NEXT-Up By W. Scott Malone -- The GOLDEN FLEECE:

NEXT-Up By W. Scott Malone -- The GOLDEN FLEECE:
AN EXCLUSIVE Report on the Top Secret Connection Between Ferdinand Marcos and the Oliver North White House ------->>> How Paul Wolfowitz Allowed the Deposed Philiphine Dictator to Pull the Biggest GOLD Heist in History.

Thursday, August 25, 2011

Scott Malone's FRONTLINE investigation of the ROSWELL INCIDENT

- OPEN SOURCE  US/1; ATTN



FOR:  Mike Sullivan
FROM:Scott Malone
DATE:11 MAY 1997
SUBJ:  ROSWELL INCIDENT
INTRODUCTION..................................................................................... 1
NEW DOCUMENTS................................................................................ 2
MISSING NURSE................................................................................... 5
BALLOON MEMORIES.......................................................................... 7
509TH PILOTS DISAGREE.................................................................... 8
SANTILLI FILM..................................................................................... 9
LOOSE ENDS..................................................................................... 10

INTRODUCTION
          Pursuant to previous investigation, I have been monitoring developments in the burgeoning field of Roswell-related evidence.  The following synopsis was put together with the able assistance of Victor Golubic, Kent Jeffrey, and William P. LaParl.  It should be treated in the strictest confidence and the material herein should not be used unless explicit permission is obtained from the various individuals whose work is cited.

          From the journalistic perspective, Roswell was the one flying saucer case with the greatest prospect of possible resolution, one way or the other--i.e. a flying disc either crashed in July 1947 and the US Army Air Force (USAAF) recovered it, or it did not.  As you will no doubt remind me, sightings and other phenomena related to this subject are simply not given to such journalistic advancement or possible resolution, and are usually based on notoriously unreliable eye-witness testimony and/or frequently arguable technical interpretations.

          But as the 50th anniversary of the so-called "crash at Roswell" approaches (July 1st to the 6th), the citizens of Roswell, NM are gearing up for the biggest social event of the past half-century.   Organizers are expecting a turn out of 150,000 visitors during the long holiday weekend.  "As of February, Roswell's nearly 1,000 hotel  rooms were completely booked," reports US News & World Report.  "The chief draw will be an all-night rock concert--a kind of Woodstock for the Weird--featuring the likes of Bush, Sheryl Crow, and the Foo Fighters..."  Since the publication of the first book, revealing Jesse MARCEL Sr.'s recollections in 1980, the alleged Roswell crash has now become a cultural icon, glorified on television in the hit Fox series The X-Files, and in movies like Independence Day. [USN&WR 3/31/97; Jeffrey 3/10/97]  On the darker side, this past March, 39 Heaven's Gate cult members "abandoned their vehicles" in the apparent hope of meeting up with a UFO cruising behind Comet Hale-Bopp.  (They were said to have been big fans of Roswell and Waco, our film included.)

          Outside of some of some stimulating loose ends, however, the majority of new evidence would seem to answer the Roswell question rather definitively, (although not absolutely conclusively)--IT DID NOT HAPPEN.  And, as noted in the past, disproving something can frequently be just as important, journalistically, as proving something.

NEW DOCUMENTS
          Various long-lost documents have begun to resurface as a result of some rather diligent pursuit by Bill LaParl through the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).  Most fascinating are the various 1948 reports, requests and meetings of Col. H.M. McCOY, Chief of the Intelligence Department of the by then USAF Air Materiel Command (AMC), headquartered at Wright-Patterson AFB, the long-suspected repository of any physical evidence of crashed discs.  The earliest, and most interesting, item uncovered so far is the minutes of the Air Force Scientific Advisory Board conference held at the Pentagon on March 17 and 18, 1948.  Dr. Theodore Von KARMAN presided over the meeting and Gen. Hoyt VANDENBERG stood in for USAF Chief of Staff Gen. SPAATZ.  The briefing officer is Col. McCOY:

"...We have a new project--Project SIGN--which may surprise you as a development from the so-called mass hysteria of the past Summer when we had all the unidentified flying objects or discs.  This can't be laughed off.  We have over 300 reports which haven't been publicized in the papers from very competent personnel, in many instances--men as capable as Dr. K.D. Wood, and practically all Air Force, Airline people with broad experience.  We are running down every report.  I can't even tell you how much we would give to have one of those crash in an area so that we could recover whatever they are." (emphasis added)   [S-AFSAB 3/17-18/48, p.78]

          Col. McCOY also discussed various technical intelligence requirements and collection procedures, aspects of cooperation with other agencies such as the CIA, and the then-very secret program of employing Nazi rocket scientists, code-named PAPER CLIP. [S-AFSAB 3/17-18/48, pp.55-98]

          Yet as Bill LaParl points out, this statement can and will be interpreted "to various extremes.  You will have the 'West Coast Interpretation' (also known as the 'Full California') in which everyone present at the meeting knew about the crashed saucer--the Colonel's remark was simply to confuse historians and ufologists 50 years in the future."  Another possibility, although slim, as noted by LaParl, is that this briefing was only classified SECRET, and there may have been a separate TOP SECRET investigation being kept from some if not all of the AFSAB.  (There were growing fears of Soviet infiltration of the US military/scientific community at the time.) [LaParl 3/6/96]

          Yet another interpretation is Air Force INCOMPETENCE--particularly the extensive and "thorough" 1994 so-called WEAVER Review, which made the Mogul Balloon theory official.  Col. Richard WEAVER and company couldn't find this and the following documents, which would have bolstered the Air Force case mightily.  (Or they are fiendishly clever).  Another section of Col. McCOY's 1948 briefing also pretty much eliminated the possibility that Russian reconnaissance craft were the cause of the crash recovery stories, and shows Air Force Intelligence personnel at the top of their game:

"...We only have one recent item of captured equipment, which is a Russian IL-7 aircraft [a WWII-era prop-fighter like the US P-47], which crash-landed in Korea a few months ago.  We first found out about it in the New York Times. (Laughter)..." [S-AFSAB 3/17-18/48, p.77]

          By October 1948, Col. McCOY, in pursuit of Project SIGN, was still seeking assistance of the CIA and other agencies.  In a SECRET letter to the CIA, McCOY wrote:

"This Headquarters is currently engaged in an intelligence investigation of all reported unidentified aerial phenomena.  To date, no concrete evidence as to the exact identity of any of the reported objects has been received.  Similarly, the origin of the so-called 'flying discs' remains obscure.  The possibility exists that some of the sighted objects are of domestic origin, i.e., unrecognized configurations of some of our latest aeronautical attainments, or that they are objects not readily recognized by the public--test vehicles in various stages of development, etc." (emphasis added) [S-AMC/I 10/7?/48]

          (It is interesting to note that Col. McCOY, whose office was the recipient of the Roswell crash debris in 1947, did NOT cite the MOGUL Balloon as an example of internally explainable "unrecognized configurations" or "test vehicles.")

          In a 8 NOV 48 SECRET memo from AMC-Hq to the USAF Chief of Staff, entitled "Flying Object Incidents in the United States," Col. McCOY made some further observations:

"...8.  The possibility that the reported objects are vehicles from another planet has not been ignored.  However, tangible evidence to support conclusions about such a possibility are completely lacking.  The occurrence of incidents in relation to the approach to the earth of the planets Mercury, Venus and Mars have been plotted.  A periodic variation in the frequency of incidents, which appears to have some relation to the planet approach curves, is noted, but it may be purely a coincidence...

"...10...b.  There is as yet no conclusive proof that unidentified flying objects, other than those which are known to be balloons, are real aircraft.

"c.  Although it is obvious that some types of flying objects have been sighted, the exact nature of those objects cannot be established until physical evidence, such as that which would result from a crash, has been obtained." (emphasis added) [S-AMC/I 11/8/48]

          Perhaps the most telling observation is that the USAF plotted the three nearest planets against the UFO incidents--a great waste of time if they actually had one.  By the end of November 1948, Project SIGN seemed to devolve into a PR exercise as the reports made their way up the chain of command.  The results of Col. McCOY's reports ended up with then-Major General Charles P. CABELL (of later CIA and JFK fame), who, as Director of Intelligence for all of the Air Force, sent out a SECRET "Air Staff Summary Sheet" to the Chief of Staff and the Secretary of the AF.  The listed subject was now "Publicity on Flying Saucer Incidents:"

"...At the present time evaluation of these reports has progressed only to the extent that we must accept that some type of flying objects have been observed although their identification and origin are not yet discernible.  We, therefore, conclude that insufficient data is available to date to warrant any further action except continuing attempts to determine the nature and origin of these objects. (emphasis added)

"3.  There is increasing pressure on the part of the U.S. Press to publicize 'flying saucer' incidents.  The Director of Intelligence, USAF, has attempted to dissuade the Press from publishing articles of this nature.  It has been pointed out to the Press that these articles would necessarily be speculative in nature and would probably result in a flood of reports, making the problem of analysis and evaluation of 'flying saucer' reports increasingly difficult.  Despite our efforts to limit this publicity the 'Saturday Evening Post' has directed a member of their staff, a Mr. _____ SHALLET, to write an article dealing with  'flying saucer' incidents.  Mr. SHALLET has approached the Directorate of Intelligence for assistance in the preparation of this article.  It is believed that an article of this nature would be less harmful to the national interests if the Directorate of Intelligence assists in its preparation."  [S-ASSS/I 11/30/48]

          Gen. CABELL went on to recommend that the Secretary of the Air Force approve and summit to Secretary of Defense James FORRESTAL an attached SECRET memorandum, which repeated the above, and sought authorization to "assist the Press."

MISSING NURSE
          By far the most tantalizing lead remains the identification of the "missing" Roswell AAF nurse named by local mortician Glenn DENNIS.  As recounted by Vic Golubic, the DENNIS story is as follows:

"Glenn recalled a happenstance encounter with sensitive activities at the the R[oswell]AAF Base Hospital in the summer of 1947.  Upon entering the rear of the hospital, as he was wont to do, he bumped into a nurse friend.  She and others were exiting a supply room with towels over their mouth[s], when she abruptly asked what he was doing there and warned him to leave quickly.  Two nearby officers overheard this exchange and ultimately threatened Glenn with bodily harm if he were to spread news of what he had just witnessed.  Glenn had just offered help, but was instead met with hostility.  He presumed a plane had crashed!  Being a mortician with a base contract, it was natural to make an offer of assistance...Later, Glenn met up with his nurse friend, where she relayed, in confidence, what she had witnessed.  Visibly shaken, she drew pictures of the three little bodies she had seen and began drawing pictures on a napkin and also noted that other doctors had been flown in.  The bodies were three and a half to four feet tall, had large heads compared with their body size, the tips of their four fingers had small suction cup-like structures, they had two small openings for a nose, two small holes for ears, slit mouths, cartilage teeth, and a flexible/pliable skull." [Golubic 2/24/97]

          Glenn DENNIS recounted a similar version to me in 1994.  The given name of this nurse was NAOMI SELFF [ph], who was allegedly transferred overseas immediately after this incident, and was rumored to have died in a subsequent plane crash.  Vic Golubic has spent the last two years vigilantly tracking down all leads on Glenn DENNIS' nurse, from genealogical searches at the Mormon Church Family History Library to pouring over the just released 1920 US Census data. "Unfortunately for Glenn, nothing positive has emerged from documents to confirm his story.  Only one other person, so far, remembers her..."  Golubic's research so far seems to shrink daily the verifiability of even the existence of nurse SELFF.  Vic found:

•    Copies of the RAAF medical squadron Morning Reports, 10/1/46 - 12/31/47.  NO MENTION is made of nurse SELFF (under any spellings.)

•    Interviewed the man who prepared the Morning Reports, equally to no avail.

•    Reviewed Census records, marriage records, naturalization records, WWI draft records, church records, city directory, property deeds, and voter registration cards in Minnesota and Wisconsin where DENNIS thought she was from.  "NET RESULT - A family found in 1920 census that matched, as much as first names would indicate nationality [Greek], a mother with the appropriate last name who had a six-month-old child named BILLY, which fits Glenn's story [Billy would have been 27 in 1947]; however the father could not yet be identified..."  NO NAOMI was listed.

•    Located and interviewed two nurses who were not mentioned or depicted in the 1947 RAAF Yearbook--one stationed at the base just before July 1947 and the other just after.  They remember the other nurses pictured in the yearbook, but none by the name or description of NAOMI SELFF.

•    Obtained photographs of ALL 13 nurses [only 5 of whom were AAF] stationed at the base in 1947.  NO NAOMI.

•    Located 124,065 Cadet Nurse Corps Identification Cards, 1943-1948.  Found FOUR SELFFs, but no NAOMIs or any from Minn/Wisc.  "Practically all training nurses participated in this program [because] it provided badly needed financial aid," and DENNIS thought she had also participated.

•    Located and interviewed the hospital commander, who did NOT recall nurse SELFF or the INCIDENT, "despite a very helpful memory."  Unfortunately he died last year, but his daughter is donating his diaries to the Air Force and they can be later retrieved.

•    Located five civilian women that worked in the hospital, including a woman that DENNIS refers to as Capt. WILSON.  Vic has interviewed three so far, and none remember a nurse SELFF or the INCIDENT.

•    Interviewed the wife of the chief surgeon (deceased), who remembered a plane crash incident, not little gray men, but has photos of various hospital parties which could prove useful.  She did NOT recall a nurse SELFF.

•    Interviewed three doctors from the base, who did NOT recall a nurse SELFF or the INCIDENT.  "[o]ne of them said he would have been the very man who would have called Glenn about child-sized coffins, but NEVER made such a call."

•    Obtained a copy of a Thanksgiving menu from November 1947 which contains all the names of military and civilian personnel at the hospital--NO nurse SELFF.

•    Sent letters to all nurse licensing agencies in the US--NO SELFF yet.

•    Located and interviewed approximately 20 other men/women stationed at the base--Most did not recall anything about this INCIDENT.  And NO NURSE. [Golubic 2/24/97]

          Vic Golubic has many other outstanding leads worthy of pursuit, which will be detailed in a later memo.  Vic has all the "ordering numbers" for file film footage of the RAAF Base and environs/operations.  He also has access to at least 40 photos from base hospital personnel and the 1947 RAAF Yearbook.

          Some of the more vivid memories of various personnel at Roswell may very well center on at least two B-29 crashes during this period, as uncovered by Bill LaParl and Vic Golubic.  Extensive details can be provided. [LaParl 4/15/97; Golubic 2/24/97]

BALLOON MEMORIES
          Kent Jeffrey is the acknowledged expert on Jesse MARCEL, the USAAF major and base intelligence officer who in 1947 recovered the "not of this earth" material from the BRAZEL ranch.  As Kent has noted elsewhere, Jesse MARCEL was later contradicted by Army CIC officer Sheridan CAVIT (who I interviewed briefly in 1994), who had accompanied MARCEL out to the scene of the crash.  "CAVIT stated that he immediately recognized the debris--dried up rubber, balsa wood sticks, reflective foil, etc.--as being that from a weather balloon." [Jeffrey 9/96]

          As Kent further notes, "Major MARCEL stopped by his house on his way back to the base and laid the debris out on the kitchen floor to show his wife and [then-11 year old] son, Jesse MARCEL Jr. [who] got a good look at the controversial debris."  So earlier this year, Kent, through the recommendation of our old FBI friend Clint VAN ZANDT, contacted Dr. Neil HIBLER clinical psychologist "and one of the world's leading experts in the use of hypnotic regression for forensic purposes."

          According to Kent's 6-hour VIDEOTAPED session with Jesse JR. and Dr. HIBLER:

"Dr. HIBLER had Jesse go through the entire story both with and without the aid of hypnosis.  The hypnosis did not bring out anything dramatically new, but served more to 'fine tune' Jesse's conscious memories of the event.  This aspect is important because it eliminates confabulation or false memory syndrome as a factor...

"Instead of providing new hope, the outcome of the session in Washington, DC, was, for me, the final coffin of the Roswell crashed saucer hypothesis.  The bottom line is that the material recovered from the Foster ranch outside of Roswell in 1947 was extremely mundane.


"The material consisted primarily of pieces of metallic foil, a few short beams or sticks, and a few pieces of a plastic substance.  Certainly, such mundane debris would not constitute wreckage from any kind of sophisticated vehicle or craft, much less one capable of interstellar travel.  There were no artifacts representative of a super-advanced technological device--no remnants of motors, servos, a propulsion system, a guidance system, instruments, controls, etc.--nothing.  Even the debris from a two-thousand-year-old Roman Chariot would be more interesting and varied than the debris that was laid out on the MARCEL kitchen floor...

"Furthermore, in addition to being mundane, the material recovered from the Foster [Brazel] ranch is, for the most part, reconcilable with the debris from an ML-307 radar reflector--the length and cross-sectional size of the beams or sticks, the pieces of foil, the light weight, etc.  Even the color of the 'symbols' that Jesse JR. remembers and the color of the flowers on the reinforcing tape [used on the MOGUL Balloon] that Irving NEWTON and Charles MOORE remember is almost a perfect match." [Jeffrey 3/10/97]

          How Maj. MARCEL and Col. Butch BLANCHARD could mistake balloon debris, even highly-classified balloon debris, as a flying saucer, while a ground-based ARMY Counterintelligence Lt. 'immediately' identified it as such, is still a mystery.  But as Kent notes, "if you eliminate the original source of a story, subsequent corroborative testimony doesn't really count for much."

509TH PILOTS DISAGREE
          Other investigation done by Kent Jeffrey does not bode well for the Roswell flying disc crash hypothesis.  Kent's father was an USAF fighter pilot, and Kent himself flies for Delta Airlines.  "Upon attending the reunion of the 509th Bomb Group...last September, I spoke with several of the pilots who were at Roswell in 1947 and was told, in no uncertain terms, that the crashed saucer event never occurred, period.  These pilots pointed out that the 509th was a very close-knit group [the only atomic bomber group in existence at the time], and that there was no way an event as spectacular as the recovery of a crashed space ship from another world could have happened at the base without them having known about it.  Despite the fact that they, individually, may not have been directly involved with the recovery operation and despite the pervasiveness of the 'need to know' philosophy in the military, these men maintained that there was no way that something of such magnitude and so earthshaking would not have been communicated amongst the members of the group--especially within the inner circle of the upper echelon of B-29 command pilots--all of whom had top-secret clearances." [Jeffrey 3/10/97]

SANTILLI FILM
          Some of the best work done on the subject to date has been done by Kent Jeffrey and Rebecca Schatte.  It should be noted that ABC 20/20 has been filming a Santilli film story, but about the Santilli film only.  Apparently a possible seam has been discovered on the dummy by an SF/FX specialist.

          Jeffrey found three of the top military photographers from the period who totally trash the film.  The highlights from his 1996 MUFON Journal story are as follows:

•    "Problems with the alleged body and autopsy procedures are noted by leading medical experts.

•    When polled, special-effects artists unanimously believed the body to be a special-effects dummy.

•    False claims have been made by Santilli concerning authentication of the alleged original film.

•    A mysterious 'collector' cited by Santilli as the reason for the film's unavailability is a business partner of Santilli's.

•    'Security markings' disappeared from the film after being labeled phony by military experts.

•    'Hieroglyphics' on the supposed debris spell out two slightly disguised English words.

•    Santilli changed his story about how he acquired the film after he was caught in a gross 'inconsistency' on a French TV program.

•    Three highly qualified former WWII military cameramen have pointed out major flaws in both the film itself and the story surrounding it." [Jeffrey-MUFON Journal 3/96]

          Numerous other sources can point out additional flaws in this specious hoax.

LOOSE ENDS
          (TK)--There is still the possibility that something from another planet crashed, but not at Roswell in July 1947.

          President CARTER.

          Senator GOLDWATER and his friend Gen. BLANCHARD.

          President REAGAN.

          "The wife of the chief surgeon and another doctor do recall the husband/surgeon making a midnight trip to the mountains west of Roswell [around] the summer of 1947." [Golubic 2/24/97]

[Information contained in BKNT E-mail is considered Attorney-Client and Attorney Work Product privileged, copyrighted and confidential. Views that may be expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of any government, agency, or news organization.]

Wednesday, August 17, 2011

WSM on the BBC on the BBC, circa 1956

- OPEN SOURCE  US/1




Airing WEDNESDAY Nights on BBC AMERICA:



W. Scott Malone signed up with "Auntie Beeb" in 1978, when they were unquestionably perhaps the best news organization in the world. Working out of Washington, but directed out of the New York 'Office' and London, Malone worked for the legendary "Current Affairs programmes" PANORAMA and NEWSNIGHT, whose birth are depicted in the well-reviewed, six-part mini-series described below. They, we, used to do beautifully shot one-hour documentaries on major investigative stories, literally racing competitors like the daily New York Times to a draw or better.

Joining the newly formed PBS Frontline in 1982, Malone went on to marry his first wife and 'last'  BBC 'boss'--once deemed 'the darling of the BBC,' who was a producer/director from the even fancier "documentary features" section of the Beeb.

Perhaps not-so-ironically, she never learned to touch-type, because her Mother told her she would forever be relegated to "fetching the coffee."

BBC’s ‘The Hour’: A Cold War enigma, layered in ’50s style

By , Published: August 16, 2011

 

Maybe the haze believed to be “Mad Men’s” excess cigarette smoke is instead exhaust fumes from a fritzy time machine. Television’s attempts to transport viewers back to the world of institutional sexism, racism, hi-fis and highballs may succeed as retromania and light social studies, but they often fail to fully sate the viewer’s fixation on 1964 or 1962 or 1956.

So many people apparently want even more of the back there, back when, back then. It’s a grief we must work through; one salve is to find mid-century teak consoles above which to place one’s flat-screen TV and then command it to seek out high-def shows set in yesteryear.

“The Hour,” an engaging yet taciturn new miniseries beginning Wednesday night on BBC America, is similar to such fare but also exceedingly, meticulously different. Set in a fictionalized depiction of BBC’s still-nascent television news operation in 1956, it is part spy thriller, part murder mystery, part love affair and part nostalgia trip. Though the six-part series does perk up a little as it plods along, it begins with a somewhat lethargic and confusing pilot episode, in which it is difficult to know what exactly “The Hour” wants to be — besides stylish. 

On the plus side, it has Dominic West (“The Wire’s” Detective Jimmy McNulty) starring as a handsome if somewhat clueless news anchor who is unwittingly caught up in a complicated, multilayered plot. 

The story: Freddie Lyon (played by Ben Whishaw) is a young BBC TV reporter who chafes at the network’s passive approach to newscasts, which are packed with official spin and feel-good footage of debutante parties and royal goings-on, all narrated in lifeless monotone. The Beeb, it seems, has an ingrained aversion to scandal, scoop and other aggressive journalistic jujitsu that we commonly associate with the modern British press.

“The Hour,” written and created by Abi Morgan, fixates on coverups, conspiracies and other averted glances that color the postwar mood as Britain readjusts to a somewhat lessened global sphere of influence. It’s all about spies, yes, but it’s also all about the waning days of the monarchy’s reach. The Suez Canal crisis of ’56 is the story of the moment, and it works as a symbolic backdrop to “The Hour’s” essential sense of national loss. 

Freddie is sent to cover yet another society fete — this time featuring Ruth Elms (Vanessa Kirby), the daughter of Lord and Lady Elms, who is engaged to an actor. In a dramatic coinkydink, when Freddie was a young working-class lad, he lived with the Elmses during the Blitz. A depressed and paranoid Ruth tries to tip Freddie off to a big story involving the recent murder of a history professor in a subway station. Soon enough, Ruth is dead, too.

This is enough to lure Freddie into investigating both deaths, which leads to the discovery that the professor had a side hobby of submitting crossword puzzles to newspapers, which, when printed, seemed to be delivering coded messages to certain readers. Yet Freddie can’t get anyone in the news department interested enough to let him pursue it. 

But enough of that. On still another track, “The Hour” is really about the creation of a BBC newsmagazine show in the vein of Edward R. Murrow’s “See It Now” and the love triangle among the show’s producer, anchor and star reporter. Freddie’s best friend (and unrequited love interest), Bel Rowley, is recruited to produce the new show, and she persuades her bosses to let her add Freddie to the staff. 

Bel is played with reserved and striking assurance by Romola Garai (from the 2009 version of “Emma”), her character working against the usual undertow of chauvinism: The prime minister’s press aide — a menacing presence around the BBC newsroom — tells her she’s wasting her maternal instincts on a career; after a network meeting, the men adjourn to a private barroom that doesn’t allow women. “What is it about you men?” Bel asks. “You always need a tiny corner where we can’t quite reach you.”

“The Hour” would be busy enough with Freddie’s mystery murders and Bel’s foray into women’s rights, but when West’s character, Hector Madden, is brought on to anchor the newsmagazine (also called “The Hour”), things start to crackle. Hector, a product of the upper crust (and married to the daughter of a rich industrialist), got the gig through connections rather than experience or skill, so it’s up to Bel to mold him into a competent anchor. This drives Freddie crazy with envy, as he sees Bel become attracted to Hector. 

“When we first met, you couldn’t even knot your tie,” Bel explains to Freddie. “You’d never tried an oyster, been to the theater, read Wolfe or Wilde. I did that. It’s what you do when you believe in someone.”

“And you believe in him?” Freddie marvels.

This particular plot thread — Freddie loves Bel who cannot help but fall for Hector, and all the while there’s a deadline to meet — tracks too close for comfort to “Broadcast News.” But all is forgiven in Episode 3, when the gang journeys out to Hector’s in-laws’ estate in the country. Here, men dress for the hunt, women dress for cocktails, a mist settles across the hills, the mystery deepens and “The Hour” finds a nostalgic sweet spot after all. Its sentimentality for British society is more authentic than its ’50s vibe.

The Hour
(75 minutes) premieres Wednesday
at 10 p.m. on BBC America.

CONTINUE READING Full Story HERE...
http://www.washingtonpost.com/lifestyle/style/bbcs-the-hour-a-cold-war-enigma-layered-in-50s-style/2011/08/15/gIQAYy42JJ_story.html?hpid=z12

August 12, 2011

British Reporters, Not Ad Men, in ’50s, Not ’60s

By MARGY ROCHLIN
London -- ONE surprising notion that might strike you while watching “The Hour” — BBC America’s six-part series about a hard-hitting television news program in 1956 Britain and the men and women who work for it — is that Peggy Olson didn’t have it so bad. At least on “Mad Men,” the midcentury-period AMC drama, one gets the impression that Peggy — the peep-voiced, wide-eyed advertising copywriter struggling to establish herself in a man’s world — has a few equally ambitious girlfriends to gripe with about the boy’s club. On “The Hour,” however, the shoulder that the head producer Bel Rowley (Romola Garai) ends up crying on is that of Freddie (Ben Whishaw), a tenacious reporter who is also in love with her. 

When “The Hour” had its premiere here on BBC2 last month (it has its BBC America premiere Wednesday at 10 p.m.), “Mad Men” comparisons abounded despite some crucial differences. For all the shadowy after-hours nightclubs and tight sheath dresses, the show’s backdrop isn’t as shiny as the Manhattan of “Mad Men,” set less than a decade later. It’s cold, wet London two years after the end of rationing, a city still struggling to regain its footing after the bombings of World War II. 

Yet “The Hour” may remind American viewers of nothing so much as our own age. Several scenes seem to anticipate the News of the World phone hacking scandal, like when Freddie bribes a policeman to let him examine a body at the morgue, and the phones of reporters are tapped by government agents (even though it was journalists doing the listening-in at News of the World). 

The recent revelations about News of the World and the hacking of cellphones owned by, among others, a murder victim hadn’t yet surfaced by the time “The Hour” went into production. But one of its executive producers, Derek Wax, acknowledged that the current scandal had given the show a sense of immediacy. 

“It does seem very pertinent now,” Mr. Wax said last month at a Television Critics Association gathering, noting that the show touches on current issues like the collusion between politicians and journalists, and “who you have lunch with one day and how stories are leaked.” He added, “We are very much in 1956, but at times you feel that nothing’s really changed.” (A second season, if approved, would address the Notting Hill race riot of 1958.) 

Of course times have changed dramatically for women. Abi Morgan, who wrote and created “The Hour,” said that while researching the project she discovered that if you were one of the few women employed by the BBC in postwar London, you were most likely a telephone-answering, tea-carrying secretary. “I think America was a bit ahead of us in that regard,” Ms. Morgan said. “There were a lot more women in the workplace in America than in Britain.” Throughout most of the series Bel is so outnumbered that when men unapologetically disparage women in front of her, nothing — no resentment, no frustration — ever registers on her pale face. 

When asked if this was an acting choice, Ms. Garai, speaking in her agent’s office in central London, said that her Bel wouldn’t have expected to be treated as an equal. “I mean, misogyny would not have been misogyny at that time. It wouldn’t have been exceptional. It would have been life.” 

To prepare for the role Ms. Garai studied up on Grace Wyndham Goldie, a British news pioneer. Ms. Goldie, a radio critic who didn’t begin her television career until her late 40s, was the producer most famously associated with the success of BBC programs like “Tonight” and “Panorama,” which broke ground by covering current affairs as they happened, thus ignoring the “14-day rule,” which dictated that the BBC not report on issues that were to be debated in Parliament within two weeks. 

“She was absolutely at the forefront of that movement, and she was totally alone,” Ms. Garai said. “She was like any woman who had to operate in that climate. She was intimidating, formidable. Definitely a woman with the emphasis on ‘man.’ ” (In “The Hour” Bel is a woman in her 20s who wears figure-hugging dresses, bright-red lipstick and smokes cigarettes as elegantly as Myrna Loy in a “Thin Man” movie.) 

Before it was broadcast, some British news outlets had positioned the series as the country’s glossy answer to “Mad Men.” But when the executive producer Jane Featherstone, president of Kudos Film and Television (“MI5,” “Life on Mars”), first commissioned Ms. Morgan to create a series about a time when the BBC stopped broadcasting government-sanctioned newsreels and focused on investigative news, Ms. Featherstone was thinking of a political thriller involving television reporters and the Suez Canal crisis of 1956

“In British terms that was the end of our empire, the moment that Britain really gave up its position as a global player,” Ms. Featherstone explained, adding that only 12 hours passed before Ms. Morgan returned with an outline for a series that included espionage, lots of drinking and the mysterious suicide of a beautiful socialite who Freddie insists has been murdered. When Bel falls for her lead anchor, a smooth-voiced beefcake named Hector Madden (Dominic West), viewers will instantly know that Ms. Morgan also took a page from “Broadcast News,” James L. Brooks’s 1987 romantic comedy about love, longing and unchecked journalistic ambition. What? No “Mad Men”? 

“What they share is some fashion and some lampshades,” Ms. Featherstone said, trying to hide the “Can we drop the ‘Mad Men’ comparisons?” weariness in her voice. Then she confessed to her own micro-campaign to distinguish the two by “going around slightly smugly correcting everybody: ‘It’s not the same decade! This is 1956, and those are the ’60s!’ ” She added, “In terms of pace and tone you can see they’re miles and miles apart.” 

There are those, of course, who will tune in thinking they might get their Jimmy McNulty fix, that is, the boozing, authority-defying police detective that Mr. West played on the HBO series “The Wire,” which ended in 2008 Stateside and was a huge hit in Britain. Speaking by phone, Mr. West wondered about what this segment of the viewing public would think of him as the posh Hector Madden, wearing hand-tailored suits, sporting a dapper side part in his curly hair and enunciating every British-inflected syllable. 

“ ‘Wire’ fans, they’re hoping for hard-bitten Baltimore, and they get very received-pronunciation English,” said Mr. West, who seems unable to get the word out that he was educated at Eton. “There’s always a sense of deflation in a room when I go in and they hear me speak.” 

Here in Britain there is one viewer excited that Mr. West has dropped his disheveled cop routine and inhabited the character of an anchorman who rivals James Bond when it comes to careful grooming. “My wife was just in heaven,” Mr. West said. “I always say: ‘There’s nothing I can do about it. I’m at the mercy of whatever job I’m doing.’ And she said: ‘Finally. You get a decent haircut.’ ”

CONTINUE READING Full Story HERE...


[Information contained in BKNT E-mail is considered Attorney-Client and Attorney Work Product privileged, copyrighted and confidential. Views that may be expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of any government, agency, or news organization.]

Monday, August 15, 2011

BlackSnakeHUMOR

- BlackSnakeHUMOR
BlackNET NavySEALs.com

US/1; US/60; Unknown LE 
[BKNT -BlackSnakeHUMOR - Sat 1/28/2006 4:50 PM] 


AN ANALYSIS OF US LAW ENFORCEMENT AGENCIES UPON ENCOUNTERING A VENOMOUS SNAKE WITHIN THEIR JURISDICTION
1. FBI:
Searches for but cannot locate snake. After snake is caught by the local police, FBI forms a Snake Task Force of 150 agents, sets up a command center, holds press conference and  assumes credit for capture of [a] snake.

2. USSS (Secret Service):
Forms a protective ring of agents around snake and escorts to a safe area.

3. ATF:
Sends SRT team to arrest snake; they expend all of their ammo, then burn the forest down  killing the snake and other local fauna. At a Congressional inquiry makes a presentation on  why additional funding is required to properly train agents how to battle the threat of snakes.

4. TSA:
Abides by Congressional ruling to prevent "profiling" of venomous snakes, which requires  "random" snake inspections. Venomous snake escapes while TSA officials strip-search non-venomous species.

5. IRS-CID:
Performs an in-depth investigation of the snake and writes a 100-page summary of why the  snake should not be prosecuted. The investigation is closed and all agents are out of the 
 office by 4:30 pm.

6.  ICE:
After obtaining permission from the BPA, CBP, FBI, FPS, IRS, FINCEN, DEA, ATF, FAMS, FEMA,  and the Girl Scouts of America, they mail the snake a notice to appear on a specified date for a status hearing. Snake never responds and is promptly forgotten.

7. DEA:
Initiates a Title 3 and an MLAT investigation on the snakes cell phone after discovering that  the above agencies have begun an investigation on the snake. Spends $3M to discover the snake is not Colombian.

8. U.S. Attorney's Office:
Declines prosecution out of "professional courtesy." 
 

9. USBP (Border Patrol)
Captures snake.  Cannot communicate with snake resulting in recruitment drive for snake handlers.  Takes snake back to border (for the 4th time).

10.  Sheriff's Office
Shoots snake after driving over it several times.  Puts snake in another City Police Officer's car while parked in jail parking area. 

INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY (IC) SNAKE ANALYSIS INTER-AGENCY REVIEW COMMITTEE (NIC/IC-SA/I-ARC)

CIA-DO: Recruits snake. Intelligence Medals awarded.

CIA-CTC: Retracts previous snake ‘threat indicator’ cover sheet from snake 201 file.

CIA-DI: Disputes snake ID; files complaint that snake intelligence is being “politicized.”

STATE: Mexico Desk cables missive on Mexican snake policy: REF: DNI cable ‘What snake?’

DNI: What snake?

NSA: No one is ‘cleared’ high enough to be briefed on ANY snake SIGINT, or even the fact that they may not actually have any.

Congressional Oversight Committees: Hold closed snake hearings; ‘deplore’ coming snake epidemic and demand NSA institute ‘crash’ snake handler language program.

FBI: Launches investigation of possible CIA-DI leak of ‘classified’ undercover snake ID to NYT.

NYT: Editorial demands ‘Open’ Congressional hearings and a Special Prosecutor.

WHITE HOUSE: Stonewalls; claims FISA foreign snake exemption.

INDEPENDENT COUNSEL appointed.

Reporter Bob Woodard goes to jail to protect the snake…

[US/1]
[Information contained in BKNT E-mail is considered Attorney-Client and Attorney Work Product privileged, copyrighted and confidential. Views that may be expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of any government, agency, or news organization.]

Monday, August 8, 2011

Bargain for Marcos : State Dept. Cable Hints He Would Lose Alleged Loot Over Fraud Case

-BLACKVAULT- OPEN SOURCE
US/1; ATTN: HST/2; ex-MP/1; IG/1                                                                                                                                                                            
[ed.note: “Tell those Motherf**kers I’m coming after them,” screamed Judge Abe Sofaer to LA Times reporter Bill Remple, who immediately called to warn us. We hurriedly cleared out any supposedly ‘classified’ or SOURCE SENSITIVE data, including all suspected narcotics paraphenelia, rusting pornography film cans, and several thousand pages of documents.

In less than an hour, goldens Bugsy, and Red Dog, brother DHM, and US/1 had booked, er..vacated the premises. Quickly crossing state lines--at a minimum hoping to cause delay and make any issuance of federal subpoenas/warrants cross juridictional.

The old rule was “one FBI agent, answer the door. Two, call the lawyers.” Shortly thereafter, then Washington Post Outlook Editor, David Ignatius, gave us the new rule: call the Washington Post’s lawyers--then under Bo Jones--first.


Washington Post Editor Ben Bradlee Burned in Effigy (at left)

After Malone's 1st Washington Post article, Scandal Almost Sank Secret Cambodia War, Ben Bradlee was burned in effigy outside the US Embassy in Bangkok—despite his legendary Watergate coverage--it was a first for him....


They have the ROGER CHANNEL…” Assistant Secretary of State for Intelligence (INR) Morton Abramowitz metaphorically bellowed in a TS cable the next day, Halloween.



But at 0730 the next morning, a telephonic check with observant neighbors revealled no dramatic police type activity, and then US/1 called Remple to say that “no DIPSEC or FBI special agents” had descended on his Georgetown home as anticipated, though US/1 had had “all the semen forcibly removed from [his] body.” Remple's laughter was a little too loud.

Judge Sofaer went on to become a much ‘maligned’ head of the US Marshal’s WITSEC Program and and later still as representative for LIBYAN money on the Pan Am 103 TERROR case. Real estate records pulled at the time he was still Chief Legal Counsel of the State Department revealed Sofaer to already be a wealthy man.]


U.S. Debates Plea Bargain for Marcos : State Dept. Cable Hints He Would Lose Alleged Loot Over Fraud Case


| October 11, 1988 |                                                                      

WILLIAM C. REMPEL and RONALD J. OSTROW | Times Staff Writers

The State Department is pressuring federal prosecutors to allow former Philippine President Ferdinand E. Marcos to negotiate a plea agreement before a possible indictment on multimillion-dollar fraud charges in the United States, according to an internal department cable obtained by The Times.

The document, however, indicates that any plea agreement acceptable to U.S. authorities would require the deposed dictator to forfeit hundreds of millions of dollars in assets allegedly looted from the Philippine Treasury before he was driven into exile in Hawaii in 1986. Such an agreement could allow Marcos and his wife Imelda to avoid any possibility of terms in U.S. federal prisons.

'Seek to Embarrass'

The cable also expresses concern that an indictment may prompt a vindictive Marcos to "seek to involve and embarrass" U.S. and Philippine officials by making allegations of improper or illegal conduct, "however unfounded," in an attempt to adversely affect relations with the current Philippine government. It did not elaborate.

The lengthy and detailed message was relayed from the State Department's chief legal counsel, Abraham D. Sofaer, to other top department officials, including U.S. Ambassador Nicholas Platt in Manila, in a classified cable. The document reflects some of the difficult internal Administration debate over legal and political conflicts that have marked the criminal investigation of the former Philippine leader and his wife, Imelda.

Indictment Arguments

For example, the State Department had argued to limit the indictment to alleged criminal acts that occurred after Marcos fled to Honolulu in February, 1986. But prosecutors on the staff of U.S. Atty. Rudolph Giuliani in New York insisted that the only way to recover an allegedly ill-gotten fortune in Manhattan real estate and fine art is to charge Marcos with acts of fraud that began during his tenure as president of the Philippines and continued after he came to Hawaii.

State Department officials finally accepted the prosecutors' argument on condition that the indictment be carefully drawn to emphasize post-revolution conduct and that public statements by Justice Department officials, including Atty. Gen. Dick Thornburgh, would "make clear that Marcos was being prosecuted because of his illegal conduct after he came to the U.S. ," according to the cable.

Also, prosecutors and diplomatic advisers disagree over when to initiate plea bargaining. The State Department wants to give Marcos "a last chance, prior to indictment," to reach a settlement. But federal prosecutors prefer to indict first to gain added leverage in negotiations with the ousted Philippine president.

'Stand Firm'

"Justice has presented no good reason why we should not continue to insist on offering Mr. Marcos a chance to reach a voluntary plea agreement prior to indictment," the cable said. "Sofaer strongly believes that if we stand firm, we can work out a way of doing this with Giuliani which would not harm Justice's prosecution interests and would give President (Reagan) a substantial degree of protection from being criticized for allowing Marcos to be prosecuted for prior activities."

In one of several recommendations outlined in the cable, the State Department said: "President Reagan should be advised of the decision to indict (if one is made) and the charges, and thereby afforded an opportunity to exercise his executive authority." This was apparently intended to leave the White House with the option of vetoing an indictment.

Sources familiar with the investigation in New York have said U.S. officials are concerned that Marcos may threaten to disclose politically damaging information about his dealings with the federal government to pressure the White House to block prosecution.

'Thoroughly Discredited'

But Filipino Ambassador Emmanuel Pelaez said: "In the Philippines, Mr. Marcos is so thoroughly discredited that he has no credibility whatsoever. I do not know about the American government, but the Philippine government has nothing to fear about anything Mr. Marcos could say. I don't see how anything he says could harm U.S.-Philippine relations."

The cable also reveals that the State Department is concerned that Marcos may be attempting to destabilize the current government of the Philippines. It did not provide any details about such activities, but The Times has reported that a separate federal grand jury in Hawaii is investigating allegations that Marcos has attempted to aid anti-government forces in the Philippines in violation of U.S. neutrality laws.

Investigative Reporters

The text of the document was made available to The Times on Monday by Washington-based investigative reporters Scott Malone and Mark Perry, who said that they received it anonymously in the mail. Malone has reported extensively on Marcos for television and magazines. The authenticity of the cable was confirmed independently by The Times.

The cable makes a number of other significant findings about the State Department's position on the Marcos case:

-- That the White House offer of safe haven in Hawaii did not include any immunity in regard to U.S. laws and that "he should be subject to prosecution for such violations."
-- That, before any indictment is issued, the government of the Philippines must agree to a formal waiver of head-of-state immunity for Marcos and his wife.

-- That it is important to make the offer to plea bargain even if Marcos does not accept it, indicating that the government is concerned about setting a proper precedent on U.S. dealings with such dictators.

"Prosecution of Mr. Marcos . . . could set a precedent (that) would have a negative impact on our ability to influence other heads of state who may be similarly situated to leave power," the cable said.

State Department officials initially opposed including in a Marcos indictment charges based on actions he took while in office. The opposition was based on grounds that he was invited to the United States and that prosecuting him for such acts would undercut U.S. ability to pressure other "similarly situated" heads of state to leave power.

Prosecutors argued that limiting the charges to alleged obstruction of justice since entering the United States would bar indictment of Marcos under the federal Racketeer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations (RICO) statute. The charges under that statute would carry with them authority to seek forfeiture of Marcos' New York real estate and other assets.

Justice Department officials agree that prosecuting Marcos solely for activities before he arrived in the United States would be improper, the cable said.

Outlines of Compromise

As a result, outlines of a compromise appeared in the cable. The Justice Department would make clearer in the indictment that Marcos is not being charged solely for actions he took while still president. Thornburgh "is also willing to make a public commitment to use his authority under the RICO statute to compensate the victims (including principally the government of the Philippines and U.S. mortgagors) out of any assets recovered," it said.

"We should accept Justice's conclusions on the question of limiting the indictment," the State Department document said. "Based on their assessment of the proposed prosecution and forfeiture possibilities, it appears that limiting the indictment would eliminate the chief benefit of prosecution--forfeiture of assets--but would do little to avoid our other concerns."

The Justice Department's "willingness to cast the indictment and any public statements as resulting from Mr. Marcos' continuing wrongful activity while in the U.S." clearly alleviates, but does not eliminate, a significant concern of diplomatic officials.
The cable notes that the department's concern is offset by assurances from the attorney general that such prosecution is necessary to attempt "recovery of wrongfully obtained assets."

'Exceeds the Mortgages'

The cable said that Giuliani told Sofaer he had rechecked the value of two of the four Marcos properties involved and that their value "far exceeds the mortgages." Other Marcos properties and bank accounts that prosecutors would seek to forfeit adds up to "a large surplus" that could be recovered for the Philippine government.

While citing the risk that prosecution could fail, the cable reported that Justice Department officials have concluded "after extensive review that the evidence is sufficient to prevail. (Giuliani has 'guaranteed' success.) We have no way of independently assessing this question."

Petition Rejected

In a related development, a Philippine court in Manila rejected Monday a petition by Marcos to return home and answer corruption charges. The court ruled that Marcos' return was a political question beyond the reach of the court and should be resolved by President Corazon Aquino.

Justice Romeo Escareal issued the ruling a month before the court begins a pretrial hearing on allegations that Marcos received millions of dollars in kickbacks from Japanese companies during his 20-year rule. Marcos could challenge the ruling in the Philippine Supreme Court.

Aquino has barred Marcos' return from exile in Hawaii, calling him a threat to national security.

Also Monday, an army spokesman denied newspaper reports that army dissidents backed by politicians loyal to Marcos planned to launch a coup attempt in November.


[ED.NOTE: MARCOS WAS EVENTUALLY INDICTED OVER THE OBJECTIONS OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES, WHICH WAS ALSO IS OFFICIAL IMMIGRATION STATUS: “GUEST OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES. MARCOS DIED BEFORE HIS TRIAL. HIS CO-CONSPIRATORS, IMELDA “WHERE’S MY SHOES” MARCOS AND SAUDI ARMS DEALER ADNAN “WHERE’S THE IRANIAN’S TOW MISSILES” KHOSSOGGI, WERE BOTH ACQUITTED.”

Three Months after the above LA Times article, SECSTATE George SCHULTZ WROTE ONE OF HIS LAST OFFICIAL MEMOS:



[Information contained in BKNT E-mail is considered Attorney-Client and Attorney Work Product privileged, copyrighted and confidential. Views that may be expressed are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect those of any government, agency, or news organization.]

David Johnson Vandenberg

David Johnson Vandenberg
Stars and Stripes 22 X 30 oil on Canvas .................................. A Patriot BORN...