1974 – Christine Maxwell completes a Post Graduate Teaching Certificate and takes up work as a middle school teacher in Oxford.
1976 – After being fired from the Dalton School, Jeffrey Epstein is hired by Alan Greenberg at Bear Stearns as a junior assistant to a floor trader at the American Stock Exchange. Greenberg is good friends with Roy Cohn.
1978 – The first computer bulletin board system (BBS) is developed, allowing users to dial into a computer using a modem to share files and leave messages.
1979 - CompuServe becomes the first computer network to offer email service to personal computer users.
1980 – Isabel Maxwell makes her second film, a documentary on lesbian women.
1981 – Jeffrey Epstein leaves Bear Stearns.
1981 – Isabel Maxwell moves to the United States, where she continues to produce and direct documentaries.
1981 – ARPANET is expanded when the National Science Foundation develops the Computer Science Network (CSNET). The number of host sites is 213, and new ones will be added regularly. These are all military sites, universities, or research centers.
1981 – The NSA becomes responsible for detailing trusted computing and network platform specifications, meaning that they can easily implement and secure hidden functions in any computer architecture. This gives them the ability to surreptitiously insert spyware or malware in any computer, which would be completely undetectable (even to computer manufacturers and technicians). Computer chips that have other functions could also be designed and then surreptitiously inserted as well.
1981 – At about this time, the US Justice Department begins using PROMIS software, owned by Bill Hamilton through his company Inslaw. PROMIS is an extremely sophisticated tracking program that was designed to easily interface with data banks in different computer systems. The program could effectively be used to probe into the lives of people in a way never before possible and track the movements of untold numbers of people in any part of the world. The DOJ will withhold millions of dollars in lease payments which will force Inslaw to file for bankruptcy. Once Inslaw is effectively destroyed, the DOJ, headed by Attorney General Edwin Meese III, will transfer PROMIS to the NSA and CIA, where a backdoor will be put in that will let them eavesdrop on any other organization that uses the software. With the backdoor in place, the CIA will secretly install PROMIS in the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) in Switzerland to keep track of electronic fund transfers to allegedly combat money-laundering and other criminal activities, including drug trafficking, securities and banking frauds and political payoffs. The CIA will also furnish the software to its agents in the field to track data, and will then begin marketing it to other intelligence agencies around the world in order to tap into these agencies at will. The NSA will also begin using PROMIS to penetrate the global banking industry.
1982 – A secret federal database called Main Core is set up by Lt. Col. Oliver North using PROMIS software. The database contains personal and financial data of millions of US citizens believed to be threats to national security. The data, which is believed to come from the NSA, FBI, CIA, and other sources, is collected and stored without warrants or court orders. Main Core is believed to have been initiated by FEMA as part of a Continuity of Government (COG) program. By 2008 it will have over 8 million Americans listed in its database as possible threats, often for trivial reasons, whom the government may choose to track, question, or detain in a time of crisis.
1982 – Jeffrey Epstein sets up J. Epstein and Co., where he will allegedly manage the investments of billionaire clients, demanding full attorney privilege over their finances.
1983 – Israeli intelligence acquires a copy of PROMIS software from the DOJ and puts their own backdoor into it before using Robert Maxwell to market it to intelligence agencies of other countries through a company he owns called Degem. Maxwell will sell PROMIS to the intelligence agencies of New Zealand, Australia, Thailand, Turkey, Belgium, Poland, East Germany, Egypt, Bulgaria, Nicaragua, Colombia, Guatemala, South Africa, Zimbabwe, China, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and the KGB. The Israelis will also sell PROMIS to the Eastern Bloc, Nicaragua, Colombia, Chile, Brazil, and the Rothschild controlled Credit Suisse. The sale to Credit Suisse will give Israel the ability to monitor all of their transactions, giving them an unwarranted advantage over the world’s financial market. PROMIS will also be sold to the infamously corrupt and now defunct BCCI (Bank of Credit and Commerce International).
1983 – Ronald Lauder (of Estee Lauder) is appointed to serve as United States Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for European and NATO Affairs. During this time, Lauder is also very active in Israeli politics and had already become an ally of the then-Israeli representative to the United Nations and future prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu.
1984 – George Nader is caught in possession of large amounts of child pornography.
1984 – Using money funded by the MOSSAD, Robert Maxwell buys the Mirror Group Newspapers, adding the Daily Mirror and five other national newspapers to his publishing empire.
Jan. 1985 – Robert Maxwell sells a copy of the Israeli’s doctored version of PROMIS software to Sandia National Laboratories (Los Alamos). He represents himself as the president of Information On Demand.
1985 – Robert Maxwell reveals PROMIS software’s backdoor to Chinese Military Intelligence (PLa-2) while selling them a copy of the software. The Chinese will later use this backdoor to steal nuclear secrets from Sandia National Labs.
1986 - Christine Maxwell is listed as president of Information On Demand, which is described at this time as an information retrieval service that can access over 300 databases, millions of published articles, market research studies, trade publications, corporate intelligence, and industry surveys. Information On Demand uses 15 'runners' who can retrieve information from libraries and universities in cities across America. They can also retrieve information from sources as far away as the Lenin Library in the USSR.
1986 – Ronald Lauder leaves his post at the Pentagon to become the US ambassador to Austria.
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1974 – Christine Maxwell completes a Post Graduate Teaching Certificate and takes up work as a middle school teacher in Oxford.
1976 – After being fired from the Dalton School, Jeffrey Epstein is hired by Alan Greenberg at Bear Stearns as a junior assistant to a floor trader at the American Stock Exchange. Greenberg is good friends with Roy Cohn.
1978 – The first computer bulletin board system (BBS) is developed, allowing users to dial into a computer using a modem to share files and leave messages.
1979 - CompuServe becomes the first computer network to offer email service to personal computer users.
1980 – Isabel Maxwell makes her second film, a documentary on lesbian women.
1981 – Jeffrey Epstein leaves Bear Stearns.
1981 – Isabel Maxwell moves to the United States, where she continues to produce and direct documentaries.
1981 – ARPANET is expanded when the National Science Foundation develops the Computer Science Network (CSNET). The number of host sites is 213, and new ones will be added regularly. These are all military sites, universities, or research centers.
1981 – The NSA becomes responsible for detailing trusted computing and network platform specifications, meaning that they can easily implement and secure hidden functions in any computer architecture. This gives them the ability to surreptitiously insert spyware or malware in any computer, which would be completely undetectable (even to computer manufacturers and technicians). Computer chips that have other functions could also be designed and then surreptitiously inserted as well.
1981 – At about this time, the US Justice Department begins using PROMIS software, owned by Bill Hamilton through his company Inslaw. PROMIS is an extremely sophisticated tracking program that was designed to easily interface with data banks in different computer systems. The program could effectively be used to probe into the lives of people in a way never before possible and track the movements of untold numbers of people in any part of the world. The DOJ will withhold millions of dollars in lease payments which will force Inslaw to file for bankruptcy. Once Inslaw is effectively destroyed, the DOJ, headed by Attorney General Edwin Meese III, will transfer PROMIS to the NSA and CIA, where a backdoor will be put in that will let them eavesdrop on any other organization that uses the software. With the backdoor in place, the CIA will secretly install PROMIS in the Bank of International Settlements (BIS) in Switzerland to keep track of electronic fund transfers to allegedly combat money-laundering and other criminal activities, including drug trafficking, securities and banking frauds and political payoffs. The CIA will also furnish the software to its agents in the field to track data, and will then begin marketing it to other intelligence agencies around the world in order to tap into these agencies at will. The NSA will also begin using PROMIS to penetrate the global banking industry.
1982 – A secret federal database called Main Core is set up by Lt. Col. Oliver North using PROMIS software. The database contains personal and financial data of millions of US citizens believed to be threats to national security. The data, which is believed to come from the NSA, FBI, CIA, and other sources, is collected and stored without warrants or court orders. Main Core is believed to have been initiated by FEMA as part of a Continuity of Government (COG) program. By 2008 it will have over 8 million Americans listed in its database as possible threats, often for trivial reasons, whom the government may choose to track, question, or detain in a time of crisis.
1982 – Jeffrey Epstein sets up J. Epstein and Co., where he will allegedly manage the investments of billionaire clients, demanding full attorney privilege over their finances.
1983 – Israeli intelligence acquires a copy of PROMIS software from the DOJ and puts their own backdoor into it before using Robert Maxwell to market it to intelligence agencies of other countries through a company he owns called Degem. Maxwell will sell PROMIS to the intelligence agencies of New Zealand, Australia, Thailand, Turkey, Belgium, Poland, East Germany, Egypt, Bulgaria, Nicaragua, Colombia, Guatemala, South Africa, Zimbabwe, China, the Royal Canadian Mounted Police, and the KGB. The Israelis will also sell PROMIS to the Eastern Bloc, Nicaragua, Colombia, Chile, Brazil, and the Rothschild controlled Credit Suisse. The sale to Credit Suisse will give Israel the ability to monitor all of their transactions, giving them an unwarranted advantage over the world’s financial market. PROMIS will also be sold to the infamously corrupt and now defunct BCCI (Bank of Credit and Commerce International).
1983 – Ronald Lauder (of Estee Lauder) is appointed to serve as United States Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for European and NATO Affairs. During this time, Lauder is also very active in Israeli politics and had already become an ally of the then-Israeli representative to the United Nations and future prime minister of Israel, Benjamin Netanyahu.
1984 – George Nader is caught in possession of large amounts of child pornography.
1984 – Using money funded by the MOSSAD, Robert Maxwell buys the Mirror Group Newspapers, adding the Daily Mirror and five other national newspapers to his publishing empire.
Jan. 1985 – Robert Maxwell sells a copy of the Israeli’s doctored version of PROMIS software to Sandia National Laboratories (Los Alamos). He represents himself as the president of Information On Demand.
1985 – Robert Maxwell reveals PROMIS software’s backdoor to Chinese Military Intelligence (PLa-2) while selling them a copy of the software. The Chinese will later use this backdoor to steal nuclear secrets from Sandia National Labs.
1986 - Christine Maxwell is listed as president of Information On Demand, which is described at this time as an information retrieval service that can access over 300 databases, millions of published articles, market research studies, trade publications, corporate intelligence, and industry surveys. Information On Demand uses 15 'runners' who can retrieve information from libraries and universities in cities across America. They can also retrieve information from sources as far away as the Lenin Library in the USSR.
1986 – Ronald Lauder leaves his post at the Pentagon to become the US ambassador to Austria.