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Ares
6th February 2014, 02:16 PM
Big big things are going down..look at Japan look at the hits another "suicide" just like I said. Ill be back in the office on the 10th. We are going into the hurricane my brother and there are very few life boats. Talked to my N.Y. FEDeral expresso source no yellow metal anywhere in central banks and bullion banks. China is grabbing all along with the rest of S.E. Asia.

Word on the "street" watch for a top level American bankster to expire. Hit teams are fully operational in Wall Street. (REDACTED) HIGHLY VISIBLE POWER BROKER- co-ordinating. Speak to you soon. Please post this to warn sheep. V-UPDATE 9:24 AM MOUNTAIN-NEXT ON THE HIT LIST CITI EXECUTIVE TIED IN WITH FOREX FRAUD -HIT LIST HAS 3 DOZEN MORE NAMES-DESPERATE TIMES REQUIRE DESPERATE MEASURES IN THE WORLD OF MONETARY CONTROL! JPM can't hold yellow metal shorts on notional gold. LIBOR and derivative hits continue as bankster suddenly commit "suicide". 43 are on the knock off list and counting. The shock waves of this and many other scandals are creating turmoil everywhere.

I was the first to report to you the heads of banking are operating from remote secondary locations. Spring cleaning has come early as the house is being swept clean. There is no honor amoung thieves. This is the final year to have your finances and wealth in order. Be prepared.

http://www.stevequayle.com/index.php?s=33&d=791

mick silver
6th February 2014, 02:56 PM
how many banker die last week , i think there was three posted here

Ares
6th February 2014, 03:18 PM
how many banker die last week , i think there was three posted here

Yeah looks like 3. I did some more searching, and came up with this article... Interesting.


A Rash of Deaths and a Missing Reporter – With Ties to Wall Street Investigations

In a span of four days last week, two current executives and one recently retired top ranking executive of major financial firms were found dead. Both media and police have been quick to label the deaths as likely suicides. Missing from the reports is the salient fact that all three of the financial firms the executives worked for are under investigation for potentially serious financial fraud.

The deaths began on Sunday, January 26. London police reported that William Broeksmit, a top executive at Deutsche Bank who had retired in 2013, had been found hanged in his home in the South Kensington section of London. The day after Broeksmit was pronounced dead, Eric Ben-Artzi, a former risk analyst turned whistleblower at Deutsche Bank, was scheduled to speak at Auburn University in Alabama on his allegations that Deutsche had hid $12 billion in losses during the financial crisis with the knowledge of senior executives. Two other whistleblowers have brought similar charges against Deutsche Bank.

Deutsche Bank is also under investigation by global regulators for potentially rigging the foreign exchange markets – an action similar to the charges it settled in 2013 over its traders’ involvement in the rigging of the interest rate benchmark, Libor.

Just two days after Broeksmit’s death, on Tuesday, January 28, a 39-year old American, Gabriel Magee, a Vice President at JPMorgan in London, plunged to his death from the roof of the 33-story European headquarters of JPMorgan in Canary Wharf. According to Magee’s LinkedIn profile, he was involved in “Technical architecture oversight for planning, development, and operation of systems for fixed income securities and interest rate derivatives.”

Magee’s parents, Bill and Nell Magee, are not buying the official story according to press reports and are planning to travel from the United States to London to get at the truth. One of their key issues, which should also trouble the police, is how an employee obtains access to the rooftop of one of the mostly highly secure buildings in London.

Nell Magee was quoted in the London Evening Standard saying her son was “a happy person who was happy with his life.” His friends are equally mystified, stating he was in a happy, long-term relationship with a girlfriend.

JPMorgan is under the same global investigation for potential involvement in rigging foreign exchange rates as is Deutsche Bank. The firm is also said to be under an investigation by the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations for its involvement in potential misconduct in physical commodities markets in the U.S. and London.

One day after Magee’s death, on Wednesday, January 29, 2014, 50-year old Michael (Mike) Dueker, the Chief Economist at Russell Investments, is said to have died from a 50-foot fall from a highway ramp down an embankment in Washington state. Again, suicide is being presented by media as the likely cause. (Do people holding Ph.D.s really attempt suicide by jumping 50 feet?)

According to Dueker’s official bio, prior to joining Russell Investments, he was an assistant vice president and research economist at the Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis from 1991 to 2008. His duties there included serving as an associate editor of the Journal of Business and Economic Statistics. He also was editor of Monetary Trends, a monthly publication of the St. Louis Fed.

Bloomberg News quotes William Poole, former President of the St. Louis Fed from 1998 to 2008, saying “Everyone respected his professional skills and good sense.”

According to a report in the New York Times in November of last year, Russell Investments was one of a number of firms that received subpoenas from New York State regulators who are probing the potential for pay-to-play schemes involving pension funds based in New York. No allegations of wrongdoing have been made against Russell Investments in the matter.

The case of David Bird, the oil markets reporter who had worked at the Wall Street Journal for 20 years and vanished without a trace on the afternoon of January 11, has this in common with the other three tragedies: his work involves a commodities market – oil – which is under investigation by the U.S. Senate’s Permanent Subcommittee on Investigations for possible manipulation. The FBI is involved in the Bird investigation.

Bird left his Long Hill, New Jersey home on that Saturday, telling his wife he was going for a walk. An intentional disappearance is incompatible with the fact that he left the house wearing a bright red jacket and without his life-sustaining medicine he was required to take daily as a result of a liver transplant. Despite a continuous search since his disappearance by hundreds of volunteers, local law enforcement and the FBI, Bird has not been located.

When a series of tragic events involving one industry occur within an 18-day timeframe, the statistical probability of these events being random is remote. According to a number of media reports, JPMorgan is conducting an internal investigation of the death of Gabriel Magee. Given that JPMorgan, Deutsche Bank and Russell Investments are subjects themselves of investigations, a more serious, independent look at these deaths is called for.

http://wallstreetonparade.com/2014/02/a-rash-of-deaths-and-a-missing-reporter-%E2%80%93-with-ties-to-wall-street-investigations/

iOWNme
6th February 2014, 03:33 PM
Killing Banksters IS NEVER going to solve the problems we face. Because the problems we face exist between our ears.

Banksters are perfectly ok with doing what they do BECAUSE IT IS LEGAL. Most people make a direct connection between legal and moral. They have absolutely no problem doing ANYTHING that is immoral and unjust, because in their mind if it is 'legal' it is totally ok to do it.

Banksters are a SYMPTOM of the problem of Central Banking. Central Banking is a SYMPTOM of the problem of the belief in 'Government'. Therefore, getting rid of Banksters, DOES NOT address the underlying moral principle. And without using a moral principle, people are just mindlessly trying to fix the world, while they simultaneously DESTROY it.

EE_
6th February 2014, 05:23 PM
Killing Banksters IS NEVER going to solve the problems we face. Because the problems we face exist between our ears.

Banksters are perfectly ok with doing what they do BECAUSE IT IS LEGAL. Most people make a direct connection between legal and moral. They have absolutely no problem doing ANYTHING that is immoral and unjust, because in their mind if it is 'legal' it is totally ok to do it.

Banksters are a SYMPTOM of the problem of Central Banking. Central Banking is a SYMPTOM of the problem of the belief in 'Government'. Therefore, getting rid of Banksters, DOES NOT address the underlying moral principle. And without using a moral principle, people are just mindlessly trying to fix the world, while they simultaneously DESTROY it.

Who's talking about solving problems? Seeing banksters die makes us feel good and gets rid of worthless people that do immoral and unjust things.
Fixing the world is no longer an option. Destroying it, will let it solve itself.

mick silver
6th February 2014, 05:27 PM
you just cant fix the shit , it got to come down

osoab
6th February 2014, 06:11 PM
What's "The Hawk" have to say? How's Steve's daughters country music career going?

osoab
6th February 2014, 06:13 PM
Who's talking about solving problems? Seeing banksters die makes us feel good and gets rid of worthless people that do immoral and unjust things.
Fixing the world is no longer an option. Destroying it, will let it solve itself.

Probably bankers that were ready to spill the beans.

Tumbleweed
6th February 2014, 06:23 PM
Who's talking about solving problems? Seeing banksters die makes us feel good and gets rid of worthless people that do immoral and unjust things.
Fixing the world is no longer an option. Destroying it, will let it solve itself.

If it were the bankers at the top of the pryimid that were dying it might do a lot of good. They are the most immoral and unjust of all in my opinion.

EE_
6th February 2014, 07:16 PM
If it were the bankers at the top of the pryimid that were dying it might do a lot of good. They are the most immoral and unjust of all in my opinion.

You can't always get what you want...sometimes you have to just be happy with those little things.

old steel
6th February 2014, 11:24 PM
you just cant fix the shit , it got to come down

The thing that concerns me mick is what if the Phoenix that rises from the ashes is far worse than anything we could ever imagine in our worst nightmares?

We can dream of a better world but like a lot of dreams there is a monster at the end of it.

midnight rambler
6th February 2014, 11:59 PM
Steve Quayle...lol

Ares
7th February 2014, 07:39 PM
Steve Quayle...lol

Maybe he was right???

I don't believe this crap that he killed himself with a nail gun. Let alone shot himself 7-8 times in the torso and head with one...

The ugly rash of financial services executive suicides appears to have spread once again. Following the jumping deaths of 2 London bankers and a former-Fed economist in the US, The Denver Post reports Richard Talley, founder and CEO of American Title, was found dead in his home from self-inflicted wounds - from a nail-gun. Talley's company was under investigation from insurance regulators.



Via The Denver Post,

Richard Talley, 57, and the company he founded in 2001 were under investigation by state insurance regulators at the time of his death late Tuesday, an agency spokesman confirmed Thursday.



It was unclear how long the investigation had been ongoing or its primary focus.



A coroner's spokeswoman Thursday said Talley was found in his garage by a family member who called authorities. They said Talley died from seven or eight self-inflicted wounds from a nail gun fired into his torso and head.



Also unclear is whether Talley's suicide was related to the investigation by the Colorado Division of Insurance, which regulates title companies.

http://www.zerohedge.com/news/2014-02-07/4th-financial-services-executive-found-dead-self-inflicted-nail-gun-wounds

Cebu_4_2
7th February 2014, 08:40 PM
Perhaps he was on marijuana and mistakenly took his body for a piece of paneling in his garage? We will never know.

midnight rambler
7th February 2014, 08:57 PM
Maybe he was right???

You do make a good point since a clock that isn't running is right momentarily at least twice a day.

mick silver
8th February 2014, 08:13 AM
it would only take one time shooting your self with a nailgun and you would stop

Cebu_4_2
8th February 2014, 09:20 AM
it would only take one time shooting your self with a nailgun and you would stop

And there are never any pictures. Maybe they are just going into retirement.

mick silver
8th February 2014, 09:29 AM
Billionaire Bunkers: Beyond the Panic Room, Home Security Goes Sci-Fi This story appears in the December 16, 2013 issue of Forbes.

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Billionaire Home Security 1 of 12
(http://www.forbes.com/pictures/mhj45egilj/s-a-f-e-house-2/) Tim Rue/Tim Rue for Forbes http://specials-images.forbesimg.com/imageserve/abafed90ffe04148037480a63d42c664/0x600.jpg?fit=scale&background=000000 (http://www.forbes.com/pictures/mhj45egilj/s-a-f-e-house/)

S.A.F.E. House Al and Lana Corbi stand in front of their Hollywood Hills home, complete with helipad on the roof. Their company, Strategically Armored & Fortified Environments (SAFE), specializes in securing high-end homes with technologies and architectural features meant to thwart everything from home invaders to nuclear holocaust to natural disaster. Their Los Angeles residence serves as a show house for prospective clients.

mick silver
8th February 2014, 09:30 AM
Al Corbi’s residence in the Hollywood Hills has the requisite white walls covered in artwork and picture windows offering breathtaking views of downtown Los Angeles, but it has more in common with NSA headquarters than with the other contemporary homes on the block. The Corbi family doesn’t need keys (thanks to biometric recognition software), doesn’t fear earthquakes (thanks to steel-reinforced concrete caissons that burrow 30 feet into the private hilltop) and sleeps easily inside a 2,500-square-foot home within a home: a ballistics-proof panic suite that Corbi refers to as a “safe core.”
Paranoid? Perhaps. But also increasingly commonplace. Futuristic security (http://www.forbes.com/security/) technologies–many developed for the military but sounding as though they came straight from James Bond’s Q–have made their way into the home, available to deep-pocketed owners whose peace of mind comes from knowing that their sensors can detect and adjust for, say, a person lurking in the bushes a half-mile away.
“If you saw this stuff in a movie you would think it is all made up,” says Corbi, whose fortress-like abode doubles as the demonstration house for his firm, Strategically Armored & Fortified Environments (http://www.safe-us.com/) (SAFE).
It’s not hard to see why such cutting-edge technologies would appeal to high-profile homeowners. “We had an assessment done three years ago from a private security company,” says John Paul DeJoria (http://www.forbes.com/profile/john-paul-dejoria/), billionaire founder of John Paul Mitchell Systems. “They said … that every now and again you get a real kook, and what if they came to your home and tried to do something stupid?” Now his main residence has security “similar to that of the White House.”
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He’s far from the only one. Chris Pollack, president of Pollack+Partners (http://www.chrispollack.com/), a design and construction advisor based in Purchase, N.Y., says that while security has always been a given in building homes for his ultra-high-net-worth clients, the spending for home defense has increased markedly over the last five years.
It starts with a property’s perimeter. “The exterior has always been the holy grail because you could never really protect it without 24-hour guard service,” says Christopher Falkenberg, a Secret Service agent turned security specialist for high-net-worth families with New York-based Insite Security (http://www.insitesecurity.com/#security-consulting). Cutting-edge technologies have strengthened that fence.
For example, FLIR Systems (http://www.flir.com/US/), based in Wilsonville, Ore., manufactures infrared cameras that can read the thermal heat signatures off everything in their sight lines regardless of time of day or atmospheric obscurants such as smoke. Human beings throw off more energy than trees or small animals, so the devices can pick someone out even from a hiding place, from a kilometer away in the lowest-end models to as much as 15 kilometers away in the premium versions.
Biometric technologies are becoming more prevalent, too. Moving beyond a fingerprint scan, some programs don’t require a homeowner to touch anything at all. Former Israeli major general Aharon Ze’evi-Farkash, onetime head of the Israeli Military Intelligence Directorate, has spent the past three years with his company, FST21 (http://fst21.com/), creating a software product that merges facial, voice and behavioral recognition technology into a keyless entry system. “It transforms you into the key for your building in under two seconds,” he says.
Windows remain an obvious and vulnerable entry point into a home. Glass-break detectors can operate within a 15-foot range, allowing them to be unobtrusively installed in the ceiling or on a wall near the window. The size of a silver dollar, they can be camouflaged in their surroundings, important when dealing with home finishes like gold-leaf ceilings or silk wallpaper. Some urban town house owners add a blast film to their windowpanes, which makes them nearly impenetrable, even if struck with a hammer or a pipe.
And don’t forget the smoke. The Corbis have a system that billows out fog screens that range from a harmless smoke meant to disorient intruders to a noisome gas with disabling effects lasting up to 24 hours. Then there is the Burglar Blaster Decintegrator (http://burglarblaster.com/), a relatively discreet ceiling-mounted device that, when tripped, showers pepper spray.
Such smoke systems can even be laced with a “DNA code”– SelectaDNA (http://www.selectadna.co.uk/), for example, comprises a series of unique, synthetic DNA chains that attach themselves to a fog-shrouded intruder. The invisible, harmless forensic code lingers on skin for weeks, shows up under UV light and, thanks to unique markers, can be traced directly back to a specific home.
The panic room has also undergone a high-tech evolution that makes the old Jodie Foster movie look quaint. A prominent author who declined to be identified has had his South Florida home jerry-rigged with a physical perimeter alarm, motion sensors throughout rooms and stairways, and a heat sensor that detects room temperature differentials caused by a sudden change in body heat. If worse comes to worst: The third-floor master suite is outfitted as a 2,500-square-foot safe haven. Switches installed throughout the house will encapsulate the space, locking down its three entrances with reinforced doors while alerting local authorities. Taking it further, the space’s bathroom doubles as an inner panic room, protected by “a silent home defense system with sufficient armament.” Fortunately, it has never come into use. “The best system in the world is the one you never use,” says the homeowner. “But there is a lot of peace of mind that comes with it.”

mick silver
8th February 2014, 09:30 AM
And there is more to worry about all the time. “Recently we have seen, especially in New York City, clients worried about dirty bombs,” says Pollack, meaning chemical weapons. Air scrubbers can suck in fresh air from outside a space and filter it indefinitely. He recently oversaw one project that would allow the client to camp in his bathroom suite turned panic room for as long as a week, hopefully long enough to wait out the worst of the chemical attack.
Gary Paster, founder of Sun Valley, Calif.-based American Saferoom Door Company (http://saferoom.com/), has been carving out safe rooms for wealthy homeowners, corporate headquarters, and international organizations like the United Nations (Paster recently outfitted its New York headquarters) since 1981. His kevlar-lined, bullet-resistant doors utilize automatic electromagnetic locks so the homeowner doesn’t have to turn a knob, and they typically hide behind traditional everyday-use doors. Paster sells between 50 and 75 custom doors per year, at a starting price of $20,000.
Gilbert, Ariz.-based Creative Home Engineering (http://hiddenpassageway.com/)specializes in a different kind of portal: secret passageways. Started by an ex-Boeing engineer, the company custom-crafts clandestine entrances that double as bookcases or wardrobes or walls. It builds about 45 portals annually for security purposes. Last year the company installed multiple passageways inside a king’s Middle Eastern royal palace.

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