Wednesday, October 7, 2015

Moldova, Nuke Bomb Smugglers, Terrorists, and Your Heart~ Keeping An Eye on Distant Places

This story is just a big reminder of how wide we each must extend the Wholesome Goodness at the core of our Being, to nurture the best in human consciousness all over the globe. Our affirmative prayer, vision, imagination must be so expanded that it reaches all human beings on our planet. The scene of this article is based in Moldova, which borders Ukraine and Romania. Well what does a small country that far away have to do with me, you may wonder? You'll soon see, that we all have an interest in what goes on there. But how could I possibly have any effect upon what is happening in Moldova?

We do this by centering our thoughts and feelings in our Heart Center. Our heart generates the largest electromagnetic field of any organ in the body. It is about 60 times greater in amplitude than waves generated by our brains. From that space we can let the radiance of our own Best Self ride out on the electromagnetic waves of our heart. Electromagnetic waves are not limited by distance, so we can effect situations and people far away, and at any time.

When we allow our word and conscious actions to be formed out of our intelligence and kindness, we get back actual proof that we are capable of pulling the best out of others and  negative situations. Our environment only reflects the feelings we have about ourselves, and about others. So we can transform, what 'appears to be', if we think, speak and act focused from one feeling: an acceptance that the outcome of the highest possibility has been brought together for all concerned.

In the song "RASTAMAN VIBARATION", Bob is reminding us of our responsibility when he sings, "(we) have to GIVE a good vibe". Our own simply lovingkindness can support the feeling of well being in individuals, and contribute to humanity experiencing global harmony. We have the power to transform thoughts and energy that keep us trapped in ignorance and attached to our egos and outdated traditions. Our thinking and old feelings from the past make us do horrible things, and really mess up the beauty and peace we are offered, each day the Sun rises.  

You know I'm trying to be more positive and inspiring here, so there's a real treat for you at the end of this article. Read the article though, because I want you to know how important your Good thoughts, words and action are in transforming our world. Then click the gift and let your "Chi" be invigorated, for all the Good you'll Be giving today. 
lovu,
Kendke 

AP INVESTIGATION: Nuclear smugglers sought extremist buyers


Oct 7, 5:27 AM (ET)
By DESMOND BUTLER and VADIM GHIRDA


(AP) This May 28, 2015 photo shows apartment blocks in Chisinau, Moldova. Repeated...
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CHISINAU, Moldova (AP) — Over the pulsating beat at an exclusive nightclub, the arms smuggler made his pitch to a client: 2.5 million euros for enough radioactive cesium to contaminate several city blocks.
It was earlier this year, and the two men were plotting their deal at an unlikely spot: the terrace of Cocos Prive, a dance club and sushi bar in Chisinau, the capital of Moldova.


"You can make a dirty bomb, which would be perfect for the Islamic State," the smuggler said. "If you have a connection with them, the business will go smoothly."


But the smuggler, Valentin Grossu, wasn't sure the client was for real — and he was right to worry. The client was an informant, and it took some 20 meetings to persuade Grossu that he was an authentic Islamic State representative. Eventually, the two men exchanged cash for a sample in a sting operation that landed Grossu in jail.
(AP) In this Feb. 19, 2015 image made from video provided by the Moldova General Police...
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The previously unpublicized case is one of at least four attempts in five years in which criminal networks with suspected Russian ties sought to sell radioactive material to extremists through Moldova, an investigation by The Associated Press has found. One investigation uncovered an attempt to sell bomb-grade uranium to a real buyer from the Middle East, the first known case of its kind. In that operation, wiretaps and interviews with investigators show, a middleman for the gang repeatedly ranted with hatred for America as he focused on smuggling the essential material for an atomic bomb and blueprints for a dirty bomb to a Middle Eastern buyer.
In wiretaps, videotaped arrests, photographs of bomb-grade material, documents and interviews, AP found that smugglers are explicitly targeting buyers who are enemies of the West. The developments represent the fulfillment of a long-feared scenario in which organized crime gangs are trying to link up with groups such as the Islamic State and al-Qaida — both of which have made clear their ambition to use weapons of mass destruction.


The sting operations involved a partnership between the FBI and a small group of Moldovan investigators, who over five years went from near total ignorance of the black market to wrapping up four sting operations. Informants and police posing as connected gangsters penetrated the smuggling networks, using old-fashioned undercover tactics as well as high-tech gear from radiation detectors to clothing threaded with recording devices.


But their successes were undercut by striking shortcomings: Kingpins got away, and those arrested evaded long prison sentences, sometimes quickly returning to nuclear smuggling, AP found.


(AP) In this May 26, 2015 photo, Gheorghe Cavcaliuc, deputy of the Moldova General Police...
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For strategic reasons, in most of the operations arrests were made after samples of nuclear material had been obtained rather than the larger quantities. That means that if smugglers did have access to the bulk of material they offered, it remains in criminal hands. The repeated attempts to peddle radioactive materials signal that a thriving nuclear black market has emerged in an impoverished corner of Eastern Europe on the fringes of the former Soviet Union. Moldova, which borders Romania, is a former Soviet republic.


Moldovan police and judicial authorities shared investigative case files with the AP in an effort to spotlight how dangerous the black market has become. They say a breakdown in cooperation between Russia and the West means that it is much harder to know whether smugglers are finding ways to move parts of Russia's vast store of radioactive materials.


"We can expect more of these cases," said Constantin Malic, one of the Moldovan investigators. "As long as the smugglers think they can make big money without getting caught, they will keep doing it."
The FBI and the White House declined to comment. The U.S. State Department would not comment on the specifics of the cases.


(AP) In this Oct. 5, 2015 photo, an imported luxury SUV is parked outside the Cocos Prive...
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"Moldova has taken many important steps to strengthen its counter nuclear smuggling capabilities," said Eric Lund, spokesman for the State Department's bureau in charge of nonproliferation. "The arrests made by Moldovan authorities in 2011 for the attempted smuggling of nuclear materials is a good example of how Moldova is doing its part." 


Wiretapped conversations exposed plots that targeted the United States, the Moldovan officials said. In one case, a middleman said it was essential the smuggled bomb-grade uranium go to Arabs, said Malic, an investigator in all four sting operations.
"He said: 'I really want an Islamic buyer because they will bomb the Americans.'"
---
"HAVE YOU EVER HEARD OF URANIUM?"
Malic was a 27-year-old police officer when he first stumbled upon the nuclear black market in 2009. He was working on a fraud unit in Chisinau, and had an informant helping police take down a euro counterfeiting ring stretching from the Black Sea to Naples, Italy.


The informant, an aging businessman, casually mentioned to Malic that over the years, contacts had periodically offered him radioactive material.
"Have you ever heard of uranium?" he asked Malic.


Malic was so new to the nuclear racket that he didn't know what uranium was, and had to look it up on Google. He was horrified — "not just for one country," he said, "but for humanity."


"Soon after, the informant received an offer for uranium. At about that time, the U.S. government was starting a program to train Moldovan police in countering the nuclear black market, part of a global multi-million dollar effort.
In Malic's first case, three people were arrested on Aug. 20, 2010, after a sample of the material, a sawed-off piece of a depleted uranium cylinder, was exchanged for cash. That kind of uranium would be difficult to turn into a bomb.
Authorities suspected, but couldn't prove, that the uranium had come from the melted down Chernobyl reactor in Ukraine, Malic said.


Malic transported the seized radioactive material in a matchbox on the passenger seat of his car. It did not occur to him that the uranium should have been stored in a shielded container to protect him from possible radiation.
When FBI agents came to collect it, they were stunned when he simply proffered the matchbox in his uncovered hand: "Take it," Malic said.
"Madman!" the American officers exclaimed.
The uranium, fortunately, turned out not to be highly toxic.
---
PLUTONIUM FOR FREE

Several months later, a former KGB informant, Teodor Chetrus, called Malic's source, the Moldovan businessman. Chetrus told him he had uranium to sell, but was looking for a Middle Eastern buyer.
Unlike Malic's first case, this one involved highly enriched uranium, the type that can be used to make a nuclear bomb.
Smarter and more cautious than the members of the previous gang, Chetrus was a bit of a paradox to the investigators. He was educated and well dressed, yet still lived in his dilapidated childhood farmhouse in a tiny village on Moldova's border with Ukraine.
In many of the smuggling cases, the ringleaders insulated themselves through a complex network of middlemen who negotiated with buyers in order to shield the bosses from arrest. In this case, Chetrus was the go-between.
But he had his own agenda. Chetrus clung to a Soviet-era hatred of the West, Malic said, repeatedly ranting about how the Americans should be annihilated because of problems he thought they created in the Middle East.
"He said multiple times that this substance must have a real buyer from the Islamic states to make a dirty bomb," Malic said.
Chetrus and the informant hammered out a deal to sell bomb-grade uranium to a "buyer in the Middle East" over months of wiretapped phone calls and meetings at Chetrus' house.
The informant would show up with a recording device hidden in a different piece of clothing each time. On the other side of the road would be Malic, disguised as a migrant selling fruit and grains from a van — watching the house for signs of trouble.
In one early phone call, the informant pressed Chetrus to find out whether he had access to plutonium as well as uranium, saying his buyer had expressed interest, according to wiretaps. But Chetrus was suspicious, and insisted that before big quantities of either substance could be discussed, the buyer had to prove that he was for real and not an undercover agent.
Chetrus' boss decided to sell the uranium in installments, starting with a sample. If the buyers were plants, he reasoned, the police would strike before the bulk of the uranium changed hands — an acceptable risk.
"I have to tell you one thing," Chetrus told the informant in a wiretapped phone call. "Intelligence services never let go of the money."
Eventually they worked out the terms of a deal: Chetrus would sell a 10-gram sample of the uranium for 320,000 euros ($360,000). The buyer could test it and if he liked what he saw, they could do a kilogram a week at the same rate — an astonishing 32 million euros every time until the buyer had the quantity he wanted. Ten kilograms of uranium was discussed — about a fifth of what was used over Hiroshima.


The two later met in the dirt courtyard of Chetrus's house to discuss plutonium. The informant had a video camera hidden in his baseball cap. Chetrus can be seen in an army-green V-neck, talking animatedly as a rooster squawks in the background.


"For the plutonium," Chetrus said, "if they prove they are serious people, we will provide the sample for free. You can use a small amount to make a dirty bomb."


He spread his hands wide. Then waved them around, as if all before him was laid to waste.


Malic found the video chilling. "I was afraid to imagine what would happen if one of these scenarios happened one day."
---_
A REAL BUYER IN SUDAN

The man behind the bomb-grade uranium deal was Alexandr Agheenco, known as "the colonel" to his cohorts. He had both Russian and Ukrainian citizenship, police said, but lived in Moldova's breakaway republic of Trans-Dniester.
A separatist enclave that is a notorious haven for smuggling of all kinds, Trans-Dniester was beyond the reach of the Moldovan police.


In a selfie included in police files, the colonel is balding, mustachioed, and smiling at the camera.


In June 2011, he arranged the uranium swap. He dispatched a Trans-Dniester police officer to smuggle the uranium to Moldova, according to court documents. At the same time, he sent his wife, Galina, on a "shopping outing" across the border to the capital.


Her job was to arrange a handoff of the uranium to Chetrus.
Galina Agheenco arrived in downtown Chisinau in a Lexus GS-330, parking near a circus. She met the police officer, who handed her a green sack with the uranium inside.
Meanwhile, the informant and Chetrus, sporting a dark suit and striped tie, pulled up at the Victoriabank on the city's main drag in a chauffeur-driven gray BMW X5. Inside the bank, Chetrus inspected a safe deposit box with 320,000 euros, court documents show. He counted the bills and used a special light to check whether they were marked.


Satisfied, Chetrus went to collect the uranium package from the Lexus, where the colonel's wife had left it. When he turned it over to the informant, the police pounced.


The bust, captured on video, shows officers in balaclavas forcing Chetrus to his knees and handcuffing him. Galina was arrested, too.


But the police officer-turned-smuggler managed to escape back to Trans-Dniester, where he and the colonel could not be touched by Moldovan police.
The arrests took Malic by surprise. He and the informant had been told that police would allow the sample exchange to go forward, so they could later seize the motherlode of uranium and arrest the ringleaders.


Malic was furious. Instead of capturing the gang leaders intent on selling nuclear bomb-grade material to extremists, his Moldovan bosses had jumped the gun.


"What they did was simply create a scene for the news media," Malic said. "We lost a huge opportunity to make the world safer."


Tests of the uranium seized confirmed that it was high-grade material that could be used in a nuclear bomb. The tests also linked it to two earlier seizures of highly enriched uranium that investigators believed the colonel was also behind.


A search of Chetrus' house showed just how dangerous the smugglers were. After police made their arrests in Chisinau, Malic combed through documents in the farmhouse.


He found the plans for the dirty bomb. Worse, there was evidence that Chetrus was making a separate deal to sell nuclear material to a real buyer.
Investigators found contracts made out to a Sudanese doctor named Yosif Faisal Ibrahim for attack helicopters and armored personnel carriers, government documents show. Chetrus had a copy of Ibrahim's passport, and there was evidence that Chetrus was trying to help him obtain a Moldovan visa. Skype messages suggested that he was interested in uranium and the dirty bomb plans.


The deal was interrupted by the sting, but it looked like it had progressed pretty far. A lawyer working with the criminal ring had traveled to Sudan, officials said. But authorities say they could not determine who was behind Ibrahim or why he was seeking material for a nuclear bomb. AP efforts to reach Ibrahim were unsuccessful.


Consequences for the smugglers were minimal. Galina Agheenco got a light 3-year sentence because she had an infant son; and Chetrus was sentenced to a 5-year prison term. Interpol notices were issued for the colonel and the Trans-Dniester policeman who got away.


Moldovan officials say there were indications from a foreign intelligence agency that the colonel fled with his infant son through Ukraine to Russia shortly after the bust.
The authorities don't know if the colonel also took a cache of uranium with him.
"Until the head of the criminal group is sentenced and jailed, until we know for sure where those substances seized in Europe came from and where they were going to, only then will we be able to say a danger is no longer present," says Gheorghe Cavcaliuc, the senior police officer who oversaw the investigation.
---
A COOL FACE, A POUNDING HEART
In mid-2014, an informant told Malic he had been contacted by two separate groups, one offering uranium, the other cesium. The Moldovan police went directly to the FBI, who backed up their operations.


Malic volunteered to work undercover, posing as an agent for a Middle Eastern buyer. He did not have much training, and struggled with his nerves, resorting to shots of vodka before each meeting. He went into them with no weapon — showing a cool face while taming a pounding heart.


The FBI fitted him with a special shirt that had microphones woven into the fabric, so that even a pat-down could not reveal that he was wired. They also set him up in a white Mercedes S-Class to look like a gangster.


It worked. At one point, the unwitting smuggler said in text messages obtained by the AP that his gang had access to an outdated Russian missile system capable of carrying a nuclear warhead. The man said he could obtain two R29 submarine-based missiles and provide technical background on how to use them.
Following the same script as in 2011, the team wrapped up the investigation after a sample of 200 grams of unenriched uranium was exchanged for $15,000 on Dec. 3, 2014. Six people were arrested, five got away.


What worried Malic was what appeared to be a revolving door of smugglers. Three criminals involved in the new case had been taken into custody following the earlier investigations. Two of them had served short sentences and immediately rejoined the smuggling network, helping the new ring acquire the uranium. A third criminal was none other than the man who drove Chetrus to make his uranium deal.


The investigators tracked the new uranium for sale to an address in Ukraine. Although they reported it to the authorities, they never heard back.
As Malic's frustration grew, so did the danger to him and his colleagues.
Early this year, at the Cocos Prive nightclub in Chisinau, the stakes became apparent. The middleman, Grossu, warned that his cesium supplier was a retired FSB officer with a reputation for brutality.


If there was any trouble, Grossu told a wired informant, "They will put all of us against the wall and shoot us," Malic recalled.


Grossu's bosses wanted the cesium to reach the Islamic State. "They have the money and they will know what to do with it," he said.


The sellers claimed to have a huge cache of cesium 137 — which could be used to make a dirty bomb. As in previous cases, they insisted that the buyers prove their seriousness by first purchasing a sample vial of less-radioactive cesium 135, which is not potent enough for a dirty bomb.


They were busted on Feb. 19. Grossu and two other men were arrested. The suspected FSB officer and the remaining cesium disappeared.
It is not clear whether the Moldovan cases are indicative of widespread nuclear smuggling operations.


"It would be deeply concerning if terrorist groups are able to tap into organized crimes networks to gain the materials and expertise required to build a weapon of mass destruction," said Andy Weber, former U.S. assistant secretary of defense, who oversaw counter-proliferation until a year ago.


On May 28, the FBI honored Malic and his team at an awards ceremony for the two recent investigations. But by then the Moldovan police department had disbanded the team amid political fallout and police infighting.


Chetrus' 5-year prison sentence was supposed to run into next year. But Chetrus' sister said this summer that he had been released in December, which the AP confirmed.


He had served barely three years for trying to sell a nuclear bomb to enemies of the United States.





And for anyone interested here are two links with great information about our powerful hearts.

The Heart~ An Organ of Perception
http://liminalsomatics.com/the-heart-an-organ-of-perception/ 

The Energentic Heart is Unfolding
https://www.heartmath.org/articles-of-the-heart/science-of-the-heart/the-energetic-heart-is-unfolding/ 



Friday, October 2, 2015

GO SEE: The Black Panther - Opening Today!



THE BLACK PANTHERS: VANGUARD OF THE REVOLUTION


Beloveds~ 
 

Lately, I have often wondered, when people would realize that the societal attitudes, conditions, events and institutional policies we are alarmed by today, are exactly the same conditions which led to the creation of the valiant Black Panther Party back in October 1966.

Yes today, October 2, 2015 America presents us, with nothing but the same.

You will find some arguing that race relations in America have changed or improved. But if this is so, why has there been the need to form an organization called Black Lives Matter? If this is so, why has Atlantic Magazine journalist Ta-Nehishi Coates, whose new book echos the words and intelligence of James Baldwin's writing, just been honored with a $625,000 MacArthur Fellowship for his writing. These awards are often called the MacArthur "Genius Grants". His award is for, "interpreting complex and challenging issues around race and racism through the lens of personal experience and nuanced historical analysis." 

Personally I think we're in a period where wholesome consciousness in America is regressing. This unending strife about RACE is the outstanding example. The cumulative actions, policies and statements of society express the bankruptcy of the collective consciousness. We are choosing to hold tight to old ideas and ways, that are symbolic of a lesser understanding of human potential. We are again, in opposition to nature, and thus stagnating evolution. That we choose not to grow and expand our understanding of life and nature only creates great problems for humanity and the well being of  planet.
 
It was these same conditions in October 1966 which led the young Black men and women of the small city of Oakland, California to declare that since no one was responding, or seemed to care about the freedom with which the local police force wantonly took lives and indiscriminately murdered and brutalized Black people in their own communities, they themselves would stand up and do something. What they did was form the Black Panther Party of Self-Defense.

Out of Oakland, California, a movement spread across the nation. The calling together of the sons and daughters raised by their parents to know that they were entitled to a life of full engagement in the rights of American citizenship was electric. For just like a message the rhythms of the drum had spelled out in Africa centuries earlier, this message was picked up by the progressive element in America's Black communities, and connected extraordinary hearts and minds. 
 
The Black lives responding to that call brought an embodied unity of qualities which was awesome: intelligence, creativity, courage, knowledge, experience and passion for a noble cause. A platform of principals known as the Ten Point Program clarified and unified what we all held in our hearts. It spoke to America's basic principals and made specific the Constitutional rights America was negligent in providing to Black and oppressed communities. It also reflected what we knew as the best of our own Black cultural experience. So the principals were fed through the arm and out of the hand our own cultural mores. 
 
That is why self-defense was our first priority. But we immediately identified other issues and attacked what we realized was needed and loved by our people. The Free Breakfast Program providing food for children to start their school day set the example for this nation's program which followed later. The Community Free Health Centers also established an example for free and low cost health centers that today permeate this country. The Black Panther Party was the first to create these institutions. But unlike the government's version, we offered our programs with love, warmth, attention to good service and respect for the recipient.

I did say extraordinary people made up the membership of the Party didn't I? Well Ta-Nehisi Coates the 2015 MacArthur Award winner who I mentioned earlier, is the son of Paul Coates, a former Baltimore Black Panther. Paul Coates is also the owner of Black Classic Press, one of the oldest Black owned publishing houses in the United States. Here is a wonderful short interview with Mr Coates, that speaks to that creativity and intelligence that characterized the consciousness in Black Panther Party members.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C3pG_IGaBS4


Would you believe that I started this message just to say~

GO SEE THE MOVIE, THE BLACK PANTHER, which opens today? 

I'm laughing at myself. Yes I was a Los Angeles Black Panther. I wrote for the newspaper, The Black Panther Speaks. I was brought into the movement as a student at UCLA. Time, place, interest and attraction put me on a course to be one of the last people to see the two dynamic L A Panther leaders alive, as they walked to their ambush in a UCLA classroom. 

After the death of John Jerome Huggins and Alprentice "Bunchy" Carter, I had to learn what was so important that led to the deaths of these two very different, and exceptional young men. They were each leaders in their respective worlds ~John a product of the East Coast's most prestigious academic schools, and his partner Bunchy, the leader of the Slausons, one of L A's most feared street gangs ~ but united under the Panther organization. The great loss of the potential in their young powerful lives still cannot be measured.

And me....?
Well, I've never been the same..........

Go see the film.




All Power to the People!

Lovu,

Kendke

 Filmmaker Letter

The Black Panthers: Vanguard of the Revolution
Message from the filmmaker
by Stanley Nelson

I was 15 years old in 1966 when the Black Panthers were formed. The Panthers were talking about problems that had to do with our lives in the North, and as a New Yorker I was naturally attracted to them. Their look, their language, their boldness—it spoke to me.
At 20, I went to see The Murder of Fred Hampton, a documentary about the Chicago Police murder of a Panther leader. The film gave me even more insight into the Panthers, but it also made me look at the power of film to move audiences. It lit a fire inside of me to make films, and I’ve been on this path ever since.
Seven years ago, I finally set out to tell the story that had been in my mind all of those years. No one had documented the rise and fall of the Black Panther Party, and I wanted to shed light on a history that had never been told in its entirety. There is so much we think we know about the Party, but I wanted to go beyond the oversimplified narrative of the Panthers as prone to violence and consumed with anger, and explore why hundreds of young people joined, what they accomplished, and why it fell apart.
I also wanted to lift up the voices of rank and file members. We often hear about the leadership, but not unlike the foot soldiers of the Civil Rights Movement, the rank and file Party members were the lifeblood of the organization. They delivered Party newspapers, tested people for sickle cell anemia, registered voters, and fed thousands of children through their Free Breakfast programs. These were people in their teens and twenties who demonstrated an enormous amount of courage, discipline and organization. And despite their missteps and the FBI’s campaign to bring them down, what was so clear to me was that their motivation came from their undying love for their community.
Now, almost 50 years after the founding of the Panthers, we find ourselves at the start of a new movement for justice and equality led, yet again, by young people. We didn’t set out to make a film that was about today, but as we began shooting, it became painfully clear that so many things the Panthers were fighting for were things that are still issues today. From police brutality, substandard schools and substandard housing, to disenchantment with the political system.
I hope that young people come to see the film and reflect on the Black Panther Party, and consider the similarities—and differences—between what the Panthers tried to build, and the new movement that is taking shape today. I hope this history inspires young people, who may see their own desire for change reflected in the story of the Black Panther Party.
Ultimately, I wanted to bring this vibrant chapter in American history to life so that we can all understand it, learn from it, and make better decisions—personally and collectively.


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