Plum City – (AbelDanger.net). United States Marine Field McConnell is informing United States governors of the links he has found between a procurement of Nortel’s Joint Automated Booking System (JABS) by his sister Kristine Marcy, Janet Reno and Jamie Gorelick, to the Misprision of Treason which occurred after the women attended a “Lab Day” event on 22nd October 1996 and allegedly heard of a conspiracy by FBI Laboratory agents to use JABS to overthrow the government of the United States by force.
McConnell recently discovered that Marcy, Reno and Gorelick attended the FBI “Lab Day” event in the Justice Department's Great Hall and heard FBI Lab agents use the euphemism of ‘re-inventing government’ to describe their planned use of JABS to deploy a combination of paroled inmates and unwitting actors in the overthrow of the government of the United States during phony continuity-of-government exercises.
McConnell claims that after the 1996 Lab Day event, Marcy, Reno and Gorelick helped agents for the FBI Lab (Robert Hanssen) and Canadian Privy Council (Lena Trudeau), to conceal the JABS conspiracy during the Amalgam Virgo war game of June 1-2 2001 and the Global Guardian continuity of government exercise of September 10-12, 2001.
McConnell further claims that Marcy, Reno and Gorelick failed (?) to alert United States governors of the FBI Lab agents' plan to activate Nortel Networks JABS and switch paroled inmates and actors from the Global Guardian exercise to the 9/11 attacks in which nearly 3,000 American suffered wrongful deaths including Captain Chic Burlingame, McConnell’s ……………..
Links: More to follow.
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References (see below) will be attached to information to be sent to United States governors.
Yours sincerely,
Field McConnell, United States Naval Academy, 1971; Forensic Economist; 30 year airline and 22 year military pilot; 23,000 hours of safety; Tel: 715 307 8222
David Hawkins Tel: 604 542-0891 Forensic Economist; former leader of oil-well blow-out teams; now sponsors Grand Juries in CSI Crime and Safety Investigation
“FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE AG
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 22, 1996 (202) 616-2777 TDD (202) 514-1888
ATTORNEY GENERAL PRESENTS HAMMER AWARDS
AT DOJ "LAB DAY"
WASHINGTON, DC -- Attorney General Janet Reno presented
Hammer Awards to three employee working groups from Justice
Department components as part of the Department's "Justice
Performance Review Lab Day," an event showcasing the achievements
of the Department's 16 reinvention labs.
The Hammer Award is Vice President Gore's special
recognition to teams of employees which made significant
contributions in support of the President's National Performance
Review (NPR) principles of improving customer service, cutting
red tape, empowering employees, and getting back to basics.
"By accepting the challenge to re-invent government, these
employees are making government more efficient and improving the
way we perform our public responsibilities," Reno said during the
Lab Day event in the Justice Department's Great Hall. Deputy
Attorney General Jamie Gorelick, who also attended, noted that
the employees "have taken the concept of creating a government
that works better and costs less and have made it a reality."
The three Justice Department teams receiving the award are:
* The SENTRI Reinvention Lab, for developing a secure, high-tech, automated border inspection system at Otay Mesa, California;
* The Joint Automated Booking System (JABS) Lab, a multi- component effort which has significantly improved the prisoner booking process;
* The Justice Prisoner Alien Transportation System (JPATS), which combines the resources of several DOJ components to schedule and transport prisoners more quickly, safely, and economically.
Additional information on the awardees is attached.
96-523
###
JUSTICE DEPARTMENT HAMMER AWARD WINNERS
OCTOBER 22, 1996
SENTRI Award
The multi-agency DOJ reinvention laboratory known as SENTRI
(Secure Electronic Network for Travelers' Rapid Inspection)
reinvented a two-century-old method for inspecting border
crossers. Designing the system for use by pre-screened, low-risk
international travelers who frequently cross the border, the
SENTRI team was led by the INS and Customs, and drew membership
from the FBI, DEA, and the U.S. Attorney for the Southern
District of California. Several other Federal agencies, the
State of California, and several governments in Mexico assisted
in the effort.
As crossers who have been approved for participation in the
SENTRI Project approach the border, they enter a "zone of
control" created by an assortment of bollards, iron posts,
electric gauges, and tire shredders which assure physical control
of traffic entering the U.S. In-ground inductive loops, free-
standing light curtains, and other kinds of technology sense the
vehicle and activate an automatic vehicle identification system,
which checks data bases and matches digital photographs to
validate the intending crosser. The system provides the
Government with more information and more security than ever
before.
Yet, the system is speedy. Before SENTRI, waiting times at
the Otay Mesa, California, test site averaged 45 minutes. Now,
wait times in the SENTRI lane never exceeds three minutes. In
addition, siphoning off low-risk travelers has cut the wait in
conventional inspection lanes to less than 20 minutes. With
SENTRI, INS and Customs are able to concentrate their limited
resources on high-risk travelers.
The JABS Award
The Joint Automated Booking Station, or JABS, Lab reinvented
offender processing procedures that had not changed significantly
in over half a century. A joint undertaking of the Federal
Bureau of Prisons, U.S. Marshals Service, INS, FBI, and DEA, the
JABS Lab set out to streamline booking procedures through
automation, to reduce duplication of effort among the agencies
involved, and to provide a uniform data base which could be used
to improve investigations and identify repeat offenders.
Before JABS, offenders moving through the criminal justice
system were booked by each agency they encountered. For a single
arrest, this often resulted in numerous bookings involving
photographing, fingerprinting, and recording biographical
information, procedures which were all done manually. Through
collaboration and prototyping, the JABS Lab automated and
streamlined this tedious process.
The Joint Automated Booking System has delivered three clear
benefits: increased speed, the elimination of duplication, and
greater access to more reliable data. An automated booking can
be completed in one quarter of the time required for the manual
booking process. By eliminating duplication, 305 separate data
elements compiled under the old system have been reduced to 61,
five photographs have been reduced to one, and 15 sets of paper
fingerprints have been reduced to one set of highly reliable
electronic prints. Finally, JABS creates a single comprehensive
electronic record of data the first time it is collected; this
record can be accessed by other law enforcement agencies for
investigative or tracking purposes.
The JPATS Award
The Justice Prisoner and Alien Transportation System
(JPATS), an innovative partnership among the U.S. Marshals
Service (USMS), the Immigration and Naturalization Service (INS),
and the Federal Bureau of Prisons, carries prisoners and
detainees under federal jurisdiction more safely and efficiently.
Before JPATS, the movement of detained aliens - for transfer
between institutions, for deportation and removal from the
country, and for relocation to lower-cost detention - was managed
solely by the INS, while the transportation of other federal
prisoners was the responsibility of the USMS. As the prison
population grew over the last decade, and as enforcement
priorities changed, both the number of prisoners and their
destinations rose dramatically. It became evident that the
collective resources of the Department needed to be fully
employed, that regular schedules needed to be established, and
that planes needed to be filled to capacity to best employ
limited resources.
JPATS was the solution.
By combining the equipment and
personnel resources of the USMS and INS, and by combining the
movement of alien prisoners with other kinds of prisoners,
flights were filled. These changes resulted in lower per-
passenger costs, faster completion of prisoner movements, and
more efficient use of valuable prison bed space. Moreover,
agreements were executed with military, state, and local law
enforcement entities to carry prisoners under their jurisdictions
on a space-available basis, reducing their costs while ensuring
maximum capacity loads on the Government's planes.
The JPATS now serves over 40 cities nationwide. It carried
180,000 passengers in its first year of operation, a 20 per cent
increase in productivity. It currently averages 400-500
"reservations" every day of the year.”
Seditious conspiracy (18 U.S.C. § 2384) is a crime under United States law. It is stated as follows:
"If two or more persons in any State or Territory, or in any place subject to the jurisdiction of the United States, conspire to overthrow, put down, or to destroy by force the Government of the United States, or to levy war against them, or to oppose by force the authority thereof, or by force to prevent, hinder, or delay the execution of any law of the United States, or by force to seize, take, or possess any property of the United States contrary to the authority thereof, they shall each be fined or imprisoned not more than 20 years, or both."
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For a seditious conspiracy charge to be effected, a crime need only be planned, it need not be actually attempted.
“The FBI Laboratory is a division within the United States Federal Bureau of Investigation that provides forensic analysis support services to the FBI, as well as to state and local law enforcement agencies free of charge. The lab is currently located at Marine Corps Base Quantico in Quantico, Virginia. Opening November 24, 1932, the lab was first known as the Technical Laboratory. It became a separate division when theBureau of Investigation (BOI) was renamed in the FBI. Public tours of the lab work area were available until the FBI moved to the newly constructed J. Edgar Hoover Building in 1974. Tours of the J. Edgar Hoover Building still were available, but the route the tour moved away from the lab work space thus sealing the lab from public view. The laboratory expanded to such an extent that the Forensic Science Research and Training Center (FSRTC) was established at the FBI Academy in Quantico, Virginia. Methods at the FSRTC helped establish standardized forensic practices for law enforcement agencies.
It is a full-service operation, with some 500 scientific experts and special agents. The lab generally enjoys the reputation as the premier crime lab in the United States. However, during the 1990s, its reputation and integrity came under withering criticism, primarily due to the revelations of Special Agent Dr. Frederic Whitehurst, the most prominent whistleblower in the history of the Bureau. Whitehurst was a harsh critic of conduct at the Lab, coming to believe that a lack of funding and a pro-prosecution bias of the Lab technicians, who were FBI agents first and forensic scientists secondly due to the institutional culture of the Bureau, had caused the tainting of much evidence.”
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