NY Times,CIA Attack On Me,Tony Ryals In 2006
First NY Post writer Chris Byron mentions me which starts their mad barking lying about me to defend the CIA stock criminals who ripped me off particularly Agora Inc of Baltimore founded by James Dale Davidson who also founded the NTU or National Taxpayers Union .......
to be continued.......In truth NY Post-s ChriStopher Byron WHO FIRST MENTIONED ME in establishment media is himself suspect of a disinfo campaign against me.The reason is that he claims hiours og phoning artound and he can't verify my claims ! Byron insisted on calling INDYMEDIAS I WAS POSTING ON A 'LEFT WING' WEBSITE RATHER THAN JUST GIVING ITS NAME AND A LINK SO READERS OF NY POST COULD READ AND DECIDE FOR THEMSELVES.The truth is any mention in my writing of Kuala Lumpur at the time turns up Vellador Group thevery 'boiler room ' I was screaming about that probably had UK intellkigence agents behind it as well.ALSO HE SPECIFICALLY AVOIDED ALL MENTION OF CIA'S SRA INRTERNATIONAL THAT WAS OR HAD BEEN 'IT' COMPANY FOR BOTH CLINTON AND BUSH WHITE HOUSE AND AFTER 911 GAD MONEY FROM ALL MILKITARY AND IRAQ ETC WAR BUSINESS AS WELL AS EVEN THE GAO ! Now it has gone from IT company rto a legal afvisor to Guantanamo prisoners !With represerntation like that theyits doubtfull even Allah can get them out of the military Kangaroo court in Guantanamo they've ended up in .
Auric Goldfinger's Short List | Stock Discussion ... - Silicon Investor
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Rubin originally was charged with Halperin in manipulating the stock prices of The Classica Group Inc. and Marx Toys and Entertainment Corp., both based in New ..... WHETHER the SEC has looked into Ryals' charges and found them baseless isn't known, but thanks to In-Q-Tel and the lengthening shadow of theCIA on ...
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CIA INC. STINKS BY CHRIS BYRON
nypost.com
THE SPY AGENCY SHOULD CLOSE ITS VENTURE CAPITAL FIRM
May 15, 2006 -- IF former National Security Agency chief Michael Hayden hangs in there as President Bush's nominee to head the CIA and makes it to a Senate confirmation hearing, one of the panel's members should ask him this:
"Sir, please tell the committee how much further you anticipate allowing the CIA to expand its presence on Wall Street via the private venture capital firm known as In-Q-Tel, Inc."
Hayden came under withering fire in Washington last week as word spread that the ex-NSA chief had presided over the White House's post-9/11 surveillance program of monitoring domestic U.S. telephone calls. The White House, politically weakened from a year of setbacks both at home and abroad, may decide to withdraw Hayden from consideration and submit an alternative nominee burdened with less civil liberties baggage.
Yet whoever winds up in the CIA's top job will inherit a developing mess involving In-Q-Tel that was largely ignored by the agency's departing director, Porter Goss. Hints that all is not well with In-Q-Tel have begun seeping into view as this little-known domestic CIA front operation continues to funnel agency money into penny stock and micro-cap companies in Wall Street's murkiest back alleys. …………...
Launched in 1999 by CIA director George Tenet as a Wall Street venture fund to finance new technologies for the spy world, In-Q-Tel quickly found friends on Capitol Hill, where policymakers seized on the fund as a way to remind
constituents that the ghost of Vietnam no longer walked the land. The attacks of 9/11 gave In-Q-Tel even more stature in Congress, where the fund came to be seen as an essential element in the war effort.
Yet the public's visceral reaction to last week's NSA revelations suggests that war or no war, a backlash against government snooping may be starting. And that in turn promises to crank up the heat under In-Q-Tel, where at least some of the fund's investments raise questions of judgment regarding how taxpayer money is being spent by the organization, as well as who it is choosing for business partners. …………..
Nonetheless, Sen. Hillary Clinton and her Democratic colleague from California, Barbara Boxer, quickly embraced the Ionatron program, which eventually devoured more than $12 million in government funding before the Pentagon finally concluded last week that the devices are not reliable and cancelled plans to deploy them. ……
Because its funding comes from the CIA, In-Q-Tel has been an irresistible target for conspiracy theorists who charge that the CIA is somehow linked through it to every penny stock that goes south.
Last week, one left-leaning Web site reported that SEC investigators think the CIA-backed venture fund has been steering money into penny stock "pump and dump" firms in Israel, Dubai and Malaysia.
But a day's worth of phoning around traces these claims to a tireless complainant named Tony Ryals, who has been bombarding the SEC and Internet message boards for years with claims that he has uncovered a submerged world of In-Q-Tel-linked fraud stretching for Kuala Lumpur to the Middle East.
The alleged linkages are bewildering in their complexity and typically impossible to follow, but conspiracy buffs find them irresistible, since they seem to echo some of the CIA's worst excesses from 30 to 40 years ago, and by their nature, they can never be entirely disproved.
WHETHER the SEC has looked into Ryals' charges and found them baseless isn't known, but thanks to In-Q-Tel and the lengthening shadow of the CIA on Wall Street, the most improbable of such claims once again have a whiff of credibility.
Bottom line: There are many sensible ways the CIA could have gone about developing the technologies it needs, but funneling money into Wall Street via an outfit like In-Q-Tel was never one of them. So it will be a good thing for Wall Street - and for America, too - if the CIA's next spymaster simply shuts the operation down.
cbyron@nypost.com
nypost.com
THE SPY AGENCY SHOULD CLOSE ITS VENTURE CAPITAL FIRM
May 15, 2006 -- IF former National Security Agency chief Michael Hayden hangs in there as President Bush's nominee to head the CIA and makes it to a Senate confirmation hearing, one of the panel's members should ask him this:
"Sir, please tell the committee how much further you anticipate allowing the CIA to expand its presence on Wall Street via the private venture capital firm known as In-Q-Tel, Inc."
Hayden came under withering fire in Washington last week as word spread that the ex-NSA chief had presided over the White House's post-9/11 surveillance program of monitoring domestic U.S. telephone calls. The White House, politically weakened from a year of setbacks both at home and abroad, may decide to withdraw Hayden from consideration and submit an alternative nominee burdened with less civil liberties baggage.
Yet whoever winds up in the CIA's top job will inherit a developing mess involving In-Q-Tel that was largely ignored by the agency's departing director, Porter Goss. Hints that all is not well with In-Q-Tel have begun seeping into view as this little-known domestic CIA front operation continues to funnel agency money into penny stock and micro-cap companies in Wall Street's murkiest back alleys. …………...
Launched in 1999 by CIA director George Tenet as a Wall Street venture fund to finance new technologies for the spy world, In-Q-Tel quickly found friends on Capitol Hill, where policymakers seized on the fund as a way to remind
constituents that the ghost of Vietnam no longer walked the land. The attacks of 9/11 gave In-Q-Tel even more stature in Congress, where the fund came to be seen as an essential element in the war effort.
Yet the public's visceral reaction to last week's NSA revelations suggests that war or no war, a backlash against government snooping may be starting. And that in turn promises to crank up the heat under In-Q-Tel, where at least some of the fund's investments raise questions of judgment regarding how taxpayer money is being spent by the organization, as well as who it is choosing for business partners. …………..
Nonetheless, Sen. Hillary Clinton and her Democratic colleague from California, Barbara Boxer, quickly embraced the Ionatron program, which eventually devoured more than $12 million in government funding before the Pentagon finally concluded last week that the devices are not reliable and cancelled plans to deploy them. ……
Because its funding comes from the CIA, In-Q-Tel has been an irresistible target for conspiracy theorists who charge that the CIA is somehow linked through it to every penny stock that goes south.
Last week, one left-leaning Web site reported that SEC investigators think the CIA-backed venture fund has been steering money into penny stock "pump and dump" firms in Israel, Dubai and Malaysia.
But a day's worth of phoning around traces these claims to a tireless complainant named Tony Ryals, who has been bombarding the SEC and Internet message boards for years with claims that he has uncovered a submerged world of In-Q-Tel-linked fraud stretching for Kuala Lumpur to the Middle East.
The alleged linkages are bewildering in their complexity and typically impossible to follow, but conspiracy buffs find them irresistible, since they seem to echo some of the CIA's worst excesses from 30 to 40 years ago, and by their nature, they can never be entirely disproved.
WHETHER the SEC has looked into Ryals' charges and found them baseless isn't known, but thanks to In-Q-Tel and the lengthening shadow of the CIA on Wall Street, the most improbable of such claims once again have a whiff of credibility.
Bottom line: There are many sensible ways the CIA could have gone about developing the technologies it needs, but funneling money into Wall Street via an outfit like In-Q-Tel was never one of them. So it will be a good thing for Wall Street - and for America, too - if the CIA's next spymaster simply shuts the operation down.
cbyron@nypost.com
…………………………………………….
https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2006/05/18/spy-fund-story-vs-spy-fund-story/
As
lawmakers on Thursday prepared to grill the man who may be the next director of
the Central Intelligence Agency, the C.I.A.’s venture capital activities were
stirring up a debate of their own.
As New
York Post columnist Chris Byron tells it, In-Q-Tel, the
C.I.A.-funded venture firm, is a stumbling, bumbling mess of an operation. It
invests in money-losing companies, fools around with penny stocks and can’t
keep chief executives in their jobs, Mr. Byron wrote in his May 15 column.
Mr. Byron noted that the firm has lost two chief
executives in the past four months and said it is having trouble finding a
replacement.
On
Wednesday, The Red Herring followed up on Mr. Byron’s claims. It interviewed
Donald Tighe, In-Q-Tel’s vice president of marketing and communications, who
said the firm has a list of promising candidates for the chief executive job.
Furthermore, the company’s portfolio has shown overall returns of more than 26
percent, he added. Some In-Q-Tel-backed companies do lose money, The Red
Herring wrote in its unsigned article, “a situation not unknown to all venture
firms.”
In his
column, Mr. Byron made reference to Tony Ryals, who, he wrote, “has been
bombarding the S.E.C. and Internet message boards for years with claims that he
has uncovered a submerged world of In-Q-Tel-linked fraud stretching for Kuala
Lumpur to the Middle East.”
According
to Mr. Byron, Mr. Ryals’ complaints earlier this month were picked up by a
“left-leaning Web site” that “reported that S.E.C. investigators think the
C.I.A.-backed venture fund has been steering money into penny stock ‘pump and
dump’ firms in Israel, Dubai and Malaysia.”
The firm’s
linkages “are bewildering in their complexity” and “typically impossible to
follow,” Mr. Byron wrote, “but conspiracy buffs find them irresistible.” As does,
apparently, at least one newspaper columnist.
Mr.
Byron’s declaration that In-Q-Tel “continues to funnel agency money into penny
stock and micro-cap companies in Wall Street’s murkiest back alleys” is also
countered in The Red Herring. “In-Q-Tel does not invest in public companies,”
Mr. Tighe said. Further, it has “no involvement in any of those countries
mentioned” by Mr. Ryals.
……………………
https://dealbreaker.com/2006/05/cloak-and-dagger-venture-capital/
DealBook has the details on the ongoing
debate about In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital firm. The gist of it is that NY Post columnist Byron
York says In-Q-Tel is a mess and the In-Q-Tel folks say that it just aint so.
Mr. Byron’s declaration that In-Q-Tel “continues to
funnel agency money into penny stock and micro-cap companies in Wall Street’s
murkiest back alleys” is also countered in The Red Herring. “In-Q-Tel does not
invest in public companies,” Mr. Tighe said. Further, it has “no involvement in
any of those countries mentioned” by Mr. Ryals…
On Wednesday, The Red Herring followed up on Mr. Byron’s claims. It interviewed Donald Tighe, In-Q-Tel’s vice president of marketing and communications, who said the firm has a list of promising candidates for the chief executive job. Furthermore, the company’s portfolio has shown overall returns of more than 26 percent, he added. Some In-Q-Tel-backed companies do lose money, The Red Herring wrote in its unsigned article, “a situation not unknown to all venture firms.”
On Wednesday, The Red Herring followed up on Mr. Byron’s claims. It interviewed Donald Tighe, In-Q-Tel’s vice president of marketing and communications, who said the firm has a list of promising candidates for the chief executive job. Furthermore, the company’s portfolio has shown overall returns of more than 26 percent, he added. Some In-Q-Tel-backed companies do lose money, The Red Herring wrote in its unsigned article, “a situation not unknown to all venture firms.”
What you won’t find in DealBook, the Post or the Red Herring, however,
is any more information on Donald Tighe. So who is the marketing and
communications guy for the spook venture fund?
Prior to joining In-Q-Tel, Tighe was a Bush administration appointee, most recently serving as Director of Communications and Public Affairs in the Office of Science and Technology Policy. He has also worked as spokesperson for Department of Homeland Security and USAID. Before that he was a staffer for Katherine Harris, the candidate for Senate in Florida who rose to noteriety for her rule in the 2000 presidential election recount. Tighe has a masters of public administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and studied economics and political science as an undergraduate at Duke University.
In-Q-Tel did not respond to inquiries. Not surprisingly, we couldn’t find a picture of Mr. Tighe on the internet.
Spy-Fund Story vs. Spy-Fund Story [DealBook]
CIA INC. STINKS [NY Post]
CIA Gains in Hunt for VC CEO [Red Herring]
https://dealbook.nytimes.com/2006/05/18/spy-fund-story-vs-spy-fund-story/
DealBook has the details on the ongoing debate about In-Q-Tel, the CIA’s venture capital firm. The gist of it is that NY Post columnist Byron York says In-Q-Tel is a mess and the In-Q-Tel folks say that it just aint so.
Mr. Byron’s declaration that In-Q-Tel “continues to funnel agency money into penny stock and micro-cap companies in Wall Street’s murkiest back alleys” is also countered in The Red Herring. “In-Q-Tel does not invest in public companies,” Mr. Tighe said. Further, it has “no involvement in any of those countries mentioned” by Mr. Ryals…
On Wednesday, The Red Herring followed up on Mr. Byron’s claims. It interviewed Donald Tighe, In-Q-Tel’s vice president of marketing and communications, who said the firm has a list of promising candidates for the chief executive job. Furthermore, the company’s portfolio has shown overall returns of more than 26 percent, he added. Some In-Q-Tel-backed companies do lose money, The Red Herring wrote in its unsigned article, “a situation not unknown to all venture firms.”
What you won’t find in DealBook, the Post or the Red Herring, however, is any more information on Donald Tighe. So who is the marketing and communications guy for the spook venture fund?
Prior to joining In-Q-Tel, Tighe was a Bush administration appointee, most recently serving as Director of Communications and Public Affairs in the Office of Science and Technology Policy. He has also worked as spokesperson for Department of Homeland Security and USAID. Before that he was a staffer for Katherine Harris, the candidate for Senate in Florida who rose to noteriety for her rule in the 2000 presidential election recount. Tighe has a masters of public administration from Harvard’s Kennedy School of Government, and studied economics and political science as an undergraduate at Duke University.
In-Q-Tel did not respond to inquiries. Not surprisingly, we couldn’t find a picture of Mr. Tighe on the internet.
Spy-Fund Story vs. Spy-Fund Story [DealBook]
CIA INC. STINKS [NY Post]
CIA Gains in Hunt for VC CEO [Red Herring]
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