMBER:
CR-10-1044-PHX-DGC (Meisel, et.al);
CR-11-1391-PHX-FJM (Kaplan)
RELEASE NUMBER: 2011-258(Meisel_etal)

For more information on the U.S. Attorney’s Office, District of Arizona, visit http://www.justice.gov/usao/az/

Uncensored – FEMEN Protest Photos

[Image]Activists from Ukraine’s scandalous FEMEN group holds a banner reading ‘woman is not a commodity’ as they stage a topless protest on November 10, 2011 against prostitution and woman as a commodity in an official prostitution’s street in Zurich. Getty[Image]
[Image]An activist of the Ukrainian women movement Femen is being arrested by policemen in front of St Peter’s basilica after holding a placard asking for ‘Freedom for women’ following Pope Benedict XVI’s Angelus prayer on November 6, 2011 at St Peter’s square at The Vatican. Getty
[Image]An activist of the Ukrainian women movement Femen is taken away by Italian policemen in front of St Peter’s basilica after holding a placard asking for ‘Freedom for women’ following Pope Benedict XVI’s Angelus prayer on November 6, 2011 at St Peter’s square at The Vatican. Getty
[Image]An activist of the Ukrainian female rights organization “Femen” shows a placard demanding freedom for women, during a protest at the end of Pope Benedict XVI’s Angelus prayer in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, Sunday, Nov. 6, 2011. (Pier Paolo Cito)
[Image]Ukrainian women’s rights group Femen, painted in colors of the Italian flag, take part in a demonstration staged by the Italian Democratic party to protest against Italian Premier Silvio Berlusconi in Rome, Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011. The International Monetary Fund will monitor Italy’s financial reform efforts, Premier Silvio Berlusconi said Friday, a humbling step for one of the world’s biggest _ but also most indebted _ economies as market confidence in its future wanes.
[Image]Activists from Ukraine’s scandalous FEMEN group dressed as housemaids stage a topless protest in a show of anger against French former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s attitude towards women in front of his residence in Paris on October 31, 2011. FEMEN has gained worldwide fame by staging a string of topless protests in Ukraine and now in Europe, in recent years to draw attention to issues from the exploitation of women to corruption. The placard read at L ‘ecstasy of power’, at R ‘your shame can’t be clean up’. Getty
[Image]People walk in front of Kiev Zoo, as activists of the Ukrainian female rights organization “Femen”, take part in a topless protest in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011. Kiev zoo is a place that Femen’s activists compared to a concentration camp for those with fur and feathers. Hundreds of animals died at the zoo in recent years due to malnutrition, lack of medical care and abuse, and some suspect that corruption is at the heart of the problem.
[Image]Securty guards detain an activist of the Ukrainian female rights organization “Femen”, during an action of protest in front of Kiev Zoo, Ukraine, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011. Kiev zoo is a place that Femen’s activists compared to a concentration camp for those with fur and feathers. Hundreds of animals died at the zoo in recent years due to malnutrition, lack of medical care and abuse, and some suspect that corruption is at the heart of the problem. Femen calls for the 100-year-old zoo to be closed.
[Image]Secury guards detain an activist of the Ukrainian female rights organization “Femen”, during an action of nude protest in front of Kiev Zoo, Ukraine, Thursday, Oct. 27, 2011. Kiev zoo is a place that Femen’s activists compared to a concentration camp for those with fur and feathers. Hundreds of animals died at the zoo in recent years due to malnutrition, lack of medical care and abuse, and some suspect that corruption is at the heart of the problem.
[Image]Police detain a member of women’s activist group FEMEN after their protest against government policy in front front of the Cabinet building in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, Aug.24, 2011. The former Soviet republic marks the 20th anniversary of its independence. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Police detain a member of the women’s activist group FEMEN, after their protest against government policy in front of the Cabinet building in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, Aug. 24, 2011. The former Soviet republic is marking the 20th anniversary of its independence. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Ukrainian women’s rights group Femen, painted in colors of the European Union countries, protest against the regular summer switch off of public utility supply of hot water in central Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, July 14, 2011. Women symbolically wash themselves in the city fountain to protest the need for hot water all year round, and to highlight the need for the hot water utility during the upcoming EURO 2012 soccer competition.(Efrem Lukatsky)[Image]
[Image]Ukrainian women’s rights group Femen holding a picket in front of a court building, against the detention of a fellow activist in Kiev, Ukraine, Monday, Jan. 17, 2011. The poster reads, “Hands off, Femen”. Opposition politicians and democrats insist that President Viktor Yanukovych trampled Ukraine’s constitution in a bit to monopolize political power.(Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Ukrainian women’s rights group Femen, painted in colors of the European Union countries, protest against the regular summer switch off of public utility supply of hot water in central Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, July 14, 2011. Women symbolically wash themselves in the city fountain to protest the need for hot water all year round, and to highlight the need for the hot water utility during the upcoming EURO 2012 soccer competition. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Police detain Alexandra Shevchenko a member of women’s activist group FEMEN, in front of parliament in Kiev, Ukraine, Tuesday, July 5, 2011. Ukrainians are fiercely opposed to the pension fund reform, which parliament is set to consider this week, that is meant to raise the retirement age for women. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Semi naked activists from the Ukrainian female rights group Femen protest in front of the Saudi Arabian embassy against a ban on driving cars for women in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, June 16, 2011. (Sergei Chuzavkov)
[Image]An secury guard detains an activist of the Ukrainian female rights organization ‘Femen’ during an action of protest in front of the city’s State Administration at a opening ceremony of clocks counting down time that remains before the EURO 2012 soccer tournament starts, in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, June 8, 2011. Writing on her back reads ‘Euro 2012 without Prostitution’. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Activists of the Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ perform during a protest against the politics of Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko, during a rally to protest against what they claim is the sex-tourism and trafficking of women from Ukraine, at Independence square in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, May 11, 2011. The Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ is an organization of the young women of the city of Kiev orientated to represent and defend the rights of women-students of the capital. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Activists of the Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ performs and shout anti-Lukashenko slogans protesting against his politics in Belarus during a rally at Independence square in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, May. 11, 2011. The poster reads ‘Put Lukashenko on the Rack!’. The Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ is an organization of the young women of the city of Kiev oriented on the women-students of the capital. The main program of the movement is the national campaign against the sex tourism and women trafficking. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Activists of the Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ performs and shout anti-Lukashenko slogans protesting against his politics in Belarus during a rally at Independence square in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, May. 11, 2011. The poster reading ‘Crush a cockroach’. The Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ is an organization of the young women of the city of Kiev oriented on the women-students A depiction of Lukashenko is seen in the background. (Efrem Lukatsky)
[Image]Ukrainian police hold back activists from the women’s rights organization “Femen” during a protest close to the site of the international donors conference to clean up the Chernobyl nuclear disaster site in Kiev, Ukraine, Tuesday, April 19, 2011. Poster reads “Yanukovych is worse than radiation”. On April 26, Ukraine marks the 25th anniversary of the fatal explosion at the Chernobyl nuclear power plant. (Ukrafoto)
[Image]Ukrainian activists from the group Femen protest Iran’s treatment of women during the opening of Iranian Culture Days in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, Nov. 11, 2010. (Sergei Chuzavkov)
[Image]Activists of the Ukrainian Women’s Movement “FEMEN” shout protests in front of the Iranian Embassy in Kiev, Ukraine, Wednesday, Nov. 3, 2010, against the death penalty given to Sakineh Mohammadi Ashtiani, a mother of two children, who was sentenced to death by stoning in Iran on charges of adultery. (Sergei Chuzavkov)
[Image]In this photo taken on Thursday, July 15, 2010, police detain activists of the local FEMEN women’s rights watchdog as they protest against the regular summer switch off of hot water in the city in downtown Kiev, Ukraine. A group of young activists is gaining popularity here for staging topless protests that involve sexually charged gestures, obscene slogans and scuffles with security guards and police. Often, the point seems to be just getting naked.
[Image]Members of the activist group Femen protest at what they see as the manipulation of the democratic system at a polling station in Kiev, Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010. The signs read “The War Begins Here” and “Stop Raping the Country.” (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Members of the activist group Femen protest at what they see as the manipulation of the democratic system at a polling station in Kiev, Ukraine, Sunday, Feb. 7, 2010. (Mikhail Metzel)
[Image]Activists of the Women’s Movement “FEMEN”, dressed as prostitutes, take part in a rally outside the Central Election Commission office in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010. The event was meant to highlight what the group called political prostitution and crude populism in the election campaign. The posters with the logos of the leading candidates and signature “Choose me” in Ukraine’s presidential race are seen at top.
[Image]An activist of the Women’s Movement “FEMEN”, dressed as a prostitute, holds a poster with the logo of one of the leading candidates and signature “Choose me” in Ukraine’s presidential race, during a rally outside the Central Election Commission office in Kiev, Ukraine, Thursday, Jan. 14, 2010. The event was meant to highlight what the group called political prostitution and crude populism, in the election campaign.
[Image]A security officer stops an activist of the Women’s Movement ‘FEMEN’ from climbing a barrier at Mykhailivska Square in Kiev, Ukraine, Monday, Dec. 14, 2009, prior the opening of the meeting for UEFA EURO 2012. The ‘FEMEN’ movement is campaigning against sex tourism and the trafficking of women in Ukraine. (Efrem Lukatsky)

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE V-W – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – V-W

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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300750529279;98;83;00;;VIERTEL, CHRISTA:;;;19440,00
111041421844;12;06;00;;VIERTEL, DIETMAR:;;;26250,00
181260413928;08;18;00;;VIERTEL, FRANK:;;;18150,00
030836429714;94;30;00;;VIERTEL, KLAUS:;;;33000,00
140146429212;99;40;00;;VIERTEL, PETER:;;;27000,00
040868429216;17;00;00;;VIERTEL, RENE:;;;8950,00
110469427310;14;69;00;;VIERTEL, RENE:;;;12575,00
240658523622;18;71;20;;VIERTEL, ROSWITHA:;;;12897,66
311249427010;12;06;00;;VIERTEL, STEPHAN:;;;21937,50
100657426535;99;40;00;;VIERTEL, THOMAS:;;;23460,00
090859528234;14;78;00;;VIERTEL, UTE:;;;17299,48
010243421225;12;18;00;;VIETHS, JUERGEN:;;;29625,00
300152509323;99;49;00;;VIETOR, BRIGITTE:;;;21600,00
250248424997;98;54;00;;VIETOR, LUTZ:;;;32250,00
200235430030;99;53;00;;VIETZ, ERWIN:;;;28500,00
120651429768;15;00;42;;VIETZ, WOLFGANG:;;;24057,16
300866421315;30;59;00;;VIETZE, GIESO:;;;12663,00
240941411917;07;03;00;;VIETZE, GUENTER:;;;22998,00
110557421314;12;19;00;;VIETZE, PETER:;;;24035,00
090369405653;18;33;00;;VIETZE, RENE:;;;9510,00
090569415426;18;32;00;;VIETZKE, DIRK:;;;9675,00
131057430129;94;30;00;;VIEWEG, GERT:;;;19607,50
271258406816;94;11;00;4706/85, :;VIEWEG, JENS-UWE;1200;OTTO-GROTEWOHL-PLATZ 1;
271258406816;94;11;00;4706/85, :;VIEWEG, JENS-UWE;1200;OTTO-GROTEWOHL-PLATZ 1;
280961424228;13;14;00;;VIEWEG, LUTZ:;;;18645,00
260758500717;14;80;00;;VIEWEG, MONIKA:;;;13691,69
140763424812;99;02;00;;VIEWEG, OLAF:;;;18260,00
160967417524;18;28;00;;VIEWEG, OLAF:;;;10425,00
161057427138;14;80;00;;VIEWEG, RAINER:;;;17537,50
141166408931;98;82;00;;VIEWEG, UWE:;;;9872,00
180260426345;18;35;00;;VIEWEG, VEIT:;;;22755,00
220564530225;30;61;00;;VIEWEGER, ANDREA:;;;13048,20
150963430271;30;31;00;;VIEWEGER, MARIO:;;;12676,00
300941517799;98;83;00;;VIEWEGER, ROSINA:;;;20250,00
081047428233;01;53;00;;VIEWEGER, STEFAN:;;;26250,00
160968410316;99;12;00;;VIEZENS, FRED:;;;8950,00
220770410312;94;03;00;;VIEZENS, IMRE:;;;4232,58
231147410322;07;00;45;;VIEZENS, ROLF:;;;25500,00
310847417563;96;15;06;;VILLAIN, JOERG:;;;33120,00
080562507118;30;61;00;;VILLBRANDT, GUNDULA:;;;15345,00
190969408821;17;00;00;;VILLMOW, NEITHARD:;;;8300,00
100946430178;96;15;17;;VILLWOCK, DIETRICH:;;;28800,00
160456407527;05;08;00;;VILLWOCK, FRANK:;;;18543,75
160668405937;18;35;00;;VILLWOCK, LARS:;;;9675,00
110560507522;05;08;00;;VILLWOCK, PETRA:;;;17434,84
050668422115;12;69;00;;VINCENC, ANDRE:;;;10361,61
140337425011;96;15;11;;VINCENZ, GUENTER:;;;32437,50
181056424611;10;00;40;;VINCENZ, JUERGEN:;;;24092,50
070135421820;97;08;00;;VIOL, EBERHARD:;;;18285,00
311237521819;97;08;00;;VIOL, JUTTA:;;;16587,50
110371409317;18;35;00;;VIOL, ROLAND:;;;2795,00
191247424613;07;19;00;;VIRAUT, LEONHARD:;;;27000,00
261067404712;04;69;00;;VLK, SANDRO:;;;9875,00
280863400812;01;18;00;;VO(E)LCKER, ECKHARD:;;;13420,00
200631430171;96;15;00;18556/60, E:;VO(E)LKEL, ALFRED;1113;BALTRUMSTR. 14;
200631430171;96;15;00;18556/60, E:;VO(E)LKEL, ALFRED;1113;BALTRUMSTR. 14;
230362430153;96;15;00;2859/84, U:;VO(E)LKEL, HEIKO;1020;KO(E)PENICKER STR. 100;
230362430153;96;15;00;2859/84, U:;VO(E)LKEL, HEIKO;1020;KO(E)PENICKER STR. 100;
160170419610;18;32;00;;VO(E)LKEL, THOMAS:;;;9986,44
290749415147;08;07;00;;VO(E)LKER, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;24750,00
150463416916;94;30;00;;VO(E)LKER, THOMAS:;;;18095,00
291256429246;94;11;00;4170/83, :;VO(E)LZ, ANDREAS;9900;KARL-FRIEDRICH-SCHINKEL-STR. 4;
291256429246;94;11;00;4170/83, :;VO(E)LZ, ANDREAS;9900;KARL-FRIEDRICH-SCHINKEL-STR. 4;
180760412230;07;06;00;;VO(E)LZ, RU(E)DIGER:;;;19437,50
120149414325;98;84;00;;VOCKE, BERND:;;;21750,00
100552529829;98;83;00;;VOCKE, REGINA:;;;18325,25
110670417712;09;69;00;;VOCKERODT, STEFFEN:;;;2911,13
030261530191;05;00;49;;VOCKEROTH, KARIN:;;;8555,30
030261407417;05;00;49;;VOCKEROTH, MICHAEL:;;;15757,50
161270421843;18;31;00;;VODAK, RENE:;;;6705,00
110566426344;14;65;00;;VODEL, JOERG:;;;14688,00
010232526312;14;00;43;;VODEL, SELMA:;;;23250,00
060266403228;04;80;00;;VOELCKERT, STEFFEN:;;;15974,00
030246429714;94;65;00;;VOELKEL, DIETER:;;;27750,00
031170400847;99;43;00;;VOELKEL, DIRK:;;;2870,00
280139430041;99;51;00;;VOELKEL, HANS-DIETRICH:;;;28500,00
290669400885;99;43;00;;VOELKEL, KARSTEN:;;;9510,00
110858500868;99;40;00;;VOELKEL, KERSTIN:;;;19520,00
230155406732;99;13;00;;VOELKEL, MANFRED:;;;24600,00
240862513624;08;00;48;;VOELKEL, SYLVIA:;;;17792,50
030742429721;15;09;00;;VOELKER, BERND:;;;28500,00
200451504516;04;80;00;;VOELKER, DORIS:;;;14946,00
230641425023;97;01;00;;VOELKER, EBERHARD:;;;28500,00
180455507217;98;83;00;;VOELKER, ELKE:;;;18227,50
280151512250;30;39;00;;VOELKER, GABRIELE:;;;15120,00
180158407519;96;15;13;;VOELKER, GERALD:;;;22770,00
221045404715;04;00;44;;VOELKER, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;22687,50
270869415127;99;43;00;;VOELKER, HEIKO:;;;9510,00
100566506169;17;00;00;;VOELKER, JANA:;;;7104,28
221168420125;18;35;00;;VOELKER, JENS:;;;9675,00
060750414228;05;08;00;;VOELKER, KLAUS-PETER:;;;18601,25
290256424037;96;15;06;;VOELKER, MATIAS:;;;23265,00
290965424056;04;00;40;;VOELKER, MICHAEL:;;;13796,00
280850406457;04;80;00;;VOELKER, OTTO-KARL:;;;20187,50
301160417714;09;18;00;;VOELKER, RONALD:;;;20020,00
120657530269;15;53;00;;VOELKER, SIGRID:;;;18520,31
071152403039;03;14;00;;VOELKERT, AXEL:;;;17820,00
220453424980;02;77;00;;VOELKNER, HARTMUT:;;;31855,00
160154524955;99;77;00;;VOELKNER, KERSTIN:;;;33120,00
260157515358;99;43;00;;VOELKNER, MARLIES:;;;18176,15
050856413232;08;51;00;;VOELKNER, RAINER:;;;19320,00
300850402734;97;08;00;;VOELKNER, REINHARD:;;;22656,00
260869415320;18;35;00;;VOELKNER, SVEN:;;;9600,00
151150516232;09;06;20;;VOELLGER, ANGELIKA:;;;19200,00
080453529756;98;82;00;;VOELLGER, GERDA:;;;19320,00
130250417335;09;06;00;;VOELLGER, JOACHIM:;;;22525,00
080150429782;15;08;00;;VOELLGER, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;24420,00
240959402525;94;03;00;;VOELLING, HOLGER:;;;18686,25
300141530354;30;61;00;;VOELLSCHOW, ELVIRA:;;;10040,06
011062510725;07;06;00;;VOELZ, ANGELIKA:;;;10939,36
030967503013;03;80;00;;VOELZ, CAROLA:;;;10873,57
301146409531;06;55;00;;VOELZ, PETER:;;;24000,00
020163404117;03;14;00;;VOELZ, THOMAS:;;;16170,00
140266400414;01;96;51;;VOELZ, TORSTEN:;;;14290,50
210534530030;98;82;00;;VOELZKE, EVAMARIE:;;;27000,00
221055401518;95;45;00;;VOELZOW, HENRY:;;;19710,00
070162417122;09;80;00;;VOEMEL, UWE:;;;16280,00
100564423810;13;00;41;;VOEPEL, MAIK:;;;16170,00
200442423829;13;00;43;;VOEPEL, SIEGFRIED:;;;24750,00
070443406198;13;40;00;;VOERCKEL, ALEXANDER:;;;24000,00
050367419924;11;69;00;;VOFREI, SILVIO:;;;9600,00
290661406422;04;00;42;;VOFREY, RENE:;;;19635,00
240539404815;97;01;00;;VOGE, BERNHARD:;;;22500,00
010555504417;99;77;00;;VOGE, BRIGITTE:;;;16206,33
060542504819;97;01;00;;VOGE, ERIKA:;;;24000,00
100445429726;94;65;00;;VOGE, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;21000,00
221135428294;14;19;00;;VOGEL, ALFRED:;;;28440,00
171047418616;10;06;00;;VOGEL, ALFRED:;;;23187,50
180464428318;98;84;00;;VOGEL, ANDRE:;;;17490,00
090167407634;98;18;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;3620,00
020261428251;14;20;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;20272,50
311257421532;12;06;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;20010,00
260370423110;12;07;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;2700,00
130461401712;02;06;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;19357,50
070167403811;99;53;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;11016,00
150571422838;18;33;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;2795,00
250958427113;94;65;00;;VOGEL, ANDREAS:;;;8966,17
270251520515;99;53;00;;VOGEL, ANNEMARIE:;;;20821,99
050556427245;14;08;00;;VOGEL, BERND:;;;20700,00
080550421026;12;00;45;;VOGEL, BERND:;;;20160,00
030542427238;96;15;09;;VOGEL, BERND:;;;30000,00
241063518618;10;51;00;;VOGEL, BIANCA:;;;0,00
150647422827;12;08;00;;VOGEL, CARL-HEINZ:;;;21750,00
070471419033;10;69;00;;VOGEL, CARSTEN:;;;3220,00
230471513134;08;00;43;;VOGEL, CHRISTINE:;;;3320,00
110358519044;10;69;00;;VOGEL, CORNELIA:;;;16115,00
080668410314;18;32;00;;VOGEL, DETLEF:;;;9675,00
200940409536;06;08;00;;VOGEL, DIETER:;%

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

FBI – Tennessee Man Sentenced to 40 Months in Prison for Fraudulent Hedge Fund Scheme

ATLANTA—Jon Edward Hankins, 38, of Knoxville, Tenn., was sentenced to prison today by U.S. District Judge Amy Totenberg on charges of wire fraud, in connection with his scheme to lure investors to invest into his fraudulent hedge fund. Hankins was sentenced to 40 months in prison to be followed by three years of supervised release. Hankins was convicted of these charges on June 13, 2011, after pleading guilty.

U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia Sally Quillian Yates said, “Before he was even discharged from an earlier federal sentence for investment fraud, he launched another fraudulent scheme. Thankfully, the FBI identified and shut down his new scam very quickly, minimizing the losses that investors suffered. Our office and the President’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force remain committed to the mission of protecting investors and promoting confidence in the integrity of our financial system.”

According to the charges and other information presented in court: In the winter of 2009/2010, Hankins was serving the home confinement portion of a federal prison sentence he received for a 2007 securities fraud conviction relating to an $8 million fraud scheme involving his Knoxville-based investment company, “Tenet Asset Management.”

Shortly after his home confinement began, Hankins concocted another scheme. He created a website, fake brochures and other business documents, and rented office space and mail forwarding addresses in the names of two entities, “Christian Financial Brotherhood” and “Banker’s Trust Annuity.” He advertised these entities on the Internet and elsewhere and solicited investors, investment advisors and stock brokers to invest their funds with him.

>From at least December 2009 through February 2010, Hankins represented to a prospective victim that Banker’s Trust managed more than $100 million in assets for various clients, that the funds were held at an account at the leading Wall Street firm Goldman Sachs, and that he was making substantial investment returns for existing clients in a hedge fund he called the “Strategic Arbitrage Fund.” Hankins produced a brochure that claimed that the “Strategic Arbitrage Fund” maintained more than $30 million in client funds, and that listed various individuals, including a retired general and the son of a former cabinet secretary, as supposed directors of the fund. None of this was true, as Christian Financial and Banker’s Trust were shams; had nothing close to the assets that Hankins represented; had been “in business” for only a few months; had not been engaged in profitable securities trading; and was not associated with the high profile individuals listed on the brochure.

Hankins, in soliciting investors, deliberately omitted mention of his securities fraud conviction, Tenet Asset Management, or that he was still serving a federal sentence.

The FBI quickly learned of Hankins’ scheme, and conducted a search warrant that shut down the scheme in April 2010. Because this new investment scheme was caught quickly, Hankins obtained less than $600,000 from his victim-investors, of which over $200,000 was recovered and returned to victims.

This law enforcement action was undertaken as part of President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force.

President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general, and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources. The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes.

This case was investigated by special agents of the FBI. The Atlanta Division Office of the U.S. Securities & Exchange Commission provided assistance.

Assistant U.S. Attorney Justin S. Anand prosecuted the case.

TOP-SECRET from the FBI – Judge Limas Associate Pleads Guilty

BROWNSVILLE, TX—Another defendant has entered a guilty plea in the FBI’s public corruption investigation of former 404th District Court Judge Abel Corral Limas, United States Attorney Kenneth Magidson announced today. Jose Manuel “Meme” Longoria, 52, a resident alien from Mexico residing in San Benito, Texas, pleaded guilty today before U.S. District Judge Andrew S. Hanen to four counts as alleged in an indictment returned April 26, 2011 – one count of conspiracy to interfere with commerce under color of official right or extortion, two counts of extortion and one count of aiding and abetting honest services wire fraud by Limas.

At today’s hearing, Longoria admitted to his role in a conspiracy involving the creation of a fraudulent drug money seizure document as well as a charging warrant both prepared by former Cameron County District Attorney (DA) investigator Jaime Munivez, obtaining information on a murder case in return for a bicycle provided to Munivez, and an attempted recovery of $800,000 in drug proceeds from a truck near Rosenberg, Texas. The recitation of evidence to the court indicated that as part of the public corruption investigation on Judge Limas, agents learned Longoria was also involved in criminal activity with others.

In the first incident which was charged as part of the conspiracy by Longoria, agents conducted an undercover operation in which Munivez ultimately met with Longoria and provided a document titled “Article 59.03 Statement of Seized Property” indicating $200,000 was seized on “11/20/07” by an investigator with the DA’s office. The document was provided in return for payment of money. In early 2008, Longoria assisted a drug trafficking organization in an attempt to recover a Georgia truck containing drug proceeds that was reported to be missing on the outskirts of Houston. Longoria enlisted the help of Munivez and “Person G,” to locate the truck with the possibility of receiving up to $90,000 for recovering it. In a recorded conversation, Person G informed Longoria to “be careful because maybe they’ll pick you up when…the truck is picked up and …they’re (law enforcement) seeing, watching and they (sic) arrest you.” Ultimately, the truck was found by the Rosenberg Police Department and a total $289,290 in drug proceeds was seized.

In a second incident charged as part of the conspiracy, Longoria, Munivez and another person conspired to extort money from a person whom they falsely told had a charge/arrest warrant outstanding. Longoria extorted the money while Munivez created the fraudulent warrant document to show to the individual. In return for the money, Longoria promised the warrant would “disappear.”

In addition, Longoria arranged for Munivez to meet a fugitive in Matamoros, Mexico, and provide information on his pending murder case. Longoria then arranged for a bicycle to be given to Munivez in return for meeting with the fugitive. Agents conducting surveillance observed Longoria and Munivez arrive at and enter Bicycle World in Brownsville. On Jan. 23. 2008, Munivez picked up the bicycle which had been paid for by the fugitive.

Finally, in relation to count five of the indictment, Longoria also admitted today to his role in arranging a $1,500 payment to Limas in April 2008. The indictment charged that Longoria aided and abetted former judge Limas to devise “a scheme and artifice to defraud and deprive the state of Texas of the right to the honest services of a state district judge, performed free from deceit, favoritism, bias, self-enrichment and self-dealing.” Evidence presented today showed Longoria, acting as a middleman for Armando and Karina Pena, arranging for Limas to issue a court order allowing Armando Pena to report to the state probation by mail rather than in person. Pena, who had left Texas without authorization to reside in Arkansas, was subject to arrest and revocation of his deferred adjudication probationary term for violating a condition of his eight-year probationary term imposed for aggravated robbery in March 2006.

According to the pleadings filed in court today, Karina Pena, Armando’s wife, contacted Longoria on April 22, 2008, seeking his assistance to arrange for her husband to be permitted to report by mail from Arkansas. Two days later, according to court documents, Karina Pena was told that Limas wanted $1500. Longoria sought $300 for himself for arranging the deal. On April 24, 2008, Armando Pena finalized the arrangements with Longoria and wire transferred $1800 to Harlingen, Texas. FBI agents later reviewed the Armando Pena state court case file and located a progress report written by Pena’s probation officer indicating that, “On April 23, 2008, the Honorable Court (Limas) contacted our office in reference to allowing the defendant to report by mail.” Furthermore, on May 13, 2008, Judge Limas signed an order allowing Pena to report by mail.

Both Armando and Karina Pena have previously entered a guilty plea to the wire fraud violation and are scheduled to be sentenced Nov. 30, 2011. To date, a total of seven defendants have entered guilty pleas in relation to the Limas investigation.

Sentencing is set before Judge Hanen on Feb. 27, 2012. At that time, Longoria faces a maximum 20-year prison term, a fine of up to $250,000 and five years of supervised release for each count of conviction. Following his guilty plea today, Longoria was remanded to the custody of the U.S. Marshals Service where he will remain pending his sentencing hearing.

Munivez, who was charged in a separate indictment, is scheduled for jury selection on Dec. 3, 2011, before Judge Hanen. He is presumed innocent unless convicted through due process of law.

The charges in relation to this case are the result of an ongoing three-year investigation being conducted by the FBI, Drug Enforcement Administration and the Brownsville Police Department. Assistant United States Attorneys Michael Wynne and Oscar Ponce are prosecuting the case.

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE U-V – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – U-V

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

171242423621;13;00;42;;U(E)BELACKER, HEINZ:;;;29530,00
150670416716;18;34;00;;U(E)BENSEE, JENS:;;;2795,00
151270413924;18;28;00;;U(E)BERMUTH, PETER:;;;2720,00
100465422783;94;65;00;;UBER, MICHAEL:;;;17410,50
310856407324;05;80;00;;UBERT, AXEL:;;;16379,12
011063428248;14;00;40;;UBL, HANS-PETER:;;;19085,00
141031428222;14;00;42;;UBL, JOHANN:;;;36000,00
100964526210;14;80;00;;UBL, KATRIN:;;;12121,65
190559400835;06;02;00;;UBL, MICHAEL:;;;20460,00
250250409518;02;11;00;;UDICH, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;25500,00
270668402530;02;08;00;;UDICH, INGO:;;;14075,00
270149502521;02;29;00;;UDICH, JUTTA:;;;18766,97
100836430257;96;15;19;;UDKE, GUNNAR:;;;30000,00
140563430249;97;29;00;;UDKE, JOERN:;;;16038,00
050471412511;07;06;00;;UEBE, SILVIO:;;;3557,10
210767430102;15;14;00;;UEBEL, ANDREAS:;;;14969,00
181043430043;97;08;00;;UEBEL, FRIEDER:;;;24187,50
210750528912;94;30;00;;UEBEL, PETRA:;;;25200,00
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Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

Live and Uncensored – Egypt Protest Photos 3


[Image]Demonstrators are lit by a laser lights as thousands spend the night in Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and the protesters, who are demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down, are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Bela Szandelszky)
[Image]A wounded protester is treated at a field hospital near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Manu Brabo)
[Image]Demonstrators chant slogans as thousands spend the night in Tahrir Square, Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and the protesters, who are demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down, are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Bela Szandelszky)
[Image]Protesters try to climb a concrete barricade erected by Egyptian Army soldiers in the street leading to the interior ministry from Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Manu Brabo)
[Image]Egyptian Army soldiers stand guard atop a concrete block barricade while protesters chant slogans, near Tahrir Square, in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Bernat Armangue)
[Image]A protester waves an Egyptian national flag as they gather in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Bernat Armangue)[Image]
[Image]Protesters gather as Egyptian Army soldiers build a concrete block barricade on the street between Tahrir Square and the interior ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Egyptian protesters stand behind a barbed wire barricade in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Mohammed Abu Zaid)
[Image]An Egyptian officer, left, attempts to talk to protesters behind a newly erected barbed wire barricade by the Egyptian army near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. International criticism of Egypt’s military rulers is mounting after five days of clashes between police and protesters demanding the generals relinquish power immediately. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]A woman protester attempts to dismantle a barbed wire barricade, newly erected by the Egyptian army, near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. International criticism of Egypt’s military rulers is mounting after five days of clashes between police and protesters demanding the generals relinquish power immediately. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Protesters gather behind a barbed wire barricade, newly erected by the Egyptian army, near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. International criticism of Egypt’s military rulers is mounting after five days of clashes between police and protesters demanding the generals relinquish power immediately. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Protesters gather behind a barbed wire barricade, newly erected by the Egyptian army, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. International criticism of Egypt’s military rulers is mounting after five days of clashes between police and protesters demanding the generals relinquish power immediately. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Protesters shout through a barbed wire barricade, newly erected by the Egyptian army, near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. International criticism of Egypt’s military rulers is mounting after five days of clashes between police and protesters demanding the generals relinquish power immediately. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]A protester watches Egyptian Army soldiers build a concrete block barricade on the street between Tahrir Square and the interior ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Egyptian Army officers ask protesters to leave the top of a concrete block barricade on the street between Tahrir Square and the interior ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]A protester looks through a concrete block barricade erected by the Egyptian Army on the street between Tahrir Square and the interior ministry in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Protesters gather around Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Mohammed Abu Zaid)
[Image]A protester prays moments after waking up in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Thursday, Nov. 24, 2011. Police and protesters demanding that Egypt’s ruling military council step down are observing a truce after five days of deadly street battles in which dozens have died. (Bernat Armangue)
[Image]Egyptian protesters set a fire during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, late Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Egyptian police are clashing with anti-government protesters for a fifth day in Cairo.

TOP-SECRET-Moscow Conference Debates Breakup of the Soviet Union Documents Show U.S.-Soviet Cooperation on Regional Conflicts in 1991

The End of the USSR, 20 Years Later

Marking the 20th anniversary of the breakup of the Soviet Union, the Gorbachev Foundation hosted a two-day conference in Moscow on November 10-11, co-organized by the National Security Archive and the Carnegie Moscow Center, examining the historical experience of 1989-1991 and the echoes today. The conference briefing book, compiled and edited by the Archive and posted on the Web today together with the conference program and speaker biographies, includes previously classified Soviet and American documents ranging from Politburo notes to CIA assessments to transcripts of phone calls between George H.W. Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev in the final months of the Soviet Union.

DOWNLOAD TOP-SECRET ORGINAL AMERICAN DOCUMENTS BELOW

1) 1989.02.03 The Soviet Union over the Next Four Years

2) 1989.02.13 The Soviet Union over the Next Four Years

3) 1989.02.22. US-Soviet Relations. Policy Opportunities

4) 1989.04 Rising Political Instability under Gorbachev (Apr 1989) 19890401a[1]

5) 1989.09 Gorb’s Domestic Gambles and Instability (Sep 1989) DOC_0000302420[1]

6) 1990.07.13 Looking into the Abyss (Jul 13 1990)

7) 1990.09.09 Bush-Gorb Meeting in Helsinki (Sep 9 1990)

Desert Crossing After Action Report Briefing_1999-07-22

9) 1991.02.23 Bush-Gorb Telcon (Feb 23 1991)

10) 1991.04.25 Soviet Cauldron (Apr 25 1991) SOV91-20177[1]

11) 1991.05.11 Bush-Gorb Telcon (May 11 1991)

12) 1991.05.23 Gorbachev’s Future (May 23 1991) 19910523[1]

13) 1991.06.21 Bush-Gorb Telcon (Jun 21 1991)

14) 1991.07.30 Bush-Gorb Expanded Bilateral (Jul 30 1991)

15) 1991.08.21 Bush-Gorb telcon (Aug 21 1991)

16) 1991.08.21 Bush-Yeltsin telcon (Aug 21 1991)

17) 1991.09.27 Bush-Gorb Telcon (Sep 27 1991)

18) 1991.10 Politics of Russ Nationalism (Oct 1991) DOC_0000499577[1]

19) 1993 Soviet Economy Unravels (1993) DOC001

Chinese User: I publicly announce full support of BoXilai

I publicly announce full support of BoXilai

In public and in private I must fully support BoXilai. In private, my grandfather and Boyibo were acquainted with each other during the Anti-Japanese war, my grandfather was persecuted in the Cultural Revolution –was released and restored to working by Boyibo. In public, BoXilai is the only one leader in China nowadays who willing to do something for the people, only one leader of the people trust, also the only one leader of people support.

This is the first time public voice that I have been persecuted over three years since 2008. Because I follow after freedom and democracy — criticize the Government serious problems in the work — especially in the financial field

case of sale Chinese bankingcase of rigged the stock market and illegal created stock warrants

case of Bank of Beijing illegal issued 100 million original shares and illegal listed£

and so on

therefore offended HuJintao WenJiabao and other vested interest groups.

I was detained on criminal charge of inciting subversion of state power in 2008, after labeled mental illness, jailed in Beijing Municipal Public Security Bureau Forced Treatment Management Department psychiatric section (Beijing AnKang hospital), jailed 186 days totals. Then told me and my parents when released, can no publish democratic article again, can not criticize the government again, can not expose the crimes of Bank of Beijing again, otherwise is fall ill again, will be re-jailed into Forced Treatment Management Department, and that is long-term detention.

My grandfathers went through fire and water to seize state power, my fathers sweat and shed blood to guard the country, to me is the third generation then was persecuted as political refugee by HuJintao WenJiabao and other vested interest groups, lawless deprived my political rights, civil rights of safeguard the National law, and subsistence rights the first human rights of The Communist Party has repeatedly advertised.

After three years I didn’t publicly voice, didn’t attend any activities, just non-publicly sent article apply for political asylum by e-mail, everyone has forgotten me, but the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue of led by HuJintao WenJiabao haven’t forgotten me and my family, they always monitor my home. In Early 2009, after I sent out apply for political asylum, the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue of led by HuJintao WenJiabao detected it. In order to prevent me going abroad to disclose their rule evil, they brutally crippled my elder sister. More than two years, the Public Security Bureau, Health Bureau, the Court, judicial expertise institutions, hospitals complicit collective falsified evidence and delayed time, divulged secret information to the perpetrator, shielded the perpetrator to escape, did not assume any criminal liability and civil liability, Beijing’s doctors did not give my sister to do surgery, then my sister has not obtained surgical treatment so far, leading to my sister necrosis of femoral head,lost the labor ability.

The powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue of led by HuJintao WenJiabao thought that still cannot completely trap my family in China, then stole my name disseminating terror information on the Internet, attempt to slander me as terrorist. I always think my arena in China, one year later will enormous changes, it doesn’t matter to go abroad or not, perhaps being trapped in China could more help my uncle bo.

BoXilai is the only one leader nowadays who willing to do something for the people, but was banished to Chongqing, how can serve the national people? He bravely chose combat corruption and crime crackdown that other leaders are afraid to do, Chinese people see some light for brilliant victories. But Chongqing is too small, and the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue is formidable, in a voice of opposition by the backstage of the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue, combat corruption and crime crackdown can not go on further. BoXilai how to continue to lead the national people? Then sing song, singing and dance is one of the main tasks of the party and Government organs and State-owned enterprises and institutions, day after day to sing, month after month to sing, year after year to sing, workplaces park street are singing. Others sing all right, BoXilai singing is not good, immediately the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue that touched the interests by combat corruption and crime crackdown slandered he want to back up again the Cultural Revolution. The Chinese people have progressed, won’t do the low level Cultural Revolution any more. The reason that the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue slander BoXilai is afraid of Chinese people are mobilized to deprive of their illegal interests, the voice attack BoXilai major from Beijing because the backstage of the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue all at Beijing.

Want to achieve victory of combat corruption and crime crackdown in China must first win victory of combat corruption and crime crackdown in Beijing. But it is not anyone does that combat corruption and crime crackdown at Beijing, the deeply involved social and political factors network of the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue in Beijing is collusion between the upper and lower, none officials who have the courage and the will and the incentive dare against them, review whole China only I can do. Yes, my short-term goal is the mayor of Beijing.

Beijing also some officials faked formidable justice high profile combat corruption and crime crackdown on stage, but as close as brothers with the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue under stage, the more combat corruption and crime crackdown, the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue in Beijing more rampant. For ten years, I and my family have been continuously suffering brutally persecution from the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue of led by HuJintao WenJiabao since I began to expose illegal criminal behavior of Bank of Beijing and follow after freedom and democracy, they killed one person in my family, crippled one person in my family, wounded two person in my family, life-long persecution to my whole family. At present Beijing Mafia-like dare open extortion and intimidation my family, they clamor that you family is repression object, not protected by the Communist Government, we can bully you family we want, nobody hinders. The powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue of led by HuJintao WenJiabao use public authority owed blood debts to my family, I will use the law blood for blood. I am the only one who have the courage and the will and the incentive utterly destroy the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue in Beijing.

My first shot that combat corruption and crime crackdown at Beijing is to make the Mafia-like, corruption, illegal listed Bank of Beijing delisting and bankruptcy, refer to article Bank of Beijing bankruptcy will bring enormous benefits, Bank of Beijing baby shareholders event is China’s first major case, 100 million original shares of Bank of Beijing illegal issued to more than 500 descendants of Chinese dignitaries, this is HuJintao WenJiabao made GSP in order to buy support from dignitaries, and thus the trader WangQishan became vice-premier. Bank of Beijing bankruptcy will lead to China’s political crisis and financial crisis, chain reaction is a large number of senior officials of central and Beijing Municipal out of power, vacate senior positions especially monetary authorities top jobs, arrange patriotic clean and fair person for the new leadership.

Since the song is not to sing, BoXilai would be better to listen to public opinion concern about the financial problems, dealing with oversupply and illegal listed on stock market, rigged the stock market and illegal created stock warrants, sale Chinese banking and transport people’s wealth to foreign, certainly can gain fully support of hundreds of millions investors and the 1.3 billion Chinese people. My grandfather together with Boyibo attacked against Japanese fascist in Jin Ji Lu Yu base area during Anti-Japanese War, now I’d like to jointly BoXilai destroy the powers of traitor Mafia-like corruption rogue in China, cooperation to build a new China.

Democratic and righteous people team up, look at the world who can be against.

XXX

October 1, 2011

Video – The illegal Execution of Lena Baker

Lena Baker (June 8, 1901 — March 5, 1945) was an African American maid who was executed for murder by the State of Georgia in 1945 for killing her employer, Ernest Knight, 67,[1] in 1944. At her trial she claimed that he had imprisoned and threatened to shoot her should she attempt to leave, whereupon she took his gun and shot him. Baker was the only woman to be executed by electrocution in Georgia.[2] She was granted a full and unconditional pardon by the State of Georgia in 2005, 60 years after her execution.

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE TS-U – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – TS-U

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

020854427246;01;19;00;;TSCHA(E)PE, FRANK:;;;19780,01
090139516219;98;83;00;;TSCHACHE, GISELA:;;;23040,00
061037416214;96;15;05;;TSCHACHE, REINER:;;;30750,00
240235401324;30;43;00;;TSCHAEGE, MANFRED:;;;22140,00
131052427510;96;15;11;;TSCHAENSCH, BURKHARD:;;;22980,00
280254513926;94;11;00;;TSCHAENSCH, GERIT:;;;20280,00
020554417767;96;15;13;;TSCHAEPE, FRED:;;;26162,50
020169416434;18;34;00;;TSCHAGE, HEIKO:;;;9675,00
180471416446;18;34;00;;TSCHAGE, UWE:;;;2795,00
150663403458;03;06;00;;TSCHAKERT, DIRK:;;;16500,00
300854414628;08;00;49;;TSCHARNTKE, HARTMUT:;;;23040,00
091155411235;07;02;00;;TSCHENISCH, THOMAS:;;;21780,00
280469409528;18;35;00;;TSCHENTKE, RALF:;;;9555,00
071267409529;06;69;00;;TSCHENTKE, THILO:;;;9675,00
230468417125;18;32;00;;TSCHEPE, JU(E)RGEN:;;;11925,00
221132401352;01;00;47;;TSCHERNER, HORST:;;;25500,00
190570417742;09;69;00;;TSCHERNER, JENS:;;;12442,50
110938517782;09;00;40;;TSCHERNER, RENATE:;;;13860,00
210364430116;15;20;00;;TSCHERNIG, MARTIN:;;;16830,00
240237407623;99;49;00;;TSCHERNTKE, NORBERT:;;;6187,50
080240429727;99;02;00;;TSCHERWINKA, FRANZ:;;;24206,25
310144429736;97;08;00;;TSCHERWINKA, REINER:;;;24000,00
200251417792;09;40;00;;TSCHESCHEL, JUERGEN:;;;25760,00
080458401946;99;09;00;;TSCHESCHLOK, OTTO-PETER:;;;21677,50
160164408210;98;83;00;;TSCHESLOG, JO(E)RG:;;;13065,88
210460508227;98;82;00;;TSCHESLOG, UTE:;;;4438,46
270254417740;09;06;21;;TSCHETNER, DETLEF:;;;20220,00
130354508928;98;20;00;;TSCHETSCHE, HELGA:;;;20520,00
080349429771;94;64;00;;TSCHETSCHE, WOLFGANG:;;;27562,50
100956423844;13;08;00;;TSCHETSCHORKE, ANDREAS:;;;17602,42
030937419021;17;00;00;;TSCHETSCHORKE, HANS:;;;35250,00
231069422116;18;33;00;;TSCHEUSCHNER, TINO:;;;9600,00
130232519039;10;77;00;;TSCHIEDEL, HERTHA:;;;14355,00
210435426342;14;00;43;;TSCHIEDEL, JUERGEN:;;;27000,00
140344528318;14;77;00;;TSCHIEDEL, RENATE:;;;23040,00
150842428247;14;08;00;;TSCHIEDEL, SEPP:;;;23937,50
101254405937;04;00;48;;TSCHIERSCH, DIETMAR:;;;26505,00
290955405513;04;00;51;;TSCHIERSCH, JOACHIM:;;;23980,00
040855505611;15;08;00;;TSCHIERSCHWITZ, CARMEN:;;;20316,92
110159405618;15;02;00;;TSCHIERSCHWITZ, MANFRED:;;;23460,00
030558511012;96;15;00;650/75/49/1, :;TSCHIHARZ, UTE;3540;KARL-MARX-STR. 23;
120651411015;96;15;00;650/75/49, :;TSCHIHARZ, WOLFGANG;3540;KARL-MARX-STR. 23;
120651411015;96;15;00;650/75/49, :;TSCHIHARZ, WOLFGANG;3540;KARL-MARX-STR. 23;
071154415359;08;00;40;;TSCHIPANG, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;22440,00
090354515358;08;77;00;;TSCHIPANG, MARTINA:;;;14190,01
280769430193;18;38;00;;TSCHIPKE, ANDRE:;;;10575,00
050242530282;99;02;00;;TSCHIRCH, GERDA:;;;25012,50
130639430247;99;02;00;;TSCHIRCH, GERHARD:;;;29687,50
090143421116;12;53;00;;TSCHIRCH, PETER:;;;30750,00
150251402723;02;19;00;;TSCHIRNER, FRED:;;;26640,00
290244524911;13;06;00;;TSCHIRNER, KARIN:;;;21937,50
180154411457;99;43;00;;TSCHIRNER, MICHAEL:;;;20160,00
281269422044;18;32;00;;TSCHIRNHORSKY, ROLF:;;;9510,00
230853422828;94;30;00;;TSCHIRPKE, JUERGEN:;;;23402,50
240649410036;12;09;00;;TSCHIRPKE, KARL-HEINZ:;;;23040,00
080236429716;99;43;00;;TSCHIRSCHKY, FRITZ:;;;20625,00
151260430077;99;43;00;;TSCHIRSCHKY, MARCO:;;;18480,00
281230430020;99;40;00;;TSCHIRSCHWITZ, GUENTER:;;;33000,00
111241429728;99;51;00;;TSCHIRSCHWITZ, HANS:;;;25500,00
130849409526;94;03;00;;TSCHISGALE, KARL-HEINZ:;;;24750,00
020448409552;06;65;00;;TSCHISGALE, KLAUS:;;;20875,00
040761408319;06;06;00;;TSCHITSCHKE, ULLI:;;;18260,00
230157408715;06;00;50;;TSCHOEPEL, WOLFGANG:;;;20585,00
010158407410;97;01;00;;TSCHOERTNER, FRANK:;;;22371,09
140363407423;99;43;00;;TSCHOERTNER, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;18425,00
070461426846;04;00;51;;TSCHORN, ANDREAS:;;;19386,00
110750514846;97;06;00;;TSCHORN, CHRISTA:;;;19440,00
060368400730;18;35;00;;TSCHORN, JAN:;;;9825,00
071050406810;97;06;00;;TSCHORN, KONRAD:;;;19933,75
100760406815;05;00;47;;TSCHORN, RALF:;;;22522,50
140367530023;99;09;00;;TSCHORR, JACQUELINE:;;;8719,25
230660430135;98;84;00;;TSCHORR, UWE:;;;18847,50
070836429710;97;06;00;;TSCHORR, WOLFGANG:;;;24087,50
160854419064;10;80;00;;TSCHRITTER, WOLFGANG:;;;17684,54
240544522779;99;77;00;;TSCHULIK, GUDRUN:;;;15692,73
150742422809;99;40;00;;TSCHULIK, JUERGEN:;;;27750,00
110655407428;05;80;00;;TSCHUSCHKE, DIETER:;;;22942,50
080552407420;05;02;00;;TSCHUSCHKE, GUENTER:;;;22320,00
180868424962;18;32;00;;TU(E)MMLER, MARCO:;;;9675,00
260470419012;18;34;00;;TU(E)NGLER, HOLGER:;;;9510,00
180367412226;07;08;00;;TU(E)RK, MARIO:;;;12999,00
040369414837;18;31;00;;TU(E)RK, MICHAEL:;;;9986,44
050555428297;14;15;00;;TU(E)RSCHMANN, UWE:;;;21120,00
240469415462;17;00;00;;TU(E)TTMANN, FRANK:;;;9675,00
220759413213;08;00;40;;TUCHENHAGEN, ANDREAS:;;;19965,00
120361415376;08;08;00;;TUCHENHAGEN, UDO:;;;20460,00
191055422728;99;09;00;;TUCHOLKE, BURKHARDT:;;;23100,00
160959424919;04;06;00;;TUCZEK, GERALD:;;;19952,50
160853406149;04;00;40;;TUDA, CLAUS:;;;24322,50
220142409222;30;51;00;;TUDYKA, RAINER:;;;20160,00
150857422745;94;03;00;;TUEBEL, MICHAEL:;;;22252,50
081162412288;99;02;00;;TUEBKE, RONALD:;;;23155,00
100347416120;09;00;41;;TUEMMLER, VOLKMAR:;;;23250,00
191045506119;04;55;00;;TUENGETHAL, DORIS:;;;21375,00
260942406165;04;53;00;;TUENGETHAL, GUENTER:;;;33750,00
161045416116;94;30;00;;TUERK, GERHARD:;;;25007,50
240245418517;10;00;44;;TUERK, RAINER:;;;30750,00
020542530041;94;30;00;;TUERK, SIEGLINDE:;;;21677,50
090341530292;98;83;00;;TUERK, SIEGRID:;;;20340,00
160549422734;12;65;00;;TUERK, WERNER:;;;20250,00
160155422416;18;31;00;;TUERPE, BERND:;;;20880,00
300442529728;99;40;00;;TUERPE, CHRISTA:;;;24000,00
160552425047;94;03;00;;TUERPE, CHRISTIAN:;;;22592,00
250264430190;96;15;03;;TUERPE, JENS:;;;19745,00
240630430010;98;19;00;;TUERPE, MANFRED:;;;44250,00
130750428241;94;65;00;;TUERPE, MANFRED:;;;21780,00
010569430260;99;40;00;;TUERPE, MARIO:;;;13875,00
210569430232;15;69;00;;TUERPE, MARTIN:;;;10294,82
311244429738;99;40;00;;TUERPE, MICHAEL:;;;27750,00
100266421315;12;08;00;;TULKA, STEFFEN:;;;11084,00
171270418416;10;03;00;;TUMA, MATTHIAS:;;;2870,00
121168426238;18;35;00;;TUMMA, JOERG:;;;9600,00
040870405918;17;00;00;;TUMMERER, AXEL:;;;2918,39
200259424831;13;18;00;;TUMMESCHEIT, JOERG:;;;21780,00
080357427725;94;03;00;;TUMOVEC, THOMAS:;;;31395,00
050570422766;18;33;00;;TUNSCH, ANDREAS:;;;9510,00
190355502215;02;00;45;;TUPING, BRIGITTE:;;;18246,41
071253402238;02;00;45;;TUPING, HELMUT:;;;23345,00
230559402236;02;26;00;;TUPING, HUGO:;;;18630,00
300458402211;02;06;00;;TUPING, KARL:;;;19205,00
211039430117;18;27;30;;TUPPAT, HELMUT:;;;30750,00
181255429925;98;84;00;;TUPPAT, RAINER:;;;19610,38
310358530055;99;41;00;;TUPPAT, SYLVIA:;;;21332,50
041263528267;30;34;00;;TURATH, GABRIELE:;;;11222,67
120762428215;14;08;00;;TURATH, LUTZ:;;;18480,00
190642422808;12;80;00;;TURBA, EMANUEL:;;;29250,00
261054405724;07;00;46;;TURBAN, GU(E)NTER:;;;19880,00
180655510410;07;00;46;;TURBAN, MONIKA:;;;15989,03
311248422138;97;06;00;;TURBER, FRANK:;;;26250,00
270749521320;97;06;00;;TURBER, MARGITTA:;;;29670,00
061135429713;99;53;00;;TURBER, RUDOLF:;;;37500,00
290170405118;04;06;00;;TURCZYK, SVEN:;;;12300,00
110947406179;18;29;00;;TURLEY, HERBERT:;;;27750,00
290655522718;12;20;00;;TUROWSKI, CORNELIA:;;;16240,97
060464404723;04;00;44;;TURSCH, ANDREAS:;;;17160,00
031044413110;08;00;43;;TURTSCHAN, ALFRED:;;;25500,00
110743430257;94;11;00;288/67, :;TUSCHE, HANS-JU(E)RGEN;1020;SEBASTIANSTR. 28;
110743430257;94;11;00;288/67, :;TUSCHE, HANS-JU(E)RGEN;1020;SEBASTIANSTR. 28;
050947422767;12;14;00;;TUSCHE, LUTZ:;;;25500,00
290762421349;99;43;00;;TUSCHE, VOLKER:;;;19965,00
290659407936;06;20;00;;TUSCHEK, PETER:;;;23100,00
301245429714;99;55;00;;TUSCHINSKI, DIETER:;;;24500,00
081065400840;01;65;00;;TUSCHY, GERD-MICHAEL:;;;16146,00
210670421824;18;35;00;;TUSSNAT, ALEXANDER:;;;2795,00
240358424999;17;00;00;;TUSTANOWSKI, MICHAEL:;;;22770,00
240868402730;99;43;00;;TUTTLIES, RALF:;;;12625,00
261139402768;02;53;00;;TUTTLIES, ULRICH:;;;27000,00
091151411916;07;06;00;;TUTZSCHKE, HEINZ-DIETER:;;;20340,00
051239424029;13;00;45;;TUTZSCHKY, DIETER:;;;19875,00
201060515028;08;00;60;;TWARDOGORSKI, REGINA:;;;7214,88
190471408576;18;32;00;;TWARTZ, ANDREAS:;;;2795,00
200569408538;18;33;00;;TWARTZ, MICHAEL:;;;9600,00
100161404324;03;00;52;;TYKWER, HEIKO:;;;20460,00
080343424929;13;65;00;;TYM, CLAUS:;;;21000,00
160749530107;99;77;00;;TYMNIK, GABRIELE:;;;31050,00
130434417735;09;26;00;;TYMPEL, HARRY:;;;29250,00
130251424940;13;07;00;;TYMPEL, HARTMUT:;;;24007,50
061166429214;14;08;00;;TYNIOR, MATTHIAS:;;;14742,00
260956417770;97;01;00;;TYRA, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;26986,67
150270423829;18;32;00;;TYRALLA, MICHAEL:;;;2795,00
230453416031;09;03;00;;TYRALLA, NORBERT:;;;25860,00
030651424810;99;49;00;;TZEUSCHNER, HANS-PETER:;;;20160,00
290332420223;11;80;00;;TZSCHACH, FRITZ:;;;23250,00
250446420217;97;01;00;;TZSCHACH, HARTMUT:;;;28500,00
050145429721;99;40;00;;TZSCHACH, WOLFGANG:;;;27000,00
130737418524;10;06;00;;TZSCHACHMANN, HEINZ:;;;22437,50
160364410120;99;09;00;;TZSCHACHMANN, MARIO:;;;16170,00
301268410127;07;06;00;;TZSCHACHMANN, MIRKO:;;;13425,00
090629422813;12;20;00;;TZSCHEUTSCHLER, ERNST:;;;37342,74
140440429715;99;43;00;;TZSCHEUTSCHLER, GERHARD:;;;27750,00
050562430117;97;08;00;;TZSCHEUTSCHLER, ROGER:;;;17077,50
290168409128;17;00;00;;TZSCHICHHOLZ, RAIK:;;;9872,00
120549422842;12;14;00;;TZSCHIRNER, FRED:;;;20062,50
110869421022;18;33;00;;TZSCHIRNER, MICHAEL:;;;9510,00
200155407412;98;82;00;;TZSCHOPPE, BERND:;;;20160,00
201148429765;99;51;00;;TZSCHOPPE, HARALD:;;;32250,00
200558507426;97;01;00;;TZSCHOPPE, REGINA:;;;14377,89
040568417520;17;00;00;;TZSCHOPPE, TORSTEN:;;;8950,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

TOP-SECRET-Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station 19 November 2011

[Image]
TEPCO note: Other photos are published on the report “Roadmap towards Restoration from the Accident at Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Power Station (November 17, 2011)” [http://cryptome.org/0005/daiichi-111711.zip (9.1MB)]
The road between unit 2 & unit 3Before, May 3, 2011[Image]

After, May 14, 2011

[Image]

Former main building entranceBefore, May 27, 2011[Image]

After, June 7, 2011

[Image]

FBI in depth – Seven Ohio Men Arrested for Hate Crime Attacks Against Amish Men

CLEVELAND—Seven Ohio men were arrested today on charges that they committed and conspired to commit religiously-motivated physical assaults in violation of the Matthew Shepard-James Byrd Hate Crimes Prevention Act. The arrests were announced today by Thomas E. Perez, Assistant Attorney General for the Civil Rights Division and Steven M. Dettelbach, U.S. Attorney for the Northern District of Ohio.

The criminal complaint, filed in Cleveland, charges Samuel Mullet Sr., Johnny S. Mullet, Daniel S. Mullet, Levi F. Miller, Eli M. Miller and Emanuel Schrock, all of Bergholz, Ohio; and Lester S. Mullet, of Hammondsville, Ohio, with willfully causing bodily injury to any person, or attempting to do so by use of a dangerous weapon, because of the actual or perceived religion of that person. The maximum potential penalty for these violations is life in prison.

According to the affidavit filed in support of the arrest warrants, the defendants conspired to carry out a series of assaults against fellow Amish individuals with whom they were having a religiously-based dispute. In doing so, the defendants forcibly restrained multiple Amish men and cut off their beards and head hair with scissors and battery-powered clippers, causing bodily injury to these men while also injuring others who attempted to stop the attacks. In the Amish religion, a man’s beard and head hair are sacred.

This case is being investigated by the Cleveland Division of the FBI and is being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorney Bridget M. Brennan of the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Northern District of Ohio and Deputy Chief Kristy Parker of the Civil Rights Division’s Criminal Section.

A criminal complaint is merely an accusation. All defendants are presumed innocent of the charges until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in court.

CONFIDENTIAL – The End of the USSR, 20 Years Later

The End of the USSR, 20 Years Later

Moscow Conference Debates Breakup of the Soviet Union

Documents Show U.S.-Soviet Cooperation on Regional Conflicts in 1991

Gorbachev Decries Lack of Western Aid to Support Perestroika

National Security Archive Electronic Briefing Book No. 364


Washington D.C., November 24, 2011 – Marking the 20th anniversary of the breakup of the Soviet Union, the Gorbachev Foundationhosted a two-day conference in Moscow on November 10-11, co-organized by the National Security Archive and the Carnegie Moscow Center, examining the historical experience of 1989-1991 and the echoes today. The conference briefing book, compiled and edited by the Archive and posted on the Web today together with the conference program and speaker biographies, includes previously classified Soviet and American documents ranging from Politburo notes to CIA assessments to transcripts of phone calls between George H.W. Bush and Mikhail Gorbachev in the final months of the Soviet Union.At the Moscow event, panels of distinguished eyewitnesses, veterans and scholars discussed Gorbachev’s political reforms of the 1980s, the crisis in the Soviet economy, the origins and impact of the “new thinking,” the role of society and social movements, and the ways the history is used and abused in current political debates. While Gorbachev himself was unable to participate for health reasons, he subsequently met with the conference organizers to give his reactions and retrospective analysis.

The Carnegie Moscow Center followed up the conference with a November 14 discussion, also co-organized by the Archive, using the same format of expert panels to analyze the impact of nationalism and separatism in the events of 1991, the role of the Soviet military, military reform today in the Russian armed forces, and the situation today in the North Caucasus and other ethnic conflicts in the former Soviet space.

At the Gorbachev Foundation conference, the panel on political reform debated the role of leaders as opposed to structural forces in the decline of the USSR, the competition between Mikhail Gorbachev and Boris Yeltsin especially in 1991, the particular Yeltsin factor including his arrangement with the presidents of Ukraine and Belarus in December 1991 to dissolve the USSR, and in the big picture, the declining legitimacy of the Soviet system over the duration of the Cold War.

The panel on economics discussed various options for modernizing the Soviet economy in the 1980s, whether the system was even reformable, the efforts of the Communist apparat to sabotage even modest reforms, the barriers in Western thinking that prevented any significant foreign aid to the Soviet Union in its last years, and the role of international financial institutions.

The panel on “new thinking” analyzed the dramatic changes in Soviet foreign policy under Gorbachev, the ultimately failed efforts at integrating Russia with Europe, the successes in U.S.-Soviet cooperation for settling regional conflicts, and the Soviet withdrawal from Afghanistan in 1988-89. This discussion also sparked a debate within the audience about the Gorbachev-Reagan ideas of nuclear abolition and their relevance for today.

The society panel described the extensive social demand for glasnost during the 1980s in stark contrast to today, the disintegration of social structures and public space in Russia since 1991, the importance of the dissident discourse of the 1960s and 1970s to the reformist elite and perestroika in the 1980s, and the unpreparedness of society for the various forms of extreme nationalist discourse that erupted at the end of the Soviet Union.

Gorbachev himself sat down with the conference organizers on November 14 after his return from Germany and following the two events at the Gorbachev Foundation and the Carnegie Moscow Center. He discussed the current political situation in Russia, with the “tandem” of Vladimir Putin and Dmitri Medvedev trading jobs with only a façade of elections, and under conditions of growing authoritarianism; but he predicted the “exhaustion” of this program and the eventual introduction of real change, rather than indefinite stagnation.

Gorbachev also commented on the issue of the lack of Western aid for his project of perestroika and glasnost – transforming the Soviet Union into a demilitarized, social democratic state that would work with the U.S. and other countries to resolve regional conflicts and build a “common home” in Europe and cooperative security arrangements globally. Coming back “empty-handed” from the G-7 meeting in the summer of 1991, Gorbachev commented, undermined his reform efforts, helped precipitate the August coup attempt, and undercut any possibility of gradual transition for the USSR. Participating in the discussion with Gorbachev were Pulitzer-Prize winners William Taubman and David Hoffman, Professor Jane Taubman, and National Security Archive representatives Tom Blanton, Malcolm Byrne, and Svetlana Savranskaya.

 

CONFIDENTIAL-TSA Flood Water Sensors Are Not Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs)

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/TSA-WaterSensorsNotIEDs-791x1024.jpg

 

 

Unveiled – Iran Public Execution

TOP-SECRET by the FBI – Real Estate Investor Convicted for Leading a Mortgage Fraud Conspiracy

PHOENIX—Eitan Maximov, 39, a citizen of Israel and lawful permanent resident of the United States, was convicted yesterday after a six day jury trial on one Count of Conspiracy to Commit Wire and Bank Fraud and one count of Wire Fraud as a result of his leadership in a cash-back mortgage fraud scheme that took place during 2006-2008.

The defendant was taken into custody following the jury verdict and his sentencing is set before U.S. District Judge David G. Campbell on February 27, 2012.

Acting U.S. Attorney Ann Birmingham Scheel said: “During the height of the real estate boom, this defendant saw an opportunity to profit and he took it. He furthered his scam by creating fictitious companies and billed himself as an investor. However, the only investment he made was in his lavish lifestyle that eventually crashed down on him.”

“Yesterday’s guilty verdict illustrates the commitment by the FBI, our law enforcement partners, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office in combating mortgage fraud,” said FBI Special Agent in Charge James L. Turgal. “When individuals use the housing market to intentionally defraud the public for their own personal financial gain, using other people’s money and dreams to live lavish lifestyles, it damages our economy and further exacerbates the mortgage crisis. The FBI’s Mortgage Fraud Task Force will continue to investigate those who orchestrate and participate in various mortgage fraud schemes in order to protect the public against those who would seek to further damage our local and national economy.”

The defendant played a leadership role in the underlying conspiracy which involved at least nine residential properties in the Scottsdale area. The objective of the conspiracy was to recruit unqualified borrowers as straw buyers, submit fraudulent loan applications on their behalf and on his own behalf, obtain mortgage loans in excess of the selling price of the property and then take the excess amount of the loans out through escrow in what is known as a “cash back” scheme.

The defendant recruited straw buyers and worked with an escrow officer in the scheme to defraud and then benefitted from their involvement in the scheme. Most of the properties were purchased or attempted to be purchased for in excess of a million dollars. Following the funding of the loans, the defendant received “cash back” or proceeds that he used to live a lavish lifestyle and further perpetuate the scheme. All of the homes purchased through the conspiracy have been foreclosed or sold at a loss to the lending institutions. The conspiracy resulted in approximately $5,000,000 in loans obtained by fraud and an actual and intended loss to lending institutions of nearly $6,500,000.

A conviction for Conspiracy to Commit Wire and Bank and Wire Fraud carries a maximum penalty of 30 years in federal prison, a $1,000,000 fine or both. In determining an actual sentence, Judge Campbell will consult the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines, which provide appropriate sentencing ranges. The judge, however, is not bound by those guidelines in determining a sentence.

The investigation in this case was conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. The prosecution was handled by Kevin M. Rapp and Monica B. Klapper, Assistant U.S. Attorneys, District of Arizona, Phoenix.

This prosecution is part of efforts underway by President Barack Obama’s Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force. President Obama established the interagency Financial Fraud Enforcement Task Force to wage an aggressive, coordinated and proactive effort to investigate and prosecute financial crimes. The task force includes representatives from a broad range of federal agencies, regulatory authorities, inspectors general and state and local law enforcement who, working together, bring to bear a powerful array of criminal and civil enforcement resources.

The task force is working to improve efforts across the federal executive branch, and with state and local partners, to investigate and prosecute significant financial crimes, ensure just and effective punishment for those who perpetrate financial crimes, combat discrimination in the lending and financial markets, and recover proceeds for victims of financial crimes. For more information about the task force visit: http://www.stopfraud.gov.

Unveiled – Egypt Protest Photos 2


[Image]Protesters gather in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011. Egyptian police are clashing with anti-government protesters for a fifth day in Cairo. Tens of thousands of protesters in Tahrir Square have rejected a promise by Egypt’s military ruler to speed up a presidential election to the first half of next year. They want Field Marshal Hussein Tantawi to step down immediately in favor of an interim civilian council. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]An injured protester, center, is aided by men on a motorcycle during clashes with Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]An injured protester is carried by other men during clashes with the Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Egyptian riot policeman clash with protesters near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian protester using scrap metal as a shield takes cover from tear gas during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian protester, center, uses a sling shot during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Egyptian protesters take cover from tear gas during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Egyptian protesters throw stones at security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian riot policeman throws a rock at protesters during clashes near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]A protester takes a break during clashes with Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]An injured Egyptian cleric from Al-Azhar, the country’s most prominent Islamic institution, wears a scarf as a mask to shield him from tear gas during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]A wounded protester is aided by a comrade during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]A protester walks away from tear gas fired during clashes with Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Female medics and doctors distribute supplies during nearby clashes with Egyptian riot police, in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]An Egyptian protester waves a national flag during clashes with security forces near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Protesters sit on a partially demolished wall during a temporary cease-fire with the Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Protesters sit on a barricade during a temporary cease-fire with the Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.
[Image]Protesters sit on the sidewalk during a temporary cease-fire with the Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Wednesday, Nov. 23, 2011.

24th of November 1964 – Jack Ruby shoots Lee Harvey Oswald

November 24, 1963, two days after the assassination of JFK.

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE TI-TS – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – TI-TS

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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150652418718;97;17;00;;TISCHENDORF, WALTER:;;;21600,00
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260854429893;30;71;00;;TISCHER, JOERG:;;;20621,03
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090154418625;10;80;00;;TISCHER, KARL-HEINZ:;;;18645,00
110542429719;97;08;00;;TISCHER, KLAUS:;;;24000,00
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250757417760;09;26;00;;TISCHER, MICHAEL:;;;19665,00
300145429712;97;08;00;;TISCHER, PETER:;;;25500,00
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050651415349;08;08;00;;TISCHER, UWE:;;;21332,50
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191254409112;95;45;00;;TISCHLER, FRANK:;;;25920,00
120757530039;94;30;00;;TISCHLER, MARTINA:;;;18418,69
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271261500870;01;18;00;;TISCHLER, SIMONE:;;;6473,59
131253409116;99;12;00;;TISCHLER, ULRICH:;;;28980,00
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150569423815;13;00;47;;TISCHOW, STEFFEN:;;;13125,00
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100743414119;08;09;00;;TITSCH, PETER:;;;24187,50
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300764427222;14;00;40;;TITTEL, JOERG:;;;19305,00
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040569423818;99;43;00;;TITTEL, OLAF:;;;9600,00
240850420914;99;49;00;;TITTEL, PETER:;;;19440,00
150956520914;12;06;00;;TITTEL, REGINA:;;;16236,09
010749528943;97;06;00;;TITTEL, RENATE:;;;23760,00
181270428920;99;02;00;;TITTEL, STEFFEN:;;;3620,00
210369417156;18;35;00;;TITTEL, SVEN:;;;10287,08
101270421515;12;69;00;;TITTEL, UWE:;;;2870,00
150469430225;94;65;00;;TITTEL, UWE:;;;13875,00
250632419332;10;07;00;;TITTELBACH, ROLF:;;;24000,00
180271415342;18;35;00;;TITTMANN, HOLGER:;;;2795,00
150259428231;30;61;00;;TITTMANN, OLAF:;;;17032,06
190647513418;08;00;46;;TITTMANN, SIGRID:;;;23120,00
010364430101;08;77;00;;TITZ, ROBERT:;;;15675,00
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060668409913;18;35;00;;TITZE, FRED:;;;9675,00
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270735406209;04;55;00;;TITZE, HORST:;;;22500,00
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290540429716;97;08;00;;TITZE, NORBERT:;;;26250,00
201138410614;97;01;00;;TITZE, RUDOLF:;;;26250,00
170970422251;18;40;00;;TITZE, THOMAS:;;;6736,77
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310760416824;97;01;00;;TITZE, VOLKER:;;;16957,50
050853417780;10;18;00;;TIX, ROLAND:;;;22609,00
091056502713;99;77;00;;TJARDES, CHRISTINE:;;;20010,00
240358401711;98;20;00;;TJARDES, OTFRIED:;;;23632,50
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061166425109;96;15;00;2143/86, A:;TKATSCH, INGO;1150;HERMSDORFER STR. 9;
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200169417793;18;32;00;;TO(E)PFER, RALF:;;;9625,00
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311249529711;15;00;44;;TO(E)PPEL, CHRISTINE:;;;25312,50
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120943405119;04;06;00;;TOBER, GUENTER:;;;25166,13
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150160503828;97;06;00;;TOBER, MARITA:;;;15510,00
240169411515;18;35;00;;TOBIAN, FELIX:;;;9675,00
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210737424975;13;65;00;;TOBIAS, PETER:;;;30937,50
160540406914;05;00;43;;TOBIAS, WOLFGANG:;;;24000,00
140351403329;98;84;00;;TOBIES, ERICH:;;;20820,00
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290154400245;98;84;00;;TOBIES, UWE:;;;21600,00
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230668428216;94;03;00;;TOBOLA, HEIKO:;;;10200,00
130650528296;94;03;00;;TOBOLA, SABINE:;;;19440,00
160635404313;97;01;00;;TOBOLDT, MANFRED:;;;28500,00
021068403313;01;69;00;;TOBOLT, RALF:;;;9510,00
010765402718;02;69;00;;TOCZEK, STEFAN:;;;10975,00
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260852418816;97;08;00;;TODT, JOACHIM:;;;28800,00
040447526210;14;80;00;;TODT, KARIN:;;;21327,50
130943428248;14;17;00;;TODT, PETER:;;;33750,00
261156422437;12;00;45;;TODTERMUSCHKE, ANDREAS:;;;23632,50
271060530053;97;06;00;;TODTMANN, KERSTIN:;;;5749,12
040757430062;99;26;00;;TODTMANN, RALF:;;;21505,00
010752422736;12;53;00;;TOEGEL, HANS-ULLRICH:;;;32040,00
240861405250;97;22;00;;TOEGEL, JENS:;;;17820,00
010652411220;07;08;00;;TOENNIGES, JUERGEN:;;;22320,00
211025430052;30;70;00;;TOENSMANN, ALEXANDER:;;;37080,00
260147511249;94;30;00;;TOEPEL, CHRISTA:;;;19758,06
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230843412239;94;65;00;;TOEPEL, KARL-HEINZ:;;;26640,00
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260151422716;96;15;13;;TOEPELMANN, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;21120,00
120456425008;99;02;00;;TOEPELT, ROLF-DIETER:;;;26910,00
090170414114;18;27;30;;TOEPFER, ANDREAS:;;;9510,00
290947530189;30;83;00;;TOEPFER, BARBARA:;;;31662,20
280356514823;08;00;65;;TOEPFER, BEATE:;;;17437,56
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080553429269;97;06;00;;TOEPFER, DIETMAR:;;;23760,00
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300165421515;12;00;50;;TOEPFER, FRANK:;;;19965,00
150661423818;94;64;00;;TOEPFER, FRANK:;;;16830,00
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171064420224;96;15;13;;TOEPFER, FRANK:;;;11067,00
071144405712;04;00;43;;TOEPFER, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;36000,00
150868422214;94;03;00;;TOEPFER, JENS:;;;9675,00
110840420229;96;15;26;;TOEPFER, JOACHIM:;;;34500,00
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061065422021;12;80;00;;TOEPFER, MAYK:;;;14904,00
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080258422777;96;15;19;;TOEPFER, ULRICH:;;;6264,00
290956430104;18;40;00;;TOEPFER, UWE:;;;20642,50
150660528255;98;83;00;;TOEPFER, WERA:;;;5390,00
220856429751;15;19;00;;TOEPPEL, BERND:;;;24150,00
070562400119;95;60;23;;TOEPPER, GERT:;;;16610,00
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250254408571;97;06;00;;TOEPPER, PETER:;;;23040,00
111165404835;98;82;00;;TOEPPER, UWE:;;;16114,50
030161407444;15;08;00;;TOEPPNER, MICHAEL:;;;8415,00
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110651419042;94;65;00;;TOERPEL, KLAUS-PETER:;;;22320,00
300451418210;10;00;47;;TOLETTI, MARTIN:;;;21285,00
260946400211;18;31;00;;TOLETZKI, HEINZ-JUERGEN:;;;27500,00
290670418820;99;43;00;;TOLETZKI, SOEREN:;;;2870,00
180962400860;99;13;00;;TOLKMITT, HOLGER:;;;18590,00
260356401919;02;06;00;;TOLKSDORF, HARTWIG:;;;14758,47
060268413921;08;08;00;;TOLKSDORF, TORSTEN:;;;14382,00
180358405729;04;20;00;;TOLKSDORFER, MARIO:;;;21562,50
300765403839;03;02;00;;TOLL, CARSTEN:;;;15522,00
260643417710;09;60;00;;TOLL, GUENTHER:;;;25500,00
291038405318;04;09;00;;TOLL, ULRICH:;;;33750,00
100355405317;30;47;00;;TOLLE, UWE:;;;22492,50
121069418718;94;03;00;;TOLLKIEN, FRANK:;;;10600,00
031139430079;30;63;00;;TOLXDORF, KLAUS:;;;16560,00
120953400821;97;01;00;;TOLZIEN, JOERG-ULRICH:;;;25920,00
050464409533;99;09;00;;TOMASCHEK, MICHAEL:;;;18920,00
221067406922;18;71;20;;TOMASCHKE, SVEN:;;;12025,00
051265413219;94;65;00;;TOMCZAK, ANDREAS:;;;16096,50
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230840520031;09;51;00;;TOMCZYK, BRIGITTE:;;;21960,00
310555408040;95;45;00;;TOMICKI, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;21600,00
101163424999;99;02;00;;TOMICZEK, MICHAEL:;;;17655,00
220650421826;12;07;00;;TOMISCH, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;26910,00
130870423015;18;31;00;;TOMISCH, REINER:;;;6705,00
080556520236;11;00;47;;TOMOSCHEID, MARION:;;;17500,00
040643402717;02;40;00;;TOMSCHICK, REINHARDT:;;;28500,00
021261408028;06;14;00;;TOMSCHIN, NORBERT:;;;17380,00
230956408025;06;40;00;;TOMSCHIN, RAINER:;;;19952,50
251152402210;02;08;00;;TOMSKI, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;26640,00
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290963430305;15;30;00;;TOMUSCHAT, MARTIN:;;;16830,00
101160430138;94;11;00;;TOMUSCHAT, STEFAN:;;;21165,00
300942429723;99;41;00;;TONAT, ERHARD:;;;28500,00
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080230426354;96;15;00;1601/75, M:;TONDOCK, HEINZ;1156;RUDOLF-SEIFFERT-STR. 6;
080230426354;96;15;00;1601/75, M:;TONDOCK, HEINZ;1156;RUDOLF-SEIFFERT-STR. 6;
070368412925;97;01;00;;TONDORYS, RALF:;;;5096,00
231163409532;06;08;00;;TONISCH, CARSTEN:;;;14795,00
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180463409246;06;69;00;;TONN, ANDRE:;;;19030,00
301168403827;18;35;00;;TONN, MARIO:;;;9510,00
010541419342;96;15;19;;TONNDORF, REINER:;;;30750,00
060166419636;11;09;00;;TONNDORF, THORSTEN:;;;11067,00
130851512258;07;51;00;;TONNE, ELEONORE:;;;24480,00
280954500632;01;96;31;;TOPEL, DORIS:;;;17906,25
080651400216;01;00;42;;TOPEL, GUENTHER:;;;25200,00
280150429850;15;80;00;;TOPEL, KLAUS:;;;19642,50
270753400249;01;96;31;;TOPEL, NORBERT:;;;24240,00
161168405521;18;35;00;;TOPF, ANDRE:;;;9600,00
240951524958;13;40;00;;TOPF, ANNELIE:;;;12952,05
071149415434;13;02;00;;TOPF, KARLHEINZ:;;;26075,00
120164423860;99;43;00;;TOPP, HOLGER:;;;17792,50
080969423813;99;43;00;;TOPP, RENE:;;;13285,00
190969420521;18;35;00;;TOPPE, JENS:;;;9600,00
140949517726;09;09;00;;TOPSCH, INGRID:;;;21060,00
150427406913;96;15;13;;TORGE, HARRY:;;;25500,00
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201043429718;97;06;00;;TORKLER, SIEGMAR:;;;26250,00
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120962413237;08;00;65;;TORNACK, OLIVER:;;;19800,00
151065424982;02;02;00;::;TORNAU, ANDRE;2755;BLEICHERSTR. 19;
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020270405019;18;32;00;;TORNEY, JAN:;;;9510,00
300859430109;98;63;00;;TORNOW, ANDREAS:;;;18630,00
271234529715;15;40;00;;TORNOW, INGE:;;;24000,00
080159430210;15;69;00;;TOSCH, FRANK:;;;25530,00
020458428239;01;00;42;;TOSCH, JOACHIM:;;;12150,00
020346430051;99;40;00;;TOSCH, KLAUS:;;;24000,00
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060238529712;18;35;00;;TOST, GISELA:;;;25500,00
230952429259;30;55;00;;TOST, HARRY:;;;20520,00
190135429730;99;43;00;;TOST, HELMUT:;;;21125,00
230454412235;07;06;00;;TOST, INGO:;;;19320,00
290942515369;30;83;00;;TOST, INGRID:;;;16387,50
300649426558;96;15;17;;TOST, JOACHIM:;;;24288,71
091147426218;14;00;43;;TOST, JUERGEN:;;;22770,00
061151526222;14;00;42;;TOST, RENATE:;;;16397,70
080152415026;03;19;00;;TOST, RUEDIGER:;;;20405,00
101066428234;98;84;00;;TOTTEWITZ, HEIKO:;;;16038,00
131069428261;18;35;00;;TOTZAUER, ANDRE:;;;6705,00
120758412237;99;02;00;;TOTZEK, FRANK:;;;22942,50
260659512210;99;77;00;;TOTZEK, KERSTIN:;;;16032,82
210757412242;12;80;00;;TOTZEK, STEPHAN:;;;17192,50
051169401912;02;69;00;;TOTZKE, ANDREAS:;;;9555,00
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191157430200;15;00;44;;TOUSSAINT, FRANK:;;;22586,37
260461525040;30;47;00;;TOUSSAINT, KERSTIN:;;;16200,00
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210970406319;18;31;00;;TRA(E)GER, OLAF:;;;2795,00
210166401533;30;59;00;;TRABANDT, JOERG:;;;13861,00
140649402724;02;08;00;;TRABITZSCH, WOLFGANG:;;;27007,50
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061042420736;08;00;56;;TRADEL, BERND:;;;25200,00
051250400626;12;65;00;;TRADEMANN, REINHARD:;;;20047,50
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250558401328;01;06;27;;TREDUP, ANDREAS:;;;17250,00
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110951424951;94;11;00;;TREIBER, MICHAEL:;;;26100,00
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101137410112;97;01;00;;TREICHEL, DIETER:;;;29000,04
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110571422807;18;35;00;;TRENTZSCH, THOMAS:;;;2795,00
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300557430226;15;00;48;;TRISPEL, FRED:;;;20987,50
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310370420318;18;35;00;;TRITSCHLER, MIKE:;;;2795,00
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070252502611;97;06;00;;TRITTEL, JUTTA:;;;20655,48
070271430270;18;32;00;;TRITTEL, OLAF:;;;2795,00
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111269406413;17;00;00;;TRITTSCHACK, DIRK:;;;9555,00
050470410813;18;35;00;;TRNKA, JO(E)RG:;;;6705,00
140467428915;18;25;00;;TRO(E)GER, ANDREAS:;;;10425,00
050270429333;18;40;00;;TRO(E)GER, KAI:;;;10830,00
260571426158;18;80;00;;TRO(E)GER, PIERRE:;;;2945,00
010670428923;18;31;00;;TRO(E)GER, RU(E)DIGER:;;;6705,00
241069415441;18;33;00;;TRO(E)MMEL, THOMAS:;;;12611,44
100460525003;13;00;40;;TROCH, BEATE:;;;0,00
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300655427725;96;15;13;;TROCHA, ANDREAS:;;;20010,00
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200252415027;10;00;43;;TROEBS, LOTHAR:;;;25200,00
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240961430074;96;15;05;;TROEGEL, HOLGER:;;;16335,00
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291048420554;99;13;00;;TROEGER, WOLFGANG:;;;24480,00
030931400127;98;83;00;;TROELENBERG, SIEGFRIED:;;;20625,00
011170408533;06;69;00;;TROELENBERG, STEFFEN:;;;2870,00
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280355423815;99;43;00;;TROELLMICH, MANFRED:;;;19492,50
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091251413951;07;00;44;;TROEMEL, WILLY:;;;27420,00
030369424710;99;43;00;;TROEPGEN, MARKUS:;;;9675,00
220261427925;30;48;00;;TROESCHEL, LUTZ:;;;13860,00
210263400639;99;43;00;;TROESTER, HARDY:;;;15180,00
210254413622;08;03;00;;TROESTER, HARTMUT:;;;22320,00
190237400621;01;00;49;;TROESTER, HORST:;;;25500,00
161046407238;05;80;00;;TROETSCH, DIETER:;;;21750,00
180452507262;05;80;00;;TROETSCH, INGE:;;;19440,00
060357421835;12;00;52;;TROETSCH, ULRICH:;;;22770,00
160554420573;99;40;00;;TROETSCHER, BERND:;;;22980,00
260361430036;94;11;00;;TROETSCHER, JUERGEN:;;;22335,00
151157424947;96;15;00;2691/80, F:;TROISCH, ANDREAS;1020;AM NUS(Z)BAUM 7;
151157424947;96;15;00;2691/80, F:;TROISCH, ANDREAS;1020;AM NUS(Z)BAUM 7;
071270425415;18;31;00;;TROISCH, HOLGER:;;;6705,00
140560419722;94;03;00;;TROITZSCH, HENNING:;;;17403,75
100569423836;99;49;00;;TROITZSCH, MARIO:;;;12900,00
040562406839;05;99;20;;TROJAHN, MICHAEL:;;;16197,50
061262507454;05;99;20;;TROJAHN, VIOLA:;;;12686,36
021263414528;30;63;00;;TROJAN, AXEL:;;;15052,00
060264403427;60;90;00;;TROJAN, HEIKO:;;;
060264403427;60;90;00;;TROJAN, HEIKO:;;;18300,00
091269401537;01;69;00;;TROJAN, MICHAEL:;;;9510,00
260269401312;01;06;24;;TROLES, OLAF:;;;6806,61
241160420225;11;06;21;;TROLL, RENE:;;;16252,50
060136402737;02;53;00;;TROLL, SIEGFRIED:;;;36000,00
010352414454;08;00;56;;TROLLE, FRANK:;;;23040,00
120951424926;13;15;00;;TROLLE, KARL-HEINZ:;;;28020,00
290654424315;13;65;00;;TROMMER, BERND:;;;19440,00
190231429722;99;43;00;;TROMMER, GUENTER:;;;33000,00
220869429240;18;31;00;;TROMMER, HEIKO:;;;6705,00
220734429243;14;55;00;;TROMMER, HELMUT:;;;19500,00
310769429242;05;69;00;;TROMMER, JENS:;;;9725,00
240169408463;18;33;00;;TROMMER, JO(E)RN:;;;9675,00
230551426559;14;51;00;;TROMMER, JOCHEN:;;;21840,00
270557430109;98;83;00;;TROMMER, JOERG:;;;19952,50
260564427929;97;01;00;;TROMMER, JUERGEN:;;;20460,00
020257416020;95;60;23;;TROMMER, MANFRED:;;;22022,50
081155524310;13;20;00;;TROMMER, PETRA:;;;20700,00
010834429720;97;17;00;;TROMMER, SIEGMAR:;;;33000,00
070570426511;18;33;00;;TROMMER, TORSTEN:;;;9510,00
010429419019;10;15;00;;TROMMER, VOLKMAR:;;;24750,00
260641427034;14;00;58;;TROMMER, WERNER:;;;29250,00
041145426518;14;00;44;;TROMMER, WOLFGANG:;;;26220,00
270650422808;96;15;14;;TROMMLER, GERD:;;;29072,50
301038529720;98;18;00;;TROMMLER, GISELA:;;;22562,50
280164426239;99;43;00;;TROMMLER, HEIKO:;;;16912,50
260140429736;97;08;00;;TROMMLER, KLAUS:;;;28500,00
160761506919;98;83;00;;TROMMLER, MARTINA:;;;16231,31
230462430089;15;00;40;;TROMMLER, MICHEAL:;;;21120,00
150342426210;14;00;42;;TROMMLER, ROLF:;;;21750,00
280251429745;96;15;00;957/89, F:;TROMMLER, WERNER;1156;HO-CHI-MINH-STR. 4;
280251429745;96;15;00;957/89, F:;TROMMLER, WERNER;1156;HO-CHI-MINH-STR. 4;
211151400217;99;02;00;;TROMP, HARTMUT:;;;25200,00
200970411231;18;35;00;;TROMSKI, RENE:;;;2795,00
310163430265;94;03;00;;TRONICKE, ANDRE:;;;17490,00
270535506117;17;00;00;;TRONICKE, ANNELIES:;;;21750,00
030240529714;96;15;11;;TRONICKE, ELFRIEDE:;;;24375,00
210235406152;17;00;00;;TRONICKE, HANS-DIETER:;;;35250,00
100164513825;94;03;00;;TRONICKE, PETRA:;;;5621,52
020464406140;04;08;00;;TRONICKE, UWE:;;;16005,00
210141430039;94;03;00;;TRONICKE, WOLFGANG:;;;37500,00
190149529716;99;43;00;;TRONNIER, GISELA:;;;25375,00
070368530147;15;12;00;;TRONNIER, GUDRUN:;;;11158,78
290649429744;99;43;00;;TRONNIER, GUNTER:;;;24750,00
190659409538;06;02;00;;TROPPA, ANDRE:;;;16610,00
010959406928;97;08;00;;TROPPA, JOERG:;;;18820,00
100958508948;30;83;00;;TROPPA, SABINE:;;;15109,60
081069407636;05;69;00;;TROPPENZ, MAIK:;;;2870,00
110470426817;18;32;00;;TROPPSCHUG, RICO:;;;6705,00
190265417113;97;01;00;;TROPSCH, DIRK:;;;19140,00
070341417419;09;00;50;;TROPSCHUG, KLAUS:;;;22687,50
041069418435;18;32;00;;TROSCH, ROBERTO:;;;9510,00
020440430066;98;84;00;;TROSCHIER, PETER:;;;35250,00
160632429726;97;17;00;;TROSCHKE, BODO:;;;34500,00
041049402217;97;08;00;;TROSCHKE, FRED:;;;24480,00
050254429886;15;65;00;;TROSCHKE, KUNO:;;;21907,50
060756402236;99;43;00;;TROSCHKE, MAGNUS:;;;19320,00
191247421228;97;08;00;;TROSCHUETZ, CLAUS-PETER:;;;25500,00
280370415338;96;15;25;;TROSKE, DIRK:;;;8300,00
070449515360;08;51;00;;TROSKE, EDITH:;;;16109,49
070148415366;08;00;40;;TROSKE, ROLAND:;;;26250,00
230661415359;08;00;64;;TROSKE, THOMAS:;;;19772,50
020263400025;97;01;00;;TROST, HARALD:;;;16830,00
270960415312;99;43;00;;TROST, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;18042,50
031145419028;10;20;00;;TROST, PETER:;;;27937,50
161062430091;94;03;00;;TROST, RALF:;;;18590,00
250350409136;97;22;00;;TROST, REINER:;;;20230,00
120571400850;01;06;24;;TROST, RONALD:;;;2896,61
090954403122;99;26;00;;TROST, UWE:;;;22320,00
270246429725;98;83;00;;TROST, WERNER:;;;22500,00
181128430026;99;43;00;;TROST, WOLFGANG:;;;22962,50
130169416482;18;33;00;;TROSTMANN, KARSTEN:;;;9510,00
021069417792;99;02;00;;TROSTORFF, ANDRE:;;;8300,00
220465417753;60;90;00;;TROSTORFF, MARKUS:;;;
220465417753;60;90;00;;TROSTORFF, MARKUS:;;;15624,00
091149417745;10;02;00;;TROSTORFF, MICHAEL:;;;38250,00
091247416738;99;78;00;;TROTT, GERD:;;;36125,00
311055404013;60;90;00;;TROTTNOW, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;18820,00
110558528121;14;00;42;;TROTZ, ANGELIKA:;;;12787,13
210859413019;99;77;00;;TROTZKI, FRANK:;;;15766,03
270340421818;12;06;00;;TROWE, SIEGFRIED:;;;21375,00
280669417768;18;31;00;;TROX, THOMAS:;;;9600,00
201048407219;99;51;00;;TROYKE, DETLEF:;;;25500,00
210552507213;98;83;00;;TROYKE, ERIKA:;;;18630,00
030547407228;98;83;00;;TROYKE, GERD:;;;21500,00
290533429718;94;30;00;;TROYKE, HARRY:;;;23000,00
140744407216;98;83;00;;TROYKE, MANFRED:;;;20625,00
180157526348;14;00;43;;TRTSCHKA, ELLEN:;;;15143,92
301270411823;18;34;00;;TRU(E)MPELMANN, NORMAN:;;;6705,00
040661511853;07;06;00;;TRU(E)MPER, CORNELIA:;;;15603,48
050158411838;07;06;00;;TRU(E)MPER, ERNST-WALTER:;;;18480,00
220852416232;09;06;00;;TRU(E)MPER, MANFRED:;;;20220,00
280344429728;99;43;00;;TRUBIG, JUERGEN:;;;33000,00
140370404212;03;69;00;;TRUCKENBRODT, FRANK:;;;2899,03
130271419719;18;35;00;;TRUCKENBRODT, JO(E)RG:;;;2795,00
031264402624;02;00;49;;TRUEB, RALF:;;;13038,00
180958411233;97;08;00;;TRUEBE, BERND:;;;24085,08
070655428911;97;01;00;;TRUEBENBACH, PETER:;;;18670,00
280137410610;07;06;00;;TRUEE, HORST:;;;12570,57
091137430045;94;30;00;;TRUELTZSCH, SIEGFRIED:;;;13881,26
270339429716;98;84;00;;TRUEMMEL, GUENTER:;;;24000,00
280764430223;99;53;00;;TRUEMMEL, STEFFEN:;;;17270,00
301269414541;99;43;00;;TRUEMPER, OLIVER:;;;8955,00
301258408920;97;06;00;;TRUEMPLER, LUTZ:;;;18515,00
090664506836;97;06;00;;TRUEMPLER, ROSWITHA:;;;11573,72
260766416494;09;00;41;;TRUESCHLER, THOMAS:;;;14580,00
160763425135;99;43;00;;TRUM, TIBOR:;;;19143,55
280759410826;98;18;00;;TRUMANN, DETLEF:;;;22080,00
200960528129;97;06;00;;TRUMMER, CARMEN:;;;19898,22
040628430015;98;54;00;;TRUMMER, GERHARD:;;;28500,00
260760428128;97;06;00;;TRUMMER, INGOLF:;;;22467,50
070254410614;97;01;00;;TRUMPF, JUERGEN:;;;25200,00
200757429248;94;03;00;;TRUMPOLD, MICHAEL:;;;21160,00
120371404427;18;32;00;;TRUNCZIK, STEFAN:;;;2795,00
100253418432;10;06;00;;TRUPPEL, HANS:;;;20010,00
040349410820;07;00;49;;TRUTE, BERND:;;;22500,00
091155411948;07;15;00;;TRUTE, ECKHARD:;;;24150,00
250852410815;07;00;42;;TRUTE, KLAUS:;;;23287,50
081165420216;11;08;00;;TRUTHAEN, MICHAEL:;;;8491,94
210857421517;99;10;00;;TRUTT, WERNER:;;;21527,53
130664430150;98;85;00;;TRUXA, FRANK:;;;16753,50
110336429718;99;02;00;;TRUXA, HANS:;;;24687,50
010263430268;15;80;00;;TRUXA, JO(E)RG:;;;16610,00
230448416117;30;61;00;;TRUXA, WOLFGANG:;;;18360,00
270838500847;01;06;00;;TRYBULL, BRIGITTE:;;;18120,00
060439400851;01;15;00;;TRYBULL, GUENTER:;;;27000,00
180762400874;96;15;14;;TRYBULL, OLAF:;;;23265,00
280363520332;30;83;00;;TRYBULL, PETRA:;;;16295,00
270739400920;01;06;23;;TRYBULL, WERNER:;;;24000,00
210760404411;03;08;00;;TRYLUS, LOTHAR:;;;17462,50
180666407427;30;61;00;;TRZCENSKY, MARIO:;;;13284,00
150459420541;15;08;00;;TRZETZIAK, FRANK:;;;17865,80
191060528914;99;77;00;;TRZETZIAK, PETRA:;;;2651,78
031062501536;01;80;00;;TRZETZIAK, RIA:;;;15850,00
180351528216;99;09;00;;TRZEWIG, CHRISTINE:;;;21600,00
091243506146;30;56;00;;TRZINKA, HEIDEMARIE:;;;20880,00
070565406196;04;06;00;;TRZINKA, MICHAEL:;;;16582,50
270564400856;01;00;42;;TRZINSKI, ULF:;;;19580,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

FBI-Mafia Takedown Largest Coordinated Arrest in FBI History

Agents knock on door in Brooklyn
Agents search a house in Brooklyn

Agents during processing in Brooklyn

BI agents and partner law enforcement officers began arresting nearly 130 members of the Mafia in New York City and other East Coast cities charged in the largest nationally coordinated organized crime takedown in the Bureau’s history.

Members of New York’s infamous Five Families—the Bonanno, Colombo, Gambino, Genovese, and Luchese crime organizations—were rounded up along with members of the New Jersery-based DeCavalcante family and New England Mafia to face charges including murder, drug trafficking, arson, loan sharking, illegal gambling, witness tampering, labor racketeering, and extortion. In one case involving the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA) at the Ports of New York and New Jersey, the alleged extortion has been going on for years.

Mafia Org Chart

More than 30 of the subjects indicted were “made” members of the Mafia (see graphic), including several high-ranking family members. The arrests, predominantly in New York, are expected to seriously disrupt some of the crime families’ operations.

“The notion that today’s mob families are more genteel and less violent than in the past is put to lie by the charges contained in the indictments unsealed today,” said Janice Fedarcyk, assistant director in charge of our New York Field Office. “Even more of a myth is the notion that the mob is a thing of the past; that La Cosa Nostra is a shadow of its former self.”

The Mafia—also known as La Cosa Nostra (LCN)—may have taken on a diminished criminal role in some areas of the country, but in New York, the Five Families are still “extremely strong and viable,” said Dave Shafer, an assistant special agent in charge who supervises FBI organized crime investigations in New York.  

Today’s operation began before dawn. Some 500 FBI personnel—along with about 200 local, state, and other federal law enforcement officers—took part, including key agencies such as the New York Police Department and the Department of Labor Office of Inspector General. By 11 a.m., more than 110 of the 127 subjects charged had been taken into custody.

DONWLOAD MAFIA FAMILY TREE HERE

mafia-family-tree

ADIC Janice Fedarcyk speaks during press conference in Brooklyn
Janice Fedarcyk, assistant director in charge of the New York FBI, speaks during a press conference
in Brooklyn. To her left is Attorney General Eric Holder. |

The idea for a nationally coordinated LCN takedown originated at the Department of Justice last summer, said Shafer, a veteran organized crime investigator. “We have done big LCN takedowns before, but never one this big.”

Among those charged:

  • Luigi Manocchio, 83, the former boss of the New England LCN;
  • Andrew Russo, 76, street boss of the Colombo family;
  • Benjamin Castellazzo, 73, acting underboss of the Colombo family;
  • Richard Fusco, 74, consigliere of the Colombo family;
  • Joseph Corozzo, 69, consigliere of the Gambino family; and
  • Bartolomeo Vernace, 61, a member of the Gambino family administration.

The LCN operates in many U.S. cities and routinely engages in threats and violence to extort victims, eliminate rivals, and obstruct justice. In the union case involving the ILA, court documents allege that the Genovese family has engaged in a multi-decade conspiracy to influence and control the unions and businesses on the New York-area piers.

“If there’s money to be made,” said Diego Rodriguez, special agent in charge of the FBI’s New York criminal division, “LCN will do it.” He noted that today’s Mafia has adapted to the times. “They are still involved in gambling and loan sharking, for example, but in the old days the local shoemaker took the betting slips. Now it’s offshore online gambling and money laundering. If you investigate LCN in New York,” Rodriguez added, “it’s a target-rich environment.”

FBI-More Than 35 Search Warrants Executed in United States, Five Arrests in Europe as Part of Ongoing Cyber Investigations

WASHINGTON—Fourteen individuals were arrested today by FBI agents on charges related to their alleged involvement in a cyber attack on PayPal’s website as part of an action claimed by the group “Anonymous,” announced the Department of Justice and the FBI. Two additional defendants were arrested today on cyber-related charges.

The 14 individuals were arrested in Alabama, Arizona, California, Colorado, the District of Columbia, Florida, Massachusetts, Nevada, New Mexico, and Ohio on charges contained in an indictment unsealed today in the Northern District of California in San Jose. In addition, two individuals were arrested on similar charges in two separate complaints filed in the Middle District of Florida and the District of New Jersey. Also today, FBI agents executed more than 35 search warrants throughout the United States as part of an ongoing investigation into coordinated cyber attacks against major companies and organizations. Finally, the United Kingdom’s Metropolitan Police Service arrested one person and the Dutch National Police Agency arrested four individuals today for alleged related cyber crimes.

According to the San Jose indictment, in late November 2010, WikiLeaks released a large amount of classified U.S. State Department cables on its website. Citing violations of the PayPal terms of service, and in response to WikiLeaks’ release of the classified cables, PayPal suspended WikiLeaks’ accounts so that WikiLeaks could no longer receive donations via PayPal. WikiLeaks’ website declared that PayPal’s action “tried to economically strangle WikiLeaks.”

The San Jose indictment alleges that in retribution for PayPal’s termination of WikiLeaks’ donation account, a group calling itself Anonymous coordinated and executed distributed denial of service (DDoS) attacks against PayPal’s computer servers using an open source computer program the group makes available for free download on the Internet. DDoS attacks are attempts to render computers unavailable to users through a variety of means, including saturating the target computers or networks with external communications requests, thereby denying service to legitimate users. According to the indictment, Anonymous referred to the DDoS attacks on PayPal as “Operation Avenge Assange.”

The defendants charged in the San Jose indictment allegedly conspired with others to intentionally damage protected computers at PayPal from Dec. 6, 2010, to Dec. 10, 2010.

The individuals named in the San Jose indictment are: Christopher Wayne Cooper, 23, aka “Anthrophobic;” Joshua John Covelli, 26, aka “Absolem” and “Toxic;” Keith Wilson Downey, 26; Mercedes Renee Haefer, 20, aka “No” and “MMMM;” Donald Husband, 29, aka “Ananon;” Vincent Charles Kershaw, 27, aka “Trivette,” “Triv” and “Reaper;” Ethan Miles, 33; James C. Murphy, 36; Drew Alan Phillips, 26, aka “Drew010;” Jeffrey Puglisi, 28, aka “Jeffer,” “Jefferp” and “Ji;” Daniel Sullivan, 22; Tracy Ann Valenzuela, 42; and Christopher Quang Vo, 22. One individual’s name has been withheld by the court.

The defendants are charged with various counts of conspiracy and intentional damage to a protected computer. They will make initial appearances throughout the day in the districts in which they were arrested.

In addition to the activities in San Jose, Scott Matthew Arciszewski, 21, was arrested today by FBI agents on charges of intentional damage to a protected computer. Arciszewski is charged in a complaint filed in the Middle District of Florida and made his initial appearance this afternoon in federal court in Orlando, Fla.

According to the complaint, on June 21, 2011, Arciszewski allegedly accessed without authorization the Tampa Bay InfraGard website and uploaded three files. The complaint alleges that Arciszewski then tweeted about the intrusion and directed visitors to a separate website containing links with instructions on how to exploit the Tampa InfraGard website. InfraGard is a public-private partnership for critical infrastructure protection sponsored by the FBI with chapters in all 50 states.

Also today, a related complaint unsealed in the District of New Jersey charges Lance Moore, 21, of Las Cruces, N.M., with allegedly stealing confidential business information stored on AT&T’s servers and posting it on a public file sharing site. Moore was arrested this morning at his residence by FBI agents and is expected to make an initial appearance this afternoon in Las Cruces federal court. Moore is charged in with one count of accessing a protected computer without authorization.

According to the New Jersey complaint, Moore, a customer support contractor, exceeded his authorized access to AT&T’s servers and downloaded thousands of documents, applications and other files that, on the same day, he allegedly posted on a public file-hosting site that promises user anonymity. According to the complaint, on June 25, 2011, the computer hacking group LulzSec publicized that they had obtained confidential AT&T documents and made them publicly available on the Internet. The documents were the ones Moore had previously uploaded.

The charge of intentional damage to a protected computer carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Each count of conspiracy carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

An indictment and a complaint merely contain allegations. Defendants are presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt in a court of law.

To date, more than 75 searches have taken place in the United States as part of the ongoing investigations into these attacks.

These cases are being prosecuted by Assistant U.S. Attorneys in the U.S. Attorneys’ Offices for the Northern District of California, Middle District of Florida, and the District of New Jersey. The Criminal Division’s Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section also has provided assistance.

Today’s operational activities were done in coordination with the Metropolitan Police Service in the United Kingdom and the Dutch National Police Agency. The FBI thanks the multiple international, federal, and domestic law enforcement agencies who continue to support these operations.

TOP-SECRET- Anonymous’ Texas Takedown Thursday: Chinga La Migra IV – ORIGINAL LETTER

         #         ######
                      ###      ####  ##                ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!
                     ## #   ###    ###              !!i #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED~;
             #     ##   ####      ###       ###### !;L  #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
            # ######               #####      ##   ;!i; #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
           #                                ##    !;!i; #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
     #######                       #       ###    !;1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
      #  ##                 #####   #           ####1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
    ###                           ##########      !###: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
    ##        #                              #####!;1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED 1
      ##### ###                         ####  #####;1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
         ######      #                      ###  ###1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !
         ##          #####                     ####;1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED +;
    ###              #######                 #### !;1?:#OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #O ~
   ##                 ########               ### ##;1?:WNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED
    ##          ###   #########              ##   !;1?: #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OW
      ####      #          ########        ##     !;1?:NED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED
          #     #                ######  ##       !;1?:#OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWN
           #    ##               #########        !;1?:ED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #
          ##   #####                  ##          !;1?:OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNE
        ######      ##               ##           !;1?:D #OWNED #OW!~NED #OWNED
      ##               ##           ##            !L1?~#OWNED #OWN! !D #OWNED #O
     ##  #####            ####   ####                      WNED #!  !+NED #OWNED
    ##        ####################             #########        #!   ! WNED #OWN
   ##   ####         ###                #####          ######        !+ED #OWNED
  ##          ####    ##           ###         !!!;Li        ###      1  #OWNED
 #############    ######       ###:::::::~::::::~~~~~  #~?1     ###    111111iiO
##                   ##    !##~WNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED ~?;     ###        !L+#
##     ################  ##;!1 :OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED  ?;     ##      L+ #O
#####               ## ## !;!1? ~WNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #O  ;         L+WNED
##        ######   ####    !;!i?+:~#OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED +        !;#OWNED
 #              #  ##       !;L1i +;  #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OW ;        !1 NED #
 #   #          ###          !!;!1? +~OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWN !   L L   ;;ED #O
  #  ###  ####   ####          !!L!i?+;~WNED #OWNED #OWNED #O~L !!;WN  L  1 ED #
  #############   #####          !;L1i +:~OWNED #OWNED #OWNED !!: #OWNED+L;: #OW
   ##### ######        ##         !!;!1? ; NED #OWNED #OWNED  : #OWNED #O ++WNED
   ##  ##          #######          !;L1? ; #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #
 ##   #####      ############         !L1?+ OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #O
##    ##     ###            ##         !!i :WNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OWNED #OW
 #  ######           ########          !L1i  NED #OWNED #O :;;::~~WNED #OWNED #O
     #######         #####              ;L1?+:WNED #OWNED  ?ii?? +;   #OWNED #OW
                                        !;L1? +:NED #OWNE+!LLLL!i? +: D #OWNED #
                                         !;L!i? +;~OWNE +L!!!!!;L!1? ;~D #OWNED
                                           !;L!1i?  ;::?;!!     !;L!i ; #OWNED #
                                             !;;L!1ii1!;!         !L!i ;OWNED #O
                                                !;;LL;;!           !L1? ~WNED #O

################################################################################
#### #ANTISEC #### #CHINGALAMIGRA COMMUNUQUE 4 #### #TEXASTAKEDOWNTHURSDAY #####
################################################################################
      _  _                   __  .__
   __| || |__ _____    _____/  |_|__| ______ ____   ____        #antisec
   \   __   / \__  \  /    \   __\  |/  ___// __ \_/ ___\       #anonymous
    |  ||  |   / __ \|   |  \  | |  |\___ \\  ___/\  \___       #freeanons
   /_  ~~  _\ (____  /___|  /__| |__/____  |\___ \ \___  |      #freetopiary
     |_||_|        \/     \/             \/     \/     \/       #chingalamigra

################################################################################
# ANTISEC MESSES WITH TEXAS, ATTACKS DOZENS OF POLICE SYSTEMS AND CHIEF EMAILS #
################################################################################

Greetings professional hypocrites in law enforcement!

Having a slow day behind the desk, filing papers, staring at your colleague's
fine posterior? What have you been up to since our last visit? Don't answer
that. We already know.

Lewd jokes? Check. Racist chain mails? Check. You lost your radio license? Lulz.
Playing on the fears of voters? Check. But we already figured that. Our friends,
allies, and vessels are threatened with 10+ years in prison. Yet terrorists like
Luis Posada Carilles go free. This hypocritical and paranoid reaction puts us
and the citizens you are supposed to protect in the same boat. You call us a
national security risk. Yet BATFE guns go directly to drug dealers so they can
take out rivals who don't launder money through backrooms of dominant banks. Any
press can check court documents from operations like 'Fast and Furious'. Who
came up with that one? What you didn't see 'From Dusk 'til Dawn'? Better title.
Be more creative next time.

In retaliation for the arrests of dozens of alleged Anonymous suspects, we
opened fire on dozens of Texas police departments and stole boatloads of
classified police documents and police chief emails across the state. During the
San Jose courtdate we defaced and gave out live backdoor and admin access to the
website TexasPoliceChiefs.org while allied ships launched ddos attacks upon
Justice.gov and other law enforcement websites. For every defendant in the
anonymous "conspiracy" we are attacking two top Texas police chiefs, leaking 3GB
of their private emails and attachments. Mind you, we don't expect a sane
response. Even a few insults would have been better than the way you cowards
hide behind protocol, innuendo, and your badge. 

For more than a month we have been lurking their emails, law enforcement
portals, and records and reporting systems. We leaked a few teasers including
access to fbivirtualacademy.edu, several classified documents, voicemail
recordings, live passwords, and even some dirty pictures. To continue the
fighting spirit of WikiLeaks, we want to share the full Texas collection and
expose these bumbling fools and all their secrets to the world.

Thousands of documents are available on tor hidden services / bittorrent and
include several dozen FBI, Border Patrol, and counter-terrorism documents
classified as "law enforcement sensitive" and "for official use only". The
emails also included police records, internal affairs investigations, meeting
notes, training materials, officer rosters, security audits, and live password
information to government systems. The private chief emails also included
several racist and sexist chain email forwards and personal details sure to
embarrass, discredit, and incriminate several of these so-called "community
leaders".

We are attacking Texas law enforcement as part of "Chinga La Migra" as they
continue to harass immigrants and use border patrol operations as a cover for
their backwards racist prejudice. The notoriously racist police state of Texas
recently passed SB 9 and "Secure Comminities" anti-immigration laws. Texas is
well known and hated for being full of Minutemen, Tea Party and KKK groups,
murdering the most amount of innocent people on death row, and giving us the
Bush and Cheney administration. Two months ago on the 1st we attacked the
Arizona DPS and defaced several Fraternal Order of Police websites. One month
ago we "Shot The Sheriff" and released 10GB of private law enforcement data
while defacing dozens of police department websites in several states in the
south. A week ago we released private emails belonging to Richard T. Garcia, VP
of Texas-based Vanguard Defense Industries, and also a former FBI agent and
current Infragard executive board member.

We are doing this in solidarity with the "Anonymous 16" PayPal LOIC defendants,
accused LulzSec member Jake Davis "Topiary", protesters arrested during #OpBart
actions, Bradley Manning, Stephen Watt, and other hackers and leakers worldwide.
We also call for the release of Leonard Peltier, Mumia Abu Jamal, Oscar Lopez
Rivera, Troy Davis, the Angola 3, and all others behind bars standing up to
state repression. While many of our comrades facing charges and in prison are
innocent, there is no such thing as an innocent police officer, and we will
continue to directly attack the prison industrial complex by leaking their
private data, destroying their systems, and defacing their websites.

We might have respect for these officers if they understood their job and whom
they serve. But unlike some that left the force decades ago and rumors abound
that they may have joined our ranks, these officers hide behind their badge and
use policies to ignore their great responsibility. These officers betrayed the
trust citizens have in them by choosing be drones of the system rather than
protectors of freedom and the peace of their communities. From the lowest prison
guard to the mightiest chief, we will continue to attack the cogs of the
police state that protects the interests of the rich and powerful.

Hackers all over the world are uniting to make 2011 the year of hacks and
revolutions. Join us, comrades: open fire on governments, law enforcement
organizations, white hat, corporate and military targets!

NOTE: THE DOCUMENTS MENTIONED IN THE LETTER ARE ALREADY PUBLISHED IN THE INTERNET

FBI – Member of Hacking Group LulzSec Arrested for June 2011 Intrusion of Sony Pictures Computer Systems

LOS ANGELES—A member of the LulzSec hacking group was arrested this morning for his role in an extensive computer attack against the computer systems of Sony Pictures Entertainment, announced André Birotte Jr., the United States Attorney in Los Angeles; and Steven Martinez, Assistant Director in Charge of the FBI’s Los Angeles Field Office.

Cody Kretsinger, 23, of Phoenix, Arizona, was arrested this morning by FBI agents without incident. On September 2, 2011, a federal grand jury returned an indictment filed under seal in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles charging Kretsinger with conspiracy and the unauthorized impairment of a protected computer. The federal indictment was unsealed this morning upon Kretsinger’s arrest.

From approximately May 27, 2011, through June 2, 2011, the computer systems of Sony Pictures Entertainment were compromised by a group known as “LulzSec,” or “Lulz Security,” whose members anonymously claimed responsibility on LulzSec’s website. Kretsinger, also known by the moniker “recursion,” is believed to be a current or former member of LulzSec. The extent of damage caused by the compromise at Sony Pictures is under investigation.

According to the indictment, Kretsinger resided in Tempe, Arizona at the time the alleged criminal activity took place. In order to carry out the attack, Kretsinger allegedly sed a proxy server in an attempt to mask or hide his Internet Protocol (IP) address. The indictment alleges that Kretsinger and other coconspirators obtained confidential information from Sony Pictures’ computer systems using an “SQL injection” attack against its website, a technique commonly used by hackers to exploit vulnerabilities and steal information.

The indictment alleges that Kretsinger and his co-conspirators distributed the stolen information, including by posting the information on LulzSec’s website, and then announced the attack via its Twitter account. The indictment further alleges that, in order to avoid detection by law enforcement, Kretsinger permanently erased the hard drive of the computer he used to conduct the attack on Sony Pictures.

LulzSec is known for its affiliation with the international group of hackers known as “Anonymous.” Anonymous, according to the indictment, is a collective of computer hackers and other individuals located throughout the world that conduct cyber attacks, including the dissemination of confidential information stolen from victims’ computers, against individuals and entities they perceive to be hostile to its interests.

In the recent past, LulzSec has been linked to the hacking or attempted hacking of numerous targets, including various websites that represent governmental or business entities, among others.

Kretsinger will make an initial appearance before a federal magistrate in U.S. District Court in Phoenix today. The government will request that Kretsinger be removed to Los Angeles, the district in which he was charged, to face prosecution. If convicted, Kretsinger faces a statutory maximum sentence of 15 years in prison. This investigation was conducted by the Electronic Crimes Task Force (ECTF) in Los Angeles. The ECTF is comprised of agents and officers from the FBI, United States Secret Service, Los Angeles Police Department, Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department, United States Attorney’s Office, Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office, and the California Highway Patrol.

This case is being prosecuted by the United States Attorney’s Office in Los Angeles.

An indictment merely contains allegations that a defendant has committed a crime. Every defendant is presumed innocent unless and until proven guilty at trial.

Unveiled – Fuck the FBI message by Anonymous – Orginal Letter



Greetings Pirates, and welcome to another exciting #FuckFBIFriday release.

As part of our ongoing effort to expose and humiliate our white hat enemies, we
targeted a Special Agent Supervisor of the CA Department of Justice in charge of
computer crime investigations. We are leaking over 38,000 private emails which
contain detailed computer forensics techniques, investigation protocols as well
as highly embarrassing personal information. We are confident these gifts will 
bring smiles to the faces of our black hat brothers and sisters (especially 
those who have been targeted by these scurvy dogs) while also making a mockery 
of "security professionals" who whore their "skills" to law enforcement to 
protect tyrannical corporativism and the status quo we aim to destroy.

We hijacked two gmail accounts belonging to Fred Baclagan, who has been a cop
for 20 years, dumping his private email correspondence as well as several dozen 
voicemails and SMS text message logs. While just yesterday Fred was having a 
private BBQ with his CATCHTEAM high computer crime task force friends, we were 
reviewing their detailed internal operation plans and procedure documents. We 
also couldn't overlook the boatloads of embarrassing personal information about 
our cop friend Fred. We lulzed as we listened to angry voicemails from his 
estranged wives and ex-girlfriends while also reading his conversations with 
girls who responded to his "man seeking woman" craigslist ads. We turned on his 
google web history and watched him look up linux command line basics, golfing 
tutorials, and terrible youtube music videos. We also abused his google 
voice account, making sure Fred's friends and family knew how hard he was owned.

Possibly the most interesting content in his emails are the IACIS.com internal
email list archives (2005-2011) which detail the methods and tactics cybercrime 
units use to gather electronic evidence, conduct investigations and make 
arrests. The information in these emails will prove essential to those who want 
to protect themselves from the techniques and procedures cyber crime 
investigators use to build cases. If you have ever been busted for computer 
crimes, you should check to see if your case is being discussed here. There are 
discussions about using EnCase forensic software, attempts to crack TrueCrypt 
encrypted drives, sniffing wireless traffic in mobile surveillance vehicles, how 
to best prepare search warrants and subpoenas, and a whole lot of clueless 
people asking questions on how to use basic software like FTP. In the end, we
rickrolled the entire IACIS list, causing the administrators to panic and shut
their list and websites down.

These cybercrime investigators are supposed to be the cream of the crop, but we
reveal the totality of their ignorance of all matters related to computer
security. For months, we have owned several dozen white hat and law enforcement
targets-- getting in and out of whichever high profile government and corporate
system we please and despite all the active FBI investigations and several
billion dollars of funding, they have not been able to stop us or get anywhere
near us. Even worse, they bust a few dozen people who are allegedly part of an
"anonymous computer hacking conspiracy" but who have only used 
kindergarten-level DDOS tools-- this isn't even hacking, but a form of
electronic civil disobedience. 

We often hear these "professionals" preach about "full-disclosure," but we are
sure these people are angrily sending out DMCA takedown notices and serving
subpoenas as we speak. They call us criminals, script kiddies, and terrorists, 
but their entire livelihood depends on us, trying desperately to study our 
techniques and failing miserably at preventing future attacks. See we're cut 
from an entirely different kind of cloth. Corporate security professionals like
Thomas Ryan and Aaron Barr think they're doing something noble by "leaking" the
public email discussion lists of Occupy Wall Street and profiling the "leaders"
of Anonymous. Wannabe player haters drop shitty dox and leak partial chat logs
about other hackers, doing free work for law enforcement. Then you got people 
like Peiter "Mudge" Zatko who back in the day used to be old school l0pht/cDc 
only now to sell out to DARPA going around to hacker conventions encouraging 
others to work for the feds. Let this be a warning to aspiring white hat 
"hacker" sellouts and police collaborators: stay out the game or get owned and 
exposed. You want to keep mass arresting and brutalizing the 99%? We'll have to 
keep owning your boxes and torrenting your mail spools, plastering your personal 
information all over teh internets.

Hackers, join us and rise up against our common oppressors - the white hats, the 
1%'s 'private' police, the corrupt banks and corporations and make 2011 the year 
of leaks and revolutions! 

We are Anti-Security,
We are the 99%
We do not forgive.
We do not forget.
Expect Us!

NOTE THE RELEVANT FILES MENTIONED ARE ALREADY IN CIRCULATION

TOP-SECRET-FAA Comunications Security 1991

https://i0.wp.com/cryptome.org/0005/faa-comsec.jpg

                                    ORDER
         Date:  3/5/91                                                         

      Initiated
           by:  ACO-300                                                        

      Subject: COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY (COMSEC) 
 
 FOREWORD                                     

      This order establishes policies and procedures and assigns
      responsibilities for ensuring agency compliance with requirements
      of the national communications security (COMSEC) policy.                 

      The guidance in this order is based upon COMSEC policy directives
      promulgated by the National Security Agency and implementing
      regulations and directives issued by the United States Air Force.
      Should a conflict exist between the requirements of this order
      and the appropriate national COMSEC policy or implementing
      directive, the national policy or directive will in all cases
      apply.  Instances of this type will be reported expeditiously to
      this headquarters.                                                       

      This order is marked FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY.  It is to be
      safeguarded, handled and processed in accordance with
      requirements of Order 1600.15D.  This order is not releasable to
      contractors or to foreign nationals without the specific approval
      of the Assistant Administrator for Civil Aviation Security,
      Washington, D.C.  However, dissemination of pertinent information
      extracted from this order to contractors having a need-to-know is
      permissible when such release is authorized by applicable
      National COMSEC Instructions (NACI).                                     

      Changes in national COMSEC policy reflected in this order such as
      the institution of the Formal Cryptographic Access Program have
      been coordinated with and accurately state the position of the
      Office of the Secretary of Transportation.                               

      All FAA personnel whose duties require them to handle, process,
      store, safeguard, or otherwise have access to classified
      cryptographic material are required to become familiar with and
      conform to the requirements of this order.                               

      /s/ James B. Busey
          Administrator                                                        

                            FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                     NOT RELEASABLE TO FOREIGN NATIONALS
         NOT RELEASABLE TO CONTRACTORS WITHOUT ORIGINATOR'S APPROVAL

                              TABLE OF CONTENTS                                

                                                                  Page         

      CHAPTER 1. GENERAL                                       1           

           1.  Purpose                                             1
           2.  Distribution                                        1
           3.  Cancellation                                        1
           4.  Explanation of Changes                              1
           5.  Definitions                                         2
           6.  Forms and Reports                                   2
           7.  Requests for Information                            2
           8.  Statement of Intent                                 2
           9.  Scope                                               2
          10.  Responsibilities                                    2
          11.  Interpretation                                      2
          12.  Authority to change this Order                      7
          13.-19.  Reserved                                        7           

      CHAPTER 2. POLICY FOR GRANTING ACCESS TO U.S.
 CLASSIFIED CRYPTOGRAPHIC INFORMATION            13           

          SECTION 1.  POLICY                                      13           

          20.  General                                            13
          21.  Policy                                             13           

          SECTION 2.  DEFINITION                                  13           

          22.  Cryptographic Information                          13           

          SECTION 3.  CRITERIA                                    14           

          23.  Access Requirements                                14
          24.  Polygraph                                          14
          25.  Contacts with Foreign Nationals and Unofficial
               Foreign Travel to Communist or other Designated
               Countries                                          15           

          SECTION 4.  GRANTING FORMAL CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS        15           

          26.  Scope                                              15
          27.  Preparing AFCOMSEC Form 9                          17
          28.  Withdrawing FCA                                    18
          29.  Certificates of Personnel Declining Cryptographic
               Access                                             19
          30.-34.  Reserved                                       19           

      CHAPTER 3. COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY (COMSEC) DUTIES AND
		       RESPONSIBILITIES                                27           

          35.  General                                            27
          36.  COMSEC Custodians and Alternates                   27
          37.  Training                                           28
          38.  Waivers                                            30
          39.  Duties of the COMSEC Custodian                     30
          40.  Performance Standards                              31
          41.  Appointment of Custodians and Alternates           32
          42.  Monitoring Responsibilities                        32
          43.-49.  Reserved.                                      33           

      CHAPTER 4. SAFEGUARDING COMSEC FACILITIES                  39           

          SECTION 1.  GENERAL                                     39           

          50.  Purpose                                            39
          51.  Referenced Publications                            39
          52.  Background                                         39           

          SECTION 2.  PHYSICAL SECURITY STANDARDS                 40           

          53.  Physical Security Standards for Fixed COMSEC
               Facilities                                         40
          54.  Installation Criteria                              40
          55.  Facility Approvals, Inspection, and Tests          41
          56.  Intrusion Detecting Systems                        43
          57.-60.  Reserved                                       43           

          SECTION 3.  ACCESS RESTRICTIONS AND CONTROLS            43           

          61.  Unescorted Access                                  43
          62.  Escorted Access                                    45
          63.  Visitor Register                                   45
          64.  No-Lone Zones                                      46
          65.  Guard Services                                     46
          66.-70.  Reserved                                       47           

          SECTION 4.  PROTECTION OF UNATTENDED COMSEC EQUIPMENT   47           

          71.  General                                            47
          72.  Protection Requirements                            47
          73.-77.  Reserved                                       48           

          SECTION 5.  PROTECTION OF LOCK COMBINATIONS             48           

          78.  Purpose                                            48
          79.  Protection Requirements                            48
          80.  Access to Combinations                             49
          81.  Record of Combinations                             49
          82.-86.  Reserved.                                      50           

          SECTION 6.  NONESSENTIAL AUDIO/VISUAL EQUIPMENT         51           

          87.  Personally Owned Equipment                         51
          88.  Government Owned Equipment                         51
          89.-94.  Reserved                                       51           

          SECTION 7.  STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES (SOP)         51           

          95.  Requirement                                        51
          96.  Emergency Plan                                     52
          97.-101.  Reserved                                      53           

      CHAPTER 5. SAFEGUARDING AND CONTROL OF COMMUNICATIONS
                  SECURITY MATERIALS                              65           

         102.  General                                            65
         103.  Definitions                                        66
         104.  Handling Keying Material                           66
         105.109.  Reserved                                       66           

          SECTION 1.  GENERAL INFORMATION APPLICABLE TO ALL
                      COMSEC MATERIAL                             66           

         110.  Responsibilities for Safeguarding COMSEC Material  66
         111.  Transport of COMSEC Material                       67
         112.  Courier Responsibilities                           68
         113.  Open Display of COMSEC Material and Information    68
         114.  Destruction                                        68
         115.  Reporting Insecurities                             68
         116.  Evidence of Tampering                              69
         117.  Alteration of COMSEC Material                      69
         118.  Clearance Requirements for Guards                  69
         119.  Storage Requirements                               69
         120.  Other COMSEC Information                           70
         121.  Disposition of COMSEC Materials                    71
         122.  Page Checks of COMSEC Publications                 72
         123.  Daily or Shift Inventory Requirements              73
         124.  COMSEC Account Record File                         73
         125.-129.  Reserved                                      74           

      CHAPTER 6. CONTROLLED CRYPTOGRAPHIC ITEMS (CCI)            79           

         130.  Purpose and Background                             79
         131.  Definitions                                        79
         132.  Control Requirements                               80
         133.  Inventories                                        84
         134.  Reporting Insecurities                             84
         135.  Routine and Emergency Destruction                  84
         136.-144.  Reserved                                      84           

      CHAPTER 7. SECURE VOICE                                    89           

          SECTION 1.  GENERAL                                     89           

         145.  Purpose                                            89
         146.  Types and Models of STU-III                        89
         147.  Definitions                                        89
         148.-150.  Reserved                                      91           

          SECTION 2.  EXCEPTIONS                                  91           

         151.  Requests for Exception                             91
         152.-153.  Reserved                                      91           

          SECTION 3.  COMSEC CUSTODIAN DUTIES AND
                      RESPONSIBILITIES                            91           

         154.  General                                            91
         155.  Receipt of Key                                     91
         156.  Accounting for Key                                 92
         157.  Notices from the KMS/CAO                           93
         158.-160.  Reserved                                      94           

          SECTION 4.  KEYING OF TERMINALS                         94           

         161.  Initial Keying of Terminals                        94
         162.-163.  Reserved                                      94           

          SECTION 5.  ACCOUNTABILITY                              94           

         164.  Cryto-Ignition Key Handling and Local Accounting   94
         165.-166.  Reserved                                      95           

          SECTION 6.  REKEYING                                    96           

         167.  Electronic Rekeying                                96
         168.-170.  Reserved                                      96           

          SECTION 7.  PHYSICAL SECURITY                           96           

         171.  Unkeyed Terminal Type 1                            96
         172.  Keyed Terminal                                     96
         173.  Terminal Display                                   97
         174.  Use by Other U.S. Personnel                        97
         175.  Use by Foreign Nationals                           98
         176.  Storage                                            98
         177.  Use of the Secure Data Mode                        98
         178.  After Hours Protection                             98           

          SECTION 8.  TRANSPORTATION                              98           

         179.  Type 1 Terminals                                   98
         180.-182.  Reserved                                      99           

          SECTION 9.  INSTALLATION                                99           

         183.  General                                            99
         184.  Residences                                         100
         185.-186.  Reserved                                      100          

          SECTION 10.  MAINTENANCE                                100          

         187.  General                                            100
         188.  Access                                             100
         189.-190.  Reserved                                      100          

         SECTION 11.  PROTECTION OF KEY STORAGE DEVICES           101          

         191.  General                                            101
         192.  Fill Devices                                       101
         193.  Crypto-Ignition Keys (CIKs)                        102
         194.  Protection and Use of the Micro-KMODC              104
         195.-198.  Reserved                                      104          

          SECTION 12.  DESTRUCTION AND EMERGENCY DESTRUCTION      104          

         199.  General Requirement                                104
         200.  Reserved                                           104          

          SECTION 13.  REPORTABLE INSECURITIES                    105          

         201.  Insecure Practice/COMSEC Incident Handling         105
         202.-204.  Reserved                                      106          

          SECTION 14.  RECORDS RETENTION                          106          

         205.  General                                            106
         206.-208.  Reserved                                      106          

      APPENDIX 1. REQUIRED FORMS AND REPORTS (2 pages)           1          

      APPENDIX 2. SAMPLE CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS BRIEFING (9 pages) 1          

      APPENDIX 3. CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS CERTIFICATE (1 page)      1          

      APPENDIX 4. SECURE TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITY 1 
 AND COMSEC ACCOUNT CHECKLIST (6 pages)                    

      APPENDIX 5. PUBLICATIONS TO BE MAINTAINED BY ALL 1 
 FAA COMSEC ACCOUNTS (2 pages)                             

      APPENDIX 6. PHYSICAL SECURITY STANDARDS FOR FIXED 1 
 COMSEC FACILITIES (3 pages)                               

      APPENDIX 7. STANDARDS FOR SAFEGUARDING KEYING MATERIAL     1
                     (4 pages)          

      APPENDIX 8. ROUTINE DESTRUCTION AND EMERGENCY PROTECTION 1 
 OF COMSEC MATERIAL (7 pages)                              

                           FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                         PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                        DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

                             CHAPTER 1. GENERAL                               

      1.  PURPOSE.  This order prescribes FAA standards and procedures
      for communications security (COMSEC) and implements changes in
      national COMSEC policy for FAA COMSEC operations.                        

      2.  DISTRIBUTION.  This order is distributed to Regional
      Administrators and Center Directors:  to the director level in
      the Office of System Engineering and Program Management, Office
      of Air Traffic System Management, Air Traffic Plans and
      Requirements Service, Advanced System Design Service, Office of
      Human Resource Development, Office of Training and Higher
      Education, and Logistics Service; to the division level in the
      Systems Maintenance Service, and Office of Civil Aviation
      Security, Operations to Emergency Operations Staff (ADA-20),
      Regional and Aeronautical Center Civil Aviation Security
      Divisions, Technical Center Civil Aviation Security Staff,
      Europe, Africa and Middle East Civil Aviation Security Staff; to
      COMSEC custodians including Air Route Traffic Control
      Centers; to the FAA manager/supervisor at each Joint Use System
      Long Range Radar Site; to Associate Program Managers for
      Engineering, Communications and Aircraft Acquisition Program.            

      3.  CANCELLATION.  Order 1600.8B, Communications Security
      (COMSEC), dated November 14, 1975, is canceled                           

      4.  EXPLANATION OF CHANGES.  This order updates FAA COMSEC
      policies and procedures to reflect national COMSEC policy
      guidance from the National Security Agency (NSA), and the U.S.
      Air Force (USAF).  It also establishes new training standards for
      individuals assigned as COMSEC custodians.  This revision:
           a.  Promulgates changes in national policy contained in NSA
      National COMSEC Instructions (NACSI) and National
      Telecommunications and Information Systems Security Instructions
      (NTISSI).                                                                

           b.  Establishes a Formal Cryptographic Access (FCA) Program
      in FAA to include mandatory requirements for cryptographic access
      briefings and Cryptographic Access Certificates.                         

           c.  Disseminates USAF guidance for implementing national
      COMSEC policy as set forth in USAF Regulations (AFR), USAF
      Special Purpose/Operational Miscellaneous (AFSAL) publications
      and related documents.                                                   

           d.  Prescribes policies and procedures governing the
      utilization and safeguarding of Controlled Cryptographic Items
      (CCI).                                                                   

           e.  Prescribes mandatory formal training requirements for
      COMSEC custodians.                                                       

           f.  Prescribes guidance concerning the Secure Terminal Unit
      (STU) III secure voice system.                                           

           g.  Establishes requirements for the inclusion of COMSEC
      duties and responsibilities as a Critical Job Element (CJE) in
      the individual performance standards for the COMSEC custodian and
      alternate(s).                                                            

      5.  DEFINITIONS.  The definitions contained in National
      Communications Security Committee (NCSC) 9 and Air Force
      Regulation (AFR) 56-2 apply to this order.  Definitions not
      contained in these references will be provided in the body of the
      order.                                                                   

      6.  FORMS AND REPORTS.  Appendix 1, Required Forms and Reports,
      contains a listing of the forms and reports required by this
      order.  Additional reporting requirements will be addressed in
      the portion of the order to which they pertain.                          

      7.  REQUESTS FOR INFORMATION.  Questions on the interpretation of
      the provisions of this order or their application shall be
      referred to the servicing security element in regions and centers
      or to the Director, Office of Civil Aviation Security,
      Operations, ACO-1, 800 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington,
      D.C. 20591.                                                              

      8.  STATEMENT OF INTENT.  It is the intention of the FAA to
      ensure that requirements of the national COMSEC policy are fully
      understood and implemented by all having responsibilities for
      COMSEC operations and support within the agency.                         

      9.  SCOPE.                                                               

           a.  The provisions of this order apply to all FAA employees,
      military, civilian, and contractor, who are holders or users of
      NSA produced or authorized cryptographic information or who
      otherwise have access to such information, regardless of duty
      station, location, or position.                                          

           b.  FAA procurement actions which result in requirements for
      contractors to generate or utilize NSA approved or authorized/
      cryptographic information in the performance of the contract will
      be accomplished in accordance with Order 1600.56, Guidelines for
      FAA Participation in the Department of Defense (DOD) Industrial
      Security Program (ISP).  Access requirements shall be specified
      in accordance with National Telecommunications and Information
      Systems Security Policy (NTISSP) Number 3.                               

      10.  RESPONSIBILITIES.                                                   

           a.  Director, Office of Civil Aviation Security, ACO-1 is
      responsible for:                                                         

                (1)  Implementing the national COMSEC policy and the
      provisions of this order within the FAA.                                 

                (2)  Recommending policies for safeguarding of FAA
      information and data using COMSEC techniques to provide the
      required degree of protection.                                           

                (3)  Ensuring that cryptologic access briefings and
      debriefings are conducted and that cryptographic access
      certificates are signed in accordance with provisions of this
      order.                                                                   

                (4)  Establishing and ensuring the implementation of
      standards and procedures for handling, safeguarding, accounting,
      destruction, storage, access and control of classified and
      unclassified COMSEC and other NSA approved and authorized
      cryptographic materials in accordance with national COMSEC policy
      and this order.                                                          

                (5)  Developing standards and procedures for physical
      and environmental security of FAA cryptographic communications
      installations.                                                           

                (6)  Ensuring in coordination with the Program Director
      for Communications, FAA COMSEC equipment installations are
      designed in accordance with applicable national COMSEC policies
      pertaining to on-line and TEMPEST engineering standards.                 

                (7)  Monitoring headquarters, region, and center COMSEC
      accounts and appointment of COMSEC custodians.                           

                (8)  Ensuring that countermeasures and specialized
      communications security inspections are conducted of COMSEC
      secure communications areas in accordance with NSA and USAF
      directives, and this order.                                              

           b.  National Airspace System Engineering Service, ASE, is
      responsible for:                                                         

                (1)  Development of National Airspace System (NAS)
      plan/and baseline system requirements for COMSEC systems.                

                (2)  Ensuring the baselined COMSEC system requirements
      and interface requirements are consistent with national COMSEC
      engineering and security standards established by the NSA.               

                (3)  Formulating guidance and standards applicable to
      acquisition of facilities and equipment including COMSEC systems.        

                (4)  Coordination with the Office of Civil Aviation
      Security, on NAS plans and NAS system specifications involving
      COMSEC security requirements and resources.                              

           c.  Office of Air Traffic Systems Management, ATM, is
      responsible for:                                                         

                (1)  Establishing COMSEC requirements for support of
      air traffic control operational telecommunications.                      

                (2)  Developing and recommending national guidance,
      standards, and procedures for implementation of COMSEC in the
      security control of military and other air traffic pursuant to
      the FAA's support of the national defense.                               

                (3)  Coordination with the Office of Civil Aviation
      Security in establishing procedures and standards for the
      identification of sensitive and classified information and data
      in the air traffic control system requiring COMSEC protection.           

                (4)  Ensuring that sensitive and classified
      telecommunications in the air traffic control system are
      safeguarded in accordance with national COMSEC policy.                   

           d.  Air Traffic Plans and Requirements Service, ATR, is
      responsible for:                                                         

                (1)  Coordination with the Office of Civil Aviation
      Security in developing and implementing procedures and standards
      for the identification of COMSEC support required to ensure a
      secure and effective air traffic system telecommunications
      capability.                                                              

                (2)  Serving as the air traffic system focal point for
      coordination of COMSEC programs and requirements in support of
      the NAS.
           e.  Systems Maintenance Service, ASM, is responsible for:           

                (1)  Coordination with the Office of Civil Aviation
      Security to:                                                             

                     (a)  Identify requirements for communications
      security during network planning and engineering of future
      telecommunications networks or expansions or modifications to
      present networks.                                                        

                     (b)  Ensure operational compliance with
      communications security requirements in telecommunications
      maintenance support.                                                     

                (2)  Participate in the development of maintenance
      planning for COMSEC equipment and systems in the FAA, including
      identification of required COMSEC maintenance training for FAA
      personnel.                                                               

           f.  Office of Human Resource Development, AHD, is
      responsible for:                                                         

                (1)  Providing administrative and technical guidance
      and support for inclusion of the COMSEC custodian position in the
      Performance Evaluation Rating (PER) system.                              

                (2)  Establishing standards and criteria for
      designating the responsibilities of the custodian and alternate
      as CJE'S.                                                                

           g.  Office of Training and Higher Education, AHT, is
      responsible for:                                                         

                (1)  Providing administrative and technical guidance
      and support for mandatory training for custodians at the USAF
      COMSEC Account Management course.                                        

                (2)  Establishing and incorporating in appropriate
      directives criteria for evaluation of COMSEC responsibilities and
      training in career development programs for selected employees.          

           h.  Office of Labor and Employee Relations, ALR, is
      responsible for facilitating the implementation of the
      requirements of this order as required.                                  

           i.  Regions and Centers are responsible for implementation
      of this order within their areas of jurisdiction.                        

           j.  Office of Air Traffic System Management, Air Traffic
      Plans and Requirements Service, Systems Maintenance Service,
      National Airspace System Engineering Service are responsible for:        

                (1)  Implementing this order in those organizations
      that report to them who have a requirement for access to COMSEC
      information.                                                             

                (2)  Ensuring that COMSEC custodians receive formal
      COMSEC account management training and that operators and
      maintenance personnel are properly trained in procedures for
      safeguarding and handling of COMSEC material required in the
      performance of their duties.                                             

                (3)  Ensuring that all authorized COMSEC materials are
      properly obtained, procured, installed, operated, safeguarded,
      destroyed, or transferred when no longer required.                       

                (4)  Ensuring that viable emergency plans exist to
      minimize the risk of compromise of COMSEC materials during crisis
      situations.                                                              

           k.  Region and Center Civil Aviation Security Divisions and
      Staffs are responsible for:                                              

                (1)  Ensuring that COMSEC information and material in
      offices and activities under their control or jurisdiction are
      safeguarded and controlled in accordance with this order.                

                (2)  Providing staff guidance, assistance, and
      interpretation with regard to this order.                                

                (3)  Conducting COMSEC account inspections.                    

                (4)  Ensuring that insecurities involving COMSEC
      materials are reported to cognizant authorities in a timely and
      comprehensive manner as required by U.S. Air Force General
      Publication (AFKAG) 2 and NTISSI-4003.                                   

                (5)  Developing and administering a Cryptologic Access
      Program in accordance with provisions of chapter 2, of this
      directive, to include the following:                                     

                     (a)  Ensuring that all personnel within their
      jurisdiction requiring access to U.S. classified cryptographic
      information sign a Cryptologic Access Certificate (AFCOMSEC Form
      9) prior to being granted access in accordance with provisions of
      Chapter 2 of this order and                                              

                     (b)  Ensuring that the signed cryptographic access
      certificate is made a permanent part of the individual employee's
      official security records and is accounted for in accordance with
      provisions of Order 1600.1C concerning retention of security
      clearance/access certificates.                                           

           l.  COMSEC Custodian is the properly appointed individual
      who manages and controls the accountable COMSEC material in the
      COMSEC Material Control System charged to his/her activity with
      responsibilities which include:                                          

                (1)  The receipt, storage, amendment, accountability,
      inventory, and issuance of COMSEC material charged to his/her
      account and destruction or transfer of material when it is no
      longer required.                                                         

                (2)  Ensuring that appropriate COMSEC material is
      readily available to properly authorized individuals whose duties
      require its use.                                                         

                (3)  Ensuring that all persons requiring access to U.S.
      classified cryptographic information receive a cryptographic
      access briefing in accordance with this directive and sign a
      cryptographic access certificate before they are permitted
      access.                                                                  

                (4)  Advising users and supervisors, as appropriate, of
      the required protection and procedures which must be provided
      COMSEC material issued to them for use, including the authorized
      procedures for destruction or disposition of such material when
      it is no longer required.                                                

                (5)  Reporting COMSEC insecurities in accordance with
      instructions in AFKAG-2 and NTISSI-4003.  COMSEC insecurities
      fall into three categories, cryptographic, personnel and
      physical.  Specific examples of each type are given in NTISSI
      4003.                                                                    

           m.  Individual users are responsible for:                           

                (1)  Knowledge of the requirements of this order.              

                (2)  Safeguarding and proper employment of all COMSEC
      material he or she uses or for which he or she is responsible in
      accordance with the provisions of this order.                            

                (3)  Promptly reporting to the custodian any
      occurrences, circumstances, or acts which could jeopardize the
      security of COMSEC material.  Should the custodian be unavailable
      the report is submitted to the servicing security element or
      ACO-300.                                                                 

           p.  Program Manager, Communications and Aircraft
      Acquisition, ANC-1, is responsible for:                                  

                (1)  Management of engineering planning, development,
      acquisition, and implementation of COMSEC equipments and systems
      in support of FAA requirements and the national COMSEC policy.           

                (2)  Recommending, through coordination with the Office
      of Air Traffic System Management and the Office of Civil Aviation
      Security, and other Federal Agencies, appropriate COMSEC
      equipments and systems to meet identified needs.                         

                (3)  Identification of required maintenance training
      for FAA personnel in coordination with the Systems Maintenance
      Service and the Office of Training and Higher Education.                 

                (4)  Coordination with the Office of Civil Aviation
      Security, Operations, to ensure that plans and specifications for
      COMSEC installations are reviewed and meet all FAA NSA security
      requirements prior to installation.                                      

                (5)  Developing and recommending engineering standards
      and procedures to implement national TEMPEST and COMSEC
      engineering criteria for the secure installation and operation of
      COMSEC equipment in the FAA in concert with ACS.                         

      11.  INTERPRETATION.  Questions regarding the interpretation of
      the provisions of this order or their application shall be
      referred to the Regional or Center Civil Aviation Security
      Division or Staff, or to the Manager, Investigations and Security
      Division, ACO-300, Office of Civil Aviation Security Operations,
      800 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C., 20591.                  

      12.  AUTHORITY TO CHANGE THIS ORDER.  The Assistant Administrator
      for Civil Aviation Security is authorized to issue changes to
      this order which do not contain policy, assign responsibilities,
      or delegate authority.                                                   

      13.-19.  RESERVED.                                                       

                            FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                          PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                        DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

               CHAPTER 2. POLICY FOR GRANTING ACCESS TO U.S. 
 CLASSIFIED CRYTOGRAPHIC INFORMATION                       

                             SECTION 1.  POLICY                                

      20.  GENERAL.  In accordance with policies established by the
      National Telecommunications and Information Systems Security
      Committee (NTISSC) in National Telecommunications and Information
      Systems Security Policy (NTISSP) Number 3, issued in December
      1988, and implemented by the Air Force Systems Security
      Instruction (AFSSI) 4000 of October 1, 1989, the FAA requires
      special access controls for certain U.S. classified cryptographic
      information, the loss of which would cause serious or
      exceptionally grave damage to U.S. national security.  This order
      provides policy, guidelines, and procedures as applicable to the
      Formal Cryptographic Access (FCA) Program.  It provides for an
      individual's eligibility, unofficial foreign-travel requirements,
      contacts with foreign nationals, procedures for granting and
      withdrawing FCA, and actions to take when personnel decline FCA.         

      21.  POLICY.  A formal Cryptographic Access Program is
      established in the FAA whereby access to certain U.S. classified
      cryptographic information shall only be granted to individuals
      who satisfy the criteria set forth herein.  All FAA employees and
      FAA contractor employees assigned duties as communications
      security (COMSEC) custodians; alternate COMSEC custodians; COMSEC
      accountants; COMSEC inspectors; cryptoequipment maintenance and
      installation personnel; key distribution center (KDC) personnel;
      telecommunications center personnel; any personnel identified by
      ACO-300; and any other persons who work full time in the above
      areas who have access to the cryptomaterial must have the FCA to
      meet the requirements of this order as well as the requirements
      established for two-person integrity.                                    

                           SECTION 2.  DEFINITION                              

      22.  CRYPTOGRAPHIC INFORMATION.  The terms used in this order are
      defined in AFR 56-2.  For the purposes of this directive U.S.
      classified cryptographic information is defined as:                      

           a.  TOP SECRET and SECRET, CRYPTO designated, key and
      authenticators.                                                          

           b.  All cryptographic media which embody, describe, or
      implement classified cryptographic logic; this includes full
      maintenance manuals, cryptographic descriptions, drawings of
      cryptographic logics, specifications describing a cryptographic
      logic, cryptographic computer software, or any other media which
      may be specifically identified by the NTISSC.                            

                            SECTION 3.  CRITERIA                               

      23.  ACCESS REQUIREMENTS.  An individual may be granted access to
      U.S. classified cryptographic information, only if that
      individual:                                                              

           a.  Is a U.S. citizen.                                              

           b.  Is an FAA employee or is a U.S. Government-cleared
      contractor approved by ACO-300.                                          

           c.  Possesses a security clearance appropriate to the
      classification of the U.S. cryptographic information to be
      accessed.                                                                

           d.  Possesses a valid need-to-know that has been determined
      to be necessary to perform duties for, or on behalf, of FAA.             

           e.  Receives a security briefing from the servicing security
      element in regions and centers, or from ACO-300 in headquarters,
      detailing the sensitive nature of cryptomaterial and the
      individual's responsibility for protecting cryptomaterial.
      Appendix 2 contains the text of the briefing.                            

           f.  Acknowledges the granting of such access by signing the
      Cryptographic Access Certificate AFCOMSEC Form 9 an example of
      which is contained in Appendix 3 of this order.                          

      24.  POLYGRAPH.  The NTISSP Number 3 provides for utilization of
      non lifestyle counterintelligence polygraph examinations under
      certain conditions.  FAA has determined however that the use of
      the polygraph will not be a requirement in the FAA COMSEC
      Program.                                                                 

      25.  CONTACTS WITH FOREIGN NATIONALS AND UNOFFICIAL FOREIGN
      TRAVEL TO COMMUNIST OR OTHER DESIGNATED COUNTRIES.                       

           a.  All FAA employees possessing an FCA must advise their
      servicing security element of all contacts with nationals of the
      listed governments and receive written permission from their
      facility or office manager with an information copy to the
      servicing security element and to ACO-300 for unofficial travel
      to these countries.                                                      

           Afghanistan                   Latvia
           Albania                       Libyan Arab Republic
           Angola                        Lithuania
           Berlin (Soviet Sector)        Mongolian Peoples
           Bulgaria                       Republic (Outer
           Cambodia (Kampuchia)           Mongolia)
           Peoples Republic of           Nicaragua
            China (Including Tibet)      Poland
           Cuba                          Rumania
           Czechoslovakia                South Yemen
           Estonia                       Syria
           Ethiopia                      Union of Soviet
           Hungarian Peoples             Socialist Republics
            Republic (Hungary)            (Russia)
           Iran                          Democratic Republic of
           Iraq                           Vietnam (North
           Democratic Peoples             Vietnam)
            Republic of Korea            South Vietnam
            (North Korea)                Yugoslavia
           Laos                                                                

           b.  The above restrictions are in addition to those
      requirements of Order 1600.61, Defensive Security Briefing
      Requirements for FAA Employees Traveling to Communist-Controlled
      Countries.                                                               

              SECTION 4.  GRANTING FORMAL CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS                 

      26.  SCOPE.  This policy shall apply to all FAA employees
      civilian and military who satisfy the requirements of Section 3,
      above, and whose official duties require continuing access to
      U.S. classified cryptographic information.  Procedures to be
      followed in the granting of a Cryptographic Access Certificate
      are as follows:                                                          

           a.  COMSEC Manager and Custodian.  The COMSEC custodian or
      the manager responsible for COMSEC operations in a facility or
      office shall:                                                            

                (1)   Upon receipt of this order take appropriate
      action to coordinate with the supporting personnel office and the
      servicing security element to provide them with the names and
      positions of all personnel requiring FCA.                                

                (2)  Immediately notify the servicing security element
      of any change in status or need-to-know of individuals having
      FCA.                                                                     

            b.  Personnel Offices.  The personnel office will
      coordinate with the supporting security element to accomplish the
      following:                                                               

                (1)  To ensure that the master record reflects the
      requirement for FCA, and to arrange for the procedures to be
      followed to provide the required briefing, as well as
      need-to-know and clearance verification for each individual.             

                (2)  The personnel office will be responsible for
      entering into the Consolidated Management Information System
      (CPMIS) the correct information pertaining to FCA requirements
      for designated positions.                                                

                (3)  To develop procedures that will ensure that the
      servicing security element is informed whenever individuals with
      FCA change positions, terminate or otherwise no longer have need
      for the FCA in accordance with this directive.                           

                (4)  To coordinate with the servicing security element
      and to take such additional actions as may be required to ensure
      that the national security objectives of the FCA are supported
      and implemented.                                                         

           c.  Servicing Security Element.  The servicing security
      element will designate in writing an individual to serve as the
      FCA point-of-contact for implementation and coordination of the
      FCA Program.  This individual may be the personnel security
      officer and will be responsible for implementing the FCA Program
      within his/her area of responsibility.  To include the following
      actions:                                                                 

                (1)  Ensure that the requirements of this order are
      met.                                                                     

                (2)  Provide guidance to operating offices and
      personnel offices on the FCA Program.                                    

                (3)  Ensure that clearance data and other relevant
      information pertinent to individuals seeking FCA is correct and
      is entered into the CPMIS and Civil Aviation Security Information
      System (CASIS) to the extent that is necessary to permit accurate
      tracking of individuals in the FCA Program.                              

                (4)  Coordinate with Personnel and the operating
      facility or office to schedule briefing indoctrinations required
      for FCA and to obtain required signatures on Cryptographic Access
      Certificates (AFCOMSEC Form 9).                                          

                (5)  Ensure that the properly filled out AFCOMSEC Form
      9 (Cryptographic Access Certificate) is handled, documented, and
      retained as required by Order 1600.1C for clearance
      certifications.                                                          

           d.  Cryptographic Access Certificate.                               

                (1)  The facility or office manager having
      responsibility for the COMSEC operation or his or her designated
      representative in coordination with the supporting personnel
      office and the servicing security element will establish
      procedures for briefing personnel requiring FCA.                         

                (2)  Upon completion of the required briefing each
      individual requiring FCA will be asked to sign the Cryptographic
      Access Certificate.  The manager will normally sign as witness to
      the signature of the persons being granted access.                       

                (3)  The original copy of the signed certificate will
      be forwarded to the servicing security element in regions and
      centers, and to ACO-300 in the Washington Headquarters, where it
      will be permanently retained.                                            

           e.  Local Tracking Procedures for FCA.  Each facility or
      office having personnel assigned duties in paragraph 21 will, in
      coordination with the supporting Personnel Office and the
      servicing security element, develop written procedures, to
      include out-processing, for reporting the granting and
      termination of FCA.                                                      

           f.  FAA employees requiring an FCA at TDY locations and who
      meet all requirements of the FCA Program will be briefed prior to
      their departure and asked to sign the Cryptographic Access
      Certificate.  When all requirements have been met, clearance
      status notifications will include the fact that the individual
      has FCA.                                                                 

      27.  PREPARING AFCOMSEC FORM 9.                                          

           a.  AFCOMSEC Form 9.  (Appendix 3)  Include the following
      information on the AFCOMSEC Form 9:                                      

                (1)  Installation.  Facility or office where the
      individual is permanently assigned.                                      

                (2)  Unit or Office Symbol.  Individual's office and
      office symbol.                                                           

                (3)  Supporting COMSEC Account.  Self-explanatory.             

                (4)  Signature.  Payroll signature.                            

                (5)  Name.  Full name, last name, first name, middle
      initial.                                                                 

                (6)  SSN:  Will contain dashes (that is 001-01-0001)           

                (7)  Grade and Date of Birth.  Self-explanatory.               

                (8)  In Section 2, paragraph B, a line will be drawn
      through the last sentence in this paragraph which reads:  "I
      understand that I am subject to and consent to a periodic,
      counterintelligence polygraph examination."  This modification
      will be initialed both by the person signing the form and by the
      witness.                                                                 

      NOTE:  Type AFCOMSEC Forms 9 to ensure legibility and accuracy of
      the information.  The servicing security element and ACS-300 will
      return AFCOMSEC Forms 9 not properly and completely filled in.           

           b.  FAA Cryptographic Access Program.  Prepare three copies
      of AFCOMSEC Form 9.  Forward the original signed certificate to
      the servicing security element in regions and centers and to
      ACS-300 in the Washington Headquarters; one copy to the
      individual; and one copy for retention by the local COMSEC
      account (Folder 2).  Maintain locally retained certificates as
      long as individuals require cryptographic access.  Termination
      statements shall be copies of the locally retained certificate
      with the properly filled in bottom portion.                              

           c.  Supply of AFCOMSEC Forms 9.  Initial distribution of
      AFCOMSEC Forms 9 will be made by ACO-300 to servicing security
      elements in regions and centers who in turn will distribute the
      forms to the accounts for which they have monitor responsibility.
      After initial distribution, forms should be requisitioned as
      needed in accordance with guidance provided in AFKAG-2.                  

      28.  WITHDRAWING FCA.                                                    

           a.  Once granted the FCA may be withdrawn for only three
      reasons:                                                                 

                (1)  Administrative.  An individual is being reassigned
      by the facility or office manager to a position not requiring
      FCA, or a person is being reassigned to another FAA facility or
      region or is terminating employment.
                (2)  Suspension.  If a person's security clearance or
      any special access is suspended as outlined in Order 1600.1C,
      that person's FCA must be suspended until the matter is
      adjudicated favorably.  Suspension of the FCA requires that the
      individual be removed from COMSEC custodian and accounting duties
      that require access to cryptographic material until a final
      determination of reinstatement or revocation can be made.                

                (3)  Revocation.  Any person who has a security
      clearance withdrawn or special access denied will also have the
      FCA revoked.  This revocation of FCA is permanent and cannot be
      reinstated and permanently bars the individual from ever being
      assigned to duties within the areas in paragraph 21.                     

           b.  Facility and office managers will advise the servicing
      security element by message of any change in a person's FCA
      status resulting from suspension or revocation including reason
      for suspension or revocation.  The servicing security element
      will advise ACO-300 by message of all such actions.  In addition
      the facility and office manager will send an original copy of the
      Cryptographic Access Certificate to the servicing security
      element.  Keep a copy of the Cryptographic Access Certificate for
      90 days after signature for local records.                               

      29.  CERTIFICATES OF PERSONNEL DECLINING CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS.
      Send the original copy of certificates of any personnel who
      decline to sign the Cryptographic Access Certificates through the
      servicing security element to ACO-300 for permanent retention.
      Certificates should contain all the information on the individual
      less the signature.  State that the individual has refused FCA on
      the face of the form and on the administering official's
      signature and signature block.                                           

      30.-34.  RESERVED.                                                       

                             FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                           PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                         DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

           CHAPTER 3. COMMUNICATIONS SECURITY (COMSEC) DUTIES AND 
 RESPONSIBILITIES                                        

      35.  GENERAL.  All COMSEC material shall be entered into and
      retained in the COMSEC accounting system from the time of its
      origin until its ultimate destruction.  COMSEC accounts are
      established when a facility or activity manager has a need for
      secure information processing, and application is made through
      the servicing security element and ACO-300 to the USAF
      Cryptologic Support Center (AFCSC).  Upon approval by AFCSC the
      type of COMSEC account established will vary according to the
      mission it supports.  Within the FAA the two most common types of
      accounts are operational and administrative or monitor accounts.         

      36.  COMSEC CUSTODIANS AND ALTERNATES.                                   

           a.  Designation.  When a COMSEC account has been authorized
      the cognizant facility or office manager will appoint a qualified
      COMSEC custodian and at least one alternate custodian.  The
      appointment will be made in writing by properly completing an Air
      Force COMSEC (AFCOMSEC) Form 3, Appointment of COMSEC Custodians,
      for each COMSEC account.                                                 

                (1)  Managers of Civil Aviation Security Divisions
      shall be the appointing officials for COMSEC monitor accounts
      under their security cognizance.                                         

                (2)  The Manager, Investigations and Security Division,
      Operations, ACO-300, will be the appointing official for the
      headquarters COMSEC monitor account custodian and alternate.             

           b.  Grade Requirements.                                             

                (1)  FAA COMSEC custodians must be grade GS-9 or above.        

                (2)  FAA alternate custodians must be grade GS-7 or
      higher.                                                                  

           c.  Clearance Requirements.  Custodians and alternate
      custodian(s) positions are designated as non-critical sensitive
      for COMSEC accounts handling material at the Secret level or
      lower classification; for accounts handling Top Secret material
      the custodian and alternate custodian(s) positions are designated
      as critical sensitive.  Persons designated to fill these
      positions must be cleared for the highest classification of
      COMSEC material they will be required to handle or have access
      to.  Requirements are as follows:                                        

                (1)  For Top Secret COMSEC accounts, the designating
      official must ensure that persons designated as custodians and
      alternate custodians have a final Top Secret clearance based on a
      favorably adjudicated background investigation completed within
      the past 5 years.  Periodic reinvestigations (PRI) will be
      conducted within 5 years from the date of the last Sensitive
      Background Information, Background Information, or PRI in
      accordance with Order 1600.1C.                                           

                (2)  For COMSEC accounts handling classified material
      up to and including Secret, the designating official must ensure
      that the individuals designated as custodian and alternate
      custodian(s) as a minimum, have a final Secret clearance based on
      a favorably adjudicated Minimum Background Investigation (MBI).
      A PRI is recommended 5 years after placement and every 5 years
      thereafter.                                                              

                (3)  In making selections for custodian and alternate
      custodian the designating official shall give preference to
      qualified candidates who have maximum retainability in their
      current assignment.  Other considerations include the following:         

                     (a)  The individual must never have been relieved
      from COMSEC custodian duties for cause.                                  

                     (b)  If practical, custodians and alternate
      custodians should be selected on the basis of best qualified
      rather than seniority.  In this regard, consideration should be
      given to the following:                                                  

                          1  Persons with a background in COMSEC.              

                          2  Persons having a minimum total of three
      years previous COMSEC experience.                                        

      37.  TRAINING.                                                           

           a.  COMSEC Custodian.  For the purposes of this order the
      following shall apply:                                                   

                (1)  For individuals who have had no prior COMSEC
      experience and for individuals who have not been actively engaged
      in COMSEC activities during the 3 years prior to the date of
      their designation, attendance at the three week COMSEC Account
      Management Course conducted by the USAF is mandatory.                    

                     (a)  It is the responsibility of the FAA manager
      or other official designating the custodian to ensure that the
      designee is scheduled for attendance at this course within 60
      days of the date of appointment.                                         

                     (b)  Because the waiting period for this
      particular course is often several months, it is important that
      requests for allocations be submitted through appropriate
      region/center channels as soon as possible.                              

                     (c)  Additional information concerning this course
      may be obtained from the servicing security element, or from
      ACO-300, Washington, D.C.                                                

                (2)  For employees who have attended the U.S. Air Force
      COMSEC Account Management Course or other formal COMSEC training
      provided by the government within the past 3 years prior to their
      designation as custodian, attendance at the USAF COMSEC Account
      Management Training Course will normally not be required.
      Similarly, employees who have been actively engaged in COMSEC
      operations during the 3 years prior to their designation, will
      not be required to attend formal COMSEC training provided the
      nature of their duties has enabled them to develop the skills and
      proficiency required to perform the duties of custodian.                 

           b.  Alternate COMSEC Custodian(s).  Training for the
      employee(s) designated as alternate COMSEC custodian(s) is
      important, since the alternate performs the duties of the
      custodian in the custodian's absence.                                    

                (1)  Normally if the individual(s) designated as
      alternate custodian(s) have been engaged in COMSEC activities
      during the 3 years prior to their designation additional formal
      training will not be required.  It is highly desirable that at
      least one alternate custodian attend the 3 week USAF COMSEC
      Account Management Course.                                               

                (2)  As a minimum, however, it is mandatory that
      alternate custodians who have not been actively engaged in COMSEC
      activities during the 3 years prior to their designation be
      scheduled to attend approved COMSEC training of shorter duration
      than the USAF course within 60 days of their appointment.                

                     (a)  Courses approved for alternate custodian
      training include COMSEC account management training courses
      offered by the General Services Administration (GSA).  These are
      1 week training courses in COMSEC accounting offered at various
      times during the year in different geographic locations.                 

                     (b)  Allocations for GSA courses are obtained
      through appropriate region/center personnel training channels.
      Information concerning these courses is available from the
      General Services Administration, Communications Security Training
      Center, ATTN:  Registrar 7 KET-6, 1500 East Bannister Road,
      Kansas City, MO 64131-3087.                                              

           c.  Qualification Training Package.  As an interim training
      measure while an individual is awaiting a class date for the
      COMSEC Account Management Course in the case of custodians, or
      the GSA course for alternate custodians, the Qualification
      Training Package (QTP) should be used.  This is an Air Force
      produced COMSEC Account Management training package designed for
      self-study.  Requests for this package should be addressed to
      ACO-300 through the servicing security element.                          

           d.   Recurrent Training.  Recurrent training for COMSEC
      custodians and alternates shall be scheduled as necessary to
      ensure that individuals maintain a high level of proficiency in
      COMSEC account management procedures and practices.  Recurrent or
      proficiency training should be scheduled when the custodian
      determines that such training is required to achieve the required
      level of proficiency.                                                    

           e.  Coordination.  The servicing security element COMSEC
      monitor account will be provided an information copy of all
      requests for COMSEC training for custodians and alternate
      custodians.                                                              

      38.  WAIVERS.                                                            

           a.  Problems encountered in meeting minimum grade or
      training requirements for custodians or alternate custodians will
      be referred to ACO-300, through the appropriate servicing
      security element.                                                        

           b.  Where operational necessity is a consideration a request
      for waiver of minimum requirements may be submitted.                     

           c.  ACO-300 will be the approving authority for all waiver
      requests.  If a waiver is granted, it applies only to the
      designated individual and must not be transferred; it applies to
      the designated individual only while currently assigned; and it
      must be terminated if a qualified person meeting minimum grade
      requirements becomes available.  In addition, the waiver must be
      renewed annually.  Include the following information in all
      requests:                                                                

                (1)  COMSEC account number.                                    

                (2)  Name, grade, and clearance of the individuals
      desired for appointment.                                                 

                (3)  Present duty assignment.                                  

                (4)  Type custodian (primary or alternate).                    

                (5)  Complete justification.                                   

                (6)  Reason for nonselection, if applicable, of
      assigned individuals who are senior in grade and meet all other
      selection criterions.                                                    

                (7)  Date of any known projected personnel gains who
      would meet the minimum grade and/or training requirements.               

                (8)  Date the appointment is planned.                          

      39.  DUTIES OF THE COMSEC CUSTODIAN.  Specific duties for which
      the COMSEC custodian is responsible include the following:               

           a.  The development and implementation of a comprehensive
      user-training program for all persons who, in performing official
      duties, deal with COMSEC material.  An example would be the
      employees responsible for operation of COMSEC equipment at Joint
      Use Sites.  The training will include programs for user personnel
      that ensure these individuals are completely familiar with their
      duties and responsibilities in areas of control, physical
      protection, inventory and destruction of COMSEC material, and
      reporting of security hazards, violations, and possible
      compromises.  Refresher training is required as needed.                  

           b.  Ensure that requirements established in FAA's Formal
      Cryptographic Access (FCA) Program are understood and
      implemented.  This includes ensuring that personnel having an
      operational need for access have received a cryptographic access
      briefing, and have signed a Cryptographic Access Certificate,
      AFCOMSEC Form 9, as required by this order.                              

           c.  Be thoroughly familiar with directives concerning
      classified material such as Order 1600.2C, National Security
      Information.                                                             

           d.  Issue on hand receipt, all COMSEC material to users who
      need it for their job and ensure that all responsible users of
      this material know the procedures for protecting, accounting,
      destroying, and reporting possible compromise of such material.          

           e.  In coordination with the facility emergency planning
      staff, develop written plans to protect COMSEC materials in an
      emergency, and ensure that the plans are integrated with the
      facility contingency plan.  Train COMSEC personnel in their
      duties under the plan and ensure that adequate and appropriate
      destruction equipment and materials are readily available.               

           f.  Ensure that all necessary and appropriate COMSEC
      material is maintained by the account and that disposition
      instructions have been requested from the Central Office of
      Record (COR) for surplus or unneeded material.  Prepare and
      submit accounting reports promptly and accurately.                       

           g.  Ensure that standard operating procedures (SOP) are
      prepared as required, for secure and efficient conduct of
      COMSEC/operations within the cryptofacility.                             

      40.  PERFORMANCE STANDARDS.                                              

           a.  General.  The position of COMSEC custodian and that of
      alternate COMSEC custodian require persons of unquestioned
      integrity and loyalty.  The quality of the work performance of
      individuals in these positions has a direct reflection on the
      national security of the United States and is a vital factor in
      the support provided by the FAA COMSEC effort to the National
      Airspace System.  It is appropriate therefore that the position
      descriptions (PD) for individuals designated as COMSEC custodian
      or alternate COMSEC custodian include the COMSEC responsibilities
      assigned to that individual.                                             

           b.  Requirement.  Managers responsible for performance
      evaluation rating of individuals designated as COMSEC custodians
      or alternate COMSEC custodians will:                                     

                (1)  Ensure that the PD's include the COMSEC
      responsibilities of the individual(s).                                   

                (2)  Identify the COMSEC responsibility as a critical
      job element (CJE) in the performance standards for the
      individual(s).                                                           

      41.  APPOINTMENT OF CUSTODIANS AND ALTERNATES.                           

           a.  Each COMSEC account must have a COMSEC custodian and at
      least one alternate COMSEC custodian.  From a practical
      viewpoint, the COMSEC custodian should be thoroughly familiar
      with the day-to-day transactions of the COMSEC account.                  

           b.  As part of their monitor responsibilities, servicing
      security elements will:                                                  

                (1)  Ensure that proposed custodians and alternates
      meet the clearance requirements and qualifications for
      appointment as described in paragraph 21.                                

                (2)  Obtain original signatures of the designated
      custodian and alternate(s) in the proper blocks on each of four
      copies (three copies when action concerns a monitoring account)
      of AFCOMSEC Form 3.                                                      

                (3)  Ensure that all applicable blocks of all copies of
      the AFCOMSEC Form 3 are completed, including the "Effective Date"
      and "From" block.                                                        

                (4)  Forward the original copy of AFCOMSEC Form 3 under
      a covering letter to the Air Force Cryptologic Support Center
      (AFCSC), Attention:  MMIC, San Antonio, Texas 78243.  Refer to
      Situation F-2, AFKAG-2.  The letter should designate appointment
      or rescission of a custodian or alternate(s), as appropriate.
      One copy of AFCOMSEC Form 3 will be forwarded to FAA
      Headquarters, Washington, D.C. 20591, Attention:  ACO-300.  One
      copy shall be retained by the servicing security element
      monitoring account, and one copy shall be retained in the
      operational account.                                                     

      42.  MONITORING RESPONSIBILITIES.                                        

           a.  FAA/USAF Agreement.  By agreement with the U.S. Air
      Force (USAF), FAA will provide for the monitoring of all FAA
      COMSEC accounts.  The Manager, Investigations and Security
      Division, Operations, ACO-300, is responsible for the agencywide
      COMSEC monitoring effort at the headquarters level.  ACO-300 is
      also responsible for monitoring the administrative/monitor
      accounts of the regions, Aeronautical Center and Technical
      Center, and the operational and user accounts at the Washington
      Telecommunications Center.  The regional and center servicing
      security elements have been established as administrative
      accounts with the responsibility for the monitoring of
      operational and secure telecommunications facilities within their
      respective jurisdictions.                                                

           b.  Monitor/Inspection Requirements.  Monitor and inspection
      activities shall be conducted in accordance with the following
      requirements:                                                            

                (1)  Regional and center monitor accounts shall conduct
      a general inspection of each operational COMSEC account and
      secure telecommunication facility in their jurisdiction at least
      once each year.  Additional inspections will be conducted as
      required by Order 1650.7B.                                               

                (2)  Appendix 4, Secure Telecommunications Facility and
      COMSEC Account Checklist, shall be used as a guide in the conduct
      of the inspection.  The completion of the checklist does not in
      itself constitute a COMSEC inspection.  The inspector must be
      competent and knowledgeable in all phases of COMSEC.  A formal
      written report containing the results of the inspection and
      recommended corrective actions shall be provided to the facility
      or office manager having responsibility for the COMSEC operation,
      and to the custodian of the inspected account.  An information
      copy of COMSEC inspection reports shall be provided to ACO-300,
      ATTN:  ACO-320.                                                          

                (3)  Technical surveillance countermeasures (TSCM)
      inspections of secure telecommunications facilities shall be
      conducted in accordance with provisions of this order and Order
      1600.12C, Technical Security Countermeasures Program.                    

                (4)  ACO-300 will inspect regional and center monitor
      accounts at least once every two years.  In addition, ACO-300
      will schedule COMSEC inspections and surveys as required
      agencywide to ensure effective monitoring of regional and center
      COMSEC programs.                                                         

           c.  Administrative Requirements.                                    

                (1)  The custodian of each FAA COMSEC account shall
      forward a copy of all reports, correspondence, etc., pertaining
      to COMSEC accounting to his/her servicing security element
      monitoring account.  Regional and center monitor accounts shall
      provide copies of the documents pertaining to their account
      operations to ACO-300, ATTN:  ACO-320.  Conversely, AFCSC sends a
      copy of all reports, correspondence, etc., it originates to the
      appropriate monitoring account.                                          

                (2)  The monitoring account shall review these
      documents and ensure the completeness, accuracy, and timeliness
      of the accounting actions.  In the event that a monitor account
      receives a copy of a discrepancy report from AFCSC, the monitor
      account custodian shall ensure that the required corrective
      action is accomplished expeditiously.                                    

      43.-49.  RESERVED.                                                       

                      FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                       PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                     DETERMINED UNDER U.S.C. 552

                 CHAPTER 4. SAFEGUARDING COMSEC FACILITIES                    

                             SECTION 1.  GENERAL                               

      50.  PURPOSE.  National Communications Security Instruction
      (NACSI) 4008, Safeguarding COMSEC Facilities, dated March 4,
      1983, prescribes standards for safeguarding COMSEC Facilities.
      NACSI 4008 is implemented for all USAF supported COMSEC accounts
      by Air Force Regulation AFR 56-6, same subject, dated November 3,
      1986, all FAA COMSEC accounts are required to comply with the
      policies and procedures established in these directives.  This
      chapter identifies specific requirements for which compliance is
      mandatory.                                                               

      51.  REFERENCED PUBLICATIONS.  Appendix 5, to this order contains
      a reference listing of NACSI'S, NTISSI'S, and AFR's that are to
      be maintained by all FAA COMSEC accounts.  The publications
      listed below pertain specifically to areas covered in this
      chapter.                                                                 

           a.  NACSI No. 4005, Safeguarding and Control of
      Communications Security Material, dated October 12, 1979.  This
      NACSI is implemented in USAF publication AFR 56-13, same subject,
      dated July 28, 1987.                                                     

           b.  NACSI No. 4009, Protected Distribution Systems, dated
      December 30, 1981.  Implemented by USAF publication AFR 56-19,
      same subject, dated November 3, 1986.                                    

           c.  NTISSI No. 4004, Routine Destruction and Emergency
      Destruction of COMSEC Material, dated March 11, 1987.
      Implemented by USAF publication AFR 56-5, same subject, dated
      August 28, 1987.                                                         

           d.  NCSC-9, National COMSEC Glossary, dated September 1,
      1982.                                                                    

      52.  BACKGROUND.                                                         

           a.  National standards for safeguarding COMSEC facilities
      are necessary to ensure the integrity of the classified COMSEC
      material contained therein.                                              

           b.  The principal threats which such safeguards must defend
      against are:                                                             

               (1)  Unauthorized access to or observation of classified
      COMSEC material.                                                         

               (2)  Tampering with or TEMPST exploitation of, COMSEC
      and associated telecommunications equipment.                             

               (3)  Clandestine exploitation of sensitive
      communications within a secure telecommunications
      facility (e.g. "bugging").                                               

                   SECTION 2.  PHYSICAL SECURITY STANDARDS                     

      53.  PHYSICAL SECURITY STANDARDS FOR FIXED COMSEC FACILITIES.            

           a.  Application.  For the purposes of this order, unless
      specifically stated otherwise, all FAA COMSEC facilities are
      considered as "fixed."  Should questions arise concerning the
      application of the physical security standards prescribed by this
      order to a specific facility they shall be addressed through the
      servicing security element to Manager, Investigations and
      Security Division, ACO-300, Washington, D.C., for resolution.            

           b.  Standards.  All FAA COMSEC secure telecommunications
      facilities will be designated as CLOSED Areas in accordance with
      Order 1600.2C and will comply with the physical security
      standards specified in this section and Appendix 3.                      

           c.  Special Security Requirements.  Users of COMSEC
      equipment should be aware of special security requirements that
      may apply to the system they are using.  NSA publishes these
      special doctrinal guidance documents as NACSI's in the 8000
      series.  The USAF implements the 8000 series NACSI's as AFSAL's
      and publishes and distributes them as specialized COMSEC
      publications in the COMSEC Material Control System (CMCS).  These
      documents are indexed in AFKAG-13 and are available on request to
      all COMSEC custodians.                                                   

           d.  Security/Engineering Approval.                                  

               (1)  The manager of the office or activity in which a
      secure telecommunications facility is located is responsible for
      ensuring that design and construction plans are coordinated
      through the servicing security element with ANC-120 and ACO-300
      prior to implementation.  This includes engineering and
      construction plans and specifications for proposed secure
      telecommunications facilities and ancillary terminal equipments,
      as well as plans for the reengineering or modification of
      existing facilities.  Failure to do this will result in automatic
      loss of certification for the secure telecommunications facility.
               (2)  Specifications and associated drawings must be
      submitted through the servicing security element to ACO-300 and
      to ANC-120.  Subsequent to a review of the plans and
      specifications, a joint determination will be made by ANC-120 and
      ACO-300 either approving the plans or identifying corrective
      actions that must be taken.                                              

      54.  INSTALLATION CRITERIA.  FAA facilities which generate,
      process, or transfer unencrypted classified information by
      electrical, electronic, electromechanical, or optical means shall
      conform to the guidance and standards in NACSI 4009, NACSIM
      5100A, and NACSIM 5203 with regard to protected wireline
      distribution systems.  Questions concerning security requirements
      shall be addressed through the servicing security element to
      ACO-300 for resolution.  Questions relevant to engineering and
      construction standards should be coordinated through the
      appropriate regional/center Airway Facilities channel and
      forwarded in writing to ANC-120, with an information copy to
      ACO-300 and the servicing security element.                              

      55.  FACILITY APPROVALS, INSPECTION, AND TESTS.                          

           a.  Approval to Hold Classified COMSEC Material.  Each FAA
      facility must be approved by the servicing security element
      before the facility may hold classified COMSEC material.  Such
      approval shall be based on an inspection by the servicing
      security element which determines that the facility meets the
      physical safeguarding and other requirements of this order.              

                (1)  The servicing security element will advise the
      facility manager by letter of the approval or disapproval of the
      facility with an information copy to ACO-300.  The facility will
      retain a copy of the approval letter in its COMSEC file.                 

                (2)  After initial approval, each FAA facility holding
      classified COMSEC material shall be reinspected in accordance
      with provisions of FAA Order 1650.7B as they pertain to Category
      1 facilities.  The facility shall also be reinspected and the
      approval reviewed, when:                                                 

                (a)  There is evidence of penetration or tampering,            

                (b)  Alterations are made which significantly change
      the physical characteristics of the facility,                            

                (c)  The facility is relocated or the facility is
      reoccupied after being temporarily abandoned.                            

           b.  Approval to Operate Secure Telecommunication Facilities.
      In addition to the requirement for physical security approval to
      hold classified COMSEC material, FAA secure telecommunications
      facilities require the following inspections and tests:                  

                (1)  General COMSEC Inspection.  ACO-300 is responsible
      for conducting a general COMSEC inspection of secure
      telecommunications facilities prior to initial activation where
      practicable, but in any case within 90 days after activation.
      Thereafter reinspection is required at intervals of no greater
      than 18 months.  At a minimum, the inspection shall assess secure
      operating procedures and practices, handling and storage of
      COMSEC material, routine and emergency destruction capabilities,
      compliance with installation (Red/Black) criteria, and obvious
      technical security hazards.
                (2)  Technical Surveillance Countermeasures
      Inspections.  TSCM inspections are conducted by ACO-300 in
      accordance with provisions of Order 1600.12C.                            

                     (a)  COMSEC custodians shall send requests for
      TSCM inspections of new secure telecommunications facilities
      through the appropriate servicing security element to ACO-300 in
      accordance with procedures required by Order 1600.12C.  Requests
      will be appropriately classified and should be submitted at least
      90 days before the projected activation date for the facility.           

                     (b)  After the initial TSCM survey ACO-300 will
      schedule subsequent surveys.                                             

                     (c)  Requests for TSCM support shall be submitted
      when any of the conditions exist that are described in
      subparagraphs 5b(2)(a), (b), and (c), Annex A to NACSI 4008/AFR
      56-6.                                                                    

                (3)  TEMPEST Inspections and Tests.  Visual TEMPEST
      inspections and, where determined to be necessary by ANC-120,
      instrumented TEMPEST tests shall be conducted at secure
      telecommunications facilities in accordance with requirements
      specified in subparagraphs 4b(3)(a) and (b), Annex A to NACSI
      4008/AFR 56-6.                                                           

      Written requests for instrumented TEMPEST test support should be
      submitted by the office or activity manager or COMSEC custodian
      through appropriate region/center channels to ANC-120 with an
      information copy to ACO-300.                                             

           c.  Daily Security Check.                                           

               (1)  Continuously Manned Facility.  In a continuously
      manned facility, a security check shall be made at least once
      every 24-hours.  This shall be a visual check to ensure that all
      classified COMSEC information is properly safeguarded, and that
      physical security protection system/devices (e.g., door locks and
      vent covers) are functioning properly.                                   

                (2)  Facilities that are Not Continuously Manned.  In a
      facility which is not continuously manned, the security check
      shall be conducted at least every 24 hours if the facility is in
      operation for 24 hours or more and prior to departure of the last
      person and shall include additional checks to ensure that the
      facility entrance door is locked and that, where installed,
      intrusion detection systems are activated.  Where a facility is
      unmanned for periods greater than 24 hours (e.g., during weekends
      and holidays) and the facility is not protected by an intrusion
      detection system that has been approved by ACO-300, a check shall
      be made at least once every 24 hours to ensure that all doors to
      the facility are locked and that there have been no attempts at
      forceful entry.                                                          

           d.  Activity Security Checklist.  FAA secure
      telecommunications facilities will use Standard Form (SF) 701,
      Activity Security Checklist, to record the daily security check.
      The national stock number for the SF 701 is 7540-01-213-7899.
      The form is available from the GSA.  In facilities which operate
      continuously, at the end of each shift, the person responsible
      (shift supervisor, for example) makes the security check.  The
      daily security check may be a part of, but not a substitute for,
      the daily (or shift) inventory of COMSEC material.
      NOTE:  If in a continuously operating facility the security
      container is not unlocked it will not be opened solely to
      inventory the contents.  An inventory will be conducted when the
      container is opened.                                                     

      56.  INTRUSION DETECTION SYSTEMS.  Intrusion detection systems
      used to protect COMSEC information must be specifically approved
      for that purpose by ACO-300 prior to installation.  When approved
      alarm systems replace permanent guards, they must be used with an
      immediate guard response which will not exceed 5 minutes under
      any condition.                                                           

      57.-60.  RESERVED.                                                       

                SECTION 3.  ACCESS RESTRICTIONS AND CONTROLS                   

      61.  UNESCORTED ACCESS.                                                  

           a.  General.  Unescorted access to FAA offices/activities
      handling, storing, or processing classified COMSEC material will
      be limited to:                                                           

                (1)  FAA government civilian or military personnel who
      are U.S. citizens and whose duties require such access and, if
      the material is classified, who have been granted a security
      clearance equal to or higher than the classification of the
      COMSEC material involved.                                                

                (2)  Normally, these individuals will have regular duty
      assignments in the facility.  The individuals must meet all
      requirements of the FAA Formal Cryptographic Access (FCA) Program
      as specified on Chapter 2 of this order.                                 

                (3)  The names of all such individuals shall appear on
      a posted formal access list.                                             

                (4)  Official visitors whose names do not appear on the
      access list may also be granted unescorted access by the COMSEC
      custodian or the facility manager having responsibility and
      authority for the COMSEC operations, provided the visitors
      require such access and meet the access requirements of NACSI
      4005 and this order to include verification of the fact that the
      individuals have received a cryptographic access briefing and
      have a current signed cryptographic access authorization.  All
      such visits shall be recorded on the visitor register (FAA Form
      1600.8 or equivalent).                                                   

                (5)  No individual will be allowed unescorted access to
      an FAA COMSEC facility who has not received a cryptographic
      access briefing and signed a cryptographic access authorization.         

           b.  Access Controls and Procedures for Secure
      Telecommunications Facilities.  The following controls and
      procedures will be used to control access to secure
      telecommunications facilities:                                           

                (1)  Entrance controls will be established to prevent
      entry by persons not listed on the authorized entrance list.
      Facilities using the locked-door system must have a buzzer system
      and a way to challenge and identify persons before they enter.           

                (2)  Entrance doors to FAA facilities shall be equipped
      with a fish-eye viewing device to permit identification of
      persons seeking admittance.                                              

                (3)  If guards are assigned, station them immediately
      outside the entrance.  Regardless of the control system used,
      entry procedures must ensure identification of persons seeking
      entry so as to prevent viewing of activities within the facility
      before entry is permitted.                                               

                (4)  Unrestricted entry to the secure
      telecommunications center will be limited to persons whose names
      appear on an official posted entrance list.  The authorized
      entrance list must contain the names of all persons regularly
      assigned duties within the secure telecommunications facility and
      those others whose duties require them to have frequent access.
      All personnel on the authorized entrance list must have received
      a cryptographic access briefing and must have a current signed
      Cryptographic Access Certificate on file which is verified by the
      custodian or the manager having responsibility for the COMSEC
      operation.  In addition, each individual on the list must have a
      valid clearance equal to or higher than the COMSEC information
      being given access to.  It is the COMSEC custodian's
      responsibility to verify the clearance for each individual on the
      authorized entrance list.  Custodians should consult with the
      servicing security element to determine the most effective method
      to verify clearance information and cryptographic access
      authorization data for each facility.                                    

                (5)  The following statement will be placed on the
      authorized entrance list, certifying that all persons listed
      thereon have been granted access to classified COMSEC information
      and that a security clearance is on file for each person:  "ALL
      PERSONNEL LISTED HEREON HAVE BEEN GRANTED ACCESS TO CLASSIFIED
      COMSEC INFORMATION AND APPROPRIATE DOCUMENTATION IS ON FILE."  By
      affixing his or her signature to this statement the custodian
      affirms that he or she has personally verified with the facility
      or activity personnel officer, or the servicing element, that
      each individual on the authorized access list has:                       

                     (a)  A current Form 1600.54, Notification of
      Personnel Security Action, on file;                                      

                     (b)  A clearance equal to the highest
      classification level of COMSEC material to which he/she will have
      access.                                                                  

                     (c)  Received a cryptographic access briefing and
      has signed a current Cryptographic Access Certification as
      required by this order.                                                  

                (6)  On the authorized entrance list, the COMSEC
      custodian will specifically designate those persons, by name, who
      may authorize admittance to others not on the list.  The number
      of persons authorized to admit others in this manner shall be
      kept to a minimum.  Usually, the facility manager having
      responsibility and authority over the COMSEC operation, and the
      custodian may authorize admittance.                                      

                (7)  The authorized entrance list will be signed and
      dated by the COMSEC custodian.  It is the custodian's
      responsibility to ensure that the list is current at all times.          

                (8)  An FAA Form 1600-8, Visitor Register, will be
      maintained to record the arrival and departure of all persons
      whose names do not appear on the authorized entrance and access
      list.  Completed FAA Form 1600-8, shall be maintained on file by
      the custodian for a period of two calendar years, after which
      they may be destroyed.                                                   

           c.  Access Control for Administrative/Monitor Accounts.  FAA
      administrative and monitor accounts do not require the stringent
      security measures required for secure telecommunications
      facilities.                                                              

                (1)  Administrative/monitor accounts are those which
      hold only general COMSEC publications or serve as issue points
      for codes and authentication systems.  This type of account
      requires adequate storage facilities and inventory controls.
      However, they may be located within general office space if
      measures are taken to exclude unauthorized and uncleared
      personnel and prevent viewing of COMSEC material when in use.            

                (2)  The custodian must closely control access to an
      administrative account's holdings; access must be limited to
      persons within the immediate working area who have a need-to-know
      and others whose duties require frequent access.  The
      requirements for granting access and certification or
      verification thereof are the same as for secure
      telecommunications facilities.                                           

      62.  ESCORTED ACCESS.
           a.  Uncleared visitors.  Uncleared visitors may be
      authorized admittance by the custodian, or the manager having
      operational responsibility for the COMSEC facility, provided
      effective security precautions are taken to preclude unauthorized
      access to classified information.  These visitors shall be under
      continuous escort by an individual whose name appears on the
      access list.  All such visits shall be recorded in the visitor
      register.                                                                

           b.  Repairmen.  When uncleared repairmen are admitted to
      perform maintenance on commercially contracted information-
      processing equipment which is connected to circuits protected by
      cryptographic equipment, the escort shall be a cryptorepair
      person or other technically qualified individual who is capable
      of recognizing acceptable and proper repair procedures for that
      type of equipment.  This is a means to control attempts at
      malicious action against the involved COMSEC equipment or
      installation.                                                            

      63.  VISITOR REGISTER.                                                   

           a.  Requirement.  A visitor register, FAA Form 1600.8, will
      be maintained at the COMSEC facility entrance area to record the
      arrival and departure of authorized visitors.                            

           b.  Procedure.  The visitor register shall contain the
      following information for each individual.                               

                (a)  Date and time of arrival and departure.                   

                (b)  Printed name and signature of visitor.                    

                (c)  Purpose of visit.                                         

                (d)  Signature of individual admitting visitor.                

           c.  Disposition.  Records of authorized visitors shall be
      retained in the custodian's files for a period of two calendar
      years, after which they may be destroyed.                                

      64.  NO-LONE ZONES.                                                      

           a.  Facilities which produce or generate key (in any form)
      distribution centers, and depots and other logistic activities
      which store or distribute large quantities of keying material
      shall employ no-lone-zone restrictions within all areas in which
      these activities take place.                                             

           b.  Refer to AFR 56-1, paragraph 3-5, for restrictions on
      single person access.                                                    

           c.  The majority of FAA COMSEC facilities handling or
      processing COMSEC material at the SECRET level or below will not
      have a need for institution of no-lone-zone measures.  Custodians
      having questions concerning no-lone-zone applications should
      direct them to ACO-300 through their servicing security element.         

      65.  GUARD SERVICES.                                                     

           a.  Purpose.  FAA facilities requiring the services of a
      secure telecommunications facility may for various reasons not be
      able to have a COMSEC resource in-house.  This would be the case
      for example, if a secure telecommunications facility were being
      reengineered and it was necessary to take the facility off-line
      for a period of time.  When this situation occurs, the FAA
      facility may enter into an agreement with another U.S. Government
      or military secure telecommunications facility to receive and
      transmit their classified and operational messages until the
      facility circuits are operational.  This is referred to as
      "guarding."                                                              

           b.  Requirement.  The FAA manager having operational
      authority and responsibility for a secure telecommunications
      facility will inform ANC-120 and ACO-300, through appropriate
      regional channels to include the servicing security element, of a
      requirement for "guard" service prior to making arrangements for
      such support.  Only secure telecommunications facilities operated
      by U.S. Government or military personnel will be used for
      guarding for classified FAA telecommunications.  Contractor
      operated secure telecommunications facilities will not be used.          

      66.-70.  RESERVED.                                                       

            SECTION 4.  PROTECTION OF UNATTENDED COMSEC EQUIPMENT              

      71.  GENERAL.                                                            

           a.  Noncontinuously Manned Facility.  In a noncontinuously
      manned facility, unattended COMSEC equipment shall be protected
      as prescribed in this section during periods when the facility is
      not manned.                                                              

           b.  Construction.  A facility which meets the construction
      requirements of Appendix 6 provides sufficient protection, under
      normal circumstances, for unattended, unkeyed COMSEC equipment
      installed in an operational configuration.  The requirements for
      the protection of COMSEC equipment in secure telecommunications
      facilities which normally operate unmanned for extended periods
      of time are covered in Annex C, NACSI 4008/AFR 56-6, under
      "Unattended, Fixed Secure Telecommunications Facilities."                

      72.  PROTECTION REQUIREMENTS.                                            

           a.  General.  In some situations there may be significant
      technical or operational reasons to locate communications and
      associated COMSEC equipments in unattended sites.  Any
      requirement for FAA activities to locate COMSEC equipment at
      unattended sites must be submitted through the servicing security
      element to ACO-300 for approval prior to implementation.  The
      request for approval will be submitted in writing, by the
      custodian or facility manager having authority over the COMSEC
      assets and will include the measures to be taken to satisfy the
      safeguarding requirements listed in subparagraph b, below.               

           b.  Safeguards.  Paragraph IID, Annex C to NACSI 4005/AFR
      56-13 establishes the following safeguard requirements:                  

                (1)  The site must be located in an area firmly under
      U.S. control.                                                            

                (2)  Cryptonets whose keying variables are held in
      COMSEC equipments located at unattended sites must be kept as
      small as possible, with unique keying material used on each link
      terminated at an unattended site where feasible.                         

                (3)  COMSEC equipment not in use may not be stored at
      an unattended site.  All COMSEC equipments located at unattended
      sites must be operationally required as on-line, standby or
      back-up items to terminate an active circuit.                            

                (4)  Keying material other than that which is
      electrically or physically held in the COMSEC equipments may not
      be stored at unattended sites.
                (5)  The FAA manager responsible for operation of the
      unattended site must arrange for timely guard force response to
      investigate incidents involving threats to the COMSEC equipment
      at the site.  Response planning should be conducted in
      coordination with the servicing security element.  The servicing
      security element will advise the manager on effective security
      planning and will provide investigative support when necessary.
      The FAA custodian responsible for the COMSEC material must be
      knowledgeable of these arrangements.                                     

                (6)  The FAA manager responsible for operation of the
      unattended site must ensure that inspections of the sites are
      conducted to verify that the COMSEC equipments have not been
      tampered with.  The inspections should be at random and at
      irregular intervals without excessive delay between the
      intervals.                                                               

      73.-77.   RESERVED.                                                      

                 SECTION 5.  PROTECTION OF LOCK COMBINATIONS                   

      78.  PURPOSE.                                                            

           a.  General.  The requirements of this section apply to
      combination locking devices for FAA COMSEC facility doors and
      security containers which hold classified, telecommunications
      security (TSEC) nomenclatured material.                                  

           b.  Collateral Classified Materials.  Combinations to FAA
      security containers which are used to store only collateral
      classified material that is not accountable under the COMSEC
      Material Accounting System (CMCS), may be controlled in
      accordance with this section or the requirements of Order
      1600.2C.  If a container is used to store both collateral and
      TSEC nomenclatured material the protection requirements of this
      section will apply.                                                      

      79.  PROTECTION REQUIREMENTS.                                            

           a.  Selection of Combinations.  Each lock must have a
      combination composed of randomly selected numbers.  This
      combination shall not deliberately or accidentally duplicate a
      combination selected for another lock within the facility and
      shall not be composed of successive numbers, numbers in a
      systematic sequence, nor predictable sequences (e.g., birthdates,
      social security numbers, and phone numbers).                             

           b.  Changing Combinations.  A lock combination shall only be
      changed by a cleared individual having a need-to-know for the
      information safeguarded by the lock.  Combinations must be
      changed:                                                                 

                (1)  When the lock is initially placed in use.  (The
      manufacturer's preset combination shall not be used.)                    

                (2)  When any person having authorized knowledge of the
      combination no longer requires such knowledge (e.g., through
      transfer or loss of clearance).                                          

                (3)  When the possibility exists that the combination
      has been subjected to compromise.                                        

                (4)  At least annually.
           c.  Classification of Combinations.  Lock combinations shall
      be classified the same as the highest classification of the
      information protected by the locks.  For a security container,
      this is the highest classification of the information held in the
      container; for a facility door, it is the highest classification
      of the information held in the facility to which the door
      controls access including that information stored in containers.         

      80.  ACCESS TO COMBINATIONS.                                             

           a.  Access to the combination of a lock used to protect
      COMSEC material shall be limited to individuals who are
      authorized access to the material in accordance with NACSI
      4005/AFR 56-13, and Chapter 2 of this order.                             

           b.  Where a container is used to store future editions of
      keying material, access to the combination shall be further
      restricted to the COMSEC Custodian and the Alternate
      Custodian(s).  Where this restriction cannot be applied because
      others must have access to the container for current editions of
      keying material or other material, future editions of keying
      material shall be stored separately in a locked strongbox which
      can be opened only by the Custodian and the Alternate
      Custodian(s).  The strongbox shall be kept in the security
      container.  Exceptions may be made in operational areas to allow
      shift supervisors access to the next future edition of keying
      material, but not to later future editions.                              

           c.  Access to combinations for security containers used to
      store Top Secret keying material will be controlled in accordance
      with requirements of NTISSI 4005, and Appendix 7.
      81.  RECORD OF COMBINATIONS.                                             

           a.  Standard Form 700.  The Standard Form (SF) 700, Security
      Container Information, NSN:  7540-01-214-5372, will be used to
      record the current combination to COMSEC containers.  Parts 2 and
      2A of each completed copy of SF 700 shall be classified at the
      highest level of classification of the information authorized for
      storage in the security container.  A new SF 700 must be
      completed each time the combination to the security container is
      changed.                                                                 

           b.  Emergency Access.  To provide for ready access to
      secured material in emergencies, a central record of lock
      combinations shall be maintained in a security container approved
      for storage of the highest classified combination.  The
      combination to this container shall be restricted to persons with
      proper clearance and need-to-know.  Provision must be made for
      access to the record of combinations in case of an emergency.            

           c.  Packaging Requirements.  Combinations to FAA COMSEC
      containers will be packaged and handled as follows:                      

                (1)  The SF 700 Part 2 and 2A containing the
      combination will be assigned a classification equal to the
      highest category of classified material stored within the
      container.  In addition to the classification, the SF 700 will be
      annotated to reflect the following:                                      

                     (a)  The identity of the container (reference
      paragraph 191, chapter 8, Order 1600.2C).  This will include the
      container, room, and building number.
                     (b)  The date the combination was changed.                

                     (c)  The responsible persons authorized access to
      the combination.                                                         

                (2)  Safe combination will be maintained within COMSEC
      channels.  This will not prevent storing combinations in FAA
      areas outside the secure communications facility or vault.  For
      combinations up to and including Secret a properly filled out SF
      700 should be forwarded to the servicing security element monitor
      account through COMSEC channels.  Proper packaging is required
      and delivery should be accomplished by courier.  Persons who have
      access to the security containers which house COMSEC combinations
      must have a clearance level equal to or above that required for
      access to security containers or vaults for which the
      combinations have been recorded, and must meet FAA FCA Program
      requirements specified in Chapter 2 of this order.  For storage
      outside the secure communications facility or vault the COMSEC
      custodian will require an SF 154 hand receipt for the combination
      and will maintain the current SF 154 receipt(s) in the COMSEC
      file.                                                                    

                (3)  For storage outside the secure telecommunications
      facility or vault, a combination storage location shall be chosen
      which allows ready access in an emergency but which is restricted
      to persons with proper clearance and need-to-know.  Top Secret
      combinations do not have to be recorded with the Top Secret
      Control Office (TSCO) since they are controlled within COMSEC
      channels.  Top Secret combination must be controlled however in
      accordance with NTISSI 4005, and Appendix 7.                             

           d.  Prohibition.  It is specifically prohibited for
      individuals to record and carry, or store insecurely for personal
      convenience, the combinations to facilities or containers in
      which COMSEC material is stored.  Also, records of such
      combinations may not be stored in electronic form in a computer.         

      82.-86.  RESERVED.                                                       

               SECTION 6.  NONESSENTIAL AUDIO/VISUAL EQUIPMENT                 

      87.  PERSONALLY OWNED EQUIPMENT.  Personally owned receiving,
      transmitting, recording, amplification, information-processing,
      and photographic equipment (e.g., radios, tape recorders,
      stereos, televisions, cameras, magnetic tape and film) shall not
      be permitted in FAA secure telecommunications facilities.                

      88.  GOVERNMENT OWNED EQUIPMENT.  Government-owned or leased (or
      company owned-or leased in the case of contractor-operated
      facilities) receiving, transmitting, recording, amplification,
      video, and photographic equipment (e.g., radios, music systems,
      TV monitors/cameras, and amplifiers) which are not directly
      associated with secure telecommunications operations or
      information processing activities may be used in secure
      telecommunications facilities provided approval for their use is
      granted by the FAA facility chief or manager having
      responsibility for and authority over COMSEC operations on a
      case-by-case basis, subject to the following:                            

           a.  The Government-owned equipment in FAA telecommunications
      facilities must be subjected to and pass all the same technical
      and TEMPEST security requirements that mission-essential
      equipment must pass.                                                     

           b.  Equipment must be reinspected or tested each time it is
      removed and then returned to the facility.                               

           c.  The manager responsible for approving the location of
      the equipment in the secure telecommunications facility will also
      be responsible for ensuring that a record of the latest approval
      and inspection/test is maintained in the secure
      telecommunications facility, and a copy provided to ACO-300
      through the servicing security element.                                  

           d.  The reinspection/test and record requirements do not
      apply to approved portable telephone "beepers" and two-way radios
      carried by visiting key personnel on official duty, if approved
      by the COMSEC custodian.                                                 

      89.-94.  RESERVED.                                                       

               SECTION 7.  STANDARD OPERATING PROCEDURES (SOP)                 

      95.  REQUIREMENT.                                                        

           a.  Requirement. Each FAA COMSEC secure telecommunications
      facility shall have a written COMSEC SOP.                                

           b.  Procedure.  The COMSEC custodian will prepare and
      maintain in a current status a written SOP which shall contain
      provisions for the secure conduct of facility operations and for
      the safeguarding of COMSEC material, for example the SOP should
      include procedures for:
                (1)  Cryptographic operations.                                 

                (2)  Local accountability of COMSEC material.                  

                (3)  Obtaining COMSEC maintenance support.                     

                (4)  Controlling access to the COMSEC area.                    

                (5)  Storage.                                                  

                (6)  Routine and emergency destruction.                        

                (7)  Reporting of insecurities.                                

           c.  Coordination.  The custodian will require all persons
      associated with the day-to-day operations of the secure
      telecommunications facility to familiarize themselves with the
      SOP initially and signify by their initials that they have reread
      the SOP at least once every 3 months thereafter.                         

      96.  EMERGENCY PLAN.  As an adjunct to its SOP each FAA Plan
      COMSEC facility shall have a current emergency plan prepared in
      accordance with guidance contained in NTISSI 4004/AFR 56-5.              

      The plan shall be written, and, as a minimum shall be structured
      to address the following concerns:                                       

           a.  Coordination with the overall facility/activity
      emergency contingency planning staff.  COMSEC
      emergency/contingency and destruction planning should be an
      integral part of the overall facility plan.
           b.  Fire reporting and initial fire fighting by assigned
      personnel.                                                               

           c.  Assignment of on-the-scene responsibility for ensuring
      protection of the COMSEC material held.                                  

           d.  Procedures for securing or removing classified COMSEC
      material and evacuation of the area(s).                                  

           e.  Protection of material when admission of outside
      firefighters into the secure area(s) is necessary.                       

           f.  Assessment and reporting of probable exposure of
      classified COMSEC material to unauthorized persons during the
      emergency.                                                               

           g.  Post-emergency inventory of classified COMSEC material
      and reporting of any losses or unauthorized exposure to the
      servicing security element.                                              

      97.-101.  RESERVED.

           CHAPTER 5. SAFEGUARDING AND CONTROL OF COMMUNICATIONS 
 SECURITY MATERIAL                                       

      102.  GENERAL                                                            

           a.  Purpose.  This chapter specifies minimum safeguards and
      establishes standard criteria for the protection and control of
      Communications Security (COMSEC) material in accordance with
      guidelines set forth in National Communications Security
      Committee document NCSC-1, Safeguarding COMSEC Material.  The
      NCSC has been replaced by the National Telecommunications and
      Information Systems Security Committee (NTISSC).  The U.S. Air
      Force implementing directive is AFR 56-13, Safeguarding and
      Control of Communications Security Material, dated July 28, 1986.        

           b.  Scope.  Controls for safeguarding COMSEC material apply
      to access, use, production, development, transportation, storage,
      accounting, and disposition.  Safeguards and control criteria for
      COMSEC material are specified herein in the following categories:        

                (1)  Keying material marked "CRYPTO" (e.g., key lists,
      key cards, codes, authenticators, one-time pads, CRIBS, rotors,
      keying plugs, tapes, keyed microcircuits, etc.).                         

                (2)  Crypto-equipment (including communications and
      information processing equipment with integral cryptography) and
      components thereof which embody the principles or logic of a
      cryptosystem, including COMSEC computer software and firmware.           

      NOTE:  "Firmware" refers to software that is permanently stored
      in a hardware device which allows reading and executing the
      software but not writing or modifying it.                                

                (3)  Other COMSEC material of the following types:             

                     (a)  General COMSEC instructional documents,
      TEMPEST information, COMSEC equipment operating maintenance
      manuals, changing call signs and frequency systems, brevity
      lists, and keying material not marked "CRYPTO."                          

                     (b)  Crypto-ancillary material (including
      equipment or software designed specifically to facilitate
      efficient or reliable operation of crypto-equipment, or designed
      specifically to convert information to a form suitable for
      processing by crypto-equipment).                                         

      103.  DEFINITIONS.  For the purposes of this order the following
      terms shall have the meanings set forth below:                           

           a.  Communications Security (COMSEC).  Communications
      security (COMSEC) means protective measures taken to deny
      unauthorized persons information derived from telecommunications
      of the United States Government related to national security and
      to ensure the authenticity of such communications.  Such
      protection results from the application of security measures
      (including cryptosecurity, transmission security, emissions
      security) to electrical systems generating, handling, processing,
      or using national security or national security related
      information.  It also includes the application of physical
      security measures to communications security information or
      materials.                                                               

           b.  Telecommunications.  Telecommunications means the
      transmission, communication, or processing of information,
      including the preparation of information, by electrical,
      electromagnetic, electromechanical, or electro-optical means.            

           c.  National security.  National security means the national
      defense and foreign relations of the United States.                      

      104.  HANDLING KEYING MATERIAL.  Keying material marked "CRYPTO"
      must be handled within the COMSEC Material Control System (CMCS).
      This is a unique system set up for producing, transmitting,
      storing, accounting for, and destroying COMSEC material including
      International Pact Organization (IPO) material.  All
      nomenclatured COMSEC material (except material handled through
      publication distribution channels; such as National COMSEC
      Instructions (NACSI), National COMSEC/EMSEC Information Memoranda
      (NACSEM) and National COMSEC Information Memoranda (NACSIM)), is
      controlled within the CMCS throughout its life.  The system
      requires that all COMSEC material be handled only between COMSEC
      custodians through established channels.  Classified COMSEC
      material never enters the regular document distribution and
      control system.                                                          

      105.-109  RESERVED.                                                      

                SECTION 1.  GENERAL INFORMATION APPLICABLE TO ALL
                            COMSEC MATERIAL                                    

      110.  RESPONSIBILITY FOR SAFEGUARDING COMSEC MATERIAL.                   

           a.  Managers of FAA facilities and offices which use or
      handle COMSEC material are responsible for safeguarding and
      controlling all COMSEC material provided to or produced by their
      facility or office, and for establishing procedures which include
      the following:                                                           

                (1)  A Central Office of Record (COR).  For the FAA the
      U.S. Air Force Cryptologic Support Center, AFCSC/MMIC, San
      Antonio, Texas 78243-5000, is the Central Office of Record.              

                (2)  Establishment and Disestablishment of COMSEC
      Accounts.  Directive guidance for the establishment and
      disestablishment of FAA COMSEC accounts is contained in AFKAG-2
      and this order.                                                          

           b.  COMSEC Custodian.  The COMSEC Custodian is the properly
      appointed individual who manages and controls the accountable
      COMSEC material in the CMCS charged to his/her activity.  The
      custodian's responsibilities include:                                    

                (1)  Receiving, storing, amending, accounting for
      inventorying, and issuing COMSEC material charged to his/her
      account and destroying or transferring of material when it is no
      longer required.                                                         

                (2)  Ensuring that appropriate COMSEC material is
      readily available to properly authorized individuals whose duties
      require its use.                                                         

                (3)  Advising user and supervisors, as appropriate, of
      the required protection and procedures which must be provided
      COMSEC material issued to them for use, including the authorized
      procedures for destruction or disposition of such material when
      it is no longer required.
                (4)  Reporting insecurities in accordance with AFKAG-2
      and NTISSI 4003, COMSEC insecurities fall into three categories,
      cryptographic, personnel and physical.  Specific examples of each
      type are provided in NTISSI 4003, Reporting COMSEC Insecurities.         

           c.  Individual Users.  Individuals involved in the use of
      COMSEC material are personally responsible for:                          

                (1)  Safeguarding and proper employment of all material
      he or she uses or for which he or she is responsible.                    

                (2)  Reporting to proper authorities any occurrences,
      circumstances, or acts which could jeopardize the security of
      COMSEC material.                                                         

      111.  TRANSPORT OF COMSEC MATERIAL.                                      

           a.  Department of Defense Courier Service, State Department
      Diplomatic Courier Service, or departmental couriers are the
      preferred means of transporting COMSEC material.                         

           b.  Use of commercial passenger aircraft for the
      transportation of current or superseded keying material is
      normally prohibited.                                                     

           c.  FAA employees are not authorized to transport current or
      superseded key material for any reason without specific prior
      approval of the servicing security element in regions and
      centers, and ACO-300 in Washington Headquarters.  In addition,
      the employee must have a valid courier letter in accordance with
      the provisions of Order 1600.2C.  The courier letter must be
      signed by the employee's facility or office manager.  Before
      signing the letter it is the manager's responsibility to ensure
      that the employee has received a briefing on his or her
      responsibilities as a courier as required by Order 1600.2C.              

      112.  COURIER RESPONSIBILITIES.                                          

           a.  Couriers are responsible for ensuring the integrity of
      COMSEC material in their custody at all times.  Couriers will
      retain their letter of authorization in their possession at all
      times while actually transporting key materials.                         

           b.  Couriers transporting material into foreign countries
      must ensure that material is not subject to inspection by
      unauthorized personnel.  In no case will U.S. COMSEC material be
      permitted to enter foreign distribution channels unless it has
      been authorized for release by the proper U.S. authorities.              

           c.  In cases where the bulk of the material to be
      transported, or the physical configuration of the conveyance will
      not allow for the courier to keep the material on his person or
      in view at all times, arrangements should be made with the
      carrier to effect a "last-in-first-out" procedure that will
      ensure the material is given the most protection possible, and
      not left unattended at loading docks, cargo storage areas,
      baggage areas, railways platforms, etc.                                  

      113.  OPEN DISPLAY OF COMSEC MATERIAL AND INFORMATION.  The open
      or public display of U.S. Government or foreign COMSEC material
      and information at nongovernmental symposia, meetings, open
      houses, or for other nonofficial purposes is forbidden.  This
      prohibition includes discussion, publications, or presentation of
      COMSEC information for other than official purposes.  Any
      requests for the public or nonofficial display or publications of
      COMSEC information, including Freedom of Information Act
      requests, will be referred through ACS-300 to the Director,
      National Security Agency.                                                

      114.  DESTRUCTION.  Appendix 8 Routine Distribution and Emergency
      Protection of COMSEC Material, contains criteria and procedures
      for secure destruction of COMSEC material.  FAA COMSEC custodians
      will ensure that destruction requirements set forth in this order
      and AFKAG-2 are followed.                                                

      115.  REPORTING INSECURITIES.                                            

           a.  General.  Requirements for reporting COMSEC insecurities
      are specified in NTISSI 4003.  The USAF implementing regulation
      for NTISSI 4003 is AFR 56-12.                                            

           b.  Requirements.                                                   

                (1)  Insecurities associated with FAA COMSEC activities
      will be reported in accordance with NTISSI 4003 or AFR 56-12.
      Information copies of reports of COMSEC insecurities will be
      provided through COMSEC channels to the servicing security
      element and to ACS-300.                                                  

                (2)  The servicing security element will conduct an
      investigation of reported insecurities and submit four copies of
      FAA Form 1600-32 (Report of Investigation) to the Manager,
      Investigations and Security Division, ATTN:  ACO-300.                    

           c.  Classification of Insecurity Reports.  Reports of COMSEC
      insecurities and associated investigative reports shall be
      classified according to content in accordance with provisions of
      NTISSI 4002 and NTISSI 4003.  If there is doubt about the correct
      classification assistance should be requested from the servicing
      security element or ACO-300.  If there is doubt as to whether a
      report should be classified or unclassified, handle and safeguard
      it as classified until a final determination is made in
      accordance with provisions of chapter 4 in Order 1600.2C.                

      116.  EVIDENCE OF TAMPERING.  All instances where COMSEC material
      displays evidence of tampering shall be promptly reported to
      Director, National Security Agency, ATTN:  S-213, in accordance
      with provisions of NTISSI 4003 and AFR 56-12.  Information copies
      of the report shall be provided to the servicing security element
      and ACO-300.                                                             

      117.  ALTERATION OF COMSEC MATERIAL.  No modifications or changes
      in classification or markings or alterations of any kind shall be
      made to COMSEC material without prior approval of the NSA.
      Requests of this nature from FAA COMSEC activities will be
      submitted through COMSEC channels to AFCSC, ATTN:  AFCSC/MMI,
      with information copies to the servicing security element and
      ACS-300.  AFCSC will coordinate with the NSA as required.                

      118.  CLEARANCE REQUIREMENTS FOR GUARDS.  Those guards whose
      duties include responsibility for access and protection of
      classified COMSEC material will be appropriately cleared.  Those
      guards whose duties are primarily area control (gate guards,
      building security) need not be cleared when they are used to
      supplement other security measures and will not normally have
      access to classified information.  All guards must be responsible
      and trustworthy personnel and instructed concerning their
      responsibilities.  Foreign guards may be used for control only.
      Questions concerning clearance requirements for FAA guard
      personnel should be coordinated with the appropriate servicing
      security element.                                                        

      119.  STORAGE REQUIREMENTS.                                              

           a.  General.  Storage means the use of security containers,
      vaults, alarms, guards, etc., to protect COMSEC information
      during nonworking hours or when it is not under the direct and
      continuous control of properly cleared and authorized personnel.
      FAA managers and custodians responsible for COMSEC operations
      will ensure that the requirements of this paragraph as well as
      the more detailed standards and criteria in appendix 11 of this
      order are complied with.  Servicing security elements will assist
      COMSEC custodians in implementing these requirements.                    

           b.  Storage Requirements.  For each vault or container used
      to store classified COMSEC material:                                     

                (1)  Designate the level of classified material
      authorized for storage therein but do not show this designation
      externally.                                                              

                (2)  Assign a number or symbol for identification
      purposes.  Place the number or symbol in a conspicuous location
      on the outside of the vault or container.                                

                (3)  Prepare a General Services Administration/
      Information Security Oversight Office (GSA/ISOO) Form SF-700
      (Security Container Information Form) for each security container
      and vault door.  On this form identify the names, addresses and
      home telephone numbers of persons to be notified if the container
      is found insecure.  Post part 1 of the SF-700 conspicuously on
      the inside of the locking drawer of each security container, and
      on the inside of each vault door.  Refer to chapter 8 in Order
      1600.2C.  Even though more than four persons may know the
      combination, only those persons to be notified need be listed on
      part 1.  For ordering purposes the NSN for the GSA/ISOO SF-700
      form is 7540-01-214-5372.                                                

                (4)  Security containers or vaults used to store COMSEC
      information shall be located in areas not accessible to general
      traffic, which are locked or otherwise protected during
      nonworking hours.                                                        

                (5)  Security containers or vaults used to store keying
      material of any classification must never have been drilled to
      gain access unless the drilled parts are replaced with new or
      repaired combination locks or drawer heads.  This also applies to
      SECRET and TOP SECRET COMSEC material other than keying material.
      When containers have been drilled to gain access and have been
      repaired and inspected to ensure acceptable safeguarding
      capabilities/(reference chapter 8 in Order 1600.2C), they may be
      used to store COMSEC material including International Pact
      Organization (IPO) other than keying material, classified no
      higher than CONFIDENTIAL.                                                

      120.  OTHER COMSEC INFORMATION.                                          

           a.  General.  Classified COMSEC information not specifically
      covered by this order shall be safeguarded in accordance with
      requirements of Order 1600.2C, National Security Information.            

           b.  Requirement.  FAA COMSEC accounts will receive
      classified documents such as NACSIS, NTISSIs, AFRs, etc., that
      are not controlled within the CMCS.  Documents of this type are
      referred to as "collateral classified" and will not have a
      register number and will not be listed on inventories provided by
      AFCSC.  Because these documents are distributed through COMSEC
      channels they will normally be delivered directly to the
      custodian and will not be placed under control at the facility
      security control point (SCP).  It is the custodian's
      responsibility to ensure that documents of this type are placed
      under control in accordance with provisions of Order 1600.2C.
      Normally, this means returning documents classified SECRET or
      higher, to the facility/activity SCP, having them logged in, and
      then signed back to the COMSEC custodian.  Reference chapter 7,
      in Order 1600.2C.                                                        

           c.  Location of SCP.  The security control point (SCP)
      function for a facility/activity should not be collocated with
      the COMSEC secure telecommunications facility, in order to ensure
      separation between the document control functions of the SCP and
      the CMCS responsibilities of the custodian and alternate.                

      121.  DISPOSITION OF COMSEC MATERIAL.                                    

           a.  General.  After COMSEC material has been issued to an
      account or user it cannot be transferred or destroyed without
      specific prior approval.  The term "disposition" as used in this
      paragraph means the transfer (return to AFCSC or transfer to
      another FAA account or to an account of another department or
      agency) or destruction of COMSEC material.  Refer to AFKAG-2,
      chapters 5 and 6.                                                        

           b.  Requirements.  When material on hand excess to
      requirements is to be returned to AFCSC or is to be shipped to
      another account to meet operational requirements, specific
      disposition instructions must be furnished as follows:                   

                (1)  ACO-300 is the approval authority to transfer to
      another FAA account.                                                     

                (2)  AFCSC gives authority:                                    

                     (a)  To transfer to an account of another
      department or agency or return to account 616600.                        

                     (b)  For destruction.                                     

           c.  Request.  Requests for disposition instructions will be
      routed through the servicing security element with an information
      copy to ACS-300.                                                         

           d.  Exception.  The above rules do not apply to
      crypto-equipment.  AFCSC gives advance approval for all movement
      of crypto-equipment (AFKAG-2).  To meet contingencies and
      emergencies, ACO-300 in coordination with ANC-120 may approve the
      relocation of FAA assets and then notify AFCSC.                          

      122.  PAGE CHECKS OF COMSEC PUBLICATIONS.                                

           a.  General.  The integrity of COMSEC material must be
      ensured so that all material produced must be accounted for and
      maintained at the lowest possible exposure rate.  Although in
      most cases FAA COMSEC custodians have free access to the secure
      telecommunications facility (TCF) they support, keying material
      issued to the secure TCF is considered to be outside the COMSEC
      material control environment because of the exposure factor.
      When material is issued by the custodian, the receiver, whether
      the actual user or an intermediary, is considered to be a user.
      A local courier is not considered to be a user because, until
      material is sighted for by line item, the material is still
      accountable within the CMCS.                                             

           b.  Requirements.  A page check of all classified COMSEC
      publications is mandatory on certain occasions, both to satisfy
      security requirements and to ensure usability.  Page checks are
      to be made by first consulting the list of effective pages on the
      cover of the document and ensuring that each page is exactly as
      described.  The page check is recorded on the record of page
      checks page; or, if the publication has no record of page checks
      page, record the page check on the record of amendments page or
      on the front cover.  The date checked, signature, and
      organizational identification of the person making the check are
      required.  Page checks will be made:                                     

                (1)  On receipt of classified COMSEC material from any
      source.                                                                  

                (2)  During change of custodian.                               

                (3)  When entering an amendment or changes which adds,
      deletes, or replaces pages or affects page numbers (COMSEC Users
      Guide - AFR 56-10).                                                      

                (4)  At least annually.                                        

                (5)  Before destruction.  The page check conducted
      before a document is destroyed does not have to be recorded.
      Sealed keying material, whether sealed with the original
      production wrapping or sealed by the custodian according to Annex
      B, paragraph IIE3b, NACSI 4005/AFR 56-13, does not require page
      check before destruction.                                                

           c.  Exceptions to Page Check Requirements.  The following
      are exceptions to page check requirements listed in paragraph
      122b:                                                                    

                (1)  Check one-time pads that are sealed on the edges
      as individual pages are used.  No separate record of page check
      is required.  A page check of one-time pads that are not sealed
      on the edges is required only on issue to a user.                        

                (2)  Keycards and keylists enclosed in protective or
      restrictive wrappers should be retained within these wrappers for
      as long as possible.                                                     

                (3)  One-time tape does not require a segment check.           

           d.  Additional page checks.  FAA custodians are authorized
      to conduct additional page checks as needed.                             

      123.  DAILY OR SHIFT INVENTORY REQUIREMENTS.  A daily or shift
      inventory is required for:                                               

           a.  Legend 1 COMSEC material.  Equipments are identified by
      the suffix CA to the national stock number (NSN).                        

           b.  Legend 1 International Pact Organization COMSEC
      material; that is North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
           c.  Legend 2 COMSEC material.  Equipments are identified by
      the suffix CS to the NSN.                                                

           d.  Legend 3 COMSEC material.  Material whose accountability
      has been dropped between AFCSC and the FAA COMSEC account.               

           e.  Legend 5 COMSEC material.  Material which has not been
      placed into effect (reserve or contingency material).                    

      124.  COMSEC ACCOUNT RECORD FILE.  Each FAA COMSEC account shall
      maintain an account record file consisting of six folders as
      required by AFKAG-2.  A description of these files follows:              

           a.  Folder 1.  Accounting reports and an AFCOMSEC Form 14:          

                (1)  File authenticated copies of all accounting
      reports in numerical sequence by the account's voucher number.           

                (2)  Maintain an AFCOMSEC Form 14 in the front of the
      folder.                                                                  

                (3)  Classify this folder a minimum of CONFIDENTIAL.           

           b.  Folder 2.  AFCOMSEC Form 3.  This folder contains the
      current records appointing and rescinding the COMSEC custodian
      and alternate custodians for the COMSEC account.  AFCOMSEC form 9
      also shall be retained in this folder.                                   

           c.  Folder 3.  General accounting correspondence.  File
      copies of correspondence about COMSEC distribution and accounting
      (such as disposition instructions, procedure changes, and tracer
      actions).  Classify this folder equal to the highest
      classification of the correspondence therein.                            

           d.  Folder 4.  Mail and courier package receipts.  File
      package receipts for classified COMSEC material transmitted or
      received through Armed Forces Courier Service, other officially
      designated couriers, or the U.S. Postal Service.                         

           e.  Folder 5.  Hand receipts.  File signed copies of hand
      receipts for COMSEC material issued to users.  Destroy the
      receipt according to the instructions in AFKAG-2.                        

           f.  Folder 6.  Local destruction reports.  Keep reports as
      instructed in Situation E4, AFKAG-2.                                     

      125.-129.  RESERVED.                                                     

                        FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                      PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                    DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552


              CHAPTER 6. CONTROLLED CRYPTOGRAPHIC ITEMS (CCI)                 

      130.  PURPOSE AND BACKGROUND.                                            

           a.  The Controlled Cryptographic Item (CCI) category applies
      to specified, unclassified, secure telecommunications and
      information handling equipments and associated cryptographic
      components.  The intent is to promote the broad use of secure
      telecommunications and information handling equipments for the
      protection of national security (classified), and other sensitive
      information which should be protected in the national interest.          

           b.  Secure telecommunications and information and handling
      equipments and associated cryptographic components which are
      designated "Controlled Cryptographic Item" or "CCI" use a
      classified cryptographic logic; it is only the hardware or
      firmware embodiment of that logic which is unclassified.  The
      associated cryptographic drawings, logic descriptions, theory of
      operation, computer programs, and related cryptographic
      information remains classified.                                          

           c.  Procedures for controlling CCI secure telecommunications
      and information handling equipments and associated cryptographic
      components are required to guard against preventable losses to an
      actual or potential enemy.                                               

                (1)  In keeping with the spirit of expanded use of
      these equipments, minor lapses in carrying out control procedures
      shall be referred to the responsible manager as a matter of
      administrative discretion.  FAA employees can be held liable for
      the loss, damage, or destruction of Government property caused by
      their negligence, willful misconduct, or deliberate unauthorized
      use.                                                                     

                (2)  More serious infractions of CCI control procedures
      may constitute sabotage, loss through gross negligence, theft, or
      espionage that would be punishable under various sections of the
      United States Code or the Uniform Code of Military Justice.              

      131.  DEFINITIONS.                                                       

           a.  Controlled Cryptographic Item (CCI).  A secure
      telecommunications or information handling equipment, or
      associated cryptographic components, which is unclassified but
      controlled.  Equipments and components so designated shall bear
      the designator "Controlled Cryptographic Item" or "CCI".                 

           b.  Secure Telecommunications and Information Handling
      Equipment.  Equipment designed to secure telecommunications and
      information handling media converting information to a form
      unintelligible to an unauthorized intercepter and by reconverting
      the information to its original form for authorized recipients.
      Such equipment, employing a classified cryptographic logic, may
      be stand-alone-crypto-equipment, as well as telecommunications
      and information handling equipment with integrated or embedded
      cryptography.                                                            

           c.  Crytopgraphic Component.  The hardware or firmware
      embodiment of the cryptographic logic in a secure
      telecommunications or information handling equipment.  A
      cryptographic component may be a modular assembly, a printed
      circuit board, a microcircuit, or a combination of these items.
           d.  Access.  The ability or opportunity to obtain, modify,
      or use.  External viewing of a CCI does not constitute access.           

      132.  CONTROL REQUIREMENTS.  The following subparagraphs set
      forth the minimum requirements for controlling unkeyed CCI
      equipments and components utilized by the FAA.  Where such
      equipments and components contain classified key they shall be
      protected in accordance with the requirements of Chapter 5 of
      this Order.  Also, depending upon the application, other more
      stringent requirements may be prescribed.                                

           a.  Access.  A security clearance is not required for access
      to unkeyed CCI equipments and components.  However, access shall
      normally be restricted to U.S. citizens whose duties require such
      access.  Access may be granted to permanently admitted resident
      aliens who are U.S. Government civilian employees or active duty
      or reserve members of the U.S. Armed Forces whose duties require
      such access.  ACO-300 may grant waivers to permit non-U.S.
      citizens unescorted access to installed CCIs, regardless of the
      release status of the CCI, under conditions listed below:                

      NOTE:  The approval of the National Managers must be obtained by
      ACO-300 through AFCSC/SRMP before allowing such access by non-
      U.S. citizens in Communist block or other countries listed in the
      Attorney General Criteria Country List.  Such requests shall be
      routed through the servicing security element to ACO-300 together
      with complete justification and explanation of operational need.         

                (1)  Unkeyed CCI's:                                            

                     (a)  Such access is in conjunction with building
      maintenance, custodial duties, or other operational
      responsibilities normally performed by such personnel unescorted
      in the area now containing the CCIs before their installation;
      and                                                                      

                     (b)  The CCI is installed within a facility which
      is a U.S.-controlled facility or a combined facility with a
      permanent U.S. presence, as opposed to a host nation facility,
      even through the primary staffing is by host nation personnel;
      and                                                                      

                     (c)  The servicing security element has determined
      that the risk of tampering with the CCI which could result in
      compromise of U.S. information, classified or unclassified but
      sensitive, is acceptable in light of the local threat and
      vulnerability and the sensitivity of the information being
      protected and indicated by its classification, special security
      controls, and intelligence life; and                                     

                     (d)  Such access is not prohibited by Department
      of State policies and procedures applicable to FAA operation in a
      given geographic area.                                                   

                     (e)  The system doctrine for the CCI does not
      specifically prohibit such access.                                       

                (2)  Keyed CCI's.  In addition to all of the
      requirements for unkeyed CCIs, the following apply for unescorted
      access or use by foreign personnel:                                      

                     (a)  The foreign personnel are civilian employees
      of the U.S. Government or assigned to a combined facility; and
                     (b)  The CCI remains U.S. property, a U.S. citizen
      is responsible for it, and the presence of such installed CCIs is
      verified at least monthly; and                                           

                     (c)  The communications to be protected are
      determined to be essential to the support of FAA or combined
      operations; and                                                          

                     (d)  FAA and other U.S. users communicating with
      such terminals are made aware of the non-U.S. citizen status of
      the CCI user; and                                                        

                     (e)  Only U.S. personnel with classified U.S. keys
      may key CCI's.  Authorized foreign personnel may key CCIs with
      allied keys or unclassified keys.                                        

                (3)  Special Security Requirements.  If a CCI is to be
      installed and operated in a foreign country at a facility which
      is either unmanned or manned entirely by non-U.S. citizens,
      additional special security measures, such as vault areas,
      locking bars, safes, alarms, etc., are required.  Should an
      installation of this nature be required to support FAA operations
      it must be approved in advance by ACO-300 after coordination with
      AFCSC/SRM on a case-by-case basis.                                       

                (4)  Moving CCI's.  CCI's will not normally be moved
      from an environment where the tampering risk presented by non-
      U.S. citizen access is acceptable to a more sensitive environment
      where the risk is not acceptable.  If such action is an
      operational necessity, it must receive the prior approval of the
      FAA servicing security element and in overseas areas the
      cognizant representative of the Department of State for the
      particular geographic area.  All such CCI's must be examined for
      signs of tampering by qualified COMSEC maintenance personnel.
      Any evidence of tampering shall be reported as a COMSEC incident
      and immediate action will be taken to remove the CCI from
      operational use pending notification from the Director, National
      Security Agency.                                                         

           b.  Courier.  Authorized FAA employees and contractor
      employees (U.S. citizens) may courier CCI equipment and
      components.  Requirements for courier authorization are specified
      in FAA Order 1600.2C, National Security Information.                     

                (1)  Authorized persons may transport CCI aboard both
      Government and commercial aircraft, either handcarried or as
      checked baggage.  If it is checked as hold baggage on commercial
      airliners, it must be packaged in a container which is sealed in
      a manner that will detect unauthorized access to the enclosed
      material, such as tamper-detections tape, wire seals, etc.               

                (2)  CCI can be subjected to X-ray inspections;
      however, if airport security personnel require physical
      inspection, the inspection must be limited to external viewing
      only.  To avoid unnecessary delays and searches by airport
      personnel, prior coordination with the servicing security element
      shall be accomplished to ensure that airport personnel are
      informed in a timely manner of the transfer of CCI material.             

           c.  Storage and Transportation.                                     

                (1)  General.  Store and transfer CCI equipment and
      components in a manner that affords protection at least equal to
      that which is normally provided to weapons, computers,
      electronics equipment, etc., and ensures that access and
      accounting integrity is maintained.                                      

                (2)  Storage.  Handle CCI's in connection with
      warehouse functions provided they are under direct supervision of
      an individual who meets the access requirements of this chapter.         

                (3)   Transportation.                                          

                     (a)  General.  Ship CCI equipments and components
      by a traceable means in accordance with the following:                   

                          1  Within CONUS:                                     

                             a  Commercial carrier providing DOD
      Constant Surveillance Service (CSS)  (NOTE:  Contact the
      Transportation Officer of the nearest Defense Contract
      Administration Service Management Area (DCASMA) office for
      information concerning the carriers servicing the specific
      geographic area.  CSS is not available overseas.                         

                             b  U.S. registered mail provided the mail
      does not at any time pass out of U.S. control.                           

                             c  Authorized FAA or contractor courier.
      For contractor couriers, the authorization to act as a courier or
      escort for CCI equipment and components may be granted by the
      servicing FAA security element in accordance with FAA Order
      1600.2C.                                                                 

                             d  Diplomatic courier service.
                          2   Outside CONUS:  In foreign countries
      where there are two or more FAA facilities where FAA personnel
      are stationed, foreign nationals who are employed by the FAA may
      transport CCI's provided:                                                

                             a  There is a signature record that
      provides continuous accountability for custody of the shipment
      from pickup to ultimate destination, and                                 

                             b  There is a constant U.S. presence (for
      example, a U.S. person accompanies a foreign driver in couriering
      the material), or                                                        

                             c  The material is contained in a closed
      vehicle or shipping container which is locked and has a shipping
      seal that will prevent undetected access to the enclosed
      material.                                                                

           d.  Accounting.                                                     

                (1)  Within the FAA, CCI equipments shall be delivered
      to a primary FAA COMSEC account.                                         

                (2)  The COMSEC Custodian shall initially receipt for
      the CCI equipment, and will be responsible for ensuring that
      before further distribution is made the individual CCI items are
      entered into the Property Management System for the using
      facility, Region, or Center as appropriate.                              

      NOTE:  The custodian should coordinate with the responsible
      property management officer to ensure that the requirements of
      this order are met.                                                      

                (3)  CCI equipments shall be accounted for by serial
      number.  CCI components, installed in this equipment, do not
      require separate accountability.  Spares or other uninstalled CCI
      components shall be accounted for by quantity.                           

                (4)  The accounting system must provide the following:         

                     (a)  Establish a central point designated by the
      Property Management Officer for the using facility, region or
      center for control of CCI equipments.                                    

                     (b)  The identification of CCI equipment and
      components which are lost.                                               

                     (c)  Individual accountability in order to support
      prosecution in cases which involve infractions that would be
      punishable under the United States Code or the Uniform Code of
      Military Justice.                                                        

                (5)  The manager having property management
      responsibility for the using facility region or center shall
      ensure that procedures are followed to permit entering CCI
      equipment into the Property Management System data base in such a
      way that equipments can be accurately inventoried when necessary.        

      133.  INVENTORIES.                                                       

           a.  CCI equipments shall be inventoried at least annually.
      This includes uninstalled CCI equipments.  An inventory should
      also be accomplished whenever there is a change of personnel
      responsible for the safekeeping or accounting of an
      organization's holdings of CCI equipments and components.
      Reports of inventory shall be submitted to the central control
      point established for control of CCI equipments.  Inventory
      records shall be maintained current for as long as the using
      facility, region or center maintains CCI assets.                         

           b.  Inability to reconcile an organization's holdings of CCI
      equipments and components with the record of accountability at
      the established central control point shall be reported as an
      insecurity in accordance with this order and AFR 56-12.                  

      134.  REPORTING INSECURITIES.                                            

           a.  Users of CCI must be familiar with the criteria that
      constitutes an insecurity as specified in AFR 56-12.                     

           b.  All insecurities involving CCI equipments or components
      shall be reported through COMSEC channels in accordance with the
      following:                                                               

                (1)  Keyed equipment.  Report insecurities involving
      keying material according to AFR 56-12.                                  

                (2)  Unkeyed equipment.  Insecurities involving unkeyed
      CCI equipments shall be reported in accordance with AFR 56-12 and
      applicable FAA property management directives concerning the
      responsibilities for safeguarding and protection of high value
      U.S. Government property.                                                

      135.  ROUTINE AND EMERGENCY DESTRUCTION.                                 

           a.  The routine and emergency destruction procedures of AFR
      56-5 apply to CCI equipments and components.                             

           b.  Routine destruction of CCI equipment and components by
      FAA users is not authorized.  Equipment that is inoperative or no
      longer required shall be reported to the FAA servicing security
      element with a request for disposition instructions.  The
      servicing security element will be responsible for coordinating
      all such requests with ACO-300 prior to any disposition of the
      equipment.                                                               

      136-144.  RESERVED.                                                      

                          FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                        PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                      DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

                          CHAPTER 7. SECURE VOICE                             

                             SECTION 1.  GENERAL                               

      145.  PURPOSE.  This chapter provides guidelines for use by the
      COMSEC custodian when dealing with the third generation or "user
      friendly" Secure Telephone Units; i.e., STU-III's, that are used
      to transmit classified information.                                      

      146.  TYPES AND MODELS OF STU-III.                                       

           a.  Type I.  These terminals are Controlled Cryptographic
      Items (CCI).  Type I STU-III terminals may be used to secure
      classified information, or unclassified but sensitive, voice or
      data communications when keyed with an appropriate level of
      keying material.  STU-III terminals are considered keyed when
      keying material has been loaded and an authorized Crypto Ignition
      Key (CIK) is inserted.  When keyed, Type I STU-III terminals must
      be safeguarded to the same classification level that the keying
      material being used is authorized to protect.  When the terminals
      are unkeyed, they are considered as high value property and are
      to be protected as CCI in accordance with provisions of NTISSI
      4001, Controlled Cryptographic Items, NTISSI 3013, Operational
      Security Doctrine for the secure Telephone Unit III (STU-III)
      Type 1 Terminal, AFSAL 4001A, Air Force COMSEC Publication
      Controlled Cryptographic Items and this order.                           

           b.  Type II.  Type II terminals may only be used with
      unclassified keying material.  Use of these terminals is not
      addressed in this chapter.                                               

      147.  DEFINITIONS.                                                       

           a.  Authentication Information.  Information which
      identifies a STU-III terminal.  Authentication information is
      specified for each STU-III key ordered and is included as a part
      of the key.  Each terminal's authentication information is
      displayed on the distant terminal during a secure call.
      Authentication information includes:                                     

                (1)  Classification level - the highest classification
      level authorized for an individual STU-III terminal.  During a
      secure call, the clearance level displayed on each terminal is
      the highest level common to both terminals, and is the authorized
      level for the call.                                                      

                (2)  Identification of the using organization (e.g.,
      FAA HQ, Wash. DC).                                                       

                (3)  Expiration date of the terminal's key.                    

                (4)  Foreign access to the terminal, where appropriate
      (e.g. CAN, US/KOR, US/NATO).                                             

           b.  Authorized Person.  A person who meets the access
      requirements of NTISSI/AFSAL No. 4001, Controlled Cryptographic
      Items, (AFR 56-20 when published), and this directive, and who
      has adequate clearance if classified material is involved.               

           c.  Crypto-Ignition Key (CIK).  A key storage device (KSD)
      which contains a portion of STU-III key(s) in encrypted form.
      Insertion of the CIK into the terminal(s) for which it was
      created allows the terminal(s) to be used in the secure mode;
      withdrawal disables the secure mode.                                     

           d.  CIK Information.  Split portions of an encrypted STU-III
      key, a part of which resides in the CIK, the other in the
      terminal.                                                                

           e.  Interoperable CIK.  A single CIK which may be programmed
      to work in more than one terminal.                                       

           f.  Key.  Information (usually a sequence of random binary
      digits) used to initially set up and to periodically change the
      operations performed in a crypto-equipment for purposes of
      encrypting or decrypting electronic signals; for determining
      electronic counter countermeasures (ECCM) patterns (e.g., for
      frequency hopping or spread spectrum); or for producing other
      keys.                                                                    

      NOTE:  Key replaces the terms "variable," "key(ing) variable,"
      and "cryptovariable".                                                    

           g.  Keyed Terminal.  A terminal which has been keyed, in
      which the CIK is inserted.                                               

           h.  Key Encryption Key (KEK).  A key that is used in the
      encryption and/or decryption of other keys for transmission
      (rekeying) or storage.                                                   

           i.  Key Storage Device (KSO).  The name given to the
      physical device that can be used as a fill device and also as a
      CIK for all Type 1 terminals.  It is a small device shaped like a
      physical key and contains passive memory.  When it is used to
      carry key to Type 1 terminals it is termed a fill device; when it
      is used to protect key that has been loaded into Type 1
      terminals, it is termed a CIK.                                           

           j.  Master CIK.  A CIK which may be used to create
      additional CIKs for a terminal as they are required, up to the
      terminal's maximum.                                                      

           k.  Micro-KMODC.  An MS-DOS compatible personal computer
      with a custom hardware/software configuration which, when
      connected to a Type 1 terminal, may be used to electronically
      order and receive STU-III keys.                                          

           1.  Unkeyed Terminal.  A terminal which contains no keys or
      one which has been keyed but from which the CIK has been removed
      and properly secured.                                                    

           m.  User Representative.  A person formally designated to
      order keys for STU-III terminals.                                        

           n.  U.S. Controlled Space.  An area, access to which is
      physically controlled by authorized U.S. Government personnel.           

      148.-150.  RESERVED.                                                     

                           SECTION 2.  EXCEPTIONS                              

      151.  REQUESTS FOR EXCEPTION.  Requests for exception to any of
      the provisions of this chapter must be submitted prior to
      implementation to the Emergency Operations Staff, ADA-20, who is
      Controlling Authority for the FAA STU-III Program.                       

      152.-153.  RESERVED.                                                     

          SECTION 3.  COMSEC CUSTODIAN DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES             

      154.  GENERAL.  The COMSEC Custodian handling STU-III key
      performs those responsibilities normally associated with handling
      and controlling other COMSEC material as specified in this order.
      The COMSEC Custodian is responsible for initial receipt of key,
      for storage until issued to a user, and for all accounting until
      the key is "destroyed."  Although the COMSEC Custodian may be
      the person who actually keys terminals and creates the associated
      CIK's, he or she may instead issue the key to authorized users,
      who load the key and create CIK's.  COMSEC Custodians are also
      responsible for the preparation of a number of control and
      accountability reports.                                                  

      155.  RECEIPT OF KEY.  The COMSEC Custodian will receive the key
      from the Key Management System (KMS) in the form of a key storage
      device, KSD-64A, used as a fill device.  The following applies:          

           a.  Fill Device Labels.  Each fill device will have an
      attached card label.  The card label will be removed by the
      COMSEC Custodian when the key in the fill device is loaded into a
      terminal.  The fill device card label contains space for the
      COMSEC Custodian to write the serial number of the terminal, the
      name of the each user, and the serial number of each KSD-64A that
      is used as a CIK for the terminal.  It is important that a local
      record be maintained of the terminal serial number as it relates
      to the key material identification (KMID) number (or Registration
      Number) binding.                                                         

            b.  Fill Device Packaging.  Fill devices will be shipped
      from the KMS packaged in heat sealed plastic bags.  Packaged fill
      devices will be placed in boxes with shipping papers (SF-153
      COMSEC Material Report).  The boxes will be double wrapped in
      accordance with appropriate COMSEC standards.  A copy of the
      SF-153 COMSEC Material Report must be signed by the COMSEC
      Custodian and returned as the receipt for the key.                       

           c.  Incoming Inspection.  The procedures for incoming
      inspection are as follows:                                               

                (1)  Inspect the package.  If any tampering is evident,
      submit a COMSEC incident report.                                         

                (2)  Take inventory of the package contents against the
      shipping papers.                                                         

                (3)  If all is in order, fill in the appropriate
      blocks, sign the enclosed receipt and return it to the
      KMS/Central Accounting Office (CAO).                                     

                (4)  If all is not in order, call the KMS immediately,
      note the discrepancy on the SF-153, and send it to the KMS/CAO.          

           d.  Storage and Protection of Key.  Fill devices stored by a
      COMSEC Custodian prior to loading into a terminal should remain
      sealed in the plastic bag.  The storage of the fill devices must
      be in accordance with procedures prescribed by this order for the
      storage of classified COMSEC keying material.                            

      156.  ACCOUNTING FOR KEY.  The COMSEC Custodian plays a critical
      role in accounting for STU-III key.  The Custodian is supported
      by the STU-III CAO and the cognizant Central Office of Record
      (COR).                                                                   

           a.  STU-III Type I Key.  The STU-III Type I operational and
      Type I seed key is accounted for by registration number
      Accounting Legend Code 1 (ALC-1).  All test key is unclassified
      and assigned ALC-4 (i.e. after receipt at the user COMSEC
      account, they are locally accountable).                                  

      NOTE:  TOP SECRET Type I operational key requires two person
      integrity handling in accordance with National doctrine, unless a
      specific exemption has been granted by the controlling authority
      (ADA-20) with approval of the National Manager (NSA).                    

           b.  Reports.  In addition to complying with all cognizant
      COR rules and requirements, the COMSEC Custodian is responsible
      for submitting the following reports directly to the KMS/CAO:            

                (1)  Key Receipts.  An SF-153 COMSEC Material Report
      will be included in each key order shipped from the KMS.  The
      Custodian must verify that all listed devices were received and
      then fill in the appropriate blocks, sign the SF-153, and return
      the original to the KMS/CAO.                                             

                (2)  Transfer Reports.  The sending COMSEC Custodian
      must generate an SF-153 Transfer Report whenever STU-III key is
      shipped between COMSEC accounts.  A copy of the report must be
      sent to the KMS/CAO.  The receiving Custodian must receipt for
      the keys and send a copy of the receipt to the KMS/CAO.                  

      Only STU-III key should be listed on Transfer Reports sent to the
      KMS/CAO.  Transfer reports for other types of key and for COMSEC
      equipment should be sent to the appropriate COR (for FAA accounts
      the COR for COMSEC materials other than STU-III is normally the
      US Air Force Cryptologic Support Center (USAFCSC), Kelly Air
      Force Base, TX).                                                         

                (3)  Destruction Reports.  The COMSEC Custodian must
      generate and submit an SF-153 Destruction Report to the KMS/CAO
      when Type I operational key is loaded into a terminal or
      zeroized.  Destruction Reports generated for key loaded in a
      terminal will contain the signature of the Custodian or alternate
      and the serial number of the STU-III terminal in the Remarks
      Column (Block 13).  Destruction Reports for TOP SECRET Type I
      operational key require two signatures, that of the Custodian or
      alternate and a witness.  Destruction Reports for zeroized key
      require two signatures.  Do not mix STU-III key destruction
      reports with other key transactions.  Destruction Reports are not
      required for Type I seed key successfully loaded into a STU-III
      terminal since the electronic conversion call to the KMS results
      in the automatic generation of a Key Conversion Notice (KCN)
      which serves as the Destruction Report.  The KSD-64A should not
      be physically destroyed by breaking or smashing the device as
      this does not guarantee destruction of the key material in the
      device.  For approved destruction procedures refer to the current
      STU-III Key Management Plan and the servicing security element.          

                (4)  Possession Reports.  Possession Reports are used
      when a shipment of key material is received without any
      accompanying paperwork.  The receiving Custodian should generate
      an SF-153 Possession Report and submit it to the KMS/CAO and
      other locations as directed by his COR.  Do not mix STU-III key
      Possession Reports with other key Possession Reports.                    

      157.  NOTICES FROM THE KMS/CAO.                                          

           a.  Key Conversion Notices.  When Type 1 seed key is loaded
      into a terminal, the user must call the KMS to obtain (convert it
      to) the Type I operational key.  The KMS/CAO generates a Key
      Conversion Notice which is sent to the accountable COMSEC
      Custodian informing him or her of the KMID numbers of seed key
      converted to operational key.  This notice indicates the serial
      number of the terminal into which the seed was loaded, the KMID,
      and the date of conversion.  The Custodian should verify that
      this is the terminal in which the key was loaded in order to
      maintain accurate records.  Additionally, this notice must be
      used by the COMSEC Custodian to ensure that all seed keys listed
      have, in fact, been converted.  Any discrepancies must be
      immediately reported as a COMSEC incident.  Delay in reporting
      constitutes a reportable COMSEC incident.  The KCN also documents
      any Type 1 operational key that has been rekeyed before
      notification of a destruction is received at the KMS/CAO.                

           b.  Tracers.  When a key shipment has been sent via
      registered mail to a COMSEC account and the SF-153 key receipt is
      not returned to the KMS/CAO within 30 days, or when key is sent
      by DCS to a COMSEC account and the SF-153-30 key receipt is not
      returned within 45 days, the KMS/CAO will send a Tracer Report to
      the Custodian to determine if the key has been received.  If the
      Custodian has received the key, the key receipt should have the
      applicable blocks filled in and should be submitted to the
      KMS/CAO.  If the key has not been received, the Custodian should
      immediately contact the KMS/CAO for instructions.                        

      158.-160.  RESERVED.
                       SECTION 4.  KEYING OF TERMINALS                         

      161.  INITIAL KEYING OF TERMINALS.                                       

           a.  Procedures for the initial keying of terminals differ
      slightly depending on the type of key.  A separate procedure for
      each type of key (seed and operational) is described below.
      These procedures may vary if a master CIK is desired and may vary
      among terminal vendors.  For detailed information on the specific
      key loading procedures for terminals, see the vendor's key
      loading instructions.                                                    

           b.  CIK's are created for a terminal during the key loading
      procedure.  Therefore, the user organization must decide if a
      master CIK should be created to allow CIK's to be programmed at a
      later time, or decide the number of regular CIKs needed for each
      terminal prior to loading the key.  The STU-III permits creation
      of a master CIK, which allows additional CIKs to be created at a
      later time.                                                              

      162.-163.  RESERVED.                                                     

                         SECTION 5.  ACCOUNTABILITY                            

      164.  CRYPTO IGNITION KEY HANDLING AND LOCAL ACCOUNTING.  To
      operate in the secure mode, a CIK must be inserted into a
      terminal and turned.  This paragraph discusses the accountability
      requirements prescribed for CIK's in terms of guidance in the
      STU-III doctrine and factors that affect both the accounting
      procedures and the number of CIK's required for an organization.
      It is understood that each user organization will disseminate any
      detailed or clarifying doctrinal guidance.                               

           a.  Local Accountability Requirements.                              

                (1)  CIK's are locally accountable.  This means that a
      local record of the CIK's and the persons to whom CIK's for each
      terminal are issued should be maintained.  The COMSEC Custodian
      or an authorized user should record the serial number of the
      STU-III terminal, the KSD-64A serial numbers, and the name of
      each terminal user in the appropriate spaces on the back of the
      fill device card.  Each card is perforated so that it can be
      detached and retained by the Custodian or an authorized user in a
      3x5 card file.                                                           

                (2)  Taking a periodic inventory of the CIK's for each
      terminal is encouraged.                                                  

                (3)  When loss of a CIK is locally reported, the
      Custodian or the authorized user can disable use of that CIK on
      the appropriate terminal.                                                

                (4)  Local guidance to terminal users concerning CIK
      accountability should be formulated and distributed
      appropriately.                                                           

           b.  Crypto Ignition Key Management.  There are a number of
      factors that affect the management and control of CIK's to
      include those listed below.                                              

                (1)  Multiple Terminal Users.  Each user activity or
      office must determine how many people will be allowed to use a
      terminal, which method(s) of multiple use will be allowed, and
      how many CIK's are required.  The methods for supporting multiple
      users of a terminal are as follows:                                      

                     (a)  Shared CIK'S.  A single CIK can be shared
      among a number of users.  During normal duty hours, this CIK can
      be left in the terminal if the terminal is located in a secure
      area where no unauthorized person could gain access to the
      terminal.                                                                

                     (b)  Multiple CIK'S.  STU-III terminals will
      support up to eight CIK's for each key.  The identification
      information displayed during a secure call will be the same for
      each of the eight CIK'S, and any of the eight CIK's can be used
      to operate the terminal.  These CIK's can be issued to several
      users.                                                                   

                     (c)  Multiple Key Sets per Terminal.  STU-III
      vendors offer terminals which can be filled with more than one
      key at a time.                                                           

                (2)  Multiple Terminals per Crypto Ignition Key.
      STU-III vendors offer a feature which will allow a single CIK to
      be associated with more than one terminal (an "interoperable"
      CIK).  This feature requires a single CIK to be programmed by
      each terminal with which it is to be used.  The use of multiple
      terminals per CIK complicates local accountability and security
      procedures, but permits greater flexibility for the user.                

                (3)  Master Crypto Ignition Keys.  STU-III's contain a
      master CIK feature which allows additional CIK's to be created at
      a later date.  However, the total number of CIK's per key stored
      in a terminal may never exceed eight.                                    

      165.-166.  RESERVED.                                                     

                            SECTION 6.  REKEYING                               

      167.  ELECTRONIC REKEYING.  The STU-III KMS provides for
      electronic rekeying of Type I terminals through a rekey call to
      the KMS.  (The Type 2 terminals cannot be electronically
      rekeyed.)  During this process, the terminals identification
      information is not changed.  Only the terminal's cryptographic
      information is changed.  The KMS supports electronic rekey over
      the public telephone networks (1-800 service and regular
      commercial networks) and the DOD AUTOVON network.  The situations
      in which electronic rekeying is performed are:                           

           a.  Initial Keying.  When a terminal is physically keyed
      with Type 1 seed key, a call to obtain Type I operational key is
      necessary.  When a terminal is physically keyed with Type I
      operational key, a call to the KMS rekey number is strongly
      recommended to obtain a current copy of the Compromised Key List
      (CKL) and the Compromise Information Message (CIM).                      

           b.  Scheduled Rekeying.  The terminal user is required to
      call the KMS for an electronic rekey at least once each year.
      Some terminals display the key expiration date automatically each
      time the CIK is inserted.                                                

           c.  When Rekey Notification is Received from the KMS.  A
      universal rekey notification to call for a rekey will be
      promulgated by mail or AUTODIN to all COMSEC Custodians.  The
      COMSEC Custodians will be responsible for directing each of their
      terminal users to call for a rekey.  In addition, the STU-III KMS
      has the capability to use the CIM message to notify STU-III
      terminals via the terminal display to call for a rekey.  (In
      those circumstances where a terminal user cannot call for an
      electronic rekey when such a notice is received, the terminal
      will have to be physically rekeyed.)                                     

      NOTE:  Electronic rekeying is performed by placing a secure call
      to the KMS through toll-free 800 service, AUTOVON, or direct dial
      lines.  The rekey telephone numbers are listed in the STU-III
      User's Manual.                                                           

      168.-170.  RESERVED.                                                     

                        SECTION 7.  PHYSICAL SECURITY                          

      171.  UNKEYED TERMINAL - TYPE 1.  In the unkeyed mode, the
      terminal can be used to place only unsecured, unclassified calls
      which are not sensitive.  An unkeyed terminal must be protected
      in accordance with the requirements of NTISSI/AFSAL 4001, and
      chapter 6 of this order.                                                 

      172.  KEYED TERMINAL.  When the terminal is keyed, it may be used
      in the secure mode by authorized persons only.  The terminal must
      be afforded protection commensurate with the classification of
      the key it contains as required by NACSI 4005/AFR 56-13, and
      Chapter 5, of this order.  When persons in an area are not
      cleared to the level of the keyed terminal, it must be under the
      operational control and within view of at least one appropriately
      cleared, authorized person.
      173.  TERMINAL DISPLAY.  Proper use requires strict attention to
      the authentication information displayed on the terminal during
      each secure call.  When two terminals communicate in the secure
      mode, each terminal automatically displays authentication
      information of the distant terminal.  The information displayed
      indicates the system capacity, and does not authenticate the
      person using the terminal.  Therefore, users must use judgement
      in determining need-to-know when communicating sensitive but
      unclassified or classified information.  If the display fails the
      terminal must not be used in the secure mode.                            

           a.  Authentication.  Authentication information is
      representative of the distant terminal and should match the
      distant user.  If there is question as to the validity of this
      information, sensitive but unclassified and classified
      information should not be communicated, even though voice
      recognition may be possible.                                             

           b.  Display.  When the display indicates that the distant
      terminal's key has expired, this could be an indication of
      unauthorized system access.  If the period is excessive (e.g.
      more than two months), users should not exchange sensitive
      unclassified or classified information.                                  

           c.  Classification Level.  Users must adhere to the
      classification level indicated on the terminal display.  Because
      of the interoperability among terminals of different
      classification levels, the display may indicate a level less than
      the actual classification of either terminal's own key(s) (e.g.,
      when a SECRET terminal calls a CONFIDENTIAL terminal,
      "CONFIDENTIAL" is displayed on both terminals as the approved
      level for the call).  Therefore users must observe the display
      with each call and limit the level of information accordingly.           

           d.  System Testing.  During system testing, authentication
      information on the display may vary, as required for the test;
      however, the display will always indicate that the call is for
      TEST purposes only.  Classified information may not be
      transmitted during system tests.                                         

      174.  USE BY OTHER U.S. PERSONNEL.                                       

           a.  Keyed Type 1 terminals may be used by or under the
      direct supervision of authorized persons only.  When
      operationally required, authorized persons may permit others not
      normally authorized to use the keyed terminal (e.g., persons not
      assigned to the FAA office, service or facility identified in the
      display and persons whose clearance does not meet the level
      indicated on the display) under the following conditions:                

                (1)  The call must be placed by an authorized person.          

                (2)  After reaching the called party, the caller must
      identify the party on whose behalf the call is being made,
      indicating their level of clearance.  Again, the maximum
      classification level may not exceed that level which appears on
      the terminal display.                                                    

           b.  Uncleared or otherwise unauthorized persons must not be
      permitted to overhear classified conversations or to have access
      to classified or sensitive information transmitted over the
      terminal.                                                                

      175.  USE BY FOREIGN NATIONALS.  NTISSI 4001/AFR 56-20 and
      Chapter 6 of this order, limit access to CCI equipments to U.S.
      citizens and permanently admitted resident aliens who are
      employees of the U.S. Government.  For the FAA prior approval of
      the Manager, Emergency Operations Staff, ADA-20, is required for
      any exception to this policy.                                            

      176.  STORAGE.  Type 1 terminals must be stored as specified in
      NTISSI/AFSAL 4001, and Chapter 6, of this order.  Foreign
      nationals who are employed by the U.S. Government at locations
      described in paragraph 179 below, may handle Type 1 terminals in
      connection with warehouse functions, provided they are under the
      direct supervision of an individual who meets the access
      requirements of NTISSI/AFSAL 4001, and Chapter 6.                        

      177.  USE OF THE SECURE DATA MODE.  During data transmissions,
      each Type I terminal must be manned by authorized persons.  The
      data must be sent only after the sending and receiving parties
      have observed the terminal display and have assured themselves of
      the appropriateness of the information transfer (i.e., is the
      sending/receiving party's organization level in the terminal
      display?).  If the terminal is attached to a computer, computer
      security and system issues should be addressed separately with
      the servicing security element prior to start of operations.
      Additional assistance in the area of computer security is
      available if needed from ACO-340, Washington, D.C.  It is
      important that these issues be addressed because of the inherent
      interoperability of all STU-III terminals.                               

      178.  AFTER HOURS PROTECTION.  When authorized persons are not
      present, the CIK must be removed from the terminal and properly
      protected as specified in this chapter.  Area controls must be
      sufficient to ensure access and accounting integrity of the
      terminal.                                                                

                         SECTION 8.  TRANSPORTATION                            

      179.  TYPE I TERMINALS.                                                  

           a.  Type 1 terminals must be unkeyed during shipment.  In no
      instance may KSDs containing seed or operational KEK's or CIK's
      be included in the same container or shipment as Type 1
      terminals.                                                               

           b.  Type I terminals may be transported by any means that
      provides continuous accountability and protection against losses
      and unauthorized access while in transit.  These criteria are
      satisfied by any of the following:                                       

                (1)  FAA courier authorized in accordance with
      provisions of Order 1600.2C.                                             

                (2)  FAA authorized contractor/company, U.S. citizen
      courier.                                                                 

                (3)  U.S. Registered Mail provided it does not at any
      time pass out of U.S. control and does not pass through a foreign
      postal system or any foreign inspection.                                 

                (4)  Commercial carriers under constant surveillance
      service (CSS) in CONUS only.  FAA elements may obtain information
      concerning these services from the General Services
      Administration (GSA), ATTN:  Traffic and Travel Services.
                (5)  U.S. military or military-contractor air service
      (e.g., Military Airlift Command, LOGAIR, QUICKTRANS) provided the
      requirements for CSS are observed.                                       

                (6)  U.S. Diplomatic Courier Service (overseas service
      only).  FAA STU-III units intended for overseas installation in
      FAA facilities or office spaces will be transferred to the
      Department of State for transportation to the overseas location.
      All movements of this type will be coordinated through the
      Manager, Emergency Operations Staff, ADA-20, Washington, D.C.            

                (7)  Armed Forces/Defense Courier Service (ARFCOS)
      outside the 48 contiguous states when no other means of secure
      transportation is available.                                             

      180.-182.  RESERVED.                                                     

                          SECTION 9.  INSTALLATION                             

      183.  GENERAL.  Type 1 terminals may be installed in U.S.
      controlled spaces (including vehicles) and in residences of U.S.
      Government officials.  The fundamental purpose of the Type 1
      terminal is to provide a readily available, easy to use secure
      telephone capability for all personnel who have a need to discuss
      classified or sensitive information.                                     

           a.  Acoustic Security.  Local acoustic security is an
      important consideration.  The greatest security threat to
      telephone conversations is where they are most vulnerable to
      hostile intercept and exploitation -- during transmission over
      the telephone network.  Therefore, a common-sense approach should
      be followed on acoustic security for the Type 1 installation.            

           b.  Servicing Security Element.  Specific provisions for
      achieving acoustical security should be determined in
      coordination with the servicing security element for each FAA
      using organization prior to STU-III installation.  The manager or
      supervisor having responsibility for the STU-III terminal is
      responsible for ensuring that acoustical security measures are
      enforced to preclude unauthorized overhearing of classified or
      sensitive but unclassified telephonic discussions.                       

      184.  RESIDENCES.  Type 1 terminals installed in residences may
      be used only by the persons for whom they are installed.  All of
      the security requirements for preventing unauthorized access to
      classified and sensitive information, and to the keyed terminal
      must be observed.                                                        

           a.  The terminal must be located in an area of the home
      where family members or other unauthorized persons will not
      overhear or view classified or sensitive information.                    

           b.  The CIK must be removed from the terminal following each
      use and kept in the personal possession of the user, or properly
      stored.                                                                  

           c.  If the CIK is stored in the residence and the associated
      terminal is used to protect classified information, the CIK must
      be protected in a GSA-approved security container.                       

           d.  When the terminal is used in the data mode, classified
      information that is viewed on the screen should be removed as
      soon as possible, and should not be printed out unless there is
      appropriate classified storage.                                          

           e.  Installation of STU-III equipments in residences will
      require the prior approval of the servicing security element and
      the responsible COMSEC custodian.                                        

      185.-186.  RESERVED.                                                     

                          SECTION 10.  MAINTENANCE                             

      187.  GENERAL.  NTISSI/AFSAL 4001 contains the training
      requirements which apply to all persons who maintain COMSEC
      equipment, to include the Type 1 terminal.  Authorized
      maintenance personnel need not be cleared unless they require
      access to classified COMSEC information to perform terminal
      maintenance.                                                             

      188.  ACCESS.  Maintenance personnel may not have access to a
      terminal which has been keyed for normal operations.  Therefore,
      any terminal which will be removed or disassembled for repair
      should first be zeroized.  However, if terminal malfunction
      prevents zeroization, the terminal may be returned, minus the
      CIK, which must be retained in appropriate storage by authorized
      persons.  When an FAA terminal is removed from an operational
      area by maintenance personnel the associated KEK's will be
      zeroized.                                                                

      189.-190.  RESERVED.                                                     

               SECTION 11.  PROTECTION OF KEY STORAGE DEVICES                  

      191.  GENERAL.  When they contain KEK's or CIK information, KSD's
      must be protected against unauthorized access.  When they contain
      none of the above information, KSDs require no special handling
      or protection, and their loss is not a reportable insecurity.            

      192.  FILL DEVICES.  Fill devices containing KEK's must be
      safeguarded in accordance with Annex B of NACSI 4005/AFR 56-13,
      and Chapter 5 of this order.                                             

           a.  Access.  An appropriate clearance is required for access
      to a fill device when it contains a classified operational KEK.
      Although seed KEK's are handled as UNCLASSIFIED CRYPTO, COMSEC
      Custodians and users must also be appropriately cleared to
      receive seed KEK's with classified data.                                 

           b.  Classification and Accountability.  See Section 3, of
      this Chapter.                                                            

           c.  Transportation.                                                 

                (1)  Within the U.S.  Fill devices containing
      classified operational KEK's should routinely be transported by
      cleared designated courier or ARFCOS.  However, if distribution
      is to a location which cannot reasonably be served by the above
      means, or the urgency for delivery precludes their use,
      operational KEK's classified up through SECRET may be transported
      by U.S. Registered Mail.  Seed KEK's and unclassified operational
      KEK's may be transported by any means prescribed for transporting
      classified COMSEC material or by U.S. Registered Mail.                   

                (2)  Outside of the U.S.  Fill devices containing
      operational KEK's, regardless of classification, must be
      transported in accordance with arrangements made with the U.S.
      Department of State Office of Communications Security.  Seed
      KEK's, regardless of clearance data may be transported by any
      means prescribed for operational KEK'S.                                  

                (3)  Quantity.  Normally, up to 50 operational and/or
      seed KEK's may be shipped in a single package.  However, when for
      emergency reasons classified operational KEK's must be
      transported by U.S. Registered Mail within the U.S., no more than
      25 may be included in a single package.                                  

           d.  Reserve Key.  Although there is no prohibition against a
      COMSEC Custodian holding some level of seed or operational key in
      reserve for emergency use (e.g., if a terminal fails), that level
      should be kept to a minimum consistent with operational
      requirements, in order to limit the exposure of keys in long-term
      storage.                                                                 

                (1)  COMSEC Custodians must notify the KMS of damaged,
      broken, or otherwise unusable fill devices and return them to the
      KMS for disposition.  The devices must be returned at their
      original classification.                                                 

                (2)  A seed or operational key is considered destroyed
      after it has been loaded in a terminal.  Seed KEK's are
      automatically dropped from central accountability once the
      terminal has been rekeyed through a call to the KMS.  A formal
      destruction report is not required.                                      

                     (a)  COMSEC Custodians must submit a formal
      destruction report for operational KEKs which have been manually
      loaded into the terminal, where a call is not made to the KMS for
      rekeying (a witness to the destruction is not required since the
      terminal records the identification of the key loaded).                  

                     (b)  Manually loaded operational KEK's not
      replaced through a call to the KMS or reported destroyed by a
      destruction report will appear on the COMSEC Custodian's next
      scheduled inventory.                                                     

           f.  Unused KEK(s).  An unused KEK which has passed its
      expiration date should be zeroized (in a Type I terminal) by the
      COMSEC Custodian.  Zeroization must be witnessed by another
      authorized person (e.g., the alternate custodian) who must also
      sign the destruction report submitted to the KMS by the COMSEC
      custodian.  Once zeroized, the KSD may then be used as a CIK.            

      193.  CRYPTO-IGNITION KEYS (CIKS).                                       

           a.  General.  At least one CIK must be created immediately
      following the manual loading of a KEK into a terminal.
      Additional CIK'S, up to the terminal's maximum, may be created at
      this time; or, if the terminal design supports it, the first CIK
      may be designated as a master CIK, allowing subsequent creation
      of additional CIK's as they are required.  Since CIK's permit the
      terminal to be used in the secure mode, they must be protected
      against unauthorized access and use.  The number of CIK's created
      should be kept to the minimum required for operational necessity.        

           b.  Access.  CIK's may normally be retained in the personal
      custody of authorized persons, who must protect them as valuable
      personal property.  Any person who may have unrestricted access
      to the keyed terminal may retain the CIK.                                

           c.  Accountability.  CIK's should be accounted for locally
      to minimize insecurities associated with their use.  Local
      accounting includes maintaining a record of all CIK's created
      along with the names, organizations/locations of the persons to
      whom they are issued.  In addition, the user should verify at
      least once a year to the COMSEC Custodian that he or she still
      holds the CIK.  Verification of CIK holdings should be in writing
      from user to COMSEC account in accordance with procedural
      instruction published by the respective user organizations or the
      Controlling Authority.                                                   

           d.  Transportation.  CIK's may be transported by any means
      prescribed for seed KEKs, or on the person of an authorized user.
      CIKs must always be shipped separately from terminals.                   

           e.  Protection in Use.  During operational hours the CIK may
      be left in the terminal so long as authorized persons are present
      and the terminal is under the continuous visual supervision and
      physical control of an authorized user.  If the area is left
      unattended, authorized persons are not present, or if for any
      reason it is not possible for an authorized user to maintain
      constant visual surveillance and physical control over the
      terminal, the CIK will be removed from the terminal and
      maintained in the personal possession of an authorized user.  In
      the event that the CIK is to be kept in the same room as the
      terminal, the CIK must be afforded protection commensurate with
      the classification of the keyed terminal (e.g., in a GSA-approved
      security container for CONFIDENTIAL, SECRET and TOP SECRET).             

           f.  Losses.
                (1)  Loss of a CIK must be promptly reported to the
      responsible COMSEC Custodian, who must initiate immediate action
      to delete that CIK from all terminals with which it was
      associated.  All losses shall be reported within 72 hours of the
      loss to the responsible FAA COMSEC Custodian.                            

                (2)  In the event of the loss of an unkeyed terminal,
      the associated CIK(s) must be protected at the classification
      level of the key.  Absence of the terminal prevents the erasure
      of the CIK information in the terminal; therefore, the CIK must
      be zeroized, or protected at the level of the terminal when
      keyed.                                                                   

           g.  Disposition.  Once a CIK has been disassociated from a
      terminal (either through deletion of the CIK from the terminal,
      or zeroization of the associated seed or operational KEK in the
      terminal), the CIK requires no special controls and may be
      retained for further use in the same or other terminals.                 

           h.  Master CIK.  The master CIK should be subject to
      additional controls to prevent its loss or use to make
      unauthorized CIK's or unauthorized secure calls.  Master CIK's
      should be kept under the personal control of an authorized person
      who has been briefed on its sensitivity and the requirements for
      its control.                                                             

                (1)  The master CIK should be maintained in a GSA
      approved security container except when it is required to create
      other CIK's or to place secure calls.                                    

                (2)  Storage of the master CIK must be commensurate
      with the classification of the associated KEK.                           

           i.  Interoperable CIK.  An interoperable CIK may be created
      for concurrent use with one of the keys in up to four Type 1
      terminals.  Authentication information associated with the
      interoperable CIK (i.e., organization and clearance level) must
      be representative of every person with access to this CIK.  If
      the clearance level varies between terminals, any person with
      access to the interoperable CIK must be cleared to the highest
      level of the associated key.  While use of an interoperable CIK
      provides users operational flexibility, COMSEC Custodians should
      assure that the appropriate accounting is maintained and that
      losses are acted upon promptly.  It is important that the
      custodian be aware of the status of an interoperable CIK since
      the terminals in which it is used will probably not be colocated
      and each terminal may also have other CIK's associated with it.
      For these reasons, it is recommended that an interoperable CIK
      remain at all times in the personal possession of a single
      individual assigned responsibility for its use.                          

      194.  PROTECTION AND USE OF THE MICRO-KMODC.  The micro-KMODC may
      be used to electronically order and receive keys.  User
      representatives may order keys, but only appropriately cleared
      COMSEC Custodians may receive keys.  The following guidelines
      apply:                                                                   

           a.  Location.  There are no restrictions on where the
      micro-KMODC may be installed.  However, during use, controls must
      be instituted to prevent unauthorized access to the system and
      its keys.                                                                

           b.  Classifications.  All classifications of key may be
      ordered through a micro-KMODC.  However, only unclassified
      operational KEKs, and all seed KEKs regardless of their clearance
      data, may be received at the micro-KMODC.                                

           c.  Disks.  Floppy disks containing seed and operational
      KEK's received at the micro-KMODC must be labelled and handled as
      UNCLASSIFIED CRYPTO material, and must remain under the local
      control of the COMSEC Custodian.  Each KEK on the disk is
      centrally accountable to the KMS.  A receipt is automatically
      generated for these keys between the micro-KMODC and the KMODC,
      and the appropriate COR notified.  Therefore, a separate
      possession report is not required.  KEK's which remain in the
      COMSEC Custodian's account, whether on the disk or in a fill
      device, will be subject to continuous central accounting until
      converted (seed KEK's) or reported destroyed (operational KEK's).        

           d.  Destruction.  When the floppy disks will no longer be
      used for storage of keys, they must be destroyed in accordance
      with NTISSI 4004/AFR 56-5.                                               

      195.-198.  RESERVED.                                                     

              SECTION 12.  DESTRUCTION AND EMERGENCY PROTECTION                

      199.  GENERAL REQUIREMENT.  The provisions of NTISSI 4004/AFR
      56-5, must be followed in the disposal and emergency protection
      of Type 1 terminals and KSD's used as fill devices and CIK'S.            

      200.  RESERVED.                                                          

                    SECTION 13.  REPORTABLE INSECURITIES                       

      201.  INSECURE PRACTICE/COMSEC INCIDENT HANDLING.                        

           a.  General.  With any secure communications system,
      incidents and compromises of terminals and key are possible.  The
      design of the STU-III terminals and keying concept minimizes the
      threat of compromised traffic; therefore, compromise recovery is
      focused on preventing an adversary from posing as a valid user
      (e.g. a keyed terminal is lost and someone is pretending to be
      the individual identified by the terminal's key).  This paragraph
      provides an introduction into the compromise recovery feature for
      Type I terminals.  For Type 2 terminals, there is no compromise
      recovery capability available.                                           

           b.  Compromise Types.  The terminal users and COMSEC
      Custodians are primarily responsible for detecting potential
      compromises and following through with necessary reporting
      procedures.  These potential compromises are broken into two
      classes:  insecure practices/locally reportable events; and,
      COMSEC incidents/centrally reportable events.                            

                (1)  Insecure Practices/Locally Reportable Events.
      Insecure practices are not in and of themselves COMSEC incidents,
      but could lead to loss of integrity of the user's information as
      well as information of other system users.  For this reason,
      insecure practices should be managed locally.  Examples of
      locally reportable events are the loss of a CIK, and failure to
      rekey a terminal within two months of the end of the
      cryptoperiod.  STU-III doctrine contains a complete listing of
      insecure practices.  Incidents of this type shall be reported to
      the servicing security element for the region or center
      concerned.                                                               

                (2)  COMSEC Incidents/Centrally Reportable.  Centrally
      reportable events are reported to the NSA by secure phone,
      AUTODIN, or registered mail.  The AUTODIN reports should be sent
      to:  DIRNSA FT GEO G MEADE MD//S2// (Reports of insecurities
      involving KEK's must include the assigned KEK identification
      number, whether or not there were any CIK's involved, and whether
      they were under protection when the insecurity occurred.)  The
      following are examples of centrally reportable incidents:                

                     (a)  Loss of a master CIK.                                

                     (b)  Failure to zeroize CIK information from a
      Type I terminal within 72 hours of the loss of a CIK.                    

                     (c)  Failure of the COMSEC Custodian to notify the
      KMS that a seed KEK listed on the conversion notice still exists
      in his or her COMSEC account.                                            

                     (d)  Use in the secure mode of a terminal whose
      display is inoperable.                                                   

                     (e)  Failure to adequately protect or zeroize a
      CIK that is associated with an unkeyed terminal which is lost.           

                     (f)  Indication in the terminals display that the
      distant terminal contains compromised key.                               

      202.-204.  RESERVED.                                                     

                       SECTION 14.  RECORDS RETENTION                          

      205.  General.  In addition to the normal records which are
      retained for accounting purposes, certain information must be
      kept to facilitate the automated Federal Secure Voice System
      compromise recovery mechanism.  The following information must be
      maintained for each KEK until it is truly destroyed (i.e.,
      finally zeroized from the terminal or overwritten by a new KEK):         

           a.  The identification of the terminal into which each KEK
      was loaded.                                                              

           b.  The identification of all CIK's associated with each KEK
      by terminal.                                                             

           c.  The identification of all terminals associated with each
      CIK, by CIK.                                                             

      NOTE:  This information may be recorded on the card which
      accompanies each fill device or it may be computerized.                  

      206.-208.  RESERVED.                                                     

                       FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                     PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                   DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

                   APPENDIX 1. REQUIRED FORMS AND REPORTS                     

          Form Number          Unit of             Title
                               Issue                                           

      1.  AFCOMSEC Form 3      Sheet          Record of Custodian              

      2.  AFCOMSEC Form 9      Sheet          Cryptographic Access
                                              Certificate                      

      3.  AFCOMSEC Form 14     Sheet          COMSEC Material Voucher
                                              and Package Register             

      4.  AFCOMSEC Form 16     Sheet          COMSEC Account Daily-
                                              Shift Inventory                  

      5.  FAA Form 1600.8      Sheet          Visitor Register
                                              (Stock No. 0052-00-91
                                              -2000)                           

      6.  FAA Form 1600.54     Sheet          Notification of Personnel
                                              Security Action
                                              (Stock No. 0052-00-869
                                              -4000)                           

      7.  SF-153               Sheet          COMSEC Material Report           

      8.  SF-700               Sheet          Security Container
                                              Information
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-214-5372)         

      9.  SF-701               Sheet          Activity Security Check
                                              - list.
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-213-7899)         

      10.  SF-702              Sheet          Security Container Check
                                              Sheet NSN 7540-01-213
                                              -7900                            

                                              (NSN:  7540-01-213-7900)
      11.  SF-703              Sheet          TOP SECRET Cover Sheet
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-213-7901)         

      12.  SF-704              Sheet          SECRET Cover Sheet
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-213-7902)         

      13.  SF-705              Sheet          CONFIDENTIAL Cover Sheet
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-213-7903)         

      14.  SF-706              Pack           TOP SECRET Label
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-207-5536)         

      15.  SF-707              Pack           SECRET Label
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-207-5537)         

      16.  SF-708              Pack           CONFIDENTIAL Label
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-207-5538)         

      17.  SF-709              Pack           CLASSIFIED Label
                                              (NSN:  7540-01-207-5540)         

      NOTE:  Ordering information for the above forms is as follows:           

                a.  FAA Forms:  Orders for additional copies of FAA
      forms should be submitted to the FAA Depot, Mike Monroney
      Aeronautical Center, ATTN:  AAC-434, P.O. Box 25082, Oklahoma
      City, Oklahoma 73125.                                                    

                b.  AFCOMSEC forms should be ordered by letter request
      60 days before current supply is depleted.  Letter request should
      be sent to HQ ESC/DAPD, San Antonio, TX 78243-5000.  Request an
      estimated 6 month supply.                                                

                c.  Standard forms (SF) should be ordered through
      normal document acquisition channels from the GSA.  If any
      difficulty is encountered obtaining specific SFs contact the
      servicing security element for assistance.                               

                         FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                   Public Availability to be Determined
                           Under 5 U.S.C. 552

              APPENDIX 2. SAMPLE CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS BRIEFING                

      1.  You have been selected to perform duties that will require
      access to U.S. classified cryptographic information.  It is
      essential that you be made aware of certain facts relevant to the
      protection of this information before access is granted.  You
      must know the reason why special safeguards are required to
      protect U.S. classified cryptographic information.  You must
      understand the directives which require these safeguards and the
      penalties you will incur for the unauthorized disclosure,
      unauthorized retention, or negligent handling of U.S. classified
      cryptographic information.  Failure to properly safeguard this
      information could cause serious to exceptionally grave damage, or
      irreparable injury, to the national security of the United States
      or could be used to advantage by a foreign nation.                       

      2.  U.S. classified cryptographic information is especially
      sensitive because it is used to protect classified information.
      Any particular piece of cryptographic keying material and any
      specific cryptographic technique may be used to protect a large
      quantity of classified information during transmission.  If the
      integrity of a cryptographic system is breached at any point, all
      information protected by the system may be compromised.  The
      safeguards placed on U.S. classified cryptographic information
      are a necessary component of government programs to ensure that
      our Nation's vital secrets are not compromised.                          

      3.  Because access to U.S. classified cryptographic information
      is granted on a strict need-to-know basis, you will be given
      access to only that cryptographic information necessary to
      perform your duties.  You are required to become familiar with
      Order 1600.8C, as well as AFRs 56-10 and 56-13.  Sections 641,
      793, 794, 798, and 952, Title 18, U.S. Code are contained in
      attachments 1 through 6 of this appendix.  Cited directives and
      Executive Order 12356 are attached in a briefing book for your
      review at this time.                                                     

      4.  Especially important to the protection of U.S. classified
      cryptographic information is the timely reporting of any known or
      suspected compromise of this information.  If a cryptographic
      system is compromised, but the compromise is not reported, the
      continued use of the system can result in the loss of all
      information protected by it.  If the compromise is reported,
      steps can be taken to lessen an adversary's advantage gained
      through the compromise of the information.                               

      5.  You should know that intelligence services of some foreign
      governments prize the acquisition of U.S. classified
      cryptographic information.  They will go to extreme lengths to
      compromise U.S. citizens and force them to divulge cryptographic
      techniques and materials that protect the nation's secrets around
      the world.  You must understand that any personal or financial
      relationship with a foreign government's representative could
      make you vulnerable to attempts at coercion to divulge U.S.
      classified cryptographic information.  You should be alert to
      recognize those attempts so that you may successfully counter
      them.  The best personal policy is to avoid discussions that
      reveal your knowledge of, or access to, U.S. classified
      cryptographic information and thus avoid highlighting yourself to
      those who would seek the information you possess.  Any attempt,
      either through friendship or coercion, to solicit your knowledge
      regarding U.S. classified cryptographic information must be
      reported immediately to your servicing security element, or to
      ACO-300, ATTN:  ACO-320, Headquarters, Federal Aviation
      Administration, 800 Independence Avenue, S.W., Washington, D.C.,
      telephone 202-267-3961.                                                  

      6.  In view of the risks noted above, unofficial travel to
      certain communist or other designated countries will require the
      prior approval of your manager and the servicing security
      element, or ACO-300.  It is essential that you contact your
      manager and the region/center security office, or ACO-300, if
      such unofficial travel becomes necessary.                                

      7.  Finally, you must know that, should you willfully or
      negligently disclose to any unauthorized persons any of the U.S.
      classified cryptographic information to which you will have
      access, you will be subject to administrative and civil
      sanctions, sanctions, including adverse personnel actions, as
      well as criminal sanctions under the Uniform Code of Military
      Justice or the criminal laws of the United States, as
      appropriate.                                                             

                                 APPENDIX 2
                                Attachment 1                                   

                  Title 18, United States Code Section 641.
                     Public Money, Property or Records.                        

      "Whoever embezzles, steals, purloins or knowingly converts to his
      use or the use of another, or without authority, sells, conveys
      or disposes of any records, voucher, money, or thing of value of
      the United States or of any department or agency thereof, or any
      property made or being made under contract for the United States
      or any department or agency therefor;                                    

      "Whoever receives, conceals, or retains the same with intent to
      convert it to his use or gain, knowing it to have been embezzled,
      stolen, purloined or converted - shall be fined not more than
      $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years or both; but if the
      value of such property does not exceed the sum of $100, he shall
      be fined not more than $1,000 or imprisoned not more than one
      year or both.                                                            

      "The word 'value' means face, par, or market value, or cost
      price, either wholesale or retail, whichever is greater."                

                                 APPENDIX 2
                                Attachment 2                                   

                  Title 18, United States Code Section 793.
           Gathering, Transmitting or Losing Defense Information.              

      "(a) Whoever, for the purpose of obtaining information respecting
      the national defense with intent or reason to believe that the
      information is to be used to the injury of the United States, or
      to the advantage of any foreign nation, goes upon, enters, flies
      over, or otherwise obtains information concerning any vessel,
      aircraft, work of defense, navy yard, naval station, submarine
      base, fueling station, fort, battery, torpedo station, dockyard,
      canal, railroad, arsenal, camp, factory, mine, telegraph,
      telephone, wireless, or signal station, building, office,
      research laboratory or station or other place connected with the
      national defense owned or constructed, or in progress of
      construction by the United States or under the control of the
      United States, or of any of its officers, departments, or
      agencies, or within the exclusive jurisdiction of the United
      States, or any place in which any vessel, aircraft, arms,
      munitions, or any other materials or instruments for use in time
      of war are being made, prepared, repaired, stored, or are the
      subject of research or development, under any contract or
      agreement with the United States, or any department or agency
      thereof, or with any person on behalf of the United States, or
      otherwise on behalf of the United States, or any prohibited place
      so designated by the President by proclamation in time of war or
      in case national emergency in which anything for the use of the
      Army, Navy, or Air Force is being prepared or constructed or
      stored, information as to which prohibited place the President
      has determined would be prejudicial to the national defense; or          

      (b) Whoever, for the purpose aforesaid, and with like or reason
      to believe, copies, takes, makes, or obtains, or attempts to
      copy, take, make, or obtain, any sketch, photograph, photographic
      negative, blueprint, plant map, model, instrument, appliance,
      document, writing, or note of anything connected with the
      national defense; or                                                     

      (c) Whoever, for the purpose aforesaid, receives or obtains or
      agrees or attempts to receive or obtain from any person, or from
      any source whatever, any document, writing, code book, signal
      book, sketch, photograph, photographic negative, blueprint, plan,
      map, model, instrument, appliance, or note, of anything connected
      with the national defense, knowing or having reason to believe,
      at the time he receives or obtains, or agrees or attempts to
      receive or obtain it, that it has been or will be obtained, taken
      made or disposed of by any person contrary to the provisions of
      this chapter; or                                                         

      (d) Whoever, lawfully having possession of, access to, control
      over, or being entrusted with any document, writing, code book,
      signal book, sketch, photograph, photographic negative,
      blueprint, plan, map, model, instrument, appliance, or note
      relating to the national defense, or information relating to the
      nation defense which information the possessor has reason to
      believe could be used to the injury of the United States or to
      the advantage of any foreign nation, willfully communicates,
      delivers, transmits or causes to be communicated, delivered or
      transmitted or attempts to communicate, deliver transmit or cause
      to be communicated, delivered or transmitted to receive it, or
      willfully retains the same and fails to deliver it on demand to
      the officer or employee of the United States entitled to receive
      it; or                                                                   

      (e) Whoever having unauthorized possession of, access to, or
      control over any documents, writing, code book, signal book,
      sketch, photograph, photographic negative, blueprint, plan, map,
      model, instrument, appliance, or note relating to the national
      defense, or information relating to the national defense which
      information the possessor has reason to believe could be used to
      the injury of the United States or the advantage of any foreign
      nation, willfully communicates, delivers, transmits, or causes to
      be communicated, delivered, or transmitted, or attempts to
      communicate, deliver, transmit or cause to be communicated,
      delivered, or transmitted the same to any person not entitled to
      receive it, or willfully retains the same and fails to deliver it
      to the officer of employee of the United States entitled to
      receive it; or                                                           

      (f) Whoever, being entrusted with or having lawful possession of
      control of any document, writing, code book, signal book, sketch,
      photograph, photographic negative, blueprint, plan, map, model,
      instrument, appliance, note, or information relating to the
      national defense, (1) through gross negligence permits the same
      to be removed from its proper place of custody or delivered to
      anyone in violation of his trust, or to be lost, stolen,
      abstracted, or destroyed, or (2) having knowledge that the same
      has been illegally removed from its proper place of custody or
      delivered to anyone in violation of its trust, or lost, or
      stolen, abstracted, or destroyed, and fails to make prompt report
      of such loss, theft, abstraction, or destruction to his superior
      officer -- shall be fined not more than $10,000 or imprisoned not
      more than ten years, or both, or                                         

      (g) If two or more persons conspire to violate any of the
      foregoing provisions of this section, and one or more of such
      persons do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each
      of the parties to such conspiracy shall be subject to the
      punishments provided for the offense which is the object of such
      conspiracy."                                                             

                                 APPENDIX 2
                                Attachment 3                                   

                  Title 18, United States Code Section 794.                    

                       Gathering or delivering defense
                   information to aid foreign government.                      

      "(a) Whoever, with intent or reason to believe that it is to be
      used to the injury of the United States or to the advantage of a
      foreign nation, communicates, delivers, or transmits, or attempts
      to communicate, deliver, or transmit, to any foreign government,
      or to any fraction or party or military or naval force within a
      foreign country, whether recognized or unrecognized by the United
      States, or to any representative, officer, agent, employee,
      subject, or citizen thereof, either directly or indirectly any
      document, writing, code book, signal book, sketch, photograph,
      photographic negative, blueprint, plan, map, model, note,
      instrument, appliance, or information relating to the national
      defense, shall be punished by death or imprisonment for any term
      of years or for life.                                                    

      (b) Whoever, in time of war, with intent that the same shall be
      communicated to the enemy, collects, records, publishes, or
      communicates or attempts to elicit any information with respect
      to the movement, numbers, description, condition, or disposition
      of any of the Armed Forces, ships, aircraft, or war materials of
      the United States or with respect to the plans or conduct, or
      supposed plans or conduct of any naval or military operations, or
      with respect to any works or measures undertaken for or connected
      with, or intended for the fortification or defense of any place,
      or any other information relating to the public defense, which
      might be useful to the enemy, shall be punished by death or by
      imprisonment for any term of years or for life.                          

      (c) If two or more persons conspire to violate this section, and
      one or more of such persons do any act to effect the object of
      the conspiracy, each of the parties to such conspiracy shall be
      subject to the punishment provided for the offense which is the
      object of such conspiracy."                                              

                                 APPENDIX 2
                                Attachment 4                                   

                  Title 18, United States Code Section 798.
                    Disclosure of classified information.                      

      "(a) Whoever knowingly and willfully communicates, furnishes,
      transmits, or otherwise makes available to an unauthorized
      person, or publishes, or uses in any manner prejudicial to the
      safety of interest of the United States or for benefit of any
      foreign government to the detriment of the United States and
      classified information -                                                 

           (1)  concerning the nature, preparation, or use of any code,
      cipher, or cryptographic system of the United States or any
      foreign government; or                                                   

           (2)  concerning the design, construction, use, maintenance,
      or repair of any device, apparatus, or appliance used or prepared
      or planned for use by the United States or any foreign government
      for cryptographic or communication intelligence purposes; or             

           (3)  concerning the communication intelligence activities of
      the United States or any foreign government; or                          

           (4)  obtained by the process of communications intelligence
      from the communications of any foreign government, knowing the
      same to have been obtained by such processes - shall be fined not
      more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years, or both.        

      (b) As used in subsection (a) of this section -- The term
      'classified information' means information which, at the time of
      a violation of this section, is for reasons of national security,
      specifically designated by a United States Government Agency for
      limited or restricted dissemination or distribution; the terms
      'code,' 'cipher,' and 'cryptographic system' include in their
      meanings, in addition to their usual meanings, any method of
      secret writing and any mechanical or electrical device or method
      used for the purpose of disguising or concealing the contents,
      significance, or meanings of communications; the term 'foreign
      government' includes in its meaning any person or persons acting
      or purporting to act for or on behalf of any faction, party,
      department, agency, bureau, or military force of or within a
      foreign government, or for or on behalf of any government or any
      person or persons purporting to act as a government within a
      foreign country, whether or not such a government is recognized
      by the United States.  The term 'communications intelligence'
      means all procedures and methods used in the interception of
      communications and the obtaining of information from such
      communications by other than intended recipients; The term
      'unauthorized person' means any person who, or agency which, is
      not authorized to receive information of the categories set forth
      in subsection (a) of this section, by the President, or by the
      head of a department or agency of the United States Government
      which is expressly designated by the President to engage in
      communication intelligence activities for the United States.             

      (c) Nothing in this section shall prohibit the furnishing, upon
      lawful demand, of information to any regularly constituted
      committee of the Senate or House of Representatives of the United
      States of America, or joint committee thereof."                          

                                  APPENDIX 2
                                 Attachment 5                                  

                  Title 18, United States Code Section 952.
                    Diplomatic codes and correspondence.                       

      "Whoever, by virtue of this employment by the United States,
      obtains from another or has or has had custody of or access to,
      any official diplomatic code, and without authorization or
      competent authority, willfully publishes or furnishes to another
      any such code or matter, or any matter which was obtained while
      in the process of transmission between any foreign government and
      its diplomatic mission in the United States, shall be fined not
      more than $10,000 or imprisoned not more than ten years, or
      both."                                                                   

                                 APPENDIX 2
                                Attachment 6                                   

                  Title 50, United States Code Section 783
                                  Offenses.                                    

      "Communications of classified information by Government officer
      or employee.  It shall be unlawful for any officer or employee of
      the United States or any department or agency thereof, or of any
      corporation the stock of which is owned in whole or in major part
      by the United States or any department or agency thereof, to
      communicate in any manner or by any means, to any person whom
      such officer or employee knows or has reason to believe to be an
      agent or representative of any foreign government or member of
      any Communist organization as defined in paragraph (5) of section
      782 of this title, any information of a kind which shall have
      been classified by the President (or by the head of any such
      department, agency, or corporation with approval of the
      President) as affecting the security of the United States,
      knowing or having reason to know that such information has been
      so classified, unless such officer or employee shall have been
      specifically authorized by the President, or by the head of the
      department, agency, or corporation by which this officer or
      employee is employed, to make such disclosure of such
      information."                                                            

                       FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                        PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                      DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

                APPENDIX 3. CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS CERTIFICATE                  

                      CRYPTOGRAPHIC ACCESS CERTIFICATE
              (This form is covered by the Privacy Act of 1974)                

      Privacy Act Statement:  Authority.  Executive Order 9397.
      Routine and sole use of the SSN is to identify the individual
      precisely when necessary to certify access to US cryptographic
      information.  While disclosure of your SSN is voluntary, your
      failure to do may delay certification, and in some cases, prevent
      original access to US cryptographic information.                         

                            Section 1 (Type Only)
      _________________________________________________________________
      | Installation    | Unit/Office Symbol    | Supporting COMSEC   |
      |                 |                       | Account Number      |
      |                 |                       |                     |
      |_________________|_______________________|_____________________|        

      Instructions:  Section 2 of this certificate must be accomplished
      before an individual may be granted access to US cryptographic
      information.  Section 3 will be accomplished when the individual
      no longer requires such access.  This certificate (original) will
      be made a permanent part of the official records of the person
      concerned.                                                               

                     Section 2.  Authorization for Access to US
                                 Cryptographic information                     

        A.  I understand that I am being granted access to US
      cryptographic information.  I understand that my being granted
      access to cryptographic information involves me in a position of
      special trust and confidence concerning matters of national
      security.  I hereby acknowledge that I have been briefed
      concerning my obligation with respect to such access.                    

        B.  I understand that safeguarding US cryptographic information
      is of the utmost importance and that the loss or compromise of
      such information could lead to irreparable damage to the US and
      its allies.  I understand that I am obligated to protect US
      cryptographic information and I have been instructed in the
      special nature of this information and the principle for the
      protection of such information.  I acknowledge that I have also
      been instructed in the rules requiring that I report any
      unofficial foreign contacts and travel to my appropriate security
      officer and that, before this briefing, I reported any
      unauthorized foreign travel or foreign contacts I may have had in
      the past.  I understand that I am subject to and consent to an
      aperiodic, counterintelligence security polygraph examination.           

        C.  I understand fully the information presented at the
      briefing I have received and am aware that any disclosure of US
      cryptographic information to unauthorized persons may make me
      subject to prosecution under the criminal law of the US.  I have
      read this certificate and my questions, if any, have been
      answered.  I acknowledge that the briefing officer has made
      available to me the provisions of Sections 641, 793, 794, 798,
      and 952, Title 18, US Code and Executive Order 12356.  I
      understand that, if I disclose to any unauthorized person any of
      the cryptographic information to which I have access, I may be
      subject to prosecution under the Uniform Code of Military Justice
      and/or the criminal laws of the US.  I understand and accept that
      unless I am released in writing by an authorized representative
      of my appropriate security office, the terms of this certificate
      and my obligation to protect all cryptographic information to
      which I may have access apply during the time of my access and at
      all times thereafter.                                                    

      ACCESS GRANTED THIS ____________ DAY OF _________________ 19 ____        

      SIGNATURE ______________________ NAME, GRADE, SSN, DOB __________
                                                            (Type Only)        

      ________________________________ ________________________________
      SIGNATURE OF ADMINISTERING       NAME, GRADE,         (Type Only)
      OFFICIAL                         OFFICIAL POSITION                       

                     SECTION 3.  TERMINATION OF ACCESS TO US
                                 CRYPTOGRAPHIC INFORMATION                     

      I am aware that my authorization for access to cryptographic
      information is being withdrawn.  I fully appreciate and
      understand that the preservation of the security of US
      cryptographic information is of vital importance to the welfare
      and defense of the US.  I certify that I will never divulge any
      US cryptographic information I acquired, nor discuss with any
      person any of the US cryptographic information to which I have
      had access, unless and until freed from this obligation by
      unmistakable or categorical official notice from competent
      authority.  I have read this agreement carefully and my
      questions, if any, have been answered to my satisfaction.  I
      acknowledge that the briefing officer has made available to me
      Sections 641, 793, 794, 798, and 952 of Title 18, US Code,
      Section 783(b) of Title 50, US Code; and Executive Order 12356.          

                                       () Administrative
      REASONS FOR WITHDRAWAL           () Suspension
      (Check One:)                     () Revocation
      ACCESS WITHDRAWN THIS __________ DAY OF _________________ 19 ____        

      SIGNATURE ______________________ NAME, GRADE, SSN, DOB __________
                                                            (Type Only)        

      ________________________________ ________________________________
      SIGNATURE OF ADMINISTERING       NAME, GRADE,     (Type or Stamp)
      OFFICIAL                         OFFICIAL POSITION                       

                     FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                  Public Availability to be Determined
                        Under 5 U.S.C. 552

             APPENDIX 4. SECURE TELECOMMUNICATIONS FACILITY AND 
 COMSEC ACCOUNT CHECKLIST                             

      1.  All items in the checklist apply to COMSEC accounts and
      COMSEC user facilities unless considered not applicable by the
      servicing security element or ACS-300 due to specific
      circumstances.  Only those items preceded with an asterisk in
      parentheses (*) apply to administrative accounts.                        

      (*)  2.  (Some questions are self contained that is, good
      management practice dictates an affirmative response to the
      question, but the question itself is the only authority.                 

                                   General                                     

      (*)  1.  Is a semiannual (or upon change of custodian) inventory
      of the COMSEC account being performed as required?
      (AFR 56-10)                                                              

      (*)  2.  Have all discrepancies indicated on previous inspection
      reports (regional/center servicing security element inspections
      and Headquarters ACS-300 inspections) been corrected?
      (AFKAG-1)                                                                

      (*)  3.  If the answer to (2) is "no" what discrepancies still
      exist and what action has been taken to correct them?  Have
      timely follow-up actions been taken? (AFKAG-1)                           

      (*)  4.  Has the COMSEC custodian verified the final clearance of
      all personnel listed on the COMSEC accounts authorized
      entrance/access list each month?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)
      (*)  5.  Has the custodian verified that each person on the
      authorized entrance/access list has complied with all
      requirements of FAA's Formal Cryptographic Access (FCA) Program
      to include having received a briefing and having a signed,
      current Cryptographic Access Certificate on file?  (AFSSI 4000,
      Order 1600.8C)                                                           

      (*)  6.  Has the facility manager having responsibility for
      COMSEC or the COMSEC custodian validated the authorized
      entrance/access list on a monthly basis?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)          

      (*)  7.  Do the COMSEC storage areas of the COMSEC account meet
      minimum physical security requirements established by National
      COMSEC Instruction (NACSI) 4008 and Order 1600.8C?                       

      (*)  8.  Is there documented approval on file certifying that the
      COMSEC account has been inspected and approved for the storage of
      classified COMSEC information by the servicing security element
      for regions/center and by ACS-300 for Washington Headquarters?
      (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008, AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                              

      (*)  9.  Are SF 700, Security Container Information, prepared and
      affixed to the inside of vault doors and the locking drawer of
      GSA approved safes and containers? (AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                

      (*)  10.  Are safe/vault combinations changed in accordance with
      Order 1600.2C to include at least every 12 months or when a
      person knowing the combination is relieved, transferred, or
      terminated? (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)
      (*)  11.  Does the COMSEC facility have an emergency plan which
      provides adequate instructions for implementing
      safeguarding/destruction procedures in the event of an emergency?
      (AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004)                    

      (*)  12.  Have all assigned personnel including COMSEC custodian
      and alternates, reviewed and participated in quarterly tests (dry
      runs) of the emergency plans?  (AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004)                    

      (*)  13.  Have the COMSEC emergency plans been coordinated with
      the contingency plans or the facility both initially and whenever
      significant changes are made?  (AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004, AFR
      56-10/COMSEC User's Guide)                                               

      (*)  14.  Have adequate destruction equipment and materials been
      provided or suitable arrangements made for emergency destruction?
      (AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004)                                                   

      (*)  15.  Does the account report file contain transfer,
      destruction, and inventory reports?  Are they filed in numerical
      order by voucher Number? (AFKAG-2)                                       

      (*)  16.  Is the account report file properly classified, with a
      minimum of CONFIDENTIAL? (AFKAG-2)                                       

      (*)  17.  Does the account properly maintain the AFCOMSEC Form
      14, COMSEC Material-Voucher and Package Register?  (AFKAG-2)             

      (*)  18.  Is the AFCOMSEC Form 3 current and maintained in the
      account report file?  (AFKAG-2)                                          

      (*)  19.  Is the proper disposition made of all COMSEC files and
      records?  (AFKAG-1, AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide)                       

                              Physical Security                                

      (*)  20.  Were correct procedures used to identify and admit
      inspection personnel?  Was each person in the inspection party
      required to sign the FAA Form 1600.8, Visitor Register, upon
      admittance?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                                       

      NOTE:  All personnel not listed on the access list must be signed
      in on FAA Form 1600.8 prior to being granted access to the COMSEC
      area.                                                                    

           21.  Has a way been provided so that persons seeking entry
      may be identified prior to admission or viewing of COMSEC
      operations?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008, AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                 

           22.  Are all secure telecommunications facility doors
      solidly constructed and fitted with approved secure locks?
      (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008, AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                              

           23.  Is the secure telecommunications facility sound proofed
      and have measures been taken to prevent acoustic interception?
      (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                                                    

           24.  Is an authorized entrance list posted inside the
      facility or inside the COMSEC security container (for an
      administrative facility)?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                         

           25.  Is the authorized entrance list limited to persons
      assigned and others whose duties may require frequent admittance?
      (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                                                    

           26.  Are specific persons designated by name to authorize
      admittance to those persons not on the authorized entrance and
      access list?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                                      

           27.  Are visitors being processed in and escorted within the
      facility?  (AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                                         

           28.  Is a copy of the most current TSCM survey on file?
      (AFKAG-1, Order 1600.12C)                                                

      (*)  29.  Have the operational STU-III terminals located in
      offices and residences been inspected within the previous 6
      months by technically competent personnel?                               

      (*)  30.  Is strict accountability maintained for all accountable
      COMSEC material held?  (AFKAG-2, AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide,
      and AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                                                

      (*)  31.  During the periodic inventories prescribed in AFKAG-2,
      is the material physically sighted, including material on hand
      receipts to users?  (AFKAG-2)                                            

      (*)  32.  Are written directives in effect that ensure all
      persons who have classified COMSEC material on hand receipt are
      relieved from accountability before permanent departure?
      (AFKAG-2)                                                                

      (*)  33.  Is a daily or shift inventory made for all COMSEC
      materials and equipments where applicable?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC
      User's Guide, AFR 56-13/ NACSI 4005)                                     

      (*)  34.  Is an inventory performed of COMSEC materials stored in
      a locked safe or other container before closure or locking of the
      container?  (AFR 56-13/NACS1 4005)                                       

           35.  (U)  Is COMSEC and keying material at user activities
      being destroyed immediately, but no later than 12 hours after
      supersession?  (AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004)                                    

           36.  (U)  Are COMSEC materials at the COMSEC account being
      destroyed as soon as possible after supersession, but within the
      time requirements of AFR 56-5?  (AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004)                   

      (*)  37.  (U)  Is proper documentation being maintained locally
      for accountable COMSEC materials destroyed before normal
      reporting to the central office of record (COR)?  (AFR
      56-5/NTISSI 4004, AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide)                         

      (*)  38.  (U)  Are all assigned personnel familiar with the
      procedures for reporting possible physical compromises?  (AFR
      56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-12/NTISSI 4003)                        

      (*)  39.  (U)  Have page checks been made and properly recorded
      in COMSEC documents as required?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide,
      AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                                                    

      (*)  40.  (U)  Are security checks being performed at the end of
      each shift or on a daily basis as required?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC
      User's Guide)                                                            

      (*)  41.  (U)  Are adequate authorized facilities available to
      destroy classified waste and are they convenient to each facility
      or account?  (AFR 56-5/NTISSI 4004)                                      

      (*)  42.  (U)  Are there appropriate signs displayed to designate
      the secure telecommunications facility as a CLOSED Area?  (Order
      1600.8C, Order 1600.2C)                                                  

      NOTE:  This item applies to administrative accounts only if
      operations codes or authentication systems are held for issue to
      users.                                                                   

      (*)  43.  (U)  Are users given adequate guidance on effective
      dates, accounting, supersession, destruction, physical security,
      and reporting of COMSEC insecurities?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's
      Guide, AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties and Responsibilities)                     

           44.  (U)  Has the account developed written standard
      operating procedures (SOP), on handling, controlling and
      protecting COMSEC assets including inventory and destruction?
      (AFKAG-1, AFR 56-6/NACSI 4008)                                           

           45.  (U)  Have user accounts developed in coordination with
      the COMSEC custodian their own written SOPs on the handling,
      controlling and safeguarding of COMSEC assets to include
      inventory and destruction?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR
      56-6/NACSI 4008)                                                         

           46.  Are all applicable TOP SECRET keying material being
      handled and protected under Two Person Integrity or is an AFCSC
      approved waiver on file?                                                 

                           Cryptographic Security                              

           47.  Are the referenced directives used with appropriate
      SOPs to report insecurities?  (AFR 56-12/NTISSI 4003)                    

           48.  Has a training program been initiated to ensure
      proficiency in all phases of COMSEC operation.  Is this training
      documented?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-11/COMSEC
      Duties and Responsibilities)                                             

           49.  Has a specified time been established for circuit
      changes and is a record kept of the time of last change to ensure
      the cryptoperiod is not exceeded?  (AFKAG-1.  AFR 56-5/NTISSI
      4004, AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)               

           50.  Does the operations section maintain SOPs which list
      current SPECAT codewords and outline specific procedures for
      processing and safeguarding these types of messages?  (AFKAG-1)          

           51.  If appropriate, have persons been briefed on any
      special handling procedures required by the originator or
      recipient of SPECAT messages?  (AFKAG-1)                                 

                              COMSEC Management                                

      (*)  52.  Are all COMSEC materials (initial and resupply) and
      amendments thereto being received and posted on a timely basis?
      (AFKAG-2 and AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties and Responsibilities)               

      (*)  53.  When permissible, are extracts made from COMSEC
      publications rather than requesting increased allowance?  (AFR
      56-9/NACSI 4004)                                                         

      (*)  54.  With reference to 54, above - was controlling authority
      approval obtained to make extracts?  (AFR 56-9/NACSI 4004)               

      (*)  55.  Are all items and amounts of COMSEC materials limited
      to those which are absolutely essential to the efficient
      operation and mission of the FAA facility being supported?
      (AFKAG-1, AFKAG-2, AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR
      56-11/COMSEC Duties and Responsibilities, AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)          

      (*)  56.  Are COMSEC holdings surveyed on a continuing basis to
      determine if items are no longer required or are being received
      in quantities in excess of requirements?  (AFKAG-1, AFKAG-2, AFR
      56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties and
      Responsibilities, AFR 56-13/NACSI 4005)                                  

      (*)  57.  Has required annual COMSEC indoctrination or training
      been administered to FAA contractors having access to COMSEC
      materials or information (training identical to that provided for
      FAA personnel)?  (AFKAG-1, AFR 56-12/NTISSI 4003)                        

      (*)  58.  Are both the custodian and the alternates familiar with
      and actively performing their assigned duties and
      responsibilities?  (AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties and Responsibilities)        

      (*)  59.  Are all insecurity reports thoroughly reviewed for
      accuracy by the COMSEC custodian and the facility or office
      manager having responsibility for COMSEC before being forwarded
      through official channels?  (AFR 56-12/NTISSI 4003)                      

      (*)  60.  Has corrective action been taken to prevent the
      recurrence of COMSEC insecurities?  (AFR 56-12/NTISSI 4003)              

      (*)  61.  Are insecurity reports being processed in a timely
      manner? (AFR 56-12/NTISSI 4003)                                          

      (*)  62.  Is the COMSEC custodian conducting user training prior
      to issue of COMSEC materials and at least annually?  (AFR
      56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties and
      Responsibilities)                                                        

      (*)  63.  Is there training documentation available at the
      account?  (AFR 56-10/COMSEC User's Guide, AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties
      and Responsibilities)                                                    

      (*)  64.  Has the COMSEC custodian made maximum use of the
      Qualification Training Package (QTP) 491X1-30E, COMSEC Account
      Management, for training of all assigned personnel not attending
      the formal COMSEC training course.  Is documentation of training
      on hand in the COMSEC account?  (AFR 56-11/COMSEC Duties and
      Responsibilities)                                                        

           65.  Have all applicable personnel been granted Formal
      Cryptographic Access (FCA)?  Have procedures been established to
      debrief personnel upon departure (PCS, termination or
      retirement), and for suspension or revocation of access.  (Order
      1600.8C)                                                                 

           66.  Are all waivers granted to COMSEC accounts or COMSEC
      responsible personnel current?                                           

                               FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                             PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                           DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

           APPENDIX 5. PUBLICATIONS TO BE MAINTAINED BY ALL FAA COMSEC 
 ACCOUNTS                                               

      1.  General.  The publications listed in paragraph 3, below, are
      to be maintained in each FAA COMSEC operational and monitor
      account.                                                                 

      2.  Abbreviations.  The following abbreviations are used in this
      Appendix with the associated meanings as shown below.                    

           a.  AFR - Air Force Regulation.  This is an Air Force policy
      document.  The 56-series of AFRs are directives implementing the
      national COMSEC policy as established by the National Security
      Agency (NSA).                                                            

           b.  NACSI - National Communications Security Instruction.
      The NACSI is an NSA publication that establishes national COMSEC
      policies and procedures.                                                 

           c.  NTISSI - National Telecommunications And Information
      Systems Security Instruction.  The NTISSI is also an NSA
      document.  NTISSIs are used to promulgate current COMSEC doctrine
      and frequently will supersede an older NACSI.                            

           d.  NACSI/AFR or NTISSI/AFR.  When the AFR number is also
      provided on a NACSI or NTISSI it indicates that the Air Force has
      added its own guidance and interpretation to the basic NSA
      document.                                                                

      3.  Publication Listing.                                                 

      _________________________________________________________________
      Item          AFR NO.     NSA Reference          Subject
      _________________________________________________________________
      01             56-1                          Signal Security             

      02             56-2        NCSC-9         Communications Security
                                                  Glossary                     

      03             56-3        NTISSI 4002    Classification Guide
                                                  for COMSEC                   

      04             56-4        NACSI 6002     Security of Defense
                                                  Contractor
                                                    Telecommunications         

      05             56-5        NTISSI 4004    Routine Destruction and
                                                  Emergency Protection
                                                    of COMSEC Material         

      06             56-6        NACSI 4008     Safeguarding COMSEC
                                                  Facilities                   

      07             56-7        NACSI 4007     Management of Manual
                                                  Cryptosystems                

      08             56-9        NACSI 4004     Controlling Authorities
                                                  for COMSEC Material          

      09             56-10       .....          COMSEC User's Guide            

      10             56-11       .....          COMSEC Duties and
                                                  Responsibilities
      11             56-12       NTISSI 4003    Reporting COMSEC
                                                  Insecurities                 

      12             56-13       NACSI 4005     Safeguarding and
                                                  Control of COMSEC
                                                    Material                   

      13             56-19       NACSI 4009     Protected Distribution
                                                  Systems                      

      14             56-20       NACSI 4001     Controlled
                                                  Cryptographic Items          

      15             .....       NTISSI 4005    Control of TOP SECRET
                                                  Keying Material              

      16             AFSAL 4001  NTISSI 4001    Controlled
                                                  Cryptographic Items          

      17             .....       NTISSI 3013    Operational Security
                                                  Doctrine for the
                                                    Secure Telephone
                                                    Unit III (STU-III)
                                                    Type 1 Terminal            

                       FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                       PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                      DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

             APPENDIX 6. PHYSICAL SECURITY STANDARDS FOR FIXED 
 COMSEC FACILITIES                                

      1.  INTRODUCTION.  This appendix sets forth the standards for the
      physical security safeguarding of fixed FAA COMSEC facilities.
      It implements the provisions of Annex A, NACSI No. 4008/AFR 56-6.
      These standards apply to fixed FAA facilities which contain
      classified COMSEC material and which are devoted principally to
      normal activities involving these materials (e.g., secure
      telecommunications, manufacturing, training, maintenance, and
      storage).  Unless reference is made to a specific facility type,
      these standards apply equally to all FAA fixed COMSEC facilities.        

      2.  LOCATION.  FAA fixed COMSEC facilities will be located in an
      area which provides positive control over access, and is as far
      as possible from areas which are difficult or impossible to
      control (e.g., parking lots, ground floor exterior walls,
      multiple corridors or driveways, or surrounded by other
      uncontrolled buildings or offices).                                      

      3.  CONSTRUCTION.  A fixed COMSEC facility must be constructed of
      solid, strong materials to prevent unauthorized penetration and
      to show evidence of attempts at unauthorized penetration.  It
      must provide adequate attenuation of internal sounds which could
      divulge classified information through walls, doors, windows,
      ceilings, air vents and ducts.  Maximum physical security is
      achieved when these facilities are of vault-type construction as
      specified in Annex E to NACSI No. 4005/AFR 56-13.  As a minimum,
      construction or modification of an area containing a FAA fixed
      COMSEC facility shall conform to the following requirements.             

           a.  Walls, Floor, and Ceilings.  Walls, floors, and ceilings
      shall be of sufficient structural strength to prevent, or show
      evidence of attempts at, unauthorized penetration.  Walls shall
      be constructed from true floor to true ceiling.  Where false
      ceilings are used, additional safeguards are required to resist
      unauthorized entry (e.g., installation of an approved intrusion
      detection system in the area above the false ceiling).                   

           b.  Doors and Entrance Areas.  Only one door shall be used
      for regular entrance to the facility.  Other doors may exist for
      emergency exit and for entry or removal of bulky items.  All
      doors shall remain closed during facility operations and will
      only be opened to admit authorized personnel or material.  The
      following standards apply to FAA COMSEC facility doors and
      entrance areas.                                                          

                (1)  Main Entrance Door.                                       

                     (a)  Design and Installation.  The door must have
      sufficient strength to resist forceful entry.  In order of
      preference, examples of acceptable doors are:                            

                          1  GSA-approved vault doors.                         

                          2  Standard 1-3/4-inch, internally
      reinforced, hollow metal industrial doors.                               

                          3  Metal-clad or solid hardwood doors with a
      minimum thickness of 1-3/4-inches.                                       

      The door frame must be securely attached to the facility and must
      be fitted with a heavy-duty/high-security strike plate and hinges
      installed with screws long enough to resist removal by prying.
      The door shall be hung so that the hinge pins cannot be removed
      from the exterior side of the door.                                      

                     (b)  Door Lock.  The main entrance door to FAA
      fixed C0MSEC facilities must be equipped with a GSA-approved,
      built-in, Group 1-R lock. (Note:  A GSA-approved Group 1-R lock
      is a three-position combination lock with a changeable
      combination, is manipulation proof, and is radiation resistant.)
      When FAA COMSEC facilities are continuously manned, an
      electronically actuated lock (e.g., cipher lock or keyless
      pushbutton lock) may be used on the entrance door to facilitate
      the admittance of authorized personnel when the facility is
      operationally manned.  Electronic locks do not afford the
      required physical security protection and may not be used as a
      substitute for the Group 1-R lock required to secure the facility
      when it is not manned.                                                   

                          1  If a cipher lock is used, it must be one
      of the following:                                                        

                             a  Federal Stock Number (FSN) 6350-957-
      4190.  This lock is being produced by several manufacturers.  FSN
      5340-757-0691, manufacturers' part number 152, electric latch
      release, is also needed.                                                 

                             b  Simplex Pushbutton Combination Lock,
      Model NL-A-200-S.  This lock is manufactured by Simplex Security
      Systems, Inc., Collinsville, CT.                                         

      Note:  The knowledge of the combination must be strictly
      controlled and released only to persons assigned regular duties
      within the secure telecommunications facility.  It is emphasized
      that this type of lock is used only as a convenience feature and
      affords no protection from forced or surreptitious manipulation.
      Pushbuttons must be cleaned at least weekly.                             

                          2  A key-operated, pin-and-tumbler,
      night-latch-type lock may be used for personnel access control
      during periods when the facility is operationally manned if the
      following conditions are met:
                             a  The lock must be mounted so that it
      cannot be removed from the outside.                                      

                             b  The lock must have a spring-load
      locking feature.                                                         

                             c  All keys must be numbered and issued
      only on hand receipts to provide a written record of all keys.
      Extra keys will be maintained within the FAA COMSEC facility and
      will be accounted for on the daily inventory.                            

                (2)  Other Doors.  Other doors (e.g., emergency exit
      doors and doors to loading docks) must meet the same installation
      requirements as facility entrance doors but must be designed so
      that they can only be opened from inside the facility.  Approved
      panic hardware and locking devices (lock bars, dead bolts, knobs,
      or handles) may be placed only on the interior surfaces of other
      doors to the facility.                                                   

                (3)  Entrance Areas.  Entrances to FAA COMSEC
      facilities shall be equipped with a device which affords
      personnel desiring admittance the ability to notify personnel
      within the facility of their presence.  A method shall be
      employed to establish positive visual identification of a visitor
      before entrance is granted.  Additionally, the entrance area
      shall be designed in such a manner that an individual cannot
      observe classified activities until access requirements are
      completed.                                                               

           c.  Windows.  COMSEC facilities should not contain windows.
      Where windows exist they will be secured in a permanent manner to
      prevent them from being opened.  Windows will be alarmed and/or
      barred to prevent their use as an access point.                          

      Observation of internal operations of the facility shall be
      denied to outside viewing by covering the windows from the inside
      or otherwise screening the secure area from external viewing.            

                (5)  Other Openings.  Air vents, ducts, or any similar
      openings which breach the walls, floor or ceiling of the facility
      shall be appropriately secured to prevent penetration.  Openings
      which are less than 90 square inches shall have approved baffles
      installed to prevent an audio or acoustical hazard.  If the
      opening exceeds 90 square inches, acoustical baffles shall be
      supplemented by either hardened steel bars or an approved
      intrusion detection system.  All holes, cracks, and other
      openings in walls, floors, and ceilings will be permanently
      filled in or sealed to prevent insertion of surveillance devices.        

                               FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                                PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                              DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

           APPENDIX 7. STANDARDS FOR SAFEGUARDING KEYING MATERIAL             

              SECTION 1.  PHYSICAL ACCESS, STORAGE AND CONTROLS                

      1.  Basis for Protection.  The cryptographic security of
      transmitted information is based primarily on the proper use of
      uncompromised keying material.  The safeguarding and control of
      keying materials used to protect national security information
      are of paramount importance.  To ensure that these keying
      materials are provided the most rigorous and comprehensive
      handling and protection, they must be distributed through the
      COMSEC Material Control System.  Safeguarding of keying material
      is achieved procedurally through restrictions and controls
      governing access, distribution, storage, accounting, use, and
      disposition.                                                             

      2.  Controls.                                                            

           a.  Application.                                                    

                (1)  The requirements of this Appendix apply to all
      hard-copy keying material intended for use to protect
      telecommunications carrying national security information, or to
      ensure their authenticity.  Such keying material, both classified
      and unclassified, will be marked "CRYPTO."                               

                (2)  Additional or differing guidance for certain types
      of keying material may appear in the handling or operating
      instructions of affected systems, and will take precedence over
      the provisions of this appendix and the basic order.                     

                (3)  Specific guidance concerning controls for keying
      variables in electronic form will appear in NSA-published system
      NACSIs and USAF AFSALS.                                                  

                (4)  Guidance on handling of maintenance and test key
      is contained in Annex D, NACSI 4005/AFR 56-13, and in specific
      handling instructions for the material.  In cases of conflict,
      specific handling instructions for the material will take
      precedence.                                                              

           b.  Access.                                                         

                (1)  Government Civilian or Military Personnel Who Are
      U.S. Citizens.  Access to COMSEC keying material other than TOP
      SECRET may be granted to U.S. citizens whose duties require such
      access and, if the material is classified, who have been granted
      a security clearance equal to or higher than the classification
      of the keying material involved.  Access to TOP SECRET COMSEC
      keying material will be governed by requirements of NTISSI 4005.         

                (2)  Contractors and Foreign Nationals.  Access by U.S.
      contractor personnel and by noncitizens is governed by national
      COMSEC policy directives.  Questions concerning such access
      should be directed to ACS-300 through the servicing security
      element.                                                                 

                (3)  Immigrant Aliens.  Refer to Annex B, NACSI
      4005/AFR 56-13.                                                          

                (4)  Need-to-Know.  Clearance or rank does not, in
      itself, entitle any individual to have access to keying material.
      Each person having access to keying materials must need the
      material in the performance of his or her duties or
      responsibilities and be familiar with his or her responsibilities
      for its protection, use and disposition.                                 

           c.   Storage.  Unless appropriately cleared persons are
      using or otherwise safeguarding keying material, it will be
      stored in the most secure facilities available.  As a minimum,
      the following storage requirements apply:                                

                (1)  TOP SECRET.  (Refer to NTISSI 4005)                       

                     (a)  TOP SECRET material will be stored in an
      approved steel security container meeting requirements for
      two-person integrity controls as specified in NTISSI 4005.  The
      container will be physically located in a room or vault that has
      an Intrusion Detection System (IDS) installed, and which has been
      inspected and approved by the servicing security element for TOP
      SECRET storage.                                                          

                     (b)  As an alternative to (a) above, TOP SECRET
      material may be stored in an area that has been approved by the
      servicing security element as a secure area, and is manned
      continuously 24-hours a day by personnel holding final clearances
      authorizing them access to the highest classification of material
      stored.  Two-person integrity controls apply.                            

                     (c)  A Class "A" vault constructed in accordance
      with the specifications outlined in Annex E, NACSI 4005/AFR
      56-13.                                                                   

                     (d)  At user locations, TOP SECRET keying material
      shall be stored under two-person integrity controls employing two
      different GSA approved Group 1R combination locks, with no one
      person authorized access to both combinations.  Storage can be in
      a strongbox within a security container, in a security container
      within a vault, or in a security container with two combination
      locks.  At least one of the combination locks must be built-in,
      as in a vault door or in a security container drawer.  If a
      requirement exists for an approved combination padlock the lock
      selected must be a changeable, three position combination padlock
      meeting Federal Specification FF-P-110.                                  

                (2)  SECRET.  SECRET keying material shall be stored
      in:                                                                      

                     (a)  Any manner approved for TOP SECRET.                  

                     (b)  An approved steel security safe procured from
      the General Services Administration (GSA) Federal Supply
      Schedule.                                                                

                     (c)  A Class "B" vault constructed in accordance
      with the specifications outlined in Annex E, NACSI 4005/AFR
      56-13.                                                                   

                (3)  CONFIDENTIAL.  CONFIDENTIAL keying material shall
      be stored in:                                                            

                     (a)  Any manner approved for TOP SECRET or SECRET.        

                     (b)  An approved steel security container having a
      built-in Group 1R, three position, changeable combination lock.          

                (4)  UNCLASSIFIED.  Unclassified keying material shall
      be stored in:                                                            

                     (a)  The same manner as required for TOP SECRET,
      SECRET, or CONFIDENTIAL.                                                 

                     (b)  In the most secure manner available to the
      user.                                                                    

      3.  Supplementary Controls and Older Containers.  Supplementary
      controls such as guard forces, alarms, etc., shall be used as
      determined necessary by the servicing security element to protect
      security containers and areas against unauthorized access.
      Security containers which do not meet the prescribed standards
      may continue to be used until approved containers can be
      procured, in accordance with provisions of chapter 8, Order
      1600.2C.  If a nonapproved container is used or open area storage
      is unavoidable, the classified keying material must be under
      protection of a guard force, or protected by an alarm system
      approved by ACO-300, with immediate guard response capability.
      Frequent and irregular checks should be made of the area.                

      4.  Keyed Equipments.  Equipments which must be stored in a keyed
      condition must be protected in a manner consistent with the
      classification of the keying variable they contain.  Protection
      provided may never be less than for the classification of the
      unkeyed condition of the equipment.                                      

      5.  Split Variables.  Security procedures for equipments
      utilizing split variables will normally be addressed in the
      handling and security doctrine for the specific system.  In most
      cases, removal of part of a split variable permits the equipment
      to be handled as if it were unkeyed.
                          SECTION 2.  DISTRIBUTION                             

      1.  General.  COMSEC custodians are responsible for ensuring that
      keying materials are properly prepared for shipment, that only
      authorized means of shipment are used, that accounting and
      transfer reports are submitted on a timely basis, and that
      packages are examined upon receipt for signs of tampering and
      possible tampering reported.                                             

           a.  Preparation for Shipment.                                       

                (1)  Wrapping:  Keying material will be double-wrapped
      and securely sealed prior to shipment.                                   

                (2)  Markings:                                                 

                     (a)  Inner wrapping will be marked with the
      security classification of the material, "TO" and "FROM"
      addressees, the COMSEC account number, and the instruction "ATTN:
      COMSEC Custodian", or "To Be Opened Only By COMSEC Custodian" or
      equivalent, and the "CRYPTO" marking.                                    

                     (b)  Outer wrappings will contain the "TO" and
      "FROM" addressees and any other notations to facilitate delivery.
      The outer wrapping of the package shall not reveal whether the
      package contains classified information or keying material.
      Material transmitted by State Department diplomatic pouch must
      indicate that "Courier Accompaniment is Required."                       

           b.  Methods of Transmittal.                                         

                (1)  Keying materials must be moved in the custody of
      authorized, and, if classified material is involved, cleared
      department, service, agency, or contractor couriers, U.S.
      Diplomatic Courier Service, or Department of Defense Courier
      Service.  Refer to Annex B, NACSI 4005/AFR 56-13.                        

                (2)  For TOP SECRET keying material, two-person
      integrity controls shall apply whenever local couriers are used
      to transport TOP SECRET key material from a user COMSEC account
      to another user account or location.  Refer to NTISSI 4005.
      Controls shall apply whenever local couriers are used to
      transport TOP SECRET key material from a user COMSEC account to
      another user account or location.  Refer to NTISSI 4005.                 

                        FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                      PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                    DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552

               APPENDIX 8. ROUTINE DESTRUCTION AND EMERGENCY 
 PROTECTION OF COMSEC MATERIAL                      

      1.  INTRODUCTION.  This appendix implements the provisions of
      NTISSI Number 4004/AFR 56-5, and establishes standards and
      procedures for the routine and emergency destruction of COMSEC
      materials within the FAA.  The security that is achieved through
      the proper use of contemporary U.S. cryptosystems is heavily
      dependent upon the physical protection which is afforded the
      associated keying material.  Current and superseded keying
      material is extremely sensitive, since its compromise potentially
      exposes to compromise all traffic encrypted with it.                     

      2.  POLICY.                                                              

           a.  Keying Material.  Keying material must be destroyed as
      soon as possible after it has been superseded or has otherwise
      served its intended purpose.  Destruction reports are submitted
      in accordance with AFKAG-2.                                              

           b.  Defective or Faulty Key Material.  As an exception to
      the stated policy defective or faulty key will not be destroyed.
      Instead material in these categories will be reported to
      AFCSC/MMIA, through COMSEC channels, with information copies to
      DIRNSA/S042, and ACS-300.  The material will be held for
      disposition instructions.                                                

           c.  Superseded or Obsolete Cryptoequipment.  Destruction of
      superseded or obsolete cryptoequipment and its supporting
      documentation is also required.  FAA COMSEC accounts will request
      disposition instructions from AFCSC/MMIA.
           d.  Waste Paper Material.  All waste paper material, whether
      containing classified information or not, which is removed from
      the secure telecommunications facility or from the associated
      teletypewriter equipment area, shall be safeguarded and destroyed
      as classified waste.  Teletypewriter, printer, and typewriter
      ribbons used to process classified information will also be
      safeguarded and destroyed as classified material.                        

               SECTION 1.  PROCEDURES FOR ROUTINE DESTRUCTION
                             OF COMSEC MATERIAL                                

      3.  GENERAL.                                                             

           a.  Routine Destruction.  Routine destruction will normally
      be accomplished by the COMSEC custodian and the alternate COMSEC
      custodian(s).  However, this restriction should not preclude
      granting the authority to perform destruction of superseded
      material to additional appropriately cleared persons, who then
      certify the destruction to the COMSEC custodian, if such action
      is required to avoid delay in accomplishing the destruction.  The
      terms "appropriately cleared" and "cleared" mean possession of a
      security clearance for the highest classification of material to
      be destroyed.                                                            

           b.  FAA COMSEC Activities.  In FAA facilities the COMSEC
      custodian, alternate custodian, or appropriately cleared person
      designated by the custodian, will accomplish actual destruction
      in the presence of a cleared witness.                                    

           c.  Requirements.
                (1)  Routine destruction may be accomplished at the
      using facility by a cleared individual and witness.  The issuing
      COMSEC custodian must be advised by the user, either verbally or
      in writing, that the user has destroyed the material.  Verbal
      confirmation must be followed up with written confirmation of
      destruction as soon as possible.  For accounting purposes the
      COMSEC custodian will then consider the material destroyed.  In
      such cases, the COMSEC custodian must brief the user on the
      necessity for prompt and complete destruction of superseded
      keying material, and for prompt reporting of any loss of control
      of material before destruction could be accomplished.                    

                (2)  Extreme care must be taken not to accidentally
      destroy COMSEC material.  Do not destroy COMSEC material unless
      one or more of the following conditions exists:                          

                     (a)  The COMSEC custodian has issued instructions
      to the user.  For example, the material is listed on the COMSEC
      custodian's formal monthly destruction report or in a status
      document, such as AFKAG-14, as being authorized for destruction.         

                     (b)  A superseding document authorizes, in its
      handling instructions, the superseded document to be destroyed.          

                     (c)  The controlling authority supersedes the
      document and authorizes its destruction.                                 

                     (d)  Emergency destruction plans are in effect.           

                (3)  Destruction and witnessing officials for user
      accounts must be appointed in writing and a copy provided to the
      COMSEC custodian.                                                        

                (4)  The user records destruction of legend 1 and 2
      material by preparing two copies of each destruction report (SF
      153).  Users will send one copy to the COMSEC custodian and
      retain the other in the user COMSEC account files.                       

      4.  SCHEDULING ROUTINE DESTRUCTIONS.                                     

           a.  Keying Material.  Keying material designated CRYPTO
      which has been issued for use should be destroyed as soon as
      possible after supersession.  In any event, the destruction
      should be accomplished within not more than 12 hours after
      supersession.  Where special circumstances prevent compliance
      with the 12-hour standard the FAA facility manager having
      responsibility for COMSEC operations may grant an extension of up
      to 24 hours.                                                             

           b.  Complete Editions of Key Material.  Complete editions of
      superseded keying material designated CRYPTO which are held by a
      user account shall be destroyed within 5 days after supersession.
      Every effort must be made by COMSEC personnel however, to destroy
      the superseded material within the 12 hour period established as
      the standard.                                                            

           c.  Maintenance and Sample Key Material.  Maintenance and
      sample keying material not designated CRYPTO is not regularly
      superseded and need only be destroyed when physically
      unserviceable.                                                           

           d.  Classified COMSEC Publications.  Superseded classified
      COMSEC publications which are held by a user COMSEC account shall
      be destroyed within 15 days after supersession.  Every effort
      must be made by COMSEC account personnel to destroy superseded
      material within the 12 hour standard period.                             

           e.  Amendment Residue.  The residue of entered amendments to
      classified COMSEC publications shall be destroyed within 5 days
      after entry of the amendment.                                            

           f.  Compromised Material.  Compromised material will be
      destroyed no later than 12 hours after receipt of disposition
      instructions.  DO NOT destroy the COMSEC material involved in an
      investigation unless directed by NSA or AFCSC.                           

           g.  Correspondence.  When it has no further value destroy
      correspondence concerning superseded documents and material.             

      5.  ROUTINE DESTRUCTION METHODS.                                         

           a.  General.  The authorized methods for routinely
      destroying paper COMSEC material are burning, pulverizing or
      chopping, crosscut shredding, and pulping.  Nonpaper COMSEC
      material authorized for routine destruction must be destroyed by
      burning, chopping or pulverizing, or chemical alteration.  FAA
      COMSEC custodians are responsible for ensuring that destruction
      of paper COMSEC material is accomplished using an NSA-approved
      paper destruction device (some of which are also approved for
      destruction of printed circuit boards), and employing
      NSA-approved destruction methods.  In addition to the guidance
      provided in this order, all FAA COMSEC custodians must also be
      familiar with, and abide by, the requirements for destruction
      reflected in the following references:                                   

                (1)  NSA-approved paper destruction devices are listed
      in Annex B, NTISSI 4004/AFR 56-5.                                        

                (2)  NSA-approved destruction methods are explained in
      Annex C, NTISSI 4004/AFR5 6-5.
           b.  Paper COMSEC Material.  The criteria given below apply
      to classified COMSEC keying material and media which embody,
      describe, or implement a classified cryptographic logic.  Such
      media include full maintenance manuals, cryptographic
      descriptions, drawings of cryptographic logics, specifications
      describing a cryptographic logic, and cryptographic software.
      Other paper COMSEC material may be destroyed by any means that
      are listed in Chapter 9, FAA Order 1600.2C that are approved for
      other paper material of equal classification or sensitivity.             

                (1)  When destroying paper COMSEC material by burning,
      the combustion must be complete so that all material is reduced
      to white ash, and contained so that no burned pieces escape.
      Ashes must be inspected and, if necessary, broken up or reduced
      to sludge.                                                               

                (2)  When pulping, pulverizing, or chopping devices are
      used to destroy paper COMSEC material, they must reduce the
      material to bits no larger than 5 millimeters (0.197 inches) in
      any dimension.                                                           

                (3)  DO NOT PULP paper-mylar-paper key tape or high wet
      strength paper (map stock) and durable-medium paper substitute
      (e.g., TYVEC olefin, polyethylene fiber).  These materials will
      not reduce to pulp, and must be destroyed by burning,
      pulverizing, chopping or crosscut shredding.                             

                (4)  When crosscut (double cut) shredders are used to
      destroy COMSEC material, they must reduce the material to shreds
      not more than 3/64-inch (1.2 mm) in width and not more than
      1/2-inch (13 mm) in length, or not more than 1/35-inch (0.73 mm)
      in width and not more than 7/8-inch (22.2 mm) in length.                 

           c.  Nonpaper COMSEC Material.  The authorized methods of
      routinely destroying nonpaper COMSEC material are burning,
      melting, chopping, pulverizing, and chemical alteration.  The
      material must be destroyed to the extent that there is no
      possibility of reconstructing classified information by physical,
      chemical, electrical, optical, or other means.                           

                (1)  Microforms.  Microforms (microfilm, microfiche, or
      other reduced-image photo negatives), may be destroyed by burning
      or by chemical means, such as immersion in household bleach (for
      silver film masters), or acetone or methelyne chloride (for diazo
      reproductions) for approximately 5 minutes.  When destroying by
      chemical means, film sheets must be separated and roll film must
      be unrolled.  Refer to Annex C, NTISSI 4004/AFR 56-5, for
      additional methods and guidance.  Use caution when destroying by
      chemical means to avoid potential hazards.  Protective clothing
      and goggles should be worn.                                              

                (2)  Magnetic Media.  Magnetic or electronic storage or
      recording media are handled on an individual basis.  Refer to
      Annex C, NTISSI 4004/AFR 56-5.                                           

                (3)  Plastic Canisters.  The objective in destroying
      plastic canisters used to hold keying material is to disfigure
      the two large flat surfaces (sides) of the canister.  This can be
      accomplished by inserting the canister inside a zip-lock bag and
      either puncture or smash the empty canister.  An empty canister
      will shatter.  Do not attempt to destroy an empty canister
      without the noted safety precautions included in the handling
      instructions.  Zip-lock bags are not furnished with the
      canisters.  Adequate safety precautions must be taken to prevent
      injuries that could. be caused by flying pieces of plastic when
      the canister shatters.                                                   

           d.  COMSEC Equipment and Components.  Routine destruction of
      COMSEC equipment and components is NOT AUTHORIZED.  Equipment
      which is unserviceable and cannot be repaired, or which is no
      longer required shall be reported to ANC-120, and to ACO-300
      through the appropriate region/center servicing security element.
      Custodians should review and be familiar with the procedures
      contained in AFKAG-2, USAF COMSEC Accounting Procedures, for
      returning COMSEC equipment and components.  Equipment which is
      unserviceable or no longer required will be retained until
      disposition instructions are provided.                                   

      6.  REPORTING ROUTINE DESTRUCTION.                                       

           a.  General.  FAA COMSEC accounts will report routine
      destruction in accordance with guidance in chapter 6, AFKAG-2.
      FAA accounts and users must destroy and witness all classified
      COMSEC material and record the destruction on an SF 153.                 

           b.  Legend 1 and 2 Material.  Users of keycards, keytapes,
      and keylists will:                                                       

                (1)  Use the destruction record provided with the
      material to record destruction of each day's key settings as soon
      as possible after supersession but no later than 72 hours.  FAA
      facilities which have a normal Monday through Friday operation
      are authorized superseded weekend key settings on the Monday
      following that particular weekend.  If the supersession date
      falls on a non-duty day, return the material on the first duty
      day thereafter.                                                          

                (2)  Return keycard booklet covers or keylist booklets
      or keytape canisters and records of destruction as well as unused
      emergency key settings to the issuing FAA custodian or destroy as
      directed by the custodian no later than 24 hours after monthly
      supersession.                                                            

           c.  Legend 3 or 5 Material.                                         

                (1)  Superseded legend 3 or 5 material must be
      destroyed as soon as possible after use, but no later than 12
      hours after supersession.  The 12-hour time limit is authorized
      for use only when mission requirements preclude immediate
      destruction.                                                             

                (2)  Destroy Secret and Confidential COMSEC material
      (by appropriately cleared destruction and witnessing officials)
      and certify destruction on an SF-153.                                    

                (3)  FAA users will retain certificates of destruction
      (SF 153, COMSEC Material Report, or AFCOMSEC Form 1) for all
      classified legends 3 and 5 material for a period of 2 calendar
      years.                                                                   

           d.  Disposing of Legend 4 Material.  Classified or
      unclassified material is accountable to AFCSC by the accounting
      number or by the quantity on initial receipt and must be reported
      to AFCSC when it is transferred or becomes excess.                       

                (1)  When accounting legend 4 material is no longer
      needed or superseded, users must return the material, except
      amendment residue, to the issuing COMSEC account.                        

                (2)  FAA COMSEC accounts will forward a decrease
      request for the legend 4 material according to AFKAG-2.                  

                (3)  The issuing COMSEC account must destroy and
      witness classified legend 4 COMSEC material.  Destruction is
      recorded on an SF-153.                                                   

           e.  Destruction and Witnessing Official.  Both the
      destruction and the witnessing officials must sign all
      destruction reports subject to the following rules:                      

                (1)  The FAA COMSEC custodian, or alternate COMSEC
      custodian in the absence of the custodian, must sign the
      AFCSC-prepared monthly destruction report.                               

                (2)  Within FAA COMSEC accounts grade requirements are
      as specified in chapter 2, of this directive.                            

                (3)  For FAA COMSEC users, the destruction official
      will be an appropriately cleared responsible individual.  There
      is no grade requirement specified formally for users, therefore,
      facility and activity managers having responsibility for COMSEC
      must use their discretion when appointing responsible
      individuals, and must ensure that these individuals are
      trustworthy and knowledgeable.                                           

                (4)  Clearance requirements are:                               

                     (a)  Within FAA COMSEC-accounts, the witnessing
      official must meet the clearance requirements of the COMSEC
      material being destroyed.  If, for any reason, no one is
      available who meets this requirement, the COMSEC custodian may
      waive the clearance requirement for the witnessing official, in
      which case the witnessing official's examination of the material
      to be destroyed must be confined to the front cover of the
      material.                                                                

                     (b)  For FAA users, the witnessing official must
      meet the clearance requirements of the material being destroyed.
      In an emergency, the destruction official may waive the clearance
      requirement of the witnessing official, subject to the same
      precautions noted in (a), above.                                         

                           FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY
                         PUBLIC AVAILABILITY TO BE
                        DETERMINED UNDER 5 U.S.C. 552


CONFIDENTIAL-Microsoft MSN Online Services Subpoena/Legal Compliance Guide

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Video – Anonymous Message to Germany

New Film – President Kennedy a day before he was assassinated

CONFIDENTIAL-Blizzard Entertainment World of Warcraft Law Enforcement Subpoena Guides

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CONFIDENTIAL – AOL Information Request/Subpoena Guidelines

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

AOL-2010

CONFIDENTIAL-Egypt Protest Photos


[Image]Protesters keep a pathway clear to move injured people during nearby clashes with Egyptian riot police in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s ruling military moved up the date for transferring power to a civilian government to July next year and consulted Tuesday with political parties on forming a new Cabinet. But the major concessions were immediately rejected by tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square threatening a “second revolution.” (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Women protesters stand in a group during nearby clashes with Egyptian riot police in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s ruling military moved up the date for transferring power to a civilian government to July next year and consulted Tuesday with political parties on forming a new Cabinet. But the major concessions were immediately rejected by tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square threatening a “second revolution.” (AP Photo/Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Egyptian protesters perform prayers as they are guarded by other protesters who hold the national flag at Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egyptian politicians say the ruling military has moved up the date for transferring power to a civilian government to July 1, 2012. (Ahmed Ali)
[Image]Protesters demonstrate during clashes with Egyptian riot police, not pictured, near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s ruling military moved up the date for transferring power to a civilian government to July next year and consulted Tuesday with political parties on forming a new Cabinet. But the major concessions were immediately rejected by tens of thousands of protesters in Cairo’s iconic Tahrir Square threatening a “second revolution.” (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Protesters chant slogans during clashes with the Egyptian riot police near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011.Egypt’s civilian Cabinet has offered to resign after three days of violent clashes in many cities between demonstrators and security forces, but the action failed to satisfy protesters deeply frustrated with the new military rulers. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]A protester runs to throw a tear gas canister away during clashes with the Egyptian riot police near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011.Egypt’s civilian Cabinet has offered to resign after three days of violent clashes in many cities between demonstrators and security forces, but the action failed to satisfy protesters deeply frustrated with the new military rulers. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Protesters run for cover during clashes with the Egyptian riot police near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s civilian Cabinet has offered to resign after three days of violent clashes in many cities between demonstrators and security forces, but the action failed to satisfy protesters deeply frustrated with the new military rulers. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Protesters carry a wounded man during clashes with the Egyptian riot police near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011.Egypt’s civilian Cabinet has offered to resign after three days of violent clashes in many cities between demonstrators and security forces, but the action failed to satisfy protesters deeply frustrated with the new military rulers. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]A protester on a motorcycle chants slogans during clashes with the Egyptian riot police near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s civilian Cabinet has offered to resign after three days of violent clashes in many cities between demonstrators and security forces, but the action failed to satisfy protesters deeply frustrated with the new military rulers. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]An Egyptian riot police officer fires tear gas during clashes with protesters near Tahrir square in Cairo, Egypt, Tuesday, Nov. 22, 2011. Egypt’s civilian Cabinet has offered to resign after three days of violent clashes in many cities between demonstrators and security forces, but the action failed to satisfy protesters deeply frustrated with the new military rulers. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Egyptian protesters and riot police face off in Alexandria, Egypt, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Security forces fired tear gas and clashed Monday with several thousand protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in the third straight day of violence that has killed dozens of people and has turned into the most sustained challenge yet to the rule of Egypt’s military.
[Image]Protesters gather in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Security forces fired tear gas and clashed Monday with several thousand protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in the third straight day of violence that has killed dozens of people and has turned into the most sustained challenge yet to the rule of Egypt’s military.(Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Protesters evacuate a wounded man during clashes with Egyptian riot police to a field hospital near Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Security forces fired tear gas and clashed Monday with several thousand protesters in Cairo’s Tahrir Square in the third straight day of violence that has killed at least two dozen people and has turned into the most sustained challenge yet to the rule of Egypt’s military. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Canadian volunteer nurse, Merikel, below right, helps an Egyptian medical team to treat an injured protester at a field hospital at Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Egyptian riot police clashed Monday with thousands of protesters demanding that the ruling military quickly announce a date to hand over power to an elected government. (Amr Nabil)
[Image]Egyptian protesters throw stones at Egyptian riot police, unseen, in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Monday, Nov. 21, 2011. Police are clashing for a third day in Cairo’s central Tahrir Square with stone-throwing protesters demanding the country’s military rulers quickly transfer power to a civilian government. (Ahmed Ali)
[Image]Protesters throw stones as they take cover during clashes with Egyptian riot police near the interior ministry in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011. Firing tear gas and rubber bullets, Egyptian riot police on Sunday clashed for a second day with thousands of rock-throwing protesters demanding that the ruling military quickly announce a date to hand over power to an elected government. The police battled an estimated 5,000 protesters in and around central Cairo’s Tahrir Square.
[Image]Tear gas surrounds Egyptian riot police as they stand guard during clashes in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. Thousands of police clashed with protesters for control of downtown Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Saturday after security forces tried to stop activists from staging a long-term sit-in there. The violence took place just nine days before Egypt’s first elections since the ouster of longtime President Hosni Mubarak in February. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Egyptian riot police clash with protesters in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. Egyptian riot police beat protesters and dismantled a small tent city set up to commemorate revolutionary martyrs in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Saturday. The clashes occurred after activists camped in the central square overnight following a massive Friday rally. The military tolerates daytime demonstrations in the central square, a symbol of the country’s Jan. 25-Feb. 11 uprising.

OCCUPY-Movement – Pepper Sprayed-Maced Protests Photos

[Image]In this Friday, Nov. 18, 2011, photo University of California, Davis Police Lt. John Pike uses pepper spray to move Occupy UC Davis protesters while blocking their exit from the school’s quad Friday in Davis, Calif. Two University of California, Davis police officers involved in pepper spraying seated protesters were placed on administrative leave Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011, as the chancellor of the school accelerates the investigation into the incident. (Wayne Tilcock)
[Image]In this Friday, Nov. 18, 2011, photo Occupy University of California, Davis, protesters including David Buscho, far left, react after being pepper sprayed by police who came to remove tents set up on the school’s quad Friday in Davis, Calif. Two University of California, Davis police officers involved in pepper spraying seated protesters were placed on administrative leave Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011, as the chancellor of the school accelerates the investigation into the incident. (Wayne Tilcock)
[Image]In this Friday, Nov. 18, 2011, photo occupy protester David Buscho is helped after being pepper sprayed by campus police while blocking their exit from the school’s Quad Friday in Davis, Calif. Two University of California, Davis police officers involved in pepper spraying seated protesters were placed on administrative leave Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011, as the chancellor of the school accelerates the investigation into the incident. (Wayne Tilcock)
[Image]In this image made from video, a police officer uses pepper spray as he walks down a line of Occupy demonstrators sitting on the ground at the University of California, Davis on Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. The video – posted on YouTube – was shot Friday as police moved in on more than a dozen tents erected on campus and arrested 10 people, nine of them students. AP

[Image]

[Image]University of California, Davis, student Mike Fetterman, receives a treatment for pepper spray by UC Davis firefighter Nate Potter, after campus police dismantled an Occupy Wall Street encampment on the campus quad in Davis, Calif. , Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. UC Davis officials say eight men and two women were taken into custody. AP
[Image]A police officer uses pepper spray on an Occupy Portland protestor at Pioneer Courthouse Square in Portland Ore. , Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011. AP
[Image]A protester affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement pours liquid over the eyes of another fellow protester to ease the pain from pepper spray during an unannounced raid by the New York City Police Department outside Zuccotti Park in New York, in the early hours of November 15, 2011. Police wearing helmets and carrying shields evicted protesters with the Occupy Wall Street movement early on Tuesday from the park in New York City’s financial district where they have camped since September. Reuters
[Image]Seattle Police officers deploy pepper spray into a crowd during an Occupy Seattle protest on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 at Westlake Park in Seattle. Protesters gathered in the intersection of 5th Avenue and Pine Street after marching from their camp at Seattle Central Community College in support of Occupy Wall Street. Many refused to move from the intersection after being ordered by police. Police then began spraying pepper spray into the gathered crowd hitting dozens of people. AP
[Image]Seattle activist Dorli Rainey, 84, reacts after being hit with pepper spray during an Occupy Seattle protest on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 at Westlake Park in Seattle. Protesters gathered in the intersection of 5th Avenue and Pine Street after marching from their camp at Seattle Central Community College in support of Occupy Wall Street. Many refused to move from the intersection after being ordered by police. Police then began spraying pepper spray into the gathered crowd hitting dozens of people. AP
[Image]A woman who gave her name as Jennifer and said she was two months pregnant is rushed to an ambulance after being hit with pepper spray at an Occupy Seattle protest on Tuesday, Nov. 15, 2011 at Westlake Park in Seattle. Protesters gathered in the intersection of 5th Avenue and Pine Street after marching from their camp at Seattle Central Community College in support of Occupy Wall Street. Many refused to move from the intersection after being ordered by police. Police then began spraying pepper spray into the gathered crowd hitting dozens of people. AP
[Image]A man is treated by fellow protesters after he was sprayed in the face with pepper spray by police during the Occupy Seattle’s protest against JPMorgan Chase CEO Jamie Dimon in Seattle November 2, 2011. About 300 rain-soaked protesters blocked the street outside the Sheraton hotel where Dimon was scheduled to speak at an event organized by the University of Washington’s school of business. Reuters
[Image]A police officer escorts an Occupy Tulsa protestor who was pepper sprayed in the face while being arresting for an alleged curfew violation for inhabiting a city park at night at Centennial Green in downtown Tulsa, Okla. , early Wednesday morning Nov. 2, 2011. Police warned demonstrators that they were in violation of a city curfew and gave them the choice of leaving before applying pepper spray and forcibly removing demonstrators sitting in a circle at the park shortly before 2 a.m. AP
[Image]Protesters use a metal structure against riot police as the police use pepper spray against them during clashes outside the Greek parliament in Athens, Wednesday, Oct. 19, 2011. Greek anger over new austerity measures and layoffs erupted into violence outside parliament on Wednesday, as demonstrators hurled chunks of marble and gasoline bombs and riot police responded with tear gas and stun grenades that echoed across Athens’ main square. Wednesday was the first day of a two-day general strike that unions described as the largest protests in years, with at least 100,000 people marching through central Athens. AP
[Image]A San Diego Police officer maces a demonstrator at the Civic Center Plaza Friday, Oct. 14, 2011 in San Diego. Police on Friday began removing about a half-dozen tents after warning demonstrators that their personal belongings couldn’t stay in the Occupy San Diego camp. (Lenny Ignelzi)
[Image]A demonstrator receives help after San Diego Police used pepper spray during a demonstration at the Civic Center Plaza Friday, Oct. 14, 2011 in San Diego. Police on Friday began removing about a half-dozen tents after warning demonstrators that their personal belongings couldn’t stay in the Occupy San Diego camp. AP
[Image]A demomstrator tries to wash pepper spray from his eyes after a clash with the San Diego Police at the Civic Center Plaza Friday, Oct. 14, 2011 in San Diego. Police on Friday began removing about a half-dozen tents after warning demonstrators that their personal belongings couldn’t stay in the Occupy San Diego camp. AP
[Image]Two demonstrators cover themselves after San Diego Police used pepper spray during a protest at the Civic Center Plaza Friday, Oct. 14, 2011 in San Diego. Police on Friday began removing about a half-dozen tents after warning demonstrators that their personal belongings couldn’t stay in the Occupy San Diego camp. AP
[Image]One demonstrator helps another flush her eyes with water after after police pepper-sprayed a group of protestors, who were trying to get into the National Air and Space Museum in Washington Saturday, Oct. 8, 2011, as part of Occupy DC activities in Washington. (Jose Luis Magana)

[Image]

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[Image]NYPD Deputy Inspector Anthony Bologna sprays protestors, 26 September 2011. Charlie Grapski via Daily Kos

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[Image]A protester is hit by pepper spray when police used them against protesters as they broke through a police cordon to carry out a sit-in protest in the Hong Kong’s central business district Friday, July 1, 2011, Tens of thousands people march to vent their anger over skyrocketing property prices and government policies, the 14th anniversary of the former British colony’s return to Chinese rule. AP
[Image]A riot police reacts, after his colleagues used pepper spray, against protesters outside the Health Ministry in Athens, Thursday, May 26, 2011. Police have used pepper spray to disperse protesting doctors and state hospital staff, in the latest protest against public spending cuts.
[Image]Israeli riot police detain a man whose face was sprayed with pepper spray during riots in the East Jerusalem neighborhood of Issawiya on May 13, 2011 as Israeli police flooded the streets of Jerusalem, fearing violence as Palestinians began marking the ‘Nakba’ or ‘catastrophe’ which befell them following Israel’s establishment in 1948.
[Image]Police spray pepper gas and water canons at protesters in Ankara, Turkey, Thursday, Feb. 3, 2011, trying to stop a march on Parliament by workers protesting government-proposed legislation that they say will strip them of their rights. About ten thousands of workers, many of whom had traveled from across Turkey, had gathered in the capital Ankara and vowed to reach Parliament in defiance of laws that bar demonstrations near the assembly building. AP

 

Volcano Accident in Guatemala: Journalist being killed on duty

CONFIDENTIAL-NYPD Patrol Guide Procedure 203-09: Officers Must Courteously Identify Themselves

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Civilians filed 231 allegations of “refusal to provide name and/or shield number” in 1999, 349 in 2000, 468 in 2001, and 636 in 2002, a 175% increase in just four years and an 82% increase in the last three years. During these same years, refusal to provide name and/or shield number constituted less than one percent, 5%, 8%, and 10% of all allegations the board substantiated. These increases led the CCRB to take a closer look at this allegation and summarize its findings in this report. As the basis for this mini-study, the agency chose to examine all complaints in which the civilian filed this allegation that the board closed after a full investigation between January 1 and June 30, 2002.

A word must first be said about the legal landscape in which this allegation exists. The New York City Police Department Patrol Guide, procedure 203-09 (Public Contact—General), states that officers must “give name and shield number to anyone requesting them.” New York City’s Office of Administrative Trials and Hearings (“OATH”) has issued a number of recent opinions that examine what this patrol guide procedure requires of officers. In essence, these cases have held that the patrol guide procedure imposes an “affirmative obligation” to “give name and shield number to anyone requesting them;” in other words, a demand for a name or badge number demands an “affirmative response.”

1. As a result of a recommendation contained in the 2002 “New York City Civilian Complaint Review Board’s Status Report” and in order to claritY the obligation of members of the service to provide their name and shield number to the public, Patrol Guide procedure 203-09, “Public Contact- General” has been revised.

2. Therefore, effective immediately, Patrol Guide procedure 203-09, “Public Contact – General,” is amended as follows:

a. REVISE current step “1″, page “1″ to read:

“PUBLIC CONTACT

1. Courteously and clearly state your rank, name, shield number and command, or otherwise provide them, to anyone who requests you to do so. Allow the person ample time to note this information.”

3. Any provisions of the Department manual or other Department directive in conflict with the contents of this order are suspended.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

NYPD-OfficerIdentifyYourself

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE T-TI – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – T-TI

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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090939429738;96;15;13;;TEICHMANN, KLAUS:;;;26312,50
060463515384;10;06;00;;TEICHMANN, LIANE:;;;17820,00
251163406129;97;22;00;;TEICHMANN, MARIAN:;;;16830,00
290471413250;97;06;00;;TEICHMANN, MARIO:;;;4090,81
141264421224;12;26;00;;TEICHMANN, MATTHIAS:;;;17435,00
200256527034;99;12;00;;TEICHMANN, MONIKA:;;;20412,50
040868419034;10;77;00;;TEICHMANN, OLAF:;;;12675,00
171246419339;12;06;00;;TEICHMANN, PAUL:;;;22437,50
090846428939;14;06;00;;TEICHMANN, PETER:;;;23187,50
250650521015;98;83;00;;TEICHMANN, REGINA:;;;17522,50
010243524910;13;18;00;;TEICHMANN, REGINA:;;;22500,00
280869428277;18;29;30;;TEICHMANN, RENE:;;;3070,16
020167417126;98;82;00;;TEICHMANN, STEFFEN:;;;16470,00
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150649405617;97;01;00;;TEICHMANN, ULRICH:;;;26732,50
300550408528;06;80;00;;TEICHMANN, UVE:;;;16847,50
200663417721;09;06;20;;TEICHMANN, UWE:;;;16280,00
110868422744;18;33;00;;TEICHMANN, VOLKMAR:;;;9510,00
100541430065;94;30;00;;TEICHMANN, WOLFGANG:;;;29250,00
281050426913;96;15;00;1603/75, M:;TEICHMEYER, LUTZ;1144;BANSINER STR. 3;
281050426913;96;15;00;1603/75, M:;TEICHMEYER, LUTZ;1144;BANSINER STR. 3;
140370419617;18;31;00;;TEICHMU(E)LLER, JO(E)RG:;;;9600,00
240453429827;30;83;00;;TEICHMUELLER, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;29055,31
190865416237;18;33;00;;TEICHMUELLER, UWE:;;;16546,50
250241529710;15;53;00;;TEICKE, BRIGITTE:;;;25125,00
280540429725;15;40;00;;TEICKE, GUNTHER:;;;35250,00
281144410015;07;00;43;;TEICKNER, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;26562,50
111265403434;03;40;00;;TEIDGE, JO(E)RG:;;;15348,00
101136418518;10;41;00;;TEIGKY, JOACHIM:;;;33750,00
070857418519;10;80;00;;TEIGKY, UWE:;;;17544,92
190857407429;96;15;11;;TEINZ, JOERG:;;;24365,00
290360407421;97;08;00;;TEINZ, UWE:;;;21217,50
220560412213;94;03;00;;TEITGE, DETLEF:;;;19946,75
081062412264;07;00;40;;TEITGE, JUERGEN:;;;15510,00
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281268417315;18;33;00;;TEJKL, STEFAN:;;;9510,00
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160139512278;07;06;00;;TELCH, MARGRET:;;;18333,00
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300552400853;01;51;00;;TELL, HORST:;;;21660,00
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101163415400;08;00;40;;TELLBRUN, DIRK:;;;17875,00
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090747413459;90;65;40;5133/76,;TELLBRUN, WOLFGANG;1140;NIEMEGKER STR. 1;
090747413459;90;65;40;5133/76,;TELLBRUN, WOLFGANG;1140;NIEMEGKER STR. 1;
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180256406114;97;08;00;;TELLE, WOLFRAM:;;;24840,00
210755419037;17;00;00;;TELLER, JOERG:;;;27300,76
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270371419366;10;69;00;;TELLER, MARIO:;;;2870,00
080469416027;18;33;00;;TELLHELM, JAN:;;;10725,00
240335530238;96;15;00;5181/84, U:;TELSCHOW, LIESELOTTE;1136;HANS-LOCH-STR. 26D;
240335530238;96;15;00;5181/84, U:;TELSCHOW, LIESELOTTE;1136;HANS-LOCH-STR. 26D;
080245430321;96;15;22;;TELSCHOW, MICHAEL:;;;35437,50
030830400873;01;41;00;;TELSCHOW, WALTER:;;;33750,00
300951517143;99;77;00;;TELZEROW, ELSA:;;;19682,25
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250645426320;94;30;00;;TEMLER, WERNER:;;;25500,00
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160570410316;07;06;00;;TEMME, ANDREAS:;;;12460,00
160451413960;18;33;00;;TEMMLER, FALK-DIETRICH:;;;32010,00
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260641520319;04;77;00;;TEMPEL, INGRID:;;;34200,00
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211055407312;04;15;00;;TEMPLIN, FRANK:;;;25530,00
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081156412214;99;43;00;;TENNEMANN, RALF:;;;20010,00
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040259407943;95;45;00;;TENNER, HENRY:;;;20642,50
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200870407913;18;31;00;;TENNERT, HEIKO:;;;6705,00
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261251409556;07;65;00;;TENNERT, UDO:;;;19440,00
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120369412321;18;32;00;;TENNSTA(E)DT, GUIDO:;;;9600,00
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280569422121;18;33;00;;TENTA, JENS:;;;9675,00
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110340429737;99;02;00;;TERNIES, HANS-DIETER:;;;35250,00
190351400211;01;00;40;;TERPE, MANFRED:;;;22695,00
161156424987;13;15;00;;TERPE, PETER:;;;21551,37
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010843409545;06;08;00;;TERSCH, HEINZ:;;;25875,00
080843502719;02;51;00;;TERSCHANSKI, GISELA:;;;24808,47
190641402741;60;90;00;;TERSCHANSKI, OSWALD:;;;
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070630430054;99;40;00;;TERTON, FRED:;;;33000,00
040970400823;01;69;00;;TERWEDOW, HEIKO:;;;2896,61
011158422033;99;02;00;;TERZYK, ENRICO:;;;26910,00
080643429721;15;53;00;;TERZYK, GERHARD:;;;25500,00
011269425026;18;33;00;;TES(Z)MER, HEIKO:;;;2795,00
221263430209;98;20;00;;TESCH, CARSTEN:;;;16500,00
051048417440;98;20;00;;TESCH, GUENTER:;;;23760,00
040342429721;99;43;00;;TESCH, HANSJOACHIM:;;;33000,00
220468402119;18;31;00;;TESCH, HOLGER:;;;9825,00
251260403421;94;65;00;;TESCH, ROLAND:;;;18870,00
080669430157;99;49;00;;TESCH, UWE:;;;9623,33
050656429782;97;08;00;;TESCHAUER, DIETER:;;;23287,50
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251139403438;03;40;00;;TESCHKE, HORST:;;;23937,50
140564401810;02;06;00;;TESCHKE, MICHAEL:;;;14634,00
210566407037;96;15;22;;TESCHKE, UWE-JENS:;;;13455,00
090858430083;97;01;00;;TESCHNER, ANDREAS:;;;24840,00
050459506136;98;82;00;;TESCHNER, BEATE:;;;18368,86
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180444422832;12;55;00;;TESCHNER, GERT:;;;21000,00
300452507020;98;83;00;;TESCHNER, GISELA:;;;20880,00
211054411125;99;02;00;;TESCHNER, HANS-OTTO:;;;29100,00
090132403617;94;03;00;;TESCHNER, HEINZ:;;;42000,00
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060948406178;04;30;00;;TESCHNER, JOACHIM:;;;21000,00
110160430159;94;03;00;;TESCHNER, MICHAEL:;;;21390,00
311058410013;04;06;00;;TESCHNER, UDO:;;;19205,00
160153509518;09;00;49;;TESCHNER, WALTRAUD:;;;13236,61
180566400738;99;43;00;;TESCHULAT, RENE:;;;15876,00
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101157430065;97;06;00;;TESHMER, LUTZ:;;;18400,00
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270351406824;05;06;00;;TESKE, GERHARD:;;;28080,00
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270367414319;97;06;00;;TESKE, MARIO:;;;15406,00
310169423816;94;65;00;;TESKE, MARIO:;;;9708,54
251250506814;05;53;00;;TESKE, MONIKA:;;;17432,91
131254429864;15;00;47;;TESKE, PETER:;;;25030,00
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230570406828;05;80;00;;TESKE, THOMAS:;;;8505,00
181070420545;18;34;00;;TESKE, TINO:;;;6570,00
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300855405619;04;06;00;;TESMER, LOTHAR:;;;21200,00
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151269404721;17;00;00;;TESSMER, HEIKO:;;;9555,00
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181161522168;12;96;65;;TESZMER, BIRGIT:;;;10691,94
270663412254;07;65;00;;TESZMER, ENDRIK:;;;15510,00
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250759407013;99;53;00;;TESZMER, PETER:;;;17940,00
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110344417514;09;18;00;;TEUBER, JOHANNES:;;;27125,00
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060463413927;95;45;00;;TEUBNER, GERALD:;;;16077,29
260870421218;18;77;00;;TEUBNER, HANNES:;;;2720,00
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110943421216;12;77;00;;TEUBNER, STEFAN:;;;37440,00
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151169422025;18;33;00;;TEUCHER, HEIKO:;;;9600,00
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310868414628;17;00;00;;TEUCHERT, INGO:;;;10250,80
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190471429801;05;69;00;;TEUDT, RICO:;;;2870,00
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210557421080;96;15;09;;TEUMER, STEFFEN:;;;25702,50
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270457415358;13;06;00;;TEUSCHER, BENNO:;;;22195,00
171056513017;13;78;00;;TEUSCHER, MECHTHILD:;;;17449,70
121270415017;98;27;00;;TEUSCHER, THOMAS:;;;3620,00
230549400421;01;06;20;;TEUT, WILFRIED:;;;19537,50
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211264413946;90;65;40;2729/86, :;TEUTER, MAIK;1280;ELBESTR. 99;
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210455413020;98;82;00;;TEUTLOFF, ERWIN:;;;19600,00
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061047509211;12;06;00;;TEWELLIS, ERIKA:;;;13966,20
020370409228;12;15;00;;TEWELLIS, OLAF:;;;8350,00
130842409224;12;06;00;;TEWELLIS, WERNER:;;;21187,50
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200445430135;18;77;00;;TEWS, GERHARD:;;;24875,00
160869408528;06;69;00;;TEWS, GERMO:;;;9510,00
300868423912;18;35;00;;TEWS, HEIKO:;;;9510,00
280340403643;30;45;00;;TEWS, SIEGBERT:;;;14766,00
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080737403717;03;00;46;;TEYKA, JOACHIM:;;;21750,00
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230245424010;15;00;47;1484/82, :;THA(E)TER, WOLFGANG;1140;FRANZ-STENZER-STR. 7;
230245424010;15;00;47;1484/82, :;THA(E)TER, WOLFGANG;1140;FRANZ-STENZER-STR. 7;
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190458400641;01;06;25;;THAELE, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;20010,00
290563409419;99;43;00;;THAELE, OLAF:;;;16830,00
150459400612;01;26;00;;THAELE, PETER:;;;19320,00
110263508545;99;43;00;;THAELE, PETRA:;;;16513,30
080243422854;12;06;00;;THAEMELT, PETER:;;;22687,50
150660407525;30;42;00;;THAENS, MICHAEL:;;;13200,00
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021037516219;09;06;20;;THAETZ, ROSEMARIE:;;;23800,02
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060444400733;90;65;40;666/66,;THALE, KLAUS;1136;MELLENSEESTR. 61;
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210470428124;18;31;00;;THALHEIM, ANDREAS:;;;6705,00
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150646429728;97;08;00;;THALHEIM, GUENTHER:;;;23466,66
111057421056;12;20;00;;THALHEIM, LUTZ:;;;23460,00
300752426716;97;22;00;;THALHEIM, PETER:;;;23460,00
270163530318;99;02;00;;THALHEIM, ROSITA:;;;17490,00
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Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

Taliban show video with the execution of a person alleged spying for the CIA

Unveiled – Nazi Leaders Executed At Nuremberg

A short film I made, covering the execution of the former Nazi leaders in Nuremberg in October 1946.

CONFIDENTIAL-Clark Lytle Geduldig Cranford Occupy Wall Street Lobbyist Response Proposal for the American Bankers

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/OWS-CLGC.png

Leading Democratic party strategists have begun to openly discuss the benefits of embracing the growing and increasingly organized Occupy Wall Street (OWS) movement to prevent Republican gains in Congress and the White House next year. We have seen this process of adopting extreme positions and movements to increase base voter turnout, including in the 2005-2006 immigration debate. This would mean more than just short-term political discomfort for Wall Street firms. If vilifying the leading companies of this sector is allowed to become an unchallenged centerpiece of a coordinated Democratic campaign, it has the potential to have very long-lasting political, policy and financial impacts on the companies in the center of the bullseye.

It shouldn’t be surprising that the Democratic party or even President Obama’s re-election team would campaign against Wall Street in this cycle. However the bigger concern should be that Republicans will no longer defend Wall Street companies- and might start running against them too.

Well-known Wall Street companies stand at the nexus of where OWS protestors and the Tea Party overlap on angered populism. Both the radical left and t he radical right are channeling broader frustration about the state of the economy and share a mutual anger over TARP and other perceived bailouts. This combination has the potential to be explosive later in the year when media reports cover the next round of bonuses and contrast it with stories of millions of Americans making do with less this holiday season.

Democratic strategists have identified the OWS movement as a way to tap this populist anger. As an example, the L.A. Times reported that Robby Mook, executive director of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, wrote an email to supporters saying “protestors are assembling in New York and around the country to let billionaires, big oil and big bankers know that we’re not going to let the richest 1% force draconian economic policies and massive cuts to crucial programs on Main Street Americans.”

They are certainly in the field right now testing messaging options and developing the plans to deploy them in ads, speeches, social media and grassroots communications as early as this year. The focus of those campaign efforts would be to tar the financial services sector- and in particular high-profile Wall Street investment house brands-as being responsible for the economic problems facing the country and middle class Americans. As the Democrat half of the well-known Battleground Survey polling team, Celinda Lake, said: “It has enormous potential.” It may be easy to dismiss OWS as a ragtag group of protestors but they have demonstrated that they should be treated more like an organized competitor who is very nimble and capable of working the media, coordinating third party support and engaging office holders to do their
bidding. To counter that, we have to do the same. Putting the cornerstone elements of a plan in place right now will prepare firms to respond quickly and collectively at the earliest and most influential point when embracing OWS goes from concept planning to execution. The cornerstone elements of a plan include: survey research and message testing, opposition research, targeted social media monitoring, coalition planning, and advertising creative and placement strategy development.

Targeted Social Media Monitoring

The transparency of social media platforms offers an excellent opportunity to anticipate future OWS tactics and messaging as well as identify extreme language and ideas that put its most ardent supporters at odds with mainstream Americans. These platforms may not be a place where engaging OWS supporters directly could be successful but with sophisticated monitoring and analytical tactics it could provide exceptional political intelligence.

Deliverable: We will conduct and report on an audit of most active social media platforms used by OWS with the identification of trends in their engagement. This audit will offer analysis of those trends and identify effective reporting tools to develop actionable intelligence that could be rapidly acted on when a campaign becomes fully operational.

Pricing

This initial effort to develop the cornerstone elements of a strategic campaign is achievable within 60 days and would best provide you with a range of effective response options if the move to adopt OWS continues on its current path. The cost of the deliverables identified above is $850,000.

DOWNLAOD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

Unveiled – The botched execution of the real SS-Commander Amon Goeth from Steven Spielbergs “Schindlers List”

Amon Goeth (full name Amon Leopold Göth) was a Nazi SS officer who was in charge of a concentration camp in Plaszow, Poland. After the war, the Supreme National Tribunal of Poland at Kraków found Göth guilty of murdering tens of thousands of people. He was hanged on September 13, 1946, aged 37, not far from the former site of the Płaszów camp. At his execution, Göth’s hands were tied behind his back. The executioner twice miscalculated the length of rope necessary to hang Göth, and it was only on the third attempt that the execution was successful.

TOP-SECRET FROM THE WHITE HOUSE – Implementation of Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties

Vol. 76 Tuesday, No. 225 November 22, 2011 Part II Department of State ———————————————————————– 22 CFR Parts 120, 123, 124, et al. Implementation of Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties; Proposed Rule Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 225 / Tuesday, November 22, 2011 / Proposed Rules [[Page 72246]] ———————————————————————– DEPARTMENT OF STATE 22 CFR Parts 120, 123, 124, 126, 127, and 129 [Public Notice 7683] RIN 1400-AC95 Implementation of Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties AGENCY: Department of State. ACTION: Proposed rule. ———————————————————————– SUMMARY: The Department of State is proposing to amend the International Traffic in Arms Regulations (ITAR) to implement the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom, and identify via a supplement the defense articles and defense services that may not be exported pursuant to the Treaties. Additionally, the Department of State proposes to amend the section pertaining to the Canadian exemption to reference the new supplement, and, with regard to Congressional certification, the Department of State proposes to add Israel to the list of countries and entities that have a shorter certification time period and a higher dollar value reporting threshold. DATES: The Department of State will accept comments on this proposed rule until December 22, 2011. ADDRESSES: Interested parties may submit comments within 30 days of the date of the publication by any of the following methods: Email: DDTCResponseTeam@state.gov with the subject line, Regulatory Change–Treaties. Persons with access to the Internet may also view and comment on this notice by searching for its RIN on the U.S. Government regulations Web site at http://www.regulations.gov. FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Sarah Heidema, Office of Defense Trade Controls Policy, Department of State, Telephone (202) 663-2809; Fax (202) 261-8199; or Email DDTCResponseTeam@state.gov. ATTN: Regulatory Change–Treaties. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: ———————————————————————— ITAR Part Proposed change ———————————————————————— Part 120…………………….. Section 120.19 revised to clarify meaning of reexport or retransfer; new Sec. Sec. 120.33 and 120.34 added to provide definitions of the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties between the United States and Australia and the U.K., respectively; new Sec. Sec. 120.35 and 120.36 added to define the implementing arrangements pursuant to the Treaties between the United States and Australia and the United States and the U.K., respectively. Part 123…………………….. Clarifying edits made throughout section and references to new proposed Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17 added; Israel added to Sec. 123.9(e). Part 124…………………….. Sec. 124.11 revised to add Israel to the list of countries and entities subject to the 15-day time period regarding Congressional certification. Part 126…………………….. Clarifying edits made throughout section; Sec. 126.5(b) revised to reference the new supplement to part 126, consequently, Sec. Sec. 126.5(b)(1)-(21) are removed; Sec. 126.16 added to describe the exemption pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia; Sec. 126.17 added to describe the exemption pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom; Supplement No. 1 to part 126 added. Part 127…………………….. Clarifying edits made throughout section; revised to make reference to new proposed Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17. Part 129…………………….. Sections 129.6(b)(2), 129.7(a)(1)(vii), and 129.7(a)(2) revised to include Israel in the listing of countries and entities. ———————————————————————— These proposed amendments are pursuant to the Security Cooperation Act of 2010 (Pub. L. 111-266), with the inclusion of other proposed changes. Title I of the Security Cooperation Act, the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties Implementation Act of 2010, implements the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia, done at Sydney, Australia, on September 5, 2007; and the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom, done at Washington, DC and London on June 21 and 26, 2007, respectively (collectively referred to herein as the “Treaties”). We propose a supplement to part 126 that will identify those defense articles and defense services exempt from the scope of the Treaties. These proposed amendments would affect parts 120, 123, 126, and 127, with new sections in part 126 describing the licensing exemptions pursuant to the Treaties. Title III of the Security Cooperation Act creates for Israel a status in law similar to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), the member countries of NATO, Australia, Japan, New Zealand, and the Republic of Korea concerning certification to the Congress. Pursuant to the proposed change, we would require certification for transfers to Israel prior to granting any license or other approval for transactions of major defense equipment sold under a contract in the amount of $25,000,000 or more (currently required for amounts of $14,000,000 or more), or for defense articles and defense services sold under a contract in the amount of $100,000,000 or more (currently required for amounts of $50,000,000 or more), and provided the transfer does not include any other countries. The change would also shorten from thirty (30) to fifteen (15) calendar days the certification time period during which approval may not be granted. This proposed amendment would affect parts 123, 124, and 129. Additionally, we are revising Sec. 126.5, describing the Canadian exemption, to reference the proposed supplement to part 126. This proposed amendment would affect part 126. Section by section identification of the proposed changes follows. We are revising the authority citation for part 120 to include Public Law 111-266; section 120.1 to reference the Treaties as authorities; and section 120.19 to clarify the meaning of reexport or retransfer. In Sec. 120.28, we are correcting an outdated reference (Shipper’s Export Declaration) to refer to the Electronic Export Information. We are proposing new Sec. Sec. 120.33 and 120.34 to provide definitions of the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaties between the United States and Australia and the U.K., respectively. Also, we are proposing new Sec. Sec. 120.35 and 120.36 to define the implementing arrangements pursuant to the Treaties between the United States and Australia and the United States and the U.K., respectively. The proposed change in Sec. 123.4 replaces the word “export” with the word “exporter.” In the last sentence in [[Page 72247]] Sec. 123.9(a), “a person” will replace “exporters,” and we are adding “destination” as an item that must be determined prior to the submission of an application or the claiming of an exemption. We are adding a note following this section. We are revising section 123.9(b) to expand the reference to documents, and to reference the new proposed Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17. We are adding clarifying language to Sec. Sec. 123.9(c), (c)(1), and (c)(2); and adding the language of the current (c)(4) to (c)(3). New language pertaining to new Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17 will comprise a new (c)(4). We are removing and reserving section 123.9(d). We are adding Israel to the list of countries and entities in Sec. 123.9(e); citing the new Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17 in Sec. 123.9(e)(1); and adding clarifying language to Sec. Sec. 123.9(e)(3) and (e)(4). We are adding Israel to the list of countries and entities in Sec. Sec. 123.15(a)(1), (a)(2), and (b). We are adding Australia and the United Kingdom to Sec. 123.16(a), and reference to the Electronic Export Information replaces reference to the Shipper’s Export Declaration in this section and in Sec. 123.16(b)(1)(iii). We are clarifying documents in Sec. 123.16(b)(2)(vi), and adding new Sec. Sec. 123.16(c) and (d) referencing the new Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17. Section 123.22(b)(2) replaces references to the Shipper’s Export Declaration with the Electronic Export Information. We are revising the title and text for Sec. 123.26. We are revising the authority citation for part 124 to include Public Law 111-266. We are revising section 124.11 to add Israel to the list of countries and entities subject to the 15-day time period regarding Congressional certification. We are revising the authority citation for part 126 to include Public Law 111-266, and revising section 126.1(e) for clarification. We are adding a section (e)(1), to contain the current requirement found in (e) to notify the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of any transactions that contravene the prohibitions of Sec. 126.1(a). We are reserving section (e)(2). We are revising section 126.3 to change “Director” to “Managing Director” and “Office” to “Directorate.” We are replacing references to Shipper’s Export Declaration with Electronic Export Information in Sec. 126.4(d). We are revising section 126.5(a) to change “Port Director” to “Port Directors.” We are revising section 126.5(b) to reference the new supplement to part 126; consequently, we are removing Sec. Sec. 126.5(b)(1)-(21). We are removing and reserving section 126.5(c) (defense services not subject to exemption will be covered by the new supplement to part 126). We are revising Section 126.5(d) to change “re-transfer” to “retransfer,” and revising Sec. 126.5(d)(2) Note 2 to reference the proposed new supplement to part 126. We are adding the terms “criminal complaint” and “other criminal charge” to Sec. 126.7(a)(3), and adding clarifying language to Sec. 126.7(a)(7). We are revising section 126.13(a) to include reference to Sec. 123.9; revising Sec. 126.13(a)(1) to add the terms “criminal complaint” and “other criminal charge”; and revising Sec. 126.13(a)(4) to include reference to Sec. 123.9. We are proposing section 126.16 to describe the exemption pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia, and proposing Sec. 126.17 to describe the exemption pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom. We are proposing the addition of Supplement No. 1 to part 126, and this provision will delineate those items of the U.S. Munitions List that are outside the scope of the exemptions established by the Treaties and the Canadian exemptions at Sec. 126.5. We are revising the authority citation for part 127 to include Public Law 111-266. We are revising section 127.1 to make reference, where appropriate, to new proposed Sec. Sec. 126.16 and 126.17, and we are providing clarifying language, leading to the inclusion of a new proposed Sec. 127.1(e). We are adding the words “or attempt to use” in Sec. 127.2(a); “subchapter” will replace “section” in Sec. 127.2(b); we are adding “reexport” and “retransfer to Sec. 127.2(b)(1); adding “Electronic Export Information filing” to Sec. 127.2(b)(2); and proposing a new Sec. 127.2(b)(14). We are adding clarifying language to Sec. 127.3(a); adding the words “or by exemption” to Sec. 127.4(a); adding the words “or claim of an exemption” to Sec. 127.4(c); and proposing new Sec. 127.4(d). We are revising section 127.7(a) to remove the words “for which a license or approval is required by this subchapter.” In Sec. 127.10(a), we are modifying the word “approval” with addition of the word “written.” We are proposing new Sec. 127.12(b)(5). We are revising the structure of Sec. 127.12(d), removing an unnecessary level, and expanding the example list for “shipping documents”. We are revising sections 129.6(b)(2), 129.7(a)(1)(vii), and 129.7(a)(2) to include Israel in the listing of countries and entities. Regulatory Analysis and Notices Administrative Procedure Act The Department of State is of the opinion that controlling the import and export of defense services is a foreign affairs function of the United States Government and that rules implementing this function are exempt from Sec. 553 (Rulemaking) and Sec. 554 (Adjudications) of the Administrative Procedure Act. Although the Department is of the opinion that this proposed rule is exempt from the rulemaking provisions of the APA, the Department is publishing this proposed rule with a 30-day provision for public comment and without prejudice to its determination that controlling the import and export of defense services is a foreign affairs function. Regulatory Flexibility Act Since this proposed amendment is not subject to the notice-and- comment procedures of 5 U.S.C. 553, it does not require analysis under the Regulatory Flexibility Act. Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995 This proposed amendment does not involve a mandate that will result in the expenditure by State, local, and tribal governments, in the aggregate, or by the private sector, of $100 million or more in any year and it will not significantly or uniquely affect small governments. Therefore, no actions were deemed necessary under the provisions of the Unfunded Mandates Reform Act of 1995. Executive Order 13175 The Department of State has determined that this proposed amendment will not have tribal implications, will not impose substantial direct compliance costs on Indian tribal governments, and will not pre-empt tribal law. Accordingly, the requirement of Executive Order 13175 does not apply to this proposed amendment. Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996 This proposed amendment has been found not to be a major rule within the meaning of the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness Act of 1996. Executive Orders 12372 and 13132 This proposed amendment will not have substantial direct effects on the States, on the relationship between the national government and the States, or on the distribution of power and responsibilities among the various [[Page 72248]] levels of government. Therefore, in accordance with Executive Order 13132, it is determined that this proposed amendment does not have sufficient federalism implications to require consultations or warrant the preparation of a federalism summary impact statement. The regulations implementing Executive Order 12372 regarding intergovernmental consultation on Federal programs and activities do not apply to this proposed amendment. Executive Order 12866 The Department is of the opinion that restricting defense articles exports is a foreign affairs function of the United States Government and that rules governing the conduct of this function are exempt from the requirements of Executive order 12866. However, the Department has nevertheless reviewed this regulation to ensure its consistency with the regulatory philosophy and principles set forth in that Executive Order. Executive Order 12988 The Department of State has reviewed this proposed amendment in light of sections 3(a) and 3(b)(2) of Executive Order 12988 to eliminate ambiguity, minimize litigation, establish clear legal standards, and reduce burden. Executive Order 13563 The Department of State has considered this rule in light of Executive Order 13563, dated January 18, 2011, and affirms that this regulation is consistent with the guidance therein. Paperwork Reduction Act This proposed amendment does not impose any new reporting or recordkeeping requirements subject to the Paperwork Reduction Act, 44 U.S.C. Chapter 35. List of Subjects 22 CFR Parts 120, 123, 124, and 126 Arms and Munitions, Exports. 22 CFR Part 127 Arms and Munitions, Crime, Exports, Penalties, Seizures and Forfeitures. 22 CFR Part 129 Arms and Munitions, Exports, Brokering. Accordingly, for the reasons set forth above, Title 22, Chapter I, Subchapter M, parts 120, 123, 124, 126, 127, and 129 are proposed to be amended as follows: PART 120–PURPOSE AND DEFINITIONS 1. The authority citation for Part 120 is revised to read as follows: Authority: Secs. 2, 38, and 71, Pub. L. 90-629, 90 Stat. 744 (22 U.S.C. 2752, 2778, 2797); 22 U.S.C. 2794; E.O. 11958, 42 FR 4311; E.O. 13284, 68 FR 4075; 3 CFR, 1977 Comp. p. 79; 22 U.S.C. 2651a; Pub. L. 105-261, 112 Stat. 1920; Pub. L. 111-266. 2. Section 120.1 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (c), and (d) to read as follows: Sec. 120.1 General authorities and eligibility. (a) Section 38 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2778), as amended, authorizes the President to control the export and import of defense articles and defense services. The statutory authority of the President to promulgate regulations with respect to exports of defense articles and defense services was delegated to the Secretary of State by Executive Order 11958, as amended. This subchapter implements that authority. Portions of this subchapter also implement the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom. (Note, however, that the Treaties are not the source of authority for the prohibitions in part 127, but instead are the source of one limitation on the scope of such prohibitions.) By virtue of delegations of authority by the Secretary of State, these regulations are primarily administered by the Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Defense Trade and Regional Security and the Managing Director of Defense Trade Controls, Bureau of Political-Military Affairs. * * * * * (c) Receipt of Licenses and Eligibility. (1) A U.S. person may receive a license or other approval pursuant to this subchapter. A foreign person may not receive such a license or other approval, except as follows: (i) A foreign governmental entity in the United States may receive an export license or other export approval; (ii) A foreign person may receive a reexport or retransfer approval; and (iii) A foreign person may receive a prior approval for brokering activities. Requests for a license or other approval other than by a person referred to in paragraphs (c)(1)(i) and (c)(1)(ii) will be considered only if the applicant has registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls pursuant to part 122 or 129 of this subchapter, as appropriate. (2) Persons who have been convicted of violating the criminal statutes enumerated in Sec. 120.27 of this subchapter, who have been debarred pursuant to part 127 or 128 of this subchapter, who are subject to indictment or are otherwise charged (e.g., by information) for violating the criminal statutes enumerated in Sec. 120.27 of this subchapter, who are ineligible to contract with, or to receive a license or other form of authorization to import defense articles or defense services from any agency of the U.S. Government, who are ineligible to receive an export license or other approval from any other agency of the U.S. Government, or who are subject to a Department of State policy of denial, suspension or revocation under Sec. 126.7(a) of this subchapter, or to interim suspension under Sec. 127.8 of this subchapter, are generally ineligible to be involved in activities regulated under this subchapter. (d) The exemptions provided in this subchapter do not apply to transactions in which the exporter, any party to the export (as defined in Sec. 126.7(e) of this subchapter), any source or manufacturer, broker or other participant in the brokering activities, is generally ineligible as set forth above in paragraph (c) of this section, unless prior written authorization has been granted by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. 3. Section 120.19 is revised to read as follows: Sec. 120.19 Reexport or retransfer. Reexport or retransfer means the transfer of defense articles or defense services to an end-use, end-user, or destination not previously authorized by license, written approval, or exemption pursuant to this subchapter. 4. Section 120.28 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows: Sec. 120.28 Listing of forms referred to in this subchapter. * * * * * (b) * * * (2) Electronic Export Information filed via the Automated Export System. * * * * * 5. Section 120.33 is added to read as follows: Sec. 120.33 Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia. Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia means the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of [[Page 72249]] Australia Concerning Defense Trade Cooperation, done at Sydney, September 5, 2007. For additional information on making exports pursuant to this treaty, see Sec. 126.16 of this subchapter. 6. Section 120.34 is added to read as follows: Sec. 120.34 Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom. Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom means the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Concerning Defense Trade Cooperation, done at Washington DC and London, June 21 and 26, 2007. For additional information on making exports pursuant to this treaty, see Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter. 7. Section 120.35 is added to read as follows: Sec. 120.35 Australia Implementing Arrangement. Australia Implementing Arrangement means the Implementing Arrangement Pursuant to the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of Australia Concerning Defense Trade Cooperation, done at Washington, March 14, 2008, as it may be amended. 8. Section 120.36 is added to read as follows: Sec. 120.36 United Kingdom Implementing Arrangement. United Kingdom Implementing Arrangement means the Implementing Arrangement Pursuant to the Treaty between the Government of the United States of America and the Government of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland Concerning Defense Trade Cooperation, done at Washington DC, February 14, 2008, as it may be amended. PART 123–LICENSES FOR THE EXPORT OF DEFENSE ARTICLES 9. The authority citation for part 123 continues to read as follows: Authority: Secs. 2, 38, and 71, Pub. L. 90-629, 90 Stat. 744 (22 U.S.C. 2752, 2778, 2797); 22 U.S.C. 2753; E.O. 11958, 42 FR 4311; 3 CFR, 1977 Comp. p. 79; 22 U.S.C. 2651a; 22 U.S.C. 2776; Pub. L. 105- 261, 112 Stat. 1920; Sec 1205(a), Pub. L. 107-228. 10. Section 123.4 is amended by revising paragraph (d) introductory text to read as follows: Sec. 123.4 Temporary import license exemptions. * * * * * (d) Procedures. To the satisfaction of the Port Directors of U.S. Customs and Border Protection, the importer and exporter must comply with the following procedures: * * * * * 11. Section 123.9 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (b), (c), (e), (e)(1), (e)(3), (e)(4), and removing and reserving paragraph (d), to read as follows: Sec. 123.9 Country of ultimate destination and approval of reexports or retransfers. (a) The country designated as the country of ultimate destination on an application for an export license, or in an Electronic Export Information filing where an exemption is claimed under this subchapter, must be the country of ultimate end use. The written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls must be obtained before reselling, transferring, reexporting, retransferring, transshipping, or disposing of a defense article to any end-user, end-use, or destination other than as stated on the export license, or in the Electronic Export Information filing in cases where an exemption is claimed under this subchapter, except in accordance with the provisions of an exemption under this subchapter that explicitly authorizes the resell, transfer, reexport, retransfer, transshipment, or disposition of a defense article without such approval. A person must determine the specific end-user, end-use, and destination prior to submitting an application to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls or claiming an exemption under this subchapter. Note to paragraph (a): In making the aforementioned determination, a person is expected to review all readily available information, including information available to the public generally as well as information available from other parties to the transaction. (b) The exporter shall incorporate the following statement as an integral part of the bill of lading, airway bill, or other shipping documents and the invoice whenever defense articles or defense services are to be exported or transferred pursuant to a license, other written approval, or an exemption under this subchapter, other than the exemptions contained in Sec. 126.16 and Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter (Note: for exports made pursuant to Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter, see Sec. 126.16(j)(5) or Sec. 126.17(j)(5)): “These commodities are authorized by the U.S. Government for export only to [country of ultimate destination] for use by [end-user]. They may not be transferred, transshipped on a non- continuous voyage, or otherwise be disposed of, to any other country or end-user, either in their original form or after being incorporated into other end-items, without the prior written approval of the U.S. Department of State.” (c) Any person requesting written approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for the reexport, retransfer, other disposition, or change in end use, end user, or destination of a defense article or defense service initially exported or transferred pursuant to a license or other written approval, or an exemption under this subchapter, must submit all the documentation required for a permanent export license (see Sec. 123.1 of this subchapter) and shall also submit the following: (1) The license number, written authorization, or exemption under which the defense article or defense service was previously authorized for export from the United States (Note: For exports under exemptions at Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter, the original end- use, program, project, or operation under which the item was exported must be identified.); (2) A precise description, quantity, and value of the defense article or defense service; (3) A description and identification of the new end-user, end-use, and destination; and (4) With regard to any request for such approval relating to a defense article or defense service initially exported pursuant to an exemption contained in Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter, written request for the prior approval of the transaction from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls must be submitted: (i) By the original U.S. exporter, provided a written request is received from a member of the Australian Community, as identified in Sec. 126.16 of this subchapter, or the United Kingdom Community, as identified in Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter (where such a written request includes a written certification from the member of the Australian Community or the United Kingdom Community providing the information set forth in this subsection); or (ii) By a member of the Australian Community or the United Kingdom Community, where such request provides the information set forth in this section. (d) [Reserved] (e) Reexports or retransfers of U.S.-origin components incorporated into a foreign defense article to NATO, NATO agencies, a government of a NATO [[Page 72250]] country, or the governments of Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea are authorized without the prior written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, provided: (1) The U.S.-origin components were previously authorized for export from the United States, either by a license, written authorization, or an exemption other than those described in either Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter; * * * * * (3) The person reexporting the defense article provides written notification to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of the retransfer not later than 30 days following the reexport. The notification must state the articles being reexported and the recipient government. (4) The original license or other approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls did not include retransfer or reexport restrictions prohibiting use of this exemption. 12. Section 123.15 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1), (a)(2), and (b) to read as follows: Sec. 123.15 Congressional certification pursuant to Section 36(c) of the Arms Export Control Act. (a) * * * (1) A license for the export of major defense equipment sold under a contract in the amount of $14,000,000 or more, or for defense articles and defense services sold under a contract in the amount of $50,000,000 or more, to any country that is not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), or Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea that does not authorize a new sales territory; or (2) A license for export to a country that is a member country of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO), or Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea, of major defense equipment sold under a contract in the amount in the amount of $25,000,000 or more, or for defense articles and defense services sold under a contract in the amount of $100,000,000 or more, and provided the transfer does not include any other countries; or * * * * * (b) Unless an emergency exists which requires the proposed export in the national security interests of the United States, approval may not be granted for any transaction until at least 15 calendar days have elapsed after receipt by the Congress of the certification required by 22 U.S.C. 2776(c)(1) involving the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, or Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea or at least 30 calendar days have elapsed for any other country; in the case of a license for an export of a commercial communications satellite for launch from, and by nationals of, the Russian Federation, Ukraine, or Kazakhstan, until at least 15 calendar days after the Congress receives such certification. * * * * * 13. Section 123.16 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) introductory text, (b)(1)(iii), (b)(2)(vi), and adding paragraphs (c) and (d), to read as follows: Sec. 123.16 Exemptions of general applicability. (a) The following exemptions apply to exports of unclassified defense articles for which no approval is needed from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. These exemptions do not apply to: Proscribed destinations under Sec. 126.1 of this subchapter; exports for which Congressional notification is required (see Sec. 123.15 of this subchapter); MTCR articles; Significant Military Equipment (SME); and may not be used by persons who are generally ineligible as described in Sec. 120.1(c) of this subchapter. All shipments of defense articles, including but not limited to those to and from Australia, Canada, and the United Kingdom, require an Electronic Export Information (EEI) filing or notification letter. If the export of a defense article is exempt from licensing, the EEI filing must cite the exemption. Refer to Sec. 123.22 of this subchapter for EEI filing and letter notification requirements. (b) * * * (1) * * * (iii) The exporter certifies in the EEI filing that the export is exempt from the licensing requirements of this subchapter. This is done by writing, “22 CFR 123.16(b)(1) and the agreement or arrangement (identify/state number) applicable”; and * * * * * (2) * * * (vi) The exporter must certify on the invoice, the bill of lading, air waybill, or shipping documents and in the EEI filing that the export is exempt from the licensing requirements of this subchapter. This is done by writing “22 CFR 123.16(b)(2) applicable”. * * * * * (c) For exports to Australia pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia refer to Sec. 126.16 of this subchapter. (d) For exports to the United Kingdom pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom refer to Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter. 14. Section 123.22 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows: Sec. 123.22 Filing, retention, and return of export licenses and filing of export information. * * * * * (b) * * * (2) Emergency shipments of hardware that cannot meet the pre- departure filing requirements. U.S. Customs and Border Protection may permit an emergency export of hardware by truck (e.g., departures to Mexico or Canada) or air, by a U.S. registered person, when the exporter is unable to comply with the Electronic Export Information (EEI) filing timeline in paragraph (b)(1)(i) of this section. The applicant, or an agent acting on the applicant’s behalf, in addition to providing the EEI using the AES, must provide documentation required by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection and this subchapter. The documentation provided to the U.S. Customs and Border Protection at the port of exit must include the External Transaction Number (XTN) or Internal Transaction Number (ITN) for the shipment and a copy of a notification to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls stating that the shipment is urgent accompanied by an explanation for the urgency. The original of the notification must be immediately provided to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. The AES filing of the export information when the export is by air must be at least two hours prior to any departure from the United States; and, when a truck shipment, at the time when the exporter provides the articles to the carrier or at least one hour prior to departure from the United States, when the permanent export of the hardware has been authorized for export: * * * * * 15. Section 123.26 is revised to read as follows: Sec. 123.26 Recordkeeping for exemptions. Any person engaging in any export, reexport, transfer, or retransfer of a defense article or defense service pursuant to an exemption must maintain records of each such export, reexport, transfer, or retransfer. The records shall include the following information: A description of the defense article, including technical data, or defense service; the name and address of the end-user and other available contact information (e.g., telephone number and electronic mail address); the name of the natural person [[Page 72251]] responsible for the transaction; the stated end-use of the defense article or defense service; the date and time of the transaction; the Electronic Export Information (EEI) Internal Transaction Number (ITN); and the method of transmission. The person using or acting in reliance upon the exemption shall also comply with any additional recordkeeping requirements enumerated in the text of the regulations concerning such exemption. * * * * * PART 124–AGREEMENTS, OFF-SHORE PROCUREMENT AND OTHER DEFENSE SERVICES 16. The authority citation for part 124 continues to read as follows: Authority: Secs. 2, 38, and 71, Pub. L. 90-629, 90 Stat. 744 (22 U.S.C. 2752, 2778, 2797); E.O. 11958, 42 FR 4311; 3 CFR 1977 Comp. p. 79; 22 U.S.C. 2651a; 22 U.S.C. 2776; Pub. L. 105-261. 17. Section 124.11 is amended by revising paragraph (b) to read as follows: Sec. 124.11 Congressional certification pursuant to Section 36(d) of the Arms Export Control Act. * * * * * (b) Unless an emergency exists which requires the immediate approval of the agreement in the national security interests of the United States, approval may not be granted until at least 15 calendar days have elapsed after receipt by the Congress of the certification required by 22 U.S.C. 2776(d)(1) involving the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, any member country of that Organization, or Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea or at least 30 calendar days have elapsed for any other country. Approvals may not be granted when the Congress has enacted a joint resolution prohibiting the export. * * * * * PART 126–GENERAL POLICIES AND PROVISIONS 18. The authority citation for part 126 is revised to read as follows: Authority: Secs. 2, 38, 40, 42, and 71, Pub. L. 90-629, 90 Stat. 744 (22 U.S.C. 2752, 2778, 2780, 2791, and 2797); E.O. 11958, 42 FR 4311; 3 CFR, 1977 Comp. p. 79; 22 U.S.C. 2651a; 22 U.S.C. 287c; E.O. 12918, 59 FR 28205; 3 CFR, 1994 Comp. p. 899; Sec. 1225, Pub. L. 108-375; Sec. 7089, Pub. L. 111-117; Pub. L. 111-266. 19. Section 126.1 is amended by revising paragraph (e) to read as follows: Sec. 126.1 Prohibited exports, imports, and sales to or from certain countries. * * * * * (e) Proposed sales. No sale, export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer and no proposal to sell, export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer any defense articles or defense services subject to this subchapter may be made to any country referred to in this section (including the embassies or consulates of such a country), or to any person acting on its behalf, whether in the United States or abroad, without first obtaining a license or written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. However, in accordance with paragraph (a) of this section, it is the policy of the Department of State to deny licenses and approvals in such cases. (1) Duty to Notify: Any person who knows or has reason to know of such a proposed or actual sale, export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer of such articles, services, or data must immediately inform the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. Such notifications should be submitted to the Office of Defense Trade Controls Compliance, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. (2) [Reserved] * * * * * 20. Section 126.3 is revised to read as follows: Sec. 126.3 Exceptions. In a case of exceptional or undue hardship, or when it is otherwise in the interest of the United States Government, the Managing Director, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, may make an exception to the provisions of this subchapter. 21. Section 126.4 is amended by revising paragraph (d) to read as follows: Sec. 126.4 Shipments by or for United States Government agencies. * * * * * (d) An Electronic Export Information (EEI) filing, required under Sec. 123.22 of this subchapter, and a written statement by the exporter certifying that these requirements have been met must be presented at the time of export to the appropriate Port Directors of U.S. Customs and Border Protection or Department of Defense transmittal authority. A copy of the EEI filing and the written certification statement shall be provided to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls immediately following the export. 22. Section 126.5 is amended by removing and reserving paragraph (c) and revising paragraphs (a), (b), (d) introductory text, and Notes 1 and 2, to read as follows: Sec. 126.5 Canadian exemptions. (a) Temporary import of defense articles. Port Directors of U.S. Customs and Border Protection and postmasters shall permit the temporary import and return to Canada without a license of any unclassified defense articles (see Sec. 120.6 of this subchapter) that originate in Canada for temporary use in the United States and return to Canada. All other temporary imports shall be in accordance with Sec. Sec. 123.3 and 123.4 of this subchapter. (b) Permanent and temporary export of defense articles. Except as provided in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter and for exports that transit third countries, Port Directors of U.S. Customs and Border Protection and postmasters shall permit, when for end-use in Canada by Canadian Federal or Provincial governmental authorities acting in an official capacity or by a Canadian-registered person for return to the United States, the permanent and temporary export to Canada without a license of unclassified defense articles and defense services identified on the U.S. Munitions List (22 CFR 121.1). The exceptions noted above are subject to meeting the requirements of this subchapter, to include 22 CFR 120.1(c) and (d), parts 122 and 123 (except insofar as exemption from licensing requirements is herein authorized) and Sec. 126.1, and the requirement to obtain non-transfer and use assurances for all significant military equipment. For purposes of this section, “Canadian-registered person” is any Canadian national (including Canadian business entities organized under the laws of Canada), dual citizen of Canada and a third country other than a country listed in Sec. 126.1, and permanent resident registered in Canada in accordance with the Canadian Defense Production Act, and such other Canadian Crown Corporations identified by the Department of State in a list of such persons publicly available through the Internet Web site of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and by other means. (c) [Reserved] (d) Reexports/retransfer. Reexport/retransfer in Canada to another end user or end use or from Canada to another destination, except the United States, must in all instances have the prior approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. Unless otherwise exempt in this subchapter, the original exporter is responsible, upon request from a Canadian-registered person, for obtaining or providing reexport/ retransfer approval. In any instance when the U.S. exporter is no longer available to the Canadian end user the [[Page 72252]] request for reexport/retransfer may be made directly to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. All requests must include the information in Sec. 123.9(c) of this subchapter. Reexport/retransfer approval is acquired by: * * * * * Notes to Sec. 126.5: 1. In any instance when the exporter has knowledge that the defense article exempt from licensing is being exported for use other than by a qualified Canadian-registered person or for export to another foreign destination, other than the United States, in its original form or incorporated into another item, an export license must be obtained prior to the transfer to Canada. 2. Additional exemptions exist in other sections of this subchapter that are applicable to Canada, for example Sec. Sec. 123.9, 125.4, and 124.2, that allow for the performance of defense services related to training in basic operations and maintenance, without a license, for certain defense articles lawfully exported, including those identified in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter. 23. Section 126.7 is amended by revising the section heading and paragraphs (a)(3), (a)(7) and (e) introductory text to read as follows: Sec. 126.7 Denial, revocation, suspension, or amendment of licenses and other approvals. (a) * * * (3) An applicant is the subject of a criminal complaint, other criminal charge (e.g., an information), or indictment for a violation of any of the U.S. criminal statutes enumerated in Sec. 120.27 of this subchapter; or * * * * * (7) An applicant has failed to include any of the information or documentation expressly required to support a license application, exemption, or other request for approval under this subchapter, or as required in the instructions in the applicable Department of State form or has failed to provide notice or information as required under this subchapter; or * * * * * (e) Special definition. For purposes of this subchapter, the term “Party to the Export” means: * * * * * 24. Section 126.13 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) introductory text, (a)(1), and (a)(4) to read as follows: Sec. 126.13 Required information. (a) All applications for licenses (DSP-5, DSP-61, DSP-73, and DSP- 85), all requests for approval of agreements and amendments thereto under part 124 of this subchapter, and all requests for other written authorizations (including requests for retransfer or reexport pursuant to Sec. 123.9 of this subchapter) must include a letter signed by a responsible official empowered by the applicant and addressed to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, stating whether: (1) The applicant or the chief executive officer, president, vice- presidents, other senior officers or officials (e.g., comptroller, treasurer, general counsel) or any member of the board of directors is the subject of a criminal complaint, other criminal charge (e.g., an information), or indictment for or has been convicted of violating any of the U.S. criminal statutes enumerated in Sec. 120.27 of this subchapter since the effective date of the Arms Export Control Act, Public Law 94-329, 90 Stat. 729 (June 30, 1976); * * * * * (4) The natural person signing the application, notification or other request for approval (including the statement required by this subsection) is a citizen or national of the United States, has been lawfully admitted to the United States for permanent residence (and maintains such lawful permanent residence status under the Immigration and Nationality Act, as amended (8 U.S.C. 1101(a), section 101(a)20, 60 Stat. 163), or is an official of a foreign government entity in the United States, or is a foreign person making a request pursuant to Sec. 123.9 of this subchapter. * * * * * 25. Section 126.16 is added to read as follows: Sec. 126.16 Exemption pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia. (a) Scope of exemption and required conditions. (1) Definitions. (i) An export means, for purposes of this section only, the initial movement of defense articles or defense services from the United States Community to the Australian Community. (ii) A transfer means, for purposes of this section only, the movement of a defense article or defense service, previously exported, by a member of the Australian Community within the Australian Community, or between a member of the United States Community and a member of the Australian Community. (iii) Retransfer and reexport have the meaning provided in Sec. 120.19 of this subchapter. (iv) Intermediate consignee means, for purposes of this section, an entity or person who receives defense articles, including technical data, but who does not have access to such defense articles, for the sole purpose of effecting onward movement to members of the Approved Community. (2) Persons or entities exporting or transferring defense articles or defense services are exempt from the otherwise applicable licensing requirements if such persons or entities comply with the regulations set forth in this section. Except as provided in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter, Port Directors of U.S. Customs and Border Protection and postmasters shall permit the permanent and temporary export without a license to members of the Australian Community (see paragraph (d) of this section regarding the identification of members of the Australian Community) of defense articles and defense services not listed in Supplement No. 1 to part 126, for the end-uses specifically identified pursuant to paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section. The purpose of this section is to specify the requirements to export, transfer, reexport, retransfer, or otherwise dispose of a defense article or defense service pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia. (3) Export. In order for an exporter to export a defense article or defense service pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia, all of the following conditions must be met: (i) The exporter must be registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and must be eligible, according to the requirements and prohibitions of the Arms Export Control Act, this subchapter, and other provisions of United States law, to obtain an export license (or other forms of authorization to export) from any agency of the U.S. Government without restriction (see paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section for specific requirements); (ii) The recipient of the export must be a member of the Australian Community (see paragraph (d) of this section regarding the identification of members of the Australian Community). Australian entities and facilities that become ineligible for such membership will be removed from the Australian Community; (iii) Intermediate consignees involved in the export must be eligible, according to the requirements and prohibitions of the Arms Export Control Act, this subchapter, and other provisions of United States law, to handle or receive a defense article or defense service without restriction (see paragraph (k) of this section for specific requirements); (iv) The export must be for an end-use specified in the Defense Trade [[Page 72253]] Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and mutually agreed to by the U.S. Government and the Government of Australia pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the Implementing Arrangement thereto (the Australia Implementing Arrangement) (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses); (v) The defense article or defense service is not excluded from the scope of the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia (see paragraph (g) of this section and Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter for specific information on the scope of items excluded from export under this exemption) and is marked or identified, at a minimum, as “Restricted USML” (see paragraph (j) of this section for specific requirements on marking exports); (vi) All required documentation of such export is maintained by the exporter and recipient and is available upon the request of the U.S. Government (see paragraph (l) of this section for specific requirements); and (vii) The Department of State has provided advance notification to the Congress, as required, in accordance with this section (see paragraph (o) of this section for specific requirements). (4) Transfers. In order for a member of the Australian Community to transfer a defense article or defense service under the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia, all of the following conditions must be met: (i) The defense article or defense service must have been previously exported in accordance with paragraph (a)(3) of this section or transitioned from a license or other approval in accordance with paragraph (i) Transitions of this section; (ii) The transferor and transferee of the defense article or defense service are members of the Australian Community (see paragraph (d) of this section regarding the identification of members of the Australian Community) or the United States Community (see paragraph (b) for information on the United States Community/approved exporters); (iii) The transfer is required for an end-use specified in the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and mutually agreed to by the United States and the Government of Australia pursuant to the terms of the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the Australia Implementing Arrangement (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses); (iv) The defense article or defense service is not identified in paragraph (g) of this section and Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter as ineligible for export under this exemption, and is marked or otherwise identified, at a minimum, as “Restricted USML” (see paragraph (j) of this section for specific requirements on marking exports); (v) All required documentation of such transfer is maintained by the transferor and transferee and is available upon the request of the U.S. Government (see paragraph (l) of this section for specific requirements); and (vi) The Department of State has provided advance notification to the Congress in accordance with this section (see paragraph (o) of this section for specific requirements). (5) This section does not apply to the export of defense articles or defense services from the United States pursuant to the Foreign Military Sales program. (b) Authorized exporters. The following persons compose the United States Community and may export defense articles and defense services pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia: (1) Departments and agencies of the U.S. Government, including their personnel, with, as appropriate, a security clearance and a need- to-know; and (2) Nongovernmental U.S. persons registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and eligible, according to the requirements and prohibitions of the Arms Export Control Act, this subchapter, and other provisions of United States law, to obtain an export license (or other forms of authorization to export) from any agency of the U.S. Government without restriction, including their employees acting in their official capacity with, as appropriate, a security clearance and a need-to-know. (c) An exporter that is otherwise an authorized exporter pursuant to subsection (b) above may not export pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia if the exporter’s president, chief executive officer, any vice-president, any other senior officer or official (e.g., comptroller, treasurer, general counsel); any member of the board of directors of the exporter; any party to the export; or any source or manufacturer is ineligible to receive export licenses (or other forms of authorization to export) from any agency of the U.S. Government. (d) Australian Community. For purposes of the exemption provided by this section, the Australian Community consists of the Australian entities and facilities identified as members of the Approved Community through the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls Web site at the time of a transaction under this section; Australian entities and facilities that become ineligible for such membership will be removed from the Australian Community. (e) Authorized End-uses. The following end-uses, subject to subsection (f), are specified in the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia: (1) United States and Australian combined military or counter- terrorism operations; (2) United States and Australian cooperative security and defense research, development, production, and support programs; (3) Mutually determined specific security and defense projects where the Government of Australia is the end-user; or (4) U.S. Government end-use. (f) Procedures for identifying authorized end-uses pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section: (1) Operations, programs, and projects that can be publicly identified will be posted on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site; (2) Operations, programs, and projects that cannot be publicly identified will be confirmed in written correspondence from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls; or (3) U.S. Government end-use will be identified specifically in a U.S. Government contract or solicitation as being eligible under the Treaty. (4) No other operations, programs, projects, or end-uses qualify for this exemption. (g) Items eligible under this section. With the exception of items listed in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter, defense articles and defense services may be exported under this section subject to the following: (1) An exporter authorized pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section may market a defense article to the Government of Australia if that exporter has been licensed by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls to export (as defined by Sec. 120.17 of this subchapter) the identical type of defense article to any foreign person. (2) The export of any defense article specific to the existence of (e.g., reveals the existence of or details of) anti-tamper measures made at U.S. Government direction always requires [[Page 72254]] prior written approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. (3) U.S.-origin classified defense articles or defense services may be exported only pursuant to a written request, directive, or contract from the U.S. Department of Defense that provides for the export of the classified defense article(s) or defense service(s). (4) Defense articles specific to developmental systems that have not obtained written Milestone B approval from the Department of Defense milestone approval authority are not eligible for export unless such export is pursuant to a written solicitation or contract issued or awarded by the Department of Defense for an end-use identified pursuant to paragraphs (e)(1), (2), or (4) of this section. (5) Defense articles excluded by paragraph (g) of this section or Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter (e.g., USML Category XI(a)(3) electronically scanned array radar) that are embedded in a larger system that is eligible to ship under this section (e.g., a ship or aircraft) must separately comply with any restrictions placed on that embedded defense article under this subsection. The exporter must obtain a license or other authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for the export of such embedded defense articles (for example, USML Category XI(a)(3) electronically scanned array radar systems that are exempt from this section that are incorporated in an aircraft that is eligible to ship under the this section continue to require separate authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for their export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer). (6) No liability shall be incurred by or attributed to the U.S. Government in connection with any possible infringement of privately owned patent or proprietary rights, either domestic or foreign, by reason of an export conducted pursuant to this section. (7) Sales by exporters made through the U.S. Government shall not include either charges for patent rights in which the U.S. Government holds a royalty-free license, or charges for information which the U.S. Government has a right to use and disclose to others, which is in the public domain, or which the U.S. Government has acquired or is entitled to acquire without restrictions upon its use and disclosure to others. (h) Transfers, Retransfers, and Reexports. (1) Any transfer of a defense article or defense service not exempted in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter by a member of the Australian Community (see paragraph (d) of this section for specific information on the identification of the Community) to another member of the Australian Community or the United States Community for an end-use that is authorized by this exemption (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) is authorized under this exemption. (2) Any transfer or other provision of a defense article or defense service for an end-use that is not authorized by the exemption provided by this section is prohibited without a license or the prior written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses). (3) Any retransfer or reexport, or other provision of a defense article or defense service by a member of the Australian Community to a foreign person that is not a member of the Australian Community, or to a U.S. person that is not a member of the United States Community, is prohibited without a license or the prior written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (see paragraph (d) of this section for specific information on the identification of the Australian Community). (4) Any change in the use of a defense article or defense service previously exported, transferred, or obtained under this exemption by any foreign person, including a member of the Australian Community, to an end-use that is not authorized by this exemption is prohibited without a license or other written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses). (5) Any retransfer, reexport, or change in end-use requiring such approval of the U.S. Government shall be made in accordance with Sec. 123.9 of this subchapter. (6) Defense articles excluded by paragraph (g) of this section or Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter (e.g., USML Category XI(a)(3) electronically scanned array radar) that are embedded in a larger system that is eligible to ship under this section (e.g., a ship or aircraft) must separately comply with any restrictions placed on that embedded defense article unless otherwise specified. A license or other authorization must be obtained from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for the retransfer, reexport or change in end-use of any such embedded defense article (for example, USML Category XI(a)(3) electronically scanned radar systems that are exempt from this section that are incorporated in an aircraft that is eligible to ship under the this section continue to require separate authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for their export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer). (7) A license or prior approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls is not required for a transfer, retransfer, or reexport of an exported defense article or defense service under this section, if: (i) The transfer of defense articles or defense services is made by a member of the United States Community to Australian Department of Defense (ADOD) elements deployed outside the Territory of Australia and engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using ADOD transmission channels or the provisions of this section (Note: For purposes of paragraph (h)(7)(i)-(iv), per Section 9(9) of the Australia Implementing Arrangement, “ADOD Transmission channels” includes electronic transmission of a defense article and transmission of a defense article by an ADOD contracted carrier or freight forwarder that merely transports or arranges transport for the defense article in this instance.); (ii) The transfer of defense articles or defense services is made by a member of the United States Community to an Approved Community member (either U.S. or Australian) that is operating in direct support of Australian Department of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of Australia and engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using ADOD transmission channels or the provisions of this section; (iii) The reexport is made by a member of the Australian Community to Australian Department of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of Australia engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using ADOD transmission channels or the provisions of this section; (iv) The retransfer or reexport is made by a member of the Australian Community to an Approved Community member (either United States or Australian) that is operating in direct support of Australian Department of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of Australia engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using ADOD transmission channels or the provisions of this section; or [[Page 72255]] (v) The defense article or defense service will be delivered to the Australian Department of Defense for an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses); the Australian Department of Defense may deploy the item as necessary when conducting official business within or outside the Territory of Australia. The item must remain under the effective control of the Australian Department of Defense while deployed and access may not be provided to unauthorized third parties. (8) U.S. persons registered, or required to be registered, pursuant to part 122 of this subchapter and Members of the Australian Community must immediately notify the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of any actual or proposed sale, retransfer, or reexport of a defense article or defense service on the U.S. Munitions List originally exported under this exemption to any of the countries listed in Sec. 126.1 of this subchapter, any citizen of such countries, or any person acting on behalf of such countries, whether within or outside the United States. Any person knowing or having reason to know of such a proposed or actual sale, reexport, or retransfer shall submit such information in writing to the Office of Defense Trade Controls Compliance, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. (i) Transitions. (1) Any previous export of a defense article under a license or other approval of the U.S. Department of State remains subject to the conditions and limitations of the original license or authorization unless the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls has approved in writing a transition to this section. (2) If a U.S. exporter desires to transition from an existing license or other approval to the use of the provisions of this section, the following is required: (i) The U.S. exporter must submit a written request to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, which identifies the defense articles or defense services to be transitioned, the existing license(s) or other authorizations under which the defense articles or defense services were originally exported; and the Treaty-eligible end- use for which the defense articles or defense services will be used. Any license(s) filed with U.S. Customs and Border Protection should remain on file until the exporter has received approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls to retire the license(s) and transition to this section. When this approval is conveyed to U.S. Customs and Border Protection by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, the license(s) will be returned to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls by U.S. Customs and Border Protection in accordance with existing procedures for the return of expired licenses in Sec. 123.22(c) of this subchapter. (ii) Any license(s) not filed with U.S. Customs and Border Protection must be returned to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls with a letter citing the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ approval to transition to this section as the reason for returning the license(s). (3) If a member of the Australian Community desires to transition defense articles received under an existing license or other approval to the processes established under the Treaty, the Australian Community member must submit a written request to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, either directly or through the original U.S. exporter, which identifies the defense articles or defense services to be transitioned, the existing license(s) or other authorizations under which the defense articles or defense services were received, and the Treaty-eligible end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) for which the defense articles or defense services will be used. The defense article or defense service shall remain subject to the conditions and limitations of the existing license or other approval until the Australian Community member has received approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls to transition to this section. (4) Authorized exporters identified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section who have exported a defense article or defense service that has subsequently been placed on the list of exempted items in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter must review and adhere to the requirements in the relevant Federal Register notice announcing such removal. Once removed, the defense article or defense service will no longer be subject to this section, such defense article or defense service previously exported shall remain on the U.S. Munitions List and be subject to the International Traffic in Arms Regulations unless the applicable Federal Register notice states otherwise. Subsequent reexport or retransfer must be made pursuant to Sec. 123.9 of this subchapter. (5) Any defense article or defense service transitioned from a license or other approval to treatment under this section must be marked in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (j) of this section. (j) Marking of Exports. (1) All defense articles and defense services exported or transitioned pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and this section shall be marked or identified as follows: (i) For classified defense articles and defense services the standard marking or identification shall read: “//CLASSIFICATION LEVEL USML//REL AUS and USA Treaty Community//.” For example, for defense articles classified SECRET, the marking or identification shall be “// SECRET USML//REL AUS and USA Treaty Community//.” (ii) Unclassified defense articles and defense services exported under or transitioned pursuant to this section shall be AUS classified as “Restricted USML” and, the standard marking or identification shall read “//RESTRICTED USML//REL AUS and USA Treaty Community//.” (2) Where defense articles are returned to a member of the United States Community identified in paragraph (b) of this section, any defense articles AUS classified and marked or identified pursuant to paragraph j(1)(ii) of this section as “//RESTRICTED USML//REL AUS and USA Treaty Community//” shall no longer be AUS classified and such marking or identification shall be removed; and (3) The standard marking and identification requirements are as follows: (i) Defense articles (other than technical data) shall be individually labeled with the appropriate identification detailed in paragraphs (j)(1) and (j)(2) of this section; or, where such labeling is impracticable (e.g., propellants, chemicals), shall be accompanied by documentation (such as contracts or invoices) clearly associating the defense articles with the appropriate markings as detailed above; (ii) Technical data (including data packages, technical papers, manuals, presentations, specifications, guides and reports), regardless of media or means of transmission (physical or electronic), shall be individually labeled with the appropriate identification detailed in paragraphs (j)(1) and (j)(2) of this section; or, where such labeling is impracticable (oral presentations), shall have a verbal notification clearly associating the technical data with the appropriate markings as detailed above; and (4) Contracts and agreements for the provision of defense services shall be identified with the appropriate identification detailed in paragraphs (j)(1) and (j)(2) of this section. (5) The exporter shall incorporate the following statement as an integral part [[Page 72256]] of all shipping documentation (airway bill, bill of lading, manifest, packing documents, delivery verification, invoice, etc.) whenever defense articles are to be exported: “These commodities are authorized by the U.S. Government for export only to Australia for use in approved projects, programs or operations by members of the Australian Community. They may not be retransferred or reexported or used outside of an approved project, program or operation, either in their original form or after being incorporated into other end-items, without the prior written approval of the U.S. Department of State.” (k) Intermediate Consignees. (1) Unclassified exports under this section may only be handled by: (i) U.S. intermediate consignees who are: (A) Exporters registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and eligible; (B) Licensed customs brokers who are subject to background investigation and have passed a comprehensive examination administered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection; or (C) Commercial air freight and surface shipment carriers, freight forwarders, or other parties not exempt from registration under Sec. 129.3(b)(3) of this subchapter that are identified at the time of export as being on the list of Authorized U.S. Intermediate Consignees, which is available on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site. (ii) Australian intermediate consignees who are: (A) Members of the Australian Community; or (B) Freight forwarders, customs brokers, commercial air freight and surface shipment carriers, or other Australian parties that are identified at the time of export as being on the list of Authorized Australian Intermediate Consignees, which is available on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site. (2) Classified exports must comply with the security requirements of the National Industrial Security Program Operating Manual (DoD 5220.22-M and supplements or successors). (l) Records. (1) All exporters authorized pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section who export pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and this section shall maintain detailed records of all exports, imports, and transfers made by that exporter of defense articles or defense services subject to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the requirements of this section. Exporters shall also maintain detailed records of any reexports and retransfers approved or otherwise authorized by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of defense articles or defense services subject to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the requirements of this section. These records shall be maintained for a minimum of five years from the date of export, import, transfer, reexport, or retransfer and shall be made available upon request to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or U.S. Customs and Border Protection, or any other authorized U.S. law enforcement officer. Records in an electronic format must be maintained using a process or system capable of reproducing all records on paper. Such records when displayed on a viewer, monitor, or reproduced on paper, must exhibit a high degree of legibility and readability. (For the purpose of this section, “legible” and “legibility” mean the quality of a letter or numeral that enables the observer to identify it positively and quickly to the exclusion of all other letters or numerals. “Readable” and “readability” means the quality of a group of letters or numerals being recognized as complete words or numbers.) These records shall consist of the following: (i) Port of entry/exit; (ii) Date/time of export/import; (iii) Method of export/import; (iv) Commodity code and description of the commodity, including technical data; (v) Value of export; (vi) Reference to this section and justification for export under the Treaty; (vii) End-user/end-use; (viii) Identification of all U.S. and foreign parties to the transaction; (ix) How the export was marked; (x) Classification of the export; (xi) All written correspondence with the U.S. Government on the export; (xii) All information relating to political contributions, fees, or commissions furnished or obtained, offered, solicited, or agreed upon as outlined in paragraph (m) of this section; (xiii) Purchase order or contract; (xiv) Technical data actually exported; (xv) The Internal Transaction Number for the Electronic Export Information filing in the Automated Export System; (xvi) All shipping documentation (airway bill, bill of lading, manifest, packing documents, delivery verification, invoice, etc.); and (xvii) Statement of Registration (Form DS-2032). (2) Filing of export information. All exporters of defense articles and defense services under the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and the requirements of this section must electronically file Electronic Export Information (EEI) using the Automated Export System citing one of the four below referenced codes in the appropriate field in the EEI for each shipment: (i) 126.16(e)(1): used for exports in support of United States and Australian combined military or counter-terrorism operations (the name or an appropriate description of the operation shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well); (ii) 126.16(e)(2): used for exports in support of United States and Australian cooperative security and defense research, development, production, and support programs (the name or an appropriate description of the program shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well); (iii) 126.16(e)(3): used for exports in support of mutually determined specific security and defense projects where the Government of Australia is the end-user (the name or an appropriate description of the project shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well); or (iv) 126.16(e)(4): used for exports that will have a U.S. Government end-use (the U.S. Government contract number or solicitation number (e.g., “U.S. Government contract number XXXXX”) shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well). Such exports must meet the required export documentation and filing guidelines, including for defense services, of Sec. 123.22(a), (b)(1), and (b)(2) of this subchapter. (m) Fees and Commissions. All exporters authorized pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section shall, with respect to each export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer, pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and this section, submit a statement to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls containing the information identified in Sec. 130.10 of this subchapter relating to fees, commissions, and political contributions on contracts or other instruments valued in an amount of $500,000 or more. (n) Violations and Enforcement. (1) Exports, transfers, reexports, and retransfers that do not comply with the conditions prescribed in this section will constitute violations of the Arms Export Control Act and this subchapter, [[Page 72257]] and are subject to all relevant criminal, civil, and administrative penalties (see Sec. 127.1 of this subchapter), and may also be subject to other statutes or regulations. (2) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers have the authority to investigate, detain, or seize any export or attempted export of defense articles that does not comply with this section or that is otherwise unlawful. (3) The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and other authorized U.S. law enforcement officers may require the production of documents and information relating to any actual or attempted export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer pursuant to this section. Any foreign person refusing to provide such records within a reasonable period of time shall be suspended from the Australian Community and ineligible to receive defense articles or defense services pursuant to the exemption under this section or otherwise. (o) Procedures for Legislative Notification. (1) Exports pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and Australia and this section by any person identified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section shall not take place until 30 days after the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls has acknowledged receipt of a Form DS-4048 (entitled, “Projected Sales of Major Weapons in Support of Section 25(a)(1) of the Arms Export Control Act”) from the exporter notifying the Department of State if the export involves one or more of the following: (i) A contract or other instrument for the export of major defense equipment in the amount of $25,000,000 or more, or for defense articles and defense services in the amount of $100,000,000 or more; (ii) A contract or other instrument for the export of firearms controlled under Category I of the U.S. Munitions List of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations in an amount of $1,000,000 or more; (iii) A contract or other instrument, regardless of value, for the manufacturing abroad of any item of significant military equipment; or (iv) An amended contract or other instrument that meets the requirements of paragraphs (o)(1)(i)-(o)(1)(iii) of this section. (2) The Form DS-4048 required in paragraph (o)(1) of this section shall be accompanied by the following additional information: (i) The information identified in Sec. 130.10 and Sec. 130.11 of this subchapter; (ii) A statement regarding whether any offset agreement is proposed to be entered into in connection with the export and a description of any such offset agreement; (iii) A copy of the signed contract or other instrument; and (iv) If the notification is for paragraph (o)(1)(ii) of this section, a statement of what will happen to the weapons in their inventory (for example, whether the current inventory will be sold, reassigned to another service branch, destroyed, etc.). (3) The Department of State will notify the Congress of exports that meet the requirements of paragraph (o)(1) of this section. 26. Section 126.17 is added to read as follows: Sec. 126.17 Exemption pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom. (a) Scope of exemption and required conditions. (1) Definitions. (i) An export means, for purposes of this section only, the initial movement of defense articles or defense services from the United States to the United Kingdom Community. (ii) A transfer means, for purposes of this section only, the movement of a defense article or defense service, previously exported, by a member of the United Kingdom Community within the United Kingdom Community, or between a member of the United States Community and a member of the United Kingdom Community. (iii) Retransfer and reexport have the meaning provided in Sec. 120.19 of this subchapter. (iv) Intermediate consignee means, for purposes of this section, an entity or person who receives defense articles, including technical data, but who does not have access to such defense articles, for the sole purpose of effecting onward movement to members of the Approved Community. (2) Persons or entities exporting or transferring defense articles or defense services are exempt from the otherwise applicable licensing requirements if such persons or entities comply with the regulations set forth in this section. Except as provided in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter, Port Directors of U.S. Customs and Border Protection and postmasters shall permit the permanent and temporary export without a license to members of the United Kingdom Community (see paragraph (d) of this section regarding the identification of members of the United Kingdom Community) of defense articles and defense services not listed in Supplement No. 1 to part 126, for the end-uses specifically identified pursuant to paragraphs (e) and (f) below. The purpose of this section is to specify the requirements to export, transfer, reexport, retransfer, or otherwise dispose of a defense article or defense service pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom. (3) Export. In order for an exporter to export a defense article or defense service pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom, all of the following conditions must be met: (i) The exporter must be registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and must be eligible, according to the requirements and prohibitions of the Arms Export Control Act, this subchapter, and other provisions of United States law, to obtain an export license (or other forms of authorization to export) from any agency of the U.S. Government without restriction (see paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section for specific requirements); (ii) The recipient of the export must be a member of the United Kingdom Community (see paragraph (d) of this section regarding the identification of members of the United Kingdom Community). United Kingdom entities and facilities that become ineligible for such membership will be removed from the United Kingdom Community; (iii) Intermediate consignees involved in the export must be eligible, according to the requirements and prohibitions of the Arms Export Control Act, this subchapter, and other provisions of United States law, to handle or receive a defense article or defense service without restriction (see paragraph (k) of this section for specific requirements); (iv) The export must be for an end-use specified in the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and mutually agreed to by the U.S. Government and the Government of the United Kingdom pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and the Implementing Arrangement thereto (United Kingdom Implementing Arrangement) (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses); (v) The defense article or defense service is not excluded from the scope of the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom (see paragraph (g) of this section and Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter for specific [[Page 72258]] information on the scope of items excluded from export under this exemption) and is marked or identified, at a minimum, as “Restricted USML” (see paragraph (j) of this section for specific requirements on marking exports); (vi) All required documentation of such export is maintained by the exporter and recipient and is available upon the request of the U.S. Government (see paragraph (l) of this section for specific requirements); and (vii) The Department of State has provided advance notification to the Congress, as required, in accordance with this section (see paragraph (o) of this section for specific requirements). (4) Transfers. In order for a member of the United Kingdom Community to transfer a defense article or defense service under the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom, all of the following conditions must be met: (i) The defense article or defense service must have been previously exported in accordance with paragraph (a)(3) of this section or transitioned from a license or other approval in accordance with paragraph (i) Transfers of this section; (ii) The transferor and transferee of the defense article or defense service are members of the United Kingdom Community (see paragraph (d) of this section regarding the identification of members of the United Kingdom Community) or the United States Community (see paragraph (b) of this section for information on the United States Community/approved exporters); (iii) The transfer is required for an end-use specified in the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and mutually agreed to by the United States and the Government of United Kingdom pursuant to the terms of the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and the United Kingdom Implementing Arrangement (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses); (iv) The defense article or defense service is not identified in paragraph (g) of this section and Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter as ineligible for export under this exemption, and is marked or otherwise identified, at a minimum, as “Restricted USML” (see paragraph (j) of this section for specific requirements on marking exports); (v) All required documentation of such transfer is maintained by the transferor and transferee and is available upon the request of the U.S. Government (see paragraph (l) of this section for specific requirements); and (vi) The Department of State has provided advance notification to the Congress in accordance with this section (see paragraph (o) of this section for specific requirements). (5) This section does not apply to the export of defense articles or defense services from the United States pursuant to the Foreign Military Sales program. (b) Authorized exporters. The following persons compose the United States Community and may export defense articles and defense services pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom: (1) Departments and agencies of the U.S. Government, including their personnel, with, as appropriate, a security clearance and a need- to-know; and (2) Nongovernmental U.S. persons registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and eligible, according to the requirements and prohibitions of the Arms Export Control Act, this subchapter, and other provisions of United States law, to obtain an export license (or other forms of authorization to export) from any agency of the U.S. Government without restriction, including their employees acting in their official capacity with, as appropriate, a security clearance and a need-to-know. (c) An exporter that is otherwise an authorized exporter pursuant to subsection (b) above may not export pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom if the exporter’s president, chief executive officer, any vice-president, any other senior officer or official (e.g., comptroller, treasurer, general counsel); any member of the board of directors of the exporter; any party to the export; or any source or manufacturer is ineligible to receive export licenses (or other forms of authorization to export) from any agency of the U.S. Government. (d) United Kingdom Community. For purposes of the exemption provided by this section, the United Kingdom Community consists of the United Kingdom entities and facilities identified as members of the Approved Community through the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site at the time of a transaction under this section; non- governmental United Kingdom entities and facilities that become ineligible for such membership will be removed from the United Kingdom Community. (e) Authorized End-uses. The following end-uses, subject to subsection (f), are specified in the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom: (1) United States and United Kingdom combined military or counter- terrorism operations; (2) United States and United Kingdom cooperative security and defense research, development, production, and support programs; (3) Mutually determined specific security and defense projects where the Government of the United Kingdom is the end-user; or (4) U.S. Government end-use. (f) Procedures for identifying authorized end-uses pursuant to paragraph (e) of this section: (1) Operations, programs, and projects that can be publicly identified will be posted on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site; (2) Operations, programs, and projects that cannot be publicly identified will be confirmed in written correspondence from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls; or (3) U.S. Government end-use will be identified specifically in a U.S. Government contract or solicitation as being eligible under the Treaty. (4) No other operations, programs, projects, or end-uses qualify for this exemption. (g) Items eligible under this section. With the exception of items listed in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter, defense articles and defense services may be exported under this section subject to the following: (1) An exporter authorized pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section may market a defense article to the Government of the United Kingdom if that exporter has been licensed by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls to export (as defined by Sec. 120.17 of this subchapter) the identical type of defense article to any foreign person. (2) The export of any defense article specific to the existence of (e.g., reveals the existence of or details of) anti-tamper measures made at U.S. Government direction always requires prior written approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. (3) U.S.-origin classified defense articles or defense services may be exported only pursuant to a written request, directive, or contract from the U.S. Department of Defense that provides for the export of the classified defense article(s) or defense service(s). (4) Defense articles specific to developmental systems that have not obtained written Milestone B approval from the Department of Defense milestone approval authority are not [[Page 72259]] eligible for export unless such export is pursuant to a written solicitation or contract issued or awarded by the Department of Defense for an end-use identified pursuant to paragraphs (e)(1), (2), or (4) of this section. (5) Defense articles excluded by paragraph (g) of this section or Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter (e.g., USML Category XI (a)(3) electronically scanned array radar) that are embedded in a larger system that is eligible to ship under this section (e.g., a ship or aircraft) must separately comply with any restrictions placed on that embedded defense article under this subsection. The exporter must obtain a license or other authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for the export of such embedded defense articles (for example, USML Category XI (a)(3) electronically scanned array radar systems that are exempt from this section that are incorporated in an aircraft that is eligible to ship under the this section continue to require separate authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for their export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer). (6) No liability shall be incurred by or attributed to the U.S. Government in connection with any possible infringement of privately owned patent or proprietary rights, either domestic or foreign, by reason of an export conducted pursuant to this section. (7) Sales by exporters made through the U.S. Government shall not include either charges for patent rights in which the U.S. Government holds a royalty-free license, or charges for information which the U.S. Government has a right to use and disclose to others, which is in the public domain, or which the U.S. Government has acquired or is entitled to acquire without restrictions upon its use and disclosure to others. (8) Defense articles and services specific to items that appear on the European Union Dual Use List (as described in Annex 1 to EC Council Regulation No. 428/2009) are not eligible for export under the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom. (h) Transfers, Retransfers, and Reexports. (1) Any transfer of a defense article or defense service not exempted in Supplement No.1 to part 126 of this subchapter by a member of the United Kingdom Community (see paragraph (d) of this section for specific information on the identification of the Community) to another member of the United Kingdom Community or the United States Community for an end-use that is authorized by this exemption (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) is authorized under this exemption. (2) Any transfer or other provision of a defense article or defense service for an end-use that is not authorized by the exemption provided by this section is prohibited without a license or the prior written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses). (3) Any retransfer or reexport, or other provision of a defense article or defense service by a member of the United Kingdom Community to a foreign person that is not a member of the United Kingdom Community, or to a U.S. person that is not a member of the United States Community, is prohibited without a license or the prior written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (see paragraph (d) of this section for specific information on the identification of the United Kingdom Community). (4) Any change in the use of a defense article or defense service previously exported, transferred, or obtained under this exemption by any foreign person, including a member of the United Kingdom Community, to an end-use that is not authorized by this exemption is prohibited without a license or other written approval of the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses). (5) Any retransfer, reexport, or change in end-use requiring such approval of the U.S. Government shall be made in accordance with Sec. 123.9 of this subchapter. (6) Defense articles excluded by paragraph (g) of this section or Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter (e.g., USML Category XI (a)(3) electronically scanned array radar systems) that are embedded in a larger system that is eligible to ship under this section (e.g., a ship or aircraft) must separately comply with any restrictions placed on that embedded defense article unless otherwise specified. A license or other authorization must be obtained from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for the retransfer, reexport or change in end-use of any such embedded defense article (for example, USML Category XI(a)(3) electronically scanned array radar systems that are exempt from this section that are incorporated in an aircraft that is eligible to ship under the this section continue to require separate authorization from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls for their export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer). (7) A license or prior approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls is not required for a transfer, retransfer, or reexport of an exported defense article or defense service under this section, if: (i) The transfer of defense articles or defense services is made by a member of the United States Community to United Kingdom Ministry of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of the United Kingdom and engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using United Kingdom Armed Forces transmission channels or the provisions of this section; (ii) The transfer of defense articles or defense services is made by a member of the United States Community to an Approved Community member (either U.S. or U.K.) that is operating in direct support of United Kingdom Ministry of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of the United Kingdom and engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end- uses) using United Kingdom Armed Forces transmission channels or the provisions of this section; (iii) The reexport is made by a member of the United Kingdom Community to United Kingdom Ministry of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of the United Kingdom engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using United Kingdom Armed Forces transmission channels or the provisions of this section; (iv) The retransfer or reexport is made by a member of the United Kingdom Community to an Approved Community member (either U.S. or U.K.) that is operating indirect support of United Kingdom Ministry of Defense elements deployed outside the Territory of the United Kingdom engaged in an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) using United Kingdom Armed Forces transmission channels or the provisions of this section; or (v) The defense article or defense service will be delivered to the United Kingdom Ministry of Defense for an authorized end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses); the United Kingdom Ministry of Defense may deploy the item as necessary when conducting official business within or outside the Territory of the United Kingdom. The item must remain under the effective control of the United [[Page 72260]] Kingdom Ministry of Defense while deployed and access may not be provided to unauthorized third parties. (8) U.S. persons registered, or required to be registered, pursuant to part 122 of this subchapter and Members of the United Kingdom Community must immediately notify the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of any actual or proposed sale, retransfer, or reexport of a defense article or defense service on the U.S. Munitions List originally exported under this exemption to any of the countries listed in Sec. 126.1 of this subchapter, any citizen of such countries, or any person acting on behalf of such countries, whether within or outside the United States. Any person knowing or having reason to know of such a proposed or actual sale, reexport, or retransfer shall submit such information in writing to the Office of Defense Trade Controls Compliance, Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. (i) Transitions. (1) Any previous export of a defense article under a license or other approval of the U.S. Department of State remains subject to the conditions and limitations of the original license or authorization unless the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls has approved in writing a transition to this section. (2) If a U.S. exporter desires to transition from an existing license or other approval to the use of the provisions of this section, the following is required: (i) The U.S. exporter must submit a written request to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, which identifies the defense articles or defense services to be transitioned, the existing license(s) or other authorizations under which the defense articles or defense services were originally exported; and the Treaty-eligible end- use for which the defense articles or defense services will be used. Any license(s) filed with U.S. Customs and Border Protection should remain on file until the exporter has received approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls to retire the license(s) and transition to this section. When this approval is conveyed to U.S. Customs and Border Protection by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, the license(s) will be returned to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls by U.S. Customs and Border Protection in accord with existing procedures for the return of expired licenses in Sec. 123.22(c) of this subchapter. (ii) Any license(s) not filed with U.S. Customs and Border Protection must be returned to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls with a letter citing the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ approval to transition to this section as the reason for returning the license(s). (3) If a member of the United Kingdom Community desires to transition defense articles received under an existing license or other approval to the processes established under the Treaty, the United Kingdom Community member must submit a written request to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, either directly or through the original U.S. exporter, which identifies the defense articles or defense services to be transitioned, the existing license(s) or other authorizations under which the defense articles or defense services were received, and the Treaty-eligible end-use (see paragraphs (e) and (f) of this section regarding authorized end-uses) for which the defense articles or defense services will be used. The defense article or defense service shall remain subject to the conditions and limitations of the existing license or other approval until the United Kingdom Community member has received approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls to transition to this section. (4) Authorized exporters identified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section who have exported a defense article or defense service that has subsequently been placed on the list of exempted items in Supplement No. 1 to part 126 of this subchapter must review and adhere to the requirements in the relevant Federal Register notice announcing such removal. Once removed, the defense article or defense service will no longer be subject to this section, such defense article or defense service previously exported shall remain on the U.S. Munitions List and be subject to the International Traffic in Arms Regulations unless the applicable Federal Register notice states otherwise. Subsequent reexport or retransfer must be made pursuant to Sec. 123.9 of this subchapter. (5) Any defense article or defense service transitioned from a license or other approval to treatment under this section must be marked in accordance with the requirements of paragraph (j) of this section. (j) Marking of Exports. (1) All defense articles and defense services exported or transitioned pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section shall be marked or identified as follows: (i) For classified defense articles and defense services the standard marking or identification shall read: “//CLASSIFICATION LEVEL USML//REL UK and USA Treaty Community//.” For example, for defense articles classified SECRET, the marking or identification shall be “// SECRET USML//REL UK and USA Treaty Community//.” (ii) Unclassified defense articles and defense services exported under or transitioned pursuant to this section shall be UK classified as “Restricted USML” and, the standard marking or identification shall read “//RESTRICTED USML//REL UK and USA Treaty Community//.” (2) Where defense articles are returned to a member of the United States Community identified in paragraph (b) of this section, any defense articles UK classified and marked or identified pursuant to paragraph j(1)(ii) as “//RESTRICTED USML//REL UK and USA Treaty Community//” no longer be UK classified and such marking or identification shall be removed; and (3) The standard marking and identification requirements are as follows: (i) Defense articles (other than technical data) shall be individually labeled with the appropriate identification detailed in paragraphs (j)(1) and (j)(2) of this section; or, where such labeling is impracticable (e.g., propellants, chemicals), shall be accompanied by documentation (such as contracts or invoices) clearly associating the defense articles with the appropriate markings as detailed above; (ii) Technical data (including data packages, technical papers, manuals, presentations, specifications, guides and reports), regardless of media or means of transmission (physical or electronic), shall be individually labeled with the appropriate identification detailed in paragraphs (j)(1) and (j)(2) of this section; or, where such labeling is impracticable (oral presentations), shall have a verbal notification clearly associating the technical data with the appropriate markings as detailed above; and (4) Contracts and agreements for the provision of defense services shall be identified with the appropriate identification detailed in paragraphs (j)(1) and (j)(2) of this section. (5) The exporter shall incorporate the following statement as an integral part of all shipping documentation (airway bill, bill of lading, manifest, packing documents, delivery verification, invoice, etc.) whenever defense articles are to be exported: “These commodities are authorized by the U.S. Government for export only to United Kingdom for use in approved projects, programs or operations by members of the United Kingdom [[Page 72261]] Community. They may not be retransferred or reexported or used outside of an approved project, program, or operation, either in their original form or after being incorporated into other end-items, without the prior written approval of the U.S. Department of State.” (k) Intermediate Consignees. (1) Unclassified exports under this section may only be handled by: (i) U.S. intermediate consignees who are: (A) Exporters registered with the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls and eligible; (B) Licensed customs brokers who are subject to background investigation and have passed a comprehensive examination administered by U.S. Customs and Border Protection; or (C) Commercial air freight and surface shipment carriers, freight forwarders, or other parties not exempt from registration under Sec. 129.3(b)(3) of this subchapter that are identified at the time of export as being on the list of Authorized U.S. Intermediate Consignees, which is available on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site. (ii) United Kingdom intermediate consignees who are: (A) Members of the United Kingdom Community; or (B) Freight forwarders, customs brokers, commercial air freight and surface shipment carriers, or other United Kingdom parties that are identified at the time of export as being on the list of Authorized United Kingdom Intermediate Consignees, which is available on the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls’ Web site. (2) Classified exports must comply with the security requirements of the National Industrial Security Program Operating Manual (DoD 5220.22-M and supplements or successors). (l) Records. (1) All exporters authorized pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section who export pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section shall maintain detailed records of all exports, imports, and transfers made by that exporter of defense articles or defense services subject to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section. Exporters shall also maintain detailed records of any reexports and retransfers approved or otherwise authorized by the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of defense articles or defense services subject to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section. These records shall be maintained for a minimum of five years from the date of export, import, transfer, reexport, or retransfer and shall be made available upon request to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, or U.S. Customs and Border Protection, or any other authorized U.S. law enforcement officer. Records in an electronic format must be maintained using a process or system capable of reproducing all records on paper. Such records when displayed on a viewer, monitor, or reproduced on paper, must exhibit a high degree of legibility and readability. (For the purpose of this section, “legible” and “legibility” mean the quality of a letter or numeral that enables the observer to identify it positively and quickly to the exclusion of all other letters or numerals. “Readable” and “readability” means the quality of a group of letters or numerals being recognized as complete words or numbers.) These records shall consist of the following: (i) Port of entry/exit; (ii) Date/time of export/import; (iii) Method of export/import; (iv) Commodity code and description of the commodity, including technical data; (v) Value of export; (vi) Reference to this section and justification for export under the Treaty; (vii) End-user/end-use; (viii) Identification of all U.S. and foreign parties to the transaction; (ix) How the export was marked; (x) Classification of the export; (xi) All written correspondence with the U.S. Government on the export; (xii) All information relating to political contributions, fees, or commissions furnished or obtained, offered, solicited, or agreed upon as outlined in subsection (m) below; (xiii) Purchase order or contract; (xiv) Technical data actually exported; (xv) The Internal Transaction Number for the Electronic Export Information filing in the Automated Export System; (xvi) All shipping documentation (airway bill, bill of lading, manifest, packing documents, delivery verification, invoice, etc.); and (xvii) Statement of Registration (Form DS-2032). (2) Filing of export information. All exporters of defense articles and defense services under the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section must electronically file Electronic Export Information (EEI) using the Automated Export System citing one of the four below referenced codes in the appropriate field in the EEI for each shipment: (i) 126.16(e)(1): Used for exports in support of United States and United Kingdom combined military or counter-terrorism operations (the name or an appropriate description of the operation shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well); (ii) 126.16(e)(2): Used for exports in support of United States and United Kingdom cooperative security and defense research, development, production, and support programs (the name or an appropriate description of the program shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well); (iii) 126.16(e)(3): Used for exports in support of mutually determined specific security and defense projects where the Government of the United Kingdom is the end-user (the name or an appropriate description of the project shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well); or (iv) 126.16(e)(4): Used for exports that will have a U.S. Government end-use (the U.S. Government contract number or solicitation number (e.g., “U.S. Government contract number XXXXX”) shall be placed in the appropriate field in the EEI, as well). Such exports must meet the required export documentation and filing guidelines, including for defense services, of Sec. 123.22(a), (b)(1), and (b)(2) of this subchapter. (m) Fees and Commissions. All exporters authorized pursuant to paragraph (b)(2) of this section shall, with respect to each export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer, pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section, submit a statement to the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls containing the information identified in Sec. 130.10 of this subchapter relating to fees, commissions, and political contributions on contracts or other instruments valued in an amount of $500,000 or more. (n) Violations and Enforcement. (1) Exports, transfers, reexports, and retransfers that do not comply with the conditions prescribed in this section will constitute violations of the Arms Export Control Act and this subchapter, and are subject to all relevant criminal, civil, and administrative penalties (see Sec. 127.1 of this subchapter), and may also be subject to other statutes or regulations. (2) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers have the authority to investigate, detain, or seize [[Page 72262]] any export or attempted export of defense articles that does not comply with this section or that is otherwise unlawful. (3) The Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, U.S. Customs and Border Protection, and other authorized U.S. law enforcement officers may require the production of documents and information relating to any actual or attempted export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer pursuant to this section. Any foreign person refusing to provide such records within a reasonable period of time shall be suspended from the United Kingdom Community and ineligible to receive defense articles or defense services pursuant to the exemption under this section or otherwise. (o) Procedures for Legislative Notification. (1) Exports pursuant to the Defense Trade Cooperation Treaty between the United States and the United Kingdom and this section by any person identified in paragraph (b)(2) of this section shall not take place until 30 days after the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls has acknowledged receipt of a Form DS-4048 (entitled, “Projected Sales of Major Weapons in Support of Section 25(a)(1) of the Arms Export Control Act”) from the exporter notifying the Department of State if the export involves one or more of the following: (i) A contract or other instrument for the export of major defense equipment in the amount of $25,000,000 or more, or for defense articles and defense services in the amount of $100,000,000 or more; (ii) A contract or other instrument for the export of firearms controlled under Category I of the U.S. Munitions List of the International Traffic in Arms Regulations in an amount of $1,000,000 or more; (iii) A contract or other instrument, regardless of value, for the manufacturing abroad of any item of significant military equipment; or (iv) An amended contract or other instrument that meets the requirements of paragraphs (o)(1)(i)-(o)(1)(iii) of this section. (2) The Form DS-4048 required in paragraph (o)(1) of this section shall be accompanied by the following additional information: (i) The information identified in Sec. 130.10 and Sec. 130.11 of this subchapter; (ii) A statement regarding whether any offset agreement is proposed to be entered into in connection with the export and a description of any such offset agreement; (iii) A copy of the signed contract or other instrument; and (iv) If the notification is for paragraph (o)(1)(ii) of this section, a statement of what will happen to the weapons in their inventory (for example, whether the current inventory will be sold, reassigned to another service branch, destroyed, etc.). (3) The Department of State will notify the Congress of exports that meet the requirements of paragraph (o)(1) of this section. 27. Supplement No. 1 is added to Part 126 read as follows: Supplement No. 1 * —————————————————————————————————————- (CA) Sec. (AS) Sec. (UK) Sec. USML category Exclusion 126.5 126.16 126.17 —————————————————————————————————————- I-XXI……………………………….. Classified defense articles and X X X services. See Note 1. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense articles listed in the X X X Missile Technology Control Regime (MTCR) Annex. I-XXI……………………………….. U.S. origin defense articles ………. X X and services used for marketing purposes and not previously licensed for export in accordance with this subchapter. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense services for or X ………. ………. technical data related to defense articles identified in this supplement as excluded from the Canadian exemption. I-XXI……………………………….. Any transaction involving the X ………. ………. export of defense articles and services for which congressional notification is required in accordance with Sec. 123.15 and Sec. 124.11 of this subchapter. I-XXI……………………………….. U.S. origin defense articles ………. X X and services specific to developmental systems that have not obtained written Milestone B approval from the U.S. Department of Defense milestone approval authority, unless such export is pursuant to a written solicitation or contract issued or awarded by the U.S. Department of Defense for an end use identified in subsections (e)(1), (2), or (4) of Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter and is consistent with other exclusions of this supplement. I-XXI……………………………….. Nuclear weapons strategic X ………. ………. delivery systems and all components, parts, accessories, and attachments specifically designed for such systems and associated equipment. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to the existence or method of compliance with anti- tamper measures made at U.S. Government direction. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to reduced observables or counter low observables in any part of the spectrum. See Note 2. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to sensor fusion beyond that required for display or identification correlation. See Note 3. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to the automatic target acquisition or recognition and cueing of multiple autonomous unmanned systems. I-XXI……………………………….. Nuclear power generating ………. ………. X equipment or propulsion equipment (e.g. nuclear reactors), specifically designed for military use and components therefore, specifically designed for military use. See also Sec. 123.20 of this subchapter. I-XXI……………………………….. Libraries (parametric technical ………. ………. X databases) specially designed for military use with equipment controlled on the USML. I-XXI……………………………….. Defense services or technical X ………. ………. data specific to applied research as defined in Sec. 125.4(c)(3) of this subchapter, design methodology as defined in Sec. 125.4(c)(4) of this subchapter, engineering analysis as defined in Sec. 125.4(c)(5) of this subchapter, or manufacturing know-how as defined in Sec. 125.4(c)(6) of this subchapter. [[Page 72263]] I-XXI……………………………….. Defense services that are not X ………. ………. based on a written arrangement (between the U.S. exporter and the Canadian recipient) that includes a clause requiring that all documentation created from U.S. origin technical data contain the statement that “This document contains technical data, the use of which is restricted by the U.S. Arms Export Control Act. This data has been provided in accordance with, and is subject to, the limitations specified in Sec. 126.5 of the International Traffic In Arms Regulations (ITAR). By accepting this data, the consignee agrees to honor the requirements of the ITAR”. I…………………………………… Defense articles and services X ………. ………. related to firearms, close assault weapons, and combat shotguns. II(k)……………………………….. Software source code related to ………. X X Categories II(c), II(d), or II(i). See Note 4. II(k)……………………………….. Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Category II(d). See Note 5. III…………………………………. Defense articles and services X ………. ………. related to ammunition for firearms, close assault weapons, and combat shotguns listed in Category I. III…………………………………. Defense articles and services ………. ………. X specific to ammunition and fuse setting devices for guns and armament controlled in Category II. III(e)………………………………. Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Categories III(d)(1) or III(d)(2) and their specially designed components. See Note 5. III(e)………………………………. Software source code related to ………. X X Categories III(d)(1) or III(d)(2). See Note 4. IV………………………………….. Defense articles and services X X X specific to man-portable air defense systems (MANPADS). See Note 6. IV………………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. ………. X specific to rockets, designed or modified for non-military applications that do not have a range of 300 km (i.e., not controlled on the MTCR Annex). IV………………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to torpedoes. IV………………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. ………. X specific to anti-personnel landmines. IV(i)……………………………….. Software source code related to ………. X X Categories IV(a), IV(b), IV(c), or IV(g). See Note 4. IV(i)……………………………….. Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Categories IV(a), IV(b), IV(d), or IV(g) and their specially designed components. See Note 5. V…………………………………… The following energetic ………. ………. X materials and related substances:. a. TATB (triaminotrinitrobenzene) (CAS 3058-38-6) b. Explosives controlled in USML Category V(a)(32) or V(a)(33) c. Iron powder (CAS 7439-89-6) with particle size of 3 micrometers or less produced by reduction of iron oxide with hydrogen d. BOBBA-8 (bis(2- methylaziridinyl)2-(2- hydroxypropanoxy) propylamino phosphine oxide), and other MAPO derivatives e. N-methyl-p-nitroaniline (CAS 100-15-2) f. Trinitrophenylmethyl- ………. ………. ………. nitramine (tetryl) (CAS 479-45- 8) V(c)(7)……………………………… Pyrotechnics and pyrophorics ………. ………. X specifically formulated for military purposes to enhance or control radiated energy in any part of the IR spectrum. V(d)(3)……………………………… Bis-2, 2-dinitropropylnitrate ………. ………. X (BDNPN). VI………………………………….. Defense Articles specific to ………. ………. X equipment specially designed or configured to be installed in a vehicle for military ground, marine, airborne or space applications, capable of operating while in motion and of producing or maintaining temperatures below 103 K (-170 [deg]C). VI………………………………….. Defense Articles specific to ………. ………. X superconductive electrical equipment (rotating machinery and transformers) specially designed or configured to be installed in a vehicle for military ground, marine, airborne, or space applications and capable of operating while in motion. This, however, does not include direct current hybrid homopolar generators that have single-pole normal metal armatures which rotate in a magnetic field produced by superconducting windings, provided those windings are the only superconducting component in the generator. VI………………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to naval technology and systems relating to acoustic spectrum control and awareness. See Note 10. VI(a)……………………………….. Nuclear powered vessels…….. X X X VI(c)……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to submarine combat control systems. VI(d)……………………………….. Harbor entrance detection ………. ………. X devices. VI(e)……………………………….. Defense articles and services X X X specific to naval nuclear propulsion equipment. See Note 7. VI(g)……………………………….. Technical data and defense X X X services for gas turbine engine hot sections related to Category VI(f). See Note 8. VI(g)……………………………….. Software source code related to ………. X X Categories VI(a) or VI(c). See Note 4. VII…………………………………. Defense articles specific to ………. ………. X equipment specially designed or configured to be installed in a vehicle for military ground, marine, airborne, or space applications, capable of operating while in motion and of producing or maintaining temperatures below 103 K (-170 [deg]C). [[Page 72264]] VII…………………………………. Defense articles specific to ………. ………. X superconductive electrical equipment (rotating machinery and transformers) specially designed or configured to be installed in a vehicle for military ground, marine, airborne, or space applications and capable of operating while in motion. This, however, does not include direct current hybrid homopolar generators that have single-pole normal metal armatures which rotate in a magnetic field produced by superconducting windings, provided those windings are the only superconducting component in the generator. VII…………………………………. Armored all wheel drive ………. ………. X vehicles, other than vehicles specifically designed or modified for military use, fitted with, or designed or modified to be fitted with, a plough or flail for the purpose of land mine clearance. VII(e)………………………………. Amphibious vehicles………… ………. ………. X VII(f)………………………………. Technical data and defense X X X services for gas turbine engine hot sections. See Note 8. VIII………………………………… Defense articles specific to ………. ………. X equipment specially designed or configured to be installed in a vehicle for military ground, marine, airborne, or space applications, capable of operating while in motion and of producing or maintaining temperatures below 103 K (-170 [deg]C). VIII………………………………… Defense articles specific to ………. ………. X superconductive electrical equipment (rotating machinery and transformers) specially designed or configured to be installed in a vehicle for military ground, marine, airborne, or space applications and capable of operating while in motion. This, however, does not include direct current hybrid homopolar generators that have single-pole normal metal armatures which rotate in a magnetic field produced by superconducting windings, provided those windings are the only superconducting component in the generator. VIII(a)……………………………… All Category VIII(a) items….. X ………. ………. VIII(b)……………………………… Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to gas turbine engine hot section components and digital engine controls. See Note 8. VIII(f)……………………………… Developmental aircraft, engines X ………. ………. and components identified in Category VIII(f). VIII(g)……………………………… Ground Effect Machines (GEMS).. ………. ………. X VIII(i)……………………………… Technical data and defense X X X services for gas turbine engine hot sections related to Category VIII(b). See Note 8. VIII(i)……………………………… Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Categories VIII(a), VIII(b), or VIII(e) and their specially designed components. See Note 5. VIII(i)……………………………… Software source code related to ………. X X Categories VIII(a) or VIII(e). See Note 4. IX………………………………….. Training or simulation ………. ………. X equipment for MANPADS. See Note 6. IX(e)……………………………….. Software source code related to ………. X X Categories IX(a) or IX(b). See Note 4. IX(e)……………………………….. Software that is both ………. ………. X specifically designed or modified for military use and specifically designed or modified for modeling or simulating military operational scenarios. X(e)………………………………… Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Categories X(a)(1) or X(a)(2) and their specially designed components. See Note 5. XI(a)……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to countermeasures and counter-countermeasures See Note 9. XI………………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to naval technology and systems relating to acoustic spectrum control and awareness. See Note 10. XI(b) XI(c) XI(d)…………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to communications security (e.g., COMSEC and TEMPEST). XI(d)……………………………….. Software source code related to ………. X X Category XI(a). See Note 4. XI(d)……………………………….. Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Categories XI(a)(3) or XI(a)(4) and their specially designed components. See Note 5. XII…………………………………. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to countermeasures and counter-countermeasures. See Note 9. XII(c)………………………………. Defense articles and services X ………. ………. specific to XII(c) articles, except any 1st- and 2nd- generation image intensification tubes and 1st- and 2nd-generation image intensification night sighting equipment. End items in XII(c) and related technical data limited to basic operations, maintenance, and training information as authorized under the exemption in Sec. 125.4(b)(5) of this subchapter may be exported directly to a Canadian Government entity. XII(c)………………………………. Technical data or defense X X X services for night vision equipment beyond basic operations, maintenance, and training data. However, the AS and UK Treaty exemptions apply when such export is pursuant to a written solicitation or contract issued or awarded by the U.S. Department of Defense for an end use identified in subsections (e)(1), (2), or (4) of Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter and is consistent with other exclusions of this supplement. XII(f)………………………………. Manufacturing know-how related X X X to Category XII(d) and their specially designed components. See Note 5. XII(f)………………………………. Software source code related to ………. X X Categories XII(a), XII(b), XII(c), or XII(d). See Note 4. XIII(b)……………………………… Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to Military Information Security Assurance Systems. [[Page 72265]] XIII(c)……………………………… Defense articles and services ………. ………. X specific to armored plate manufactured to comply with a military standard or specification or suitable for military use. See Note 11. XIII(d)……………………………… Carbon/carbon billets and ………. ………. X performs which are reinforced in three or more dimensional planes, specifically designed, developed, modified, configured or adapted for defense articles. XIII(f)……………………………… Structural materials……….. ………. ………. X XIII(g)……………………………… Defense articles and services ………. ………. X related to concealment and deception equipment and materials. XIII(h)……………………………… Energy conversion devices other ………. ………. X than fuel cells. XIII(i)……………………………… Metal embrittling agents……. ………. ………. X XIII(j)……………………………… Defense articles and services ………. X X related to hardware associated with the measurement or modification of system signatures for detection of defense articles as described in Note 2. XIII(k)……………………………… Defense articles and services ………. X X related to tooling and equipment specifically designed or modified for the production of defense articles identified in Category XIII(b). XIII(l)……………………………… Software source code related to ………. X X Category XIII(a). See Note 4. XIV…………………………………. Defense articles and services ………. X X related to toxicological agents, including chemical agents, biological agents, and associated equipment. XIV(a) XIV(b) XIV(d) XIV(e) XIV(f)……… Chemical agents listed in X ………. ………. Category XIV(a), (d) and (e), biological agents and biologically derived substances in Category XIV(b), and equipment listed in Category XIV(f) for dissemination of the chemical agents and biological agents listed in Category XIV(a), (b), (d), and (e). XV(a)……………………………….. Defense articles and services X X X specific to spacecraft/ satellites. However, the Canadian exemption may be used for commercial communications satellites that have no other type of payload. XV(b)……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to ground control stations for spacecraft telemetry, tracking, and control. XV(c)……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to GPS/PPS security modules. XV(c)……………………………….. Defense articles controlled in X ………. ………. XV(c) except end items for end use by the Federal Government of Canada exported directly or indirectly through a Canadian- registered person. XV(d)……………………………….. Defense articles and services X X X specific to radiation-hardened microelectronic circuits. XV(e)……………………………….. Anti-jam systems with the X ………. ………. ability to respond to incoming interference by adaptively reducing antenna gain (nulling) in the direction of the interference. XV(e)……………………………….. Antennas having any of the following: (a) Aperture (overall dimension of the radiating portions of the antenna) greater than 30 feet; (b) All sidelobes less than or equal to -35 dB relative to the peak of the main beam; or (c) Designed, modified, or X ………. ………. configured to provide coverage area on the surface of the earth less than 200 nautical miles in diameter, where “coverage area” is defined as that area on the surface of the earth that is illuminated by the main beam width of the antenna (which is the angular distance between half power points of the beam). XV(e)……………………………….. Optical intersatellite data X ………. ………. links (cross links) and optical ground satellite terminals. XV(e)……………………………….. Spaceborne regenerative X ………. ………. baseband processing (direct up and down conversion to and from baseband) equipment. XV(e)……………………………….. Propulsion systems which permit X ………. ………. acceleration of the satellite on-orbit (i.e., after mission orbit injection) at rates greater than 0.1 g. XV(e)……………………………….. Attitude control and X ………. ………. determination systems designed to provide spacecraft pointing determination and control or payload pointing system control better than 0.02 degrees per axis. XV(e)……………………………….. All specifically designed or X ………. ………. modified systems, components, parts, accessories, attachments, and associated equipment for all Category XV(a) items, except when specifically designed or modified for use in commercial communications satellites. XV(e)……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to spacecraft and ground control station systems (only for telemetry, tracking and control as controlled in XV(b)), subsystems, components, parts, accessories, attachments, and associated equipment. XV(f)……………………………….. Technical data and defense X X X services directly related to the other defense articles excluded from the exemptions for Category XV. XVI…………………………………. Defense articles and services X X X specific to design and testing of nuclear weapons. XVI(c)………………………………. Nuclear radiation measuring X ………. ………. devices manufactured to military specifications. XVI(e)………………………………. Software source code related to ………. X X Category XVI(c). See Note 4. XVII………………………………… Classified articles and defense X X X services not elsewhere enumerated. See Note 1. XVIII……………………………….. Defense articles and services ………. X X specific to directed energy weapon systems. XX………………………………….. Defense articles and services X X X related to submersible vessels, oceanographic, and associated equipment. XXI…………………………………. Miscellaneous defense articles X X X and services. —————————————————————————————————————- [[Page 72266]] Note 1: Classified defense articles and services are not eligible for export under the Canadian exemptions. U.S. origin defense articles and services controlled in Category XVII are not eligible for export under the UK Treaty exemption. U.S. origin classified defense articles and services are not eligible for export under either the UK or AS Treaty exemptions except when being released pursuant to a U.S. Department of Defense written request, directive or contract that provides for the export of the defense article or service. Note 2: The phrase “any part of the spectrum” includes radio frequency (RF), infrared (IR), electro-optical, visual, ultraviolet (UV), acoustic, and magnetic. Defense articles related to reduced observables or counter reduced observables are defined as: a. Signature reduction (radio frequency (RF), infrared (IR), Electro-Optical, visual, ultraviolet (UV), acoustic, magnetic, RF emissions) of defense platforms, including systems, subsystems, components, materials, (including dual-purpose materials used for Electromagnetic Interference (EM) reduction) technologies, and signature prediction, test and measurement equipment and software and material transmissivity/reflectivity prediction codes and optimization software. b. Electronically scanned array radar, high power radars, radar processing algorithms, periscope-mounted radar systems (PATRIOT), LADAR, multistatic and IR focal plane array-based sensors, to include systems, subsystems, components, materials, and technologies. Note 3: Defense Articles related to sensor fusion beyond that required for display or identification correlation is defined as techniques designed to automatically combine information from two or more sensors/sources for the purpose of target identification, tracking, designation, or passing of data in support of surveillance or weapons engagement. Sensor fusion involves sensors such as acoustic, infrared, electro optical, frequency, etc. Display or identification correlation refers to the combination of target detections from multiple sources for assignment of common target track designation. Note 4: Software source code beyond that source code required for basic operation, maintenance, and training for programs, systems, and/or subsystems is not eligible for use of the UK or AS Treaty Exemptions, unless such export is pursuant to a written solicitation or contract issued or awarded by the U.S. Department of Defense for an end use identified in subsections (e)(1), (2), or (4) of Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter and is consistent with other exclusions of this supplement. Note 5: Manufacturing know-how, as defined in Sec. 125.4(c)(6) of this subchapter, is not eligible for use of the UK or AS Treaty Exemptions, unless such export is pursuant to a written solicitation or contract issued or awarded by the U.S. Department of Defense for an end use identified in subsections (e)(1), (2), or (4) of Sec. 126.16 or Sec. 126.17 of this subchapter and is consistent with other exclusions of this supplement. Note 6: Defense Articles specific to Man Portable Air Defense Systems (MANPADS) includes missiles which can be used without modification in other applications. It also includes production equipment specifically designed or modified for MANPAD systems, as well as training equipment specifically designed or modified for MANPAD systems. Note 7: Naval nuclear propulsion plants includes all of USML Category VI(e). Naval nuclear propulsion information is technical data that concerns the design, arrangement, development, manufacture, testing, operation, administration, training, maintenance, and repair of the propulsion plants of naval nuclear-powered ships and prototypes, including the associated shipboard and shore-based nuclear support facilities. Examples of defense articles covered by this exclusion include nuclear propulsion plants and nuclear submarine technologies or systems; nuclear powered vessels (see USML Categories VI and XX). Note 8: Examples of gas turbine engine hot section exempted defense article components and technology are combustion chambers/liners; high pressure turbine blades, vanes, disks and related cooled structure; cooled low pressure turbine blades, vanes, disks and related cooled structure; advanced cooled augmenters; and advanced cooled nozzles. Examples of gas turbine engine hot section developmental technologies are Integrated High Performance Turbine Engine Technology (IHPTET), Versatile, Affordable Advanced Turbine Engine (VAATE), Ultra- Efficient Engine Technology (UEET). Note 9: Examples of countermeasures and counter-countermeasures related to defense articles not exportable under the AS or UK Treaty exemptions are: a. IR countermeasures; b. Classified techniques and capabilities; c. Exports for precision radio frequency location that directly or indirectly supports fire control and is used for situation awareness, target identification, target acquisition, and weapons targeting and Radio Direction Finding (RDF) capabilities. Precision RF location is defined as angle of arrival accuracy of less than five degrees (RMS) and RF emitter location of less than ten percent range error; d. Providing the capability to reprogram; and e. Acoustics (including underwater), active and passive countermeasures, and counter-countermeasures Note 10: Examples of defense articles covered by this exclusion include underwater acoustic vector sensors; acoustic reduction; off-board, underwater, active and passive sensing, propeller/propulsor technologies; fixed mobile/floating/powered detection systems which include in-buoy signal processing for target detection and classification; autonomous underwater vehicles capable of long endurance in ocean environments (manned submarines excluded); automated control algorithms embedded in on-board autonomous platforms which enable (a) group behaviors for target detection and classification, (b) adaptation to the environment or tactical situation for enhancing target detection and classification; “intelligent autonomy” algorithms which define the status, group (greater than 2) behaviors, and responses to detection stimuli by autonomous, underwater vehicles; and low frequency, broad-band “acoustic color,” active acoustic “fingerprint” sensing for the purpose of long range, single pass identification of ocean bottom objects, buried or otherwise. (Controlled under Category XI(a), (1) and (2) and in (b), (c), and (d)). Note 11: The defense articles include constructions of metallic or non-metallic materials or combinations thereof specially designed to provide protection for military systems. The phrase “suitable for military use” applies to any articles or materials which have been tested to level IIIA or above IAW NIJ standard 0108.01 or comparable national standard. This exclusion does not include military helmets, body armor, or other protective garments which may be exported IAW the terms of the AS or UK Treaties. —————————————————————————————————————- * An “X” in the chart indicates that the item is excluded from use under the exemption referenced in the top of the column. An item excluded in any one row is excluded regardless of whether other rows may contain a description that would include the item. PART 127–VIOLATIONS AND PENALTIES 28. The authority citation for part 127 is revised to read to as follows: Authority: Secs. 2, 38, and 42, Public Law 90-629, 90 Stat. 744 (22 U.S.C. 2752, 2778, 2791); E.O. 11958, 42 FR 4311; 3 CFR, 1977 Comp., p. 79; 22 U.S.C. 401; 22 U.S.C. 2651a; 22 U.S.C. 2779a; 22 U.S.C. 2780; Pub. L. 111-266. 29. Section 127.1 is revised to read as follows: Sec. 127.1 Violations. (a) Without first obtaining the required license or other written [[Page 72267]] approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls, it is unlawful: (1) To export or attempt to export from the United States any defense article or technical data or to furnish or attempt to furnish any defense service for which a license or written approval is required by this subchapter; (2) To reexport or retransfer or attempt to reexport or retransfer any defense article, technical data, or defense service from one foreign end-user, end-use, or destination to another foreign end-user, end-use, or destination for which a license or written approval is required by this subchapter, including, as specified in Sec. 126.16(h) and Sec. 126.17(h) of this subchapter, any defense article, technical data, or defense service that was exported from the United States without a license pursuant to any exemption under this subchapter; (3) To import or attempt to import any defense article whenever a license is required by this subchapter; (4) To conspire to export, import, reexport, retransfer, furnish or cause to be exported, imported, reexported, retransferred or furnished, any defense article, technical data, or defense service for which a license or written approval is required by this subchapter. (b) It is unlawful: (1) To violate any of the terms or conditions of a license or approval granted pursuant to this subchapter, any exemption contained in this subchapter, or any rule or regulation contained in this subchapter. (2) To engage in the business of brokering activities for which registration and a license or written approval is required by this subchapter without first registering or obtaining the required license or written approval from the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls. For the purposes of this subchapter, engaging in the business of brokering activities requires only one occasion of engaging in an activity as reflected in Sec. 129.2(b) of this subchapter. (3) To engage in the United States in the business of either manufacturing or exporting defense articles or furnishing defense services without complying with the registration requirements. For the purposes of this subchapter, engaging in the business of manufacturing or exporting defense articles or furnishing defense services requires only one occasion of manufacturing or exporting a defense article or furnishing a defense service. (c) Any person who is granted a license or other approval or who acts pursuant to an exemption under this subchapter is responsible for the acts of employees, agents, and all authorized persons to whom possession of the defense article or technical data has been entrusted regarding the operation, use, possession, transportation, and handling of such defense article or technical data abroad. All persons abroad subject to U.S. jurisdiction who obtain temporary or permanent custody of a defense article exported from the United States or produced under an agreement described in part 124 of this subchapter, and irrespective of the number of intermediate transfers, are bound by the regulations of this subchapter in the same manner and to the same extent as the original owner or transferor. (d) A person with knowledge that another person is then ineligible pursuant to Sec. Sec. 120.1(c) or 126.7 of this subchapter may not, directly or indirectly, in any manner or capacity, without prior disclosure of the facts to, and written authorization from, the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls: (1) Apply for, obtain, or use any export control document as defined in Sec. 127.2(b) of this subchapter for such ineligible person; or (2) Order, buy, receive, use, sell, deliver, store, dispose of, forward, transport, finance, or otherwise service or participate in any transaction which may involve any defense article or the furnishing of any defense service for which a license or approval is required by this subchapter or an exemption is available under this subchapter for export, where such ineligible person may obtain any benefit therefrom or have any direct or indirect interest therein. (e) No person may knowingly or willfully cause, or aid, abet, counsel, demand, induce, procure, or permit the commission of, any act prohibited by, or the omission of any act required by, 22 U.S.C. 2778 and 2779, or any regulation, license, approval, or order issued thereunder. 30. Section 127.2 is amended by revising paragraphs (a), (b) introductory text, (b)(1), (b)(2), and adding (b)(14), to read as follows: Sec. 127.2 Misrepresentation and omission of facts. (a) It is unlawful to use or attempt to use any export or temporary import control document containing a false statement or misrepresenting or omitting a material fact for the purpose of exporting, transferring, reexporting, retransferring, obtaining, or furnishing any defense article, technical data, or defense service. Any false statement, misrepresentation, or omission of material fact in an export or temporary import control document will be considered as made in a matter within the jurisdiction of a department or agency of the United States for the purposes of 18 U.S.C. 1001, 22 U.S.C. 2778, and 22 U.S.C. 2779. (b) For the purpose of this subchapter, export or temporary import control documents include the following: (1) An application for a permanent export, reexport, retransfer, or a temporary import license and supporting documents. (2) Shipper’s Export Declaration or an Electronic Export Information filing. * * * * * (14) Any other shipping document that has information related to the export of the defense article or defense service. 31. Section 127.3 is revised to read as follows: Sec. 127.3 Penalties for violations. Any person who willfully: (a) Violates any provision of Sec. 38 or Sec. 39 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2778 and 2779) or any rule or regulation issued under either Sec. 38 or Sec. 39 of the Act, or any undertaking specifically required by part 124 of this subchapter; or (b) In a registration, license application, or report required by Sec. 38 or Sec. 39 of the Arms Export Control Act (22 U.S.C. 2778 and 2779) or by any rule or regulation issued under either section, makes any untrue statement of a material fact or omits a material fact required to be stated therein or necessary to make the statements therein not misleading, shall upon conviction be subject to a fine or imprisonment, or both, as prescribed by 22 U.S.C. 2778(c). 32. Section 127.4 is amended by revising paragraphs (a) and (c), and adding paragraph (d), to read as follows: Sec. 127.4 Authority of U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers. (a) U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement and U.S. Customs and Border Protection officers may take appropriate action to ensure observance of this subchapter as to the export or the attempted export of any defense article or technical data, including the inspection of loading or unloading of any vessel, vehicle, or aircraft. This applies whether the export is authorized by license or by written approval issued under this subchapter or by exemption. * * * * * (c) Upon the presentation to a U.S. Customs and Border Protection Officer of a license or written approval, or claim of an exemption, authorizing the export [[Page 72268]] of any defense article, the customs officer may require the production of other relevant documents and information relating to the proposed export. This includes an invoice, order, packing list, shipping document, correspondence, instructions, and the documents otherwise required by the U.S. Customs and Border Protection or U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement. (d) If an exemption under this subchapter is used or claimed to export, transfer, reexport or retransfer, furnish, or obtain a defense article, technical data, or defense service, law enforcement officers may rely upon the authorities noted above, additional authority identified in the language of the exemption, and any other lawful means to investigate such a matter. 33. Section 127.7 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows: Sec. 127.7 Debarment. (a) Debarment. In implementing Sec. 38 of the Arms Export Control Act, the Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs may prohibit any person from participating directly or indirectly in the export, reexport and retransfer of defense articles, including technical data, or in the furnishing of defense services for any of the reasons listed below and publish notice of such action in the Federal Register. Any such prohibition is referred to as a debarment for purposes of this subchapter. The Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs shall determine the appropriate period of time for debarment, which shall generally be for a period of three years. However, reinstatement is not automatic and in all cases the debarred person must submit a request for reinstatement and be approved for reinstatement before engaging in any export or brokering activities subject to the Arms Export Control Act or this subchapter. * * * * * 34. Section 127.10 is amended by revising paragraph (a) to read as follows: Sec. 127.10 Civil penalty. (a) The Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs is authorized to impose a civil penalty in an amount not to exceed that authorized by 22 U.S.C. 2778, 2779a, and 2780 for each violation of 22 U.S.C. 2778, 2779a, and 2780, or any regulation, order, license, or written approval issued thereunder. This civil penalty may be either in addition to, or in lieu of, any other liability or penalty which may be imposed. * * * * * 35. Section 127.12 is amended by adding paragraph (b)(5), and revising paragraph (d), to read as follows: Sec. 127.12 Voluntary disclosures. * * * * * (b) * * * (5) Nothing in this section shall be interpreted to negate or lessen the affirmative duty pursuant to Sec. Sec. 126.1(e), 126.16(h)(5), and 126.17(h)(5) of this subchapter upon persons to inform the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls of the actual or proposed sale, export, transfer, reexport, or retransfer of a defense article, technical data, or defense service to any country referred to in Sec. 126.1 of this subchapter, any citizen of such country, or any person acting on its behalf. * * * * * (d) Documentation. The written disclosure should be accompanied by copies of substantiating documents. Where appropriate, the documentation should include, but not be limited to: (1) Licensing documents (e.g., license applications, export licenses, and end-user statements), exemption citation, or other authorization description, if any; (2) Shipping documents (e.g., Shipper’s Export Declarations; Electronic Export Information filing, including the Internal Transaction Number), air waybills, and bills of laden, invoices, and any other associated documents); (3) Any other relevant documents must be retained by the person making the disclosure until the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls requests them or until a final decision on the disclosed information has been made. * * * * * PART 129–REGISTRATION AND LICENSING OF BROKERS 36. The authority citation for part 129 continues to read as follows: Authority: Sec. 38, Pub. L. 104-164, 110 Stat. 1437, (22 U.S.C. 2778). 37. Section 129.6 is amended by revising paragraph (b)(2) to read as follows: Sec. 129.6 Requirements for License/Approval. * * * * * (b) * * * (2) Brokering activities that are arranged wholly within and destined exclusively for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, any member country of that Organization, Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea, except in the case of the defense articles or defense services specified in Sec. 129.7(a) of this subchapter, for which prior approval is always required. 38. Section 129.7 is amended by revising paragraphs (a)(1)(vii) and (a)(2) to read as follows: Sec. 129.7 Prior Approval (License). (a) * * * (1) * * * (vii) Foreign defense articles or defense services (other than those that are arranged wholly within and destined exclusively for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, any member country of that Organization, Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea (see Sec. Sec. 129.6(b)(2) and 129.7(a)). (2) Brokering activities involving defense articles or defense services covered by, or of a nature described by part 121, of this subchapter, in addition to those specified in Sec. 129.7(a), that are designated as significant military equipment under this subchapter, for or from any country not a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, Australia, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, or the Republic of Korea whenever any of the following factors are present: * * * * * Dated: November 7, 2011. Ellen O. Tauscher, Under Secretary, Arms Control and International Security, Department of State. [FR Doc. 2011-29328 Filed 11-21-11; 8:45 am] BILLING CODE 4710-25-P

SECRET – CIA’s Clandestine Services Histories of Civil Air Transport

https://www.cia.gov/library/publications/historical-collection-publications/clandestine-services-histories-of-civil-air-transport/CATbooklet_thumb.jpg

CIA’s Clandestine Services Histories of Civil Air Transport

This booklet and CD represent the public release of some of the most closely held activities in CIA history concerning one of the most controversial operations in American history. Within these pages, you will find excerpts of the CIA’s Clandestine Services Histories of Civil Air Transport (CAT) – the precursor to Air America. The Histories were written by Alfred T. Cox who was named the President of CAT when CIA acquired it, and guided both the covert operations side and the public commercial side of the airline for a number of years. As the name suggests, these histories are normally not released in any form to the public. In this case, time and circumstances allow us to release these particular products in concert with the 2011 CAT Association Reunion. You also will find pictures of the men and women who dedicated their lives to keeping the airline afloat through good times and bad. These people became a family in the early days and, although many of the founding members have passed on, the CAT community remains committed to the memory of the enormous accomplishments they and their families
achieved with this airline.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

CAT Booklet

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE SU-T – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – SU-T

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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030768403722;98;82;00;;SWOBODA, HOLGER:;;;13875,00
041042422231;06;19;00;;SWOBODA, MANFRED:;;;29250,00
221067422228;18;34;00;;SWOBODA, TORSTEN:;;;10155,00
130259428241;09;00;52;;SWOBODA, UWE:;;;19352,00
120957524987;30;79;00;;SWOLENSKY, BARBARA:;;;2566,66
100737429728;94;03;00;;SYDLIK, DIETER:;;;24062,50
250764400748;30;63;00;;SYDOW, ANDREAS:;;;13784,00
040663415398;99;49;00;;SYDOW, FRANK:;;;24420,00
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240943403611;03;65;00;;SYDOW, KLAUS-GEORG:;;;20250,00
140951400615;94;03;00;;SYDOW, KLAUS-JUERGEN:;;;28080,00
071065505512;15;80;00;;SYDOW, RAMONA:;;;16274,04
150460403423;03;22;00;;SYDOW, UWE:;;;20420,00
150535403410;03;12;00;;SYDOW, WOLF-DIETER:;;;21000,00
140850402216;02;51;00;;SYDOW, WOLFGANG:;;;24120,00
220350529771;17;00;00;;SYKOR, GABRIELE:;;;20715,35
230461415370;08;09;00;;SYKORA, AXEL:;;;20660,00
040834429728;99;55;00;;SYKORA, GERHARD:;;;27750,00
160365401525;99;43;00;;SYLUPP, MAIK:;;;18480,00
090152405644;04;06;00;;SYLVESTER, WOLFGANG:;;;22500,00
150239401517;30;43;00;;SYMANEK, ARTUR:;;;14400,00
211266401527;01;18;00;;SYMANEK, BERND:;;;15066,00
290969430277;99;43;00;;SYMMANK, HOLGER:;;;13285,00
110558422714;99;26;00;;SYMMANK, MARTIN:;;;18756,50
230345430119;18;80;00;;SYMMANK, PETER:;;;27750,00
310838527138;98;83;00;;SYMMANK, RENATE:;;;21000,00
040347530140;99;12;00;;SYMMANK, RENATE:;;;21185,00
050963420526;12;00;41;;SYMMANK, UWE:;;;20405,00
131243429738;18;27;00;;SYNNATSCHKE, BERND:;;;23250,00
251157407512;97;01;00;;SYRBE, ANDRE:;;;25530,00
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141158407517;05;06;00;;SYRBE, MICHAEL:;;;17710,00
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141143424920;13;00;41;;SYRBE, NICK:;;;29040,00
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160144428230;14;14;00;;SYRBE, STEFFEN:;;;18345,83
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291259527327;08;03;00;;SYRING, ROSWITHA:;;;11172,91
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080169429256;99;77;00;;SZAG, RICO:;;;9750,00
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290660403211;99;43;00;;SZCZUKA, MICHAEL:;;;18177,50
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311258406123;30;40;00;;SZIEGAUD, DIETER:;;;18965,00
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150429407012;05;80;00;;SZTUCKI, HERBERT:;;;17077,50
300357407013;05;51;00;;SZTUCKI, NORBERT:;;;18745,00
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101248411935;07;06;00;;SZUMINSKI, JOACHIM:;;;21187,50
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240348424012;13;40;00;;SZYLTOWSKI, DIETER:;;;29040,00
121170424012;18;28;00;;SZYLTOWSKI, JO(E)RG:;;;2945,00
151232430109;30;58;00;;SZYMANIAK, HERBERT:;;;17654,40
040961403424;03;08;00;;SZYMANSKI, JOERG:;;;16775,00
111063415410;94;30;00;;SZYSKA, TORSTEN:;;;18738,00
060359412238;15;07;00;;SZYSZKA, MARTIN:;;;22770,00
081260412273;94;65;00;;SZYSZKA, THOMAS:;;;19140,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

Unveiled – The Execution of “The Marshal” Ion Antonescu

The Execution of German General Dostler in Italy WW II

The Execution of a German General
He served as Chief of Staff of the 7th Army. Subsequently, he commanded the 57th Infantry Division (1941-1942), the 163rd Infantry Division (1942) and the 42nd Army Corps (1943-1944). He was appointed to command the 75th Army Corps in January 1944.

Confidential – Obama – Implementing National Strategy for Countering Biological Threats

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This Presidential Policy Directive is one of a number that have not previously been released. It was publicly posted to a collaboration server for U.S. military personnel complete with its National Security Council coversheet intact, providing a rare look at dissemination guidelines utilized in high-level documentation.

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TOP SECRET – White House “WikiLeaks” Executive Order on Improving Security of Classified Networks

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DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT BELOW

WikiLeaksExecutiveOrder

 

By the authority vested in me as President by the Constitution and the laws of the United States of America and in order to ensure the responsible sharing and safeguarding of classified national security information (classified information) on computer networks, it is hereby ordered as follows:

Section 1. Policy. Our Nation’s security requires classified information to be shared immediately with authorized users around the world but also requires sophisticated and vigilant means to ensure it is shared securely. Computer networks have individual and common vulnerabilities that require coordinated decisions on risk management.

This order directs structural reforms to ensure responsible sharing and safeguarding of classified information on computer networks that shall be consistent with appropriate protections for privacy and civil liberties. Agencies bear the primary responsibility for meeting these twin goals. These structural reforms will ensure coordinated interagency development and reliable implementation of policies and minimum standards regarding information security, personnel security, and systems security; address both internal and external security threats and vulnerabilities; and provide policies and minimum standards for sharing classified information both within and outside the Federal Government. These policies and minimum standards will address all agencies that operate or access classified computer networks, all users of classified computer networks (including contractors and others who operate or access classified computer networks controlled by the Federal Government), and all classified information on those networks.

Sec. 2. General Responsibilities of Agencies.

Sec. 2.1. The heads of agencies that operate or access classified computer networks shall have responsibility for appropriately sharing and safeguarding classified information on computer networks. As part of this responsibility, they shall:

(a) designate a senior official to be charged with overseeing classified information sharing and safeguarding efforts for the agency;

(b) implement an insider threat detection and prevention program consistent with guidance and standards developed by the Insider Threat Task Force established in section 6 of this order;

(c) perform self-assessments of compliance with policies and standards issued pursuant to sections 3.3, 5.2, and 6.3 of this order, as well as other applicable policies and standards, the results of which shall be reported annually to the Senior Information Sharing and Safeguarding Steering Committee established in section 3 of this order;

(d) provide information and access, as warranted and consistent with law and section 7(d) of this order, to enable independent assessments by the Executive Agent for Safeguarding Classified Information on Computer Networks and the Insider Threat Task Force of compliance with relevant established policies and standards; and

(e) detail or assign staff as appropriate and necessary to the Classified Information Sharing and Safeguarding Office and the Insider Threat Task Force on an ongoing basis.

Sec. 3. Senior Information Sharing and Safeguarding Steering Committee.

Sec. 3.1. There is established a Senior Information Sharing and Safeguarding Steering Committee (Steering Committee) to exercise overall responsibility and ensure senior-level accountability for the coordinated interagency development and implementation of policies and standards regarding the sharing and safeguarding of classified information on computer networks.

Sec. 3.2. The Steering Committee shall be co-chaired by senior representatives of the Office of Management and Budget and the National Security Staff. Members of the committee shall be officers of the United States as designated by the heads of the Departments of State, Defense, Justice, Energy, and Homeland Security, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the Information Security Oversight Office within the National Archives and Records Administration (ISOO), as well as such additional agencies as the co-chairs of the Steering Committee may designate.

Sec. 3.3. The responsibilities of the Steering Committee shall include:

(a) establishing Government-wide classified information sharing and safeguarding goals and annually reviewing executive branch successes and shortcomings in achieving those goals;

(b) preparing within 90 days of the date of this order and at least annually thereafter, a report for the President assessing the executive branch’s successes and shortcomings in sharing and safeguarding classified information on computer networks and discussing potential future vulnerabilities;

(c) developing program and budget recommendations to achieve Government-wide classified information sharing and safeguarding goals;

(d) coordinating the interagency development and implementation of priorities, policies, and standards for sharing and safeguarding classified information on computer networks;

(e) recommending overarching policies, when appropriate, for promulgation by the Office of Management and Budget or the ISOO;

(f) coordinating efforts by agencies, the Executive Agent, and the Task Force to assess compliance with established policies and standards and recommending corrective actions needed to ensure compliance;

(g) providing overall mission guidance for the Program Manager-Information Sharing Environment (PM-ISE) with respect to the functions to be performed by the Classified Information Sharing and Safeguarding Office established in section 4 of this order; and

(h) referring policy and compliance issues that cannot be resolved by the Steering Committee to the Deputies Committee of the National Security Council in accordance with Presidential Policy Directive/PPD-1 of February 13, 2009 (Organization of the National Security Council System).

Sec. 4. Classified Information Sharing and Safeguarding Office.

Sec. 4.1. There shall be established a Classified Information Sharing and Safeguarding Office (CISSO) within and subordinate to the office of the PM-ISE to provide expert, fulltime, sustained focus on responsible sharing and safeguarding of classified information on computer networks. Staff of the CISSO shall include detailees, as needed and appropriate, from agencies represented on the Steering Committee.

Sec. 4.2. The responsibilities of CISSO shall include:

(a) providing staff support for the Steering Committee;

(b) advising the Executive Agent for Safeguarding Classified Information on Computer Networks and the Insider Threat Task Force on the development of an effective program to monitor compliance with established policies and standards needed to achieve classified information sharing and safeguarding goals; and

(c) consulting with the Departments of State, Defense, and Homeland Security, the ISOO, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, and others, as appropriate, to ensure consistency with policies and standards under Executive Order 13526 of December 29, 2009, Executive Order 12829 of January 6, 1993, as amended, Executive Order 13549 of August 18, 2010, and Executive Order 13556 of November 4, 2010.

Sec. 5. Executive Agent for Safeguarding Classified Information on Computer Networks.

Sec. 5.1. The Secretary of Defense and the Director, National Security Agency, shall jointly act as the Executive Agent for Safeguarding Classified Information on Computer Networks (the “Executive Agent”), exercising the existing authorities of the Executive Agent and National Manager for national security systems, respectively, under National Security Directive/NSD-42 of July 5, 1990, as supplemented by and subject to this order.

Sec. 5.2. The Executive Agent’s responsibilities, in addition to those specified by NSD-42, shall include the following:

(a) developing effective technical safeguarding policies and standards in coordination with the Committee on National Security Systems (CNSS), as re-designated by Executive Orders 13286 of February 28, 2003, and 13231 of October 16, 2001, that address the safeguarding of classified information within national security systems, as well as the safeguarding of national security systems themselves;

(b) referring to the Steering Committee for resolution any unresolved issues delaying the Executive Agent’s timely development and issuance of technical policies and standards;

(c) reporting at least annually to the Steering Committee on the work of CNSS, including recommendations for any changes needed to improve the timeliness and effectiveness of that work; and

(d) conducting independent assessments of agency compliance with established safeguarding policies and standards, and reporting the results of such assessments to the Steering Committee.

Sec. 6. Insider Threat Task Force.

Sec. 6.1. There is established an interagency Insider Threat Task Force that shall develop a Government-wide program (insider threat program) for deterring, detecting, and mitigating insider threats, including the safeguarding of classified information from exploitation, compromise, or other unauthorized disclosure, taking into account risk levels, as well as the distinct needs, missions, and systems of individual agencies. This program shall include development of policies, objectives, and priorities for establishing and integrating security, counterintelligence, user audits and monitoring, and other safeguarding capabilities and practices within agencies.

Sec. 6.2. The Task Force shall be co-chaired by the Attorney General and the Director of National Intelligence, or their designees. Membership on the Task Force shall be composed of officers of the United States from, and designated by the heads of, the Departments of State, Defense, Justice, Energy, and Homeland Security, the Office of the Director of National Intelligence, the Central Intelligence Agency, and the ISOO, as well as such additional agencies as the co-chairs of the Task Force may designate. It shall be staffed by personnel from the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Office of the National Counterintelligence Executive (ONCIX), and other agencies, as determined by the co-chairs for their respective agencies and to the extent permitted by law. Such personnel must be officers or full-time or permanent part-time employees of the United States. To the extent permitted by law, ONCIX shall provide an appropriate work site and administrative support for the Task Force.

Sec. 6.3. The Task Force’s responsibilities shall include the following:

(a) developing, in coordination with the Executive Agent, a Government-wide policy for the deterrence, detection, and mitigation of insider threats, which shall be submitted to the Steering Committee for appropriate review;

(b) in coordination with appropriate agencies, developing minimum standards and guidance for implementation of the insider threat program’s Government-wide policy and, within 1 year of the date of this order, issuing those minimum standards and guidance, which shall be binding on the executive branch;

(c) if sufficient appropriations or authorizations are obtained, continuing in coordination with appropriate agencies after 1 year from the date of this order to add to or modify those minimum standards and guidance, as appropriate;

(d) if sufficient appropriations or authorizations are not obtained, recommending for promulgation by the Office of Management and Budget or the ISOO any additional or modified minimum standards and guidance developed more than 1 year after the date of this order;

(e) referring to the Steering Committee for resolution any unresolved issues delaying the timely development and issuance of minimum standards;

(f) conducting, in accordance with procedures to be developed by the Task Force, independent assessments of the adequacy of agency programs to implement established policies and minimum standards, and reporting the results of such assessments to the Steering Committee;

(g) providing assistance to agencies, as requested, including through the dissemination of best practices; and

(h) providing analysis of new and continuing insider threat challenges facing the United States Government.

Sec. 7. General Provisions. (a) For the purposes of this order, the word “agencies” shall have the meaning set forth in section 6.1(b) of Executive Order 13526 of December 29, 2009.

(b) Nothing in this order shall be construed to change the requirements of Executive Orders 12333 of December 4, 1981, 12829 of January 6, 1993, 12968 of August 2, 1995, 13388 of October 25, 2005, 13467 of June 30, 2008, 13526 of December 29, 2009, 13549 of August 18, 2010, and their successor orders and directives.

(c) Nothing in this order shall be construed to supersede or change the authorities of the Secretary of Energy or the Nuclear Regulatory Commission under the Atomic Energy Act of 1954, as amended; the Secretary of Defense under Executive Order 12829, as amended; the Secretary of Homeland Security under Executive Order 13549; the Secretary of State under title 22, United States Code, and the Omnibus Diplomatic Security and Antiterrorism Act of 1986; the Director of ISOO under Executive Orders 13526 and 12829, as amended; the PM-ISE under Executive Order 13388 or the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, as amended; the Director, Central Intelligence Agency under NSD-42 and Executive Order 13286, as amended; the National Counterintelligence Executive, under the Counterintelligence Enhancement Act of 2002; or the Director of National Intelligence under the National Security Act of 1947, as amended, the Intelligence Reform and Terrorism Prevention Act of 2004, as amended, NSD-42, and Executive Orders 12333, as amended, 12968, as amended, 13286, as amended, 13467, and 13526.

(d) Nothing in this order shall authorize the Steering Committee, CISSO, CNSS, or the Task Force to examine the facilities or systems of other agencies, without advance consultation with the head of such agency, nor to collect information for any purpose not provided herein.

(e) The entities created and the activities directed by this order shall not seek to deter, detect, or mitigate disclosures of information by Government employees or contractors that are lawful under and protected by the Intelligence Community Whistleblower Protection Act of 1998, Whistleblower Protection Act of 1989, Inspector General Act of 1978, or similar statutes, regulations, or policies.

(f) With respect to the Intelligence Community, the Director of National Intelligence, after consultation with the heads of affected agencies, may issue such policy directives and guidance as the Director of National Intelligence deems necessary to implement this order.

(g) Nothing in this order shall be construed to impair or otherwise affect:

(1) the authority granted by law to an agency, or the head thereof; or

(2) the functions of the Director of the Office of Management and Budget relating to budgetary, administrative, or legislative proposals

(h) This order shall be implemented consistent with applicable law and appropriate protections for privacy and civil liberties, and subject to the availability of appropriations.

(i) This order is not intended to, and does not, create any right or benefit, substantive or procedural, enforceable at law or in equity by any party against the United States, its departments, agencies, or entities, its officers, employees, or agents, or any other person.

BARACK OBAMA

THE WHITE HOUSE,
October 7, 2011.

 

Live at the Locations – Women Protest Worldwide Photos 7

[Image]Members of the Galician pro-indepence group Ceive stage a protest in favor of the transfert of jailed Galician independentist to Galician jails, next to a polling station in the village of Escravitude, some 20 kms from Santiago de Compostela, northwestern Spain, on November 20, 2011. Spaniards voted in rain-swept elections Sunday that were all but certain to hand a thundering victory to the right and topple yet another debt-laden eurozone government. Bowed by a 21,5 percent jobless rate, economic stagnation and deep spending cuts, the first voters of the 36 million-strong Spanish electorate headed to polls ready to punish the ruling Socialists. Getty
[Image]A protester gestures during clashes with Egyptian riot police, not seen, near the interior ministry in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011. Firing tear gas and rubber bullets, Egyptian riot police on Sunday clashed for a second day with thousands of rock-throwing protesters demanding that the ruling military quickly announce a date to hand over power to an elected government. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]A protester overcome with tear gas inhalation is helped inside a cafe during clashes with the Egyptian riot police, not seen, near the interior ministry in downtown Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011. Firing tear gas and rubber bullets, Egyptian riot police on Sunday clashed for a second day with thousands of rock-throwing protesters demanding that the ruling military quickly announce a date to hand over power to an elected government. (Tara Todras-Whitehill)
[Image]Wounded protesters are seen in a field hospital during clashes with Egyptian riot police in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 20, 2011. Firing tear gas and rubber bullets, Egyptian riot police on Sunday clashed for a second day with thousands of rock-throwing protesters demanding that the ruling military quickly announce a date to hand over power to an elected government. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Occupy Oakland protester Abby Balanda demonstrates during a march through Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. Anti-Wall Street protesters in Oakland pushed down a chain-link fence surrounding a city-owned vacant lot where they planned a new encampment on Saturday. (Noah Berger)
[Image]An Occupy Oakland protester, who declined to give her name, pitches a tent to establish a new encampment in Oakland, Calif., on Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. Police raided the group’s previous camp on Monday. Anti-Wall Street protesters in Oakland pushed down a chain-link fence surrounding a city-owned vacant lot where they planned a new encampment on Saturday. (Noah Berger)
[Image]A police officer arrests a demonstrator affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement as they block the entrance to the New York Stock Exchange on Broad Street, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011 in New York. Two days after the encampment that sparked the global Occupy protest movement was cleared by authorities, demonstrators marched through New York’s financial district and promised a national day of action with mass gatherings in other cities. (Mary Altaffer)
[Image]Police officers arrest a demonstrator affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011 in New York. Two days after the encampment that sparked the global Occupy protest movement was cleared by authorities, demonstrators marched through New York’s financial district and promised a national day of action with mass gatherings in other cities. (Mary Altaffer)[Image]
[Image]Naked Israeli women pose for a photograph in Tel Aviv, November 19, 2011, to show solidarity with Egyptian blogger Aliaa Magda Elmahdy, who put naked pictures of herself on the Internet, support free expression and protest against Islamic extremism. The banner reads: “Love With No Boundaries”. Picture taken November 19, 2011. Reuters
[Image]Tibetan Buddhist nun Palden Choetso sits in a house, in this handout picture taken in 1998 and recently released by the http://www.freetibet. org organisation. The 35-year-old Tibetan Buddhist nun burned herself to death on a public street an hour’s drive away on November 3, 2011, the latest in a string of self-immolations to protest against Chinese religious controls over Tibet. In China, eleven Tibetan monks and nuns — some former clergy — have resorted to the extreme protest since March this year. At least six have been fatal. Reuters
[Image]Activists are blocked by the police during a march against the use of fur on November 19, 2011 in Paris, France. The march, in its third year, is held to protest the use of animal fur in fashion and animal cruelty. Getty
[Image]Pro-Syrian regime protesters shout pro-Syrian President Bashar Assad slogans during a demonstration to show their soldarity with their president, in Damascus, Syria, on Sunday Nov. 20, 2011. Residents in the Syrian capital awoke to two loud explosions Sunday amid reports from activists that the Damascus headquarters of the ruling Baath party had been hit by several rocket-propelled grenades. But eyewitnesses said the party headquarters appeared intact and reported no significant security deployments.
[Image]Women supporters hold placards during a protest organised by Awami National Conference in Srinagar on November 19, 2011. The protesters demanded revocation of Armed Forces Special Powers Act in restive Kashmir. The draconian Armed Forces Special Powers Act (AFSPA) was introduced in 1990 to give the army and paramilitary forces sweeping powers to detain people, use deadly force and destroy property. Violence is at its lowest in Indian Kashmir since the start of the insurgency that has so far left more than 47,000 people dead by official count but separatists putting the toll twice as high. Getty
[Image]Spain’s ‘indignant’ protesters demostrate in the Puerta del Sol square in Madrid on November 19, 2011 against spending cuts, high unemployment and political corruption, a week before a general election. Spain’s so-called ‘indignant’ protest movement was born when thousands of people set up camp in Madrid’s Puerta del Sol square ahead of May 22 municipal elections. Getty
[Image]A female protester gestures as she argues with Egyptian riot police officers in Tahrir Square in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Nov. 19, 2011. Egyptian riot police beat protesters and dismantled a small tent city set up to commemorate revolutionary martyrs in Cairo’s Tahrir Square on Saturday. (Khalil Hamra)
[Image]Egyptian women wave flags during a rally in Cairo’s Tahrir square, Egypt, Friday, Nov.18, 2011, in a protest against what they say are attempts by the country’s military rulers to reinforce their powers. The rally Friday was dominated by the country’s most organized political group, the Muslim Brotherhood.
[Image]Egyptian Laila Soueif, at left, the mother of prominent blogger Alaa Abdel-Fattah who was jailed by Egypt’s ruling generals, who is on hunger strike to protest her son’s detention, as they celebrate Alaa’s 30th birthday in Cairo’s Tahrir square, Friday, Nov. 18, 2011. At Friday’s rally in Tahrir square, protesters gathered to celebrate the birthday of one of the most prominent revolutionary bloggers to be jailed by the military prosecutor. (Amr Nabil)
[Image]Bahraini demonstrators gesture Friday, Nov. 18, 2011, in A’ali, Bahrain, in front of a replica of the massive protest encampment that was demolished by government forces last spring in the crackdown on a pro-democracy uprising, complete with tents and a model of the landmark pearl monument (unseen). Thousands of Shiite-led protesters calling for greater rights streamed into the area outside the capital of Manama in one of the largest demonstrations in weeks against the Gulf kingdom’s rulers.
[Image]Muslims rally in Foley Square during a protest of ethnic profiling by law enforcement on November 18, 2011 in New York City. Muslims held a rally and Friday prayers and were joined by protesters affiliated with Occupy Wall Street. Getty
[Image]Animal activists, painted in “blood”, lie on a pile of fur during a protest in Belgrade November 18, 2011. The protest was held in conjunction with the “anti-fur” campaign in Europe. Reuters
[Image]Syrians living in Turkey write ‘Freedom’ with their blood during a protest against the government of Syria’s President Bashar al-Assad in front of the Syrian consulate in Istanbul, on November 18, 2011. Turkey added its voice Friday to warnings that civil war threatens Syria, while France’s top diplomat called for stepped up sanctions against Damascus, which he said had left it too late to reform. Getty
[Image]Opponents of ousted Thai premier Thaksin Shinawatra hold banners as they shout during a protest in central Bangkok November 18, 2011. Opponents of Thaksin Shinawatra said on Thursday they could take to the streets if the government led by his sister tried to push through an amnesty that would let him return from exile a free man. Reuters
[Image]Muslims listen during a rally in Foley Square to protest against the NYPD surveillance operations of Muslim communities, Friday, Nov. 18, 2011, in New York. Hundreds of Muslims gathered in prayer Friday to oppose a decade of police spying on Muslim communities. The crowd filled about three-fourths of Foley Square in lower Manhattan, not far from City Hall. Demonstrators were scheduled to march on police headquarters (Bebeto Matthews)
[Image]Dorli Rainey, 84, left, who was pepper-sprayed by police last Tuesday while taking part in an “Occupy Seattle” protest, speaks Friday, Nov. 18, 2011, in front of police headquarters in downtown Seattle. Rainey and several dozen others marched to the station Friday and held the rally to call attention to how protesters have been treated. (Ted S. Warren)
[Image]Virila Perez, left, and Francisco Gonzalez, who work as municipal trash collectors, demonstrate against proposed lay-offs by lying on broken glass in Asuncion, Paraguay, Friday Nov. 18, 2011. Asuncion’s municipal government is proposing cuts in employment to reduce the cost of municipal workers to 60% of the city budget. The sign covering them reads in Spanish “Until the final fight, overcome or die.” (Jorge Saenz)
[Image]Annette Jones waits with other demonstrators to be arrested during a protest organized by Occupy Chicago and Stand Up Chicago November 17, 2011 in Chicago, Illinois. The demonstration was one of many protests held nationwide to mark the second month of the Occupy Wall Street protests. Getty
[Image]Occupy Seattle protestors demonstrate at the University Bridge, temporarily shutting it down, after meeting others from Seattle Central Community College during a national day of action, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011, in Seattle. Traffic was snarled around Seattle’s University District as two rallies marched toward the bridge. (Kevin P. Casey)
[Image]Eugene Police officers carry an Occupy Eugene protester away after arresting her for blocking the entrance to a Chase Bank in Eugene, Ore. Nov. 17, 2011. Occupy Eugene protesters spent an afternoon demonstrating at bank offices, and 17 were arrested. (Chris Pietsch)
[Image]A Occupy Portland protester is arrested by Portland Police officers after protesters take over a Wells Fargo bank Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011, in Portland, Ore. Occupy Wall Street demonstrators held modestly sized, but energetic rallies around the country Thursday to celebrate two months since the movement’s birth and signal that they aren’t ready to quit yet, despite police raids that have destroyed some of their encampments. (Rick Bowmer)
[Image]Occupy Wall Street protesters walk across the Brooklyn Bridge after a rally in Foley Square, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011 in New York. Organizers with the Service Employees International Union and progressive groups staged similar bridge marches in several cities in an event that was planned weeks ago, but happened to coincide with rallies marking two months since the start of the Occupy movement (Henny Ray Abrams)
[Image]Protesters willing to be arrested, including Donna Cassult, left, of Minneapolis, linked arms and sat on the roadway of the 10th Ave. Bridge in Minneapolis and waited for police to place them in custody Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011. Demonstrators peacefully shut down the 10th Ave. Bridge during rush hour to call attention to the need for more jobs and racial equality in employment.
[Image]Police officers arrest a demonstrators affiliated with the Occupy Wall Street movement, Thursday, Nov. 17, 2011 in New York. Two days after the encampment that sparked the global Occupy protest movement was cleared by authorities, demonstrators marched through New York’s financial district and promised a national day of action with mass gatherings in other cities. (Mary Altaffer)
[Image]20-year-old Egyptian blogger Aliaa Mahdy. Photograph: Aliaa Mahdy

Live at the Locations – Women Protest Worldwide Photos 6

[Image]Spanish ‘indignant’ protesters hold a placard reading ‘We do not want fascists’ during a protest in front of a campaign meeting of the far-right party ‘Plataforma per Catalunya’ on November 13, 2011 in Barcelona. Hundreds of Spain’s ‘indignant’ protesters marched through the streets of Madrid Sunday to protest spending cuts, high unemployment and political corruption, a week before a general election. In Barcelona about 30 members of the movement decided at an assembly Saturday to camp out in the Plaza de Catalunya until the general election on November 20. Getty
[Image]Two girls holds a coffin with a doll inside that wearing a mask with the faces of presidential candidates of Popular Party Mariano Rajoy and Socialist Party Alfredo Perez Rubalcaba during a demonstration against the government and banks in Madrid on Sunday, Nov. 13, 2011. Spain goes to the polls for presidential elections on November 20. (Arturo Rodriguez)
[Image]Public workers march during a protest in Lisbon’s main avenue of Liberdade November 12, 2011. Public workers, policemen and military personnel are holding several protests in Lisbon against the job and 2012 state budget cuts. Reuters
[Image]A woman holds up a sign that reads “No is No” as she takes part in the “Marcha de las Putas” (SlutWalk), held to protest against discrimination and violence against women in Lima, November 12, 2011. The march is part of the SlutWalk protest movement which started after a policeman advised women students in Canada to “avoid dressing like sluts”. Reuters
[Image]Pro-Syrian regime protesters, hold up portraits of Syrian President Bashar Assad with Arabic words: ” The lion (Assad) of resistance and the rejectionism” during a demonstration against the Arab League decision to suspend Syria in front the Syrian embassy, in Beirut, Lebanon, on Sunday Nov. 13, 2011. Tens of thousands of pro-regime demonstrators gathered in a Damascus square Sunday to protest the Arab League’s vote to suspend Syria over its bloody crackdown on the country’s eight-month-old uprising.
[Image]Syrian protesters shout anti-Syrian Preident Bashar Assad slogans during a protest in front of the Arab League headquarters in Cairo, Egypt, Saturday, Nov.12, 2011 where the League emergency session on Syria is to discuss the country’s failure to end bloodshed caused by government crackdowns on civil protests. Protesters called the Arab League to suspend the country’s membership. Arabic read ” step out, we need to build civilian modern country” (Amr Nabil)
[Image]Demonstrators with cooking pots and colanders on their heads stand in front of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, Saturday, Nov.12, 2011. Thousands of people formed a human chain around the Frankfurt bank towers protesting against the power of banks. German police say more than ten thousand people are protesting against the banks’ dominance in two of the country’s major cities.
[Image]A group of protesters prepare their signs before heading out into the ocean to hold an anti-APEC protest at Waikiki Beach in Honolulu on Saturday, Nov. 12, 2011 as the summit is held in Oahu over the weekend. (Marco Garcia)
[Image]Demonstrators hold a ribbon reading “smash banks, redistribute wealth” in front of the European Central Bank in Frankfurt, Germany, Saturday, Nov.12, 2011. Thousands of people formed a human chain with the ribbon around the Frankfurt bank towers to protest against the power of banks.Thousands of people formed a human chain around the Frankfurt bank towers protesting against the worldwide power of banks. German police say more than ten thousand people are protesting against the banks’ dominance in two of the country’s major cities.
[Image]Protestors march through downtown Lisbon during a demonstration by military personnel associations against austerity measures Saturday, Nov. 12 2011. The Portuguese government plans to introduce more pay cuts and steep tax hikes next year while the country is struggling to restore its fiscal health despite a euro78 billion ($106 billion) bailout earlier this year. Banner reads ” Amnesty for the military punished for offenses of opinion” refering to military who have been punished for taking part in protests.
[Image]Students march against government plans to reform higher education in Medellin, Colombia, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011. Thousands of students march in the country’s main cities despite President Juan Manuel Santos’ proposal to withdraw a reform bill on higher education. (Luis Benavides)
[Image]A UCLA student arrested by Los Angeles Police Department officers after she attempted to escape after eleven student protesters sat in circle in middle of the Westwood and Wilshire boulevard intersection as part of a protest of bank practices and rising fees at public universities on November 9, 2011 in Los Angeles, California. The protest organized by ReFund California was one of several planned at universities around the state. Getty
[Image]Students demonstrate against an education reform bill in Bogota, on November 10, 2011. Thousands of students from more than 30 public universities took to the streets in Colombia to protest against proposed education reforms they fear will partially privatize higher education. The students have been on strike over the past month to protest a bill put forward by President Juan Manuel Santos that would require public universities to generate some of their own revenues. On Wednesday Santos offered to withdraw the draft and open a dialogue if the more than half a million students on strike lift their form of pressure. Getty
[Image]A demonstrator holds a banner against the ECB in Naples on November 11, 2011 during a rally called ‘Occupy Napoli’ (Occupy Naples), refering to the Occupy Wall Street movement in New York, to protest against banks and international financial power. Getty
[Image]Hungarian and foreign activists and sympathizers of the ‘True Democracy Now’ group hold banners reading ‘Direct Democracy’ (R) and ‘Be part’, (L) as an elderly woman mouth’s is covered by a fake 1000 euro bill in front the central bank of Budapest on November 11, 2011 during a demonstration for a better and livable world and to protest against the political and economical system. Getty
[Image]A protester holds a sign reading “Neither Tremonti nor Monti” during a protest in front of the Ministry of Finance in Rome November 11, 2011. The package of austerity measures that were demanded by the European Union will now go to the Italian lower house, which is expected to approve it on Saturday. That vote will trigger the resignation of Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi. The signs refer to Italian Finance Minister Giulio Tremonti and former European Commissioner Mario Monti, who is tipped as the favourite to replace Berlusconi. Reuters
[Image]A Yemeni woman covers her mouth with her hand painted in the colours of the national flag during to a protest against the regime of Ali Abdullah Saleh in the capital Sanaa, on November11, 2011. Forces loyal to Yemeni President Abdullah Saleh shelled the country’s second largest city Taez, killing nine people, among them two women and a child, a medic and witnesses said. Getty
[Image]A protester holding a banner camps outside the Banca d’Italia on November 11, 2011 in Venice, Italy. Protest in several Italian cities have been called by the Indignados, students, social centres and other organizations for today 11.11.11 to protest against financial insitutions and cuts proposed by the Government. Getty
[Image]Dalbir Kaur, sister of Indian national Sarabjit Singh on death row in Pakistan, second right, along with supporters of All India Youth Foundation takes an oath for securing his release in front of the India Gate war memorial at 11:11 am, in New Delhi, India, Friday, Nov. 11, 2011. A placard on left reads, “People’s Voice, Sarabjit.” (Gurinder Osan)
[Image]An Indonesian Muslim woman wears a Palestinian flag face mask during a solidarity protest for the Palestinian people in Jakarta, Indonesia, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011. (Irwin Fedriansyah)
[Image]Demonstrators of a group “Occupy Rio” protest against Rio de Janeiro’s governor Sergio Cabral in downtown Rio de Janeiro November 10, 2011. The demonstration, inspired by the Occupy Wall Street movement, seeks to address the corruption in the police and the problems with the health care system under the governance of Cabral. Cabral had originally organized a demonstration to rally against an oil reform amendment approved by the lower house of Congress. Reuters
[Image]Protesters from the communist-affiliated trade union PAME shout slogans during an anti-government protest in Athens November 10, 2011. Greece named former European Central Bank vice-president Lucas Papademos on Thursday to head a crisis government, ending a chaotic search for a leader to save the country from default, bankruptcy and an exit from the euro zone. Reuters
[Image]A demonstrator marches during a student protest against government plans to reform higher education at the main square in Bogota, Colombia, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011. Thousands of students marched in the country’s main cities despite a government proposal to withdraw a reform bill on higher education. (William Fernando Martinez)
[Image]People wave flags of Rio de Janeiro state during a protest against an oil reform amendment in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Thursday, Nov. 10, 2011. Thousands of Brazilians are demonstrating against a plan that reduces revenue for oil-producing states and the federal government while increasing oil royalties for non-producing states. (Felipe Dana)
[Image]Christian fundamentalist holds a candle during a demonstration against Italian director Romeo Castellucci’s play “On the Concept of the Face, Regarding the Son of God” in Rennes, western France, Thursday Nov. 10, 2011. Christian fundamentalists gathered outside the cultural palace the Theatre National de Bretagne, (National Theatre of Brittany), to protest against the play which they claim is blasphemous. (David Vincent)
[Image]One of the students with peaceful attitude cleans the shield of a riot policemen that was stained with paint by more violent protesters, during a demonstration against an education reform bill at Bogota’s main square Plaza de Bolivar, on November 10, 2011. Thousands of students from more than 30 public universities took to the streets in Colombia to protest against proposed education reforms they fear will partially privatize higher education. The students have been on strike over the past month to protest a bill put forward by President Juan Manuel Santos that would require public universities to generate some of their own revenues. On Wednesday Santos offered to withdraw the draft and open a dialogue if the more than half a million students on strike lift their form of pressure. Getty
[Image]NOVEMBER 09: UCLA graduate student Cheryl Deutsch is arrested by Los Angeles Police Department officers after she and 10 other student protesters sat in circle in middle of the Westwood and Wilshire boulevard intersection as part of a protest of bank practices and rising fees at public universities on November 9, 2011 in Los Angeles, California. The protest organized by ReFund California was one of several planned at universities around the state. Getty
[Image]A woman shouts out as police officers move into the crowd of demonstrators and push people back during a student anti-cuts protest in London, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. Thousands of students marched through central London on Wednesday to protest cuts to public spending and a big increase in university tuition fees. Police said there were “a number of arrests for public order offenses” Wednesday, but the march was largely peaceful as demonstrators made their way through the city center.
[Image]A protester cries out as students and campaigners march through the streets of London in a protest against higher tuition fees and government cuts, Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. (Sang Tan)
[Image]A lone protester stands outside the Scottsdale Plaza Resort to protest Republican Presidential candidate Herman Cain who was addressing the media Tuesday, Nov. 8, 2011, in Scottsdale, Ariz. Cain said Tuesday that he would not drop his bid for the Republicans’ presidential nomination in the face of decade-old allegations of inappropriate sexual behavior. (Charlie Leight)
[Image]Two members of People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) who are covered from head to toe in green and blue bodypaint, as they hold a banner reading, “Save the Planet, Go Vegan,” at the Nanjing pedestrian street in Shanghai, China Wednesday, Nov. 9, 2011. (Eugene Hoshiko)
[Image]Protestors from Occupy Philly participate in a ‘die in’ demonstration outside a PNC Bank branch in Philadelphia on Monday Nov. 7, 2011. The demonstration was conducted to draw attention to PNC Bank’s business practices. (Joseph Kaczmarek)
[Image]A Syrian woman, who lives in Cairo, reacts as others wave a giant Syrian revolution flag during an anti-Syrian President Bashar Assad demonstration at Tahrir Square, the focal point of Egyptian uprisings, in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 6, 2011 to support protesters in Syria during the first day of Islamic Eid al-Adha, or Feast of the Sacrifice. (Amr Nabil)
[Image]An activist of the Ukrainian female rights organization “Femen” shows a placard demanding freedom for women, during a protest at the end of Pope Benedict XVI’s Angelus prayer in St. Peter’s Square at the Vatican, Sunday, Nov. 6, 2011. (Pier Paolo Cito)
[Image]Yemeni girls hold a giant Yemeni flag, left, as Syrians hold their revolution flag, right, during a protest against Yemeni and Syrian regimes at Tahrir Square, the focal point of Egyptian uprising, in Cairo, Egypt, Sunday, Nov. 6, 2011 to support protesters in Yemen and Syria during the first day of Islamic Eid al-Adha, or Feast of the Sacrifice. (Amr Nabil)
[Image]Amy Barnes protests as police move in to clear a downtown street during an Occupy Atlanta demonstration late Saturday, Nov. 5, 2011 in Atlanta. (David Goldman)
[Image]In this Nov. 27, 2010 file photo, Susanna Camusso, leader of Italy’s largest labor confederation CGIL, arrives to deliver her speech during a demonstration to protest government policies regarding the economical crisis, in Rome. In an interview with The Associated Press Monday Nov. 7, 2011, Camusso is predicting 2012 will be a “terrifying” year for the economy even if beleaguered Premier Silvio Berlusconi leaves power soon.

HOLOCAUST – Firing Squad – Execution of 3 Women

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE STEM-SU – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – STEM-SU

 

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

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150357418213;10;00;48;;STO(E)CKER, ROLAND:;;;22385,00
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131168410323;18;28;00;;STO(E)HR, ANDREAS:;;;9510,00
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030452425087;13;51;00;;STO(E)HR, LUTZ:;;;20010,00
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241057418223;10;00;44;;STO(E)R, ULRICH:;;;22440,00
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070369420214;18;32;00;;STO(E)S(Z)EL, THOMAS:;;;8480,00
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280269413012;18;33;00;;STO(E)TZER, STEFFEN:;;;2720,00
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100568408538;18;96;00;;STO(E)WHAAS, JENS:;;;10500,00
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271156515333;08;77;00;;STOBINSKI, PETRA:;;;10312,91
100651428310;14;08;00;;STOBWASSER, PETER:;;;22320,00
140568430010;97;22;00;;STOCK, ANDRE:;;;14675,00
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250441526231;14;51;00;;STOCK, EDITH:;;;22125,00
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210554400225;01;64;00;;STOCK, GERHARD:;;;23040,00
180555421023;12;00;44;;STOCK, HANS-DIETER:;;;23700,00
090452420934;12;06;00;;STOCK, HANS-GERD:;;;20820,00
211133419029;30;36;00;;STOCK, HELMUT:;;;18000,00
171265419078;10;08;00;;STOCK, JENS-PETER:;;;15604,50
121159430083;97;08;00;;STOCK, MARIO:;;;16170,00
040370410120;18;31;00;;STOCK, MARTIN:;;;6705,00
100669413424;18;31;00;;STOCK, MICHAEL:;;;6570,00
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260364403711;95;45;00;;STOCK, PETER:;;;17490,00
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110469417147;18;40;00;;STOCK, RALF:;;;10575,00
071241429740;94;03;00;;STOCK, ROLAND:;;;34687,50
150137422210;12;51;00;;STOCK, SIEGFRIED:;;;24750,00
191155429863;94;30;00;;STOCK, WILFRIED:;;;24270,00
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200451401728;05;00;44;;STOCKFISCH, JUERGEN:;;;30360,00
230370406153;18;33;00;;STOCKFISCH, STEFAN:;;;2795,00
080738510813;07;06;00;;STOCKLOEW, BAERBEL:;;;21000,00
040458511241;07;00;52;;STOCKMANN, BAERBEL:;;;16269,33
040669427613;18;32;00;;STOCKMANN, JENS:;;;2795,00
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150249429249;18;38;00;;STOCKMANN, PETER:;;;22740,72
250963408523;06;30;00;;STOCKMANN, RALF:;;;11220,00
060651418522;10;06;00;;STOCKMANN, REINHARD:;;;20880,00
300770412211;18;35;00;;STODTMEISTER, HEIKO:;;;2795,00
290557430190;99;02;00;;STODTMEISTER, JOERG:;;;19147,50
281057423838;99;43;00;;STODTMEISTER, LUTZ:;;;18917,50
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050932413518;08;00;47;;STOEBE, GERHARD:;;;27750,00
151247500018;97;06;00;;STOEBE, INGE:;;;24750,00
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210341529711;99;43;00;;STOECKEL, BRUNHILDE:;;;24000,00
150458427522;14;18;00;;STOECKEL, FRANKLIN:;;;22195,00
061059427125;14;06;00;;STOECKEL, HARTMUT:;;;19895,00
240537429736;98;18;00;;STOECKEL, HEINZ:;;;29250,00
190862414543;94;65;00;;STOECKEL, JAN:;;;17985,00
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040754404344;03;06;00;;STOECKEL, WOLFGANG:;;;19980,00
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100151506917;97;06;00;;STOECKER, CHRISTEL:;;;20585,00
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170151406944;99;43;00;;STOECKER, KLAUS:;;;21840,00
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110569400529;01;00;44;;STOECKER, MIKE:;;;12675,00
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100870406154;15;00;44;;STOECKERT, THOMAS:;;;3620,00
010562430065;96;15;21;;STOECKIGT, FRANK:;;;17325,00
181028430010;96;15;05;;STOECKIGT, KARL:;;;42000,00
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010651404539;94;64;00;;STOECKMANN, JOACHIM:;;;20872,50
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300665422434;15;00;41;;STOEHR, FRANK:;;;16038,00
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080957421220;97;07;00;;STOEHR, HOLGER:;;;24840,00
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291247422413;12;06;00;;STOEHR, KLAUS:;;;24000,00
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180851422776;12;09;00;;STOEHR, STEFAN:;;;31680,00
151152400225;01;80;00;;STOEHR, VOLKER:;;;18180,00
051263415026;98;82;00;;STOELZEL, OLAF:;;;16261,50
160454429263;14;00;61;;STOELZEL, PETER:;;;25382,50
241163427019;30;61;00;;STOELZEL, VEIT:;;;12325,00
140347426624;98;18;00;;STOELZEL, WERNER:;;;28875,00
030466430135;99;02;00;;STOELZIG, PETER:;;;10710,00
190842429713;97;06;00;;STOELZNER, ROLF:;;;29250,00
020856401920;30;43;00;;STOENNER, BERNHARD:;;;13857,72
020665402808;02;02;00;;STOERK, OLAF:;;;18067,50
281142402716;02;09;00;;STOERK, PETER:;;;33187,50
251065502221;02;18;00;;STOERK, SIMONE:;;;5228,73
280545404017;97;06;00;;STOERL, HELMUTH:;;;21562,50
160866417736;09;15;00;;STOERL, HOLGER:;;;12672,00
100863521832;18;78;00;;STOERL, MARION:;;;11075,19
111270414314;99;14;00;;STOERMER, ANDREAS:;;;8955,00
220653400115;97;08;00;;STOERMER, DIETER:;;;5771,91
300951413838;08;00;53;;STOERMER, GERHARD:;;;27007,50
290649413021;08;00;42;;STOERMER, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;24850,00
130651418638;99;43;00;;STOERMER, HARALD:;;;25860,00
240151413424;08;00;59;;STOERMER, RUDI:;;;30360,00
220254500135;97;08;00;;STOERMER, WALTRAUD:;;;15510,00
270151403426;99;43;00;;STOERMER, WILLI:;;;28800,00
270246429717;94;65;00;;STOERZEL, ANDREAS:;;;23250,00
180437400862;01;60;00;;STOERZEL, DIETER:;;;30937,50
030435426619;14;12;00;;STOERZEL, KARL:;;;24000,00
150260407526;99;53;00;;STOESKE, ANDREAS:;;;19320,00
200243429726;97;06;00;;STOESZ, HELMUT:;;;24750,00
301264430200;95;45;00;;STOESZ, TILO:;;;18480,00
231265416442;09;15;00;;STOESZEL, ANDREAS:;;;20432,00
090371416423;09;69;00;;STOESZEL, MATTHIAS:;;;2911,13
180258422214;12;80;00;;STOESZER, BERND:;;;15977,50
190957521333;12;80;00;;STOESZER, CAROLA:;;;15922,50
250459402712;95;45;00;;STOETZEL, ANDREAS:;;;16830,00
161054416433;09;96;00;;STOETZER, BODO:;;;21930,00
230249426320;14;00;56;;STOETZER, FRANK:;;;36000,00
210152417788;09;03;00;;STOETZER, MATTHIAS:;;;22320,00
050252423640;13;03;00;;STOETZNER, ALFRED:;;;22320,00
221166406119;04;06;00;;STOEWE, MARIO:;;;16119,00
190551400857;01;40;00;;STOEWESAND, BERTHOLD:;;;23280,00
161157400717;01;08;00;;STOEWESAND, BODO:;;;19492,50
190147429711;15;03;00;;STOFF, EBERHARD:;;;30187,50
211137402523;97;01;00;;STOFFEL, JOACHIM:;;;21937,50
050664500825;96;15;08;;STOFFER, ANDREA:;;;7118,71
170164400891;99;43;00;;STOFFER, RONALD:;;;16775,00
130458400014;01;06;23;;STOFFERS, DIETMAR:;;;17862,50
080243407259;98;97;00;;STOFFERS, LOTHAR:;;;23437,50
130667406121;04;06;00;;STOHF, THOMAS:;;;15630,00
030540411048;17;00;00;;STOHR, HANS:;;;34700,04
150546511038;17;00;00;;STOHR, HELGA:;;;18572,50
160569411012;04;69;00;;STOHR, MARCO:;;;9907,26
230637418234;10;06;00;;STOHR, WERNER:;;;25500,00
031054406731;30;31;00;;STOIBER, FRITZ:;;;22540,00
030567409917;18;29;30;;STOICA, MARIO:;;;10015,00
090768409918;96;15;13;;STOICA, MICHAEL:;;;13800,00
010269412298;18;31;00;;STOIK, THILO:;;;9675,00
180267410813;99;43;00;;STOKLASEK, JAN:;;;15714,00
020942410815;07;00;58;;STOKLASEK, WILLIBALD:;;;18000,00
230253403826;12;08;00;;STOLDT, DETLEF:;;;20700,00
030352403825;96;15;27;;STOLDT, KARL-HEINZ:;;;24322,50
040461402230;02;08;00;;STOLDT, UWE:;;;18380,00
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091240512217;99;77;00;;STOLETZKI, JUTTA:;;;19640,32
280831530145;30;47;00;;STOLFIG, CHRISTA:;;;20400,00
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160651428331;99;51;00;;STOLL, CHRISTIAN:;;;23040,00
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100636400846;01;18;00;417/71, :;STOLL, DIETRICH;2551;GARTENSTR. 5;
051166411226;07;00;52;;STOLL, FRANK:;;;9729,00
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300856400887;96;15;16;;STOLL, HARTMUT:;;;23100,00
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071261503020;97;01;00;;STOLL, KORDULA:;;;11973,08
210171411816;18;35;00;;STOLL, MARIO:;;;2795,00
050347401938;02;55;00;;STOLL, NORBERT:;;;17500,00
181250424957;13;51;00;;STOLL, RAINER:;;;17250,00
080461426319;14;80;00;;STOLL, RAINER:;;;18150,00
230767426937;18;35;00;;STOLL, RALF:;;;9825,00
150749517122;13;80;00;;STOLL, REGINA:;;;16157,50
260450501924;02;80;00;;STOLL, SABINE:;;;22640,00
130369413155;18;33;00;;STOLL, ULLI:;;;9675,00
280151429772;97;08;00;;STOLL, WOLFGANG:;;;24480,00
210854514718;08;51;00;;STOLLBERG, GUDRUN:;;;16762,91
120951414736;08;26;00;;STOLLBERG, JUERGEN:;;;33302,50
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110853425002;94;03;00;;STOLLE, BERND:;;;20160,00
270159406437;99;02;00;;STOLLE, BURKHARD:;;;21562,50
080670404810;99;09;00;;STOLLE, CARSTEN:;;;2700,00
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260160422224;12;00;55;;STOLLE, JOHANNES:;;;20537,50
171068403819;08;69;00;;STOLLE, SILVIO:;;;9555,00
271040404842;94;30;00;;STOLLE, WERNER:;;;23283,33
070441407533;96;15;06;;STOLLMAYER, GUENTHER:;;;35250,00
100351530081;96;15;00;338/81, J:;STOLLMAYER, SABINE;1293;ZEDERNWEG 7;
100351530081;96;15;00;338/81, J:;STOLLMAYER, SABINE;1293;ZEDERNWEG 7;
250862401322;01;69;00;;STOLOWSKI, HARTMUT:;;;18480,00
020565401349;15;00;42;;STOLOWSKI, RONALD:;;;17820,00
120269400016;18;32;00;;STOLP, TORSTEN:;;;9675,00
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210371428268;18;32;00;;STOLPE, THILO:;;;2795,00
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290949401321;01;03;00;;STOLT, ALFRED:;;;28585,58
150854529723;96;15;12;;STOLT, TAMARA:;;;17814,68
220867402415;99;43;00;;STOLTE, HEIKO:;;;9825,00
160567413014;18;35;00;;STOLTE, JO(E)RG:;;;9675,00
300369414122;97;22;00;;STOLTENBERG, PAUL:;;;9750,00
300756420012;96;15;12;;STOLTENFELDT, HENRY:;;;18975,00
060453403119;10;00;43;;STOLTENOW, JUERGEN:;;;26760,00
260253419016;10;60;00;;STOLTMANN, BERND:;;;18690,00
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070832419021;10;02;00;;STOLTMANN, ERNST:;;;19312,50
130149402710;04;09;00;;STOLTMANN, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;28500,00
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120470531122;99;53;00;;STOLTZ, SILKE:;;;13800,00
280842429712;99;51;00;;STOLTZ, WERNER:;;;37500,00
110559408017;06;18;00;;STOLZ, FRANK:;;;21120,00
301241411218;07;00;52;;STOLZ, HARALD:;;;29250,00
020453413214;18;80;00;;STOLZ, HARTMUT:;;;25920,00
280853403358;03;15;00;;STOLZ, MANFRED:;;;25200,00
081140511218;07;00;52;;STOLZ, MONIKA:;;;20937,50
101063430080;98;81;00;;STOLZE, ANDRE:;;;16830,00
221151415397;08;08;00;;STOLZE, ANDREAS:;;;19440,00
270857400833;01;18;00;;STOLZE, BERND:;;;19800,00
140766512914;99;43;00;;STOLZE, BIANKA:;;;11168,52
291165514816;30;39;00;;STOLZE, CORNELIA:;;;4827,95
110466412914;99;43;00;;STOLZE, ENRIKO:;;;15822,00
280234416619;09;00;45;;STOLZE, ERWIN:;;;27000,00
301140415367;08;65;00;;STOLZE, HANS-DIETER:;;;27000,00
020653412267;07;08;00;;STOLZE, HOLGER:;;;17722,50
040469413620;13;69;00;;STOLZE, KARSTEN:;;;9555,00
270966515429;98;81;00;;STOLZE, KERSTIN:;;;16524,00
310150514216;08;12;00;;STOLZE, LIANE:;;;20324,83
150429430028;99;09;00;;STOLZE, LOTHAR:;;;24256,04
280751414523;08;00;57;;STOLZE, MANFRED:;;;24480,00
110551514616;08;08;00;;STOLZE, MARGITTA:;;;23040,00
050364405316;97;01;00;;STOLZE, OLAF:;;;20185,00
300555412278;07;08;00;;STOLZE, PETER:;;;15290,00
111165412210;30;39;00;;STOLZE, PETER:;;;13122,00
180959412238;07;08;00;;STOLZE, RONALD:;;;17206,25
191256410846;07;06;00;;STOLZE, THOMAS:;;;19320,00
240369415019;18;35;00;;STOLZE, UWE:;;;9675,00
150751408523;06;06;00;;STOLZE, WERNER:;;;20880,00
060756421023;04;06;00;;STOLZENBERG, BODO:;;;18802,50
160357530124;04;80;00;;STOLZENBERG, PETRA-MARINA:;;;16252,50
300653526367;08;96;00;;STOLZENBURG, BARBARA:;;;10408,67
300651424973;04;06;00;;STOLZENBURG, CHRISTIAN:;;;24480,00
271050426340;08;96;00;;STOLZENBURG, DETLEF:;;;19440,00
111246408512;01;20;00;;STOLZENBURG, DIETER:;;;26250,00
090154500119;01;02;00;;STOLZENBURG, SABINE:;;;19620,00
040769400215;99;43;00;;STOLZENBURG, TORSTEN:;;;11995,00
250731401365;01;00;47;;STOLZMANN, FRITZ:;;;35625,00
140465401321;01;18;00;;STOLZMANN, JOERG:;;;18810,00
020761401311;01;02;00;;STOLZMANN, KARSTEN:;;;19800,00
010752407042;05;40;00;;STOLZMANN, SIEGFRIED:;;;21612,50
090344406158;11;96;61;;STOOF, HEINZ-RUEDIGER:;;;19125,00
051169426714;14;69;00;;STOPE, TORSTEN:;;;12085,00
090442529717;99;40;00;;STOPFKUCHEN, DORIS:;;;23375,00
110836429714;99;40;00;;STOPFKUCHEN, ERHARD:;;;22125,00
270371413415;18;32;00;;STOPFKUCHEN, HAIKO:;;;2795,00
040265507414;98;81;00;;STOPH, GRITT:;;;16700,00
030264430436;98;84;00;;STOPH, THOMAS:;;;17270,00
180967519617;11;96;61;;STOPP, ANDREA:;;;10845,00
100355402140;96;15;13;;STOPP, BERND:;;;21960,00
140348430107;94;30;00;;STOPP, EBERHARD:;;;24610,00
110535506173;97;08;00;;STOPP, ERIKA:;;;19500,00
180639429727;99;43;00;;STOPP, FRIEDER:;;;21000,00
100257406113;97;06;00;;STOPP, GERT:;;;22022,50
010757430057;90;65;40;5218/84, :;STOPP, HELMAR;1123;RYBNICKER STR. 7;17688,58
240132402121;02;54;00;;STOPP, JOHANNES:;;;24750,00
031158530059;99;77;00;;STOPP, MARION:;;;19741,70
281162430028;98;20;00;;STOPP, MICHAEL:;;;17630,16
111034429717;99;43;00;;STOPP, WALTER:;;;20290,32
300170411514;18;35;00;;STOPPA, DIETMAR:;;;9600,00
060568411418;18;31;00;;STOPPEL, GERALD:;;;9825,00
030444416228;09;00;43;;STOPPEL, THEODOR:;;;23250,00
250668420327;18;31;00;;STORANDT, THOMAS:;;;9600,00
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100358502227;98;83;00;;STREMPEL, ANGELA:;;;17077,50
080564430011;95;45;00;;STREMPEL, BODO:;;;16830,00
190951419629;98;20;00;;STREMPEL, HERBERT:;;;25560,00
040760500826;99;02;00;;STREMPEL, INA:;;;17792,50
101036405111;04;00;43;;STREMPEL, LOTHAR:;;;26437,50
131259417790;99;43;00;;STREMPEL, MANFRED:;;;17940,00
140962530212;15;20;00;;STREMPEL, MARLIES:;;;5255,25
100862417750;15;00;40;;STREMPEL, RAINER:;;;19772,50
150835417718;09;08;00;;STREMPEL, WOLDEMAR:;;;23250,00
180560417758;60;90;00;;STRENG, UWE:;;;
180560417758;60;90;00;;STRENG, UWE:;;;17555,00
210335515313;98;81;00;;STRENGE, HANNELORE:;;;24750,00
080138415337;98;82;00;;STRENGE, HANS-DIETER:;;;30750,00
080262408513;97;08;00;;STRENGE, VOLKER:;;;24288,70
050748425009;13;20;00;;STRENGER, JOERG:;;;33750,00
010868411713;18;40;00;;STRESE, JO(E)RG:;;;10305,00
210364407522;05;65;00;;STRESE, RAINER:;;;15730,00
090359400111;01;06;23;;STRESING, LUTZ:;;;17940,00
060951424860;99;49;00;;STRESSIG, DIETER:;;;21780,00
050337429734;94;30;00;;STREU, EBERHARD:;;;21000,00
020835429721;96;15;02;;STREUBEL, CHRISTIAN:;;;39750,00
230652528255;14;08;00;;STREUBEL, GABRIELE:;;;17468,50
260369413222;08;96;00;;STREUBEL, KARSTEN:;;;12375,00
090736521526;13;00;45;;STREUBEL, MARGARETE:;;;14960,00
120452426919;14;08;00;;STREUBEL, REINHARD:;;;21600,00
010547421814;12;00;52;;STREUBEL, WERNER:;;;27420,00
250251411230;07;00;40;;STREUBUEHR, DETLEF:;;;21780,00
120355409834;07;00;46;;STREUER, HELMUT:;;;23460,00
250955402738;02;07;00;;STREUER, NORBERT:;;;22687,50
260869408518;18;32;00;;STREUZIK, FRANK:;;;9510,00
061258408517;96;15;20;;STREY, RAINER:;;;19140,00
050663410828;07;00;51;;STRIBRNY, ERIK:;;;18928,87
301159415324;08;51;00;;STRICH, DETLEF:;;;19792,50
131058423828;13;29;00;;STRICHIRSCH, ROLAND:;;;23144,67
230556402732;02;18;00;;STRICKER, MICHAEL:;;;23460,00
200867408536;18;35;00;;STRICKER, THOMAS:;;;9675,00
271149406454;04;80;00;;STRICKER, ULRICH:;;;21825,00
080748429779;97;01;00;;STRICKER, WERNER:;;;23250,00
290929416219;30;35;00;;STRICKRODT, BERTHOLD:;;;19800,00
101046417431;09;00;50;;STRICKRODT, MANFRED:;;;28080,00
311252411829;30;39;00;;STRICKROTH, BERND:;;;20167,50
210968417529;18;35;00;;STRIEBE, MARIO:;;;6958,87
230243430230;97;08;00;;STRIEBEL, OLAF:;;;20437,50
130969413220;04;06;00;;STRIEGEL, FRANK:;;;3310,00
090148417319;96;15;17;;STRIEGEL, FRANK-GUSTAV:;;;28800,00
190733429714;99;43;00;;STRIEGLER, GERHARD:;;;30750,00
281251428288;94;30;00;;STRIEGLER, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;25530,00
020130428235;14;43;00;;STRIEGLER, HERBERT:;;;29250,00
020958421519;12;20;00;;STRIEGLER, MICHAEL:;;;16905,00
081156430199;97;06;00;;STRIEGLER, MICHAEL:;;;23115,00
140764430317;90;65;40;1642/85, :;STRIEGLER, RALF;1142;HEINRICH-RAU-STR. 192;
140764430317;90;65;40;1642/85, :;STRIEGLER, RALF;1142;HEINRICH-RAU-STR. 192;
080552528214;94;30;00;;STRIEGLER, WINNIFRED:;;;20186,77
200555504828;96;15;22;;STRIEHN, BURGLIND:;;;16970,20
090749428232;18;28;00;;STRIENITZ, BERND:;;;21964,64
291029430079;30;63;00;;STRIETZEL, HEINZ:;;;21600,00
190860424932;96;15;26;;STRIETZEL, MATTHIAS:;;;22610,00
240854528914;10;00;40;;STRIETZEL, RENATE:;;;11681,13
030561427268;99;43;00;;STRIETZEL, THOMAS:;;;19580,00
260870409913;18;34;00;;STRIEWSKI, RAINER:;;;2795,00
231251421531;12;00;40;;STRILLER, DIETER:;;;27420,00
170163401331;95;45;00;;STRIPP, TORSTEN:;;;17737,50
111149517717;96;15;00;4270/78/1, N:;STRISCHEK, ERIKA;1035;FRANKFURTER ALLEE 100;
111149517717;96;15;00;4270/78/1, N:;STRISCHEK, ERIKA;1035;FRANKFURTER ALLEE 100;
230845404814;96;15;00;4270/78, N:;STRISCHEK, RUDOLF;1035;FRANKFURTER ALLEE 100;
230845404814;96;15;00;4270/78, N:;STRISCHEK, RUDOLF;1035;FRANKFURTER ALLEE 100;
160563404321;12;02;00;;STRITTER, HENRY:;;;20625,00
021068430119;18;38;00;;STRITTMATTER, MICHAEL:;;;9510,00
190248400811;01;51;00;;STRITZ, REINHOLD:;;;22250,00
020754426334;97;01;00;;STRITZEL, FRANK:;;;25920,00
240668405910;04;69;00;;STRITZEL, FRANK:;;;9600,00
030239429716;97;06;00;;STRITZKE, LOTHAR:;;;34500,00
200437530267;97;06;00;;STRITZKE, RENATE:;;;20160,00
180552423824;13;40;00;;STRO(E)DE, ULRICH:;;;25650,00
050168416739;18;34;00;;STRO(E)HL, FRANK:;;;10575,00
300459400023;01;19;69;;STROBACH, EDGAR:;;;22959,75
020154412262;07;08;00;;STROBACH, HARALD:;;;17211,25
130450409815;04;30;00;;STROBACH, HEINZ-JOACHIM:;;;25107,50
210967427717;14;69;00;;STROBACH, KARSTEN:;;;12600,00
110857410019;07;00;43;;STROBACH, PETER:;;;17172,00
280252405227;04;00;50;;STROBE, BERND:;;;25800,00
251165418211;10;00;51;;STROBEL, ANDREAS:;;;15949,50
021149427413;14;06;00;;STROBEL, BERNDT:;;;23017,50
210363515134;96;15;19;;STROBEL, CORNELIA:;;;13468,08
190755429897;15;01;00;;STROBEL, DETLEF:;;;25290,00
030352422778;99;43;00;;STROBEL, DIETER:;;;24480,00
150137529712;99;77;00;;STROBEL, ERIKA:;;;25500,00
291136417785;97;01;00;;STROBEL, FRIEDRICH:;;;33000,00
020436416616;97;01;00;K, 5809/82:;STROBEL, GU(E)NTER;8312;DRESDNER STR. 101;39750,00
221042428930;14;40;00;;STROBEL, GUENTER:;;;22687,50
310357422781;12;06;00;;STROBEL, HANS-JUERGN:;;;19320,00
151157430028;98;18;00;;STROBEL, HOLGER:;;;26003,85
130257428344;12;65;00;;STROBEL, JOERG:;;;18572,50
150344414336;98;18;00;;STROBEL, JUERGEN:;;;25380,00
280432429728;96;15;03;;STROBEL, KARL-HEINZ:;;;35250,00
290452429863;99;02;00;;STROBEL, KLAUS:;;;28080,00
251241429749;99;02;00;;STROBEL, KLAUS-GERT:;;;22500,00
190371427411;97;06;00;;STROBEL, LARS:;;;4090,81
240167430077;99;26;00;;STROBEL, MIRKO:;;;14706,00
141169430149;94;65;00;;STROBEL, MIRKO:;;;10599,93
300365417764;97;01;00;;STROBEL, RALF:;;;19140,00
060656415013;30;80;00;;STROBEL, REINER:;;;17250,00
070968407433;18;35;00;;STROBEL, RENE:;;;6705,00
090755519018;94;30;00;;STROBEL, RITA:;;;22938,88
241128430028;99;51;00;;STROBEL, RUDI:;;;49500,00
280662530346;99;02;00;;STROBEL, SABINE:;;;0,00
160139527429;14;83;00;;STROBEL, SIEGRID:;;;14715,00
011258522795;12;96;67;;STROBEL, SIGRID:;;;14836,22
250166414314;98;82;00;;STROBEL, STEFFEN:;;;14132,50
140948425002;99;49;00;;STROBEL, STEPHAN:;;;24750,00
240666427024;14;14;00;;STROBEL, SVEN:;;;14526,00
190563400758;18;32;00;;STROBEL, THOMAS:;;;22418,00
190238427412;14;06;00;;STROBEL, WILFRIED:;;;22437,50
131239506147;04;06;00;;STROBELT, INGE:;;;20280,00
230865406454;18;28;00;;STROBELT, JAN:;;;11055,00
240868429239;18;40;00;;STROBELT, JO(E)RG:;;;10500,00
110750427056;97;01;00;;STROBELT, JUERGEN:;;;26410,00
220738406161;04;06;00;;STROBELT, KLAUS:;;;24687,50
190254408916;96;15;14;;STROBL, DIETMAR:;;;24420,00
050843410411;07;06;00;;STROEBER, HANS:;;;21750,00
230844409920;98;84;00;;STROEBER, HARTMUT:;;;20250,00
280568410428;99;02;00;;STROEBER, RENE:;;;14994,00
100150508515;99;40;00;;STROEBER, VERONIKA:;;;20285,80
100639429732;97;17;00;;STROEDER, WOLF-DIETER:;;;33750,00
050345412238;07;80;00;;STROEHL, DIETER:;;;24187,50
250151426523;14;00;44;;STROEHLA, EDGAR:;;;9675,00
111154412258;07;29;00;;STROESZENREUTER, GU(E)NTER:;;;24090,00
210461411910;06;65;00;;STROHBACH, ANDREAS:;;;17380,00
250460522711;12;80;00;;STROHBACH, CAROLA:;;;15521,61
041068426820;18;32;00;;STROHBACH, DIRK:;;;10086,44
060350426713;14;26;00;;STROHBACH, GERALD:;;;21780,00
020471427126;18;31;00;;STROHBACH, HOLGER:;;;6705,00
210461411929;30;31;00;;STROHBACH, HOLGER:;;;17160,00
110362421525;12;80;00;;STROHBACH, JENS:;;;17270,00
160536406137;04;06;00;;STROHBACH, MANFRED:;;;22437,50
300171413116;08;14;00;;STROHBACH, MICHAEL:;;;3320,00
210944506121;30;56;00;;STROHBACH, RENATE:;;;19320,00
100554421352;14;00;42;;STROHBACH, STEFFEN:;;;25472,50
180969413023;18;31;00;;STROHKORB, FRANK:;;;10600,00
141052400843;30;43;00;;STROHM, ECKARD:;;;19645,58
020856506124;17;00;00;;STROHM, MARLIES:;;;20700,00
241153406193;17;00;00;;STROHM, SIEGFRIED:;;;20160,00
260664421823;17;00;00;;STROHMEIER, RALF:;;;15318,00
280557430124;99;02;00;;STROHMEYER, HOLGER:;;;24150,00
230569416930;98;85;00;;STROHSCHEIN, JENS:;;;9675,00
180138507520;05;51;00;;STROHSCHEIN, MARGRIT:;;;21060,00
100160419022;10;51;00;;STROHSCHNEIDER, LUTZ:;;;18312,50
270258430256;15;00;43;;STROHWALD, THOMAS:;;;23460,00
270271400713;01;69;00;;STROIK, JAN:;;;2896,61
100942419027;10;40;00;;STROMREDER, KLAUS:;;;28500,00
240369404838;18;32;00;;STRONKA, RONNY:;;;9675,00
100559407437;15;00;43;;STROPPE, ANDREAS:;;;20010,00
131068411513;18;32;00;;STROPPE, JO(E)RG:;;;9675,00
030865407426;99;43;00;;STROPPE, MICHAEL:;;;16384,50
110567416914;09;00;49;;STROSCHEIN, ULRICH:;;;17915,40
140863430208;94;64;00;;STROSCHER, HENDRIK:;;;17737,50
041236430133;99;40;00;;STROSCHER, WOLFGANG:;;;27000,00
290841429728;96;15;05;;STROSNY, DIETER:;;;24000,00
301243529738;94;65;00;;STROSNY, SILVIA:;;;21750,00
250953402734;99;43;00;;STROTH, EDWIN:;;;24480,00
280659523612;94;11;00;498/86/1, :;STROTH, ELKE;2760;EDGAR-BENNERT-STR. 62;
280659523612;94;11;00;498/86/1, :;STROTH, ELKE;2760;EDGAR-BENNERT-STR. 62;
150658402733;94;11;00;498/86, :;STROTH, HEIKO;2760;EDGAR-BENNERT-STR. 62;
150658402733;94;11;00;498/86, :;STROTH, HEIKO;2760;EDGAR-BENNERT-STR. 62;
211057402419;97;01;00;;STROZYK, KLAUS:;;;24840,00
100954402417;99;02;00;;STROZYK, UDO:;;;20107,43
161170409820;18;32;00;;STRU(E)BING, JENS:;;;2795,00
120164406147;04;00;44;;STRU(E)BING, SVEN:;;;20350,00
190259430186;30;31;00;;STRUBE, ANDREAS:;;;21355,00
050560420038;11;06;20;;STRUBE, BERND:;;;17796,25
261035404515;04;00;41;;STRUBE, HERMANN:;;;21750,00
050567515312;96;15;22;;STRUBE, INES:;;;7112,10
100469420312;18;80;00;;STRUBE, MICHAEL:;;;9675,00
160355528266;11;06;20;;STRUBE, REGINA:;;;16792,88
100666404514;96;15;22;;STRUBE, VOLKER:;;;14985,00
060554422415;99;02;00;;STRUCK, DETLEF:;;;24092,50
250462430060;98;84;00;;STRUCK, FRANK:;;;17490,00
201253529741;94;30;00;;STRUEBING, ANNE-CHRISTIN:;;;20348,00
271134516415;98;83;00;;STRUEBING, HANNA:;;;19440,00
220661500714;01;06;00;;STRUEBING, INA:;;;9797,99
020961521836;94;11;00;;STRUEBING, KARIN:;;;16665,00
050234430177;97;08;00;;STRUEBING, KLAUS:;;;20250,00
120156400036;01;06;00;;STRUEBING, WOLFGANG:;;;20182,50
260555403925;04;06;00;;STRUEFING, JUERGEN:;;;22080,00
160839406169;04;51;00;;STRUEMPEL, DIETER:;;;23250,00
311040412256;07;40;00;;STRUEMPEL, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;23370,00
101162406166;04;06;00;;STRUEMPEL, PETER:;;;16430,81
120969413512;08;69;00;;STRUETZEL, ENRICO:;;;6780,00
180640428940;96;15;13;;STRUEVER, BERND:;;;22562,50
060868400235;01;06;24;;STRUEWING, BJOERN:;;;9585,00
180852400720;99;43;00;;STRUEWING, UWE:;;;25920,00
160468420710;12;00;47;;STRUGALLA, JOERG:;;;14170,00
090471420745;12;69;00;;STRUGALLA, TORSTEN:;;;3199,35
090570411115;18;34;00;;STRUHS, MATTHIAS:;;;6705,00
260963412265;96;15;24;;STRUNCK, JO(E)RG:;;;18397,50
211045412214;94;65;00;;STRUNCK, REINER:;;;22500,00
200742409535;97;07;00;;STRUNK, DIETER:;;;37125,00
091042509535;99;77;00;;STRUNK, KARIN:;;;26812,50
140752428957;14;15;00;;STRUNZ, DIETMAR:;;;24150,00
200956427421;14;51;00;;STRUNZ, ECKHARD:;;;19952,50
180248422798;12;07;00;;STRUNZ, KARL-HEINZ:;;;35000,00
021035429744;98;83;00;;STRUNZ, MANFRED:;;;24000,00
300171403620;18;33;00;;STRUNZ, ROBERT:;;;2795,00
200849416452;09;96;00;;STRUNZE, PETER:;;;17853,75
290461418429;10;06;00;;STRUPAT, BERND:;;;16445,00
220456418519;10;06;00;;STRUPAT, OLAF:;;;16680,00
170164418514;98;83;00;;STRUPAT, VOLKMAR:;;;15895,50
141135404217;03;80;00;;STRUPP, ERICH:;;;25725,00
141237400858;01;53;00;;STRUPP, MANFRED:;;;26250,00
191168430206;18;32;00;;STRUPP, RENE:;;;9675,00
290369400840;18;35;00;;STRUPP, THORALF:;;;9102,10
020164400046;01;09;00;;STRUPPE, BERND:;;;15433,00
130138400023;94;03;00;;STRUPPERT, HANS:;;;27812,50
240128430015;99;49;00;;STRUPPERT, HORST:;;;25500,00
271269506919;05;77;00;;STRUTZ, BEATA:;;;4500,00
140551410814;07;00;49;;STRUTZ, FRITZ-WERNER:;;;17280,00
110844429714;99;43;00;;STRUTZ, HILMAR:;;;21750,00
300346429719;99;43;00;;STRUTZ, PETER:;;;22500,00
010652429826;96;15;00;309/76, F:;STRUTZ, REINER;2861;KO(E)HLERWEG 7;25530,00
070156406136;04;65;00;;STRUTZ, ROLF:;;;18423,00
290360410364;60;90;00;;STRUTZ, SIEGFRIED:;;;
290360410364;60;90;00;;STRUTZ, SIEGFRIED:;;;15659,00
190832412213;07;65;00;;STRUTZ, WOLFGANG:;;;21000,00
081248401344;04;00;44;;STRUTZENBERG, BERND:;;;30180,00
100659402158;94;03;00;;STRUTZKE, HOLGER:;;;20137,50
171052420550;99;13;00;;STRUWE, NORBERT:;;;25920,00
090543429715;99;41;00;;STRUZAK, JUERGEN:;;;28500,00
240440406917;99;43;00;;STRYJAK, GUENTER:;;;22500,00
121264506924;99;43;00;;STRYJAK, HEIKE:;;;16804,50
311265406914;98;83;00;;STRYJAK, HEIKO:;;;17362,50
100469416110;08;69;00;;STRZALA, OLAF:;;;9555,00
140637429719;99;77;00;;STRZELETZ, WERNER:;;;22187,50
221059405137;04;00;47;;STU(E)BER, DETLEF:;;;18758,17
160764414526;08;00;57;;STU(E)BER, SILVIO:;;;17737,50
041267413117;18;33;00;;STU(E)BING, RALF:;;;9825,00
070857422841;12;80;00;;STU(E)BNER, ANDREAS:;;;16215,00
260663430250;15;00;40;;STU(E)BNER, JO(E)RG:;;;17435,00
090668422445;18;32;00;;STU(E)BNER, KLAUS:;;;9986,44
111260522872;12;96;67;;STU(E)BNER, STEFFI:;;;17020,00
260562430139;15;00;47;;STU(E)BNER, TINO:;;;21120,00
180370413211;18;33;00;;STU(E)CKROTH, RENE:;;;2720,00
141150400839;96;15;00;1870/87, L:;STU(E)DEMANN, ROBERT;1071;BORNHOLMER STR. 9A;
141150400839;96;15;00;1870/87, L:;STU(E)DEMANN, ROBERT;1071;BORNHOLMER STR. 9A;
180331429712;96;15;00;3032/82, J:;STU(E)MER, HANS;1156;ANTON-SAEFKOW-PLATZ 11;
180331429712;96;15;00;3032/82, J:;STU(E)MER, HANS;1156;ANTON-SAEFKOW-PLATZ 11;
240160530219;90;65;40;2015/80,;STU(E)RMER, GERLINDE;1140;HELENE-WEIGEL-PLATZ 13;
240160530219;90;65;40;2015/80,;STU(E)RMER, GERLINDE;1140;HELENE-WEIGEL-PLATZ 13;
270968430226;18;32;00;;STU(E)RMER, JAN:;;;9675,00
120271419824;18;35;00;;STU(E)RTZ, TOBIAS:;;;2795,00
141064416025;09;00;42;;STU(E)TZER, ANDREAS:;;;19470,00
300560400730;01;00;42;;STUBBE, JOERG:;;;22522,50
280165402722;02;00;48;;STUBBE, MICHAEL:;;;14960,00
140833529717;99;02;00;;STUBBE, RUTH:;;;23250,00
231241421220;12;20;00;;STUCHLIK, GERD:;;;27565,00
190653412234;99;43;00;;STUCHLIK, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;25920,00
090734429718;99;02;00;;STUCHLY, WOLFGANG:;;;39750,00
080560408028;06;80;00;;STUCKART, RALF:;;;17940,00
090168412216;96;15;22;;STUCKE, TORALF:;;;9675,00
301063412217;30;39;00;;STUCKE, TORSTEN:;;;14960,00
050144413437;08;12;00;;STUDE, ALBRECHT:;;;21000,00
250358416613;99;43;00;;STUDE, HERBERT:;;;24782,50
200956408212;06;65;00;;STUDE, KLAUS:;;;18630,00
180650429760;15;77;00;;STUDE, MANFRED:;;;21647,50
040653429868;15;09;00;;STUDE, PETER:;;;23760,00
271059508211;06;80;00;;STUDE, PETRA:;;;13200,00
240948429757;15;06;00;;STUDE, WOLFGANG:;;;27312,50
300130430040;98;82;00;;STUDT, GUENTER:;;;46500,00
100659430239;94;30;00;;STUDT, RALF:;;;22540,00
050870410345;07;03;00;;STUDTE, MATTHIAS:;;;3302,26
280170430787;07;06;00;;STUDTE, MIKE:;;;12475,00
180344410324;07;03;00;;STUDTE, WOLFGANG:;;;27000,00
291261419069;10;80;00;;STUEBCHEN, UWE:;;;17685,00
290544430044;15;09;00;;STUEBER, KARL:;;;32687,50
210656405115;04;06;00;;STUEBER, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;22080,00
161053427413;14;08;00;;STUEBIGER, RALF:;;;21600,00
270350504617;04;06;00;;STUEBING, BRIGITTE:;;;19750,00
250260416439;09;00;43;;STUEBING, DIETMAR:;;;20185,00
030441406219;04;51;00;;STUEBING, WOLFGANG:;;;24500,00
030369406918;96;15;22;;STUEBNER, ANDRE:;;;9600,00
020738421533;12;80;00;;STUEBNER, MANFRED:;;;26250,00
150655422798;12;96;42;;STUEBNER, MATTHIAS:;;;19752,50
271160421129;99;43;00;;STUEBNER, PETER:;;;18485,00
250759522759;12;80;00;;STUEBNER, PETRA:;;;16391,32
070543530073;99;43;00;;STUEBNER, RENATE:;;;20625,00
180949511523;99;77;00;;STUEBNER, URSULA:;;;32230,00
110668530329;99;53;00;;STUECKLER, ANDREA:;;;14200,00
040543530324;97;01;00;;STUECKLER, HANNELORE:;;;19320,00
171053406144;97;08;00;;STUEDEMANN, HEINZ-DIETER:;;;23940,00
110330400850;01;18;00;;STUEDEMANN, WOLFGANG:;;;27000,00
130869429217;94;03;00;;STUEHLER, FRANK:;;;9510,00
130955504121;98;18;00;;STUELPNER, ELKE:;;;19097,67
140144424418;96;15;25;;STUELPNER, JUERGEN:;;;27360,00
180255407668;98;20;00;;STUELPNER, KLAUS:;;;25380,00
160556430070;99;43;00;;STUEMER, FREDY:;;;20010,00
060459517424;96;15;17;;STUEMER, HEIDRUN:;;;16108,90
211057430014;97;08;00;;STUEMER, JOACHIM:;;;22655,00
190756429725;97;08;00;;STUEMER, KLAUS:;;;21850,00
250552429768;97;06;00;;STUEMER, MICHAEL:;;;24480,00
281058530176;96;15;20;;STUEMER, PETRA:;;;16541,46
110945418328;10;51;00;;STUENDEL, JOERG:;;;22440,00
030153529767;99;77;00;;STUENZNER, BRIGITTE:;;;24338,14
290642430056;94;94;00;;STUENZNER, WOLFGANG:;;;30750,00
091167421318;98;82;00;;STUERK, ROLF:;;;15582,00
160432417130;09;00;48;;STUERMER, GERHARD:;;;24812,50
060358507518;08;08;00;;STUERMER, KERSTIN:;;;16146,00
250128430014;99;43;00;;STUERZE, ROBERT:;;;33000,00
080561430091;97;06;00;;STUERZEBECHER, ANDRE:;;;17435,00
101137429729;98;82;00;;STUERZEBECHER, BERTHOLD:;;;24050,00
161163401716;02;00;40;;STUERZEBECHER, OLAF:;;;19800,00
130641529713;98;18;00;;STUERZEBECHER, RENATE:;;;24687,50
190666407311;05;00;48;;STUERZEL, MARIO:;;;15228,00
311068407643;05;69;00;;STUERZENBECHER, ANDRE:;;;10275,00
290152426249;07;77;00;;STUETZ, MICHAEL:;;;20160,00
080149415359;08;02;00;;STUETZ, RUDI:;;;3120,00
080151519632;11;00;45;;STUETZEL, RENATE:;;;21300,00
161070420029;99;02;00;;STUETZER, JENS:;;;3620,00
281247427928;30;48;00;;STUETZNER, GUENTER:;;;22000,00
221167402726;02;69;00;;STUEVE, SVEN:;;;9875,00
310848511930;98;84;00;;STUEWE, CHRISTA:;;;21955,65
010833530050;99;77;00;;STUEWE, EVELYN:;;;24000,00
270666402748;02;20;00;;STUEWE, FRANK:;;;10587,00
260943430263;98;20;00;;STUEWE, HARTMUT:;;;35250,00
110832429717;98;19;00;;STUEWE, HELMUT:;;;27000,00
090765417744;09;65;00;;STUEWE, INGOLF:;;;16276,50
270752403712;03;51;00;;STUEWE, REINER:;;;23880,00
100148406712;05;00;41;;STUEWER, GUENTER:;;;17595,00
301257400839;02;00;44;;STUEWER, KLAUS:;;;19580,00
020361420310;94;11;00;591/88, :;STUHL, DIETHARD;6018;KARL-MARX-STR. 33;18480,00
180349414316;08;00;53;;STUHLTRAEGER, GUENTHER:;;;17940,00
301053503414;03;02;00;;STUHR, BARBARA:;;;19936,00
210553404849;04;00;54;;STUHR, FRANK:;;;23421,67
110255401924;02;65;00;;STUHR, GUENTER:;;;19090,00
291130404828;04;00;45;;STUHR, ROLF:;;;30750,00
040560425059;96;15;10;;STUHR, THOMAS:;;;20460,00
150952429793;03;26;00;;STUHR, WERNER:;;;22827,50
180255424935;97;01;00;;STUMBRIES, JOACHIM:;;;26640,00
301141403341;07;07;00;;STUMBRIES, MANFRED:;;;25200,00
050371402711;02;06;00;;STUMKAT, JENS:;;;3510,00
171140500024;94;03;00;;STUMM, ADELHEID:;;;19500,00
210857504021;03;53;00;;STUMM, DORIS:;;;18630,00
261233403310;03;03;00;;STUMM, ERWIN:;;;26250,00
040857403328;03;15;00;;STUMM, JOERG-PETER:;;;21390,00
210940400020;94;03;00;;STUMM, RICHARD:;;;22312,50
131170413718;18;32;00;;STUMMER, ROY:;;;2795,00
130369418618;18;33;00;;STUMPF, ANDRE:;;;9600,00
240734529728;94;30;00;;STUMPF, ANNELIESE:;;;21230,00
281041430128;30;84;00;;STUMPF, DIETER:;;;20160,00
200446418218;99;40;00;;STUMPF, INGO:;;;29437,50
250839429714;15;00;50;;STUMPF, JUERGEN:;;;27750,00
261168417328;18;31;00;;STUMPF, MARIO:;;;9825,00
111070413923;18;32;00;;STUMPF, MATTHIAS:;;;6876,77
301251426544;98;18;00;;STUMPF, MICHAEL:;;;27600,00
280968400018;01;69;00;;STUMPF, REINHOLD:;;;9510,00
240532429737;99;40;00;;STUMPF, ROLF:;;;28500,00
060761416288;97;06;00;;STUMPF, RUEDIGER:;;;18810,00
251051510028;98;18;00;;STUMPF, RUTH:;;;18985,65
250768418611;17;00;00;;STUMPF, TORSTEN:;;;8950,00
021169430169;17;00;00;;STUMPF, UWE:;;;8300,00
100254424623;14;00;48;;STUMPF, VOLKER:;;;22770,00
060670416450;18;34;00;;STUNKAT, MICHAEL:;;;6705,00
030929406917;99;43;00;;STUPEL, HERBERT:;;;25500,00
091263406919;96;15;22;;STUPEL, MATTHIAS:;;;16995,00
041154406914;94;65;00;;STUPEL, WOLFGANG:;;;22800,00
070369411115;18;31;00;;STUPKA, DENNIS:;;;9675,00
091041409225;30;51;00;;STUPKA, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;15180,00
220643419023;10;60;00;;STUPKA, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;16702,27
231056430088;94;03;00;;STUPKA, JUERGEN:;;;26910,00
280632429730;98;18;00;;STUPKA, KARL:;;;27000,00
031056529719;97;06;00;;STUPKA, MARGIT:;;;13874,28
030866419082;10;77;00;;STUPKA, SVEN:;;;14094,00
300848424440;13;20;00;;STUR, GERHARDT:;;;25500,00
131252502722;02;51;00;;STURM, ANGRET:;;;20700,00
240955406414;17;00;00;;STURM, BERND:;;;18601,25
200849507514;05;51;00;;STURM, CHARLOTTE:;;;20892,10
131251422114;12;09;00;;STURM, DIETER:;;;23040,00
281258509523;06;29;00;;STURM, GABRIELE:;;;14202,12
020148429738;98;84;00;;STURM, GERHARD:;;;21375,00
020668413246;18;34;00;;STURM, HARTMUT:;;;9825,00
070648406132;99;26;00;;STURM, HELMUT:;;;24548,19
080868412912;18;33;00;;STURM, HENDRIK:;;;9195,00
300330430037;96;15;06;;STURM, HERBERT:;;;25236,22
081153407655;99;43;00;;STURM, JUERGEN:;;;26640,00
101051500846;01;00;48;;STURM, KARIN:;;;18900,00
241069409519;06;69;00;;STURM, KARSTEN:;;;9600,00
050364528017;14;00;59;;STURM, KERSTIN:;;;5298,33
020642420931;12;40;00;;STURM, LOTHAR:;;;29625,00
050441400886;01;40;00;;STURM, LOTHAR:;;;20625,00
161165413235;18;33;00;;STURM, MIRKO:;;;13985,85
030169410111;17;00;00;;STURM, OLAF:;;;8950,00
120650429803;94;30;00;;STURM, PETER:;;;23520,00
100248409574;06;08;00;;STURM, PETER-MICHAEL:;;;22927,08
260764520343;11;96;63;;STURM, RAMONA:;;;11721,52
090467420320;94;03;00;;STURM, REIKO:;;;16848,00
260166420334;11;51;00;;STURM, RENE:;;;15174,00
070142417731;09;08;00;;STURM, ROLF:;;;27000,00
120445417758;97;06;00;;STURM, RUDOLF:;;;30750,00
060870431137;99;43;00;;STURM, SVEN:;;;2870,00
060664513238;08;00;44;;STURM, SYBILLE:;;;15559,50
100769423638;18;40;00;;STURM, THOMAS:;;;6741,77
220164419368;11;00;00;;STURM, UWE:;;;13007,50
080548407516;05;09;00;;STURM, WILFRIED:;;;24000,00
070953422112;30;53;00;;STURM, WOLFGANG:;;;24900,00
061256422710;12;80;00;;STURMHOEFEL, UDO:;;;18630,00
261155429805;18;35;00;;STURZEBECHER, DIRK:;;;25242,50
050733407019;98;85;00;;STUSSAK, MANFRED:;;;28437,50
250754404374;15;20;00;;STUTH, ARMIN:;;;22440,00
180960422716;97;08;00;;STUTTERHEIM, FRANK:;;;20715,00
051154511211;99;43;00;;STUTTERHEIM, ILONA:;;;19247,50
290653422828;99;43;00;;STUTTERHEIM, RAINER:;;;19988,00
130554421325;98;50;00;;STUTTHOFF, WINFRIED:;;;24480,00
070158404417;03;00;53;;STUTZ, DIETER:;;;15770,18
200363401920;02;20;00;;STUTZKOWSKI, FRANK:;;;19965,00
100452404826;30;83;00;;STUWE, HANS-ULRICH:;;;22080,00
290950422875;12;06;00;;STYS, PETER:;;;23250,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

TOP-SECRET-Joint Chiefs of Staff Commander’s Handbook for Counter Threat Finance

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/DoD-CounterThreatFinance.png

This handbook provides an understanding of the processes and procedures being employed by joint force commanders (JFCs) and their staffs to plan, execute, and assess counter threat finance (CTF) activities and integrate them into their joint operation/campaign plans. It provides fundamental principles, techniques, and considerations related to CTF that are being employed in the field and are evolving toward incorporation in joint doctrine.

(1) (U//FOUO) Identifying the key personnel associated with the threat financial function. What is their contact information; what are their duties and responsibilities; who do they report to; and what, if any, financial, political, tribal, religious and family ties do they have with the government of the HN and of the countries that surround the HN? What is the relationship between the adversary financial operators and the rest of the adversary organization?

(2) (U//FOUO) Determining how threat financial support networks are organized and controlled and how the money flows through the network from the point of origin to the end user. What are the key nodes in the network? Changes in the distribution of funds through the network can be an indicator of many things to include the establishment of new operational cells, pending adversary offensive operations or a shift in geographic operating areas.

(3) (U//FOUO) Determining which venues the adversary financial operators work from and what areas that they support.

(4) (U//FOUO) Determining the adversary’s cost to operate. What are their fixed and overhead costs? What are their operational costs? What are their special operations costs? Plans and operations drive the requirement to acquire funding. Costs requirements drive fund raising efforts and most funding streams are only capable of producing a certain amount of money. Changes in funding requirements can force the adversary to increase fund raising efforts, which can create undue pressure on the local population and the economy or force the adversary to use new fund raising schemes. Either of these courses of action can expose the adversary financial operators to law enforcement and intelligence collectors.

(5) (U//FOUO) What are their sources of funding (local, area, regional, international, and multinational) and how and when is that money collected?

(6) (U//FOUO) Identifying which financial and natural resources and assets are being exploited by the adversary financial operators (HN, multinational, and US provided).

(7) (U//FOUO) Which funding sources provide the greatest source of revenue to the adversary and what alternatives does the adversary have if that funding source is interdicted?

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

DoD-CounterThreatFinance

Cruel War – US Soldier Lost 1/3 of Brain in Iraq

Unveiled – Saddams Execution

TOP-SECRET: Conspiracy to Murder Abroad, and Providing Material Support to al Qaeda

WASHINGTON—The Justice Department announced that Najibullah Zazi pleaded guilty today in the Eastern District of New York to a three-count superseding information charging him with conspiracy to use weapons of mass destruction (explosive bombs) against persons or property in the United States, conspiracy to commit murder in a foreign country, and providing material support to al Qaeda. Among other things, Zazi admitted that he brought TATP [Triacetone Triperoxide] explosives to New York on Sept. 10, 2009, as part of plan to attack the New York subway system.

Zazi, 25, a resident of Aurora, Colo., and legal permanent resident of the United States from Afghanistan, entered his guilty plea today before Chief U.S. District Judge Raymond J. Dearie. Zazi faces a maximum statutory sentence of life in prison for the first two counts of the superseding information and an additional 15 years in prison for the third count of the superseding information.

FBI agents in Colorado first arrested Zazi on Sept. 19, 2009, on a criminal complaint charging him with knowingly and willfully making false statements to the FBI in a matter involving international and domestic terrorism. On Sept. 23, 2009, a federal grand jury in the Eastern District of New York returned a one-count indictment alleging that Zazi knowingly and intentionally conspired with others to use one or more weapons of mass destruction, specifically explosive bombs and other similar explosive devices, against persons or property within the United States.

As Zazi admitted during today’s guilty plea allocution and as reflected in previous government filings, he and others agreed to travel to Afghanistan to join the Taliban and fight against United States and allied forces. In furtherance of their plans, they flew from Newark Liberty International Airport in Newark, N.J., to Peshawar, Pakistan at the end of August 2008. Although Zazi and others initially intended to fight on behalf of the Taliban, they were recruited by al-Qaeda shortly after arriving in Peshawar. Al Qaeda personnel transported Zazi and others to the Waziristan region of Pakistan and trained them on several different kinds of weapons. During the training, al Qaeda leaders asked Zazi and others to return to the United States and conduct suicide operations. They agreed.

Zazi later received additional training from al Qaeda on constructing the explosives for the planned attacks in the United States. Zazi had discussions with al Qaeda leaders about target locations, including subway trains in New York City. Zazi took detailed notes during the training, and later e-mailed a summary of the notes to himself so that he could access them when he returned to the United States. Zazi also provided money and computers to al Qaeda before he left Pakistan.

Zazi returned to the United States in January 2009 and moved to Denver. Beginning in June 2009, he began reviewing the bomb-making notes from his training and conducting research on where to buy the ingredients for the explosives. Zazi then traveled to New York and met with others to discuss the plan, including the timing of the attack and where to make the explosives.

Zazi returned to Denver and used the bomb-making notes to construct the explosives for the detonator components of the bombs. As set forth in the government’s detention memorandum filed earlier in the case, in July and August 2009, Zazi purchased large quantities of components necessary to produce TATP and twice checked into a hotel room near Denver, where bomb making residue was later found.

On Sept. 8, 2009, Zazi rented a car and drove from Denver to New York, taking with him the explosives and other materials necessary to build the bombs. Zazi arrived in New York City on Thursday, Sept.10, 2009. Zazi and others intended to obtain and assemble the remaining components of the bombs over the weekend and conduct the attack on Manhattan subway lines on Sept. 14, Sept. 15, or Sept. 16, 2009. However, shortly after arriving in New York, Zazi realized that law enforcement was investigating his activities. Zazi and others discarded the explosives and other bomb-making materials, and Zazi traveled back to Denver. He was arrested on Sept. 19, 2009.

“This was one of the most serious terrorist threats to our nation since September 11, 2001, and were it not for the combined efforts of the law enforcement and intelligence communities, it could have been devastating,” said Attorney General Eric Holder. “This attempted attack on our homeland was real, it was in motion, and it would have been deadly. We were able to thwart this plot because of careful analysis by our intelligence agents and prompt actions by law enforcement. They deserve our thanks and praise.”

“Today’s plea is an important development in this complex and ongoing criminal investigation and intelligence operation that in many ways illustrates the evolving nature of the terrorist threat today,” said FBI Deputy Director John S. Pistole. “The plea is the result of the dedication and hard work by agents and officers assigned to Joint Terrorism Task Forces in both New York and Colorado working closely with federal prosecutors.”

This case is being prosecuted by the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of New York, with assistance from the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the District of Colorado and the Counterterrorism Section of the Justice Department’s National Security Division. The investigation is being conducted by the New York and Denver FBI Joint Terrorism Task Forces, which combined have investigators from more than fifty federal, state and local law enforcement agencies.

Brutal Execution in the Iraq

FBI-Director Mueller about Terrorists, Spies, and Hackers The New National Security Landscape

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE STA-STEM – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – STA-STEM

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

200556405821;90;65;40;4029/79,;STA(E)DTKE, HARTMUT;1140;ALLEE DER KOSMONAUTEN 69;
200556405821;90;65;40;4029/79,;STA(E)DTKE, HARTMUT;1140;ALLEE DER KOSMONAUTEN 69;
210670413912;18;31;00;;STA(E)HR, THOMAS:;;;6705,00
200269419833;18;31;00;;STA(E)RKER, DIRK:;;;9240,00
210970413025;18;35;00;;STA(E)UBER, RENE:;;;2795,00
160556423612;99;02;00;;STAAB, HOLGER:;;;24840,00
150768413628;08;35;00;;STAAB, MATTHIAS:;;;12900,00
120264414822;18;71;20;;STAACK, ANDREAS:;;;18480,00
060744414213;99;77;00;;STAADT, DIETER:;;;22500,00
300949414217;08;00;54;;STAADT, HERBERT:;;;25500,00
070752402238;02;00;45;;STAAK, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;17607,50
220337429717;98;83;00;;STAAMANN, GUENTER:;;;27750,00
250551414230;07;00;44;;STAAT, RAINER:;;;26640,00
110346513016;08;78;00;;STAAT, ROSWITHA:;;;21285,00
301143413033;08;00;63;;STAAT, WERNER:;;;34560,00
311249515010;08;00;60;;STAATE, MARGIT:;;;15015,00
301164412267;60;90;00;;STAATZ, MICHAEL:;;;
301164412267;60;90;00;;STAATZ, MICHAEL:;;;15944,00
100464405244;60;90;00;;STAATZ, RENE:;;;
100464405244;60;90;00;;STAATZ, RENE:;;;15457,00
270163426318;14;53;00;;STAB, KONRAD:;;;17270,00
291045415311;08;55;00;;STABEL, SIEGFRIED:;;;19509,67
151270408017;18;35;00;;STABENOW, CHRIS:;;;2795,00
151053404036;03;07;00;;STABENOW, HARTMUT:;;;25759,67
171255429889;15;00;41;;STABENOW, RAINER:;;;21065,00
180338425001;13;19;00;;STABLER, HUBERTUS:;;;24750,00
280469408912;18;34;00;;STABLER, INGO:;;;9675,00
180942430050;15;99;00;;STABNER, MANFRED:;;;27750,00
050539429716;99;55;00;;STABREY, GOTTHARD:;;;22500,00
200368404645;04;00;43;;STABREY, PETER:;;;13244,00
060963419620;97;22;00;;STACH, INGOLF:;;;17423,09
120157430165;15;00;43;;STACHE, BERND:;;;27082,50
120559414723;11;06;20;;STACHE, BERNHARD:;;;16119,59
070533429721;99;43;00;;STACHE, HORST:;;;20250,00
110157417156;09;19;00;;STACHE, HORST:;;;22770,00
120552515062;11;06;20;;STACHE, INGRID:;;;15410,00
150554404435;97;08;00;;STACHE, PETER:;;;23620,00
210258514316;15;00;45;;STACHE, ULRIKE:;;;19301,45
140742509534;06;53;00;;STACHOWIAK, DORIS:;;;22200,00
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190641417759;09;51;00;;STAHL, HELMUT:;;;24937,50
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210850402428;02;00;47;;STAHL, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;24325,00
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240148403823;03;07;00;;STAHLBERG, REINER:;;;28500,00
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310361400710;01;65;00;;STAIGIES, KARSTEN:;;;17025,00
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211051408537;06;00;54;;STAMM, HEINZ-RUEDIGER:;;;25200,00
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211048411815;07;00;41;;STAMM, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;29250,00
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150357422028;12;00;53;;STAMM, WOLFGANG:;;;22105,00
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140254415029;97;17;00;;STAMMBERGER, NORBERT:;;;23760,00
120663521318;97;06;00;;STAMMBERGER, SYLVIA:;;;2120,00
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160543400884;97;01;00;;STANDAU, HOLGER:;;;21750,00
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220761407314;60;90;00;;STANDFUSZ, ROLAND:;;;
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310570429720;99;02;00;;STANDHARDT, FRANK:;;;8805,00
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200259416428;90;65;40;5547/88, :;STANGE, DETLEF;1115;WOLFGANG-HEINZ-STR. 54;
041144530161;97;08;00;;STANGE, ERIKA:;;;17866,46
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260751405522;04;06;00;;STEINKE, HOLGER:;;;22260,00
230765403811;02;00;45;;STEINKE, HOLGER:;;;5400,00
280758406411;94;03;00;;STEINKE, MICHAEL:;;;21102,50
151169402323;02;69;00;;STEINKE, RALF:;;;9825,50
070469403817;18;35;00;;STEINKE, TORSTEN:;;;9675,00
280460403816;03;00;52;;STEINKE, ULF:;;;17245,00
050461430185;96;15;24;;STEINKE, UWE:;;;17985,00
280348415120;99;43;00;;STEINKOPF, EBERHARD:;;;42032,50
250168401349;18;33;00;;STEINKRAUS(Z), THOMAS:;;;9825,00
100668417802;17;00;00;;STEINLE, JOERG:;;;8300,00
010941429718;99;43;00;;STEINLEIN, LOTHAR:;;;20250,00
290766418825;99;26;00;;STEINMACHER, JO(E)RG:;;;14013,09
021163414213;99;02;00;;STEINMANN, ECKHARDT:;;;16857,50
150468414215;18;28;00;;STEINMANN, LARS:;;;9825,00
110648417759;09;55;00;;STEINMANN, LOTHAR:;;;20437,50
150630418522;10;00;47;;STEINMANN, WERNER:;;;26250,00
020770429762;18;35;00;;STEINMETZ, FRANK:;;;2795,00
080448402128;94;11;00;1904/72, :;STEINMETZ, GERHARD;1017;GEORGENKIRCHSTR. 13;
080448402128;94;11;00;1904/72, :;STEINMETZ, GERHARD;1017;GEORGENKIRCHSTR. 13;
310156500720;01;96;31;;STEINMETZ, GISELA:;;;16801,29
110951406729;03;06;00;;STEINMETZ, HANS-EDGAR:;;;22320,00
050355406923;01;96;31;;STEINMETZ, KLAUS:;;;16847,50
270658417114;09;41;00;;STEINMETZ, KLAUS-PETER:;;;22080,00
211069411929;18;32;00;;STEINMETZ, RALF:;;;6876,77
210553413972;03;77;00;;STEINMETZ, ROLAND:;;;21180,00
310563401914;99;51;00;;STEINMETZ, TORSTEN:;;;20460,00
241170417310;09;69;00;;STEINMETZ, TORSTEN:;;;2911,13
280357416723;99;43;00;;STEINMETZ, UWE:;;;21562,50
110351417440;99;09;00;;STEINMETZ, WOLFGANG:;;;26400,00
310156405010;99;02;00;;STEINMEYER, MICHAEL:;;;23980,00
190961530136;98;83;00;;STEINMEYER, PETRA:;;;15867,85
230269430167;18;31;00;;STEINMU(E)LLER, DIRK:;;;9600,00
310868428931;18;34;00;;STEINMU(E)LLER, JENS:;;;9675,00
070356415336;96;15;00;1881/88, A:;STEINMU(E)LLER, PETER;1142;TRUSETALER STR. 75;
070356415336;96;15;00;1881/88, A:;STEINMU(E)LLER, PETER;1142;TRUSETALER STR. 75;
190263402129;02;15;00;;STEINMU(E)LLER, PETER:;;;17820,00
280543428920;14;08;00;;STEINMUELLER, KLAUS:;;;22500,00
190151424040;14;00;48;;STEINMUELLER, LOTHAR:;;;21600,00
240244400833;01;06;00;;STEINNAGEL, GERD:;;;22562,50
211168400811;98;18;00;;STEINNAGEL, JENS:;;;13800,00
310157400131;01;06;26;;STEINNAGEL, OTMAR:;;;18860,00
060144428259;18;29;30;;STEINSDOERFER, RAINER:;;;37500,00
080462408817;97;01;00;;STEINWERTH, TORSTEN:;;;23760,00
030568410514;18;31;00;;STEINZ, GERALD:;;;9825,00
190155422800;12;80;00;;STEINZ, JUERGEN:;;;18180,00
190354413528;99;43;00;;STEINZ, RUEDIGER:;;;23760,00
110869424047;99;43;00;;STEISZ, THOMAS:;;;13210,00
180430522752;12;80;00;;STEJSKAL, ILONA:;;;21125,00
140571406118;18;35;00;;STEJSKAL, RICO:;;;2795,00
071152419612;11;06;21;;STELL, ROLAND:;;;20160,00
100571409822;18;33;00;;STELLE, ALEXANDER:;;;2795,00
050953415440;98;18;00;;STELLER, HENNING:;;;9840,00
041170422121;18;33;00;;STELLER, JAN:;;;2795,00
071253520023;98;18;00;;STELLER, MARTINA:;;;21180,00
060856513814;08;78;00;;STELLER, RENATE:;;;17816,05
291058415345;08;15;00;;STELLER, ULRICH:;;;25702,50
230471407016;18;35;00;;STELLMACH, FRANK:;;;2795,00
300155418427;11;08;00;;STELLMACH, REINHARD:;;;24140,00
260471400823;18;34;00;;STELLMACHER, ENRICO:;;;2795,00
250334425005;13;02;00;;STELLMACHER, HELMUT:;;;23187,50
141269409523;94;03;00;;STELLMACHER, JAN:;;;10600,00
281148409513;30;41;00;;STELLMACHER, KLAUSDIETER:;;;13800,00
190147412258;07;80;00;;STELLMACHER, WILFRIED:;;;18000,00
080259408248;99;43;00;;STELLMACHER, WILFRIED:;;;17940,00
040757506119;04;77;00;;STELTER, DORIS:;;;18124,18
280658424938;94;30;00;;STELTER, FRANK:;;;21677,50
250237406144;04;51;00;;STELTER, HORST:;;;24750,00
301067406113;97;07;00;;STELTER, TORSTEN:;;;8950,00
040742515311;08;11;00;;STELTNER, ELVIRA:;;;21937,50
020340415395;08;07;00;;STELTNER, RUDI:;;;26250,00
210242525045;99;77;00;;STELZER, BRIGITTE:;;;38384,77
260332430141;99;40;00;;STELZER, HANS-EHRENFRIED:;;;42000,00
190868425024;94;65;00;;STELZER, RONALD:;;;9670,00
110247416237;09;19;00;;STELZIG, GUENTER:;;;26580,00
240249516245;09;80;00;;STELZIG, MARITA:;;;13557,50
020571416213;97;22;00;;STELZIG, UWE:;;;3849,00
110350427225;14;14;00;;STELZMANN, HEINZ:;;;21187,50

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

Taliban kills two Afghan for alleged prostitution

Taliban execute 2 Afghans publicly

TOP-SECRET-U.C. Berkeley Police Crowd Control Policy

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/UCB-CrowdControl.png

This Policy is to provide an outline of basic steps to be taken and/or considered by UCPD in the management of campus demonstrations. It is recognized that no policy can completely cover every possible situation and thus we rely on the expertise of the commanders and supervisors to manage the situation utilizing this policy as a guideline. This policy is primarily intended to cover demonstrations on campus and involving primarily University affiliates but many of the elements are applicable to any demonstration. “Demonstration”, for the purposes of this policy, includes a broad range of gatherings. Generally they are events with a significant crowd intending to express a particular point of view to others, often “The University”, and often through highly visible and possibly disruptive means. They are distinguished from peaceful meetings but may spring from them.

PHILOSOPHY

The University and UCPD recognize the rights of all individuals to assemble and speak freely, as guaranteed by the First Amendment of the United States Constitution and the California State Constitution, and will actively protect those rights. The rights all people have to march, demonstrate, protest, rally or perform other First Amendment activities come with the responsibility to not abuse or violate the civil and property rights of others. The University has a right to continue normal business without disruption and all members of our community have the right to go about their business freely and safely. At times these rights result in competing interests which must be resolved. Toward this end, the University has established “time, place and manner” rules that should be used as guidelines. Only certain specific areas on campus are designated as forums for public expression.

The responsibility of UCPD is to protect the lives, property and rights of all people and to enforce the law. Personal safety is of primary importance for participants, non-participants and those who must be present by virtue of their positions (including Police Officers). Security of University facilities and continuation of normal business are also priorities.

When it becomes necessary to manage the actions of a crowd that constitutes an unlawful assembly or has committed other violations of law or University rules, the commitment and responsibility of law enforcement is to manage it lawfully, efficiently, and with minimal impact on the community. A variety of techniques and tactics may be necessary to resolve such an incident. Only that force which is reasonable may be used to arrest violators and/or restore order. Participants are expected to realize their obligation to comply with the lawful orders of police officers and to submit when arrested.

MASS ARRESTS:

When it becomes necessary to make arrests of numerous individuals over a relatively short period of time the OIC/Overall Commander should ensure that:

• The area is contained and the violators isolated.
• Personnel understand whether someone may leave the area and under what conditions.
• The proper dispersal order is read outlining the unlawful assembly, other committed violations, and the dispersal route.
• An arresting/reporting officer is assigned.
• An arrest team is designated to take custody of the demonstrators.
• All arrests are done in accordance with policies, procedures, and training. The use of various types of arrest techniques should be based upon the type of resistance presented as well as the exigency of the situation.
• All arrested prisoners are searched, photographed, and properly identified.
• A decision is made as to how prisoners will be processed, i.e. field cited (on-site or off site) or transported to Berkeley Jail or Santa Rita Jail for booking; and whether protesters will be subject to 626 PC (626.4 for students/626.6 for others).
• If a significant number of students will be arrested, Office of Student Conduct representatives are requested to consider delivering Student Conduct violation notices at the booking station as appropriate.
• An adequate secure area is designated in the field for holding arrestees for the booking process or after the initial booking process while awaiting transportation.
• An adequate number of vehicles are made available to remove the arrestees to the detention center/jail.
• All injured prisoners are provided medical attention as appropriate prior to being incarcerated.
• All arrested juveniles are handled in accordance with the Department’s procedures for arrest, transportation, and detention of juveniles (GO-B3).
• All evidence and weapons taken from arrestees are processed in accordance with the department’s policy on the preservation and custody of evidence (GO-P1).

Taliban execute 2 Afghans publicly

In a gruesome public spectacle, Taliban-linked militants on Friday executed two Afghan men accused of spying for the United States, slitting their throats and parading their severed heads before a cheering crowd

The Execution of the Polish engineer Piotr Stańczak by Terrorists

Occupy Wall Street NYC Photos

Media Interviews Julian Assange after Secret Meeting with DoJ on Plea Deal to Heave Bradley Manning from Freedom Tower[Image]
NYPD: If You See Something Say Something[Image]
Media Has Lost Interest in OWS[Image]
Arrow Taken in Ear Union Trooper Packs Egg-Stash Bivouac after Gettysburg Chicken-Out[Image]
Student Debt Too Big to Fail[Image]
Fukushima Daiichi Nuclear Fall-out Data Gathering[Image]
Jim, It Asked About You[Image]
Pigeons There, Me Here, Where’s Justice[Image]
As She Sashays, the Cop Watch Tower Tumesces[Image]
Home Sweet Home Wet[Image]
Pizza Conga[Image]
Narcissist Eyes Photographer Twin[Image]
Her Excellency Protestor and Merc Spearchucker[Image]
Mic Checking a Senior Cop While 292-Cop Prepares to Loogie[Image]
National Lawyer Guild Rep ID-Checks Prideful Illegal Alien[Image]
Memorial to Immolated Tibetan[Image]
Medical Team Back from Patching Cop Whackamoles[Image]
Another Medical Team Back from Wiping Hegemon Spittle[Image]
Cops Reassemble Un-Zipped Barricades After Masked Man Eats Plastic Tie[Image]
Senior Police Official’s Warm and Dry Pussy Wagon Quietly Rockabyeing Whiles Eyes are Averted.[Image]
Constitutionally Coddled Media Covering Wall Street from Remote Studios.[Image]
Beshitten Sergeant Coddling the Bull’s Balls While Sweettalking Mommie Dearest[Image]
Wall Street Security Crud at the South Portal to Inevitable Revolution[Image]

	

Execution in China

Vietnam Execution

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE SO-STA – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – SO-STA

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

020169422228;18;31;00;;SO(E)FFEL, UWE:;;;9825,00
310171430222;18;34;00;;SO(E)LLE, JO(E)RG:;;;2795,00
250559400810;01;80;00;;SOBCZAK, NORBERT:;;;17602,42
050165429235;18;31;00;;SOBCZINSKI, RENE:;;;19140,00
100167420325;18;27;30;;SOBE, DIRK:;;;15534,59
190339429716;99;02;00;;SOBE, WERNER:;;;22425,00
290352419035;99;13;00;;SOBECK, BERND:;;;23760,00
160941415395;10;15;00;;SOBECK, GUENTER:;;;40500,00
240956405114;04;00;47;;SOBECK, PETER:;;;20405,00
010457518428;10;99;10;;SOBECK, PETRA:;;;5012,15
090444429736;99;49;00;;SOBECK, RALF:;;;27750,00
240854419021;15;77;00;;SOBECK, ROLF:;;;22267,50
140951507017;98;83;00;;SOBECK, SIGRID:;;;18394,83
250854424313;97;17;00;;SOBERSKI, BERND:;;;21600,00
191134429717;99;41;00;;SOBERSKI, HORST:;;;25500,00
300843530041;15;19;00;;SOBERSKI, KARIN:;;;21375,00
290547530139;94;65;00;;SOBERSKI, KARIN:;;;22848,00
240443429719;97;06;00;;SOBERSKI, PETER:;;;23937,50
240443430090;98;19;00;;SOBERSKI, ROLAND:;;;25500,00
060444429755;08;00;45;;SOBIAS, REINHOLD:;;;20250,00
220534429724;97;08;00;;SOBISIAK, PETER:;;;23250,00
190646429716;99;12;00;;SOBKOWIAK, FERDINAND:;;;23250,00
230667400748;18;31;00;;SOBOLEWSKI, INGO:;;;9600,00
041036429728;97;22;00;;SOBOLL, GUENTER:;;;30750,00
150568408816;17;00;00;;SOBOLL, GUIDO:;;;9872,00
140260430276;15;08;00;;SOBOSCZYK, ULRICH:;;;16096,50
280135429721;97;01;00;;SOBOTTA, JOACHIM:;;;24687,50
270968402321;18;40;00;;SOBOTTA, OLAF:;;;10725,00
020744409215;30;51;00;;SOCK, WILFRIED:;;;19692,00
210761406742;05;00;50;;SOCKA, UWE:;;;15235,00
030664503438;99;77;00;;SODANN, KERSTIN:;;;17105,00
251063424995;95;45;00;;SODANN, MARIO:;;;18480,00
230939424912;96;15;00;3932/87, M:;SODANN, PETER;7060;RINGSTR. 197;
230939424912;96;15;00;3932/87, M:;SODANN, PETER;7060;RINGSTR. 197;
021265425001;13;00;41;;SODANN, THOMAS:;;;13580,25
040440411111;07;00;51;;SODE, ERNST:;;;29000,04
230149506120;04;00;40;;SODEIK, BRIGITTA:;;;21060,00
031044406156;17;00;00;;SODEIK, RAINER:;;;37500,00
030768404418;18;31;00;;SODEMANN, FRANK:;;;9600,00
290554522719;30;31;00;;SODMANN, ELKE:;;;18900,00
200251403016;30;81;00;;SODMANN, JUERGEN:;;;25560,00
010669406436;04;69;00;;SOEDER, ANDREAS:;;;2870,00
250163416648;09;00;45;;SOEDER, BERND:;;;10200,00
091148419917;11;09;00;;SOEDER, GUENTHER:;;;26875,00
250528422793;12;14;00;;SOEHNEL, ERICH:;;;13213,71
311249422244;12;15;00;;SOEHNEL, HARTMUT:;;;26034,52
031131421821;12;06;00;;SOEHNEL, JOSEF:;;;22500,00
150158422877;18;33;00;;SOEHNEL, MATTHIAS:;;;24840,00
221141417719;09;65;00;;SOEHNEL, ULRICH:;;;33750,00
020534416417;97;06;00;;SOEHNEL, WERNER:;;;26250,00
260361410721;15;00;48;;SOEHNER, EIKE:;;;22223,50
010361502544;96;15;12;;SOEHNER, PETRA:;;;15379,30
251170418611;10;03;00;;SOELL, JENS:;;;2870,00
191048510113;98;82;00;;SOELL, MARLIES:;;;24240,00
260152428239;14;00;58;;SOELL, RAINER:;;;21300,00
180747418638;98;82;00;;SOELL, ROLAND:;;;24090,00
040446529719;98;84;00;;SOELLE, BRIGITTE:;;;21000,00
100244430181;97;22;00;;SOELLE, PETER:;;;22500,00
010261400823;01;18;00;;SOELLIG, INGO:;;;8580,00
061139419010;30;36;00;;SOELLNER, HERBERT:;;;17240,00
190649424523;06;02;00;;SOEMISCH, GUENTER:;;;29670,00
080952408262;94;11;00;;SOERGEL, DIETER:;;;21945,00
090568427513;99;43;00;;SOERGEL, STEFFEN:;;;9600,00
240743422260;97;06;00;;SOERNITZ, DIETER:;;;24000,00
260151404323;94;30;00;;SOETMELK, ERHARD:;;;23130,78
060454413159;99;43;00;;SOFFKE, SIEGFRIED:;;;25860,00
051052405338;04;00;49;;SOFFNER, KONRAD:;;;18720,00
161149400813;99;55;00;;SOFKA, KLAUS:;;;21000,00
211166501811;12;96;67;;SOHN, KERSTIN:;;;2118,33
180160408529;99;43;00;;SOHN, THOMAS:;;;19097,50
050249412270;07;14;00;;SOHN, WOLFGANG:;;;19000,00
270856427348;14;00;52;;SOHR, ULRICH:;;;17077,50
290457403013;98;82;00;;SOHR, WERNER:;;;19320,00
230663407619;05;80;00;;SOHRMANN, DIRK:;;;16170,00
020269421513;99;10;00;;SOHRMANN, THOMAS:;;;8300,00
010558400111;99;09;00;;SOHST, CLAUS-DIETER:;;;22655,00
070159513033;01;80;00;;SOHST, PETRA:;;;16200,45
260263506156;99;09;00;;SOHST, SIBYLLE:;;;10833,60
010429419027;10;19;00;;SOIKA, FRIEDRICH:;;;38250,00
220669417552;99;49;00;;SOJKA, JOERG:;;;13305,00
270555410518;07;55;00;;SOKOLOWSKI, HORST-DIETER:;;;18400,00
040169424950;18;35;00;;SOKOLOWSKI, STEFFEN:;;;10725,00
030454407536;05;80;00;;SOKOLOWSKI, WOLFGANG:;;;18000,00
120558428023;18;34;00;;SOKYTE, BERNHARD:;;;18630,00
281055413919;08;00;63;;SOLANSKY, FRANK:;;;23800,00
100949413947;08;80;00;;SOLANSKY, JOACHIM:;;;22440,00
010740414413;99;49;00;;SOLAR, ERWIN:;;;25500,00
140153421526;99;43;00;;SOLAREK, VOLKER:;;;25920,00
010363427226;14;18;00;;SOLBRIG, STEFAN:;;;19745,00
230667416248;18;35;00;;SOLDAN, DIRK:;;;9825,00
291067421712;12;06;00;;SOLDAN, FRANK:;;;13770,00
200968415110;18;35;00;;SOLDMANN, FRANK:;;;9675,00
260254415156;08;51;00;;SOLDMANN, FRITZ-ECKHARD:;;;20880,00
110644529710;99;12;00;;SOLDMANN, INGRID:;;;12542,34
080243429722;97;01;00;;SOLDMANN, KLAUS:;;;25687,50
140352408949;06;00;44;;SOLDNER, FRANK:;;;13627,50
030668409318;06;69;00;;SOLDNER, RENE:;;;9675,00
270846416418;09;53;00;;SOLF, HANS-DIETER:;;;25187,50
020541429718;99;09;00;;SOLF, HELMUT:;;;28500,00
250555412267;99;43;00;;SOLF, HENRY:;;;15073,00
080550416817;09;00;48;;SOLF, JUERGEN:;;;26422,50
280370416824;18;31;00;;SOLF, RENE:;;;6705,00
130769416419;18;31;00;;SOLF, TOBIAS:;;;10500,00
270160422012;30;57;00;;SOLICH, JOACHIM:;;;12022,00
030740503422;97;01;00;;SOLKA, HANNELORE:;;;22365,00
180734403429;03;12;00;;SOLKA, HELMUT:;;;31500,00
050363403415;03;00;50;;SOLKA, RALF:;;;22000,00
060868403428;99;02;00;;SOLKA, RONALD:;;;14675,00
020539407528;05;99;20;;SOLLAN, ARNO:;;;31500,00
070669407513;05;06;00;;SOLLAN, JOERG:;;;12375,00
150247507522;05;51;00;;SOLLAN, MARLIES:;;;26250,00
150567407520;05;08;00;;SOLLAN, RALF:;;;15552,00
180464412922;18;34;00;;SOLLE, DETLEF:;;;19965,00
120952517323;18;78;00;;SOLLE, HANNELORE:;;;18377,34
301250417355;94;03;00;;SOLLE, HEINZ:;;;19377,50
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040650421027;97;01;00;;SPREER, HANS-GERT:;;;32230,00
200969428263;18;34;00;;SPREER, HEIKO:;;;10600,00
280157424999;13;65;00;;SPREHN, UDO:;;;17882,50
280768405914;18;32;00;;SPREJZ, HENDRIK:;;;9330,00
180560513619;06;77;00;;SPRENGEL, GABRIELA:;;;14900,00
150153529720;99;53;00;;SPRENGER, ANGELIKA:;;;16995,00
221237506142;17;00;00;;SPRENGER, ANNELIES:;;;23250,00
250753400718;08;80;00;;SPRENGER, BERND:;;;20810,00
190848423814;99;55;00;;SPRENGER, DIETER:;;;27687,50
010666406174;04;19;00;;SPRENGER, DIETMAR:;;;12272,00
010654504818;96;15;00;2633/88, J:;SPRENGER, GISELA;1020;KO(E)PENICKER STR. 98;12745,41
100537406134;04;06;00;;SPRENGER, HERMANN:;;;22125,00
190264402411;99;09;00;;SPRENGER, JOERG:;;;19085,00
231131406177;04;53;00;;SPRENGER, KURT:;;;21937,50
230271417914;09;69;00;;SPRENGER, OLAF:;;;2911,13
221237401738;02;40;00;;SPRENGER, OSWALD:;;;26640,00
220649421327;12;26;00;;SPRENGER, WOLFGANG:;;;24650,00
300468403314;03;69;00;;SPRICK, UWE:;;;10500,00
240470426310;97;22;00;;SPRIGODE, THOMAS:;;;10155,00
220550410417;18;28;00;;SPRINDT, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;22500,00
020171404520;04;69;00;;SPRING, CHRISTIAN:;;;2870,00
230958403228;98;54;00;;SPRING, JUERGEN:;;;19320,00
190541422796;12;07;00;;SPRING, PETER:;;;27000,00
020451529715;15;00;40;;SPRINGBORN, DORIS:;;;17199,00
230351429798;60;90;00;;SPRINGBORN, HORST:;;;
230351429798;60;90;00;;SPRINGBORN, HORST:;;;28920,00
271163407525;97;17;00;;SPRINGBORN, MICHAEL:;;;19415,00
231042507558;99;09;00;;SPRINGBORN, PETRA:;;;24000,00
261160417753;99;02;00;;SPRINGBORN, UWE:;;;22725,00
130659422842;12;09;00;;SPRINGER, ANDREAS:;;;21535,16
150668404214;18;35;00;;SPRINGER, AXEL:;;;9600,00
230634406713;05;00;50;V/435/88, :;SPRINGER, DIETER;1330;JULIAN-MARCHLEWSKI-RING 94;
230634406713;05;00;50;V/435/88, :;SPRINGER, DIETER;1330;JULIAN-MARCHLEWSKI-RING 94;
060552404344;03;00;49;;SPRINGER, DIETER:;;;18630,00
181250415049;18;40;00;;SPRINGER, DIETER:;;;24007,50
210269407428;94;03;00;;SPRINGER, DIRK:;;;9510,00
090569510634;99;14;00;;SPRINGER, GABRIELE:;;;14450,00
100639410636;07;00;54;;SPRINGER, GUENTER:;;;20625,00
201155429210;10;00;43;;SPRINGER, GUNTER:;;;22009,40
210352427737;99;43;00;;SPRINGER, GUNTER:;;;22500,00
290169407124;05;12;00;;SPRINGER, HEIKO:;;;11460,00
040164426252;14;26;00;;SPRINGER, HEIKO:;;;19305,00
130148412220;97;17;00;;SPRINGER, JUERGEN:;;;26687,50
230346510612;07;00;54;;SPRINGER, KARIN:;;;15697,50
180949528923;14;00;61;;SPRINGER, KARIN:;;;16665,00
090569510626;99;14;00;;SPRINGER, KERSTIN:;;;1474,20
051249426546;14;00;61;;SPRINGER, LUDWIG:;;;37062,50
070838512235;15;80;00;;SPRINGER, MARGA:;;;17307,50
300358412236;99;13;00;;SPRINGER, MICHAEL:;;;21045,00
070470413916;18;35;00;;SPRINGER, MIKE:;;;6570,00
070849530180;98;83;00;;SPRINGER, MONIKA:;;;19440,00
180366405120;98;83;00;;SPRINGER, OLAF:;;;15532,00
220741414816;08;00;47;;SPRINGER, PETER:;;;30750,00
190760414817;08;00;56;;SPRINGER, REINHARD:;;;21725,00
031054424024;04;06;00;;SPRINGER, WOLFGANG:;;;21275,00
161069506423;18;80;00;;SPRINK, MANUELA:;;;12955,80
071168415376;18;25;00;;SPRINK, MICHAEL:;;;14175,00
160750421813;12;00;52;;SPRISCH, ROLAND:;;;16215,00
260953521812;12;00;52;;SPRISCH, SIGRUN:;;;17229,66
270461406163;04;80;00;;SPRO(E)TE, TINO:;;;16682,50
131169422860;12;69;00;;SPROESSIG, KARSTEN:;;;9600,00
280332429720;96;15;01;;SPROETE, HEINZ:;;;42000,00
180968525170;99;77;00;;SPROETE, INES:;;;4200,00
311041413453;08;14;00;;SPROETE, LOTHAR:;;;20437,50
040557506122;04;80;00;;SPROETE, MARLIES:;;;17424,00
210955413721;04;00;40;;SPROETE, PETER:;;;23922,50
230870414715;18;32;00;;SPROTOFSKI, DIRK:;;;2795,00
300644422806;12;55;00;;SPROTTE, ALBRECHT:;;;27000,00
100654409537;97;17;00;;SPROTTE, REINHARD:;;;25200,00
200652409523;98;20;00;;SPROTTE, WERNER:;;;28980,00
250345406459;04;14;00;;SPRUCH, GERHARD:;;;21562,50
120951413637;97;22;00;;SPRUNG, GUENTER:;;;25200,00
200166420030;11;06;20;;SPRUNG, UDO:;;;14850,00
260251421024;12;06;00;;SPRUNGK, BERNDT:;;;23760,00
190565408710;01;15;00;;SPRUNK, HEINER:;;;15974,00
301045429728;99;43;00;;SPRUNK, HEINZ:;;;27000,00
180458404619;95;45;00;;SPUDDIG, NORBERT:;;;18932,50
080444515029;10;00;51;;SPURGAT, ANGELIKA:;;;14429,04
070840415012;10;00;43;;SPURGAT, DIETRICH:;;;23630,00
290465516229;09;00;43;;SPUTH, HEIKE:;;;15753,00
270860416238;09;08;00;;SPUTH, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;18600,00
270955429955;94;30;00;;SPYRA, DIETHELM:;;;20470,00
010151429780;96;15;12;;SPYRA, FRANK:;;;26370,00
200569422217;18;31;00;;SRA(E)GA, TO(E)RK-MARIO:;;;9555,00
120564406824;30;47;00;;SRADNICK, MICHAEL:;;;16335,00
120669413115;99;13;00;;SRB, STEFFEN:;;;13430,00
151263509514;06;08;00;;SRENK, MARTINA:;;;14085,00
230350409568;06;08;00;;SRENK, RAINER:;;;24442,50
250462430140;96;15;10;;SROCKA, BERND:;;;17820,00
141232429723;98;97;00;;SROCKA, JOHANN:;;;37395,83
200846415323;08;53;00;;SRODA, HANS-PETER:;;;26010,00
011158405823;99;43;00;;SROKA, HUBERTUS:;;;32250,16
261065415426;17;00;00;;SROVELEIT, HANS-ULRICH:;;;16626,00
010653419646;11;06;20;;SRP, GERD:;;;19440,00
270237529716;97;06;00;;SSYMANK, CHRISTA:;;;23250,00
211057430102;99;43;00;;SSYMANK, FRANK:;;;19320,00
200337430285;99;02;00;;SSYMANK, WOLFGANG:;;;35062,50

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

ORIGINAL DOCUMENT – Occupy Toronto Eviction Notice

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NOTICE UNDER THE TRESPASS TO PROPERTY ACT – NOVEMBER 15, 2011

You are hereby given notice that you are prohibited from engaging in the following activities in St. James Park and in any other City of Toronto park:

1. Installing, erecting or maintaining a tent, shelter or other structure;

2. Using, entering or gathering in the park between the hours of 12:01 a.m. and 5:30 a.m..

The City of Toronto hereby directs you immediately to stop engaging in the activities listed above and to remove immediately any tent, shelter, structure, equipment and debris from St. James Park. If you do not immediately remove any and all tents, shelters, structures, equipment and debris from St. James Park, such tents, shelters, structures, equipment and debris shall be removed from St. James Park by or on behalf of the City of Toronto. You are further ordered immediately to stop using, entering or gathering in St. James Park between the hours of 12:01 a.m. and 5:30 a.m..

Please be advised that this notice may be enforced in accordance with the provisions of the Trespass to Property Act, R.S.O. 1990 c. T21 or by any other legal means available to the City of Toronto. Please be further advised that under the Trespass to Property Act, every person who engages in an activity on premises when the activity has been prohibited under the Act is guilty of an offence and is liable, on conviction, to a fine of not more than $2000.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

OccupyTorontoEviction

The last hour of Elena and Nicolae Ceausescu

Keine der Diktaturen in Osteuropa war totalitärer als die des Nicolae Ceausescu – und keine wurde blutiger gestürzt. Die Hinrichtung des Ehepaars Ceausescu am 25. Dezember 1989 in der Militärkaserne von Tirgoviste bildet den dramatischen Höhepunkt einer Revolution, deren Hintergründe bis heute ungeklärt sind. DIE LETZTEN TAGE DER CEAUSESCUS erzählt die rumänische Revolution erstmals von innen heraus und macht die Atmosphäre jener Tage aus Euphorie, Unsicherheit und Verrat spürbar.

ORGINAL DOCUMENT – Occupy London Eviction Notice

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City of London

NOTICE TO REMOVE ALL TENTS AND OTHER STRUCTURES FROM THE PROTEST CAMP AT ST PAULS CHURCHYARD, LONDON EC4

To each and every person taking part in and/or having erected tents of other structures at St Pauls Churchyard, London EC4

Under its various legal rights and powers, the Mayor, Commonality and Citizens of the City of London (“the City of London Corporation”) requires you to remove all tents and other structures from the protest camp at St Pauls Churchyard, London EC4 (in the area shown in red and green on the attached plan) forthwith.

If any tents and other structures remain after 6pm on Thursday 17th November 2011, proceedings for possession and injunctions will be issued in the high Court of Justice without further notice.

Any attempt to establish another protest camp consisting of tents and other structures elsewhere in the City of London Corporation’s area will be likely to be the subject of immediate further proceedings without further notice.

Explanation

1. This explanation is provided in plain English to explain the basis of the City of London Corporation’s demand that tents and other structures be removed and the broad process which will follow if they are not removed.

2. The Protest Camp occupies the land shown edged in red and green on the Plan attached to this Notice. The area shown in red is public highway vested in the City of London Corporation (“the Red Land”). The area shown in green is owned by St Paul’s Cathedral (“the Green Land”). The boundary between the Red Land and the Green Land runs just outside the semi-circle of bollards at the front of St. Paul’s Cathedral.

3. Through the erection of tents and other structures, you and others involved in the Protest Camp have taken possession and control of the Red Land from the City of London Corporation without its consent. The Protest Camp is therefore a trespass. It is also an unreasonable obstruction of the highway on the Red Land.

4. In addition, in respect of both the Red Land and the Green Land, the Protest Camp does not have planning permission and causes significant harm to the area.

5. The City of London Corporation has given the most careful consideration to the right to protest and whether there is a pressing social need in the public interest to require the removal of the tents and other structures. It has concluded that there is such a pressing social need.

6. If the tends and other structures are not removed by 9am on Friday 18th November 2011, the City of London corporation will therefore issue proceedings in the High Court of Justice:

a. Seeking a possession order over the Red Land which, if granted, will mean that you have to give possession of that area back to the City of London Corporation;

b. An injunction requiring you to remove the tents and other structures from the Red and Green Land. If granted this would mean that you would be ordered by the High Court to remove the tents and other structures and any failure to do so could be a contempt of court;

c. Declarations and injunctions from the Court which will enable the City of London Corporation to move onto the Protest Camp and clear it.

7. The detailed legal basis of these claims will be explained in legal documents provided with the proceedings but the powers relied on will included s.130 and s.137 of the Highways Act 1980, s.1878 of the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, s.222 of the Local Government Act 1972 and s.2 of the Local Government Act 2000.

8. Proceedings will be served on the Protest Camp and you will be able to attend Court on a date to be fixed but likely to be next week to: (1) ask to become a named defendant; and (2) take part in the proceedings. The Court will then decide what, if any, orders to make.

9. For the avoidance of doubt, the Orders sought will not prevent lawful and peaceful protest in this general area and is directed at the tents and other structures.

10. For the avoidance of doubt, the City of London Corporation reserves all its rights to take any other such action as may be considered necessary and this Notice does not affect any powers of the police under the Public Order Act 1986 or other laws.

11. Further Notices under the Town and Country Planning Act 1990 may be served in due course. They will be additional to, and will not remove or amend, the requirements of this Notice.

Director of the Built Environment
City of London Corporation
Guildhall
London EC2P 2EJ

TO PERSONS HAVING CONTROL OF POSSESSION OF TENTS AND OTHER STRUCTURES AT ST PAULS CHURCHYARD

The City of London Corporation is the highway authority for the City of London. The highways in the vicinity of St Pauls are shown on the attached plan.

You are hereby given notice that the erection and setting up of tents and other structures at the protest camp at St Paul’s Churchyard constitutes an unlawful obstruction of the highway. There is no lawful authority or excuse for such obstruction. By wilfully placing tents and/or other structures on the highway you are committing an offence under s.137 of the Highways Act 1980.

Without prejudice to all other remedies available to the City of London Corporation, the City of London Corporation hereby gives you notice under s.142 of the Highways Act 1980 that you must remove all tents and other structures which are in your possession or control from St Paul’s Churchyard by 6 pm on Thursday November 2011.

Director of the Built Environment
City of London Corporation
Guildhall
London EC2P 2EJ

TOPSECRET UNVEILED – EU Study on Crowd Control Technologies

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This study grew out of the 1997 STOA report, ‘An Appraisal of the Technologies of Political Control’ and takes that work further. Its focus is two fold:(i) to examine the bio-medical effects and the social & political impacts of currently available crowd control weapons in Europe; (ii) to analyse world wide trends and developments including the implications for Europe of a second generation of so called “non-lethal” weapons. Seven key areas are covered by the report’s project: (a) a review of available crowd control technologies; (b) relevant legislation at national and EU levels; (c) the relative efficiency of crowd control technologies; (d) their physical and mental effects on individuals; (e) the actual and potential abuse of crowd control technologies; (f) an assessment of future technologies and their effects; and finally (g) an appraisal of less damaging alternatives such as CCTV.The report presents a detailed worldwide survey of crowd control weapons and the companies which manufacture supply or distribute them. It was found that at least 110 countries worldwide deploy riot control weapons, including chemical irritants, kinetic energy weapons, water cannon and electro-shock devices. Whilst presented as humane alternatives to the use of lethal force, the study found examples in 47 countries of these so called “non-lethal” crowd control weapons being used in conjunction with lethal force rather than as a substitute for it, leading directly to injury and fatalities.

Within Europe, the study found that the biomedical research necessary to justify the deployment of certain crowd control technologies was either absent, lacking or incomplete and that there was inadequate quality control at production level to ensure that adverse or even lethal effects were avoided. Evidence is also presented of the misuse of these technologies and the breach of deployment guidelines which can make their effects either severely damaging or lethal. Member States currently have inadequate export controls to prevent the transfer, brokerage or licensed production of crowd control weapons to human rights violators, including weapons such as electroshock devices which have been directly implicated in torture. The report warns against adopting ever more powerful crowd control weapons as ‘technical fixes’. It suggests their use should be limited and provides a number of options to make the adoption and use of these weapons more democratically accountable. These include licensing and independent evaluation of the biomedical impacts of such weapons via a formal process
of ‘Social Impact Assessment’; legal limits on weapons which are exceptionally hazardous or lethal; legally binding rules of engagement; better post incident inquiry procedures and more effective, accountable and transparent export controls.

DOWNLOAD ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

EU-CrowdControl

STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE SI-SO – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – SI-SO

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

010451403013;03;18;00;;SICHAU, GUENTHER:;;;22492,50
131257408321;06;06;00;;SICHMA, HORST:;;;19722,50
180668414516;18;33;00;;SICHTING, CARSTEN:;;;9600,00
180451415374;98;82;00;;SICHTING, WOLFRAM:;;;23100,00
051046509528;99;51;00;;SICKEL, MARGARETE:;;;26274,19
260750428239;14;96;00;;SICKERT, FRANK:;;;18252,50
250738429715;97;06;00;;SICKERT, JOACHIM:;;;27750,00
240560424714;13;06;00;;SICKERT, PETER:;;;20785,00
191260408925;30;59;00;;SICKERT, REINER:;;;12197,70
290546406419;99;51;00;;SICKERT, SIEGMAR:;;;25250,00
220949526315;14;96;00;;SICKERT, SILVIA:;;;19105,00
300767406208;17;00;00;;SICKERT, THOMAS:;;;9600,00
030270425449;13;69;00;;SICKRODT, THOMAS:;;;9600,00
050361406161;04;06;00;;SIDOW, BERND:;;;15582,74
150163403814;99;43;00;;SIEB, ANDREAS:;;;17820,00
140853413914;99;51;00;;SIEBECK, BERND:;;;23520,00
010358430033;98;84;00;;SIEBECK, HEINZ-RUEDIGER:;;;18285,00
281167430131;18;77;00;;SIEBECK, THOMAS:;;;10425,00
020247415374;08;65;00;;SIEBECKE, LOTHAR:;;;21000,00
300848528266;14;80;00;;SIEBEL, BARBARA:;;;18720,00
070242428235;14;20;00;;SIEBEL, JOACHIM:;;;29250,00
190638420324;11;00;40;;SIEBELIST, MANFRED:;;;38250,00
191250420330;30;37;00;;SIEBELIST, ROLAND:;;;20160,00
180853428135;97;01;00;;SIEBENAEUGER, ANDRE:;;;29670,00
160342413128;08;19;00;;SIEBENBUERGER, KLAUS:;;;21381,25
250970421558;99;43;00;;SIEBENEICHER, OLAF:;;;2870,00
150350429278;14;22;00;;SIEBENHAAR, CHRISTOPH:;;;23250,00
290369400867;18;35;00;;SIEBENHAAR, JOERG:;;;9825,00
071153429249;14;00;55;;SIEBENHAAR, WOLF-DIETER:;;;23696,12
100763413949;08;00;51;;SIEBENHU(E)HNER, FRANK:;;;19030,00
260332429714;98;80;50;;SIEBENHUEHNER, BRUNO:;;;28500,00
150564430020;95;45;00;;SIEBENHUEHNER, UWE:;;;17490,00
230929406710;95;60;00;;SIEBENHUENER, HEINZ:;;;44250,00
230854413616;08;51;00;;SIEBENHUENER, KLAUS-DIETER:;;;22320,00
280955529867;97;29;00;;SIEBENHUENER, PETRA-MARINA:;;;16598,76
110556406737;97;08;00;;SIEBENHUENER, ULRICH:;;;21700,00
210746421522;12;06;00;;SIEBENLIST, DIETER:;;;23250,00
050162408412;12;51;00;;SIEBENSCHUH, ROLAND:;;;16995,00
190256516048;04;80;00;;SIEBER, ANGELA:;;;20700,00
161166530222;99;77;00;;SIEBER, CLAUDIA:;;;1728,00
110863510710;30;61;00;;SIEBER, DANIELA:;;;14300,45
200335407428;97;01;00;;SIEBER, GEORG:;;;33562,50
180458414219;10;06;00;;SIEBER, MANFRED:;;;19262,50
150371427036;98;82;00;;SIEBER, MICHAEL:;;;3020,00
170965419349;99;02;00;;SIEBER, OLAF:;;;16114,50
030250421520;12;00;50;;SIEBER, RAINER:;;;27007,50
050156416010;94;03;00;;SIEBER, RALF:;;;22942,50
020558412250;30;61;00;;SIEBER, REYMUND:;;;15870,00
251068407318;05;69;00;;SIEBER, STEFAN:;;;10875,00
290561413932;08;69;00;;SIEBER, VOLKER:;;;19965,00
111067415450;08;08;00;;SIEBERG, STEFFEN:;;;11370,00
050764527910;96;15;22;;SIEBERT, BETTINA:;;;11476,02
051257508226;99;43;00;;SIEBERT, BIRGIT:;;;15465,21
300850527916;14;80;00;;SIEBERT, CHRISTINE:;;;16470,00
080559404118;99;51;00;;SIEBERT, DETLEF:;;;19375,00
111069428300;18;80;00;;SIEBERT, DIRK:;;;2945,00
161149406123;01;06;23;;SIEBERT, ENDRIK:;;;22937,50
030968420113;18;35;00;;SIEBERT, FRANK:;;;9825,00
010869422895;18;29;30;;SIEBERT, FRANK:;;;8350,00
270755405211;01;30;00;;SIEBERT, FRANK:;;;18745,00
070434407252;94;03;00;;SIEBERT, GEORG:;;;37500,00
151267413632;99;49;00;;SIEBERT, HEIKO:;;;14400,00
081238420912;12;80;00;;SIEBERT, HEINZ:;;;17460,00
050436505229;04;14;00;;SIEBERT, IRMGARD:;;;16905,00
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171069428321;18;35;00;;SLAWINSKI, MARIO:;;;6805,00
270451529258;04;40;00;;SLAWISCH, INGRID:;;;21990,00
240266406128;04;03;00;;SLIWA, JENS-UWE:;;;15120,00
190330506156;04;80;00;;SLIWINSKI, GISELA:;;;18532,50
130948524810;97;01;00;;SLODOWSKI, HANNELORE:;;;19205,00
271059508537;06;00;40;;SLOMA, MANUELA:;;;18193,83
011062430194;99;51;00;;SLOMKE, TORSTEN:;;;20405,00
311068424822;18;38;00;;SLOTTA, AXEL:;;;10800,00
230758412242;07;08;00;;SLOTTA, HARALD:;;;18112,50
130941407515;05;26;00;;SLOTTKI, JOACHIM:;;;26250,00
100769407523;18;31;00;;SLOTTKI, UWE:;;;6705,00
021168408023;97;22;00;;SLOWIK, DIRK:;;;10005,00
260163418618;10;08;00;;SLOWINSKI, BODO:;;;17325,00
060149418615;10;20;00;;SLOWINSKI, EDGAR:;;;25920,00
110649425005;30;31;00;;SLUPIANEK, JOERG:;;;22387,50
280357505013;04;26;00;;SLUSARZICK, MARION:;;;17740,67
020755405017;04;08;00;;SLUSARZICK, NORBERT:;;;17792,50
271047407528;05;14;00;;SMALLA, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;21062,50
261260416248;09;96;00;;SMARCZEWSKI, JU(E)RGEN:;;;19415,00
170169412218;18;35;00;;SMEKTALLA, THOMAS:;;;9600,00
121160419025;10;20;00;;SMEKTALLA, UDO:;;;19089,00
251160430297;97;08;00;;SMETANA, BERT:;;;17655,00
031165412237;15;69;00;;SMETANA, JOERG:;;;16384,50
180239412280;15;18;00;417/79, :;SMETANA, RU(E)DIGER;1136;RHINSTR. 7;
180239412280;15;18;00;417/79, :;SMETANA, RU(E)DIGER;1136;RHINSTR. 7;
090531410128;97;01;00;;SMETTANA, GERHARD:;;;28500,00
211269421232;18;34;00;;SMIE, REINHARD:;;;9510,00
160464400835;96;15;00;2833/87, M:;SMIEJCZAK, JAN-PETER;1156;FRANZ-JACOB-STR. 20;
160464400835;96;15;00;2833/87, M:;SMIEJCZAK, JAN-PETER;1156;FRANZ-JACOB-STR. 20;
220357508543;13;00;40;;SMIGAJ, PETRA:;;;17945,96
220539425044;13;00;40;;SMIGAJ, RAINER:;;;30250,00
031260408527;97;01;00;;SMILOWSKY, JENS-UWE:;;;23037,50
181038430057;18;71;20;;SMIRAT, OTTO:;;;22125,00
151068424216;98;83;00;;SMIREK, JOERG:;;;13210,00
080462403813;94;03;00;;SMOLAREK, MARIO:;;;19140,00
140768403826;18;34;00;;SMOLAREK, MIKE:;;;9195,00
200662530095;96;15;22;;SMOLAREK, SYLVIA:;;;6458,07
210553427717;90;65;40;4070/79,;SMOLINSKI, HANS-JOACHIM;9300;OBERE RO(E)HRGASSE;
210553427717;90;65;40;4070/79,;SMOLINSKI, HANS-JOACHIM;9300;OBERE RO(E)HRGASSE;
030451413420;98;82;00;;SMOLKA, HARTMUT:;;;20370,00
030462506147;04;06;00;;SMOLKA, PETRA:;;;16464,51
200147402734;02;51;00;;SMOLNI, GERHARD:;;;24187,50
271158506166;04;51;00;;SMUDA-TRZEBIATOWSKI, MANUELA:;;;16943,83
280855410826;04;02;00;;SMUDA-TRZEBIATOWSKI, RAINER:;;;19895,00
050153422212;97;17;00;;SMULA, WOLFRAM:;;;21600,00
280649518211;10;06;00;;SNOBECK, GUDRUN:;;;13650,00
241244400862;01;08;00;;SNOPKOWSKI, UWE:;;;27661,30
131253404868;04;00;45;;SNOPPEK, BERND:;;;26547,50

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

Death of Heinrich Himmler 1945

Escape from Sobibor

Escape from Sobibor (1987) (TV Movie)

The uncut version

143min

Occupy Wall Street NYC Photos

Liberty Park is encircled with tied-together barricades, with only two points of entry to the park, one each along Liberty and Cedar Streets.[Image]
Green-vested “guards” are numerous. These outnumber the few police outside the park.
Some of the guards appear to be undercover cops, perhaps all of them.[Image]
The guard-cop at left ordered a visitor to remove coffee and food from a bench.[Image]
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Books coming in to replace those trashed by Bloomberg.
No ban on books so in large numbers they may be used as materials to fabricate shelter.[Image]
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[Image]These gents appear leery of being photographed, and rightly so, due to persistent infiltration and photography by cops. Or could be undercover cops.[Image]
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Giant sculptures are now barricaded.[Image]
Barricades along Wall Street at the New York Stock Exchange have been reduced.[Image]
Horses have replaced heavily armed cops for tourist appeal, long pretending to protect the stock exchange.[Image]
The original Wall Street occupiers at Wall Street and Broadway protesting the folly over 200 years later.[Image]

	

TOP-SECRET-(U//FOUO) Asymmetric Warfare Group Tactical Information Superiority Report

https://i0.wp.com/publicintelligence.net/wp-content/uploads/2011/11/USArmy-InfoSuperiority.png

This document facilitates discussion, training, and implementation of effective information superiority methods at the Battalion and Brigade level. This paper discusses the Center of Gravity analysis model for identifying threat networks, Critical Capabilities, and Critical Vulnerabilities; use of the methodology to determine the threat vulnerabilities; and as a basis for understanding how to achieve Information Superiority.

The battalion commander instantly knew from looking at the map, with all of the red significant activities plotted on the overlay, that renewed operations in the valley would be rough. Almost every route into and out of the area had seen recent Improvised Explosive Device (IED) activity. Worse, it seemed that many of the villages in the valley were supportive of insurgent activity. The insurgents had recently stepped up their propaganda campaign in the area, as well, intimidating villagers, kidnapping elders, assassinating key figures, leaving behind strong warnings against cooperating with Coalition Forces, while also reinforcing their own message: the insurgents would prevail over the foreign forces because they were from the region, the insurgents would take care of the people that supported their activities, and they would continue to be in the area long after the Coalition Forces left.

The commander planned a deliberate clearing operation to regain control of the major routes in the area, deny insurgents traditional safe havens, and bolster Host Nation Security Forces and Government officials, but he also knew t hat if he entered the valley using too much force that he might further alienate the locals. The commander could not stay in the valley, holding the terrain against insurgent reinfiltration indefinitely-he would be forced to withdraw and plan for other operations, hoping the locals and Host Nation Security Forces would be willing and able to defend the area against the enemy.

How could the commander expect the villagers to aid his unit in denying the area as a support base for insurgents when there was no apparent common ground? How was he, as a Commander, supposed to communicate his intent to the local people, Host Nation officials, and to other key individuals? His battalion’s task organization included three Infantry Companies, an Anti-Tank Company, a Mortar Platoon, and a Scout Sniper Platoon. Additionally, the commander’s capabilities were augmented by a Tactical Military Information Support Team, a Military Source Operations (MSO) qualified Counterintelligence (CI) Team, and an Explosive Ordnance Detachment (EOD) Team. The commander also had new devices (including the Radio-In-The-Box or RIAB); some of these newly issued devices were pieces of equipment his leaders and Soldiers had never seen or used before deploying into theater.

The commander had enough combat forces to clear, and temporarily hold the valley, but what then? The commander knew he would achieve immediate but limited security in the area and also reach his higher headquarter’s directed end state. But how could he achieve longer term effects so that he would not have to repeat the mission again in just four months?

Lethal options in a Counter Insurgency (COIN) environment are only a portion of the necessary operations that must be successfully conducted at the tactical level. Non-Lethal options provide a balance to more kinetic operations, providing choices that can impact the threat and the population in longer term ways. Information Superiority, at the tactical level, is an essential requirement for successfully defeating insurgents in the COIN fight.

Shoah (Full Film)

Бабий Яр.Babi Yar

Германия, Беларусь, 2003. Режиссер Джефф Канев.
За два дня 29-30 сентября 1941 расстреляли в этом овраге 33 771 чел.
Les Juifs de Kiev se rassemblèrent au lieu ordonné, s’attendant à être embarqués dans des trains. La foule était suffisamment dense pour que la majorité ignorât ce qui se passait en réalité. Lorsqu’ils entendirent les mitrailleuses, il était trop tard pour prendre la fuite. Ils furent conduits par groupes de dix à travers un corridor formé de soldats, forcés à se dévêtir sous les coups de crosse, puis exécutés au bord de la gorge de Babi Yar. Le massacre dura deux jours. Selon les rapports allemands, 33 771 Juifs ont été exécutés durant l’opération.
“Victims were then ordered to undress, beaten if they resisted, and then shot at the edge of the Babi Yar gorge. According to the Einsatzgruppen Operational Situation Report[11], 33,771 Jews from Kiev and its suburbs were systematically shot dead by machine-gun fire at Babi Yar on September 29 and September 30, 1941.

In the evening, the Germans undermined the wall of the ravine and buried the people under the thick layers of earth.”

Бабий Яр.Babi Yar.A film of Jeff Kanew.2003

Mass Murder of Jews in Liepaja, Latvia, 1941.

Mass execution in Soviet Russia

ПУБЛИЧНЫЕ КАЗНИ В СССР
real face of Communism

TOP-SECRET-Fukushima Daiichi NPS Restoration Status

DOWNLOAD THE ORGINAL DOCUMENTS HERE

daiichi-111711-00

daiichi-111711-01

daiichi-111711-02

daiichi-111711-03

daiichi-111711-04

daiichi-111711-05

FBI-Man Sentenced to Prison and Ordered to Pay Over $30 Million in Restitution for Multiple Concert Promotion Ponzi Schemes

PHOENIX—Miko Dion Wady, 36, of Phoenix, Arizona, was sentenced late Monday by U.S. District Judge James A. Teilborg to nine years’ imprisonment and ordered to pay over $30 million in restitution and perform 250 hours of community service. Wady previously pleaded guilty to five counts of wire fraud and five counts of transactional money laundering.

At sentencing Judge Teilborg also ordered that Wady forfeit numerous seized items, and the proceeds from the sale of additional seized items, including a 41 foot Rinker Express Cruiser boat, a Ferrari, over $100,000 held in cash and accounts, jewelry, firearms and recreational equipment including a Weekend Warrior 5th wheel trailer.

“This individual sought to profit by creating a sophisticated money laundering scheme designed to scam investors out of their money,” said Acting U.S. Attorney Ann Birmingham Scheel. “The court’s stiff sentence reflects the seriousness of his crime and this office’s resolve to prosecute individuals who profit from unsuspecting investors.”

In the course of his guilty plea, Wady admitted that he operated and had an ownership interest in various business enterprises that purportedly were engaged in the business of promoting concerts or tours of well known entertainers and artists. The enterprises included Dezert Heat Entertainment, Inc.; Dezert Heat, Inc.; Dezert Heat Worldwide, LLC; NATO Enterprises, LLC; and NATO Entertainment, LLC.

Wady admitted that he and others misled victim investors into believing that Wady entered into performance contracts and other business arrangements with nationally and internationally known entertainers, arranged performance venues throughout the world, and greatly profited by putting on these concert or tour events. Wady, with the assistance of others, falsely claimed during the period 2004 through 2007 to have promoted concerts for at least forty artists and entertainers, including many who were nationally and internationally known.

Through various entities and associates, Wady obtained victim investor funds to finance purported concerts and tours supposedly being promoted by Wady. From at least August 2004 through March 2007, Wady and associates entered into loan and event funding agreements, totaling approximately fifty million dollars, with approximately 250 victim investors. The “investments” were purportedly to finance approximately 150 concerts or concert tours “promoted” by Wady. At the time of Wady’s sentencing, approximately 240 investors and groups of investors were known to have sustained losses totaling $30,040,197.

The “investment” loan agreements victim investors entered into regularly specified that each “investment” loan was for the financing of a particular concert or tour of a designated performer. The “investment” loan terms regularly called for repayment to the victim investors within 30 days after receipt of the net concert proceeds for the designated concert or tour. Victim investors were typically promised interest rates of 4 percent per month for the first two months, and 2.5 percent per month thereafter until the investment loans were repaid.

Upon receipt of victim investor funds by associates of Wady, the associates transferred the funds to Wady for the purported financing of concert or tour events. Because Wady had no association or contractual arrangement with any of the concerts or tours, the investor funds given to Wady by his associates were never actually used as represented to the victim investors. Most of the funds were instead returned by Wady to his associates within a short period of time, typically one or two days, under the guise that these repayments represented the net proceeds from some other concert or tour that was recently completed. In essence, because no actual investments were used for the represented concerts or tours, new victim investor monies were simply used to repay old victim investors. From beginning to end, this was primarily a Ponzi scheme. The Ponzi scheme collapsed in March 2007.

From January 2004 through March 2007, Wady used no less than three million dollars of victim investor funds to pay for his lavish lifestyle. During this period, Wady purchased for himself and others, at least 30 vehicles, including a Lamborghini, Ferrari, and Bentley. Wady also purchased a $175,000 luxury boat and $800,000.00 in real estate. All of these purchases were paid from funds Wady obtained from victim investors.

The investigation in this case was conducted by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the U.S Postal Inspection Service and the Internal Revenue Service – Office of Criminal Investigation with assistance from the Maricopa County Sheriff’s Office and the Mesa Police Department. The prosecution is being handled by Frederick A. Battista and Peter Sexton, Assistant U.S. Attorneys, District of Arizona, Phoenix.

CASE NUMBER: CR 09-1485-PHX-JAT

RELEASE NUMBER: 2011-255(Wady)

LIVE-TV – Watch Wall Street Shut Down. Live:

Watch Wall Street Shut Down. Live:

http://occupywallst.org/


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STASI-NAMEN ALPHABETISCH BUCHSTABE SCHWE-SI – STASI-NAMES IN ALPHABETICAL ORDER – SCHWE-SI

Die Liste wurde bereits früher hier publiziert:

http://stasiopfer.de/component/option,com_simpleboard/Itemid,/func,view/id,993815828/catid,4/

Vom “Stasiopfer”-Angebot führt ein Link zu einer Website in den USA (www.jya.com), die sich auch mit den Praktiken von Geheimdiensten beschäftigt. Dort findet sich die “Fipro-Liste”, das detaillierte “Finanzprojekt” der Stasi, angefertigt in den letzten Tagen der DDR, um die Rentenansprüche der rund 100 000 hauptamtlichen Mitarbeiter des MfS auch nach dem Zusammenbruch des Systems belegen zu können. Die “Fipro-Liste” ist seit langem bekannt und diente Anfang der neunziger Jahre etwa zur Identifizierung der so genannten OibE – Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz. Diese  Liste „Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz“im Jahre 1991 erschien  in der “taz. Die Echtheit kann beim BStU überprüft werden.

Siehe u.a. http://www.spiegel.de/spiegel/print/d-22539439.html

Auf Druck ehemaliger STASI-Leute und Ihrer Genossen wurde die Liste aus dem Verkehr gezogen.

Hier ist sie wieder:

100269402312;18;32;00;;SCHWEBKE, FRANK:;;;10800,00
040561420516;94;03;00;;SCHWEDA, HARRY:;;;16830,00
081065419031;10;08;00;;SCHWEDA, JENS:;;;11970,00
010257415360;05;18;00;;SCHWEDE, MICHAEL:;;;22440,00
190759522212;98;83;00;;SCHWEDLER, INA:;;;15837,10
300650507611;30;42;00;;SCHWEDLER, MARIANNE:;;;12600,00
210363422253;99;51;00;;SCHWEDLER, RENE:;;;19305,00
220456422235;99;40;00;;SCHWEDLER, TORSTEN:;;;23042,50
020437429726;96;15;10;;SCHWEDT, GUENTER:;;;21750,00
071050415370;94;03;00;;SCHWEERS, HARTMUT:;;;25500,00
050454410813;99;51;00;;SCHWEFLER, HORST:;;;24180,00
280668411129;94;64;00;;SCHWEIGEL, FRED-MARIO:;;;13650,00
090844411113;07;06;00;;SCHWEIGEL, MANFRED:;;;23250,00
151028406144;04;53;00;;SCHWEIGER, ARTHUR:;;;33750,00
101246419052;99;43;00;;SCHWEIGER, HANS:;;;23250,00
190863407011;04;06;00;;SCHWEIGER, LUTZ:;;;17930,00
210458414715;97;22;00;;SCHWEIGERT, MICHAEL:;;;20700,00
280361403319;30;31;00;;SCHWEIGHOEFER, JOERG:;;;18975,00
111042406160;96;15;18;;SCHWEINGRUBER, HARTMUT:;;;30750,00
250266406178;15;00;44;;SCHWEINGRUBER, ULF:;;;16686,00
230266403817;97;22;00;;SCHWEINITZER, JOERG:;;;16114,50
221242403818;03;15;00;;SCHWEINITZER, WILFRIED:;;;36000,00
080637406144;17;00;00;;SCHWEINOCH, HUBERTUS:;;;33000,00
190849523817;98;83;00;;SCHWEITZER, DOERTE:;;;21420,00
180867406746;98;84;00;;SCHWEITZER, HARDO:;;;15704,07
050552429737;98;83;00;;SCHWEITZER, THOMAS:;;;26640,00
060369417534;18;35;00;;SCHWEITZER, UWE:;;;10750,00
040665407017;05;09;00;;SCHWEITZER, WOLFGANG:;;;16830,00
081267416816;18;33;00;;SCHWEIZER, CLAAS:;;;10800,00
161146513038;94;64;00;;SCHWEIZER, HILDEGARD:;;;31606,86
180946429778;95;45;00;;SCHWEIZER, JOACHIM:;;;22500,00
250260430150;96;15;14;;SCHWEIZER, JOERG:;;;27600,00
120351409511;94;03;00;;SCHWEMBER, HANS-JOACHIM:;;;23392,50
260550402229;02;08;00;;SCHWEMM, BERTOLD:;;;19500,00
031128521821;12;00;52;;SCHWEMMER, RUTH:;;;18562,50
070231429718;97;07;00;;SCHWENGEL, GUENTER:;;;33000,00
300534415322;08;53;00;;SCHWENGNER, JUERGEN:;;;33750,00
211052428281;14;08;00;;SCHWENINGER, UWE:;;;24480,00
050443402746;02;55;00;;SCHWENK, DIETER:;;;18375,00
121243502713;02;20;00;;SCHWENK, MARGRIT:;;;18874,17
241050415353;08;55;00;;SCHWENK, VOLKER:;;;19256,93
030255402740;96;15;00;650/75/48, :;SCHWENK, WILFRIED;2620;VIERBURGWEG SA;
041249411222;07;00;52;;SCHWENKE, BERND:;;;27835,00
190652406131;97;06;00;;SCHWENKE, BERNHARD:;;;19780,00
191067403110;18;33;00;;SCHWENKE, HEIKO:;;;10575,00
080953511210;07;00;52;;SCHWENKE, JENNY:;;;17453,50
020441429745;97;08;00;;SCHWENKE, KARL-HEINZ:;;;24000,00
010165421026;99;43;00;;SCHWENKE, MATHIAS:;;;15510,00
231263421010;12;06;00;;SCHWENKE, TINO:;;;16527,50
180158507210;98;82;00;;SCHWENKE, UTE:;;;13786,27
090550403038;03;00;50;;SCHWENKE, UWE:;;;24660,00
301261400129;30;59;00;;SCHWENN, ULF:;;;14520,00
110642409520;99;26;00;;SCHWENSOW, JOACHIM:;;;24125,00
231046509550;94;30;00;;SCHWENSOW, MONIKA:;;;19262,50
020767409541;99;53;00;;SCHWENSOW, TORSTEN:;;;14200,00
020963430268;15;22;00;;SCHWENTECK, MIRKO:;;;18452,50
110640402114;97;01;00;;SCHWENTKOWSKI, HEINZ:;;;28500,00
250967423632;18;80;00;;SCHWENZER, TORSTEN:;;;14418,00
070439430064;94;03;00;;SCHWENZER, WILFRIED:;;;23250,00
030435407258;98;82;00;;SCHWENZFEIER, PAUL:;;;20625,00
061166421861;18;29;30;;SCHWENZON, HOLGER:;;;10015,00
070269416234;09;69;00;;SCHWERD, THOMAS:;;;2911,13
150557404852;18;71;10;;SCHWERDTFEGER, BERND:;;;21390,00
100263406144;04;06;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, DIRK:;;;19085,00
180430422778;98;80;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, ERICH:;;;35358,26
070336406168;17;00;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, HEINZ:;;;21750,00
221230430018;97;06;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, HORST:;;;37500,00
150748506181;04;06;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, ILSE:;;;19800,00
140432506936;98;83;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, INGRID:;;;21037,50
030460530207;04;00;48;;SCHWERDTFEGER, KERSTIN:;;;15291,16
141042406125;04;01;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, PETER:;;;28125,00
130666400860;01;08;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, RALF:;;;13621,50
020669422048;99;43;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, SVEN:;;;6780,00
181058405211;04;08;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, UWE:;;;18630,00
070729406919;99;43;00;;SCHWERDTFEGER, WILLI:;;;21750,00
020544416824;18;25;00;;SCHWERDTNER, DIETER:;;;25750,00
270441408057;30;41;00;;SCHWERDTNER, JUERGEN:;;;21715,00
150358421836;99;02;00;;SCHWERDTNER, REINHARD:;;;23632,50
071256408424;30;55;00;;SCHWERDTNER, REINHARD:;;;15180,00
190564400629;98;83;00;;SCHWERIN, FRANK:;;;17875,00
200969407032;05;69;00;;SCHWERIN, MARIO:;;;9510,00
010270403129;97;22;00;;SCHWERIN, MARTIN:;;;10005,00
131135530265;98;82;00;;SCHWERIN, RENATE:;;;18375,00
191252500844;01;78;00;;SCHWERIN, RENATE:;;;21700,00
260571411538;18;34;00;;SCHWERIN, RICARDO:;;;2795,00
071236429738;98;82;00;;SCHWERIN, ULLRICH:;;;20250,00
071068514721;13;00;52;;SCHWERINSKY, KATHRIN:;;;9325,00
140467424711;13;00;52;;SCHWERINSKY, THOMAS:;;;14094,00
130949416248;30;80;00;;SCHWERT, RONALD:;;;21780,00
181256517820;97;06;00;;SCHWERTFEGER, ANITA:;;;16943,14
071055413219;99;14;00;;SCHWERTFEGER, GERD:;;;22087,50
221162415480;95;45;00;;SCHWERTFEGER, HANNES:;;;18755,00
260353422837;12;06;00;;SCHWERTFEGER, MARTIN:;;;20010,00
300759413248;08;00;65;;SCHWERTFEGER, UWE:;;;20872,50
130252413012;97;17;00;;SCHWERTNER, CLAUS:;;;25920,00
230651510416;07;96;00;;SCHWERTNER, DORIS:;;;18101,25
200351411910;07;96;00;;SCHWERTNER, FRIEDRICH-HEINZ:;;;18000,00
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150750424011;30;32;00;;SCHWERTNER, KLAUS:;;;15120,00
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110456406748;18;71;10;;SCHWESIG, UWE:;;;28635,00
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070942405632;97;01;00;;SCHWIEGER, UWE:;;;27000,00
040757430177;98;18;00;;SCHWIEGERSHAUSEN, JAN:;;;26622,50
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281268402412;97;01;00;;SCHWIETZER, HENRY:;;;3674,19
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300939429714;97;06;00;;SCHWIND, ROLAND:;;;33000,00
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140443421014;99;09;00;;SCHWIPS, DIETER:;;;28500,00
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031270403113;18;31;00;;SCHWIRPLIES, JAN:;;;2795,00
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070253424934;12;07;00;;SCHYMA, MANFRED:;;;24480,00
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080655413049;97;01;00;;SCHYMANSKI, JUERGEN:;;;30221,08
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290466516212;99;53;00;;SEDDIG, CLAUDIA:;;;8509,87
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220351530117;96;15;00;109/78, J:;SEEGER, REGINA;1140;BRUNO-LEUSCHNER-STR. 27;
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170169403725;10;08;00;;SEEGER, SVEN:;;;2050,00
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281232430171;96;15;00;3502/61, T:;SEEL, WERNER;1142;GLAMBECKER RING 19;
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110444417749;96;15;00;1472/87, F:;SEELIG, WERNER;1140;BLENHEIMSTR. 60;
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210766400841;01;07;00;;SEEMANN, MICHAEL:;;;9872,00
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280361419011;09;08;00;;SEMMLER, RALF:;;;10982,50
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270169413745;08;69;00;;SEMMLER, THOMAS:;;;9600,00
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050761403613;18;40;00;;SEMPERT, UWE:;;;21780,00
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181168414418;18;31;00;;SEMSCH, FRANK:;;;9600,00
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010468421218;94;03;00;;SENDE, JOERG:;;;13050,00
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100947430145;90;65;40;3723/80,;SENDSITZKY, PETER;1092;MANETSTR. 49;
100947430145;90;65;40;3723/80,;SENDSITZKY, PETER;1092;MANETSTR. 49;
240852416425;03;18;00;;SENEBALD, ACHIM:;;;28920,00
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160169425124;18;31;00;;SENF, GUNTER:;;;9600,00
180145418323;97;06;00;;SENF, HANS-BURKHARD:;;;24000,00
250549506128;97;01;00;;SENF, HEIDEROSE:;;;14050,00
141136528019;14;00;59;;SENF, INGRID:;;;15697,50
080370419615;98;82;00;;SENF, JOERG:;;;10376,13
250852429823;97;01;00;;SENF, LUTZ:;;;20820,00
151065422848;12;02;00;;SENF, MAIK:;;;16699,50
210558422800;12;26;00;;SENF, MATTHIAS:;;;19262,50
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170171419048;18;35;00;;SENF, STEFAN:;;;2795,00
031063428035;14;51;00;;SENF, STEFFEN:;;;17985,00
040368400820;01;55;00;;SENF, THOMAS:;;;9440,00
270263413717;99;43;00;;SENFT, HEIKO:;;;18425,00
140864420925;30;59;00;;SENFT, PETER:;;;9050,00
261047407019;05;53;00;;SENFTLEBEN, AXEL:;;;24000,00
120164404344;17;00;00;;SENFTLEBEN, DIRK:;;;14425,00
010663408537;07;06;00;;SENFTLEBEN, ENRICO:;;;16832,32
050534430160;30;61;00;;SENFTLEBEN, HELMUT:;;;18360,00
100238429723;15;29;00;;SENFTLEBEN, HORST:;;;27687,50
230368416010;18;32;00;;SENFTLEBEN, TORSTEN:;;;9700,00
030754509315;06;53;00;;SENGEBUSCH, HANNELORE:;;;16309,89
260554501320;04;00;42;;SENGEBUSCH, INGRID:;;;21000,00
140352405238;04;00;48;;SENGER, DIETMAR:;;;28380,00
010970403218;18;29;30;;SENGER, INGO:;;;3070,16
140329406152;30;56;00;;SENGER, KURT:;;;15120,00
220963403223;01;00;47;;SENGER, RALF:;;;20281,69
040540422037;12;18;00;;SENGEWITZ, GUENTER:;;;27000,00
110464506132;96;15;27;;SENGEWITZ, KATRIN:;;;12551,35
021261422014;97;08;00;;SENGEWITZ, UDO:;;;19140,00
030963420317;11;80;00;;SENGLAUB, ANDRE:;;;15510,00
160841429714;97;06;00;;SENGLAUB, RAINER:;;;22000,00
070755404415;97;08;00;;SENGPIEL, GUENTER:;;;6600,00
261060412234;07;26;00;;SENGSTOCK, FRANK:;;;17710,00
131170417145;09;69;00;;SENITZ, ENRICO:;;;2911,13
111039414215;08;00;54;;SENITZ, KARLFRIED:;;;23250,00
100370410122;18;80;00;;SENITZ, KLAUS:;;;9510,00
050457426618;14;00;45;;SENK, DIETER:;;;14094,00
301254509513;14;78;00;;SENK, PETRA:;;;16152,56
091252426658;14;80;00;;SENK, WERNER:;;;21780,00
280271413636;18;35;00;;SENKE, ANDREAS:;;;2795,00
250648412223;07;00;40;;SENKEL, LUTZ:;;;24007,50
190627430017;96;15;11;;SENKEL, SIEGFRIED:;;;27000,00
010869412240;07;69;00;;SENKEL, THOMAS:;;;8137,26
041236402714;02;02;00;;SENKEL, WERNER:;;;29250,00
050553406748;05;06;00;;SENKPIEL, RALF:;;;19740,00
090354400139;01;00;40;;SENKPIEL, WOLFGANG:;;;26820,00
160170402923;02;06;00;;SENNECKE, HEIKO:;;;12530,00
190254402610;02;06;00;;SENNEKE, HANS-JUERGEN:;;;21060,00
150370402726;02;69;00;;SENNEKE, JOERG:;;;12900,00
260834402714;02;60;00;;SENNEKE, LOTHAR:;;;17114,58
050861402730;02;06;00;;SENNEKE, RALF:;;;18920,00
130344402740;02;80;00;;SENNEKE, WILFRIED:;;;18750,00
310570424970;05;69;00;;SENNEWALD, RALPH:;;;9510,00
030145505220;04;06;00;;SENS, ANGELIKA:;;;19991,62
050152516233;09;06;00;;SENS, ANGELIKA:;;;18000,00
010341405229;04;80;00;;SENS, GUENTER:;;;23250,00
031264404849;04;06;00;;SENS, INGO:;;;17710,00
130464415124;95;45;00;;SENS, PETER:;;;17737,50
210145411417;07;00;43;;SENS, WOLFGANG:;;;22770,00
301061430075;15;00;41;;SENSEL, HOLGER:;;;21725,00
300831530167;98;82;00;;SENST, IRENE:;;;17280,00
140855414419;04;06;00;;SENST, JUERGEN:;;;18917,50
160944529718;99;77;00;;SENST, JUTTA:;;;21000,00
190456404745;04;00;47;;SENST, RALF:;;;19866,25
140854506207;04;08;00;;SENST, ROSEMARIE:;;;20236,00
060730430028;98;84;00;;SENST, WERNER:;;;22687,50
011036429712;99;43;00;;SENST, WERNER:;;;24543,75
020543404717;30;44;00;;SENST, WERNER:;;;23377,50
171165407627;03;69;00;;SEPPELT, HEIKO:;;;16929,00
141064407639;99;43;00;;SEPPELT, ROLF-MARIO:;;;11157,66
200463408011;06;02;00;;SERAFIN, WALDEMAR:;;;20350,00
090662419819;11;00;42;;SERAPHIN, OLAF:;;;15950,00
210667412230;18;35;00;;SERBSER, CHRISTOPH:;;;10757,90
250563426917;99;43;00;;SERCHEN, INGO:;;;17215,00
080559418720;10;00;49;;SERFLING, RONALD:;;;15565,00
040428409545;30;41;00;;SERGEL, WERNER:;;;15750,00
120270400873;01;00;48;;SEROWIETZKI, INGO:;;;12175,00
040561419910;11;00;44;;SESSELMANN, FALK:;;;20460,00
290968419922;18;33;00;;SESSELMANN, FALK:;;;9060,00
090269428313;14;69;00;;SESSER, FRANK:;;;12575,00
051054420339;11;65;00;;SETTNER, FRANK:;;;18532,50
221260420312;11;60;00;;SETTNER, LUTZ:;;;17247,50
290553520332;11;80;00;;SETTNER, SIEGLINDE:;;;17851,25
070259402744;02;65;00;;SETTNIK, LUTZ:;;;17940,00
311232429730;12;09;00;;SETTNIK, WERNER:;;;38250,00
121243430043;99;51;00;;SETZ, HOLGER:;;;26098,79
160469430224;99;43;00;;SETZ, MATHIAS:;;;9600,00
240966413732;97;08;00;;SETZ, STEFAN:;;;11016,00
121243429739;99;26;00;;SETZ, UWE:;;;37500,00
150142413722;94;30;00;;SETZ, WOLF-DIETER:;;;28462,50
010568412917;97;06;00;;SETZEPFAND, JOERG:;;;14594,00
200570425466;17;00;00;;SETZEPFANDT, ANDREAS:;;;8300,00
201143415364;08;65;00;;SETZEPFANDT, KLAUS:;;;20250,00
221136429715;99;09;00;;SETZEPFANDT, MANFRED:;;;29250,00
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260850400866;01;77;00;;SETZKORN, MICHAEL:;;;33644,84
090165412261;07;19;00;;SEUBERT, UWE:;;;14720,00
050929430181;97;97;11;;SEUFERT, HANS:;;;42000,00
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020437415383;98;83;00;;SEUGLING, ROLF:;;;43312,50
201154524953;13;00;41;;SEUMEL, BIRGIT:;;;16780,64
270752423625;13;12;00;;SEUMEL, ROLAND:;;;18366,06
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081062424417;99;55;00;;SEVERIN, FRANK:;;;18645,00
081053500238;02;12;00;;SEVERIN, INGELORE:;;;17868,08
190155405736;99;43;00;;SEVERIN, JOERG:;;;18577,09
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290746419038;10;53;00;;SEYFARTH, ALBRECHT:;;;25687,50
161150528259;10;78;00;;SEYFARTH, ANGELIKA:;;;21170,00
300460430035;96;15;11;;SEYFARTH, HEIKO:;;;19455,00
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221260417711;96;15;00;4609/80, J:;SEYFARTH, STEPHAN;1040;LINIENSTR. 132;
221260417711;96;15;00;4609/80, J:;SEYFARTH, STEPHAN;1040;LINIENSTR. 132;
050859425079;13;08;00;;SEYFERT, ANDREAS:;;;21729,43
100265415415;11;96;63;;SEYFERT, DIRK:;;;15439,50
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140663428218;98;82;00;;SEYFERTH, HOLGER:;;;17198,50
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120260430016;97;01;00;;SEYFFARTH, BORIS:;;;24840,00
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060864416424;95;45;00;;SEYFFARTH, KARL-ALFRED:;;;17394,66
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180836406911;99;43;00;;SEYFFARTH, ROLF:;;;30750,00
071038506915;99;43;00;;SEYFFARTH, WALTRAUD:;;;20625,00
280130406117;04;40;00;;SEYFFER, EBERHARD:;;;24237,50
010558406134;04;08;00;;SEYFFER, RUEDIGER:;;;16560,00
171157423918;13;14;00;;SEYFFERT, FRANK:;;;21562,50
291070431217;18;31;00;;SEYFFERT, FRANK:;;;6958,87
160759416121;99;55;00;;SEYFFERTH, HARTMUT:;;;22252,50
311047424989;94;03;00;;SEYLER, JOACHIM:;;;25125,00
080739413257;08;40;00;;SEYRING, GERHARD:;;;27375,00
270650429794;97;08;00;;SGRAJA, KLAUS:;;;22320,00
290352406429;04;00;42;;SGRAJA, LUTZ:;;;27025,00

Diese Liste beinhaltet die Namen von 90.598 Mitarbeitern des Ministeriums für Staatssicherheit der DDR. Die Liste ist nicht vollständig. Insbesondere Mitarbeiter der Führungsebene sind nicht enthalten.

This is a list of 90.598 members of the secret police of East Germany (Ministry for State Security), the list isn’t complete, because the most of the high Officiers lieke Colonel and higher have destroyed the personal Informations in the last days of Eastern Germany.

Listen der Stasimitarbeiter-hier findest Du sie! Was bedeuten die Zahlen?
1.Listen der Stasi-Diensteinheiten!
Bem.:hier kannst du die Nr.(6-stellig) der Dienststellen heraussuchen.
2.Liste der Stasi-Mitarbeiter (Hauptamtlich)
Bem.:Hoffentlich hast Du einen guten Rechner, denn die Liste ist erschreckend lang. Die ersten 6 Ziffern sind das Geburtsdatum + die nächsten 6 Ziffern = Dienstausweisnummer! Die zwei Ziffern hinter dem Geburtsdatum geben das Geschlecht an: 41 und 42 = Männlich, 51 und 52 = Weiblich! Wichtig für suchen und finden, sind die sechs Ziffern in den Semikolon vor den Namen: z.B. ;07;00;44; ! Das ist die Nummer der Dienststelle !
Also du suchst in der Liste der Dienststellen, die Nummer der Dienststelle, die Dich interessiert. Damit gehst Du in die Liste der Mitarbeiter und suchst Dir alle Mitarbeiter der entsprechenden Dienststelle heraus. Ich habe das für mein Wohnort getan und so alle Mitarbeiter gefunden. Ob die Liste Vollständig ist kann ich nicht einschätzen, aber zumindest er/kannte ich einige Exverräter vom Namen her.
3.Liste der OibE (Offiziere im besonderen Einsatz)

Confidential-US-ARMY -Asymmetric Warfare Group Sniper Awareness and Counter-Sniper Reference Card

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DOWNLOAD THE ORIGINAL DOCUMENT HERE

USArmy-AntiSniper

The Execution of former Liberian President Samuel K. Doe

On September 9, 1990, The former President Samuel K. Doe on a visit to the Port of Monrovia was captured, tortured, mutilated and finally executed by psychopathic leader of the de-defunct INPFL, Mr. Prince Y. Johnson

SECRET-DoJ-DHS Law Enforcement Guidelines for First Amendment-Protected Events

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As articulated in the United States Constitution, one of the freedoms guaranteed by the First Amendment is the right of persons and groups to assemble peacefully. Whether demonstrating, counterprotesting, or showing support for a cause, individuals and groups have the right to peacefully gather. Law enforcement, in turn, has the responsibility to ensure public safety while protecting the privacy and associated rights of individuals.

To support agencies as they fulfill their public safety responsibilities, the Criminal Intelligence Coordinating Council (CICC) developed this paper to provide guidance and recommendations to law enforcement officers in understanding their role in First Amendment-protected events. This paper is divided into three areas, designed to provide in-depth guidance for law enforcement.

  • Pre-Event Stage—Discusses how law enforcement will plan for an event or demonstration where First Amendment protections are involved, focusing on the activity that begins when law enforcement leadership learns of an event and must determine the level, if any, of involvement at the event, from both public safety and investigative standpoints.
  • Operational Stage—Focuses on how law enforcement will respond to the event, based on the findings from the Pre-Event Stage, including the development and execution of the Operations Plan.
  • Post-Event Stage—Addresses how and whether information obtained as a result of the event (both during the Pre-Event Stage and Operational Stage) will be evaluated, disseminated, retained, or discarded, as per agency policy.

As agencies respond to First Amendment-protected events, law enforcement leadership should be aware of certain “red flag” issues that may arise as they assess whether the agency and personnel should be involved in these events and, if so, what form that involvement should take. As agencies review and understand the concepts and recommendations within this paper, special consideration should be given to these “red flag” issues to ensure that law enforcement agencies and personnel do not infringe on the rights of persons and groups.

The purpose of this paper is to provide greater awareness and understanding of the appropriate role of law enforcement in events and demonstrations where First Amendment rights are involved. This paper provides guidance and recommendations to law enforcement officers as they prepare for, respond to, and follow up with events, activities, and assemblies that are protected by the First Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America.

As officers address these types of events, the three-stage process identified in this paper should be incorporated into agency policies, manuals, and/or directives. This process, while focusing on law enforcement’s response to First Amendment events and activities, is not designed to limit the ability of officers to engage in normal criminal investigations or public safety missions. A law enforcement agency may have special rules and procedures governing the levels of review and approval required to engage in preliminary or full investigations or other activities discussed herein; as such, officers should be aware of and understand these rules and procedures.

Fusion Centers

Fusion centers can play a valuable role in supporting law enforcement’s involvement in First Amendment-protected events. As part of the Pre-Event Stage, fusion centers can support state, local, tribal, and territorial agencies as they undergo a Pre-Event Assessment. This support may include the completion of an applicable assessment and the utilization of publicly available material (such as social media tools and resources) that pertains to potential threats to the event and/or organizations participating in the event, including potential counterdemonstration groups. If the Pre-Event Assessment does not identify any risk or threat, then the fusion center should not distribute the assessment beyond those customers who are serving a public safety role for the event. Fusion centers may also support the Operational Stage by assisting in information-/intelligence-related inquiries officers may have in response to an event.

If a criminal predicate or reasonable suspicion is identified or the findings of the Pre-Event Assessment provide specific, actionable intelligence, fusion centers may support agency leadership and law enforcement officers by identifying the collection requirements3 applicable to the event, based on the mission and role of the fusion center. In those limited circumstances, fusion centers should also be involved in any post-event activities, including the information evaluation, dissemination, and retention efforts. Fusion centers should not be involved in post-event evaluation, dissemination, and retention efforts of events that involve only routine public safety issues, such as conflicts between demonstrators or crowd-control problems.

“Red Flag” Areas

“Red flags” are issues and concerns identified throughout the three-stage process that law enforcement should carefully evaluate before proceeding. As agencies utilize the guidance identified in this paper and respond to First Amendment-protected events, there are certain areas that law enforcement leadership must be aware of as they assess whether and to what degree, if any, officers should be involved in these events. Law enforcement leadership should clearly articulate the reason, purpose, and justification for collecting information when addressing these “red flag” areas in the agency Operations Plan.

1. Pre-Event Red Flags
• Collecting information based solely on participants’ beliefs/groups’ actions.
• Collecting names of organizations, proposed participants, or contact organizers (other than event organizers), including counterdemonstration groups.

2. Operational Red Flags
• Sharing information about the group(s) with other law enforcement agencies or criminal justice entities that do not have an applicable law enforcement mission.
• Taking pictures and videos of the event.
– Collecting names or other identifying information (such as license plates) of participants, people in the area, counterdemonstrators, or bystanders watching the event.

3. Post-Event Red Flags
• Retaining information beyond the purpose for which it was obtained or where no indication of criminal activity was found.
• Sharing information about the group with other justice entities.
• Not responding to reasonable inquiries regarding the role of law enforcement at the event.

It is imperative that law enforcement leadership distinguish between appropriate operational planning for activities where a criminal predicate exists and those activities protected by the U.S. Constitution. Leadership should recognize and consider these issues throughout their planning process and clearly articulate law enforcement’s role (as well as what law enforcement will not be involved in) throughout the planning process. If a legal or justified basis cannot be articulated, further research should be conducted before proceeding.

As with all law enforcement response, officers should adhere to constitutional protections, both federal and state; court decision(s); state statutes; and local ordinances, as well as agency privacy policies and procedures and other relevant resources, to ensure their response is in line with agency policy and procedures.

Prohibited conduct may include:

  • Investigating and collecting, maintaining, using, or sharing information regarding persons or groups solely because they are involved in constitutionally protected activity.
  • Investigating and collecting, maintaining, using, or sharing information regarding persons or groups solely because of the content of their speech (e.g., if there is no reasonable law enforcement purpose, such as criminal conduct advocated or planned or threat to public safety).
  • Investigating and collecting, maintaining, using, or sharing information regarding persons’ or groups’ exercise of their First Amendment rights for a purpose unrelated to the event.
  • Instructing the debriefing of or questioning witnesses, event participants, or arrestees regarding their social, political, or religious views unless specifically related to criminal conduct and then only as necessary to achieve the clearly stated objective in the Pre-Event Work Plan.
  • Collecting, maintaining, using, or sharing information that is outside the scope of the stated objectives of the investigation unless exigent circumstances justify modification of those objectives.
  • Collecting, maintaining, using, or sharing information without evaluating it and marking it for source reliability and content validity prior to maintaining, using, or sharing it.
  • Collecting, maintaining, using, or sharing information (such as names) in political petitions, mailing lists, organizational memberships, or writings espousing a particular view that is protected by the First Amendment.
  • Investigating persons or groups solely because of:
    • Advocating a position in their speech or writings that an officer finds to be offensive or disagreeable.
    • Support for unpopular causes.
    • Ethnic background, race, or national origin.
    • Religion or religious affiliations.
    • Noncriminal personal habits.
    • Associations with persons that are not of a criminal nature.
    • Association with or being related to persons belonging to an organization espousing views protected by the First Amendment.
  • Investigating, disrupting, interfering with, or harassing any person for the purpose of:
    • Preventing the person from engaging in conduct protected by the First Amendment.
    • Retaliating against the person for engaging in conduct protected by the First Amendment.
    • Discriminating against the person on the basis of conduct protected by the First Amendment.

Professional conduct—The presence of law enforcement officers at an event may arouse concern. Therefore, emphasis should be made regarding the importance for officers to be courteous and respectful. Officers should not:

  • Harass, confront, or intimidate persons attending public gatherings or make comments about the views they express.
  • Interview or otherwise question event participants engaged in First Amendment-related activities, unless directed by a supervisor as part of an authorized investigative effort.
  • Exception: If an officer witnesses a crime being committed or has reasonable suspicion that a crime may be committed (such as an expressed threat), based on the Operations Plan, agency policy, or state law, the officer may question participants, as appropriate.
  • Seize participants’ or onlookers’ cameras, cell phones, or materials unless during the course of placing the person under a lawful arrest.
  • Disclosure of identity—If consistent with the Operations Plan, officers may attend public rallies and walk in public parades without disclosing their identity provided that their purpose is solely to monitor the rally or parade for public safety and criminal conduct issues. In this capacity, officers will not direct or influence the participants of the event and will not affirmatively represent themselves to be a participant or a member of an organization participating in the event (such as wearing clothing indicating their involvement with the organization). If there is an investigative element based on criminal activity, undercover tactics may be applied to officers attending the event based on agency policies and procedures.

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DoJ-FirstAmendment

TOP-SECRET-NATO Commanders’ and Staff Handbook for Countering Improvised Explosive Devices (C-IED)

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1. There is likely to be an IED threat in all military deployments and this should be a key consideration when undertaking the preparation, planning and execution of current and future NATO deployed operations. Generic detail of the threat environments and the C-IED approach are described in Reference A but for each deployment further specific operational analysis must be undertaken to ensure a mission focussed approach. Key to this is the generation of C-IED awareness and capability within the staff at every level of command.

2. This handbook sits under References A and B and is intended to be complimentary to existing NATO doctrinal publications and formation HQ operational planning and capability development. It should be noted that although the handbook is aligned with the AJP 3.15A, it seeks only to provide an operational and tactical level staff perspective. It is designed for use within military HQs at all levels and is equally applicable for National C-IED capability development. It will be a living document and updated and amended in conjunction with NATO publications and the lessons identified/ lessons learned process.

3. This handbook does not seek to define staff HQ or national operational planning processes for C-IED but should be used as a reference manual during the planning and execution of operations. Every operational deployment will have different requirements, depending upon environmental and operational variables; therefore the Commander must identify appropriate C-IED activities and processes within his staff functions as a priority.

4. C-IED is a relatively new phenomenon and has yet to be fully institutionalised into existing military staff training and functions. All staff must be aware of this fact and take every opportunity to develop wider awareness and understanding to better integrate C-IED aspects into all training and processes.

AIM OF THE HANDBOOK

5. The aim of the handbook is to outline outputs, staff responsibilities and enablers for Commanders and staff to consider when integrating C-IED into the preparation, planning and execution of operations, and to foster an Attack the Network mindset.

CONCEPT AND APPLICABILITY

6. It is widely acknowledged that IEDs will be a major threat for all levels of current and future operations and it is therefore imperative that national and NATO Formation and Unit HQs are able to prepare for, plan and conduct C-IED activities. Clearly defined C-IED outputs will enable the force to undertake these activities throughout the JOA in order to achieve the mission.

7. Definition. Reference A defines C-IED as follows:
The collective efforts at all levels to defeat the IED system by attacking the networks, defeating the device and preparing the force.

8. C-IED approaches the IED as a systemic problem and C-IED actions aim to defeat the IED System. However, IEDs are only one of a number of forms of asymmetric attack used by insurgents, criminals, terrorists and other malign actors. The networks (e.g. Narcotics, Financial, Cyber, Piracy, Human Trafficking, IED, Terrorism, etc.) overlap and, therefore, will concurrently service the plethora of other requirements and activities of the adversary. Attack the Networks activities should take place at all levels: strategic, operational and tactical and, as the networks are predominantly personality-based, activities will focus against adversarial personalities and processes/activities as well as against IEDs/facilities/materials and their production, and will require a broad approach to the problem.

9. As there is an overlap of activities within the networks, they concurrently support the different aspects of the insurgents’ or adversaries aims and objectives. Understanding of, and intelligence on, these networks will be vital to not only the overall attack the network process but also the ability to identify the nodes and linkages within the financial, commercial, and communication sectors as well as an adversary’s own structures and interactions within the population. Most importantly, understanding these networks will highlight the adversary’s critical vulnerabilities; the target for all operational planning and activity. Thus planning for C-IED actions must include consideration of, and actions against, the adversarial networks in the widest context and recognition and understanding of friendly force Attack the Network operations taking place to achieve unity of effort and meet the Commander’s intent.

10. As the breadth of Attack the Network activities can transcend boundaries at all levels, from national through political to military, it is vital to engage with those functions, activities and personalities that are involved in the fight. This will entail military planners and commanders stepping outside their ‘comfort zone’ and engaging with entities from organizations that they may have had little or no contact with. This requires flexibility and adoption of new mind sets and appreciation of differing priorities and perspectives and, as personally uncomfortable and challenging as this may be, it is vital to success in attacking the networks and the C-IED system they support.

11. C-IED operations should not be planned or executed in isolation and must be fully integrated into the national or NATO force strategic objectives. A C-IED capability is generated when a series of tasks, activities and techniques are undertaken and integrated within the wider context of operational and tactical activities. C-IED may be undertaken within the full spectrum of operations although it is likely to be a greater factor within hybrid threat environments such as an insurgency, terrorism campaigns and during Stabilisation, Security, Transition and Reconstruction Operations (SSTRO). C-IED should be viewed as an activity to achieve the overarching mission rather than a distinct and separate function.

12. C-IED activities can take place at the local, national, regional, and international level. Subsequently, designing an operation to defeat the IED threat requires a comprehensive strategy that integrates and synchronizes series of actions and tasks from the tactical to the strategic levels of command and requires interaction with non-military organizations and the populace. As with the wider hybrid operations C-IED actions may be categorized as direct (focused on the enemy) or indirect (focused on the population). Whether direct or indirect, C-IED operations can be proactive or reactive and applicable to one or more of the three C-IED pillars. The guidance within the handbook is designed to be scalable, flexible and applicable to a variety of structures and requirements.

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NATO-CIED

Original Document: New York Supreme Court Decision to Evict Occupy Wall Street

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This judgment to deny continuance of a temporary restraining order issued earlier in the day maintains that previous eviction orders presented to the Occupy Wall Street protesters in Zuccotti Park are lawful and should be upheld.

NOTE: The New York Supreme Court is the trial-level court of the State of New York and is separate from the New York Court of Appeals, which is the highest appellate court similar in function to other states’ “Supreme Court”.

Downlaod the original document here:

OWS-Eviction