Showing posts with label C-4. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C-4. Show all posts

Walnut Creek's Bomb Squad serves entire area

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 10/26/2013

Reposted to Protect My Sons


Walnut Creek's Bomb Squad serves entire area

By Lou Fancher
Correspondent




WALNUT CREEK -- Dressed in a $20,000 Explosive Ordinance Disposal suit, Jay Hill is a bulky, green, crime-fighting machine.
But in reality, Hill is less Amazing Hulk than Bruce Wayne.
Accompanied by the Walnut Creek Bomb Squad's four-foot-tall, 400-pound Andros F-6A -- a remotely controlled robot whose disrupter platform, cameras, microphones and speakers can maneuver through tight spaces and even mount stairs -- the 16-year veteran of the Walnut Creek Police Department takes on superhero capabilities.
As the sole bomb squad in Contra Costa -- a "shared resource throughout the county," police lieutenant Hill says -- the Walnut Creek unit gets called out once a week on average. Most calls involve known incendiary devices or suspicious packages. The team also provides tactical support for other departments' SWAT teams, as in the case of a suspect who had barricaded himself in a Pleasant Hill home in November 2011. In that incident, the squad's Talon -- a smaller, more portable robot that Hill says can be out of the truck and rolling in five minutes -- was able to enter the house, locate the suspect and communicate conditions to distant officers.
Naturally, maintaining a distance is vital.
"The objective is to put a robot in harm's way instead of a person," Hill says. "Better to blow up a garage, or even a $200,000 robot, than an officer."
Hill said former Walnut Creek police officer Dick Grossman (My former Roommate's girl friend) had a particular interest in bringing a bomb squad to the local department, and led that effort in the late 1990s. "He wrote all the grants, did all the legwork," Hill says.
Funded almost entirely by the State Homeland Security Grant Program and the Urban Areas Security Initiative, the city's only costs are the regular salaries of the six technicians and one assistant who work part time on the squad.
"We don't employ extra officers or get hazard or specialty pay," Hill emphasizes.
With experience on the departments's SWAT team, where he learned tactical skills like using shields and making dynamic entries into buildings, Hill was promoted to a supervisory position in 2006, and had been the Bomb Squad's supervisor until his recent promotion to lieutenant. He remains a bomb squad technician.
Earning a technician's position on the squad requires a six-week session at Alabama's Redstone Arsenal, a hazardous devices training center that is a joint operation of the U.S. Army and the FBI.
"There are about 3,000 certified bomb technicians in the country," Hill says. "There's a waiting list to get in; more and more, they're asking departments to justify their squads."
On a typical call, the robots take X-rays and check for radiological or biological agents. Paramedics are summoned and given instructions in bomb suit removal. "It weighs 80 pounds and they have to know how to rip it off pretty quickly," Hill says.
Occasionally, a Percussion Actuated Neutralizer -- more commonly known as a "water cannon" -- is used to render a device inoperative.
"We don't like to move things unless we have to. We don't like to blow things up. We have a containment vehicle that can withstand a substantial detonation, and I know it has been used, but I've never had to use it in my six years," Hill reports.
The squad also has an official truck -- a far cry from the early days.
"We didn't have any robots, just a bomb suit and a converted bread truck, painted black, with 'Bomb Squad' on the side," Hill laughs.
His grin turns to growl when he talks about consequences for the almost-exclusively-male, often-narcotic-offending suspects who build bombs.
How come six months earlier Hill was arresting a Debra Cole 40 year old homeless woman with five pipe bombs with Commander Norman Wielsch now serving 14 years in Federal Prison who was arrested two weeks after finding a homeless woman with five pipe bombs?  Talk about weird?    

"The most common types are pipe bombs and homemade M80s or M1000s," Hill says.
Pyrotechnic explosive devices -- cardboard tubes filled with explosive powder and a fuse -- are commonly made by kids or people fascinated by fire. More dangerous pipe bombs tend to involve "devious people, like methamphetamine users," according to Hill.
"But all of these are felonies," he warns. "Making explosives, even for fun, or to blow up in a field ... kids don't realize the danger and that they are committing a felony."
Hill appreciates the specialized training he has received and plans to continue increasing officer safety through interagency demonstrations and presentations through out the county.
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California Department of Justice Employee: Suspect ex-cop in drug thefts also sought to sell explosives

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 10/25/2013
Update: 11/01/2013

Reposted to Protect My Sons


I'm gonna smoke some crack today stolen from the evidence lockers by Chris Butler who was in my house in 2004 who probably beat up my attorney in 2005 who likely set my truck on fire in Summer of 2004 is likely connected to the Kinder Morgan Fire where five workers were killed three months after my truck blew up on 680 and since the Walnut Creek Bomb Squad is connected to Weilsch, that connects them to Butler, that connects Butler to a suspect unnamed that I know grew up a few miles from the San Bruno Fire.

It doesn't get better from here as the GAS CAN MAN - these cops, CNET, SWAT and Walnut Creek BOMB Squad  all know this cop - there is a link between them and this Arson Fire that the FBI investigated which ConFire and Walnut Creek Police never occurred.  The reasons why are connected to my case being litigated from that office.  This fire links suspects to my 2004 Arson Fire, Cameo Acres Burnville which leads to my open to San Ramon Valley Fire Protection District as would drive past an obvious arson fire where the 911 calls stated openly that flames were shooting back over 100 feet but worse who would kill my attorney Divorce Attorneys Brother In-Law Nate Greenan or the same building inspector who nearly killed me in 2004 - The faces in here are critical
http://contracostawatch.blogspot.com/2013/10/death-of-public-officials-these-are-not.html




Suspect ex-cop in drug thefts also sought to sell explosives


By Contra Costa Times,Malaika FraleyRobert Salonga

Tue, 03/01/2011 - 10:49am




MARTINEZ, Calif. -- A Concord, Calif., private investigator tried to find a buyer for two bricks of a military-grade explosive in the days before he and a drug task force leader were charged with selling and conspiring to sell large quantities of drugs, according to a search warrant affidavit.
Norman Wielsch, the head of the state-run Central Contra Costa Narcotics Enforcement Team and private investigator Christopher Butler are expected to enter a plea Wednesday to 28 felony charges that allege the longtime friends sold marijuana, methamphetamine and steroids that had been seized by the narcotics team.
Butler allegedly told a confidential informant in the case that Wielsch, who he called "uncle" in many conversations secretly recorded by state Department of Justice agents, was looking to make extra money before his retirement. The informant said Butler was being audited by the IRS.
The pair was selling drugs, an informant told the Department of Justice, which oversees the now-suspended task force, on Jan. 21, three days after informant saw Wielsch speak to the media about a pipe bomb investigation at a storage locker, the affidavit says.
The state DOJ had begun audio and video surveillance on Feb. 2 when the informant gave Butler money for marijuana and steroids that Butler had obtained from Wielsch. Butler then asked if the informant could find a buyer for two bricks of the explosive C-4. The informant said that was unlikely.
"Butler tells the (informant) that if it can't be sold, he would 'give it to uncle (Wielsch)' so that he could 'say he found it in a search warrant,"' an investigator wrote.
That much C-4 could cause serious structural damage to a home but would not be enough to destroy a big officie building, said Sgt. Jay Hill of the Walnut Creek Police Department bomb squad.
It appears from the affidavit that Wielsch and Butler conspired to sell drugs that either were about to be destroyed or had been newly seized.
The pair allegedly discussed in wire-trapped phone calls when other narcotics task force members would be out of the office for training, the most opportune times to steal drugs.
Wielsch and Butler also were recorded planning to sell a pound of crystal methamphetamine for $10,000 -- the most lucrative sale detailed in the affidavit -- before the drug was scheduled for disposal.
"What if we just went in there and swapped one out with flour, no one is going to test it, and then we can just take the flour to the dump," an agent wrote that Butler told Wielsch.
"Well, the problem is, that it's at the Sheriff's department ... that means I have to go get it, and it looks pretty weird if I got get just that one," Wielsch reportedly responded.
"(Special Agent Supervisor) Wielsch continues by explaining that if he goes on Tuesday with a court order, he can take all of it as if he were going to destroy it, and adds 'no one is going to take a second look,"' an investigator wrote.
Butler's attorney, Bill Gagen, declined to comment on the affidavit. Gagen is expected to argue Wednesday that a judge should lower Butler's bail. Butler, a 49-year-old Concord man, has been held in lieu of $900,000 bail since he and Wielsch were arrested Feb. 16. Wielsch, a 49-year-old Antioch, Calif., resident, posted $400,000 bail on Feb. 18.
"I am not willing at this point to make any statements about discovery, which may take weeks," Gagen said. "There's a lot being looked at way beyond Chris Butler."
Wielsch's attorney, Michael Cardoza, said Monday that he hopes that he can reach an agreement with prosecutors to avoid a trial for Wielsch.
"It doesn't make sense to try this with a jury. The evidence we would have to face is daunting, and on the other side, the entire (narcotics) task force will be splayed on the news," Cardoza said. "If we can resolve this, it would serve us all much better."
Cardoza said his client was strained by the physical tolls of a 20-year career in law enforcement and the rising cost of caring for his ailing daughter.
"That's not by way of an excuse, but an explanation," Cardoza said. "It's not like he was a bad guy all these years. This thing just started a couple of months ago and the amount of money involved was peanuts. At the logical and rational level, this makes no sense."
------
(c) 2011, Contra Costa Times (Walnut Creek, Calif.).
Visit the Contra Costa Times on the Web at http://www.contracostatimes.com.
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.
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Ex-cop charged in drug thefts also sought to sell military-grade explosives

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 10/22/2013


Ex-cop charged in drug thefts also sought to sell military-grade explosives, records show

UPDATED:   03/01/2011 10:37:36 AM PST


MARTINEZ -- A Concord private investigator tried to find a buyer for two bricks of a military-grade explosive in the days before he and a drug task force leader were charged with selling and conspiring to sell large quantities of drugs, according to a search warrant affidavit.

Norman Wielsch, the head of the state-run Central Contra Costa Narcotics Enforcement Team, or CNET, and private investigator Christopher Butler are expected to enter a plea Wednesday to 28 felony charges that allege the longtime friends sold marijuana, methamphetamine and steroids that had been seized by CNET.

Butler allegedly told a confidential informant in the case that Wielsch was looking to make extra money before his retirement. The informant said that Butler was being audited by the IRS.

The pair was selling drugs, an informant told the Department of Justice, which oversees the now-suspended task force, on Jan. 21, three days after the informant saw Wielsch speak to the media about a pipe bomb investigation at a Pacheco storage locker, the affidavit says.

DOJ had begun audio and video surveillance on Feb. 2 when the informant gave Butler money for marijuana and steroids that Butler had obtained from Wielsch, according to the affidavit. Butler then asked if the informant could find a buyer for two bricks of the explosive C-4. The informant said that was unlikely.
"Butler tells the (informant) that if it can't be sold, he would 'give it to uncle (Wielsch)' so that he could 'say he found it in a search warrant,' " an investigator wrote.

That much C-4 could cause serious structural damage to a home but would not be enough to destroy a large office building, said Sgt. Jay Hill of the Walnut Creek Police Department bomb squad.

It appears from the affidavit that Wielsch and Butler conspired to sell drugs that either were about to be destroyed or had been newly seized.

The pair allegedly discussed in wiretapped phone calls when other CNET members would be out of the office for training, the most opportune times to steal drugs.

Wielsch and Butler also were allegedly recorded planning to sell a pound of crystal methamphetamine for $10,000 -- the most lucrative sale detailed in the affidavit -- before the drug was scheduled for disposal.
"What if we just went in there and swapped one out with flour? No one is going to test it, and then we can just take the flour to the dump," an agent wrote that Butler told Wielsch.

"Well, the problem is, that it's at the Sheriff's department "... that means I have to go get it, and it looks pretty weird if I go get just that one," Wielsch reportedly responded.

"(Special Agent Supervisor) Wielsch continues by explaining that if he goes on Tuesday with a court order, he can take all of it as if he were going to destroy it, and adds 'no one is going to take a second look,' " an investigator wrote.

Butler's attorney, Bill Gagen, declined to comment on the affidavit. Gagen is expected to argue on Wednesday that a judge should lower Butler's bail. Butler, a 49-year-old Concord man, has been held in lieu of $900,000 bail since he and Wielsch were arrested Feb. 16. Wielsch, a 49-year-old Antioch resident, posted $400,000 bail on Feb. 18.

"I am not willing at this point to make any statements about discovery, which may take weeks," Gagen said. "There's a lot being looked at way beyond Chris Butler."
Wielsch's attorney, Michael Cardoza, said Monday that he hopes that he can reach an agreement with prosecutors to avoid a trial for Wielsch.
"It doesn't make sense to try this with a jury. The evidence we would have to face is daunting, and on the other side, the entire (CNET) task force will be splayed on the news," Cardoza said. " If we can resolve this, it would serve us all much better."

Cardoza said his client was strained by the physical tolls of a 20-year career in law enforcement and the rising cost of caring for his ailing daughter.

"That's not by way of an excuse, but an explanation," Cardoza said. "It's not like he was a bad guy all these years. This thing just started a couple of months ago and the amount of money involved was peanuts. At the logical and rational level, this makes no sense."

Contact Malaika Fraley at mfraley@bayareanewsgroup.com. Contact Robert Salonga atrsalonga@bayareanewsgroup.com or 925-943-8013.

 
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Walnut Creek Targeted Person

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 06/13/2013


I wanted to post this map so that Walnut Creek City Council, The San Francisco FBI, The State Investigators and Walnut Creek Police might perhaps wonder how a person who walks everywhere, keeps to himself could possibly have his roommate attacked, beaten, a friend killed by police, had his truck towed, brakes vandalized, friend murdered (John Newman) the night he was in jail, had his attorney beaten in Walnut Creek, his other attorney offices burned down (FBI SA Ken K investigated in 2001), knows numerous homeless run over by cars, suspect his attorneys brother in-law (Nate Greenan), or his bouncer @ Round Up killed 20 minutes after they spoke, only to be killed right on top of Nate, or that his car was totaled in Lafayette in 2011.  

In fact it was Lt. Hill of the Walnut Creek Bomb Squad that knows the CNET Squad, the Bomb Squad, Chances are he knows Eric Bergen who was the Pittsburg Cop that murdered Cynthia Kempf in 1998 and there is another cold-case in Walnut Creek, actually there are two but they named suspects who are likely dead.  Just a hunch. 

You got my family but you're not going to kill my sons - 

The PG&E San Bruno Fire was not just an accident - it was hit with explosives or it was arson of opportunity, there is a thrill kill team that I suspect is connected to Hunsacker Canyon Road, and Castlewood and there is an image of sword online in the hands of someone that is now dead that knows the people stalking me.  

Stolen Laptop ~ Last summer someone took my laptop from Safeway at 9:00AM, trust me I was upset and left the area I was quite mad, then I get a call from Officer Kolhmiester who says it's been recovered! Wow I never got a police report, and never got a good idea where it was.  

Achilles Heel
Oh Oh Here She Comes, She's A Man Eater (Google)
To learn more about why this data is so important I'm about to move portions of this blog to my site.  

Search Pete Bennett


I know where they work, their schools and their families (the suspects).  When someone gets close to their game they simply kill them.  They've hacked security cameras where needed specifically Walnut Creek McDonalds and Safeway. 

Perfect Example:  On 09/28/2013 I made purchases at Safeway with my last $2 of cash at 2:00 AM, then got in a minor scuffle with a drunk at Safeway who was being belligerent with the clerk which then spilled outside.  This time I called 911 who heard a car fly by me at 60 through the intersection (oops-Crosswalk) but like many incidents about 30 minutes of arriving at Safeway someone tries to run me over as I walk home.  

And you want me to believe after last years Safeway Parking Lot incident that there is not a connection between using my Safeway Stalking Card as this month I decided to let my EBT card go regardless and just find food.  

I informed Safeway Via Email - from my experience as a database programmer that its theoretically possible that one of several scenarios exist, A) The cards have been breached and the system is being used to steal from unsuspecting customers, B) Given the recent announcement of a potential takeover could be in play requiring the deadly deal killing poison pill tactic of deluding the stock by printing some paper (Poke at the U.S. Treasury) or this is good ole harrassment by persons from within the Walnut Creek Police Department that have something big to hide like Benny Chetcuti Teflon Investments - as in give to me (25 M) but don't expect the money to stick around.  

  1. Plans to disrupt the success of their card program by making a card carrying members like myself a Targeted Persons Social Networking fiasco.   
  2. The number of suicides, murders, or shootings within a tight statistical pattern similar to stalking me is far too near their stores to be a coincidence is alarming  
  3. The Banta, Nordstroms, Treat Blvd, Kaiser WC (2) and there are the fires e.g. Piedmont, La Virage, Happy Nails, Cigarettes Cheaper, believe it not the many fires in Danville near my old neighborhood in Danville known as Cameo Acres but two perfectly timed is hard to ignore.  When you have two total (or near total) losses side by side the begs for asking.  Did anyone notice these other fires and perhaps recategorizing my 2004 fire as arson that originated in Cameo Acres but more important why didn't my fire appear on the books. 




 


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CNET: Debra Cole Case Analysis

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 09/27/2013


This is one case where I'm seeing more to gather more information on.   

Investigation Milestones: 
November 2010 - Contra Costa DA reveals investigation starting point
February  2010 - State Agents (BATF) and CAL DOJ arrest Wielsch
Investigation reveals Butler and Wielsch seeking to sell high grade explosives likely discovered during wiretaps - 

Joke; So how how many wiretaps does it take to catch an illegal wiretapper? 

Weilsch Arrests Suspect: 

Commander Wielsch (Federal Prison, 14 yrs) who was under surveillance from at least November 2010 (CAL DOJ) and his PI Chris Butler (Federal Prison, 7 yrs) are floating they have military grade explosives for sale are simultaneously arresting a female pipe bomber in Pacheco - this is another intelligence coup with Superman's XRAY Vision


Latent Discovery: ▲ March 2013 - 

March 2012: Researching my Litigation History - I realized that two persons in my court history have been murdered - then piece together that my Attorney Don Moats offices were burned down in 2001 - I begin requesting dates and times: 

Information Blockades   September 2013 to June 2013
Jurisdiction: Consolidated Fire District
Their Game Changing Mistake: They concealed facts forcing to find other sources which produced a long running Ponzi Scheme with over 100 victims to research with lawsuits leading to people I've known for decades. 

Phone Calls:  sorry no fires on Ygancio Valley Road, then I go back and do more research, then discover 

The Chettcuti Ponzi Scheme:  The Fifty Million Dollar financial fraud network -
Jurisdiction: Walnut Creek Police 
Time Window  2000 to Present 
Department of Corporations: Cease and Desist Letter - 2003 
Victim Profile: Elderly Rossmoor Residents - Current Avg over 55 to 90 




Benny Checuti - he's got his suspect, he's got the bomber red handed, he's got the Sheriff, he's got the Bomb Squad ready to blow up the pipe bombs and these guys really like to blow things up it's not a stretch to my analysis of the PG&E Pipeline Project wasn't connected to these same explosives especially when a former San Francisco Cop just happens to know the CNET cops and he showed my his "scoop" on the Piedmont Lumber Fire 
The Ponzi Scheme Discovery: ▲ June 2013 - 
Bomb Squad In The News: 


Female bombers are the rarest breed around but she's homeless because the same officers now in prison likely rigged my truck for arson in 2004 - they are willing to kill - clearly willing to burn me alive then they're willing to frame this person.  


Research pending




Code Top of Page

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Debra Cole (left) is accused of is accused of possessing five pipe bombs that were discovered at a storage facility in Pacheco on January 18, 2011. On the right, one of the pipe bombs found at the facility. (Contra Costa County Sheriff)
Debra Cole (left) is accused of is accused of possessing five pipe bombs that were discovered at a storage facility in Pacheco on January 18, 2011. On the right, one of the pipe bombs found at the facility. (Contra Costa County Sheriff)
PACHECO (BCN) — A homeless woman who was arrested in connection with a pipe bomb incident in Pacheco earlier this month has been charged with 10 felonies for allegedly possessing explosive devices.
Debra Cole, 40, has been charged with five counts of wrongful possession of an explosive device with the intent to injure someone or destroy property and five counts of possessing an explosive device near a public place, according to court records.
If convicted of all the charges, Cole could face a maximum sentence of 65 years in prison.
Cole was arrested Jan. 11 at a public storage facility in Pacheco after the Central Contra Costa County Narcotic Enforcement Team received a tip from a citizen, enforcement team Cmdr. Norm Wielsch said.
Officers from the team called a Contra Costa County sheriff’s patrol deputy who works in the area. The deputy found Cole at a storage facility at 95 First Avenue North in Pacheco.
When agents from the enforcement team arrived, they searched Cole’s locker and allegedly found five pipe bombs along with evidence they said linked Cole to the devices, Wielsch said.

Agents evacuated the area and called in the Walnut Creek bomb squad, which used a remote-controlled robot to detonate the bombs.
Air traffic at Buchanan Field Airport was restricted and the California Highway Patrol stopped southbound traffic on Interstate 680 while the devices were detonated, Wielsch said.
Investigators later determined that at least one of the bombs contained shards of broken glass, which agents believe indicates that they were intended to be used to hurt people, Wielsch said.
Agents were still trying to determine the purpose of the pipe bombs Tuesday. Wielsch said he couldn’t comment further on the case because it is still under investigation.
Cole was arraigned in Contra Costa County Superior Court on Friday, but did not enter a plea. She is scheduled to return to court Jan. 31 to be assigned an attorney and enter a plea.
In the meantime, she is being held at the West County Detention Facility in Richmond on $5 million bail.
The narcotic enforcement team is managed by the California Department of Justice, Bureau of Narcotic Enforcement and is made up of agents from the Pleasant Hill, Martinez, San Ramon, Danville, Walnut Creek, Pittsburg and Clayton police departments as well as the Contra Costa County Sheriff’s Office, the CHP, the FBI and the Contra Costa County Probation Department.
(© 2011 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. Bay City News contributed to this report.)
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NCIS - The Navy Yard Shooting - my well documented stalking reports ignored

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 09/27/2013

Walnut Creek CA - About ten years ago my life turned upside down with a series of attacks which culminated with my truck being rigged for Arson then me being severely beaten.  That was ten years ago but you'd think it was over but think again as my person near me who's supported me with food, shelter and money was attacked in Walnut Creek CA along Walker Ave.  

He was mugged by four assailants and like many Walnut Creek Police investigations you never heard about it.  It was an attempted murder as four on one is planned and I suspect Walnut Creek Officers ensnared in the CNET Scandal and tragic Fatal Police shooting of Anthony Banta Jr. on December 26th 2012 was shot and killed.  There are other shootings in Walnut Creek that are similar to this one.  So far they've killed three persons employed by the Walnut Creek businesses and this resident attorney was beaten, his other attorneys offices burned down in 2001, a case investigated by the FBI but that little fact was not known to the Walnut Creek Police or Consolidated fire but I suspect the FBI pieced it together long before I did

The City Council is clueless but there are more cases of persons employed at Walnut Creek businesses being killed in truly odd circumstances.  The accident that claimed Charles Silverman's life on 

http://lamorinda.patch.com/groups/police-and-fire/p/fatal-lafayette-accident-shears-power-pole

Those victims are: 
12/26/2013 Anthony Banta Jr. killed by Walnut Creek Police employed as hairdresser and former Starbucks employee
2001 or 2000 - Antoine Watts Killed by WCPD - Former Nordstrom Employee 
2012-Summer killed in Lafayette CA in truly strange accident that one Patch poster called the look of terror -employed as Bartender at Havana 

1979 - Robert (last name eludes me) drowned in freak accident on River Road - I knew him because his attorney became my attorney for 15 years
1980 - owner of Silver Night Bar - found in west county (this is mystery one as not much info can be found) 

I have more names and dates coming but by October 2013 I hope that most of these pages will be managed by a CMS system I've designed found on 

http://www.petebennett.net/services/cms
http://www.petebennett.net/products/default.aspx#timeline


via products 




 


NCIS100
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42 days after "microwave mind control" complaint, Alexis kills 12

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
Posted: 09/13/2013

Reposted to Protect My Sons


================================================================

42 days after "microwave mind control" complaint, Alexis kills 12

Read more: http://communities.washingtontimes.com/neighborhood/freedom-press-not-free/2013/sep/18/elf-extremely-low-frequency-clue-alexis-motives/#ixzz2fYjDeKY5
Follow us: @wtcommunities on Twitter


WASHINGTON, September 18, 2013 – There was a Newport, Rhode Island police report summarizing an early morning complaint in August by Washington Navy Yard shooter Aaron Alexis.  
Alexis complained that an individual he had an altercation with in an airport had “sent 3 people to follow him and keep him awake by talking to him…using ‘some sort of microwave device.’”


Was this a first red flag leading to an alarming portrait of a defense contractor suffering from mental illness?  Or fact?
What caused Alexis to voice this complaint on August 7, 2013, 42 says prior to embarking on a shooting rampage at the Navy Yard, leaving 13 workers dead and more questions than answers? 

Law enforcement officials close to the investigation have reported to the press that the stock of Alexis’ shotgun had been carved with “Better off this way” and “My ELF weapon.”

================================================================


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Walnut Creek Library

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch

This page and others will contain the chronology of events at the library where your children go and yes they carried guns into your library


Please read about this case.  The City Attorney offices will go to any length to discredit litigants but my case allow officers to cover-up an assault of an officer of the court so that Danville Officers can get away with all kinds CNET related antics. 

This drug deal could easily have occurred in the Library.  

http://www.sfgate.com/default/article/Informant-Sues-City-Over-Shooting-Walnut-2771618.php


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Pete Bennett for Public Office - Seeking handshakes

I am pleased to announce that I intend to run for public office.  What offices affords me the best protection when I'm attacked.  If it takes running for President then that's what I'll do as I am simply very tired of being a target.  


My initial platform will be as follows: 



  1. Federal Question: Redefining the Handshake - What is a handshake? It rhymes with Milkshake, Earthquakes, sounds like mistake, phonetically close misstatement, or mistook, mistaken, but perhaps misspoken, or better misrepresentation, or misinterpretation, or maybe it was exceptional or exponential or maybe we it's a derivative, or perhaps gravitational, extravaganza or institutionalization or nationalization with trepidation in preparation of launching a rotational objective focusing on a contradictory triangulation depending upon unknown coordinates but if you had the right map you'd have your target.     
  2. Reorganizing the Contra Costa Bar Association - 
  3. Unified Case Conflicts checker
  4. What to do when your lawyer lies
  5. How to identity a handshake aptly titled "Sergeant You've Burned Your Career" 
  6. Let the Airlines know that the TWA Flight 800 could have been taken down by a missile stolen from the San Pablo Armory in 1989 as the missing C-4 bricks are likely connected to this allegation here " Wielsch and Butler Seeking to sell Military Grade Explosives" 
No one is helping me so screw all near these cops - I suspect this leads to Cal DOJ, up and down the state, over the Vegas then to Long Island.  

The timelines fit - all undetected spanning 30 years. 




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Walnut Creek officers testify about fatally shooting 22-year-old man in December

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch EMAIL
Phone: 510-460-5641
REPosted: 06/13/2013



Walnut Creek officers testify about fatally shooting 22-year-old man in December

By Malaika Fraley Contra Costa Times
POSTED:   08/06/2013 06:08:49 AM PDT | UPDATED:   A DAY AGO


MARTINEZ -- Four Walnut Creek police officers testified Monday that they had "no choice" but to shoot a 22-year-old man when he came at them with a 10-inch knife while inside his apartment, in a killing that has spurred a $15 million lawsuit against the city.
"I gotta tell you, as a grown man, I was scared for my life," Capt. Michael Sugrue said tearfully at the coroner's inquest into the Dec. 27, 2012 fatal shooting of hairdresser Anthony Banta Jr.
Sugrue, and Officers Holley Connors, Guy Ezard and Amber Griffith testified that they all fired at Banta after responding to a 911 call placed at 3 a.m. by the girlfriend of Banta's roommate.
The couple told police that after a normal evening with Banta, they awoke to him on top of his roommate, choking him. After a struggle, they barricaded themselves in a bedroom, the door of which Banta was allegedly trying to break down.
The woman told a dispatcher that she thought Banta was sleepwalking. On the 911 call, she's heard screaming, "Anthony, Anthony, please wake up!"
Police said they entered the apartment through a large broken window next to the front door and spotted Banta pacing at the top of the stairs with a crazed look in his eyes and a chef's knife in his hand. They testified that he looked "through" them as they shouted their commands: "Put down the knife or we are going to shoot you."
"He yelled back, 'Just shoot me,'" Connors testified. "I told him I do not want to shoot you, put down the knife."
Banta then jumped down the staircase, nearly landing on the officers, and several of them fired their guns, they said. He was at their feet when he partially rose and they fired again, killing him.
Afterward, Sugrue said, the woman who called 911 hugged him and said, "This wasn't like him."
"I didn't know this person was a roommate until that very moment. I didn't understand at all," Sugrue said.
Banta was hit six times, but it was one shot to his head and another to his chest that were fatal, forensic pathologist Arnold Josselson said. He had marijuana and a very low level of alcohol in his system.
As Banta had no known history of mental illness, Josselson was asked what could have spurred the behavior that the roommate and his girlfriend told police was "very out of character" for Banta.
Josselson said it could have been caused by one of three things; 
  1. a designer drug that could not be detected by testing,
  2. An underlying mental illness that suddenly manifested
  3. psychosis caused by chronic marijuana use
My comments on these three outcomes support my ongoing allegations that someone has been poisoning suspects, homeless, and economic targets for the purpose of gain and profit.   Please visit the tacticians toolbox article posted long before this truly sad event.  

My goal is to find the truth and too save lives.  By the way this outcome potentially supports a theory that Pilots Eric Nunn and Peter Branagh were brought down with a designer drug and heck you might as well consider John F. Kennedy Jr. Fatal Flight in the Long Island Sound.  


Contra Costa County holds inquests into officer-related killings as a matter of protocol, and juries decide the mode or manner of death. Banta's jury ruled his death was accidental, though the verdict is essentially meaningless, having no criminal or civil implications.

Banta's family in January filed a $15 million wrongful death lawsuit against the city of Walnut Creek and its officers in federal court. It alleges that Banta was unarmed, and was shot accidentally when the officers tripped over themselves at the bottom of the stairs.
"We were mostly struck today -- not by the evidence -- but the evidence we know exists but was not presented," said the family's attorney, Larry Peluso. "After today, there is no doubt at all that we will be going forward (with the lawsuit)."
Contact Malaika Fraley at 925-234-1684. Follow her at Twitter.com/malaikafraley.
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Domestic Terrorism: Shooting out a PG&E Transformer

By PETE BENNETT - Contra Costa Watch  


Aug 2013 - Walnut Creek CA - Last year someone shot out a PG&E high voltage transformer which I believe was a KVA High Voltage Line that travels through many towns and cities.  Details are sketchy but glancing past articles it seem in-congruent in a modern society that a KVA Transformer would be used for target practice.

For many years I've been following news articles about PG&E, AT&T and other utilities that support our infrastructure.  Although they deliver services for millions daily in many ways that's our Achilles heal as a well timed attack could be a market disruption tool - subtly planned, tactically executed but more important potentially overlooked by those responsible as day to day activities often overwhelm or overtake many tasks.  It happens everyday at your business, your school, homework or job where so much information flows at you can't respond.

That information flow is the domestic terrorists advantage as these mysterious persons often carrying multiple agendas can strike at the weaker links.  Now to some knocking out a transformer array might sound like a drunken Cowboy out on the range but from my perspective is these events are little tests that lead up to a larger coordinated attack on our infrastructure which is why you get cable, the weather and the news plus where some live their lives out watching sports from the stadium or the arm chair.

Having personally seen PG&E documents on the San Bruno fire as a software contractor I could see endless weaknesses in their planning as well as thinking.  Old timers now retired pointed out something about the San Bruno fire that I found interesting and as an arson victim myself I now seek patterns to tie together.

There is a pattern but it's not limited to PG&E but potentially is linked to larger looming event.  My focus is the Bay Area but it's easy to see other incidents nationally are potentially interconnected.

As I use my decryption skills to analyze publicly known infrastructure points I'll paint an argument that we live in a different world where our centuries of world domination might become the foundation of domestic terrorism.

In the end you might wonder who's guarding our infrastructure and perhaps reallocating TSA nail-clipper chasers to walk the wires, pipelines, and sewers seeking intimate details no matter how smelly the task the sewer crawl could be one could easily dump a tanker trunk uphill from downtown San Francisco with the intent of creating a sensational fire.  One of the suspects I've encountered was once a member of the San Francisco Police Department and I personally consider him an arsonist.

In my other articles I'll point out the glaring connections to my July 2011 car accident and preceding arrest (Arrest Explained) where I strongly suspect that Hillside Covenant Churches Youth Director breached my laptop with sensitive data and that his relationships with the Doyle Family leads to the Former Head of the Walnut Creek Bomb Squad whose roommate Lisa was my roommate (Greg Santilli) girlfriend who all have ties to the CNET.

The easy question is why are all these people near me in the first place?


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