Pajeets Doxx Homeland Security
America’s Federal government is in grave danger of total overnight collapse, and it has nothing to do with Donald Trump. It’s DIE-ing!
Most interstate/international criminal organizations are tribal because blood is one of the few loyalties that a crook can be expected to maintain. Thus, the category Organized Crime would be better categorized as Cousin-Crime. The FBI, supposedly created to oppose exactly such organizations, obsesses over lone wolfs instead because… among other reasons… noticing Cousin-Crime would offend a certain Tribe.
And others.
Ex-Homeland Security IG, two others sentenced for plot to steal data of 200,000 colleagues
h ttps://nypost.com/2024/01/29/news/three-dhs-ex-employees-sentenced-for-conspiring-to-steal-data-of-over-200000-govt-workers/
By Ryan King, 29 January 2024
Three former employees of the Department of Homeland Security — including its onetime acting watchdog — have been sentenced for conspiring to steal personal data of hundreds of thousands of government workers from law enforcement databases.
The more than 200,000 employees whose information was stolen had worked for the inspector general’s office at either the Department of Homeland Security or the US Postal Service, where all three conspirators had previously been employed.
Whoa. Did the DHS Inspector-General doxx DHS?
This isn’t just Homeland Security we’re talking about. This is Homeland Security’s INTERNAL AFFAIRS OFFICE committing crimes against Homeland Security.
Former acting Inspector General Charles Edwards was sentenced to a year and a half in prison Friday after pleading guilty in January 2022 to conspiracy to steal government property and defraud the US and theft of government property.
Two DHS IT workers, Murali Venkata and Sonal Patel, received four months in prison and two years of probation, respectively.
Venkata & Patel sound Pajeet, but the third, Charles Edwards, is…
…Pajeet.
Every American tech worker reading this, just nodded his head in instant comprehension of where this is going.
How awkward for Fedgov. They aren’t allowed to notice Jew-Cousins, so they didn’t see the Hindu-Cousins coming, either.
And they didn’t listen to us complaining about Pajeet-organized crime against Heritage America.
And now, it’s their turn to discover why Pajeet is a four-letter word in USA.
Edwards, 63, exited his acting IG post in late 2013 after a Senate inquiry concluded he was too cozy with officials whom he was supposed to be supervising.
Check.
Edwards had also been accused of flouting nepotism rules…
Check.
…by employing his wife as an auditor in his office…
Check.
… and taking multiple trips on the taxpayers’ dime from DC to Miami and Fort Lauderdale, where he was earning a computer and information sciences degree at Nova Southeastern University, in 2011 and 2012.
Employer-funded trips/calls to distant locations, good enough for… check.
The watchdog was further accused by lawmakers of giving bonuses to employees who helped him complete school assignments and write his dissertation…
BINGO!
Excuse me. *GunnerQ puts away his Diversity Bingo Card*
…and retaliating when [non-Pajeet] employees complained about his conduct. Edwards denied any wrongdoing at the time.
The DHS Inspector-General retaliated against employees reporting his own misconduct… AND was caught trying to falsify education credentials… and he was allowed to just walk away? Did the courts not have enough evidence to prove his wife was his employee?
Prosecutors say the trio cooked up a plan to pilfer government software and employee information from the databases, with the goal of creating a commercial case management software system that Edwards’ company, Maryland-based Delta Business Solutions, would sell back to the feds.
Yet another public-private partnership success story. That explains why IG-HS was getting a bachelor’s degree in another state while…
…No. It’s a lie. That scam couldn’t possibly work. Not unless IG Edwards deleted his own agency’s database then signed a contract with his own, private company to provide the exact same database.
Some clarification is in order. I don’t know how, or if, DHS’ personnel database software is any different from the other agencies of Fedgov. The articles don’t identify it, but listening to them talk, I assume it’s a proprietary database developed in-house by DHS. A sensible step towards information security is to not use commercially available applications if you have the ability to make your own. Most viruses and Trojan horses are written to exploit the most popular software packages, for obvious reasons.
I don’t know if the US Post Office uses the same database software as DHS, or if the theft of USPS personal info was handled by accomplices of Edwards separate from the database software. Either way, Edwards stealing personal info from two agencies, indicates that data theft was a primary goal. This was not just software piracy.
The personal info that was stolen was never detailed. It could just be a list of employee names. However, there’s no indication that this Pajeet crime family would intentionally limit its theft, so I assume, at minimum, the PII includes home addresses.
Ex-Inspector General indicted for stealing data on 250k govt colleagues
h ttps://news.sophos.com/en-us/2020/03/10/ex-inspector-general-indicted-for-stealing-data-on-250k-govt-colleagues/
10 March 2020
Coinciding with the Plandemic? Hmm.
They were working the scheme for a number of years, according to the indictment. It alleges that Edwards had a network of insiders working on stealing data from the DHS Office of Inspector General (OIG) from October 2014 to April 2017.
A network of Cousins. No need to allege anything. This is how Pajeets behave. Learn to code and learn the truth.
According to court documents, the stolen data included sensitive government databases that contained personal identifying information (PII) of DHS and Postal Service (USPS) employees. The plan was to sell the enhanced, so-not-free-anymore version of DHS-OIG’s software to the OIG for the Department of Agriculture.
Okay, I originally thought he was trying to sell DHS’ database back to DHS. Even so, I have three issues with this revised scheme.
One, was DoA even in the market for a new database system? If so, why was it willing to wait not less than four years for the more expensive, Pajeet knock-off?
Two, why would DoA want DHS’ presumably high-security system AND be willing to purchase an commercial version that’s not supposed to exist?
Three, the contents of the database were included. At least, in the original theft.
The only way I can see this scam working, is a DoA-OIG accomplice intentionally buying from his Cousin in DHS-OIG. The national-security implications of a foreign-ethnic, criminal organization undermining multiple Offices of Inspector General in concert, are alarming.
Prosecutors also allege that Edwards kept it all up even after he left DHS-OIG in December 2013, maintaining his relationship with Venkata and other DHS-OIG employees to keep the intellectual property (IP) and PII flowing.
Even more alarming. DHS-OIG should have been completely purged of Pajeets just as a precaution.
But we all know why it wasn’t.
His ex-colleagues did more than just keep up the alleged insider theft, the indictment says: Venkata and others are also said to have served as Edwards’ help desk…
Meh. We already know Edwards was incompetent.
Edwards also allegedly hired software developers in India to help him develop his commercial alternative of DHS-OIG’s software. That’s an aspect of the alleged crimes that could make his penalties yet more severe if he’s convicted, given that he’s not only charged with stealing proprietary software and the PII of government employees, but also with sending it overseas.
I wish espionage and treason were still crimes. Julian Assange doesn’t count.
The indictment is part of an ongoing investigation by DHS and Postal Service inspectors general and was announced by the two agencies, the DOJ and the US attorney’s office for the District of Columbia, which is prosecuting the case.
The ruling powers are taking this seriously, as they should, but the only headlines we get are petty theft of data, punished by probation and time served. That means backroom deals.
If Edwards and Venkata are convicted, they’ll be looking at a maximum of five years for conspiracy to commit theft, 10 years for theft of government property, 20 years for wire fraud, and a minimum of two years for a count of aggravated identity theft. Venkata also faces another 20 years for destruction of records. They would also face fines of up to $250,000 for each count. Having said that, maximum sentences are rarely handed down.
If Edwards and Venkata are convicted then CIA will hire them to continue installing compromised software on the down-low. And they just were convicted in the original article here, to 18 months of jail and 24 months of probation, respectively. I’ve seen drunk drivers get harsher treatment.
Somebody saw what they did and liked their style.
The Washington Post has been following this case for a while. As it reports, it looks like Friday’s indictment is connected to an April 2019 guilty plea from a DHS federal technology manager, Sonal Patel.
Ah, this wasn’t a Plandemic-timed coup attempt. Not this time.
Ms. Patel admitted to conspiring with a former acting Inspector General to steal a database containing the PII of nearly 250,000 DHS employees, according to court filings. From The Washington Post:
Patel in court papers acknowledged instructing a subordinate to send her directions on how to install the copy, and steering the Agriculture Department inspector general’s office to using the commercial version instead of the free government version. In June 2016, her plea statement said, she handed two DVDs with copied data to Co-Conspirator 1 ‘on the side of the road’ before the latter boarded a flight from Dulles International Airport to meet with software developers in India,’ who would create the copycat program.
Patel provided a foreign nation with DHS’ database software, specifically so they could reverse-engineer it? That’s espionage. AND it contained the personal info of, apparently, the entire DHS staff? This was a data breach worse than Equifax’s after they hired that piano teacher to run their cybersecurity.
This is not mere software piracy, as was first presented to us.
After pleading guilty to one count of conspiracy to commit theft of government property and agreeing to cooperate with prosecutors regarding “a scheme that ran from 2014 to 2017,” Patel was looking at a maximum of five years in prison.
Four years of crime, five years of prison, means…
Crime doesn’t pay, even if you have the audacity to try to gussy up and sell your employer its own, free software and – ouch! – PII from your own colleagues.
Two of the three ringleaders (thus far) aren’t even seeing a jail cell for… limiting ourselves to the admissions of guilt… compromising domestic national security in a scam elaborate enough to invoke the RICO Act.
DHS hired Pajeets from a caste-obsessed nation of liars, put them in senior government because only white male taxpayers commit organized crime, then when an entire clan of thieves was discovered in senior government, they couldn’t punish one Tribe of foreign-loyal parasites without frightening the other.
Behold the death of empires.