Post by Bhang on Oct 5, 2006 14:01:49 GMT -5
Marvin Bush was head of Securacom security systems in the WTC and Dulles Airport from 1993 to 1999, yet Alex Jones reports that Marvin's contract actually expired on September 11th, 2001. Despite the contadictions in the actual contract date inforamtion, three unsettling facts remain...
1. Securacom was in control of all electronic security for the WTC complex.
2. There was a power down in the WTC towers the weekend before the 9/11 attack and teams of men were seen and heard "servicing" the elevators (access to all floors).
And last yet very far from least... look what I just fucking found!
3. Securacom went public on September 11, 1997. At IPO, it listed among its clients the World Trade Center, Dulles Airport, United Airlines, and Los Alamos National Laboratories.
KuwAm had significant ownership of Securacom, and the related company, Stratesec, from 1996 through 1999. Ownership was sometimes executed indirectly through holding companies such as "Special Situations Investment Holdings".
Marvin Bush served on the Stratesec board of directors from 1993 through 1999. His last term ended in June 2000.
In 1993, after the first attack on the World Trade Center, Burns and Roe Securacom obtained contracts among many other contractors for related security upgrades.
In 1993, as part of a new management team, including Wirt Walker, which was hired when Securacom separated from Burns and Roe, Marvin Bush joined Securacom's board of directors and he remained until 2000.
The World Trade Center and the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority were listed as two of the company's prominent clients in 1996 and 1997.
The security company, formerly named Securacom and now named Stratesec, is in Sterling, Va.. Its CEO, Barry McDaniel, said the company had a 'completion contract' to handle some of the security at the World Trade Center 'up to the day the buildings fell down.'
R. Michael Lagow, www.systemsgroup-us.com was vice president of Securacom, and the related company, Stratesec, in 1993, and he lists clients on his resume such as World Trade Center, Amtrak, and TVA Nuclear Power facilities. He joined Securacom in August of 1993 and founded the Dallas, Texas offices of Securacom. After the company went public on September 11, 1997, Securacom was ordered through a court of law, to change its name to Stratesec, due to a name infringement suit. Lagow was promoted to Executive Vice President in 1999.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Securacom
It's too obvious - there is no debate. Inside job all the way.
1. Securacom was in control of all electronic security for the WTC complex.
2. There was a power down in the WTC towers the weekend before the 9/11 attack and teams of men were seen and heard "servicing" the elevators (access to all floors).
And last yet very far from least... look what I just fucking found!
3. Securacom went public on September 11, 1997. At IPO, it listed among its clients the World Trade Center, Dulles Airport, United Airlines, and Los Alamos National Laboratories.
KuwAm had significant ownership of Securacom, and the related company, Stratesec, from 1996 through 1999. Ownership was sometimes executed indirectly through holding companies such as "Special Situations Investment Holdings".
Marvin Bush served on the Stratesec board of directors from 1993 through 1999. His last term ended in June 2000.
In 1993, after the first attack on the World Trade Center, Burns and Roe Securacom obtained contracts among many other contractors for related security upgrades.
In 1993, as part of a new management team, including Wirt Walker, which was hired when Securacom separated from Burns and Roe, Marvin Bush joined Securacom's board of directors and he remained until 2000.
The World Trade Center and the Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority were listed as two of the company's prominent clients in 1996 and 1997.
The security company, formerly named Securacom and now named Stratesec, is in Sterling, Va.. Its CEO, Barry McDaniel, said the company had a 'completion contract' to handle some of the security at the World Trade Center 'up to the day the buildings fell down.'
R. Michael Lagow, www.systemsgroup-us.com was vice president of Securacom, and the related company, Stratesec, in 1993, and he lists clients on his resume such as World Trade Center, Amtrak, and TVA Nuclear Power facilities. He joined Securacom in August of 1993 and founded the Dallas, Texas offices of Securacom. After the company went public on September 11, 1997, Securacom was ordered through a court of law, to change its name to Stratesec, due to a name infringement suit. Lagow was promoted to Executive Vice President in 1999.
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Securacom
It's too obvious - there is no debate. Inside job all the way.