McConnell has private information to share with the Veterans Administration OIG under a qui tam arrangement to prove that his sister and her outsourcing colleagues in the U.S. Senior Executive Service have been using blackmailers in the Serco Cameron Offender’s Tag Association to entrap and hire vets such as McVeigh and provide ConAir transport for the job of a patsy killer.
Napolitano Apologizes To Vets For DHS Report But Adds:
Timothy McVeigh 'Was A Vet'
Prequel 1: #2024: Marine Serco Red Switch to White’s Club Tagger, Cameron’s Underground Bombs
Prequel 2: #1984: Marine Links Serco Fraud on Veterans Affairs to Shinseki Obama Baginski's Color of Law
Prequel 3: Presidential Field Links Sister’s Decoy Death Threat To McVeigh and KSM
“McConnell infers Marcy’s decoy signature from the movements of Timothy McVeighhttp://www.ufomind.com/area51/ list/1997/jan/a07-008.shtml " Con-Air" in 1/6 San Diego Union Tribune Nichols and McVeigh were transported in the dead of night in an operation much akin to a clandestine military operation, Little said. He did not want to go into details but mentioned that a decoy plane was among the ploys used to guard against possible attempts by supporters to free the suspects. Federal officials have always been circumspect about the fine points of prisoner movement. But ConAir soon could gain a higher public profile with the planned release in June of a movie by the same name. In the Disney film, Nicolas Cage plays a hapless prisoner who wanders into a hijack plot aboard a Marshals Service plane carrying a group of high-security inmates. The Hollywood marshals rough up some of the prisoners, and the plane crashes, leaving the real Marshals Service frowning on the silver screen's invention, said Kristine Marcy, a top official in charge of detentions [and decoy contract hits]. "We don't beat up our prisoners, and our planes certainly don't crash," Marcy said on a recent trip to San Diego, where she was trying to find more jail space for federal prisoners.””
“TO: Interim VA Chief of Staff SUBJECT: Administrative Investigation, Conduct Prejudicial to the Government, Veteran Employment Services Office (VESO), Office of Human Resources and Administration (HR&A), Washington, DC (2013-00235IQ-0004)
Summary
We substantiated that Ms. Mary Santiago, former (retired) Director of VESO, failed to represent VA’s Core Values of Integrity, Commitment, Advocacy, Respect, and Excellence (ICARE). We found that Ms. Santiago and Ms. Katherine Nix, a Serco Services, Inc. (Serco) contractor employee, knowingly misrepresented the results of the VA for Vets Veterans Hiring Fair (hiring fair) held in Detroit, MI, June 26–28, 2012, and intentionally reported fictitious results to VA Senior Leadership. Reports produced by Serco, under Ms. Nix’s supervision, and approved by Ms. Santiago, reflected that 1,321 tentative selections (defined by Ms. Santiago and Ms. Nix as candidates selected to fill positions) were made during the hiring fair; however, we found that at least 574 or about 43 percent of those reported tentative selections never occurred. Evidence also reflected a high probability that the total number of falsely reported selections exceeded 574. We also found that Ms. Santiago did not properly manage her workforce, frequently used obscene and demeaning language, engaged in verbally abusive behavior toward VESO staff and VA contractor employees, and she engaged in the appearance of a conflict of interest by maintaining a less-than-arm’s-length relationship with Ms. Nix. Further, we found that Ms. Nix displayed a lack of candor while testifying under oath. Ms. Santiago announced her retirement shortly after being told of our investigation and declined to be interviewed.
We also substantiated that VESO, through an Office of Personnel Management (OPM) interagency agreement (IA), paid Serco, as the servicing contractor, $509,884 for an Event Management System (EMS), a component of Serco’s Case Management System (CMS), to accurately collect and report data both during and after the hiring fair.”
Summary
We substantiated that Ms. Mary Santiago, former (retired) Director of VESO, failed to represent VA’s Core Values of Integrity, Commitment, Advocacy, Respect, and Excellence (ICARE). We found that Ms. Santiago and Ms. Katherine Nix, a Serco Services, Inc. (Serco) contractor employee, knowingly misrepresented the results of the VA for Vets Veterans Hiring Fair (hiring fair) held in Detroit, MI, June 26–28, 2012, and intentionally reported fictitious results to VA Senior Leadership. Reports produced by Serco, under Ms. Nix’s supervision, and approved by Ms. Santiago, reflected that 1,321 tentative selections (defined by Ms. Santiago and Ms. Nix as candidates selected to fill positions) were made during the hiring fair; however, we found that at least 574 or about 43 percent of those reported tentative selections never occurred. Evidence also reflected a high probability that the total number of falsely reported selections exceeded 574. We also found that Ms. Santiago did not properly manage her workforce, frequently used obscene and demeaning language, engaged in verbally abusive behavior toward VESO staff and VA contractor employees, and she engaged in the appearance of a conflict of interest by maintaining a less-than-arm’s-length relationship with Ms. Nix. Further, we found that Ms. Nix displayed a lack of candor while testifying under oath. Ms. Santiago announced her retirement shortly after being told of our investigation and declined to be interviewed.
We also substantiated that VESO, through an Office of Personnel Management (OPM) interagency agreement (IA), paid Serco, as the servicing contractor, $509,884 for an Event Management System (EMS), a component of Serco’s Case Management System (CMS), to accurately collect and report data both during and after the hiring fair.”
“White's is a gentleman's club in St James's Street, London. It is the oldest and most exclusive gentleman's club in London.[1][2]It gained a reputation in the 18th century for both its exclusivity and the often raffish behaviour of its members. Notable current members include Charles, Prince of Wales, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, Conrad Black and Tom Stacey. British Prime Minister David Cameron was formerly a member for fifteen years but resigned in 2008, despite his father Ian Cameron having previously been the club's chairman, over the club's refusal to admit women.[3][4][5][6][7] White's continues to be a men-only establishment; the only exception being made during a visit by Queen Elizabeth II in 1991.[7] White's is a member of the Association of London Clubs.[8]”
“Tom Stacey FRSL (born 11 January 1930) is a British novelist, publisher, screenwriter, foreign correspondent, and penologist.
Born on 11 January 1930, in the Manor House, Bletchingley, Surrey, he is the younger brother of Nicolas Stacey. He attended Wellesley House School (1938-43), originally at Broadstairs, Kent, but from September 1939 was evacuated to the Scottish Highlands.
At Eton College (1943-48) Stacey became a fourth-generation successive Stacey pupil at Eton, where he was a solo treble, the founder of Wotton’s Society in the field of philosophy, editor (with Douglas Hurd) of the weekly Eton College Chronicle, winner of the Essay Prize, and House Captain.
At Scots Guards (1948-50), in which he received his commission as Second Lieutenant, on active service in what is now known as peninsular Malaysia, spent his leave with theTemiar aborigines in the jungle, and wrote his first book (The Hostile Sun).
At Worcester College, Oxford, England (1950-51), he founded and co-organised the controversial students’ tour operation, Undergrad Tours, during the 1951 Festival of Britainyear.
Journalistic career[edit]
He was staff writer at the Lilliput Magazine (1951-2), as a colleague of Patrick Campbell and Maurice Richardson. He then became feature writer and foreign correspondent forPicture Post (1952-54). During 1954 he became a Daily Express (London) ‘Express Explorer’ in which he crossed Africa overland from the Atlantic to East Africa, accompanied by Ugandan University of Cambridge graduate Erisa Kironde, and lived with the Bakonzo people of the Ruwenzori Mountains.
He was then reporter and roving correspondent for the Montreal Star (1955-56) before rejoining the Daily Express in 1956-60 as foreign correspondent and diplomatic correspondent, including as America columnist in 1957. He joined The Sunday Times as roving correspondent and chief foreign correspondent (1960-65), with a worldwide brief and covering the dismantling of British Empire globally, and major conflict zones of the period, and interviewing many heads of state (including Nikita Khrushchev, Morarji Desai,Ayub Khan, Harold Macmillan, and Éamon de Valera).
He then moved to the London Evening Standard (1965-67) while standing for Parliament, where Stacey was a columnist and roving correspondent. Subsequent freelance assignments for contributions to The Times, The Sunday Telegraph, The Daily Telegraph, The Observer, Daily Mail, and The Spectator. In all, Stacey has reported from over 120 countries, many of them several times.
..
In 1974 he became a prison visitor, following his own imprisonment (as a foreign correspondent) in India in 1965. He continued in the role ever since.
In 1981 he conceived the electronic tag for (appropriate) offenders, as an alternative to imprisonment, and in 1982 formed and launched the Offender’s Tag Association [allegedly used to assemble mobile hit and triage teams at crimes scenes including Murrah Building and WTC 1993 and 9/11] as a pressure group for the adoption and exploitation of the tag (a term adopted by Stacey from the inception of the scheme). Offender tagging has subsequently become widely used in penological reform in Britain and throughout the world. Stacey remains Director of the OTA.”
“Building a State-of-the-Practice Data Communications Network To create a state-of-the-practice data communications network required Serco to engineer different solutions for each of the AFSCN’s unique locations. Each ground station around the world had to be surveyed in order to develop detailed installation plans, project support agreements and testing plans. Furthermore, to assure communications reliability between the ground station and the operational control nodes, Serco also had to conduct a complete circuit testing exercise.
…
In developing this enhanced voice and data communications network, Serco’s team engineered and implemented an ATM backbone and secure voice system for each of the AFSCN ground stations. The installed network was based on a Wide Area Network (WAN) architecture utilizing IP based network capabilities and proprietary secure communication technologies such as KG-75s, KG-84S and KIV-7s. In addition, Serco ensured Defense Red Switch Network connectivity and operations throughout the AFSCN”
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
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.