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As of Friday, September 08, 2006 20:37:46 -0400 this is what we have on this specific dream drawing prediction.  If your able to help provide proof or information on this specific drawing, please click here to send me an email.  Please include the exact date of the dream or the DD number.  And again, thank you for your time, its very much appreciated.


DD3611



Additional information Post information on this DD  Chat about this DD with me Get email updates on this dream


"I'm not guilty , code for second 9/11 attack and a man named Harry Samit can stop it"


5.9.2006

Moussaoui just revoked his guilty plea or tried to plead not guilty saying that he now thinks he can get a fair trial.. this may be the "not guilt"" signal in your dream..
what do you think
your buddy John

reply

Thanks John, posted.

Brian


5.9.2006

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Samit

reply

Thanks, link posted.

Brian


5.11.2006

DD 3611-- It was reported yesterday, 5-09-06, Mousouai wants to change his
plea to NOT GUILTY.

reply

Thanks, posted.

Brian


5.13.2006

Brian: As you know Moussaou pleaded not guilty, this article came out today.

reply

Hi, thanks, will post this.

Brian

/11 Trial Reveals Troubles Then, and Ahead
By Richard A. Serrano, Times Staff Writer
March 26, 2006

 
WASHINGTON — Harry Samit was green. He'd been an FBI agent just two years. He was assigned to a terrorism task force, but in the bureau's field office in Minneapolis — about the least likely city in America for stumbling across an extremist.

Michael Rolince was a coat-and-tie supervisor at the FBI headquarters in Washington. For nearly 30 years, he'd worked for the bureau, handling organized crime, drugs, intelligence. Now he was running the international terrorism operations section. That made him a regular at classified meetings in the White House Situation Room.

Out in Minneapolis, Samit was tipped that an inexperienced student at a local flight school had plunked down cash to learn to fly jumbo jets. The young agent pounced. The student, a French Muslim, was arrested, and Samit worked desperately to get him to talk.

The matter was duly reported to the terrorism operations center in Washington, but Rolince heard about it in just two brief hallway chats with other bureau officials. The ops center was already tracking 70 threats; only a tiny fraction had anything to do with airplanes. There were at least 100 buildings in New York and Washington alone that Rolince viewed as "logical targets."

Later, when Samit sent Rolince's office a 25-page memo pleading for search warrants, the veteran FBI supervisor didn't even see it.

The time was August 2001, and history was about to drop the hammer. The man Samit collared and tried to warn Rolince and others about was Zacarias Moussaoui, now on trial for his life as the only Sept. 11 conspirator to be prosecuted in the United States. And the story of the new FBI agent and his veteran superior in the weeks before Sept. 11 — as it is emerging in Moussaoui's sentencing trial — is more than a tragedy of fumbled opportunities.

And it is a lesson for the future. Much has been done to improve the nation's defenses against terrorism, but the evidence presented over the last several weeks underscores just how daunting the challenge remains. Extracting meaningful clues from the mass of tips and gossip and incomplete information is worse than looking for a needle in a haystack. It's like looking for a particular wisp of hay in that haystack.

Samit and Rolince were hard-working public servants, as were their colleagues. Neither underestimated the threat. Yet both fell short.

In demanding the death penalty for Moussaoui, Justice Department lawyers argue that if he had fully disclosed what he knew about the Sept. 11 plot, it could have been thwarted. Moussaoui's lawyers contend that the government's anti-terrorism system was so fouled up that nothing could have kept the hijackers out of the planes.

A jury will sort out the question as it applies to Moussaoui. But the larger issue — how to make sure the system spots important scraps of information among mountains of such scraps — is far from resolved.

Samit and Rolince are not alone in the glare of hindsight. The trial has shown that Federal Aviation Administration officials barely raised an eyebrow when told that Mohamed Atta, who turned out to be the lead hijacker, had abandoned a small plane on a runway at Miami International Airport. Further, testimony has detailed how CIA agents missed clues that two other hijackers were living in San Diego.

But it is the Olympian battle between Samit and Rolince that has defined much of this trial and offered new insights into the challenge of preventing terrorism — insights into how something as elusive as the mind set of the FBI can play a role, for example, or the different perspectives of two men who stood at a historic crossroads but did not quite realize their moment.

Samit said FBI headquarters was guilty of "criminal negligence" for not letting him seek search warrants on Moussaoui and learn more about the plot. Rolince countered that Samit was an overeager agent who was being "spun up," that he was obsessing about Moussaoui's arrest on a minor immigration infraction.

Samit continues to fight crime in Minneapolis. Rolince retired last October. Both men love the FBI.

"I didn't agree with them, but they are in charge," Samit said of headquarters. Said Rolince: "Agent Samit's suppositions and hunches were one thing. What we actually knew at the time of the arrest was clearly something else."

Samit is a short, stocky man with a buzz haircut, a leftover from his enlistment as a naval intelligence officer and pilot. At the FBI field office in Minneapolis, he was attached to "Squad 5" and its joint task force on terrorism.

Samit was alarmed that Moussaoui, with little flying experience, was training on a jumbo jet simulator, had paid cash for lessons and was outspoken in his criticism of America.

Washington initially advised Samit to limit himself to putting Moussaoui under surveillance. But Samit had already told the manager of the Residence Inn where Moussaoui was staying that the FBI wanted him. The agent decided he had to act.

Agents arrested Moussaoui in mid-August as he was coming out of the motel. He had a small knife in his pocket, another in his car. Taken to an immigration detention center, he talked to Samit for a while, saying he was in the U.S. to learn to fly for personal reasons. Moussaoui then asked for a lawyer, and that ended all interviews.

Samit still wanted to search Moussaoui's belongings — his laptop computer, a black duffel bag and other items in his car and his apartment back in Norman, Okla.
 
This article was printed sometime in March 2006
Debbie Schlussel: Special Agent Harry Samit: This American Hero is the Real Jack Bauer

By Debbie Schlussel

Last week, we wrote about our new hero, FBI Special Agent Harry Samit. We wish all federal agents were like him.

Two weeks ago, Samit testified in detail at the death penalty phase of the Zaccarias Moussaoui trial. The counterterrorism agent recounted how he worked desperately to stop terrorist Moussaoui--believed to have been the designated 20th hijacker for the 9/11 terrorist attacks.

Samit is the real-life version of "24"'s Agent Jack Bauer. But real-life FBI agents have to deal with layers and layers of untalented, useless bureaucratic managers and superiors. And unlike Jack Bauer, those FBI bureaucrats usually succeed in foiling successful terrorism investigations.

Samit's story mirrors the one we wrote about FBI Special Agent Robert Wright's attempts to foil HAMAS and Al-Qaeda terrorists. We feel their rightful frustration.Brian Ladd of Brians Dreams - www.briansprediction.comAmerican Hero: FBI Special Agent Harry Samit (center)

Samit, a pilot, was sure Moussaoui was involved in a terrorism hijacking plan, but had to resort to a cockamamie scheme to transfer Moussaoui to France in order to search the terrorist's belongings. Thank Robert Mueller and company for that. Orders from the very top stopped Agent Samit cold.

Yesterday, Special Agent Samit testified again, confirming yet again why he's an American hero. Even if he did not succeed in stopping Moussaoui's cohorts, it was not for lack of trying. It was for lack of FBI superiors who are worth a damn.

Here are some excerpts from the Los Angeles Times' coverage of Agent Harry Samit's testimony. It is frustrating to read:

The FBI agent who arrested Zacarias Moussaoui weeks before Sept. 11 told a federal jury Monday that his own superiors were guilty of "criminal negligence and obstruction" for blocking his attempts to learn whether the terrorist was part of a larger cell about to hijack planes in the United States.

During intense cross-examination, Special Agent Harry Samit - a witness for the prosecution - accused his bosses of acting only to protect their positions within the FBI. . . .

"They obstructed it," a still-frustrated Samit told the jury, calling his superiors' actions a calculated management decision "that cost us the opportunity to stop the attacks." . . .

Samit said that officials at the FBI headquarters in Washington rejected a series of attempts to obtain a warrant to search Moussaoui's personal belongings.

Had the belongings been opened before Sept. 11, agents would have found numerous small knives, jumbo-jet pilot manuals, rosters of flight schools and other clues that might have helped them understand the Sept. 11 plot.

Samit wanted to seek a criminal search warrant, and later one from a special intelligence court. But officials at the FBI headquarters refused to let him, because they did not believe he had enough evidence to prove Moussaoui was anything but a wealthy man who had come to this country to follow his dream of becoming a pilot. . . .

He said that as Washington kept telling him there was "no urgency and no threat," his FBI superiors sent him on "wild goose chases."

For a while, Samit said, they did not even believe Moussaoui was the same person whom French intelligence sources had identified as a Muslim extremist. Samit said that FBI headquarters wanted him and his fellow agents to spend days poring through Paris phone books to make sure they had the right Moussaoui.

Samit said that when he asked permission to place an Arabic-speaking federal officer as a plant inside Moussaoui's cell to find out what Moussaoui was up to, Washington said no.

And he said that when he prepared a lengthy memo about Moussaoui for Federal Aviation Administration officials, Washington deleted key sections, including a part connecting Moussaoui with Al Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden.

Samit said he was so frustrated and so convinced that attacks were imminent that he bypassed FBI officials in Washington and met with an FAA officer he knew in Minneapolis. But he said FAA agents never got back to him, and never asked to see a pair of small knives, similar to box cutters, that Samit had found in Moussaoui's pocket and in his car.

Samit further described how he took it upon himself to cable the Secret Service that the president's safety might be in jeopardy. He recounted in the cable how Moussaoui had told him he hoped to be able to one day fly a Boeing 747 from London's Heathrow Airport to New York, and how he also hoped to visit the White House one day.

Samit said he warned the Secret Service that those desires could spell disaster. "If he seizes an airplane from Heathrow to New York City," Samit alerted the Secret Service, "it will have the fuel on board to reach D.C."

Samit said he never heard back from the Secret Service either.

This whole episode is an outrage. The FBI failed America on 9/11. Harry Samit risked his career to try to save Americans' lives, while those above him risked Americans' lives to enhance their careers.

And look what we have to show for it. More of the status quo at the J. Edgar Hoover Building. Nothing has changed.

Special Agent Harry Samit, American Hero. FBI brass, American Buffoons.
 


5.20.2006

I heard Zacharias Moussaoui say now that he is "not guilty" of plotting to be a terrorist with Al-Qaeda. This is after he was found guilty and sentenced to life in prison.  Could it be that this insane sudden plea of i'm "not guilty" was his sign to Al-Qaeda that it's time to attack again since they put him thru trial and trying to let him rot in jail?  VERY POSSIBLE!  Wouldn't you agree?  Let's see what happens......

reply

Hi, yes I agree.

Brian

 

 


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