Abel Danger Global Operations Director, Field McConnell, claims that his sister designed the SENTRI – Secure Electronic Network for Travelers' Rapid Inspection – kits in 1995 as part of a Gore Hammer program to re-invent government and allow pay-to-play insiders to kill their enemies without being detected, indicted and/or convicted
Prequel:
Senior Executive Service ('SES') - Proxy Keys to the Federal Bridge Certification Authority - Plausible Denial - SES Contract Hits - Fast & Furious
See #1
Abel Danger Mischief Makers - Mistress of the Revels - 'Man-In-The-Middle' Attacks
“Rep. Darrell Issa on the Latest with Eric Holder & Fast and Furious”
“Alex Jones Holder We must brainwash the people! 19.mar.2012”
“Inspection of the Secure Electronic Network for Travelers' Rapid Inspection Report Number I-2000-019 June 2000 SENTRI's mission is to "develop an inspection process that expedites the legal entry of low risk border crossers in non-commercial vehicles . . . while maintaining the security and integrity of the United States border." SENTRI is intended primarily for high volume ports-of-entry where commuter wait times are considered to be a problem. In October 1999, INS [Con Air with Detention and Deportation program run by Kristine Marcy in 1995/6] identified roughly 15 ports-of-entry that could potentially benefit from the implementation of SENTRI or another dedicated commuter lane (DCL) program based on current traffic volumes and commuter wait times. SENTRI was first piloted at Otay Mesa, California, in November 1995 as a JPR reinvention laboratory (see Appendix II for a description of SENTRI's major milestones). Otay Mesa was selected as the first site for SENTRI because of the port-of-entry's moderate traffic volume, relatively low incidence of border violations, and supporting physical infrastructure such as available inspection lanes and office space for SENTRI's enrollment center. The SENTRI reinvention laboratory has received several prestigious awards including a 1996 Hammer Award, presented by the Office of the Vice President, as well as the 1998 Finalist Innovations in American Government Award, presented jointly by the Ford Foundation and Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government. In 1997, SENTRI was selected by the Computerworld Smithsonian Awards Program for inclusion in the Smithsonian Institution's Permanent Research Collection on the Information Age. Based on SENTRI's early success at Otay Mesa, SENTRI was expanded as a reinvention laboratory to two additional sites along the Southwest border. In August 1998, equipment for SENTRI was installed at San Ysidro, California; however, protracted negotiations between the U.S. and Mexican governments concerning construction plans for San Ysidro's two planned SENTRI lanes have delayed the opening of this site. In September 1999, SENTRI became operational at the Stanton Street Bridge in El Paso, Texas. By October 2000, three additional sites are planned for the Southwest border: Calexico, California, andBrownsville and Hidalgo, Texas. SENTRI does not have a specifically dedicated funding source. In the past, SENTRI has received funding from the INS Commissioner's Contingency Fund as well as from other sources, including a grant from the Ford Foundation. Although Customs provides SENTRI with staffing resources, it does not provide any funding for equipment or supplies. Under the terms of the 1994 MOU between INS and Customs, "Equipment and supplies necessary for the DCL program will be funded and procured by INS through user fee funds collected." In FY 1998, SENTRI's actual budget expenditures totaled $5.3 million. The INS estimates that each SENTRI lane and accompanying enrollment center costs approximately $850,000 to construct. http://www.justice.gov/oig/reports/INS/e0019/bckgnd.htm”
“CBS News March 19, 2012 5:19 PM Prime gunwalking suspect was held by ATF but released, documents show The prime suspect in the botched gun trafficking investigation known as "Fast and Furious" -- Manuel Acosta -- was taken into custody and might have been stopped from trafficking weapons to Mexico's killer drug cartel early on. But the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (ATF) let him go, according to new documents obtained by CBS News. An ATF "Report of Investigation" obtained by CBS News shows Border Patrol agents stopped Acosta's truck on May 29, 2010. Inspectors said they found illegal materials including an "AK type, high capacity drum magazine loaded with 74 rounds of 7.62 ammunition underneath the spare tire." They also noted ledgers including a "list of firearms such as an AR15 short and a Bushmaster" and a "reference about money given to 'killer.'" … The Border Patrol ran a check [allegedly monitored on Kristine Marcy’s SENTRI kit] and found Acosta was already "under investigation for firearms trafficking" in Fast and Furious, so they called in the lead ATF case agent Hope MacAllister. Under questioning, Acosta allegedly described his contacts with a Mexican cartel member nicknamed "Chendi," and admitted going to Chendi's house for a shipment of narcotics. .. But ATF knew even more about Acosta's alleged illegal activities than what he described in the interview. ATF trace records showed "a large number of the weapons purchase by the Acosta organization are AK type rifles or FN Herstal pistols" which Acosta referred to as "cop killers" and said were preferred by drug cartels. Instead of pursuing charges, Agent MacAllister asked Acosta if he'd be willing to cooperate with federal agents. He agreed and was released. Apparently, the promised cooperation never materialized. The report notes that 17 days after Acosta was let loose, he still had "not initiated any contact with Special Agent MacAllister." In a letter today, Congressional Republicans investigating Fast and Furious asked the Justice Department why Acosta wasn't arrested in May of 2010. They also want to know why the Justice Department failed to turn over the documents on Acosta's detainment and release, which were covered under a longstanding subpoena. One law enforcement source calls the Acosta report "completely embarrassing." "He's exporting ammunition, which is a violation of law," says the source. "But they let him go." Before releasing Acosta, MacAllister wrote her contact information on a $10 bill at Acosta's request, gave it to him, then warned him "not to participate in any illegal activity unless under her direction." Acosta wasn't arrested until Feb. 2, 2011, more than eight months after the Border Patrol stop. By then, ATF had allowed more than 2,000 weapons to "walk" into the hands of Mexican drug cartels, and two of the rifles had turned up at the murder scene of Border Patrol Agent Brian Terry. The Justice Department and ATF had no immediate comment. ATF officials who approved of Fast and Furious have said they were trying to get to the "big fish" in a drug cartel. In a related case also run by ATF's Phoenix office, CBS News has reported a grenade parts trafficker named Jean Baptiste Kingery was caught smuggling 114 disassembled grenades in a tire in 2010, but was released. The same prosecutors faulted in Fast and Furious allegedly refused to bring charges saying grenade parts are "novelty items" and the case "lacked jury appeal." Mexican authorities arrested Kingery a year later at a stash house with enough materials for 1,000 grenades. The Inspector General has been investigating Fast and Furious for more than a year. Attorney General Eric Holder [a 1995/1996 contemporary of Marcy in the DOJ while she developed SENTRI for contract hits], who's denied knowing about any gunwalking, has said use of the "inappropriate tactics is neither acceptable nor excusable." The Justice Department had no immediate comment. ATF told CBS News: "The criminal case is still ongoing in federal court, and there is also inspector general's investigation looking at the overall case. Therefore, ATF cannot comment about the investigation.”
“Breitbart.com has uncovered video from 1995 of then-U.S. Attorney Eric Holder announcing a public campaign to "really brainwash people into thinking about guns in a vastly different way." Holder was addressing the Woman's National Democratic Club. In his remarks, broadcast by CSPAN 2, he explained that he intended to use anti-smoking campaigns as his model to "change the hearts and minds of people in Washington, DC" about guns. "What we need to do is change the way in which people think about guns, especially young people, and make it something that's not cool, that it's not acceptable, it's not hip to carry a gun anymore, in the way in which we changed our attitudes about cigarettes." Holder added that he had asked advertising agencies in the nation's capital to assist by making anti-gun ads rather than commercials "that make me buy things that I don't really need." He had also approached local newspapers and television stations, he said, asking them to devote prime space and time, respectively, to his anti-gun campaign.
Local political leaders and celebrities, Holder said, including Mayor Marion Barry and Jesse Jackson, had been asked to help. In addition, he reported, he had asked the local school board to make the anti-gun message a part of "every day, every school, and every level." Despite strict gun control efforts, Washington, DC was and remains one of the nation's most dangerous cities for gun violence, though crime has abated somewhat since the 1990s. Holder went on to become Deputy Attorney General in the Clinton administration, and currently serves as Attorney General in the Obama Administration. The video of Holder's remarks was uncovered by Breitbart.com contributor Charles C. Johnson.”
Please visit links to see why Field McConnell has launched a PresidentialField election campaign to, inter alia, dismantle his sister's SENTRI kits and indict her DOJ associates for the Fast and Furious contract hits.
Please visit links to see why Field McConnell has launched a PresidentialField election campaign to, inter alia, dismantle his sister's SENTRI kits and indict her DOJ associates for the Fast and Furious contract hits.
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