From: Time02112@epilot.com
Date: Mon Apr 9, 2001 5:04pm
Subject: Operation "GARDEN PLOT" ...They're the US GVT, and apparently they're preparing
To view Photos of these images that appear to be "Vaccant"
facilities resembling concentration camp style "Work Farms" complete
& equipped with white unmarked vans & busses with US GVT plates,
click on the following link below, or "copy & paste" in your browser.
http://www.sightings.com/politics4/unwhite.htm
(They're the US GVT, and apparently they're preparing to round up
many of it's private citizens, "For
WHAT"????????????)))))))))))))))))))))
Mystery Solved? Huge
Fleet Of New SUVs, Vans,
Trucks Being Painted UN White?
UPDATE
From Ted Jones Jr <tedthefed@hotmail.com>
8-2-99
I am an employee of the INS and state that your information is wrong.
The color of most "marked" INS vehicles is white. That is the way
they are "issued" to most Districts and Border Patrol Sectors.
Any markings are "usually" applied at the local level.
Border Patrol vehicles are white with a green stripe and usually have
tinted windows. Or they are just plain white with no markings,
usually in the interior of the US.
All transport vehicles will have a cage in it. Not to keep the aliens
in, but more to protect the transporting personnel.
In my time with INS I have yet to see a vehicle with shackles in it.
By law we are prohibited from securing aliens to vehicles.
I would assume that the white vehicles on the prison property in
Texas are for our future use. The Border Patrol is ever increasing in
an effort to "finally" secure the southern border.
Detention Officers and Border Patrol currently use V-10 Ford vans,
Tahoes, Yukons, Explorers, Expeditions and S-10 Blazers.
Any questions or arguments.
My e mail: tedthefed@hotmail.com
Thanks for the time.
P.S. White vehicles with UN markings and/or Military Police are
another story. I frown upon the suspected use of these vehicles and I
will fight to the death to inhibit UN forces actively pursuing
UN/Martial law goals within the US.
http://www.sightings.com/politics4/unwhite.htm
(They're the US GVT is apparently preparing to round up many of it's
private citizens, "For WHAT"????????????)))))))))))))))))))))
''(2) Any recommended legislation regarding chemical warfare
defense.
''(3) The plan for the research program.''
STUDY OF FACILITY FOR TRAINING AND EVALUATION OF CHEMICAL OR
BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS RESPONSE PERSONNEL
Pub. L. 104-132, title V, Sec. 521(b), Apr. 24, 1996, 110 Stat.
1286, provided that:
''(1) Findings. - The Congress finds that -
''(A) the threat of the use of chemical and biological weapons
by Third World countries and by terrorist organizations has
increased in recent years and is now a problem of worldwide
significance;
''(B) the military and law enforcement agencies in the United
States that are responsible for responding to the use of such
weapons require additional testing, training, and evaluation
facilities to ensure that the personnel of such agencies
discharge their responsibilities effectively; and
''(C) a facility that recreates urban and suburban locations
would provide an especially effective environment in which to
test, train, and evaluate such personnel for that purpose.
''(2) Study of facility. -
''(A) In general. - The President shall establish an
interagency task force to determine the feasibility and
advisability of establishing a facility that recreates both an
urban environment and a suburban environment in such a way as to
permit the effective testing, training, and evaluation in such
environments of government personnel who are responsible for
responding to the use of chemical and biological weapons in the
United States.
''(B) Description of facility. - The facility considered under
subparagraph (A) shall include -
''(i) facilities common to urban environments (including a
multistory building and an underground rail transit system) and
to suburban environments;
''(ii) the capacity to produce controllable releases of
chemical and biological agents from a variety of urban and
suburban structures, including laboratories, small buildings,
and dwellings;
''(iii) the capacity to produce controllable releases of
chemical and biological agents into sewage, water, and air
management systems common to urban areas and suburban areas;
''(iv) chemical and biocontaminant facilities at the P3 and
P4 levels;
''(v) the capacity to test and evaluate the effectiveness of
a variety of protective clothing and facilities and survival
techniques in urban areas and suburban areas; and
''(vi) the capacity to test and evaluate the effectiveness of
variable sensor arrays (including video, audio, meteorological,
chemical, and biosensor arrays) in urban areas and suburban
areas.
''(C) Sense of congress. - It is the sense of Congress that the
facility considered under subparagraph (A) shall, if established
-
''(i) be under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Defense;
and
''(ii) be located at a principal facility of the Department
of Defense for the testing and evaluation of the use of
chemical and biological weapons during any period of armed
conflict.''
CONSOLIDATION OF CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE TRAINING
ACTIVITIES
Section 1702 of Pub. L. 103-160 provided that: ''The Secretary of
Defense shall consolidate all chemical and biological warfare
defense training activities of the Department of Defense at the
United States Army Chemical School.''
SENSE OF CONGRESS CONCERNING FEDERAL EMERGENCY PLANNING FOR
RESPONSE TO TERRORIST THREATS
Section 1704 of Pub. L. 103-160 provided that: ''It is the sense
of Congress that the President should strengthen Federal
interagency emergency planning by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency and other appropriate Federal, State, and local agencies for
development of a capability for early detection and warning of and
response to -
''(1) potential terrorist use of chemical or biological agents
or weapons; and
''(2) emergencies or natural disasters involving industrial
chemicals or the widespread outbreak of disease.''
-CITE-
50 USC Sec. 1523 01/05/99
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 50 - WAR AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER 32 - CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM
-HEAD-
Sec. 1523. Annual report on chemical and biological warfare defense
-STATUTE-
(a) Report required
The Secretary of Defense shall include in the annual report of
the Secretary under section 113(c) of title 10 a report on chemical
and biological warfare defense. The report shall assess -
(1) the overall readiness of the Armed Forces to fight in a
chemical-biological warfare environment and shall describe steps
taken and planned to be taken to improve such readiness; and
(2) requirements for the chemical and biological warfare
defense program, including requirements for training, detection,
and protective equipment, for medical prophylaxis, and for
treatment of casualties resulting from use of chemical or
biological weapons.
(b) Matters to be included
The report shall include information on the following:
(1) The quantities, characteristics, and capabilities of
fielded chemical and biological defense equipment to meet wartime
and peacetime requirements for support of the Armed Forces,
including individual protective items.
(2) The status of research and development programs, and
acquisition programs, for required improvements in chemical and
biological defense equipment and medical treatment, including an
assessment of the ability of the Department of Defense and the
industrial base to meet those requirements.
(3) Measures taken to ensure the integration of requirements
for chemical and biological defense equipment and material among
the Armed Forces.
(4) The status of nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC)
warfare defense training and readiness among the Armed Forces and
measures being taken to include realistic nuclear, biological,
and chemical warfare simulations in war games, battle
simulations, and training exercises.
(5) Measures taken to improve overall management and
coordination of the chemical and biological defense program.
(6) Problems encountered in the chemical and biological warfare
defense program during the past year and recommended solutions to
those problems for which additional resources or actions by the
Congress are required.
(7) A description of the chemical warfare defense preparations
that have been and are being undertaken by the Department of
Defense to address needs which may arise under article X of the
Chemical Weapons Convention.
(8) A summary of other preparations undertaken by the
Department of Defense and the On-Site Inspection Agency to
prepare for and to assist in the implementation of the
convention, including activities such as training for inspectors,
preparation of defense installations for inspections under the
convention using the Defense Treaty Inspection Readiness Program,
provision of chemical weapons detection equipment, and assistance
in the safe transportation, storage, and destruction of chemical
weapons in other signatory nations to the convention.
(9) A description of any program involving the testing of
biological or chemical agents on human subjects that was carried
out by the Department of Defense during the period covered by the
report, together with -
(A) a detailed justification for the testing;
(B) a detailed explanation of the purposes of the testing;
(C) a description of each chemical or biological agent
tested; and
(D) the Secretary's certification that informed consent to
the testing was obtained from each human subject in advance of
the testing on that subject.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 103-160, div. A, title XVII, Sec. 1703, Nov. 30, 1993,
107 Stat. 1854; Pub. L. 105-85, div. A, title X, Sec. 1078(f),
Nov. 18, 1997, 111 Stat. 1915.)
-COD-
CODIFICATION
Section was enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1994, and not as part of Pub. L. 91-121, title
IV, Sec. 409, Nov. 19, 1969, 83 Stat. 209, which comprises this
chapter.
-MISC3-
AMENDMENTS
1997 - Subsec. (b)(9). Pub. L. 105-85 added par. (9).
-CITE-
50 USC Sec. 1524 01/05/99
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 50 - WAR AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER 32 - CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM
-HEAD-
Sec. 1524. Agreements to provide support to vaccination programs of
Department of Health and Human Services
-STATUTE-
(a) Agreements authorized
The Secretary of Defense may enter into agreements with the
Secretary of Health and Human Services to provide support for
vaccination programs of the Secretary of Health and Human Services
in the United States through use of the excess peacetime biological
weapons defense capability of the Department of Defense.
(b) Report
Not later than February 1, 1994, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the
feasibility of providing Department of Defense support for
vaccination programs under subsection (a) of this section and shall
identify resource requirements that are not within the Department's
capability.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 103-160, div. A, title XVII, Sec. 1705, Nov. 30, 1993,
107 Stat. 1856.)
-COD-
CODIFICATION
Section was enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1994, and not as part of Pub. L. 91-121, title
IV, Sec. 409, Nov. 19, 1969, 83 Stat. 209, which comprises this
chapter.
-CROSS-
''CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE COMMITTEES'' DEFINED
Congressional defense committees means the Committees on Armed
Services and the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and
House of Representatives, see section 3 of Pub. L. 103-160, 107
Stat. 1562.
-CITE-
50 USC Sec. 1525 01/05/99
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 50 - WAR AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER 32 - CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM
-HEAD-
Sec. 1525. Assistance for facilities subject to inspection under
Chemical Weapons Convention
-STATUTE-
(a) Assistance authorized
Upon the request of the owner or operator of a facility that is
subject to a routine inspection or a challenge inspection under the
Chemical Weapons Convention, the Secretary of Defense may provide
technical assistance to that owner or operator related to
compliance of that facility with the Convention. Any such
assistance shall be provided through the On-Site Inspection Agency
of the Department of Defense.
(b) Reimbursement requirement
The Secretary may provide assistance under subsection (a) of this
section only to the extent that the Secretary determines that the
Department of Defense will be reimbursed for costs incurred in
providing the assistance. The United States National Authority may
provide such reimbursement from amounts available to it. Any such
reimbursement shall be credited to amounts available for the
On-Site Inspection Agency.
(c) Definitions
In this section:
(1) The terms ''Chemical Weapons Convention'' and
''Convention'' mean the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons
and on Their Destruction, ratified by the United States on April
25, 1997, and entered into force on April 29, 1997.
(2) The term ''facility that is subject to a routine
inspection'' means a declared facility, as defined in paragraph
15 of part X of the Annex on Implementation and Verification of
the Convention.
(3) The term ''challenge inspection'' means an inspection
conducted under Article IX of the Convention.
(4) The term ''United States National Authority'' means the
United States National Authority established or designated
pursuant to Article VII, paragraph 4, of the Convention.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 105-85, div. A, title XIII, Sec. 1303, Nov. 18, 1997, 111
Stat. 1951.)
-COD-
CODIFICATION
Section was enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1998, and not as part of Pub. L. 91-121, title
IV, Sec. 409, Nov. 19, 1969, 83 Stat. 209, which comprises this
chapter.
-CITE-
Date: Mon Apr 9, 2001 5:04pm
Subject: Operation "GARDEN PLOT" ...They're the US GVT, and apparently they're preparing
To view Photos of these images that appear to be "Vaccant"
facilities resembling concentration camp style "Work Farms" complete
& equipped with white unmarked vans & busses with US GVT plates,
click on the following link below, or "copy & paste" in your browser.
http://www.sightings.com/politics4/unwhite.htm
(They're the US GVT, and apparently they're preparing to round up
many of it's private citizens, "For
WHAT"????????????)))))))))))))))))))))
Mystery Solved? Huge
Fleet Of New SUVs, Vans,
Trucks Being Painted UN White?
UPDATE
From Ted Jones Jr <tedthefed@hotmail.com>
8-2-99
I am an employee of the INS and state that your information is wrong.
The color of most "marked" INS vehicles is white. That is the way
they are "issued" to most Districts and Border Patrol Sectors.
Any markings are "usually" applied at the local level.
Border Patrol vehicles are white with a green stripe and usually have
tinted windows. Or they are just plain white with no markings,
usually in the interior of the US.
All transport vehicles will have a cage in it. Not to keep the aliens
in, but more to protect the transporting personnel.
In my time with INS I have yet to see a vehicle with shackles in it.
By law we are prohibited from securing aliens to vehicles.
I would assume that the white vehicles on the prison property in
Texas are for our future use. The Border Patrol is ever increasing in
an effort to "finally" secure the southern border.
Detention Officers and Border Patrol currently use V-10 Ford vans,
Tahoes, Yukons, Explorers, Expeditions and S-10 Blazers.
Any questions or arguments.
My e mail: tedthefed@hotmail.com
Thanks for the time.
P.S. White vehicles with UN markings and/or Military Police are
another story. I frown upon the suspected use of these vehicles and I
will fight to the death to inhibit UN forces actively pursuing
UN/Martial law goals within the US.
http://www.sightings.com/politics4/unwhite.htm
(They're the US GVT is apparently preparing to round up many of it's
private citizens, "For WHAT"????????????)))))))))))))))))))))
''(2) Any recommended legislation regarding chemical warfare
defense.
''(3) The plan for the research program.''
STUDY OF FACILITY FOR TRAINING AND EVALUATION OF CHEMICAL OR
BIOLOGICAL WEAPONS RESPONSE PERSONNEL
Pub. L. 104-132, title V, Sec. 521(b), Apr. 24, 1996, 110 Stat.
1286, provided that:
''(1) Findings. - The Congress finds that -
''(A) the threat of the use of chemical and biological weapons
by Third World countries and by terrorist organizations has
increased in recent years and is now a problem of worldwide
significance;
''(B) the military and law enforcement agencies in the United
States that are responsible for responding to the use of such
weapons require additional testing, training, and evaluation
facilities to ensure that the personnel of such agencies
discharge their responsibilities effectively; and
''(C) a facility that recreates urban and suburban locations
would provide an especially effective environment in which to
test, train, and evaluate such personnel for that purpose.
''(2) Study of facility. -
''(A) In general. - The President shall establish an
interagency task force to determine the feasibility and
advisability of establishing a facility that recreates both an
urban environment and a suburban environment in such a way as to
permit the effective testing, training, and evaluation in such
environments of government personnel who are responsible for
responding to the use of chemical and biological weapons in the
United States.
''(B) Description of facility. - The facility considered under
subparagraph (A) shall include -
''(i) facilities common to urban environments (including a
multistory building and an underground rail transit system) and
to suburban environments;
''(ii) the capacity to produce controllable releases of
chemical and biological agents from a variety of urban and
suburban structures, including laboratories, small buildings,
and dwellings;
''(iii) the capacity to produce controllable releases of
chemical and biological agents into sewage, water, and air
management systems common to urban areas and suburban areas;
''(iv) chemical and biocontaminant facilities at the P3 and
P4 levels;
''(v) the capacity to test and evaluate the effectiveness of
a variety of protective clothing and facilities and survival
techniques in urban areas and suburban areas; and
''(vi) the capacity to test and evaluate the effectiveness of
variable sensor arrays (including video, audio, meteorological,
chemical, and biosensor arrays) in urban areas and suburban
areas.
''(C) Sense of congress. - It is the sense of Congress that the
facility considered under subparagraph (A) shall, if established
-
''(i) be under the jurisdiction of the Secretary of Defense;
and
''(ii) be located at a principal facility of the Department
of Defense for the testing and evaluation of the use of
chemical and biological weapons during any period of armed
conflict.''
CONSOLIDATION OF CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL DEFENSE TRAINING
ACTIVITIES
Section 1702 of Pub. L. 103-160 provided that: ''The Secretary of
Defense shall consolidate all chemical and biological warfare
defense training activities of the Department of Defense at the
United States Army Chemical School.''
SENSE OF CONGRESS CONCERNING FEDERAL EMERGENCY PLANNING FOR
RESPONSE TO TERRORIST THREATS
Section 1704 of Pub. L. 103-160 provided that: ''It is the sense
of Congress that the President should strengthen Federal
interagency emergency planning by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency and other appropriate Federal, State, and local agencies for
development of a capability for early detection and warning of and
response to -
''(1) potential terrorist use of chemical or biological agents
or weapons; and
''(2) emergencies or natural disasters involving industrial
chemicals or the widespread outbreak of disease.''
-CITE-
50 USC Sec. 1523 01/05/99
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 50 - WAR AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER 32 - CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM
-HEAD-
Sec. 1523. Annual report on chemical and biological warfare defense
-STATUTE-
(a) Report required
The Secretary of Defense shall include in the annual report of
the Secretary under section 113(c) of title 10 a report on chemical
and biological warfare defense. The report shall assess -
(1) the overall readiness of the Armed Forces to fight in a
chemical-biological warfare environment and shall describe steps
taken and planned to be taken to improve such readiness; and
(2) requirements for the chemical and biological warfare
defense program, including requirements for training, detection,
and protective equipment, for medical prophylaxis, and for
treatment of casualties resulting from use of chemical or
biological weapons.
(b) Matters to be included
The report shall include information on the following:
(1) The quantities, characteristics, and capabilities of
fielded chemical and biological defense equipment to meet wartime
and peacetime requirements for support of the Armed Forces,
including individual protective items.
(2) The status of research and development programs, and
acquisition programs, for required improvements in chemical and
biological defense equipment and medical treatment, including an
assessment of the ability of the Department of Defense and the
industrial base to meet those requirements.
(3) Measures taken to ensure the integration of requirements
for chemical and biological defense equipment and material among
the Armed Forces.
(4) The status of nuclear, biological, and chemical (NBC)
warfare defense training and readiness among the Armed Forces and
measures being taken to include realistic nuclear, biological,
and chemical warfare simulations in war games, battle
simulations, and training exercises.
(5) Measures taken to improve overall management and
coordination of the chemical and biological defense program.
(6) Problems encountered in the chemical and biological warfare
defense program during the past year and recommended solutions to
those problems for which additional resources or actions by the
Congress are required.
(7) A description of the chemical warfare defense preparations
that have been and are being undertaken by the Department of
Defense to address needs which may arise under article X of the
Chemical Weapons Convention.
(8) A summary of other preparations undertaken by the
Department of Defense and the On-Site Inspection Agency to
prepare for and to assist in the implementation of the
convention, including activities such as training for inspectors,
preparation of defense installations for inspections under the
convention using the Defense Treaty Inspection Readiness Program,
provision of chemical weapons detection equipment, and assistance
in the safe transportation, storage, and destruction of chemical
weapons in other signatory nations to the convention.
(9) A description of any program involving the testing of
biological or chemical agents on human subjects that was carried
out by the Department of Defense during the period covered by the
report, together with -
(A) a detailed justification for the testing;
(B) a detailed explanation of the purposes of the testing;
(C) a description of each chemical or biological agent
tested; and
(D) the Secretary's certification that informed consent to
the testing was obtained from each human subject in advance of
the testing on that subject.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 103-160, div. A, title XVII, Sec. 1703, Nov. 30, 1993,
107 Stat. 1854; Pub. L. 105-85, div. A, title X, Sec. 1078(f),
Nov. 18, 1997, 111 Stat. 1915.)
-COD-
CODIFICATION
Section was enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1994, and not as part of Pub. L. 91-121, title
IV, Sec. 409, Nov. 19, 1969, 83 Stat. 209, which comprises this
chapter.
-MISC3-
AMENDMENTS
1997 - Subsec. (b)(9). Pub. L. 105-85 added par. (9).
-CITE-
50 USC Sec. 1524 01/05/99
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 50 - WAR AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER 32 - CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM
-HEAD-
Sec. 1524. Agreements to provide support to vaccination programs of
Department of Health and Human Services
-STATUTE-
(a) Agreements authorized
The Secretary of Defense may enter into agreements with the
Secretary of Health and Human Services to provide support for
vaccination programs of the Secretary of Health and Human Services
in the United States through use of the excess peacetime biological
weapons defense capability of the Department of Defense.
(b) Report
Not later than February 1, 1994, the Secretary of Defense shall
submit to the congressional defense committees a report on the
feasibility of providing Department of Defense support for
vaccination programs under subsection (a) of this section and shall
identify resource requirements that are not within the Department's
capability.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 103-160, div. A, title XVII, Sec. 1705, Nov. 30, 1993,
107 Stat. 1856.)
-COD-
CODIFICATION
Section was enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1994, and not as part of Pub. L. 91-121, title
IV, Sec. 409, Nov. 19, 1969, 83 Stat. 209, which comprises this
chapter.
-CROSS-
''CONGRESSIONAL DEFENSE COMMITTEES'' DEFINED
Congressional defense committees means the Committees on Armed
Services and the Committees on Appropriations of the Senate and
House of Representatives, see section 3 of Pub. L. 103-160, 107
Stat. 1562.
-CITE-
50 USC Sec. 1525 01/05/99
-EXPCITE-
TITLE 50 - WAR AND NATIONAL DEFENSE
CHAPTER 32 - CHEMICAL AND BIOLOGICAL WARFARE PROGRAM
-HEAD-
Sec. 1525. Assistance for facilities subject to inspection under
Chemical Weapons Convention
-STATUTE-
(a) Assistance authorized
Upon the request of the owner or operator of a facility that is
subject to a routine inspection or a challenge inspection under the
Chemical Weapons Convention, the Secretary of Defense may provide
technical assistance to that owner or operator related to
compliance of that facility with the Convention. Any such
assistance shall be provided through the On-Site Inspection Agency
of the Department of Defense.
(b) Reimbursement requirement
The Secretary may provide assistance under subsection (a) of this
section only to the extent that the Secretary determines that the
Department of Defense will be reimbursed for costs incurred in
providing the assistance. The United States National Authority may
provide such reimbursement from amounts available to it. Any such
reimbursement shall be credited to amounts available for the
On-Site Inspection Agency.
(c) Definitions
In this section:
(1) The terms ''Chemical Weapons Convention'' and
''Convention'' mean the Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical Weapons
and on Their Destruction, ratified by the United States on April
25, 1997, and entered into force on April 29, 1997.
(2) The term ''facility that is subject to a routine
inspection'' means a declared facility, as defined in paragraph
15 of part X of the Annex on Implementation and Verification of
the Convention.
(3) The term ''challenge inspection'' means an inspection
conducted under Article IX of the Convention.
(4) The term ''United States National Authority'' means the
United States National Authority established or designated
pursuant to Article VII, paragraph 4, of the Convention.
-SOURCE-
(Pub. L. 105-85, div. A, title XIII, Sec. 1303, Nov. 18, 1997, 111
Stat. 1951.)
-COD-
CODIFICATION
Section was enacted as part of the National Defense Authorization
Act for Fiscal Year 1998, and not as part of Pub. L. 91-121, title
IV, Sec. 409, Nov. 19, 1969, 83 Stat. 209, which comprises this
chapter.
-CITE-