Grizzly, Psychic Ginette Lucas, Angela Ford and Scott Carmichael- The Real Story About America

1 year ago
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03-03-13 6:00PM EST Time! Does Grizzly and Psychic Ginette Lucas have a show for you in store! Angela Ford is returning once again to the show! Last show was with her boss that founded the STAR GATE PROGRAM.

Angela’s involvement was a remote viewer for The DIA Defense Intelligence Agency. Yes you heard that right. T true person that has proven results for her country during the Cold War.

Now, Angela Ford does it again! Now we have Mr. Scott Carmichael himself. The roles he played in our government that we are allowed to know. Below is a brief back ground on Mr. Carmichael!

Chirs/Grizzly - I thought it best to provide a bit of background information on myself prior to the 3 March show. I was born and raised in a small town in Wisconsin, and graduated from high school in 1968 - which makes me 72 years of age today. I served as an enlisted man in the Navy from 1969-1973, during the Vietnam War. During boot camp in San Diego I scored well on a foreign language aptitude test, so the Navy sent me to the Defense Language Institute in Monterey, California for a 47-week course in Chinese-Mandarin. Upon graduation in February 1971, I completed some technical training and was first assigned to a small Navy communications station in the Philippines where I served as a radio intercept linguist monitoring and collecting intelligence on the PRC Navy, and then to a similar post on Okinawa. I volunteered for two special assignments - TDY assignments, or temporary duty assignments - on board American submarines, including Wahoo (SS-565) and Gudgeon (SS-568), to collect intelligence, again, on the PRC Navy. After mustering out of Naval service, I graduated from the University of Washington where I earned a BA degree in East Asian Studies, with a specialty on China Regional Studies. I thereafter accepted employment as a police officer in a small town in Wisconsin, working the night shifts from 1977-1984. Ih 1984, I accepted an appointment as a Special Agent for the Naval Criminal Investigative Service (NCIS) - then called the Naval Investigative Service (NIS). I was initially assigned to an NIS office on the Naval station at Treasure Island in the middle of San Francisco Bay. I became a counterintelligence (CI) specialist and provided CI support to Ivy Bells, the CIA/NSA/USN black program which employed specially configured US submarines operating out of Mare Island to tap into a Soviet undersea communication which ran between the Soviet Navy base on Vladivostok to their headquarters on the mainland. In 1986, NIS transferred me to NIS Headquarters where I served for two years as a desk officer in the counterintelligence directorate, monitoring and providing support to NIS counterintelligence investigations in various regions of the world. In 1988, I jumped ship from NIS to accept an appointment as a Special Agent for the Defense Intelligence Agency (DIA). You may recall that the 1980s was commonly referred to as the decade of the spy. So many Americans were arrested for espionage during that decade, some members of the US intelligence community decided to create their own internal counterintelligence investigative staffs to look for possible spies within their agencies - DIA created a branch within the Security Office called the Threat Countermeasures Branch. I was one of four investigators assigned to that branch, including two former Army INSCOM agents, one former AFOSI agent, and myself. I caught my first spy in 1991 - he was a DIA civilian employee named Frederick C. Hamilton. A sensitive source had alerted us to the fact that the government of Ecuador somehow acquired a quantity of classified documents authored by the Defense Attache Office at the American embassy in Lima, Peru, though the source did not know how those documents were acquired. The FBI and the State Department's Bureau of Diplomatic Security looked into the matter initially and concluded the compromise was most likely attributable to the sloppy mishandling of documents by an unknown employee at the embassy - not a deliberate act of espionage. My partner and I believed differently. I developed Hamilton as a suspect; discerned his most likely motive to commit the offense; identified the Ecuadoreans to whom he most likely provided the documents; identified three specific dates over a four month period of time on which he most likely provided the documents; and developed an interrogation theme which I believe would encourage Hamilton to talk. My partner and I flew to Lima, confronted Hamilton, obtained his full confession, accompanied him back to the US and turned him over to the FBI. Hamilton was convicted under federal espionage statutes in February 1993. I then developed a very close working relationship with one of two espionage squads at the FBI's Washington Field Office. My timing was fortunate. As you may recall, the Soviet Union dissolved in late 1991; From here, Mr. Scott Michael will explain the rest!

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