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To: RaceBannon

Yes, RaceBannon,

I procured the birth certificate on February 19, 2009 at Coast Province General Hospital in Mombasa, Kenya.

In September of this year (2009) I submitted Barack’s Kenyan birth certificate to a federal court in the Central District of California.


203 posted on 12/01/2009 10:26:56 PM PST by InspectorSmith
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To: InspectorSmith; Beckwith; rocco55; thouworm; rxsid; GOPJ; Fred Nerks; null and void; stockpirate; ..
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http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2397370/posts?page=185#185

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2397370/posts?page=193#193

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2397370/posts?page=202#202

http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/bloggers/2397370/posts?page=203#203

205 posted on 12/01/2009 11:19:51 PM PST by LucyT
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To: InspectorSmith

welcome back Inspector. How is the search about who was Chief Administrator at CPGH on the day of your date stamp
going ?
I am curious about something else:

1 You state you travelled from Congo-Kinshasa to Nariobi and then to Mombasa. Can you explain us the land route you took ? Can you tell us what borders you have crossed ?

2 You state you went to Congo for some water agency. Can you be more specific about this ? Was this a Kenyan, Congolese or Us agency ? Can you please provede a link to this agency ? The Agency you mentioned I have found nowhere.

3 Since you have provided us with pictures from Santo Domingo to describe African surroundings, could you also provide us with some photos from Mombasa (to describe Carribean surroundings) , with possibly some landmark in view ?

4 Oh. BTW. Othigo was CA admin on Feb 19th 2009.


206 posted on 12/02/2009 2:00:21 AM PST by Mik Taerg
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To: InspectorSmith; RaceBannon

http://www.qctimes.com/news/state-and-regional/article_a65ccee4-b393-5780-84d6-543b918e8c4e.html

and
http://blog.syracuse.com/news/2008/01/oswego_county_centerpiece_0116.html

Good morning, Oswego County: 01/16/2008
By Nicholas Lisi / The Post-Standard
January 16, 2008, 10:45AM
By Catie O’Toole
Staff writer

Nearly four years has passed since a stranger gave Jim Wilson Jr. a kidney and saved his life.

When he died Monday, his kidney was still functioning.

Kathleen Wilson said her son thought he was coming down with the flu and had been lying down most of the day.

“He didn’t feel good,” she said Tuesday.

Things turned for the worse.

Jim Wilson Sr. went to call 911 and their son went into cardiac arrest, Kathleen Wilson said.
James J. Wilson was 25.

“He lived every minute of every day,” his father said.

Jim Jr. was born with one kidney. It kept him going for the first 18 years of his life. He rarely missed school, and even felt fine the day a school nurse took his blood pressure and realized something was wrong. Go see a doctor, she told him. Right away.

Over three years, while his family searched for a donor, Jim Jr.’s condition worsened to the point he needed daily dialysis.

Jim Jr. was put on the national kidney transplant list in November 2001, five months after doctors diagnosed him with end stage renal disease.

Today, there are 147 people waiting for either a kidney or a kidney and pancreas transplant at University Hospital in Syracuse, said Laura Squadrito, director of programs at the National Kidney Foundation of Central New York.

The Wilsons, who live in Oswego, did what they could to speed up the process. A family friend started a Web site and Jim Wilson Sr. hung several hundred posters in stores, banks and other places, asking someone to donate a kidney to save his son’s life.

In late 2002, a man from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, sent an e-mail to the family. The man, who called himself Lucas Smith, said he was 23 years old and had emigrated from Russia five years earlier. He had seen the Web site and, Smith said, he wanted to help.

The Wilsons stopped searching for a donor. Smith passed all of the medical, physical and psychological tests. They thought he was going to save their son’s life.

Then, on May 3, 2003, Smith sent Jim Wilson Sr. an e-mail saying he wanted to be compensated for donating his kidney.

Wilson said they would pay his airfare, but because it was illegal to receive money for an organ donation, they wouldn’t give him any other cash.

Five months after holding out a lifeline, Lucas Smith disappeared.

Jim Wilson Sr. called the Cedar Rapids police.

On June 13, 2003, Diane Langton e-mailed the Wilsons. She had read about what happened and wanted to help.

Cedar Rapids is Langton’s hometown. She and her husband were born and raised there, and it pained her to have the city associated with the Wilsons’ heartache.

She was healthy, her blood type matched Jim Jr.’s, and she, too, had a son the same age as Jim Jr. “(I) would certainly wish that someone would volunteer to help save his life if necessary,” she wrote the family.

In a four-hour surgery March 16, 2004, doctors at University Hospital removed Langton’s left kidney and placed it in Jim’s body. The surgery was a success.

The Wilsons called Langton an angel.

Langton, who now has five grandchildren, said she always felt this is something God wanted done.

“It’s very hard to think of a young man like that attached to a machine every day. He needs to get out and live. He needs to do that, and if I can help do that, I’m more than happy to do it,” Langton said in 2004.

She feels the same way today.

“I wouldn’t have changed anything,” Langton said Tuesday.

After the surgery, Jim Jr. was able to stay out late for the first time in his adult life since he no longer needed to be attached to a dialysis machine for eight hours every night. He could eat his favorite foods again. And he had more energy.

He graduated from Cayuga Community College in 2005 and got a job as a custodian for the Oswego City School District. Jim Jr. was honorary chairman of the first Kidney Walk in Central New York in 2004, shortly after his surgery.

His father became chairman of the Oswego Kidney Walk when it began in 2007. This year’s October walk in Oswego will be dedicated to Jim Jr.’s memory, Squadrito said.

Jim Jr. knew he was “one of the lucky ones” to receive a kidney transplant.

As he prepared to go to the 2006 National Kidney Foundation U.S. Transplant Games in Louisville, Ky., Jim Jr. said, “This gift does not happen very often.”

More than 97,000 people nationwide are awaiting organ transplants and more than 4,000 new patients are added to the waiting list each month, according to the National Kidney Foundation.

Because of the lack of donors in the United States, 4,151 kidney patients died in 2006 while waiting for an organ transplant. Every day, 18 people die waiting for a transplant of a vital organ, such as a heart, liver, kidney, pancreas, lung or bone marrow, the foundation reported.

Jim Jr. donated his tissue and eyes, his mother said.

Sue Burns, a kidney transplant recipient and team manager of the local Transplant Games’ “Team Central New York,” said she was shocked by Jim Jr.’s sudden death.

“It’s a really sad day,” she said.

When Jim Jr. competed in the 2006 National Kidney Foundation U.S. Transplant Games, he was reunited with Langton.

“We watched him play basketball. He was very competitive and had a great outside shot,” Langton said. “It was fun watching him.”

Burns said she and Jim Jr. were planning to golf at this year’s Transplant Games in Pittsburgh.

“All I can see is Jim’s face with that big smile. That grin is ear to ear. And he had that little twinkle in his eye,” Burns said. “He was just full of life. He will be really, really missed.”

Catie O’Toole can be reached at cotoole@syracuse.com or 592-7140.


220 posted on 12/02/2009 10:51:32 AM PST by Protect the Bill of Rights
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To: InspectorSmith

How did you do this?


282 posted on 12/04/2009 5:56:47 PM PST by netmilsmom (I am Ilk)
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