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Hackers Secrets Revealed.pdf A Great PDF file that expains in a easy to understand step by step guide to help prevent Hackers Attacks. A Must Read! 3/15/03
How to prevent people from spying on you
All you need to know about IP Spoofing
Warning! The Post Office could report YOU as a drug dealer or a terrorist for
just buying a International money order
Trojan virus in computer game Dope Wars!! Caution
Spy Software in Weather Bug Program
This
means that when you need to get an "International Money Order"
from the post office. To send for payment for Medicine from Amsterdam or
other locations, Do not buy the money order at the same time that you mail
it!!!
Unless you act suspiciously they are looking for people
buying money orders over $3000, or Buy Multiple money orders from
the same P.O. Get the money order then leave & come back another
time to mail it overseas! This mean they will be looking for people buying
Multiple International Money orders & Mailing them overseas, or
getting large international money orders.
Here is a 1 page PDF file I found on a US Congress Website. About
Operation Eagle Eye.
getpage.pdf 9/17/02
If anyone who works in the Post Office can lay their hands on a copy of this order? I would love to be able to post it! So far they have refused all F.O.I.A. requests for it! chris
For release: June 22, 2001
===============================
The Post Office could report YOU as a drug dealer or a terrorist
WASHINGTON, DC --
The next time you go to the Post Office to purchase a money order, you
could get secretly reported to the federal government as a potential drug
dealer, terrorist, or money-launderer, the Libertarian Party warned today.
It's part of a massive customer surveillance program called "Under
the Eagle's Eye," which has been covertly monitoring Americans --
especially minorities and the poor -- for the past four years.
"The Post Office has gone postal on your privacy," said Steve
Dasbach, national director of the Libertarian Party. "Instead of
simply delivering mail, the Post Office is teaching its employees to spy
like an eagle on its customers. And you could end up in a government
database as a potential criminal without even knowing it."
The Under the Eagle's Eye program, which has been in effect since 1997,
trains postal clerks to watch for customers who act
"suspiciously" while purchasing money orders, making wire
transfers, or buying cash cards.
According to Post Office rules, "suspicious" activity could
include counting money in line, purchasing a large money order, or
purchasing several smaller money orders. However, the Post Office refuses
to disclose the full parameters used to determine suspicious activity,
saying it is a law enforcement secret.
But a customer does not need to meet any legal definition of suspicious
activity -- such as "beyond reasonable doubt" -- to be reported
to the government, according to the Under the Eagle's Eye manual. Instead,
"if it seems suspicious to you, then it is suspicious," the
manual tells postal employees.
Clerks are instructed that it is "better to report 10 legal
transactions than to let one illegal transaction get by."
If a customer does act "suspiciously," postal employees are
required to fill out government Form 8105-B, also called a Suspicious
Activity Report. The form includes a description of the customer and his
or her car's license plate number, if possible. Form 8105-Bs are then sent
to the Treasury Department or stored in a Post Office database for at
least five years.
"It's frightening that postal clerks have the power to report you to
the FBI, the IRS, the DEA, or the Treasury Department as a suspected drug
dealer or money launderer simply because you've purchased a money
order," said Dasbach.
The program is an offshoot of Bank Secrecy Act regulations, created in
1997 by the Treasury Department. The regulations are supposedly designed
to detect illegal money laundering, to track drug-related money, and to
catch terrorists.
Although officials decline to reveal how many "suspicious"
customers have been reported to law enforcement, the Post Office sells
about $9 billion in money orders a year. This means that tens or hundreds
of thousands of Americans may have been identified as potential drug
dealers or money-launderers by postal employees.
And a disproportionate number of those suspects are poor people,
immigrants, or minorities, noted Dasbach -- since those groups have less
access to bank accounts, and are more likely to send money orders to
foreign relatives.
"The Under the Eagle's Eye program is not just reprehensible because
it spies on Americans, it's reprehensible because it spies on the poorest,
most vulnerable Americans," he said. "It's especially shameful
that immigrants -- many of whom fled to America to escape oppressive
governments -- are spied on by our own government."
The Post Office refuses to disclose how many criminals it has apprehended
because of the Under the Eagle's Eye program. However, a similar program
which requires banks to monitor suspicious financial activity generates
99,999 reports on innocent customers for every one report on a
law-breaker, according to the National Economic Council.
If that ratio is the same for the Post Office -- and there's no reason to
believe otherwise -- then the Under the Eagle's Eye program is infringing
on innocent Americans' privacy on a massive scale, noted Dasbach.
"The idea of treating everyone who buys a money order as a criminal
suspect is outrageous," he said. "That's the reverse of the way
things are supposed to work in America, where we believe it's better to
let 10 guilty people go free than to harass one innocent person.
"If police have probable cause to think you've committed a crime,
they should go to court and get a warrant, instead of requiring postal
clerks to act as government informants."
Now that the Under the Eagle's Eye program has become public knowledge,
Americans should rise up and demand an end to Post Office spying, said
Dasbach.
"Unfortunately, the Eagle has landed