Saturday, February 18, 2012

Stolen Copy of Franco-Promis Software - Francophone Hit Men or Women - Extortionists - Entrapped Anglophone Investigators - Torture, Rape and Murder

From the Abel Danger White House Group to those whom it may concern

February 18, 2012

How McConnell sister’s Franco-Promis DNA threw the scent of JonBenét

Field McConnell claims that his Crown Agents’ Sister Kristine Marcy procured a stolen copy of Franco-Promis software for the use of francophone hit men or women and extortionists to escape justice by entrapping Anglophone investigators with DNA planted at crime scenes such as those associated with torture, rapes and murders of JonBenét Ramsey (1966), Mona Wilson (2001) and Marie-France Comeau (2009).

See #1
Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks

Prequel 1
DOJ Pride Network - QinetiQ, MI6 and 8(a) Patent-Pool SWAT Teams - Patent Pool Rights - CSI Snuff Films - Fort Hood

Prequel 2
Treasonous Crown Agent Sister - U.K. Ministry of Defence - U.S. Federal Bridge Certification Authority - Electronic Warfare Backdoor - ‘Al-Qaeda 9/11’

“Danny Casolaro-Unsolved Mysteries part 1”



"Ollie Gray and John San Agustin”


“Tribute Song to Mona Lee Wilson (Running Bear)”



“Inslaw, Inc. is a small, Washington, D.C.-based, information technology company. In the mid-1970s, Inslaw developed for the United States Department of Justice a highly efficient, people-tracking, software program known as: Prosecutor's Management Information System (Promis). Inslaw's principal owners, William Anthony Hamilton and his wife, Nancy Burke Hamilton, later sued the United States Government (acting as principal to the Department of Justice) for not complying with the terms of the Promis contract and for refusing to pay for an enhanced version of Promis once delivered. This allegation of software piracy led to three trials in separate federal courts and two congressional hearings. During ensuing investigations, the Department of Justice was accused of deliberately attempting to drive Inslaw into Chapter 7 liquidation; and of distributing and selling stolen software for covert intelligence operations of foreign governments such as Canada, Israel, Singapore, Iraq, Egypt, and Jordan; and of becoming directly involved in murder. Later developments implied that derivative versions of Enhanced Promis sold on the black market may have become the high-tech tools of worldwide terrorists such as Osama Bin Laden and international money launderers and thieves. .. By February 1985, the government had withheld payment of almost $1.8 million for Inslaw's implementation services, plus millions of dollars in Old Promis license fees. Inslaw filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection. Meanwhile, the government began highly suspicious activities to force Inslaw into Chapter 7 liquidation. … Two different federal bankruptcy courts made fully litigated findings of fact in the late-eighties, ruling that the Justice Department "took, converted, and stole" the Promis installed in U.S. Attorneys' Offices "through trickery, fraud, and deceit," and then attempted "unlawfully and without justification" to force Inslaw out of business so that it would be unable to seek restitution through the courts .. On September 27, 1994, Attorney General Janet Reno released a 187-page review concluding "that there is no credible evidence that Department officials conspired to steal computer software developed by Inslaw, Inc. or that the company is entitled to additional government payments." Yet, according to Wired (magazine), "Reno's report was released the same day [that] the House Judiciary Committee passed HR 4862, a bill which would have bound the U.S. Court of Federal Claims legally to independently investigate the Inslaw case—thus circumventing the Department of Justice's claims of innocence;" .. On the other hand, according to William Hamilton, the government flatly denied during all court proceedings what it later admitted, i.e. that agencies such as the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) and other U.S. intelligence agencies used a Promis-derivative to keep track of their classified information .. In 2001, the Washington Times and Fox News each quoted federal law enforcement officials familiar with debriefing former FBI Agent Robert Hanssen as claiming that the convicted spy had stolen copies of a Promis-derivative for his Soviet KGB handlers. They further alleged that the software was used within the FBI and other U.S. intelligence agencies to track internal intelligence, and was used by intelligence operatives to track international interbank transactions. These reports further stated that Osama bin Laden later bought copies of the same Promis-derivative on the Russian black market (blat) for $2 million. It was believed then that al Qaeda used the software to penetrate database systems to move funds throughout the banking system, and to evade detection by U.S. law enforcement. While investigating elements of this story, journalist Danny Casolaro died in what was twice ruled a suicide. Prior to his death, Casolaro had warned friends if they were ever told he had committed suicide not to believe it, and to know he had been murdered. Writing on behalf of a majority opinion in House Report 102-857, Committee Chairman, Jack Brooks (D-TX) wrote, "As long as the possibility exists that Danny Casolaro died as a result of his investigation into the INSLAW matter, it is imperative that further investigation be conducted."”

Contact Field McConnell through his Presidential Field election campaign to learn more about his sister’s use of Franco-Promis DNA to throw the scent of JonBenét and, by spoliation inference, to plant evidence to divert public attention from the real story of La Francophonie 9/11.

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