PDA

View Full Version : Citigroup Laundering Saudi Cash Used to Fund Jihad


real6
06-11-2007, 08:46 PM
http://susanohanian.org/show_nclb_outrages.html?id=2467

NCLB Outrages

Citigroup Laundering Saudi Cash Used to Fund Jihadist Terrorism. Yes, There is an NCLB Connection

Where does Neil Bush fit into all this? Keep reading.

By Bill Gallagher

DETROIT -- Did Citigroup, one of the most powerful financial institutions in the world, help transfer funds into accounts used to bankroll terrorism? Why do prominent Saudis involved in funneling money to "charitable" accounts that end up funding terrorism escape scrutiny?

Why would the FBI, when given evidence of such conduct, promise to investigate, and then wait 17 months to question the whistleblower? Why would the FBI then suddenly drop the probe just two weeks into it?

These questions haunt Leonard D. Wallace, and the Florida-based financial consultant has spent more than five years working to expose and unravel a baffling $5 billion deal involving Citigroup, a fabulously wealthy Saudi prince and money transfers bouncing around the world.

Wallace suspects money shuffling into what the Saudi government dubbed an Account 98. These are supposed to be accounts supporting humanitarian causes, but some of the money from them has been given to the families of suicide bombers, honored "martyrs." Saudi money has enabled and nurtured al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden's operations from the get-go. Those funds and the spiritual inspiration of radical clerics helped provide bin Laden with the 15 Saudi hijackers of the 19 he used in the 9/11 attacks.

The Saudi government keeps a tight lid on Account 98 records and shields them from any outside examination. Interpol, the CIA and many other intelligence and criminal investigation agencies would find a treasure trove in the trail of international terrorism and who provides the funding for it with just a peek at Account 98 records. That's why the Saudis wrap them in secrecy.

I've written several columns about Saudi money and the Leonard Wallace story, the last in July 2006, explaining that the FBI had not interviewed Wallace a year after promising to investigate his claims.

In June 2005, Barry Sabin, the chief of the Justice Department's Criminal Division, advised Wallace that the FBI's Terrorist Financing Operations Section would review his evidence of Citigroup's shady dealings.

Wallace's persistence was finally paying off -- or so it seemed. Since the day before the 9/11 attacks, when Wallace realized he was caught in the crossfire of a series of phony bank account authorizations -- he has been crying foul, telling those who should be interested what he knows and urging them to use their authority to uncover the full truth.

He's shared his concerns and evidence in letters to everyone from President George W. Bush, to Citigroup's CEO and board of directors, to members of Congress and the Saudi Embassy. He filed a formal complaint with the Justice Department.

In October, I spoke to Wallace, and we discussed the status of the FBI investigation. Nothing had happened. I planned to ask why in a column. Then, on Nov. 16, Wallace called me, his voice excited. "Bill, you're not going to believe this," he said. "The FBI just called and they want to interview me." Well, that's progress, I thought, planning to shift the focus of my next installment in the saga. Dana Conte, an FBI agent in New York City, was assigned to the case. The FBI usually says nothing about ongoing investigations.

Wallace explained to her how representatives of Citigroup's Singapore office approached him in September 2001 to help facilitate a series of business loans and assist the bank in investing the $5 billion in proceeds into housing and industrial projects. Wallace, who had done work like this before, would handle the paperwork and financial postings to make sure the transactions were in order. He was to be paid fees for his services.

Citigroup's Miami branch authenticated the financial documents, and top officers at the bank's Park Avenue headquarters in New York City were fully informed and signed off on the deal. But then Wallace discovered that collateral for the loans was based on phony documents and the real beneficiary for the money was to be Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin Alsud, one of the richest men on earth and a holder of a substantial block of Citigroup stock.

Wallace believed the whole transaction was a sham used to cloak a deal to funnel funds to a Saudi Account 98. He wrote to Citigroup's then-CEO Sanford Weil alerting him of his suspicions. The deal fizzled, but Citigroup could never explain to Wallace what was really going on. A $5 billion deal goes poof, and nobody is talking.

The FBI's probe of Wallace's claims lasted an entire two weeks. Wallace says he got a call last Wednesday from Conte informing him that she would no longer be involved in the Citigroup case, saying a level of authority above her had determined the bank was clean.

Wallace sees the powerful in Washington protecting their friends: "It took the FBI 17 months to get going with an investigation they agreed to do in June 2005. Then I learn that they're ending the investigation by saying that Citigroup didn't commit any crimes funding terrorism and that it wouldn't have been a crime even if they had transferred funds into a Saudi Type 98 Account. Doesn't it look more than ever that Citigroup is still getting a big pass from the Justice Department?" Wallace was also told Citigroup's prior misdeeds and egregious corporate behavior had no bearing on whether the investigation would proceed. The bank's rap sheet reads like that of a thug in a pinstriped suit.

The Securities and Exchange Commission slapped Citigroup with a $120 million fine for helping Enron disguise loans as cash in order to defraud investors. The bank came to a $2.65 billion settlement with WorldCom investors after it was learned that Citigroup's research department failed to reveal obvious problems with the company before it filed for bankruptcy. Citigroup was WorldCom's lead banker.

Citigroup is under investigation for its role in the failure of Italian dairy giant Parmalat. There are other probes involving Citigroup in Japan, Argentina and Great Britain. Citigroup has to be in every lineup of the usual suspects for any international money-laundering and financial chicanery. But don't tell that to the FBI.

As for our friend Saudi Prince Alwaleed, he's off on another investment binge. The prince found a hot company involved in the instructional software industry, and that's where he's putting some of his money these days.

The company sells high-tech equipment to use in the classroom for the endless tests kids must now take under the federal No Child Left Behind Act. Bush's big education reform is better labeled No Testing Company Left Behind.

The shrewd prince sees great promise in a company that produces computer-projector displays known as COWs, "curriculum on wheels." The expensive equipment -- going for $3,800 a unit -- is selling like hot cakes. The company's president is delighted with his entrepreneur vision and keen insight into a growing business niche.

Ignite! Inc. has sold 1,700 COWs, according to "Business Week," and Prince Alwaleed's investment is a winner. The owner of Ignite! expects 2006 revenue of $5 million.

Neil Bush, the son and brother of the Bush presidents, says his interest in education springs from his own struggle with dyslexia. Neil, the youngest of the Bush boys, earned his corporate stripes as a director of Silverado Savings and Loan. When the Colorado bank went belly-up, U.S. taxpayers picked up the $1 billion bill. Bush should have been indicted, but federal authorities only slapped him with a sanction -- he could no longer be involved in banking.

Neil Bush's fondness for teenage prostitutes in Thailand and Hong Kong was revealed in a sworn deposition during his divorce proceedings. Bush said the young women simply showed up, knocking on the door of his hotel room, and he had sex with them. He claimed he didn't know they were prostitutes because they never asked for money and he didn't pay them.

Typical Bush -- not even a tip for services. He said of his encounters with the ladies of the night, "It was very unusual." At the time, Bush was accepting big consulting fees from Asian firms for nebulous advice. "Ah shucks, all these teenage girls mysteriously arriving at my room every night. I'm just one lucky fella," ne'er-do-well Neil must have thought.

Bush acknowledges his name may have helped a bit with his new business, telling "Business Week," "I'm not saying it hasn't opened any doors. It may have helped with some sales." Bush says his backers like Prince Alwaleed get no favors from his brother in the White House: "Not one of our investors has ever asked for any kind of special access -- a visa, a trip to the Lincoln Bedroom, an autographed picture, or anything." The prince already has that access. He's just further ingratiating himself and the House of Saud with their beloved Bush family.

The Brits are on to a Saudi money deal, and the boys from Riyadh are fuming, even threatening to sever diplomatic relations with the U.K. The Serious Fraud Office (SFO) is investigating a secret slush fund a British defense contractor allegedly created to fund the extravagant lifestyles of members of the Saudi royal family.

BAE Systems has a contract with the Saudi government to build and deliver 72 Typhoon fighter jets, often called the Eurofighter. The deal, worth 40 billion pounds, would safeguard 10,000 jobs in the U.K. for a decade.

Five BAE employees, including the company's managing director for international programs, have been arrested in connection with the slush fund that allegedly provided the Saudi royals with the kind of goodies they so enjoy.

The London Sunday Times reports the SFO found the Saudis were given payments "in the form of lavish holidays, a fleet of luxury cars, including a gold Rolls-Royce, rented apartments and other perks." I'll bet the back 40 the "other perks" included a bevy of those Neil Bush mystery girls appearing at the doors of the Saudi princes. I'm sure the ladies did much more than sip $300-a-bottle single-malt scotch.

The Saudis went ballistic when they found out that a lawyer working on the investigation persuaded a magistrate in Switzerland to "force disclosure about a series of confidential Swiss bank accounts" the Saudi royals use. In the Muslim tradition, the worst sin is shirk: associating anything not God with God. But among the Saudi royals, there is a sin worse than shirk -- revealing their financial dealings.

That's why they are threatening to sever diplomatic relations, cancel the jet deal and even cut off intelligence cooperation with Britain over al-Qaeda. Any examination of the flow of Saudi money will lead to paths that will be more revealing and embarrassing, expose criminal behavior and show conduits used to fund terrorism.

That's why the investigation of Leonard Wallace's claims about Citigroup and the Saudi prince got nipped in the bud. It's too close to Bush family intimates and interests and the entangled reach of a corrupt banking empire.

The truth must be buried.

"By participating in a coverup that protects Citigroup and its political business associates," Wallace said, "the FBI is no better than Citigroup, government officials and the Saudis they're protecting."

Maybe when the Democrats take over Congress someone will have the nerve to ask the Saudis and their bankers what they planned to do with that $5 billion.

synergy777
06-11-2007, 08:51 PM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/11/06/ccciti106.xml

Plunging markets fear a meltdown

THE INVESTOR

ALWALEED BIN TALAL
14TH RICHEST MAN

Prince Alwaleed binTalal

Prince Alwaleed binTalal, the nephew of King Abdullah, is one of the few members of the Saudi Royal Family to have amassed his fortune by his own hand, and he can thank Citigroup for much of it.

In 1990, he helped bail out a troubled Citigroup by buying a 5pc stake for $207m. He still has a similar-sized stake now valued at $8bn, helping make him the worlds 14th richest man. A supporter of previous chief executive Sandy Weill, he has been critical of Charles Prince in the past, but was prepared to stand by him during the recent troubles until last Thursday.

Alwaleed, a Bedouin leader who is still known to hold court in the desert, despite having offices in one of Riyadhs plushest skyscrapers, also has significant stakes in Time Warner, Canary Wharf and News Corporation.

His Kingdom Holdings company said yesterday it had sold Londons Four Seasons Hotel for 70m.

niftygifter
06-11-2007, 09:30 PM
Check this:

http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/nesara/news/news.php?q=b19324b79db845b19c29d16cddfb8d78

and this

http://abundanthope.net/pages/article_851.shtml

and this

http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/nesara/news/news.php?q=bb6379ee9cadfa6472f82308448dfd6a

And still no TV coverage..just shows that the whole media are tied up in the Cabal;)

This is very significant IMO. VERY SIGNIFICANT INDEED

Nifty:D

real6
06-11-2007, 09:40 PM
Check this:

http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/nesara/news/news.php?q=b19324b79db845b19c29d16cddfb8d78

and this

http://abundanthope.net/pages/article_851.shtml

and this

http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/nesara/news/news.php?q=bb6379ee9cadfa6472f82308448dfd6a

And still no TV coverage..just shows that the whole media are tied up in the Cabal;)

This is very significant IMO. VERY SIGNIFICANT INDEED

Nifty:D



I know i saw your thread a few hours ago. thats how i found out. I left a few bullitins on Myspace and people are hitting me back like mad. They havent heard about it!!!

niftygifter
06-11-2007, 09:51 PM
I really hope for all you people over there and the rest of this planet that this is the start of the end of all this:rolleyes:

Lets keep them toppling;)

Nifty:D

jagalman
06-11-2007, 10:01 PM
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/money/main.jhtml?xml=/money/2007/11/06/ccciti106.xml

Plunging markets fear a meltdown

THE INVESTOR

ALWALEED BIN TALAL
14TH RICHEST MAN

Prince Alwaleed binTalal

Prince Alwaleed binTalal, the nephew of King Abdullah,

And because he has a Lebanese Passport! he always dreamed to be THE PRIME MINISTER OF LEBANON! And always has his eye on this position!

Al-Walid was born to Prince Talal, son of the founding king of Saudi Arabia, Abdul Aziz Al Saud, and Princess Mona El-Solh, daughter of Riad El-Solh, the first Prime Minister of modern day Lebanon and a leader of Lebanese independence. He is also a cousin of Prince Moulay Hicham of Morocco, whose mother is Mona's sister. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Al-Waleed_bin_Talal

Funny how royals connected even in marriage!

Anders Lindman
07-11-2007, 12:10 AM
Wallace suspects money shuffling into what the Saudi government dubbed an Account 98. These are supposed to be accounts supporting humanitarian causes, but some of the money from them has been given to the families of suicide bombers, honored "martyrs." Saudi money has enabled and nurtured al-Qaeda and Osama bin Laden's operations from the get-go.

:eek: Is that how they recruit suicide bombers? The suicide bomber's family will receive a lot of money if the suicide bombing is successfully carried out. :confused::eek::eek::eek:

synergy777
07-11-2007, 12:57 AM
funny how the saudis are dictators who behead people, ban women from driving, promote the most corrupted extreme version of islam. a version that states the cause for jihad, the shunning of western values, materialism. and yet they are given a royal welcome, and seem oddly enough to enjoy the very things they tell the people of arabia/muslims to avoid because they are deemed evil, hyprocracy. they seem to enjoy bentleys/rolls, gold toilets, hookers and penthouses, and yet they are the major supporters of wahabbism, and fund most terrorist groups and pay for extreme mosques/schools.

if the war on terror was real, all one would have to do is freeze the saudis assets, but then again, there is no war on terror.

http://money.uk.msn.com/investing/articles/morecommentary/article.aspx?cp-documentid=6599852

An easy guide to the banking crisis By Nick Louth
November 06 2007

They thought it was all over...well it isn't yet, not by a long chalk.

The crisis of insecurity and nerves that is afflicting the global banking system continues to worsen. Two of the world's most powerful banks, Citibank and Merrill Lynch, have each lost chief executives along with billions of dollars, losses they failed to anticipate or fully account for.

Share prices of British banks, and their European counterparts continue to fall in the absence of the information that will put investors minds at rest. The market for lending between banks, crucial for mortgages and commercial lending to companies, remains paralysed.

MSN Money's full coverage of the market turmoil

The Bank of England has around 30 billion of taxpayers money tied up supporting mortgage bank Northern Rock. That bank's new mortgage business has since dwindled to a fifth of its previous level. The impact the crisis is still growing and no-one seems to know when or how it will end.

Here is the easy guide: 10 frequently asked questions about the 2007 banking crisis and answers that will put you firmly in the picture.

1. How did this all start?
Banks in the US have for years been falling over themselves to lend money in the property boom that has been running from coast to coast. Many of the loans were made to people who really couldn't afford to meet the repayments, but were persuaded that now was the time they could get on the housing ladder.

Now many of those people can't make their repayments. House prices are tumbling, homes are being repossessed and around $200 billion of duff loans are coming home to roost.

Are you subprime?

2. Why lend to those who can't afford it?
There was a time when banks got their own deposits from savers, judged who was worth a loan, and lived with the results. If the loan decision was good, repayments were made and with them came profits. If not, the bank made losses on the money it couldn't recover.

Not these days. Many banks who made US property loans this time have sold them on. Instead of bankers, they were more like estate agents, earning a sales commission. They could afford to overlook a borrower's weak employment record, the poor state of the home, and many other issues because making that loan pay in a year or two's time was going to be someone else's problem.

Reasons to fear the credit crunch

3. Okay, that's in America. Why should it matter to us?
It matters to us because these bad loans have been spread about the world, like a consignment of bad meat delivered to a global burger chain. Most banks are sitting with the financial equivalent of tonnes of burgers frozen in their vaults labelled "mixed financial product, sourced in many places." Who knows what's actually in them? Almost no-one. You just have to wait to see who falls ill after consuming them.

These minced financial packages have been through a process called securitization, by sorting them into grades which could then be traded. Like supermarket burgers or sausages, some of these mortgage-backed securities would be sold as premium, in that the expected return on the mortgages was pretty tasty, some as standard fare, and some as cheap "subprime" in which there was a fair amount of financial gristle and bone, i.e. bad credit histories.

4. Why did this problem drag others in?
Essentially because of clever packaging. However poor the financial quality of these products, they were spiced up to look attractive by being turned into collateralised debt obligations (CDOs). These are like an up-market financial Christmas hamper, full of a variety of products offering yummy-sounding returns, but underneath the luxury jam and the Christmas pud, quite a few of those same dodgy burgers and sausages, neatly repackaged and labelled.

These CDOs were very attractive to pension funds and hedge funds, who bought them in large quantities, helped by ratings agencies (the financial equivalent of the consumer guide "Which?") that gave some of them a top-quality rating.

Agencies like Standard & Poor's and Moody's have since been slated for their role in assessing the quality of these products.

5. What was hedge funds' role in this?
Once banks discovered that there was something rotten in the mortgage-backed securities and CDOs they would no longer take these as collateral for other lending. Hedge funds, buccaneering financial groups dedicated to making money in good times or bad, had borrowed very heavily against these assets to fund their trading activities now had to raise money another way.

They couldn't sell their CDOs because no-one really knew what they were worth, especially once their quality was questioned. Instead they sold shares, whose values are established by the stock market, an independent market place. That was when the problem first emerged to a level the ordinary investor would notice.

6. I've read about off-balance sheet problems. What are they?
Banks are sometimes too clever for their own good. They have for tax and regulatory reasons created so-called structured investment vehicles, whose assets and liabilities do not appear on the owning bank's balance sheet.

These are almost like separate companies which issue commercial paper (i.e. bonds) in their own name, secured against the assets they hold. What were those assets? Yes, you've guessed it, they included big slabs of mortgage-backed securities. Many of these SIVs are now in big trouble, starved of funds and unable to offload their assets.

The upshot is likely to be that banks have to take them back on board their balance sheets, which will in turn soak up capital which could otherwise be lent. That in short will crimp the future lending which powers the global economy's investment.

7. I thought this had finished weeks ago!
So did the banks. Merrill Lynch in October set aside savings to cover losses of $4.5 billion on mortgage-backed securities, and just a few weeks later upped those provisions to $7.9 billion. That was enough to force the resignation of Stan O'Neill, the chief executive.

Last week, Meredith Whitney, an analyst at CIBC World Markets predicted that Citigroup, the world's largest bank, had so much trouble stored up that it might have to cut its dividend. "We believe over (the) near term, Citigroup will need to raise over $30 billion in capital through either asset sales, a dividend cut, a capital raise, or combination thereof," she said.

Citigroup now admits it may have to take $8 billion-$11 billion of losses, having only posted losses of $3.3 billion when it last reported quarterly results. The embarrassment is compounded by the fact that it took an external analyst armed only with a spreadsheet and a sharp brain to tell it what it should long have known itself.

8. But how did this affect Northern Rock?
Northern Rock just happened to be standing at the end of the line when a long, long credit rug was pulled away.

Once banks started to get suspicious of each other, they refused to lend in what is called the inter-bank market. Northern Rock had a much larger proportion of its funds sourced through these wholesale funds than most of its rivals, and when the tap was turned off was struggling to repay other short-term funding that fell due.

The quality of Northern Rock's own lending was as good as any bank in the UK, but this wasn't really the issue. With only a few branches and a relatively small base of savers, it hadn't the inflow of money to make fresh loans until the Bank of England stepped in.

Now, according to intermediaries that re-sell Northern Rock mortgages, business is running at less than a quarter of the level of earlier in the year. That puts further pressure on the embattled lender.

9. Does this affect the real economy?
In some ways it already has. Though the US economy is very resilient, consumer spending and confidence there has already slowed because of the sub-prime crisis and falling house values.

Though the US Federal Reserve has cut interest rates, which should make many feel better off, the rates on many new home loans are going up not down. This is partly because of the end of low introductory interest rates on many loans, and the general credit tightening for new applicants.

What we have now is a generally inflationary world economy where interest rates should be higher, but because of fears for the state of the finance system have been cut artificially low. That is why, even as banks fell, shares in big commodity companies and the Chinese stock market have been ripping away. That can only go on so long. By cutting rates now, the chances of slowing this boom gently have worsened.


10. When will this end?

It can't end until banks unpick the various packages of mortgage-backed securities whose value determines the CDOs and other securities on their balance sheets. It is something like a major food recall. You track down where the contaminated produce began, look at where it was distributed, who has got it in their cold stores and warehouse, and see into which other financial sausages it got mixed.

Finally, the whole lot has to be packed up, realistically priced and willing buyers found. That, it seems certain, is going to take many months yet.


my comments:

the banks know full well what they have lost and are about you. do you think meredith is the only one in the know ?, meredith just spoke what everyone in the city knows, but is forbidden to tell. we are on life support, since early august. why do you think central banks ( lenders of last resort ) pumped money into markets to keep them liquid, there are also plunge protection teams (PPT's), which are financed by central banks to stop market falls, to start rallys, they buy up unwanted stock with freshly printed money.

these rallys (dead cat bounce), the obscure (coded) comments from banks are merely to keep market sentiment/confidence high.

the alarm bells started to ring in my head, in march 2006, when the fed stopped publishing the M3-money supply figures. this figure tells us how much money is in the sytem/printed. why hide the figures, well it takes time to build up volumes, they were getting ready for the fallout and subsequent injections, which we have seen in the past months. if they published the figures, people would have spotted the huge increases and caught on, i did. i moved into gold and euros. although the best bet is the chinese yuan, like jim rogers and warren buffet have moved into.

also added to this is the interest rate increases in the uk, and the decreases in the usa. on average, a single rise/decrease takes 8 mths or so to filter through, so we are in for some more volatile/uncertain times.

added to this is the geopolitical aspect of iran. added to this is oil. added to this commodities from metals to food. increasing demand, decreasing supply.

also, this whole fiasco is engineered, its is not an accident. cheap credit/increasing money supply after the LTCM/Dotcom bust was needed to avoid a recession then. so they need another boom, they chose property.

abrilliantone
07-11-2007, 05:15 AM
man real6 your avatar is pretty fukcing scary :eek: if their was a boogey man that fukcers it :eek::D:):cool:

real6
07-11-2007, 02:31 PM
man real6 your avatar is pretty fukcing scary :eek: if their was a boogey man that fukcers it :eek::D:):cool:

Awwwww thanks for the kind words!!!

Yours is really dope!!!

Now can you guess where my pic is from??? Mauhahahahahha

:D:D:D

real6
07-11-2007, 06:31 PM
This is what i found in The New York Times!!!

You are not hearing about this anywere on the news or TV!!!

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/REAL6/Misc/scan0001-1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/REAL6/Misc/scan10001.jpg

anoninnyc
07-11-2007, 06:52 PM
great thread guys. so merrill and citigroups ceos have to step down. but what kind of severence packages do they get? any kind of negative repercussions? what will they go on to do? my guess is that they end up with a nice golden parachute and then end up working in high positions for "them".

niftygifter
07-11-2007, 07:31 PM
When the clinical wrapping up of the biggest financial swindle in the history of the world is going on in America, tied in to Bush Senior, Junior and the Clintons, the cover up by the media and governments continues.

Why this isnt being forced into the media I do not know, it is a duty to the human race to report this, it probably affects every single person on this planet. Just who do "they" think they are?

It just shows how these mechanisms are manipulated and we are told absolutely nothing of relevance that goes on in this world. Time to bin the TV, but hang on to the Internet, because its the only source of real truths (among some of the bullshit).

There are other forces at work though, so IMO, its only a matter of time;)

The day will come when all these thieves and hiders of truth will be revealed, the list is endless:mad: but their days are numbered and grow shorter.:rolleyes:
There WILL be a day when we are all equal in prosperity, love and common purpose.

Nifty:D

mynameis
08-11-2007, 04:26 AM
We would see outrage by family members someplace online about this issue. Where are they? There are no corroborating sources on this story from which that are reputable.

mynameis
08-11-2007, 04:28 AM
This is what i found in The New York Times!!!

You are not hearing about this anywere on the news or TV!!!

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/REAL6/Misc/scan0001-1.jpg
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v517/REAL6/Misc/scan10001.jpg

I would like this to be about arrests, but I don't think this covers arrests. If you can find at least one or two credible sources on the arrests, I would like to see them.

real6
08-11-2007, 02:21 PM
I would like this to be about arrests, but I don't think this covers arrests. If you can find at least one or two credible sources on the arrests, I would like to see them.


I know. i been trying to look at papers and news here, but guess what? NADA!!!!!!!!!!!!

No one knows about it. i was telling people in my job and they thought i was crazy.

niftygifter
08-11-2007, 06:43 PM
All still not being reported.

However!!!

Here are some more links of updates, this will get out very soon and then look out finances.

http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/nesara/news/news.php?q=28251759ee0d1f15b6c99c057eb4d6ca

http://www.fourwinds10.com/siterun_data/nesara/news/news.php?q=a1a636561298146592a47580b132e06a

Dennis Kucinich has moved on the House floor to initiate impeachment proceedings against Vice President Richard Cheney. also in the second link.

Again VERY BIG NEWS being hidden away.

Nifty:D

real6
05-10-2008, 01:41 PM
Bump

entrangermercenary
05-10-2008, 05:52 PM
supporters of wahabbism, and fund most terrorist groups and pay for extreme mosques/schools.


YES correct, yes but do you know also they hate the west with a passion. When I mean the west I mean the Crusaders, and specifically the MASONS!!
While trying to get funding I had the not so great pleasure of sitting in a room with 4 Wahabbists who lectured me on the masons and crusades (as tho it was yesterday.) FFS u think the Irish have long memorys. This encouter with the Wahabbists took place early 90s in central london. No funding granted but a nice letter of introduction in Arabic given. Still trying to work out wat it says 16 yrs later:eek:

1694
05-10-2008, 06:07 PM
The citybank arrests article: http://abundanthope.net/pages/article_851.shtml
is dated Nov6 2007. Why would it be inthe news now?

1694
05-10-2008, 06:09 PM
supporters of wahabbism, and fund most terrorist groups and pay for extreme mosques/schools.


YES correct, yes but do you know also they hate the west with a passion. When I mean the west I mean the Crusaders, and specifically the MASONS!!
While trying to get funding I had the not so great pleasure of sitting in a room with 4 Wahabbists who lectured me on the masons and crusades (as tho it was yesterday.) FFS u think the Irish have long memorys. This encouter with the Wahabbists took place early 90s in central london. No funding granted but a nice letter of introduction in Arabic given. Still trying to work out wat it says 16 yrs later:eek:

Be careful it isnt:

Dumb Fuckers Membership Card.
The card holder is a fully paid up member of the "Dumb Fuckers" Club.

Just joshing.

entrangermercenary
05-10-2008, 06:16 PM
Be careful it isnt:

Dumb Fuckers Membership Card.
The card holder is a fully paid up member of the "Dumb Fuckers" Club.

Just joshing.

OI less ov the Fuckers