This is to clarify the family tree of James Achilles Alefantis (age 42, DOB 10/24/1974), for the record.
http://imgur.com/a/WSGl3
Father: Achilles Louis Alefantis (age 71) Mother: Susan Reid Shoemaker (age 70) (Achilles and Susan divorced 2008) Brother: Louis John Alefantis (age 46) married to Sharon A. Dow (I think recently from the pictures posted). Sharon has a daughter Paige, freshman in high school.
Grandfather (on Alefantis side): Louis George Alefantis (1915-2001). Grandmother (on Alefantis side): Helen [Rappas] Alefantis. Uncle: George Louis Alefantis (brother to Achilles Louis). Cousin: (son of George Louis Alefantis & Joanne M. Alefantis): Timothy G. Alefantis married to Christine Marie Alefantis (not sure of maiden name). It appears Tim & Christine have 4 boys: Jonah, Logan, Evan, & Connor (info about boys from the obituary posted, a school swimming roster, and a picture)
More on the mysterious Tim...
http://www.pharmavoice.com/article/2016-06-flu-vaccine/
"The H1N1 influenza virus caused a worldwide pandemic in 2009. When it was first detected, it was called swine flu because the virus came from pigs, but the virus now circulates in humans as a seasonal form of influenza."
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jangles ago
Tim Alefantis: He works at Sanofi Pasteur on the next generation of vaccines. He project manages the Phase 1 team (i.e. early stages research). https://archive.is/lS1EY
ObscureAcademia ago
Q: There was that one interview with [William] Hamilton where he was talking about how PROMIS is some kind of system that includes chips that broadcast directly to NSA satellites.
MR: They are not chips as such. The existing chips in the machine are tricked into doing it. I'm getting ready to go on television explaining that chapter and verse.
Q: On national television?
MR: German television. I will explain in hardcore, unambiguous technical terms how it's done. Unambiguous to people who are technically competent.
Q: When I describe these things to other people they say "That's not possible", particularly people who like to think of themselves as computer jocks. My thought is that ordinary people with PCs can do incredible things now, particularly with the CD ROM stuff.
MR: If you know what you're doing.
Q: But the people who actually invest enormous amounts of money and resources into it, like the National Security Agency, can do things untold, I'm sure.
MR: I'm letting the cat out of the bag where PROMIS is with the NSA. It's in the MOSIS program. The Metal Oxide Semiconductor Implementation System.