Showing posts with label X Nicole Morin. Show all posts
Showing posts with label X Nicole Morin. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 22, 2023

This post had 11,244 impressions. #NXIVM #NicoleMorin #Twitter #LinkedIn

This post had 11,244 impressions earlier this week. Yet no comments, no likes, no messages, no increased followers nor connections. That is out of alignment with every A/B study. Let's circle back as to why, and please respond if you know more, can expand my understanding, or can help. Thank you.

I worked with the Marketing Director of BuyerLink, billionaire Payam Zamani's corp. His Dir was involved in making Starbucks a recognized brand, BEFORE it was a household name. Those types of mentors I worked with, contributed to the successes of any project I've had. As stated in an earlier post, b/c of their insight & what they taught me, I've never "lost" in totality; only some partial losses as one piece of ongoing case work. More than those few incidents, I have experienced DELAYS when perpetrators attempted to affect my work.

In December I was locked out of Twitter for two weeks after I posted about Nicole Morin. In January I was locked out of LinkedIn for a week, and it took buying a new computer to get back in. I sent LinkedIn the fraudulent notices I received, pretending to be from them, as well as the headers & IP traces. They were coming from a tech firm in Ontario, who was committing illegal fraud, impersonation, and affected my account. They committed a crime, and I hope Canada's Minister of Justice, frowns upon that.

An impression is different than a view and different than an open.

In marketing, to make one "sale", it's 100 cold calls, 10 conservations, 1 sale. In email marketing, it's about 1 sale to every 1,000 valid email addresses. My statistics, have always been higher (a) b/c of that Director I knew + other brilliant leaders who helped me along the way (if I worked w/you in a long term W2 assignment, you know who you are; thank you for your guidance); & (b) as I'm old school, focused on relationships. I'm generally more word of mouth, keeping my foundation w/people I know, trust, have worked with in the past.

I'm missing 8 emails from January attack. I'm missing a handful of emails from December attack.

If you're one of those people, reach out to me again. I want to connect with you.

If you reached out to identify #NXVIM members (1 of 2 posts had photos), REACH OUT TO ME AGAIN. Closing the case matters to me. I received 2 restraining orders from Judge L against their members who failed due diligence in 2018 & I need to renew. I have enough data, but there's an aspect that's BIGGER than my small case. ID can help more globally: NXIVM was indicted for trafficking, and use technology to commit crime. IDing members, bridges a gap between my case & tech they use to hurt others.

The case regarding #NicoleMorin, is my top priority this year, more important than anything I've worked on since I first worked with a District Attorney in 1998. Out of all my assignments helping corporations, reporting fraud & helping some families affected by fraud over 25 years, Morin is THE MOST IMPORTANT. As NXIVM traffics, they are a part.

graphical user interface, text, application, Teams

Threat Actors ARE on US Soil

Thanks for this. This is great. Except for, many cyber criminals ARE in the US. I've been filming & photographing a large group that traffics, since 2021. They're here, on our soil. I also met many perpetrators, in Silicon Valley. I was the Financial Controller for several major tech companies 2006-2010, working with thousands of engineers. When I achieved exit, hackers would come up to me, and give me bits of info. It always disturbed me, until I got curious, then decided to research what they were doing.One perpetrator from DC in 2021, said his father was Secret Service, and he and his friends, were exploiting some of that technology. He was an actual Influencer, and told me he marketed his brand, which was about art, tattoos, lifestyle. He formed teams of volunteers/gamers for the Domestic Terrorist Organization he worked for, utilizing Serious Games. They physically followed & technologically breached, specific individuals who fit their attack criteria. It was for profit. The targets were chosen due to their finances, their politics, their media, or for revenge. He told me he marketed and amassed a group of 1,200 Players, willing to wreak havoc.

In 2021, I spoke to a former Advertising Director living in Virginia. He admitted to me that he has a gambling addiction & engages in this type of gaming to feed his habit, for pay, and for revenge. He described women the way Narcissists do, on an extreme scale of love v hate. He told me he formed gaming teams of 1,000 players per game. He said their goal is to make money through fraud, earn points, and then kill their target within 2-3 months, making it look like suicide. He writes books, which are his trophies. One per victim.

In 2015 I spoke with a Real Estate Co-Owner in San Francisco. He told me he had a rough childhood in New York, was befriended by a male leader in mafia. He told me his job was to go to homes as a teen, and the men he was with, would beat or kill the individuals in those homes, who had debt. He told me he wanted to get out of the violent part of it, and so found BitCoin. He said he now forms teams to harass & steal from people, using technology.

In 2021 in Texas to DC, a caravan I was recording, were immigrants, from Mexico, Brazil, New Zealand, other countries. One GM who forms teams stated she brings individuals over from Australia to play in US illegal tournaments. One immigrant in DC, told me he was hired to write for a Foundation that Traffics, and that if he did what they said, they would help him with US citizenship.

This is happening HERE on US soil by Citizens & Immigrants, working for organized crime. They do use their devices from their home countries. They also use VPN's. I was able to interview a small handful of Threat Actors, who told me that they had felonies, and after they got out of prison, could not get hired elsewhere, unless menial work. One started working for organized crime, paying him $50/hour. One woman stated she earned $10K per deliverable.

https://www.linkedin.com/feed/update/urn:li:activity:7034190068508450816/

Sunday, February 19, 2023

The Art of Deception & Preventing Human Social Engineering

2000 to 2005 I worked in Private Equity, managing Trusts & Estates for Asset Preservation. We managed about 150 portfolios under 20M. The managing partner had me read The Art of Deception by Kevin Mitnick, and wanted to impress, that our systems and who we worked with, were secure, and that our firm's risk assessment, would be based on the strength of the employees, and who would be vulnerable to social engineering vs not.

My adopted family is HNW, and the family trust is UHNW, albeit they're the bottom percent of people who are UHNW, which my grandmother spoke about often. My entire life, I was trained in security, and relationships with others. Vulnerabilities with systems, can be secured. Vulnerabilities with people, are more about an archetype, and while they can be trained, modified, improved, to me, it actually does come down to Nature + Nurture + Associates + Life Experiences. There are risk assessments with people, and predictable outcomes based on stress they're going through.

My family, taught top down, which is typical teaching for high intelligence, which they are. They though, are isolated in their wealth, and also insulated in their religion. When I was training in college studying Applied Behaviorism, we worked with ASD bottom-up. I related to this training, as it was like baseball. When I won state as Starting Center for our JV Softball team, I was initially cut, then had to work exceptionally hard all season, to get Starting Center, and only for a few games at the end. With finance and security, strength builds, and is bottom-up, to me. Little mistakes, can create consuming and costly audits further on. Little slips, can open up a person or firm, to breach. Never worth it.

When it comes to people who are trustworthy or not, I always interview based on values, ethics, and utilize body language analysis and micro-expressions as taught by FBI Security Trainers, and Dr. Ekman. My companies never had the problems other firms do, based on due diligence and screening.

All corporate problems are people problems. A strong company, has no place for Narcissism, whatsoever. Does not matter if they're glib, because the place they come from, matters, and NPD is black & white thinkers who are retaliatory, and ultimately out for themselves, without an internal sense of anything eusocial for good. Narcissists thrive in organized crime. In healthy companies, they destroy that which is good.

All healthy companies, do have healthy competition. They do NOT have bullying, nor narcissism, nor any form of social engineering or espionage. They are trained in awareness, prevention, protection.

Individuals and companies are healthy, when their team is healthy, balanced, safe, and stimulated. This is the correct foundation for anything worthwhile, with longevity and profits.

Saturday, February 18, 2023

WIKIPEDIA: Kidnapping of Charley Ross

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kidnapping_of_Charley_Ross 


Charles Brewster "CharleyRoss (born May 4, 1870 – disappeared July 1, 1874) was the primary victim of the first American kidnapping for ransom to receive widespread media coverage. His fate remains unknown, and his case is one of the most famous disappearances in U.S. history.[1]

Abduction[edit]

On July 1, 1874, four-year-old Charley Ross and his five-year-old brother, Walter Lewis Ross, were playing in the front yard of their family's home in Germantown, a well-to-do section of PhiladelphiaPennsylvania. A horse-drawn carriage pulled up to the residence and the boys were approached by two men who offered candy and fireworks if they would take a ride with them. These two men were known to the boys, as they had been visiting with candy in the days preceding July 1. So the boys agreed, and were transported through Philadelphia to a store where Walter was directed to buy fireworks inside with 25 cents given to him. Walter did so, but the carriage left without him. Charley Ross was taken away and never seen again.[2]

Ransom[edit]

Christian K. Ross, the boys' father, began receiving ransom demands from the apparent kidnappers. They arrived in the form of notes mailed from post offices in Philadelphia and elsewhere, all written in an odd hand and in a coarse, semi-literate style with many simple words misspelled. The communications generally requested a ransom of $20,000 ($400,000 today). The notes cautioned against police intervention and threatened Charley's life if Christian did not cooperate. While the kidnappers had assumed the family was wealthy because of their large house and Christian's ownership of a small dry goods store,[3] the truth was that the family was heavily in debt due to the stock market crash of 1873. Seeing no way to pay the ransom, Christian went to the police. The kidnapping soon became national news.

In addition to the heavy press coverage, some prominent Philadelphians enlisted the help of the famous Pinkerton National Detective Agency, who had millions of flyers and posters printed with Charley Ross's likeness. A popular song based on the crime was composed by Dexter Smith and W. H. Brockway, entitled "Bring Back Our Darling".[4] Several attempts were made to provide the kidnappers with ransom money as dictated in the notes, but in each case the kidnappers failed to appear. Eventually, communication stopped.

Suspects[edit]

On the night of December 13, in Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, New York, the house belonging to Judge Charles Van Brunt was burgled.[5] Holmes Van Brunt, Charles' brother who lived next door, gathered armed members of his household to stop the intruders in the act. Holmes's group entered Charles's house and brought down both burglars with a torrent of gunfire. The burglars, Bill Mosher and Joe Douglas, were career criminals who had recently been released from jail. Mosher was killed instantly from the gunfire. Douglas was mortally wounded, but managed to live approximately two more hours and was able to communicate with Holmes.

There is no clear consensus regarding exactly what Douglas said as he was dying, as all who were present to witness were too shaken by the night's events to give accurate reports. It is thought that Douglas may have said that lying was pointless, as he knew he was mortally wounded, and had thusly admitted that he and Mosher had abducted Charley Ross. Douglas is believed to have reported that Ross was killed, or that Mosher knew where the boy was, possibly adding that he would be returned unharmed to his family within a few days. Douglas did not give any clues to Ross's location or other particulars of the crime and died soon afterwards.

Charley's brother Walter was taken to New York City to look at the bodies of Mosher and Douglas so as to determine if they were the men from the carriage ride. Walter confirmed that they were the same men who took the boys from in front of their home the previous summer. Mosher in particular was very identifiable as he had a distinctively malformed nose, which Walter had described to police as a "monkey nose". (The cartilage of Mosher's nose had been destroyed by syphilis or cancer). Walter himself was asked to identify the bodies of Mosher and Douglas, and he confirmed they were the kidnappers. For most, the issue of who the men in the carriage were was settled beyond reasonable doubt, but Charley Ross was still missing.

Trial[edit]

Former Philadelphia policeman William Westervelt, a known associate of Mosher (and his wife's brother), was arrested and held in connection with the case. He was tried in 1875 for kidnapping.[6] Although Westervelt was a friend and perhaps a confidant of Mosher (while in prison awaiting trial he had told Christian that his son had been alive at the time of Mosher's death), there was virtually no evidence to tie him to the crime itself. Walter, for one, insisted that Westervelt was not one of the men in the carriage that took them away. Westervelt was found not guilty of the kidnapping. However, he was found guilty of a lesser conspiracy charge and served six years in prison. He always maintained his own innocence and swore that he did not know the whereabouts of Charley Ross.

Aftermath[edit]

Two years after the kidnapping, Christian published a book on the case titled The Father's Story of Charley Ross, the Kidnapped Child in order to raise money to continue searching for his son. By 1878, the media interest in the case had begun to wane. To renew interest, Ross had the book reprinted and began giving lectures in Boston.[7]

Christian and his wife continued to search for their son until their deaths (Christian died in 1897 and his wife in 1912).[8] They followed leads and interviewed over 570 boys, teenagers, and eventually grown men from around the world who claimed to have been Charley. All proved to be imposters.[9] The Rosses eventually spent approximately $60,000 looking for their son.[10] In 1924, newspapers began running stories about the case to coincide with the fiftieth anniversary of Ross's abduction. By that time, Walter was an adult and was working as a stockbroker. In interviews, he said that he and his three sisters still received letters from middle aged men claiming to be his brother.[8]

In 1934, Gustave Blair, a 69-year-old carpenter living in Phoenix, Arizona, petitioned a Maricopa County court to recognize him as the real Charley Ross.[11] Blair claimed that after he was abducted, he lived in a cave and was eventually adopted by a man who told him he was Ross.[10] Charley's older brother, Walter Ross, dismissed Blair as "a crank" and added, "The idea that my brother is still alive is not only absurd, but the man's story seems unconvincing. We've long ago given up hope that Charles ever would be found alive."[12] As Blair's claim went uncontested, the court ruled that he was "Charles Brewster Ross" in March 1939.[12] Despite the ruling, the Ross family refused to recognize Blair as their relative and did not bequeath him any money or property from their parents' estate.[11] Blair briefly moved to Los Angeles and attempted to sell his life story to a film studio but was unsuccessful.[8] He eventually moved to Germantown with his wife before moving back to Phoenix. Blair died in December 1943 still claiming that he was Ross.[11]

Gustave Blair's victory in the Maricopa County courtroom was met with considerable skepticism[13] but was reported at the time to have solved the disappearance of Charley Ross.[14] In 2011, in a study commissioned by descendants of the family Blair claimed had raised him after he was kidnapped, Y-DNA evidence determined it did not. Using chain of custody procedures, DNA was collected from a male descendant of each of two suspected brothers, Harrison Miller and Nelson Miller (aka Gustave Blair). DNA analysis determined they had a “99.99903% probability of kinship” meaning they were in fact brothers. They shared the same paternal linage, a perfect 37/37 7-STR marker match. Gustave Blair was a Miller, Nelson Miller. He could not have been Charley Ross.[15]

The case, and in particular the fates of Mosher, Douglas, and Westervelt, served as a deterrent to other potential ransom kidnappers: it would be a quarter of a century before another high-profile ransom kidnapping case emerged with Edward Cudahy Jr. in 1900.

The common admonition "don't take candy from strangers" is said to have come from Ross's abduction. The Charley Project, a major missing persons database, is named for Ross.[9]

While waiting for President Franklin D. Roosevelt to appear at the 1936 Democratic National Convention concluding at Franklin Field in Philadelphia, newspaper columnist H.L. Mencken noted a prank had been played on a public address announcer by someone getting him to continually summon a "Charles Ross" to the press area.[16]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ DeVito, Brittany (Spring 2010). ""23 Letters - A Child Lost Forever.""The Pennsylvania Center for the Book - Charley Ross Kidnapping. Penn State University Libraries. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  2. ^ Porterfield, Waldon R. (October 2, 1974). "Little Charlie and the Crime That Shocked the Nation"The Milwaukee Journal. p. 20. Retrieved December 3, 2014.[dead link]
  3. ^ People staff (May 23, 2018). "PEOPLE Explains: Infamous Kidnappings Throughout History"People. Retrieved May 25, 2018.
  4. ^ James, Bill (2012). Popular Crime: Reflections on the Celebration of Violence. Simon and Schuster. p. 38. ISBN 978-1-4165-5274-1.
  5. ^ "Beautiful Shore Road", Brooklyn Daily Eagle, August 31, 1890
  6. ^ Digital Collections, The New York Public Library. "(still image) Philadelphia, PA. -- the trial of William Westervelt, an alleged accomplice in the abduction of little Charlie Ross, (1875)". The New York Public Library, Astor, Lenox, and Tilden Foundations. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  7. ^ Harris, Sharon (2009). Dr. Mary Walker: An American Radical, 1832–1919. Rutgers University Press. p. 165. ISBN 978-0-8135-4819-7.
  8. Jump up to: a b c Avery, Ron (1997). City of Brotherly Mayhem: Philadelphia Crimes and Criminals. Otis Books. p. 33. ISBN 1-4223-6235-3.
  9. Jump up to: a b Franscell, Ron; Valentine, Karen B. (2013). The Crime Buff's Guide to Outlaw Pennsylvania. Globe Pequot. p. 107. ISBN 978-1-4930-0446-1.
  10. Jump up to: a b Towne, Vincent (December 9, 1941). "Kidnapers Used Candy To Lure Charley Ross"Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. p. 31. Retrieved December 3,2014.
  11. Jump up to: a b c ""Charley Ross" Dead"The Montreal Gazette. December 16, 1943. p. 15. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
  12. Jump up to: a b "Philadelphia Boy Still Missing; Charlie Ross' Brother Declares Claim Of Blair Ridiculous"The Evening Independent. May 9, 1939. p. 1. Retrieved December 3, 2014.
  13. ^ Everly, Thomas. “Searching for Charley Ross.” Pennsylvania History: A Journal of Mid-Atlantic Studies, vol. 67, no. 3, 2000, pp. 376–96, https://journals.psu.edu/phj/article/view/25641/25410. Accessed 13 Apr. 2022.
  14. ^ Gustave Blair vs Walter L Ross, et al, “In the Superior Court of Maricopa County, State of Arizona - Judgement, May 9, 1939)
  15. ^ Miller, Rodney and Larry D. (December 2021). ""I am Charley Ross: Gustave Blair, Nelson Miler and the Crime that Changed a Nation""Searching for Charley Ross. Retrieved April 13, 2022.
  16. ^ The Impossible H. L. Mencken, edited by Marion Elizabeth Rodgers, 1991, Doubleday, pp. 337-339.

Bibliography[edit]

  • Carrie Hagen, we is got him: The Kidnapping that Changed America ISBN 1590200861 (The Overlook Press, 2011)
  • Christian Ross, The Father's Story of Charley Ross, the Kidnapped Child ISBN 1275753337 (John E. Potter, 1876)
  • Ernest Kahlar Alix, Ransom Kidnapping in America, 1874–1974: The Creation of a Capital Crime ISBN 0809308495(Southern Illinois University Press, 1978
  • Louis Solomon,  Great Unsolved Crimes ISBN 0-590-03020-5 (Scholastic Book Services, 1976)
  • Norman Zierold, Little Charley Ross OCLC 709440306 (Little, Brown & Company, 1967)
  • William H. Westervelt (Defendant), E. E. Barclay Life, trial and conviction of William H. Westervelt, for the abduction of little Charley Ross ... OCLC 942285029 (Barclay & Co., Philadelphia, 1877)

External links[edit]

Canadian Multiculturalism's Secret Weapon

"The essence of Multiculturalism is the desire to thrive as individuals in a way of one's own choosing in a society of others who want to do the same. All migrants sure this desire. Multiculturalism is intended to preserve the cultural freedom of all individuals and provide recognition of the contributions of diverse ethnic groups. Canada's embracing of Multiculturalism was a pivotal change in government policy and this essay touches upon that and compares with Periyar's vision of an equitable society."