Anonymous ID: 9a4ae2 April 12, 2020, 11:09 a.m. No.8770200   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0222 >>0266 >>0291 >>0308 >>0326 >>0388 >>0570 >>0641 >>0713

Black site = Dark Site

Tunnel warfare = VPN, Tor, Darkweb

Ventilators = Haxxors

Black Hat or White Hat

Dark Web or Clear Net

Crypto or OSINT

Darkness

10 Days

Tunnels

Dark Tunnels

Dark Web

Down the rabbit hole

Dark web shutdowns? Anon doesn't darkweb so who knows?

Concentrated attack

8Kun lag – Counter Attack, ie enemy response

The silent war

Conducted by keystroke and bot

Children trapped, pics/vids, on darkwebs servers lead to

Children trapped IRL

Ventilator - air out, shine light, pierce, haxxor

Ventilator - free the slaves

Silent Service

Submarine Warfare

SS

Secret Service - Lincoln assasination date, Start

Secondary responsbility, protect Rothschild Prints

Darkweb, HowPay? Crypto - Not Secure - Haxxor can trace

Black Hats v White Hats

Tech v Tech

Aluminum v Aluminum

Brass V Brass

Code V Code

 

Something BIG

Blockchain Intelligence Group = BIG

https://blockchaingroup.io/

Anonymous ID: 9a4ae2 April 12, 2020, 11:45 a.m. No.8770456   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0471

>>8770314

Former Acting AG Whitaker owned a daycare in Iowa

 

Inspection Findings 2018

 

IOWA CITY, Ia. — Inspectors found some violations at a large Iowa day care center when it was owned by acting Attorney General Matt Whitaker, including deficiencies in 2007 that prompted a downgrade in its license status, according to records released Monday.

 

Whitaker and his wife owned Little Endeavors in his hometown of Ankeny, Iowa, a center with a capacity for 204 children from newborn to school-age, from 2003 until 2015. He has said that owning the center and other businesses has given him valuable experience.

 

The Associated Press obtained 49 pages of complaints and inspection records covering Whitaker's ownership under the Iowa open records law. They paint a mostly positive picture of Little Endeavors but also show persistent concerns about a shortage of toys and supplies in some rooms and occasionally serious safety incidents.

 

Whitaker's ownership of the day care is part of the unorthodox background he brings to the nation's top law enforcement position and is one of many aspects of his past that has come under scrutiny since his appointment by President Donald Trump.

 

Trump named Whitaker, who had been Attorney General Jeff Sessions' chief of staff, to the top Justice Department job on Nov. 7 after asking Sessions to resign. Critics fear that Whitaker, a former federal prosecutor and Republican Party loyalist, was installed to protect Trump from special counsel Robert Mueller.

 

Whitaker and his wife employed a director and assistant director who ran the day-to-day operations, managing a staff that included full- and part-time teachers, records show.

 

During their tenure, some of the most significant problems involved a teacher who allegedly force fed some children to the point of vomiting in 2014, held a blanket over a frightened child's head during nap time and mistreated others. The teacher was on leave when inspectors visited and never returned to work.

 

In two other serious cases, a child went missing during a field trip to a state lake until he was returned to staff by a woman; another was left sleeping unattended in a room for several minutes when the class left for a trip. Staff took responsibility for those lapses, records show.

 

The Iowa Department of Human Services put the day care on a provisional license from December 2007 until July 2008 after it was cited for several licensing violations. Those included toys and other supplies that needed to be replenished or replaced, a staff shortage in one infant room, and staff who didn't get required annual training, among other problems. After corrective action, its full license was restored in 2008.

 

But concerns about the shortage of toys and supplies persisted before and after then. Inspection reports from visits in 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2012 noted shortages of play items in one or more of the rooms and noted that a lack of stimulation may have contributed to a biting problem among toddlers early during the Whitakers' tenure.

 

"As I walked through each room in the center, it was obvious more toys and equipment are needed," one inspector warned in 2004. "If you want to provide high quality care, more supplies need to be provided in the classroom."

 

But similar problems continued to be noted. During one 2009 visit, an inspector noted that children in one room were "just wandering around the room as if they were looking for something to do."

 

"When some puzzles and other play things were found and put out for these children, it was like Christmas morning," the inspector wrote.

 

In 2010, an inspector criticized a Lego area that only had "a dozen or so pieces." In 2012, an inspector found "five or six different puzzles in separate baggies," with no pictures of what the puzzles should look like when completed.

 

After the Whitakers sold the center in 2015, the building was repainted and "old and broken toys" were replaced, a report shows. Morale among staff improved because they felt listened to by the new director and can "request supplies for their rooms and be able to get them now instead of having to use their own money," it said.

 

A Justice Department spokeswoman had no immediate comment about the inspections of the day care. During his 2011 interview for Iowa Supreme Court vacancies, Whitaker said his ownership of the day care, a law firm and other small businesses gave him "strong administrative experience." "That gives me a perspective on business and how the law affects business, and also how small business owners work and make money," he said.

 

https://www.desmoinesregister.com/story/news/politics/2018/11/26/inspections-whitaker-former-iowa-day-care-donald-trump-acting-attorney-general-ag-ankeny/2121352002/

Anonymous ID: 9a4ae2 April 12, 2020, 11:53 a.m. No.8770511   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0641 >>0713

>>8770222

 

Blockchain Intelligence Group Joins The Anti-Human Trafficking Intelligence Initiative (ATII)

March 03, 2020

 

VANCOUVER, March 3, 2020 – BIGG Digital Assets Inc. (“BIGG” or the “Company”)(CSE: BIGG; OTCQB: BBKCF; WKN: A2PS9W), owner of Blockchain Intelligence Group (“BIG”), a leading developer of Blockchain technology search, risk-scoring and data analytics solutions, is pleased to announce that it has joined the Anti-Human Trafficking Intelligence Initiative (“ATII”).

 

The Anti-Human Trafficking Intelligence Initiative (ATII) is a non-profit organization established in 2019 in Beaufort, South Carolina. ATII’s mission is to combat global human trafficking by leveraging corporate social responsibilities directly through advocacy awareness, intelligence integration, technology advancement and strategic data collaboration. ATII aspires to pioneer necessary change in the approach to trafficking prevention, detection, reporting and collaboration to achieve justice and save lives. www.followmoneyfightslavery.org

 

In support of the ATII’s Mission, BIG has entered a data-sharing agreement wherein cryptocurrency transactions and addresses tied to human trafficking and child exploitation will be passed on to ATII immediately in order to strengthen its database and aid in the fight against these crimes. BIG’s address attribution database will also be continuously updated with input from ATII’s own data.

 

“We are honored to formally welcome the Blockchain Intelligence Group as partners in the anti-human trafficking fight and know our data sharing collaboration targeting the utilization of cryptocurrency as a facilitator of human trafficking will make a big impact in our joint efforts to disrupt the financial networks of those dealing in child exploitation, sexual and labor trafficking. We look forward to aligning our cumulative data with law enforcement, government organizations and those financial institutions and corporations practicing corporate social responsibility in the fight against modern slavery,” says Aaron Kahler, founder and CEO of ATII.

 

Blockchain Intelligence Group’s President, Lance Morginn, commented, “We are thrilled to partner with The Anti-Human Trafficking Intelligence Initiative; we are proud that our unique tools are part of the solution to combat modern day slavery. This partnership is directly aligned with our values in removing the allure of criminal use of cryptocurrency.”

 

 

On behalf of the Board,

 

Lance Morginn

President / Director

lance@blockchaingroup.io

T:+1.778.819.8702

https://blockchaingroup.io/blockchain-intelligence-group-joins-the-anti-human-trafficking-intelligence-initiative-atii/