http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/news/1483299/posts?page=118#118
To: Nita Nupress
Let's look at this as taxpaying citizens. What have we learned?
A private security services company named "Teg" was responsible for security at the Murrah Building prior to the bombing of said building.
Security at the Murrah Building was, for all practical purposes, non-existent.
"Teg" promptly disappeared as an entity, if it indeed ever existed, after the OKC bombing.
A private security services company named "Akal" appears to have been in control of "Teg," even sharing a home office address in New Mexico at the time of the OKC bombing.
Akal, a company politically connected to the democrats via one attorney and Clinton fundraiser named Earl Potter, and having never been required to answer for its failings in OKC, is still in the private security services business and raking in some of the biggest security services contracts that the US dept. of Justice has to offer - to the point that duties previously performed by the US Marshall Service are privatized and in Akal's hands.
As a taxpayer, I'm incensed. We can omit from the above synopsis any conspiracy theories w/r to the Clintons and the wars between the Justice Department and the US Marshall Service over the handling of Waco and OKC evidence. We can even ignore the Sikh angle and the Timothy McVeigh connections for the moment.
We seem to have uncovered serious Justice Department patronage contracts going to an inept and possibly unlicensed contractor - culpable via criminal negligence - for the deaths of some 160 Americans. Already, we have enough for our elected representatives to question in open session. Hell, I'd even settle for a Judicial Watch charade of an investigation.
I say we make an issue where we have one and let the conspiracies unfold as they may. That will be the payoff of this investigative effort.
- 58 Posted on Free Republic 07/10/2001 by Harrison Bergeron
Let's assume that the security firm at the Murrah Building was fully competent, acting correctly, and above reproach.
A guy parks a truck in front of the building. It blows up 120 or so seconds later. What were they supposed to do to prevent the incident?
http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1483299/posts?page=129#129
FOR RELEASE AT
No. 733-03
5 p.m. ET
October 6, 2003
ARMY
Akal Security Inc., Santa Cruz, N.M., was awarded on Sept. 30, 2003, a delivery order amount of $31,791,980 as part of a $102,461,165 firm-fixed-price contract for security guard services. Work will be performed at Fort Campbell, Ky. (45%), Fort Stewart, Ga. (19%), Anniston Army Depot, Ala. (13%), Blue Grass Army Depot, Ky. (13%), and Sunny Point, N.C. (10%), and is expected to be completed by Sept. 29, 2004. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. There were an unknown number of bids solicited via the World Wide Web on July 15, 2003, and 20 bids were received. The Northern Region Contracting Center, Fort Eustis, Va., is the contracting activity (DABJ01-03-D-0038).
Akal Security Inc., Santa Cruz, N.M., was awarded on Sept. 30, 2003, a delivery order amount of $18,872,191 as part of a $61,823,792 firm-fixed-price contract for security guard services. Work will be performed at Fort Hood, Texas, and is expected to be completed by Sept. 29, 2004. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. There were an unknown number of bids solicited via the World Wide Web on July 15, 2003, and 20 bids were received. The Northern Region Contracting Center, Fort Eustis, Va., is the contracting activity (DABJ01-03-D-0039).
Akal Security Inc., Santa Cruz, N.M., was awarded on Sept. 30, 2003, a delivery order amount of $12,624,931 as part of a $40,812,110 firm-fixed-price contract for security guard services. Work will be performed at Fort Lewis, Wash. (75%), Fort Riley, Kan. (25%), and is expected to be completed by Sept. 29, 2004. Contract funds will not expire at the end of the current fiscal year. There were an unknown number of bids solicited via the World Wide Web on July 15, 2003, and 20 bids were received. The Northern Region Contracting Center, Fort Eustis, Va., is the contracting activity (DABJ01-03-D-0040).
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