To whom it may concern
August 7, 2011
Rebekah Skyhackers – Pulver daughter bomb hoax – PKI supply chain
Abel Danger believes Crown Agents’ Sister Rebekah Wade ‘Skyhackers’ used the News International public key infrastructure to stage a Matrix 5 man-in-the-middle attack on William Pullen where the recent hoax-bomb threat to his daughter Madeleine was intended to extort Pullen and his Appen Butler Hill colleagues out of PKI and first-responder authentication supply chains presently controlled by Middle Templars and PricewaterhouseCoopers.
Matrix 5 MitM = Banker + Anglophone + Francophone + Lesbian + Pedophile attacks
Skyhack Rebekah Aug 6, 2011
Manhunt After Teen's 'Horrific' Bomb Ordeal
Prequel 1
NATO ‘Skyhackers’ - Sky News/News International - U.S. Navy Seals Silenced - PKI Technology To Kill An Osama bin Laden Doppelganger - Ambushed?
Kindle
New Captain SHerlock eBook
See # 65
Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks
“Who are the Pulvers? Wealthy members of elite society targeted Janet Fife-Yeomans From: The Daily Telegraph August 04, 2011 8:40AM Last year, Mr Pulver's hi-tech information technology business Appen joined forces with the Butler Hill Group.
At the time of the multi-million-dollar merger, Mr Pulver, chief executive of the new company Appen Butler Hill, said the two companies could provide linguistic and voice-recognition services in more than 120 languages for clients including software companies, security organisations and government agencies. Their customers include Microsoft, IBM, Fujitsu, Toshiba and Telstra. According to his profile on his company's website, Mr Pulver was based in Tokyo from 1997 to 1999 as group chief executive of ACNielsen Japan and Korea. From there the family moved to London. And when ACNielsen eRatings.com was acquired by NetRatings in 2002, the Pulver family moved to NetRatings headquarters in New York, where Mr Pulver was president and chief executive until the business was bought by The Nielsen Company in June 2007.”
“ Sky News .. Manhunt After Teen's 'Horrific' Bomb Ordeal 7:24pm UK, Thursday August 04, 2011 A teenager who had what she thought was a bomb chained to her neck has thanked police who helped her through her 10-hour ordeal as a manhunt continues. The Pulvers are one of Sydney's wealthiest families and police said they are treating the plot - described as like something out of a Hollywood film - as an extortion attempt. They told police they had no idea why their daughter had been targeted. :: Timeline: How The Teen's Bomb Terror Unfolded ... Madeleine told police a man wearing a balaclava broke in to the family's multimillion-dollar mansion in the wealthy suburb of Mosman and attached the "collar bomb", which was later discovered to be fake, to her about 2.30pm local time on Wednesday. She was alone in the house and after the culprit left she phoned her father, who then contacted the police, telling them of his daughter's plight and how she thought there was an explosive device strapped to her body .. Two police negotiators stayed with the teenager throughout the ordeal, keeping her calm while bomb disposal technicians worked on the device. The first officer on the scene was young policewoman Karen Lowden, who sat with Miss Pulver, giving her emotional support, until back-up police arrived. New South Wales (NSW) Police Commissioner Andrew Scipione has commended the constable for her actions, adding that he was "incredibly proud" of her. "Hers was a truly brave and selfless act," he said. The device was eventually removed before midnight - almost 10 hours later - and Miss Pulver was reunited with her parents, who were waiting in anticipation outside. Police later confirmed the suspicious device did not contain explosives after using X-ray technology and the help of British military bomb experts to identify what it was. :: Pictures: Bomb Strapped To Girl's Neck In Sydney Detective Superintendent Luke Moore said "Madeleine is a victim" when asked whether police were considering whether she was involved in the hoax. He added: "We are treating this as an attempted extortion." He also revealed a ransom-style note making demands was left inside the house, but he would not detail what it said. The state assistant commissioner, Mr Murdoch added: "Certainly the instructions were precise, they were such that led us to believe that we were dealing with a very serious and legitimate threat." The Sydney Daily Telegraph reports the note made no demands for money or action but said if the teen went to the police the bomb would be detonated. But she's in good hands, she's with mum and dad, who are the most important people to be with." Police said there was no evidence that explosives had been used but that it was "a very, very elaborate hoax". "It was made and certainly gave the appearance of a legitimate improvised explosive device," Mr Murdoch said. Mr Pulver is the chief executive of a leading technology company and the family lives in Mosman, one of Sydney's most exclusive neighbourhoods. Australian prime minister Julia Gillard has also spoken out about the attack, saying: "When I looked at it this... the first thing I said was 'it's like a Hollywood script, the kind of thing you would see at the cinema or on TV'. ... :: How the collar bomb horror hoax unfolded :: Who are the Pulver family? :: Police say no explosives found in suspect bomb device”
Those who may be concerned have a moral obligation to think hard.
http://www.abeldanger.net/
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