Monday, January 2, 2012

Massive New Lawsuit Filed Against U.S. Federal Government in Bond Theft Scheme

Brandon Turbeville

Some weeks ago, I wrote an article dealing with a bizarre lawsuit full of twists and turns that has been filed against individuals, governments, private institutions, and secret societies spanning the entire globe. Essentially, the plaintiff of the lawsuit is alleging that billions of dollars worth of U.S. bonds were stolen from him by a wide-ranging cartel -- bonds that he was entrusted with by the extremely rich and reclusive Dragon family of Asia.
But what at first may seem like an isolated incident, now appears to be an emerging pattern of theft of U.S. bonds from individuals who have either acquired them individually or have had them passed down through generations. That is, at least the claims of stolen bonds are becoming more and more common.
Take, for instance, another recent lawsuit filed with the Eastern District of Pennsylvania – U.S. Federal Court, by Joseph Riad.
Riad is suing the U.S. Federal Government for $15 billion as a result of the fifteen $1 billion bonds that he alleges have yet to be returned to his possession by an agent of the Department of Homeland Security. Riad claims to have a total of 735 $1 billion Federal Reserve bonds that are stashed in banks outside of Philadelphia where he lives. These 735 are in addition to the 15 bonds he is suing for.
The 15 bonds at issue, according to Riad, came from three rare “sealed and certified bronze boxes,” each of which contained 245 $1 billion Federal Reserve bonds dated back to 1934.
As Reuben Kramer of Courthouse News Service writes, “The billion-dollar bonds allegedly were used by the government for debt-management purposes in the 1930’s when physically moving lower-denomination currency or gold was impractical.” Riad allegedly discovered the bonds after his attorney suggested he open the boxes to determine whether or not there was anything of value inside them.

But, while some may automatically assume that Riad’s claim is false or that his bonds are fake, all indications are that the bonds are, in fact, real. Indeed, Riad has cited in his lawsuit “extensive and exhaustive proof of the authenticity of the Bonds.” However, according to Riad, no federal agency will redeem them, despite this proof.
As part of his case, Riad has provided what he calls and Affidavit of Procurement, in which he states that the boxes became collateral for over $76,000 in loans made by him to “a mandate to the South African government.”
Riad claims that he has spent nine years confirming the authenticity of the bonds, including contacting a number of officials and experts in the field of bonds, finance, and sculpting and metal.
Riad claims that he contacted “Kermit Harmon, PE, CEM, CCP, DGCP, a former Security Director for the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank, and an expert in bonds, notes, and other financial instruments,” and that Harmon, along with “Bruce Colburn, PhD., PE, CEM,” inspected these bonds meticulously and determined that they are authentic government-issued Federal Reserve bonds. Riad has attached the report made by Harmon and Colburn to his lawsuit as an exhibit.
Riad also claims that he consulted “A.J. Obara, internationally-renowned bronze sculptor and bronze metal expert,” who “inspected Plaintiff’s three bronze boxes containing the bonds.” It is then claimed that Obara also confirmed the authenticity of the bonds. Like Harmon’s report, the report by Obara is also included as an exhibit to the lawsuit.
Furthermore, the lawsuit claims that Riad contacted Dr. Franklin Noll, “a consultant with the Bureau of Public Debt who is an historian with expertise in the history of government-issued, high-denomination bonds, such as those Plaintiff possesses,” as well as former Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, Stuart Eizenstat, Esq., and Patrick Oxford, Esq. of Houston, all of whom recognized the bonds as real and authentic.
Riad asserts that he was then referred to the Secret Service, where he met with Secret Service agents Chad Sweet and Craig Caldwell who took the bonds, confirmed their authenticity, and then returned them. Again, Riad includes the report that the agents produced in reference to their documentation of the receipt of those bonds, as an exhibit in the suit. It should be noted that the filing points out that if the bonds had been fraudulent or fake, the Secret Service would have been bound by law to seize them and that they would not have been returned.
This is where Riad claims his fortunes took a turn for the worse. He claims he was referred to the Bureau of Public Debt, and specifically to an official of that department by the name of Donna Ayers. However, according to Riad, Ayers completely denied the existence of such bonds and referred him back to the Secret Service agents, who, in turn, “inspected plaintiff’s bonds, reviewed the accompanying expert reports, and performed their own evaluations and tests so as to render their own opinion as to the authenticity of plaintiff’s bonds.”
Riad claims that the agents then contacted Ayers and “informed her that plaintiff had completed the appropriate and required examination and authentication of the Bonds and that the redemption of said bonds did fall under the purview of the BPD, since the bonds were outstanding government issued securities/debts.” However, Riad states, he still received no cooperation from the BPD and was forced to take other avenues.
These other avenues led Riad to the Department of Homeland Security and an agent, Nickolaus Jones, who Riad claims was determined to fraudulently acquire the bonds. Riad claims he learned about Jones through a man named Neil Gibson, an individual that was,
an alleged British financial consultant who claimed to have experience in the repatriation of high-denomination U.S. government bonds, and who represented to plaintiff that he had a contract with the U.S. government to complete such transactions and that he had successfully handled such projects on behalf of the U.S. government in the past.
The lawsuit further states that Agent Jones confirmed his ability to repatriate U.S. government bonds and that he had a working relationship with Neil Gibson in this specific regard. Jones then confirmed the bonds held by Riad as bonds he already knew existed and told Riad that he wanted to know more about them. This, Riad claims, was all part of the ultimate deception.
Nevertheless, Riad says he met with Agent Jones at Jones’ Irvine, California government office for approximately three hours in March 2009. According to the suit, Jones once again confirmed for a second time that he was an agent with DHS, and produced his identification badge and business card to prove it.
However, Riad says there was another man present at the meeting who refused to do any of those things, even after being asked repeatedly by Riad and his then-lawyer for identification. Interestingly enough, Jones made no attempt to help identify the man either, even though he was witness to a discussion involving such a large amount of money.  
Continuing the story, the filing reads:
Based upon Agent Jones’ stated and apparent authority to act on behalf of the U.S. government as a DHS agent [and] . . . based upon the fact that Agent Jones repeatedly and unequivocally told plaintiff and Mr. Oxford [his then-attorney] of his ability and authority to assist plaintiff with the repatriation of his bonds . . . plaintiff provided Agent Jones with fifteen (15) of the at-issue bonds: five (5) original bonds from each of the three (3) metal containers, as well as the treasury-produced authentication documents . . . .
Surprisingly, Agent Jones refused to sign . . . [an] inventory, and he refused to issue a general receipt to plaintiff indicating that he received the bonds from plaintiff. However, in that meeting, Agent Jones assured plaintiff and Mr. Oxford that he would return the bonds to plaintiff after he completed his investigation into the authenticity of the Bonds, and that said investigation would take approximately one week to complete. Because they were meeting in DHS offices and given that Agent Jones had provided valid identification and appeared to be a legitimate member of the Irvine, CA DHS staff, plaintiff, upon advice of counsel, reluctantly provided the bond samples to Agent Jones.
Riad’s lawsuit provides the court with what it claims are copies of Agent Jones’ identification and business card as exhibits, as well as some email communication exchanged between Riad and Jones.
After about a week, Riad claims, he was contacted by Agent Jones via email and told that his bonds were not authentic. After so much evidence to the contrary, Riad claims that he demanded his bonds back from Jones, who promptly refused, stating that he had destroyed them. It is then alleged that Jones stated he could not explain his investigation methods and procedures with anyone who did not have the proper clearance. Fortunately for Riad, Kermit Harmon, who had helped identify the bonds as authentic earlier on, had such clearance. Thus, Riad then demanded a face-to-face meeting between Harmon and Jones. However, Jones subsequently refused to continue discussing the matter any further with Riad or his then-lawyer, Mr. Oxford, essentially killing the communication between them.
Riad’s lawsuit claims that Agent Jones is either currently in possession of the bonds himself or has transferred them to a third party.
It states, “Retrospectively, it is clear that Agent Jones, while operating under the actual and apparent authority that is inherent to his position as a U.S. agent with the DHS, provided plaintiff with false and/or misleading documents and information with the intent to illegally obtain the Bonds from plaintiff.”
The interplay between members of official government agencies and shadowy individuals who seem to appear at just the right moment to develop trust, only to then disappear back into the shadows after a large amount of government bonds have been stolen, has popped up in the judicial system twice now. Indeed, this lawsuit bears traits very similar in nature to that of the Dragon Family suit filed weeks ago.
Unfortunately, we will have to wait and see how the suit works its way through the courts in order to see if any further information will come out regarding world governments’ apparent attempt to prevent the theft of legally owned bonds and prevent them from being exchanged outside of the system it has designed as a rigged game. If the suit is to be believed, it will be interesting and quite revealing to witness the information brought out in the courtroom as it runs its course.
Needless to say, Riad’s claims are certainly not unbelievable, especially when one is dealing with such nefarious organizations as the Federal Reserve and the Department of Homeland Security.
As it is, Riad is suing under the Federal Tort Claims Act, for what he alleges to be trespass, conversion and intentional representation. Albert Iacocca of West Chester, Pennsylvania is representing Riad in the case.
Brandon Turbeville is an author out of Mullins, South Carolina. He has a Bachelor’s Degree from Francis Marion University where he earned the Pee Dee Electric Scholar’s Award as an undergraduate. He has had numerous articles published dealing with a wide variety of subjects including health, economics, and civil liberties. He also the author of Codex Alimentarius - The End of Health Freedom, 7 Real Conspiracies and Five Sense Solutions. Brandon Turbeville is available for podcast, radio, and TV interviews. Please contact us at activistpost@gmail.com.


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7 comments:

Anarcho-Capitalist said...

This doesn't make a lot of sense. It isn't clear what consideration Joseph Riad gave to receive the bonds. It isn't clear what their face value was in 1934, assuming their present day redemption value is $750 billion. The entire money stock in the 1930s was less than 75 billion.

Yes, it stinks (like the fed stinks) but some basic math verification is needed to give this issue more validity.

At the same time I give the article credence because the entire monetary system is a racket of epic proportions and nothing would surprise me anymore.

Parakletos said...

Bearer bonds have historically been the financial instrument of choice for money laundering, tax evasion, and concealed business transactions in general. In response, new issuances of bearer bonds have been severely curtailed in the United States since 1982.[2]

In the United States all the bearer bonds issued by the U.S. Treasury have matured. They no longer pay interest to the holders. As of May 2009, the approximate amount outstanding is $100 million.[3]

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bearer_bond


They stop paying interest after their maturity date. If they are legitimate, a tremendous amount of money value would have been lost by that mere fact alone. If you have a 1900 bearer bond for $100, it is worth $100. That's the face value of the bond -- the amount to be repaid at the bond maturity date. You might have paid $80 for it. Maybe even $90 or $95 for it. These things increase in value as their maturity date nears. But once that maturity date hits, they completely flatline in value.

Holding on to these bonds beyond their maturity date guarantees a 0% increase in the value of your holdings. And according to Wiki, there's $100 million worth of them still unaccounted for (unredeemed). Interesting...

Anarcho-Capitalist said...

Thanks for that clarification, Parakletos. I didn't know that about bearer bonds.

Joe said...

One of the many astounding points of this story, is that if only one or two of these bonds were negotiated for cash (even at a small percentage of their face value) and that cash invested almost anywhere, the holder would be incredibly wealthy.

And the other significant point, it looks like those bonds even if real weren't actually in the economy as such, being defined as "Broadly defined liquidity" rather than part of the clearly defined M0-M4 money supplies.

Perhaps that accounts for the previous point that "that kind of money didn't exist in 1934". True enough, it didn't as currency or bank deposits. But these are un-registered bits of paper, IOUs if you will. Their creation is documented, but not their ownership.

i.e. they're only money if certain players are willing to cooperate. Mainly the issuer of the bond, I expect.

Anonymous said...

http://benjaminfulford.typepad.com/benjaminfulford/2010/08/christopher-story-murdered-other-journalists-targeted-in-new-fascist-campaign-1.html

Anonymous said...

ANYONE CAN BE CHARGED & CONVICTED OF A CRIMINAL CONSPIRACY. THEREFORE A CONSPIRACY IS A PLANNED ACTION BEFORE THE FACT!
MORE ACTION PLANNED AFTER THE FACT!

The US stole China’s gold and has been using it for collateral to borrow money to purchase assets world wide. A lawsuit was filed in 1998 against the Federal Reserve. The Federal Reserve lost the lawsuit and had to return the stolen gold. The gold was not returned. Then in 2001 after the destruction of the world trade center towers China and other global nation’s cash and physical assets were stolen from building seven. The assets were never recovered. So the Chinese sold off the US treasury bonds and caused the crash in 2008. The US has been using worthless fiat money as collateral to borrow more money and print from the treasury. Assets from China and other countries have been stored in shadow banking accounts. The play was first induced in 1913 when the Federal Reserve a private international banking institution took over the entire monetary system of the world. The goal was to put the whole world in massive debt, run up the deficit in the US so the rest of the world can make money off the interest off debt. This is how the world makes money. Other countries profit off the debt of the US, the more debt the more other countries profit off the interest of debt. The architects of this global Ponzi scheme have successfully been able to manage the global economic system through corruption and manipulation on the global markets. The game now is the classic “Bait & Switch” An economic crisis was created as a climate of fear to get people to invest in commodities stock. When the time is right in 2012 perhaps after the first quarter of the New Year, commodities stocks will depreciate at a great value triggering another planned stock market crash like in 2008. This possible crash will not collapse the economic system like many experts are saying. The strategy will be to contain and control the crash. Then inflate the monetary system with more untold amounts of worthless fiat currency to prop up inflation and the stock market. They are able to do this by simply drawing off the stolen assets as collateral. Then the money printed will replace the real assets for collateral no matter the debt amount. The debt can easily be paid off by simply writing a check against the stolen global assets! President Barrack Obama signed the bill s-1867 for a purpose. The Chinese have merged their military with Mexico’s. They are planning an invasion of the US if they do not honor the lawsuit that the Federal Reserve lost back in 1998 concerning the stolen gold and other assets. A new lawsuit was filed for the sum of one trillion dollars on November 23, 2011.

Neil F. Keenan, Individually and as Agent for The
Dragon Family, citizens of foreign states,
Vs.
William H. Mulligan, Jr.
Bleakley Platt & Schmidt, LLP
One North Lexington Avenue

PDF Link: http://divinecosmos.com/media/Keenan_complaint_11-23-2011_SDNY.pdf

The US most likely will not return the stolen assets to the Chinese. Instead they’ll sell the Chinese a new deal increased profits from increased debt! The international banking cartels will continue to run up more massive debt for the US and continue to purchase all bonds and currencies world wide. So the banking cartels can destroy the sovereignty of nations including the US. So the international banking cartels can own and control the currencies of the world. This criminal conspiracy also involves the NAFTA super highway project to run from Mexico thru the US and Canada. In order to proceed with this campaign the economy needs to collapse. So borrowers will default on their housing loans and the banks will foreclose and reposes the properties. Then the properties will be demolished to make way for the NAFTA super highway project.

http://www.greatdreams.com/political/superhighway_facts.htm

This is the madness they plan to implement to reboot the US economy and the world.

- DJ SPARTACUZZ

Anonymous said...

These bonds where part of a gold swap with South Africa. This is gold confiscation by the Rothschilds. South Africa's gold was handed over in exchange for these bonds by a Rotschilds agent Jan Christian Smut who became deputy leader of the South African government in 1934.

It's not just the dragon family that were robbed. The bonds are real but their issuers never allowed for the fact that they could be cashed.

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