Friday, October 9, 2009

PROMIS

>>>>>>>>HUGE BREAKING NEWS IN PROMIS CASE!<<<<<<<< « on: October 06, 2009, 09:31:20 AM »

1ST, TO PREFACE THIS WITH CRITICAL INFO THAT THIS STORY IS DIRECTLY ATTRIBUTED TO. FOLKS, THE NWO COULD REALLY HAVE THE SCREWS PUT TO THEM WITH THIS:

The Last Circle (Sent to congress in 1996 w/DO NOT PUBLISH orders) surfaces
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=132825.0

Quote from: Sane on September 06, 2009, 09:06:00 AMIf this report to congress in 1996 would have been properly investigated, there would have never been a 9/11, anthrax, or genocides in Iraq/Afghanistan.

The information in that report holds all the keys to the remnants of the East India Trading Company's influence on the US and the ramifications of future weapons and biological depopulation plans.

This is not even in the same field as iron mountain, project blue beam, or silent weapons. EVERYTHING IN THIS IS VERIFIABLE!


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyjVd10w59I

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,558981,00.html?test=latestnews

Unsolved 1981 Triple Murder in California Was Hit Job, Authorities Say

Friday, October 02, 2009


AP/Miami Dade Police


Sept. 26: James 'Jimmy' Hughes is arrested in connection with a 1981 unsolved triple murder in California, which authorities now believe was a hit.

LOS ANGELES — California authorities believe an unsolved 1981 triple murder at the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians was a hit job orchestrated by a tribal casino director, financial adviser and others to cover up illegal activity, and state officials are seeking to have the main suspect extradited to California.

James "Jimmy" Hughes, the founder of a Miami-based Christian ministry, was arrested Saturday at Miami International Airport on a fugitive warrant and was being held in Miami, where he is fighting extradition to California.

Hughes, 52, faces three counts of murder in the execution-style shootings of Cabazon tribal official Alfred Alvarez and his friends Patricia Castro and Ralph Boger and one count of conspiracy to commit a crime, according to a felony complaint for extradition filed Thursday.

It wasn't immediately clear if Hughes had retained an attorney. His ministry spokeswoman and his wife did not reply to e-mails sent late Thursday.

The complaint alleges that Hughes conspired with non-Indian tribal financial consultant John Philip Nichols, Nichols' son John Paul Nichols, and others in the days immediately before the murders to "prevent Fred Alvarez from exposing illegal activities of John Philip Nichols, occurring at the Cabazon Indian Reservation."

The reservation is located near Indio, in a rural area of Riverside County about 130 miles southeast of Los Angeles. A message left at the tribal administration offices was not immediately returned.

The elder Nichols died in 2001 after pleading no contest to two counts of murder solicitation and serving 18 months in prison in another murder-for-hire plot. At the time, investigators said they couldn't tie him to the unsolved 1981 slayings.

The arrest warrant for Hughes was issued in August by the Riverside County Sheriff's Department after a joint investigation with the state attorney general's office, said Evan Westrup, a spokesman for the state attorney general. The state is taking the lead in prosecuting the case because Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco is a distant cousin of Hughes.

Westrup declined to say what prompted authorities to issue the warrant 28 years after the crime.

State officials are seeking to have Hughes extradited to California by a special governor's warrant, a process that could take a month or more, Westrup said. Westrup said the investigation is ongoing and added that an affidavit in support of Hughes' arrest warrant was sealed by a judge in August.

The bizarre killings were dubbed the "octopus murders" by detectives because of the complexity and mystery surrounding them. For years, numerous local and state investigations turned up no suspects, despite rampant rumors, pressure from the victims' families, and the apparent suicide in 1991 of a freelance reporter who was probing the matter.

Alvarez was vice chairman of the Cabazon Tribal Council and security chief of the tribe's poker casino. Hughes was security director of the tribe's casino and bingo operations for four years, until 1984. The elder Nichols was an outside financial guru hired by the 24-member tribe in 1978 and was considered a pioneer in Indian gaming.

In a 1985 article about the elder Nichols' arrest in the murder-for-hire plot, the Los Angeles Times reported that Alvarez told the Indio Daily News shortly before his murder that he feared for his life. The article also said Alvarez's sister said her brother believed the non-Indians running the casino were skimming gambling profits.

Alvarez's sister, Linda Alvarez, told the AP on Thursday that her brother was afraid for his life because his mailbox had been shot out and his motorcycle had many unexplained breakdowns and missing parts.

"You wouldn't think he'd be afraid of anybody because he (was) a big guy, but he was concerned," she said.

In 1984, Hughes, then 27, told authorities he had been a payoff man in the Alvarez case. He said in the summer of 1981, he had been instructed in the presence of the elder Nichols to take $25,000 to the mountain community of Idyllwild and give it to a man as a partial payment for the Alvarez killings, according to the 1985 Times article.

Hughes left California after renewed investigations turned up nothing.

He resurfaced in 1995, when he founded the Jimmy Hughes Ministries, which provides services in Central America to battered women, drug addicts and others, according to its Web site.

Calls to listings for the younger Nichols in New York City and at an Indio golf course on Cabazon property rang unanswered.

_____________________________________________________________
http://www.miamiherald.com/news/florida/AP/story/1262089.html

Posted on Thursday, 10.01.09

Calif. authorities: 1981 triple murder was hit job

By GILLIAN FLACCUS
Associated Press Writer

LOS ANGELES -- California authorities believe an unsolved 1981 triple murder at the Cabazon Band of Mission Indians was a hit job orchestrated by a tribal casino director, financial adviser and others to cover up illegal activity, and state officials are seeking to have the main suspect extradited to California.

James "Jimmy" Hughes, the founder of a Miami-based Christian ministry, was arrested Saturday at Miami International Airport on a fugitive warrant and was being held in Miami, where he is fighting extradition to California.

Hughes, 52, faces three counts of murder in the execution-style shootings of Cabazon tribal official Alfred Alvarez and his friends Patricia Castro and Ralph Boger and one count of conspiracy to commit a crime, according to a felony complaint for extradition filed Thursday.

It wasn't immediately clear if Hughes had retained an attorney. His ministry spokeswoman and his wife did not reply to e-mails sent late Thursday.

The complaint alleges that Hughes conspired with non-Indian tribal financial consultant John Philip Nichols, Nichols' son John Paul Nichols, and others in the days immediately before the murders to "prevent Fred Alvarez from exposing illegal activities of John Philip Nichols, occurring at the Cabazon Indian Reservation."

The reservation is located near Indio, in a rural area of Riverside County about 130 miles southeast of Los Angeles. A message left at the tribal administration offices was not immediately returned.

The elder Nichols died in 2001 after pleading no contest to two counts of murder solicitation and serving 18 months in prison in another murder-for-hire plot. At the time, investigators said they couldn't tie him to the unsolved 1981 slayings.

The arrest warrant for Hughes was issued in August by the Riverside County Sheriff's Department after a joint investigation with the state attorney general's office, said Evan Westrup, a spokesman for the state attorney general. The state is taking the lead in prosecuting the case because Riverside County District Attorney Rod Pacheco is a distant cousin of Hughes.

Westrup declined to say what prompted authorities to issue the warrant 28 years after the crime.

State officials are seeking to have Hughes extradited to California by a special governor's warrant, a process that could take a month or more, Westrup said. Westrup said the investigation is ongoing and added that an affidavit in support of Hughes' arrest warrant was sealed by a judge in August.

The bizarre killings were dubbed the "octopus murders" by detectives because of the complexity and mystery surrounding them. For years, numerous local and state investigations turned up no suspects, despite rampant rumors, pressure from the victims' families, and the apparent suicide in 1991 of a freelance reporter who was probing the matter.

Alvarez was vice chairman of the Cabazon Tribal Council and security chief of the tribe's poker casino. Hughes was security director of the tribe's casino and bingo operations for four years, until 1984. The elder Nichols was an outside financial guru hired by the 24-member tribe in 1978 and was considered a pioneer in Indian gaming.

In a 1985 article about the elder Nichols' arrest in the murder-for-hire plot, the Los Angeles Times reported that Alvarez told the Indio Daily News shortly before his murder that he feared for his life. The article also said Alvarez's sister said her brother believed the non-Indians running the casino were skimming gambling profits.

Alvarez's sister, Linda Alvarez, told the AP on Thursday that her brother was afraid for his life because his mailbox had been shot out and his motorcycle had many unexplained breakdowns and missing parts.

"You wouldn't think he'd be afraid of anybody because he (was) a big guy, but he was concerned," she said.

In 1984, Hughes, then 27, told authorities he had been a payoff man in the Alvarez case. He said in the summer of 1981, he had been instructed in the presence of the elder Nichols to take $25,000 to the mountain community of Idyllwild and give it to a man as a partial payment for the Alvarez killings, according to the 1985 Times article.

Hughes left California after renewed investigations turned up nothing.

He resurfaced in 1995, when he founded the Jimmy Hughes Ministries, which provides services in Central America to battered women, drug addicts and others, according to its Web site.

Calls to listings for the younger Nichols in New York City and at an Indio golf course on Cabazon property rang unanswered.

Associated Press Writer Amy Taxin contributed to this report.
____________________________________________________________
http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/forum.cgi?read=157106

OCTOPUS MURDER HIT MAN "JIMMY" HUGHES ARRESTED ON MURDER CHARGES IN 1981 TRIPLE HOMICIDE

Posted By: Rayelan
Date: Friday, 2-Oct-2009 16:53:32

In Response To: IMPORTANT: AN ARREST IN THE OCTOPUS MURDERS!! PRAY HARD THAT THIS IS THE BEGINNING!!! (Rayelan)

Note from Rayelan:

From my perspective, at least 98% of the crime and corruption we are currently seeing in the United States and the world... had its origins in the dealings that went on... on the Cabazon Indian Reservation in the early 80s.

Add in the theft of the PROMIS software at about the same time, and you have the set up for most of the problems we are seeing in the world right now... including a repeat appearance of Osama bin Laden and the Afghanis.

The PROMIS software has been updated to the point that it has become virtual artificial intelligence. I suspect it was a program based on the PROMIS software that Goldman Sachs was using to manipulate prices and trading in financial markets worldwide. This extraordinary story was exposed worldwide on July 4th, 2009.... a date that most courts are closed. Did this arrest send a secret message that we were getting our freedoms and liberties back?

I suspect an updated version of the PROMIS software is what the worldwide Chicago based criminal cabal has been using to hack in and takeover computers in law enforcement agencies and prisons worldwide.

In other words, the Chicago cabal can release prisoners, order the arrest of innocent people, manufacture evidence, lengthen or shorten prison sentences, manipulate the execution of prisoners, and anything else they feel is necessary to the continuation of their satanic, sadistic criminal enterprise.

Let us pray that the arrest of Jimmy Hughes is the beginning of true justice.

If you need more background to fully understand the far reaching ramifications of this arrest; here are some articles, and a radio interview, that should help you better understand this incredibly complicated criminal endeavor.

(views: 244)
Rayelan -- Wednesday, 8-Apr-2009 13:55:38

[url=http://www.rumormillnews.com/cgi-bin/archive.cgi/read/144688]Kelly O Meara's Ground Breaking Article on PROMIS - From 2001
(views: 526)
Rayelan -- Wednesday, 8-Apr-2009 13:53:59
If You Missed the GROUND BREAKING NEW INFO on 9/11 From RMNews Radio - Here it is!! - 9/11 PROMIS Connection (views: 2440)
Rayelan -- Monday, 6-Apr-2009 14:30:55

PRESS RELEASE FROM
http://desertfae.com/indexnonplain.htm

Jimmy Hughes Arrested on Murder Charges: 1981 Triple Homicide
09/26/09

October 2, 2009

Self-described Mafia hit-man James “Jimmy” Hughes, 52, was arrested on September 26 as he boarded a plane at Miami-Dade International Airport heading for Honduras.

The fugitive warrant lists three counts of murder and conspiracy to commit a crime for the 1981 execution-style murder of Cabazon Tribal Council Vice-Chairman Fred Alvarez, his friend Ralph Boger, and Patricia Castro in Rancho Mirage, California.

Detective John Powers at the Riverside County Sheriff’s Department in California, Central Homicide Unit – Cold Case Division, was assigned to investigate the 28-year-old triple homicide case about 2 years ago when Rachel Begley, the daughter of victim Ralph Boger, convinced the sheriff’s department to re-open the case.

Both Powers and Begley were aware of what they were stepping into when they launched their investigations. Today, their respective findings resemble the stuff of spy novels, comprised of all the dynamics of clandestine government agents and organized crime figures involved in murder, money laundering and covert arms deals while exploiting Indian sovereignty (independent of most U.S. laws) at the Cabazon reservation.

Rachel Begley and Det. John Powers: 3-2-09

Jimmy Hughes had been security director of the Cabazon tribe’s casino and bingo operations for four years, until 1984 when he fled the U.S. and hid out in Guatamala, then joined FGBMFI (Full Gospel Businessmen’s Fellowship International) in 1987 and subsequently founded Jimmy Hughes Ministries –
Free the Oppressed in Honduras.
At the FGBMFI website:
http://www.fgbmfivoice.com/stories/996hughes.htm

Hughes declares he was a Mafia hit-man before he found God. An excerpt reads as follows: “ --- "After a six-year hitch in the military, I became a professional hit man for the Mafia. I collected money, hurt a lot of people and saw a lot of blood. I know what it’s like to cut the throat of a man, see a man die, or throw a man in the trunk of a car and take him to his death. I did many horrible things. I allowed myself to do whatever was necessary.

"One day I had a contract on a man. They had paid me a lot of money to kill this person. I traveled over many states, and walked into the man’s house one day, pulled out my pistol, and put a bullet in everybody’s head.

“There were many people there that day because he was having a party. As I stood there with the gun in my hand, I suddenly realized that all those people were dead. They had died instantly. I had been paid to kill one man, but had killed half a dozen people. The rest had just been in the wrong place at the wrong time ---“

Rachel Begley, whose father is named in the arrest warrant for Hughes, set out years ago to identify and bring to justice the killer(s) of her father. Her logo at the bottom of her signature on e-mails reads: "Let Justice Be Done, Though The Heavens May Fall" ~Fiat justitia, ruat coelum.~

About a year ago, she confronted Jimmy Hughes at a FGBMFI church meeting and introduced herself as the daughter of Ralph Boger. She wanted Hughes to say he was sorry for the murder of her father, Fred Alvarez and Patti Castro, but he did not.
Hughes didn’t want to talk about his past. Nevertheless he confided, “Your parents got killed in a Mafia hit. That’s life. That’s what happened.”

Hughes added: “ --- I don’t care about my past. My past is my past. It’s none of your business. It’s nobody’s business. I don’t care who died. I don’t care who got killed. I was trained in the military. I killed people all over the world, right or wrong, because the government ordered me to. Your dad and I were friends. He touched somebody --- they gave an order and that’s what happened to him. It’s a lot bigger than the murder of this guy or the murder of that guy. It’s big --- you’re talking political people ---”

Hughes was unaware that Rachel had her camcorder turned on and everything he said was recorded. The recording can be viewed at this website:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyjVd10w59I

Reporter Nathan Baca at KESQ-TV, News Channel 3, won an Emmy for his 35-part series entitled “The Octopus Murders.”

See Rachel Begley’s Blog for details (scroll down): http://desertfae.com/wordpress/

From the podium at the San Diego Hilton as he accepted his Emmy Award, Nathan Baca announced: (Excerpted) “I do this in memory of murder victims Ralph Boger, Fred Alvarez and Patti Castro. I hope and pray that justice, a justice that has been delayed for far too many years, will soon be had by the families of these victims. Thank you.”

The series of KESQ-TV stories can be found at:
http://www.kesq.com/Global/category.asp?C=28289&nav=menu191_1

KESQ Videos on The Octopus Murders:
http://www.kesq.com/Global/category.asp?C=77242&nav=menu191_4

Meanwhile, Detective John Powers, with the full support and backing of the Riverside Sheriff, relentlessly followed the cold-case trail from 1981 to the present, examining thousands of old documents across the state, resurrecting police reports from forgotten archives (which were not computerized 28 years ago), and interviewing dozens of hostile witnesses who feared to come forward in 1981.

Ultimately, Powers formed a secret investigative alliance with Begley, a computer whiz, and their work came to fruition last week when Detective Powers was notified by authorities in Miami, Florida that Jimmy Hughes was in the U.S. and preparing to depart for Honduras.

Media reports to date have been confused or misleading about the details of the arrest. This is how it went down: Detective Powers flew to Miami and subsequently met authorities at the airport. He went to the gate where the passengers were boarding the plane and quickly scanned the crowd for Jimmy Hughes. He was the only person who could pick Hughes out of the crowd, so the other officers awaited his signal.

When Powers motioned to the other officers that Hughes was not in the crowd, two Customs Officers boarded the plane and located Hughes’ assigned seat. They found Hughes on the plane with his wife and after identifying him by his passport, took him into custody.

Two uniformed Customs Officers escorted Hughes off the plane in handcuffs. When they came down the ramp, Det. Powers confirmed they had the right man.

Three agencies assisted Detective Powers with the arrest. US Customs and Border Protection were the primary agency making the arrest. They processed Hughes in their facility at the airport and then turned custody over to Miami-Dade County Police Department - Airport District. The police department took custody of Hughes on the warrant and booked him into the County Jail located at 1321 N.W. 12th Street in Miami. An officer with Department of Homeland Security / I.C.E was also present and provided some assistance.

Although Det. Powers was there, he was not the arresting officer because he did not have jurisdiction in Miami. His purpose for being there was to make sure Hughes did not slip through their fingers and make it out of the country. Det. Powers was the only person who could identify Hughes on site and he provided photographs of Hughes to the other officers. Det. Powers also wanted to attempt an interview with Hughes once he was arrested but Hughes invoked his Miranda rights and refused an interview. Det. Powers also was hopeful that Hughes would waive extradition so he could bring him back to California, but Hughes chose to fight extradition.

One of the arresting officers who assisted Detective Powers and wrote the report was CBP (Customs Border Patrol) Officer Dale Munson. One of the two Miami-Dade Police Officers who assisted was Detective Richard Wilkinson. Both were uniformed officers assigned to the Airport District. Details of the arrest can be obtained through any of the above agencies. Chief of Customs is Elbin Rodriguez.

Det. Powers is currently in the process of getting the Governor's Warrant to have Jimmy Hughes brought back to California. He filed a Felony Complaint for Extradition in Indio Court on October 1, case number INF-066719.

The California state attorney general will prosecute the case because the Riverside County district attorney, Rod Pacheco, is a second cousin of the defendant. Pacheco also worked in the Riverside District Attorney’s office in 1984 when Jimmy Hughes fled to Guatamala. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rod_Pacheco
NOTE: For in-depth BACKGROUND details on the history of the triple homicide and Cabazon investigations see: “Octopus Cold

Case File” dated June 23, 2009 http://desertfae.com/pressrelease.htm

Rachel Begley can be contacted at: desertfae@gmail.com

-END-

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-cabazon3-2009oct03,0,6420190.story

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eyjVd10w59I

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k19acWUZGAk

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=thXt-oJ2z9g

Heya desertfae, thanks for chiming in. Great work!!! That La Times article deserves a full post! THIS MUST GET ON THE FRONTPAGE OF INFOWARS ASAP! ALEX JONES, YOU NEED TO SEE THIS!

http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la-me-cabazon3-2009oct03,0,6420190.story

Victim's daughter tracked suspect in Cabazon killings
The man she pursued, James Hughes, has been arrested in the deaths of her father and two other people.

By David Kelly

October 3, 2009



For years, Rachel Begley tracked the man suspected of killing her father and two other people in 1981. All three victims were gunned down in an apparent plot to silence them before they blew the whistle on corruption at the Cabazon Indian casino near Indio.

The scope of the conspiracy, with tentacles stretching across the nation and around the world, led investigators to dub the slayings the Octopus Murders.

Last Saturday, Begley's efforts paid off with the arrest of 52-year-old James Hughes, the director of a Miami-based ministry and self-described former Mafia hit man. Hughes stands accused of murdering Begley's father, Ralph Boger; former Cabazon Vice Chairman Alfred Alvarez; and their friend Patricia Castro.

Hughes, an ex-U.S. Army Ranger and former security director at the casino, was arrested at Miami International Airport as he was about to return home to Honduras. Riverside County sheriff's detectives along with U.S. Customs agents took part in the arrest.

Begley followed Hughes' movements for two years and finally confronted him in 2008 at a religious conference in Fresno. She and Michael Alvarez, the son of Alfred Alvarez, checked in under assumed names and carried hidden cameras.

The event was sponsored by the Full Gospel Businessman Fellowship International. The group's website has an autobiography describing Hughes as a former "professional hit man for the Mafia."

"I know what it's like to cut the throat of a man, see a man die, or throw a man in the trunk of a car and take him to his death," he wrote.

Hughes recalled a hit when he "walked into the man's house one day, pulled out my pistol, and put a bullet in everybody's head. . . . I had been paid to kill one man but had killed half a dozen people. The rest were in the wrong place at the wrong time."


When it came time for his speech, Begley secretly filmed it. Afterward, she approached Hughes and introduced herself as Ralph Boger's daughter.

With the camera still running, Hughes turned on her and Alvarez.

"Your parents got killed in a Mafia hit. That's life. That's what happened," he said. "Your parents were involved in some very dangerous things -- your dads. That's the only thing I can tell you. . . . I want to forget about the past. . . . I don't live there anymore."

He told Alvarez that he knew his father and had ridden motorcycles with him.

"Your dad and I were friends. He talked to somebody, they gave an order and that's what happened to him," he said. "It's a lot bigger than the murder of this guy or that guy. You're talking political people. I have told you more than I should."

Hughes told Begley to back off.

"You have children. You don't want to put your children in danger," he said. "Those children need a mother."

Begley took that as a threat but thinks the video helped build a case against Hughes.

"Before I went in, I sat and thought about all the things that could happen, and there was a little fear, but more determination," she said. "The fear hit me afterward."

When Begley began looking into the Octopus case, she was overwhelmed. The stories went in every direction. There were connections with Saudi arms dealers, Nicaraguan Contras, the manufacturing of weapons on Indian land, renegade private security companies and a journalist who apparently committed suicide while investigating it.

"A lot of it was lies, but a lot of it was true. I was able to confirm it," she said. "I was finally able to persuade the police to assign a detective to it. I just kept badgering them until they finally listened."

Begley, 41, worked closely with the detective as authorities began closing their net around Hughes.

At the time of the killings, the Cabazon casino -- run by a tribe of 25 -- was small but growing. Alvarez was troubled by reputed mobsters skimming casino profits and decided to take his evidence to the authorities.

But he never got the chance. On June 29, 1981, he, Boger and Castro were each shot in the head with a .38-caliber handgun as they sat on the back patio of his home.

In 1985, the Los Angeles Times reported that Alvarez had told a local newspaper that he feared for his life. Hughes told police that he had been ordered to take $25,000 to Idyllwild to partly pay off an unidentified man for the murders.

But the investigation stalled and Hughes left the country.

He returned in 1995 as head of Jimmy Hughes Ministries, helping abused women and drug addicts throughout Central America.

Begley said she's continuing to investigate the Octopus.

"There are still dangers involved," she said. "But I was in a lot more danger when I was not so public."

david.kelly@latimes.com

Copyright © 2009, The Los Angeles Times

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