McConnell notes that his MI-3 sister and Ms. Baginski launched the Senior Executive Service (SES) in 1979 and he alleges that the two women used SES public key infrastructure (mesh) to insert malicious sodomite nodes into the Five Eyes Intelligence Community where anal rape is now a preferred tool of intimidation (cf. JonBenet Ramsey, Gareth Williams and Christopher Stevens).
Disambiguation:
MI-3 = Livery Companies’ patent-pool supply-chain protection racket using Privy Purse Forfeiture Fund Marcy (Forfeiture Fund – KPMG Small Business Auction – Liquidation – Prisoner Medical Services – JABS)
+ Inkster (Queen’s Privy Purse – KPMG tax shelter – RCMP Wandering Persons Registry – Escrow fraud)
+ Interpol (Berlin 1942-1945 – Operation Paperclip into Foreign Fugitive File – William Higgitt - Entrust)
+ Intrepid (William Stephenson – GAPAN patent pool – MitM Pearl Harbor attack – Kanada Kommando)
MI-3 = Marine Interruption Intelligence and Investigation unit set up in 1987 to destroy above
McConnell notes that in Book 12 at www.abeldanger.net, agents deployed by his Marine Interruption, Intelligence and Investigations (MI-3) group are mingling in various OODA modes with agents of the Marcy Inkster Interpol Intrepid (MI-3) Livery protection racket based at Skinners’ Hall, Dowgate Hill.
Prequel 1: #1747: Marine Links MI-3 Malicious Sodomite Exit Node to Obamacare Mesh Benghazi Rape
Inside Gareth Williams' flat
Sophye e homenagem a Maureen Baginski
“The Telegraph 'Spy in the bag' case: inside Gareth Williams' flat
10:45PM BST 24 Apr 2012
The inquest into the mysterious death of MI6 agent Gareth Williams have been shown footage of the interior of his flat.
Cameras were allowed inside the spy's Pimlico flat as the inquest into his death heard that tiny fragments of another person’s DNA were discovered on the outside of the bag in which his body was found. Detective Chief Inspector Jackie Sebire, who led the police investigation into Mr Williams’ death, indicated that the DNA traces had been very small and no match had been made with anyone else. Mr Williams’ naked and decomposing remains were discovered on August 23, 2010 in a red North Face holdall which had been locked from the outside and placed in the bath.
Giving evidence in front of Mr Williams’ family, DCI Sebire also revealed that when police searched his two-bedroom Pimlico flat they discovered a newspaper cutting that listed the main regrets of the dying. The article had been removed from a copy of The Observer newspaper and was found in the living room area.
Related Articles
Animation of bathroom in MI6 spy death
0 Apr 2012
Spy family's grief 'exacerbated' by MI6 failures
02 May 2012
Mystery DNA found in Gareth Williams 'spy in the bag' case
24 Apr 2012
MI6 held internal investigation in death of spy
24 Apr 2012
Body in bag spy 'wanted to leave MI6'
23 Apr 2012
A secretive child prodigy
23 Apr 2012
In the spare bedroom of the property detectives discovered more than £20,000 of female clothing, including 26 pairs of shoes.
DCI Sebire said most of the items appeared to have been unworn but four pairs of the shoes – which were size six or six and a half, the same size as Mr Williams – did show signs of wearing.
She said the shoes were from a number of exclusive designers including Christian Laboutin, Dior and Chloe, with one pair alone costing an estimated £1,000.
As the police video showing the interior of Mr Williams’ flat was shown to the inquest, his parents Ian and Ellen left the court.
Almost 40 witnesses will give evidence during the hearing, which is expected to last at least five days. Mr Williams was a maths prodigy who graduated from Bangor University at the age of 17 before going on to complete a PhD and post-graduate studies at Manchester and Cambridge Universities.
After starting work for GCHQ in 2001 he had been seconded to MI6, the secret intelligence service, where he qualified for “operational deployment” in the field. The hearing continues.”
“Canada and the Five Eyes Intelligence Community James Cox 2012
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The January 2012 arrest of Canadian Sub-Lieutenant Jeffery Delisle for supplying Top Secret intelligence to Russia reminded Canadians of Canada’s involvement in the Five Eyes intelligence community, the world’s most exclusive intelligence sharing club that includes Canada, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. This paper promotes further understanding of the nature and structure of the Five Eyes intelligence community by reviewing three selected intelligence disciplines—signals intelligence (sigint), national assessment, and defence intelligence.
The Five Eyes intelligence community grew out of twentieth-century British-American intelligence cooperation. While not monolithic; the group is more cohesive than generally known. Rather than being centrally choreographed, the Five Eyes group is more of a cooperative, complex network of linked autonomous intelligence agencies, interacting with an affinity strengthened by a profound sense of confidence in each other and a degree of professional trust so strong as to be unique in the world. The paper suggests that, given Canadian foreign policy initiatives and evolving strategic security threats, not only must Canada maintain credible and valuable intelligence support to its partners, the Five Eyes intelligence community as a whole must remain integrated, effective and dominant.”
“The FBI's 'Vision Lady'
By Chitra Ragavan
Posted 9/19/04
Maureen Baginski is leery of heights. Yet, every morning just before dawn, the Federal Bureau of Investigation's powerful intelligence czar wills herself to drive over a narrow, shoulderless, two-lane bridge across a river, part of a nearly two-hour commute from her home in Virginia to FBI headquarters in Washington. "When I cross it in the dark, my legs start to get rubbery," says Baginski. "But I tell myself I can't be that paralyzed, for Christ's sake. I've got to drive over the bridge!"
The resolve she gathers to cross the bridge is no less necessary when she arrives at the office. Because Baginski, an FBI outsider, has been tasked with pulling off what many believe to be mission impossible: ensuring that the hidebound FBI not repeat the sort of catastrophic intelligence failures that plagued the bureau prior to the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. FBI Director Robert Mueller has proposed creating a new directorate for domestic intelligence within the FBI, with Baginski at its helm. And the stakes couldn't be much higher. Baginski's assignment is to change the FBI in a fundamental way, to turn it into an agency that systematically collects, analyzes, and disseminates intelligence. Not just to prosecute crimes after the fact, as it has done in the past, but to prevent future terrorist attacks on American soil.
The process has been nothing short of excruciating. Ultimately, the new directorate needs the blessing of Congress or the president. But Baginski has meticulously been creating the blueprint for it since May 2003, when Mueller named her to head a new office of intelligence in an effort to deflect looming criticism from the 9/11 commission. Since then, working with meager resources, Baginski, a 25-year veteran of the National Security Agency, has struggled to overcome institutional resistance. "I wouldn't even begin to pretend," Baginski told U.S. News in a rare interview, "that it's not hard."
Harvesting intelligence. Her supporters say that if anyone can do it, it's "Mo," as Baginski is known around town. A Russian linguist, Soviet expert, and career intelligence analyst, Baginski has earned kudos for trying to avoid the quick fix. Instead, she's trying to create a fundamental paradigm shift in how the FBI harvests its domestic intelligence and how the bureau recruits, trains, and retains its intelligence analysts--long viewed as such second-class citizens that they're often relegated to answering phones and even clearing trash bins. The 9/11 commission found that nearly two thirds of FBI analysts are unqualified for their jobs [particularly those who discovered that the members of the 9/11 Commission were unqualified for theirs], and the good ones are raided by other agencies.
Baginski also wants to train new agent recruits to gather and use intelligence right from the beginning of their careers. And she wants intelligence gathered from all sorts of FBI cases to be funneled into the effort to prevent terrorist attacks. "She's embedding intelligence into the DNA of the FBI," says recently retired bureau executive Steven McCraw, who was Baginski's first deputy. Meanwhile, she's struggling to resolve the legal quandaries that stem from the FBI's dual obligations: to share information but to guard evidence for use in court cases. "She's invaluable," Mueller told U.S. News. "She has helped bridge the two disciplines of law enforcement and intelligence."”
“SI International (SINT)
Maureen A. Baginski, 52, has served on our Board of Directors since October 2006. Since October 2006, she has served as the President of the National Security Systems Division of Sparta, Inc., a systems engineering and advanced technology company supporting the federal government, primarily at the Department of Defense and NASA. Prior to joining Sparta, Ms. Baginski served as a director of BearingPoint beginning in 2005 and during 2006. She also served as the Executive Assistant Director of Intelligence at the Federal Bureau of Investigation from 2003 to 2005, and a member of the senior executive service at the National Security Agency from 1979 to 2003. Ms. Baginski currently serves on the board of Argon ST.”
“Serco Executive Maureen Baginski Receives FBI Intelligence Analysts Association Award Serco is proud to announce that Maureen Baginski, Vice President of Serco’s Intelligence Services, received the FBI Intelligence Analysts Association (IAA) Award.
“We are truly proud of Maureen and this great honor she received. She has brought to Serco the same can-do attitude she exuded while working for the FBI and she continues to lead her team here at Serco with pride and respect,” said Ed Casey, Chairman and Reston, VA (PRWEB) May 02, 2011
Serco Inc., a provider of professional, technology, and management services to the federal government, is proud to announce that Maureen Baginski, Vice President of Serco’s Intelligence Services, received the FBI Intelligence Analysts Association (IAA) Award. The first annual event and ceremony was held on April 12 in Washington, DC.
Ms. Baginski was recognized for her work from 2003 to 2005, when she served as the FBI’s Executive Assistant Director for Intelligence. In that position, she was responsible for establishing and managing the FBI’s first-ever intelligence program. She adapted FBI intelligence capabilities with information technologies to create an intelligence-sharing operation that could identify threats before they became attacks.
During the awards ceremony, James Mackey, a former FBI supervisory intelligence analyst, had these words to say about Ms. Baginski, “Ladies and gentlemen, this person, Maureen Baginski immediately established credibility through hard work the old fashioned way. She became one of the Director’s tugboats, and again, through hard work…she established the FBI directorate for domestic intelligence and brought about fundamental change in the FBI, not only for you, but for the American people.”
Prior to her role with the FBI, Ms. Baginski served at the National Security Agency (NSA) for 23 years, where she held a variety of positions, including Signals Intelligence (SIGINT) Director, Senior Operations Officer in the National Security Operations Center; Executive Assistant to the Director of NSA/Central Security Service, Chief Officer of the Director; Assistant Deputy Director of Technology and Systems; and lead analyst for the Soviet Union. As SIGINT Director, Ms. Baginski successfully established and directed a unified program to exploit encrypted or denied information on global networks. Leading the NSA’s Signals Intelligence Directorate, the Nation’s high technology cryptology organization, she managed a complex and geographically dispersed distributed information production enterprise.
“We are truly proud of Maureen and this great honor she received. She has brought to Serco the same can-do attitude she exuded while working for the FBI and she continues to lead her team here at Serco with pride and respect,” said Ed Casey, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer at Serco.
Ms. Baginski is also the recipient of two Presidential Rank Awards, two Director of Central Intelligence National Achievement Medals, the Director of Military Intelligence’s Leadership Award, and NSA’s Exceptional Civilian Service Award. She holds BA and MA degrees in Slavic Languages and Linguistics from the University of Albany. In December 2005, she received an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from the University of Albany for her service to the nation.
About Serco Inc.: Serco Inc. is a leading provider of professional, technology, and management services focused on the federal government. We advise, design, integrate, and deliver solutions that transform how clients achieve their missions. Our customer-first approach, robust portfolio of services, and global experience enable us to respond with solutions that achieve outcomes with value. Headquartered in Reston, Virginia, Serco Inc. has approximately 11,000 employees, annual revenue of $1.5 billion, and is ranked in the Top 30 of the largest Federal Prime Contractors by Washington Technology. Serco Inc. is a wholly-owned subsidiary of Serco Group plc, a $6.6 billion international business that helps transform government and public services around the world. More information about Serco Inc. can be found at http://www.serco-na.com.”
Links:
PresidentialField Mandate
Abel Danger Blog
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.