scee SPRING-z OCT-14 = Hurricane hit Tyndall Air Force Base a "complete loss" & Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret
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Subject: scee SPRING-z OCT-14 = Hurricane hit Tyndall Air Force Base a "complete loss" & Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret Sun Oct 14, 2018 11:55 am
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Hurricane hit Tyndall Air Force Base a "complete loss" Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret DOD and HUD Missing Money: Supporting Documentation WEATHER WAR : Winter came early this year!
Last edited by spring2 on Sun Oct 14, 2018 3:57 pm; edited 7 times in total
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Subject: Hurricane Cost May Skyrocket As Billions In Stealth Fighter Jets Unaccounted For; Tyndall AFB "Complete Loss" Sun Oct 14, 2018 11:57 am
After Hurricane Michael rendered Tyndall Air Force Base a "complete loss" from "widespread, catastrophic damage" - questions remain over nearly two-dozen F-22 Stealth Fighters which are unaccounted for. Static F-15 display flipped over According to the New York Times, Tyndall is home to 55 stealth fighters, "which cost a dizzying $339 million each." Before Michael hit, the Air Force evacuated at least 33 of the planes to Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio, however they would not comment on the status of the remaining 22 fighters. F-22 Raptor
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Air Force officials have not disclosed the whereabouts of the remaining 22 planes, other than to say that a number of aircraft were left at the base because of maintenance or safety reasons. An Air Force spokeswoman, Maj. Malinda Singleton, would not confirm that any of the aircraft left behind were F-22s. But photos and video from the wreckage of the base showed the distinctive contours of the F-22’s squared tail fins and angled vertical stabilizers amid a jumble of rubble in the base’s largest building, Hangar 5. Another photo shows the distinctive jet in a smaller hangar that had its doors and a wall ripped off by wind. All of the hangars at the base were damaged, Major Singleton said Friday. “We anticipate the aircraft parked inside may be damaged as well,” she said, “but we won’t know the extent until our crews can safely enter those hangars and make an assessment.” -NYT
F-22s are notoriously finicky and, as the Times puts it "not always flight-worthy." The Air Force reported earlier this year that just 49% of F-22s were mission ready at any given time - the lowest rate of any fighter in the Air Force. The total value of the unaccounted-for fighters is arouind $7.5 billion. The eye of Hurricane Michael traveled directly over Tyndall, peeling back stormproof roofs like tin cans and flipping over an F-15 fighter jet display at the base entrance.
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When it was over, the base lay in ruins, amid what the Air Force called “widespread catastrophic damage.” There were no reported injuries, in part because nearly all personnel had been ordered to leave in advance of the Category 4 hurricane’s landfall. Commanders still sifting through mounds of wreckage Thursday could not say when evacuation orders would be lifted. -NYT
https://youtu.be/kbMHqBnnBL4
[ltr] View image on Twitter [/ltr]
Quote :
Tyler Rogoway@Aviation_Intel
[ltr]So one F-22 airframe has been spotted in a roofless hangar at Tyndall. Check out the upper left portion of this photo. No idea if this is flying airframe or a ground trainer or what, but it doesn't look good. More on Tyndall AFB's sad state here: http://www.thedrive.com/the-war-zone/24178/tyndall-air-force-base-in-ruins-after-michael-fighters-seen-inside-roofless-hangars …[/ltr]
6:28 PM - Oct 11, 2018
196
207 people are talking about this
[ltr] Twitter Ads info and privacy[/ltr]
The last Air Force Base to suffer catastrophic damage was in 1992, when Category 5 Hurricane Andrew slammed into Homestead Air Force Base just south of Miami with winds estimated at 150 m.p.h. Two years later it was reopened as a smaller, Air Force Reserve base.
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Tyndall, where about 3,600 airmen are stationed, sits on 29,000 acres that include undeveloped woods and beaches, as well as stores, restaurants, schools, a bowling alley and quiet, tree-lined streets with hundreds of homes for both active-duty and retired military. Video footage captured the ruin there, too: The high-powered storm skinned roofs, shattered windows, and tossed cars and trailers like toys, transforming the normally pristine base into a trash heap. Multistory barracks buildings stood open to the sky. -NYT
"Tyndall residents and evacuated personnel should remain at their safe location," said Col. Brian Laidlaw on Thursday. "We are actively developing plans to reunite families and plan to provide safe passage back to base housing."
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Subject: Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret – Dr. Mark Skidmore Sun Oct 14, 2018 12:03 pm
Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret – Dr. Mark Skidmore
By Greg Hunter On October 14, 2018 In Politics 1 Comment
By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com (Early Sunday Release) Michigan State Economics Professor Mark Skidmore made a stunning discovery late last year. Using publicly available government accounting reports, he revealed there was $21 trillion in what he calls “missing money” from the Department of Defense (DOD) and Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The data he used has been scrubbed, all accounting records are heavily redacted and now the federal government has declared its accounting falls under “national security.” Dr. Skidmore can no longer get the government to respond. Dr. Skidmore explains, “At this point, they are no longer responding to any of my inquiries. They are just not answering, and that is very astounding . . . and you can go on and look at the report yourself and see all of it blacked out. I actually lost sleep over that. That really bothered me. . . . Now, they are not even using standard accounting financial reporting rules. They are just moving things around and not telling anybody. So, first, all of this stuff is hidden because it is a national security issue, and now they are just changing the accounting standards. I would ask is that constitutional? I don’t think so. Does it match any of our financial reporting laws? I don’t think so. I am not sure what gives the government the authority to make that decision, and, yet, it’s happening.” The revelation that there is an additional $21 trillion dollars that cannot be accounted for on top of the more than $21 trillion officially in federal debt is an astounding number. It is probably the most important data point since the Federal Reserve was founded in 1913. Dr. Skidmore says, “It’s a huge amount of money to not be able to explain, and they are not explaining it.” Dr. Skidmore says there is a limit to money printing even when all the global central banks are doing it. Skidmore says, “What does it mean when a central bank is buying equities, or buying debt with printed money in order to suppress interest rates and keep this game going? I think, overall, the whole world is awash in debt, and it’s expanding at a rate that is unsustainable. The only way it has been sustained is that interest rates have been falling for 30 years. Now, interest rates are no longer falling, and we are running up against a constraint. Now, if this $21 trillion in ‘missing’ federal money really represents spending above and beyond what the official records indicate, then that has huge financial implications and huge implications for confidence in the dollar as the reserve currency. This is an enormous priority to address and not just cover up and say we are all good.” In closing, Dr. Skidmore says, “How can you have a democracy if you don’t have any transparency whatsoever? Having integrity and confidence is so essential to the whole system, and this just puts everything in question. . . . We should clean this up and show we are legitimate. If we don’t, we are just shooting ourselves in the foot.” Join Greg Hunter as he goes One-on-One with Dr. Mark Skidmore, Professor of Economics at Michigan State University. (To Donate to USAWatchdog.com Click Here) https://youtu.be/H4XRbcBz2Z4
After the Interview: Dr. Skidmore’s original interview on USAWatchdog.com gives the story and links to the data used to reveal the $21 trillion in “missing” money from DOD and HUD. Click here for that interview. To see the DOD and HUD Missing Money: Supporting Documentation click here.Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret – Dr. Mark Skidmore By Greg Hunter On October 14, 2018 In Politics 1 Comment By Greg Hunter’s USAWatchdog.com (Early Sunday Release)
Michigan State Economics Professor Mark Skidmore made a stunning discovery late last year. Using publicly available government accounting reports, he revealed there was $21 trillion in what he calls “missing money” from the Department of Defense (DOD) and Housing and Urban Development (HUD). The data he used has been scrubbed, all accounting records are heavily redacted and now the federal government has declared its accounting falls under “national security.” Dr. Skidmore can no longer get the government to respond. Dr. Skidmore explains, “At this point, they are no longer responding to any of my inquiries. They are just not answering, and that is very astounding . . . and you can go on and look at the report yourself and see all of it blacked out. I actually lost sleep over that. That really bothered me. . . . Now, they are not even using standard accounting financial reporting rules. They are just moving things around and not telling anybody. So, first, all of this stuff is hidden because it is a national security issue, and now they are just changing the accounting standards. I would ask is that constitutional? I don’t think so. Does it match any of our financial reporting laws? I don’t think so. I am not sure what gives the government the authority to make that decision, and, yet, it’s happening.”
The revelation that there is an additional $21 trillion dollars that cannot be accounted for on top of the more than $21 trillion officially in federal debt is an astounding number. It is probably the most important data point since the Federal Reserve was founded in 1913. Dr. Skidmore says, “It’s a huge amount of money to not be able to explain, and they are not explaining it.”
Dr. Skidmore says there is a limit to money printing even when all the global central banks are doing it. Skidmore says, “What does it mean when a central bank is buying equities, or buying debt with printed money in order to suppress interest rates and keep this game going? I think, overall, the whole world is awash in debt, and it’s expanding at a rate that is unsustainable. The only way it has been sustained is that interest rates have been falling for 30 years. Now, interest rates are no longer falling, and we are running up against a constraint. Now, if this $21 trillion in ‘missing’ federal money really represents spending above and beyond what the official records indicate, then that has huge financial implications and huge implications for confidence in the dollar as the reserve currency. This is an enormous priority to address and not just cover up and say we are all good.”
In closing, Dr. Skidmore says, “How can you have a democracy if you don’t have any transparency whatsoever? Having integrity and confidence is so essential to the whole system, and this just puts everything in question. . . . We should clean this up and show we are legitimate. If we don’t, we are just shooting ourselves in the foot.”
Join Greg Hunter as he goes One-on-One with Dr. Mark Skidmore, Professor of Economics at Michigan State University.
(To Donate to USAWatchdog.com Click Here)
After the Interview:
Dr. Skidmore’s original interview on USAWatchdog.com gives the story and links to the data used to reveal the $21 trillion in “missing” money from DOD and HUD. Click here for that interview.
To see the DOD and HUD Missing Money: Supporting Documentation click here.
For the latest heavily redacted DOD Inspector General Report click here.
You can find out more about Dr. Skidmore by clicking here.
Related Posts: Missing $21 Trillion Means Federal Government Is Lawless – Dr. Mark Skidmore Dollar Dominant & Dangerous – System Not Stable – Catherine Austin Fitts China China China Not Russia, Dow Crashes, Kanye Backs Trump $174,000 per Ounce Gold Not Funny–Scary – Jim Sinclair & Bill Holter NK Missiles Can Hit DC, Record Stock Market Again, Bitcoin Bubble? For the latest heavily redacted DOD Inspector General Report [url=file:///C:/Users/USAW - pc/AppData/Local/Microsoft/Windows/INetCache/IE/V325LIQV/Financial-Statement-Compilation-of-Adjustments-and-Information-Technolog.pdf]click here.[/url] You can find out more about Dr. Skidmore by clicking here.
Related Posts:
Missing $21 Trillion Means Federal Government Is Lawless – Dr. Mark Skidmore
Dollar Dominant & Dangerous – System Not Stable – Catherine Austin Fitts
China China China Not Russia, Dow Crashes, Kanye Backs Trump
$174,000 per Ounce Gold Not Funny–Scary – Jim Sinclair & Bill Holter
NK Missiles Can Hit DC, Record Stock Market Again, Bitcoin Bubble?
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Subject: DOD and HUD Missing Money: Supporting Documentation Sun Oct 14, 2018 12:11 pm
DOD and HUD Missing Money: Supporting Documentation
“No money shall be drawn from the treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by law; and a regular statement and account of receipts and expenditures of all public money shall be published from time to time.” ~ Article I, Section 9, Clause 7, U.S. Constitution
Update as of June 6, 2018 Update on the $21 Trillion in Unsupported Adjustments at the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Defense
Update as of December 12, 2017 Subsequent to the publication of Dr. Skidmore’s report, the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) took reports off line, consequently our primary links in the table below are to the same documents posted on our website. We have preserved the original DOD and HUD links in the footnotes – if they result in a 404 error or not found message, this indicates they were taken down or moved subsequent to publication.
On October 5, 2017 we discovered that the link to the report “Army General Fund Adjustments Not Adequately Documented or Supported” had been disabled. Within a several days, the links to other OIG documents we identified in our search were also disabled. The sequential non-random nature of this disabling process suggests a purposeful decision on the part of OIG to make key documents unavailable to the public via the website, as opposed to website reorganization, etc. We also revisited the website intermittently to see whether the documents had been reposted under different URLs—until very recently they had not been reposted.
On December 11, 2017, we learned that key documents had been reposted on the OIG website, but with different URLs. Documents now appear to be reposted on new URLs. As we find the new URLs we are adding them in the footnotes entitled “new link” next to the original link.
Solari Report: Interview with Dr. Mark Skidmore, Thursday, September 28, 2017
Summary Report on “Unsupported Journal Voucher Adjustments” in the Financial Statements of the Office of the Inspector General for the Department of Defense and the Department of Housing and Urban Development.
Dr. Mark Skidmore Mark is professor of economics and agricultural, food and resource economics at Michigan State University, where he holds the Morris Chair in State and Local Government Finance and Policy. He received his doctorate in economics from the University of Colorado in 1994, and his bachelor’s degree in economics from the University of Washington in 1987. Mark is Co-editor of the Journal of Urban Affairs.
Catherine Austin Fitts Catherine is the president of Solari, Inc., publisher of the Solari Report, and managing member of Solari Investment Advisory Services, LLC. She served as managing director and member of the board of directors of the Wall Street investment bank Dillon, Read & Co. Inc., as Assistant Secretary of Housing and Federal Housing Commissioner at the US Department of Housing and Urban Development in the first Bush Administration, and was the president of Hamilton Securities Group, Inc. Her experience on Wall Street and Washington is described in her book Dillon Read & Co. & the Aristocracy of Stock Profits. Catherine graduated from the University of Pennsylvania (BA), the Wharton School (MBA).
Update as of September 18, 2018 Early this year the Pentagon announced that it was conducting its first ever independent audit. However, several months after beginning the audit, the government accepted the recommendations of the Federal Accounting Standards Board: https://fas.org/sgp/news/2018/07/fasab-review.pdf (see page 3 for a summary). The statement allows government officials to misstate and move funds around to hide expenditures if it is deemed necessary for national security purposes, and the rule applies to all agencies, not just the black budget. Here is an excerpt from the report:
This Statement permits modifications that do not affect net results of operations or net position. In addition, this Statement allows a component reporting entity to be excluded from one reporting entity and consolidated into another reporting entity, and the effect of the modification may change the net results of operations and/or net position.
From this statement, it seems that only a few people with high level security clearances have the authority to determine what is a national security issue and these same people will now be allowed to restate budgets to hide activity. No one but those few people would ever know that expenditures on activity A are hidden in completely different area of government. What good is an independent audit if authorities are allowed to move expenditures around with no transparency? How can one have conduct evaluation of the any portion of the federal budget under such an arrangement? How is this policy in compliance with financial reporting laws or Constitutional requirements for reporting on government spending to the citizens of the United States?
Year DOD Government Source Document 2017 Unspecified See All Pages (#’s 100% Redacted) 2016 Unspecified See Page #78[39] 2015 Unspecified See Page #83[37], See Page #59, 78[38] 2014 Unspecified See Page #59, 79[2] 2013 Unspecified See Page #81, #101[3] 2012 Unspecified See Page #84, #104[4] 2011 Unspecified See Page #73[5] 2010 Unspecified See Page #8, #9[6] 2009 Unspecified See Page #28[7] 2008 Unspecified See Page #49[8] 2007 Unspecified See Page #46[9] 2006 Unspecified See Page #178[10] 2005 Unspecified See Page #18, #50, #296[11] 2004 Unspecified See Page #19[12] 2003 Unspecified See Page #2[13] 2002 Unspecified See Page #2[14] 2001 Unspecified See Page #2[15] 2000 $1.1 trillion (includes $320.8 billion from Air Force) See Page #1[16] See Page #147[36] 1999 $2.3 trillion See Page #9[17] 1998 $1.7 trillion See Page #5[18] Year DOD Army Government Source Document 2015 $6.5 trillion See Page #1[24] 2014 2013 2012 $110.9 billion See Page #91[25] 2011 $14.6 billion See Page #100[26] 2010 $874.8 billion See Page #4[40] 2009 $311.3 billion See Page #88[28] 2008 $595.8 billion See Page #91[29] 2007 $1.1 trillion See Page #5[41] 2006 $270.1 billion See Page #107[30] 2005 $248.5 billion See Page #140, #141[11] 2004 $258.1 billion See Page #125[32] 2003 $268.3 billion See Page #191[33] 2002 $500.1 billion See Page #232[34] 2001 2000 $361.5 billion See Page #168[35] 1999 1998 Year DOD Navy Government Source Document 2015 2014 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 $161.6 billion See Page #4[42] 1999 1998 $880 billion See Page #1[43] Year DOD Air Force Government Source Document 2015 $90.2 billion See Page #8[44] 2014 2013 2012 $1.6 trillion See Page #4[44] 2011 2010 2009 $1.4 trillion See Page #8[45] 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 Unspecified See Page #41[46] 2002 Unspecified See Page #150[47] 2001 Unspecified See Page #70[48] 2000 $320 billion See Page #147[36] 1999 1998 Year HUD Government Source Document 2015 $278.5 billion See Page #4[19] 2014 $1.9 billion See Page #5[20] 2013 2012 2011 2010 2009 2008 2007 2006 2005 2004 2003 2002 2001 2000 1999 $59.6 billion See Page #4[22] 1998 $17.6 billion See Page #4[22]
Related Reading:
$4 Trillion + Missing Money: What’s the Action? The Financial Coup d’État & Missing Money: Links The Financial Coup & Missing Money: Quotes DOD Inspector General SemiAnnual Report to Congress: 10/1/16-3/31/17 FOIA Request
FOIA Request
Response to FOIA Request
Original Sources:
Note: On December 11, 2017 we learned that the key documents had been reposted on the OIG website, but with different URLs. On October 5, 2017 we discovered that the link to the report “Army General Fund Adjustments Not Adequately Documented or Supported” had been disabled. Within a several days, the links to other OIG documents we identified in our search were also disabled. The sequential non-random nature of this disabling process suggests a purposeful decision on the part of OIG to make key documents unavailable to the public via the website, as opposed to website reorganization, etc. We also revisited the website intermittently to see whether the documents had been reposted under different URLs—until very recently they had not been reposted. Documents now appear to be reposted on new URLS. As we find the new URLS we are adding them in the footnotes below.
Old Link: 1. 2015 Semiannual Report to Congress, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 2. 2014 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 3. 2013 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 4. 2012 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 5. 2011 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 6. 2010 Testimony of the Deputy Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 7. 2009 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 8. 2008 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 9. 2007 Agency Financial Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 10. 2006 Performance and Accountability Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 11. 2005 Performance and Accountability Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 12. 2004 Performance and Accountability Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 13. 2003 Performance and Accountability Report, DOD Click here for (New Link)
14. 2002 Testimony from the Office of the Inspector General, DOD
15. 2001 Agency Financial Report, DOD
Old Link: 16. 2000 Testimony of the Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 17. 1999 Testimony of the Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 18. 1998 Testimony of the Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 19. 2017 Testimony of David A. Montoya, Inspector General, HUD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 20. 2016 Testimony of David A. Montoya, Inspector General, HUD Click here for (New Link)
21. 2002 Statement of Kenneth M. Donohue, Inspector General, HUD
22. 1999 Statement of Susan Gaffney, Inspector General, HUD
23. http://www.gao.gov/assets/670/668739.pdf
Old Link: 24. Army General Fund Adjustments Not Adequately Documented or Supported Click here for (New Link)
25. 2012 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
26. 2011 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
27. 2010 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
28. 2009 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
29. 2008 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
30. 2006 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
31. 2005 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
32. 2004 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
33. 2003 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
34. 2002 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
35. 2000 United States Army Annual Financial Statement, DOD
36. 2000 United States Air Force Annual Financial Statements, Secretary of Defense
Old Link: 37. 2015 Semiannual Report to Congress, Office of the Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
38. 2015 Agency Financial Report, Financial Section, DOD
39. Agency Financial Report, Financial Section, DOD
Old Link: 40. Defense Departmental Reporting System-Budgetary Was Not Effectively Implemented for the Army General Fund, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 41. Internal Controls over FY 2007 Army Adjusting Journal Vouchers, Office of Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 42. Navy General Fund Audit Report, Office of Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 43. Navy General Fund Financial Statements Click here for (New Link)
Old Link: 44. Followup Audit: Additional Actions Needed to Effectively Provide Complete Audit Trails for Air Force Journal Vouchers (New Link)
Old Link: 45. Deficiencies in Journal Vouchers That Affected the FY 2009 Air Force General Fund Statement of Budgetary Resources, Office of Inspector General, DOD Click here for (New Link)
46. FY 2003 United States Air Force Annual Financial Statements, Secretary of Defense
47. FY 2002 United States Air Force Annual Financial Statements, Secretary of Defense
48. FY 2001 United States Air Force Annual Financial Statements, Secretary of Defense https://missingmoney.solari.com/dod-and-hud-missing-money-supporting-documentation/
DOD and HUD Missing Money: Supporting Documentation
“No money shall be drawn from the treasury, but in consequence of appropriations made by law; and a regular statement and account of receipts and expenditures of all public money shall be published from time to time.” ~ Article I, Section 9, Clause 7, U.S. Constitution Update as of June 6, 2018 Update on the $21 Trillion in Unsupported Adjustments at the Department of Housing and Urban Development and the Department of Defense Update as of December 12, 2017 Subsequent to the publication of Dr. Skidmore’s report, the Office of the Inspector General at the Department of Defense (DOD) and the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) took reports off line, consequently our primary links in the table below are to the same documents posted on our website. We have preserved the original DOD and HUD links in the footnotes – if they result in a 404 error or not found message, this indicates they were taken down or moved subsequent to publication. On October 5, 2017 we discovered that the link to the report “Army General Fund Adjustments Not Adequately Documented or Supported” had been disabled. Within a several days, the links to other OIG documents we identified in our search were also disabled. The sequential non-random nature of this disabling process suggests a purposeful decision on the part of OIG to make key documents unavailable to the public via the website, as opposed to website reorganization, etc. We also revisited the website intermittently to see whether the documents had been reposted under different URLs—until very recently they had not been reposted. On December 11, 2017, we learned that key documents had been reposted on the OIG website, but with different URLs. Documents now appear to be reposted on new URLs. As we find the new URLs we are adding them in the footnotes entitled “new link” next to the original link.
SEE LINK ABOVE FOR WHOLE ENCHILADA!
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Subject: WEATHER WAR : Winter came early this year! Sun Oct 14, 2018 3:55 pm
Winter weather is creeping in early this year as snow storm advisories are issued across eight states. Snow continues to fall in parts of the Rocky Mountains, blanketing Colorado, western Kansas and northern New Mexico reaching up to 12 inches in some areas. Winter weather warnings are issued in five other states, including Nebraska, Wyoming and Montana through early Monday as forecasters predict heavy snowfall. While the east coast is experiencing its first refreshingly cool fall weather, the Plains and Rockies are in for a blast of Arctic air that are bringing record lows.
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Sunday's forecasts show the first cool weather of fall on the east coast, while parts of the Rocky Mountains feel more like winter
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One woman tweeted a photo of a Winter Wonderland outside her home in Denver
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Snow continues to blanket parts of Colorado, as seen in photos shared on social media People have taken to social media to share pictures of the first snowfall of the season in parts of Colorado. A blanket of white snow can be seen on porches and decks, covering outdoor furniture set up for summer fun. MORE@LINK ABOVE
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Subject: Re: scee SPRING-z OCT-14 = Hurricane hit Tyndall Air Force Base a "complete loss" & Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret
scee SPRING-z OCT-14 = Hurricane hit Tyndall Air Force Base a "complete loss" & Entire Federal Budget Now National Security Secret