http://archive.is/dx48g
this guy had some.
>A smuggler who tried to sell weapons-grade plutonium to undercover officers in Kyrgyzstan has been arrested, sparking new fears about the smuggling of nuclear material from Russia.
http://archive.is/dx48g
this guy had some.
>A smuggler who tried to sell weapons-grade plutonium to undercover officers in Kyrgyzstan has been arrested, sparking new fears about the smuggling of nuclear material from Russia.
2413 positive value contracts (3109 total) when searching DUN 123456787 and singapore on fpds between 1/1/2009 and 12/31/2017.
VENDOR_DUNS_NUMBER:"123456787" CREATED_DATE:[2009/01/01,2017/12/31] POP_COUNTRY_NAME:"SINGAPORE"
i d/l'd lots of .csv from fpds-ng this week (before maintenance) and created lots of spreadsheets.
check my math - i like that you questioned how those 14 lines could add up.
understandable.
problem is, Q's posts, as cryptic as they are, sometimes just call specific items out.
there is a generic DUN used by 50-60 companies, and it appears to be a 'slush fund' account.
123456787
it is tied to several nonsense addresses.
when i filter SINGAPORE and this DUN, during Hussein's presidency, it adds up to 29.8MM, and Q said in a post:
>Slush Fund
>>Hussein [1] $29,000,000 SINGAPORE
which to me is interesting. i'm not making the cabal connection, just that during Hussein's presidency, there were generated 29.8MM worth of contracts from that bogus DUNS, associated with Singapore.
(if you read back through - ha ha, have fun, you will find that i also located a single contract for $21.97 with the same DUNS, associated with SINGAPORE, from another Q post, calling out $22 / SINGAPORE.
the all caps is interesting too, because if you search fpds-ng with "Singapore", it turns up zilch…gotta be all caps.
(all this to say - i think that Q just wanted us to find the bogus DUNS, and the few other crumbs were to help verify that if we find the right DUNS, that some other numbers/orders will line up. call it an analog checksum. ha)
for all we know, code is hidden among the bants.
or stego'd in ultra rare pepes.
too much noise = strong crypto.
123456787 is the only one i found, and that was by accident.
i strongly encourage you to use fpds-ng if you like looking at gov't contracts.
the search function is a bit clunky, and navigating (don't every hit the back arrow!) can be tricky, but there's lots of data.
also, if your search generates over 30,000 records, find a way to split it into smaller batches, because the .csv downloader will truncate at the 30,000th record.
how many positive value contracts did you find?
i don't like that our numbers don't match, purely because that means my search is missing records, or something changed during maintenance window this morning.