Hi DJ MacWOW,
I don’t think that this “KenyanBCPunkster” ever created any birth certificate.
And here is the link you are looking for (but you have to be a member of Politijab to view it:
http://www.politijab.com/phpBB3/viewtopic.php? f=25&t=2099&start=0#p54695
“After having spent (wasted?) nearly a year in the trenches of Birthistan, I decided several months ago to “retire” and move on, save for dropping by here once in a while to keep in touch with some of the friends I’d made here. And then yesterday this Kenyan birth certificate thing seemed to explode like Krakatoa on the Internet. It was claims about Obama’s Hawaiian certificate being a forgery that suckered me into all this stuff last summer, and I guess I must still be a sucker for a good birth certificate story because I decided to look into this one. I wanted to see if I could find any images of similar documents from Kenya around the same time period that could be compared to the certificate on the web. I spent several hours with Google image search on that before I decided to broaden my search outside of Kenya-specific documents. It was some time later that I finally spotted a thumbnail on one of the results pages that looked very much like the Kenyan certificate. I pulled up the full size image and found that it was virtually EXACTLY the same type of document. It was a scanned image of a “Certified Copy of Registration of Birth” dated in 1964 for a David Jeffrey Bomford on a genealogy website for the Bomford family. Except that David Jeffrey Bomford wasn’t born in Kenya, he was born in South Australia. But what was even more interesting was certain other features of the document as compared to the Kenya certificate. The names of the registrar and the district registrar were the SAME NAMES as given in the Kenya certificate save for the first initials, i.e. G.H. Lavender and J.H. Miller in the Bomford document versus E.H. Lavender and M.H. Miller in the Kenya document. Also, the book number (44B) and page number (5733) were the exactly the same on both documents. The image of the Bomford certificate seems to prove beyond any doubt that not only is the Kenya certificate a fake, but that whomever faked it used the Bomford certificate as the template. Here’s a scaled down image of the Bomford certificate:”
I (Lucas) don’t believe that Bomford ever had his birth certificate on his family’s website.
Caches are wonderful things!
It doesn't matter. They are all liars and all in it together.
Night Mr Smith. Have a good evening!
The Bomford BC was on the Bomford Family tree web site for a short period of time...I saw it .....It was taken down very quickly after the whole story broke.
The BC was totally out of place on the site ...no other BCs were present.At the time someone here (a freeper) said that the records showed the web site had last been edited the day before, I assumed the web site had not been hacked but was manipulated by a member of the family or someone who had access to the codes . I am not a geek so I had no way of knowing that for sure but the whole thing is on FR somewhere.
I think KenyanBCPunkster posted that long paragraph.
In a Freemail he wrote to me, he used this phrase:
“I spent over a year in the trenches looking into the whole Birther thing”...
So, it is probably as I thought, no coincidence that the Bomford bc showed up so quickly. The same person who used it as a template “outed” the source.
What you just posted perfectly supports everything this guy has said. I also don’t see anything that gives any indication that Bomford didn’t have his BC on a family website.