May 2, 2010
Dear Lord Pearson:
UKIP: DLA Piper CO2 Offset Met Office Murder for Hire
Hawks CAFE asks you to investigate DLA Piper's agents, including its head of international trade law, Mrs. Clegg, who allegedly buy carbon offsets from a Met Office trading arm in the U.K. Ministry of Defence to finance murder-for-hire teams and reward the teams with a share in the proceeds of life insurance claims after the victims have stopped exhaling CO2!
Our KSM agents have evidence that Mrs. Clegg’s DLA Piper colleagues began converting the Met Office into a murder-for-hire network in 1978 in a joint venture with charter members of the U.S. Senior Executive Service and associates of various root companies such as San Diego-based Gray Cary Ware & Freidenrich, UK-based Dibb Lupton Alsop, Baltimore-based Piper & Marbury and Chicago-based Rudnick & Wolfe.
“Sustaining the green momentum” By Nigel Knowles, Joint CEO, DLA Piper .. On 1 May 2007 over 1000 British business leaders took part in the first Prince of Wales May Day Summit on climate change .. Law firms employ many hundreds and thousands of energy-consuming staff who often travel between offices, which in themselves may be hothouses for unsustainable business practices .. Here are some tips from the May Day Summit .. Mobilise suppliers .. to measure and minimise their own carbon footprint .. ‘end to end’ carbon footprint along supply chain .. Provide information to customers about the carbon footprint of your products and services; Raise customer awareness about actions they can take to reduce the carbon-impact resulting from use of your products and services. Nigel Knowles is Joint CEO of DLA Piper”
KSM notes that DLA Piper’s Legal Sector Alliance of 167 law firms now empowers the 7,000 members of the Senior Executive Service to ‘drawdown’ [borrow?] U.S. and EU military equipment including Met Office C4 sensors used to trigger trades and reward killers for reducing the carbon footprint of DLA Piper’s terrified customers and suppliers.
We allege that DLA Piper/SES agents used Met Office networks and other U.S. and EU military equipment to trigger carbon offset trades and reward the hit teams which stopped 1,128 employees of Cantor Fitzgerald, MMC and Aon from breathing on 9/11.
We have compared the EU flag with the SES flag (L & R above) and suggest that the 13 star SES flag either represents Pennsylvania as a keystone member of the Thirteen Colonies at the time of the American Revolution, OR, represents the DLA Piper/SES alliance as the keystone within the 13 stars of the United States PLUS the 12 states of Europe, which is authorized to hire hit teams to reduce carbon footprint in any state.
We see such CO2e reductions executed by Met Office hit teams equipped by the likes of Karen Garvey, a member of the Senior Executive Service and the Defense Security Cooperation Agency’s Principal Director. As SES, Ms. Garvey is authorized to make drawdowns of weapons and bypass the U.S. President using the U.K. Met Office C4 networks to deal with ‘unforeseen’ military emergencies, humanitarian catastrophes, peacekeeping needs or counter-narcotics requirements, without having to first seek additional legislative authority or budgetary appropriations.
http://www.dsca.mil/programs/erasa/drawdown%20handbookr1.pdf (PDF FILE)
http://www.legalsectoralliance.com/members
We note that in 1981, the Met Office used its new supercomputer to predict the airborne spread of foot-and-mouth disease to livestock on the south coast of England, and, in 1982 generate its first global, forecasting model to assist in operations for the Falklands War.
KSM also has evidence to suggest that in 1984, Sidley Austin, now a member of DLA Piper’s Legal Sector Alliance, hired Bernardine Dohrn to train interns in Met Office/SES murder for hire services and note that 1984 was the year that saboteurs attacked the Brighton Hotel in the U.K. and the Union Carbide Bhopal insecticide plant in India.
KSM also has evidence that DLA Piper agents have illegally outsourced MoD high frequency [Ku Band] communications systems used to 'manage' evidence of murder for hire and insurance fraud at the Met Office's global crime scenes.
“Rosemary Bointon Counsel Schottenring 14 A-1010 Vienna Austria T: +43 1 531 78 1047 previously partner with Birmingham and London offices of DLA Piper, has now joined the Vienna office of DLA Piper after a one year secondment in the Kyiv office. While in Kyiv, Rosemary oversaw transactions and documents governed by English law which are transacted from the Kyiv office of DLA Piper .. experienced in project finance, infrastructure and PPP (public private partnerships) and other concessions, but also deals with corporate transactions, including inward investment and general commercial matters .. Her clients have included both the UK and Czech Ministries of Defence as well as public and private companies and a number of banks. Key experience: Advising Serco on the outsourcing of services on an airfield .. Advised the UK MoD on Tri-Service Airfield Support Services which covered all UK military and overseas military airfields and involved the provision of 21 services to. Advised VT Merlin on a Government owned, Contractor operated (SMART GOCO) for the Defence High Frequency Communications Service, which outsourced [!!!!] defence high frequency communications throughout the world .. Advised Barclays Bank on financing of the UK MoD's E3D training project .. Professional Qualification Solicitor of the Senior Courts of England and Wales.”
We offer below an open source chronology of the Met Office
“1854: The Met Office is founded to provide information on the weather and marine currents to the marine community. This small department of the Board of Trade is headed by Vice-Admiral Robert FitzRoy, RN.
1861: The first international meteorological congress in Vienna founded an International Meteorological Organization to further essential international co-operation. This eventually transformed into the World Meteorological Organization (WMO), a specialised agency of the United Nations.
1909: Transatlantic shipping starts to use wireless telegraphy to transmit weather messages ashore.
1912: Rapid developments in meteorology lead to the establishment of the first outstation at South Farnborough to give advice to pilots.
1914: Lewis Fry Richardson conceives forecasting can be carried out using numerical techniques. He imagines 64,000 people carrying out calculations in a vast hall and comments: "Perhaps some day in the dim future it will be possible to advance the computations faster than the weather advances. But that is a dream". By 1965 numerical forecasts produced operationally as routine.
1922: Forecasts are first broadcast by BBC radio.
1939: Radiosondes are launched to gather observations from the upper air — a collection of balloon-borne sensors transmit data on pressure, temperature and humidity to receiving sites on land.
1944: The D-Day landings are planned but are postponed due to bad weather. Group Captain Stagg, the RAF's chief meteorologist (and a Met Office employee) informs General Eisenhower on 5 June that a 36-hour 'weather window' is imminent. President Truman later said: "The day selected for the continental assault was probably the only day during the month of June on which the operations could have been launched".
1953: A severe depression and storm surge in the North Sea causes catastrophic flooding in south-east England. This leads to planning and eventual construction of the Thames Barrier and the development of the Met Office's Storm Tide Forecasting Service.
1954: The first live BBC Television forecast, lasting five minutes, was made by Met Office forecaster George Cowling.
1959: London Weather Centre opens.
1962: Her Majesty the Queen performs the official opening ceremony of the new Headquarters at Bracknell. The Met Office takes delivery of its first electronic computer so that numerical forecast techniques can be applied operationally.
1964: The first operational cloud pictures from satellites are available.
1977: European weather satellite, Meteosat 1 is launched. This collaborative project will in time provide a major input to the numerical models.
1981: The Met Office's first supercomputer — the Cyber 205 — is installed to run the new 15-level atmospheric model. The airborne spread of foot-and-mouth disease to livestock on the south coast of England is predicted.
1982: The first global operational forecasting model is introduced to assist in operations for the Falklands War.
1984: World Area Forecasting Centre status for aviation is accredited to the Met Office; one of only two world centres for civil aviation.
1987: A severe storm inflicts major damage to large areas of southern and south-east England. It leads to a review of forecasting methods and the development of the National Severe Weather Warning Service.
1990: The Met Office becomes an Executive Agency of the Ministry of Defence. The Met Office Hadley Centre for Climate Prediction and Research is opened.
("The MET Office Means Global Business" - Does that mean 'Global Warming?')
1991: A Cray Y-MP supercomputer is installed and, for the first time, a single numerical model (merging ocean and atmosphere) is used for climate and weather prediction.
Cray Y-MP Computer (operates on vector process)
1996: A network of European national meteorological services (EUMETNET) is established with the help of the Met Office. The Met Office becomes a Trading Fund.
1998: Volcanic activity in Iceland releases vast quantities of ash into the atmosphere. The Met Office's dispersion model successfully predicts how it will behave and so averts aircraft disasters.
2002: The Met Office provides guidance and support to senior planners and operational staff for Operation Veritas in Afghanistan. The Mobile Meteorological Unit is deployed to theatre.
2004: The Met Office's new headquarters in Exeter are officially opened and fully operational. The move from Bracknell is probably the largest move of an operational computer complex in Europe, and is carried out on time and within planned costs.
2005: Stabilisation 2005 Conference held at the Met Office in Exeter. The world's leading climate scientists gathered under one roof to discuss vital climate-change issues.”
“It has a gigantic supercomputer, 1,500 staff and a £170m-a-year budget. So why does the Met Office get it so wrong? By Richard North Last updated at 11:23 AM on 3rd January 2010 Its supercomputer makes 1,000 billion calculations a second - then tells us to expect a mild winter. But what would you expect from a 'scientific' organisation that for 20 years has been dominated by climate change zealots, and whose current chairman is the former boss of the World Wildlife Fund? .. Having had at its helm Sir John Houghton, a conviction 'warmist', in 2006 it acquired a new and highly controversial chairman - Robert Napier. Described as a 'committed conservationist' and then a 'passionate environmentalist', before taking over the most senior position at the Met Office, Napier had for seven years been the chief executive of World Wildlife Fund-UK, one of the foremost activist groups in the climate-change business .. The Met Office has become a powerful and vocal climate-change lobbyist, contributing hugely to the climate-change conference in Copenhagen last month, at which it launched its prediction that this year would be the hottest on record Among other things, he was particularly effective in making alliances with big business, doing deals with the likes of the insurance giant Allianz and convincing the company that there was money to be made out of climate change.”
For further information on our allegations, please refer to lawsuit “Hawks CAFE v. Global Guardians” and related links below.
http://www.hawkscafe.com/107.html
http://abeldanger.blogspot.com/
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