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Ptech aka GoAgile
#8
Friday, January 14, 2005
Remember Ptech? That’s the Boston software firm financed by Saudi businessman Yassin Al-Qadi, who also happens to be an al Qaeda bagman, whose clients happened to include numerous sensitive US federal branches and agencies, including the FAA, the FBI, the military and the White House.

A little background, from the mainstream, even, thanks to WBZ-TV:
Joe Bergantino, a reporter for WBZ-TV’s investigative team, was torn. He could risk breaking a story based on months of work investigating a software firm linked to terrorism, or heed the government’s demand to hold the story for national security reasons. In mid-June [2002], Bergantino received a tip from a woman in New York [Indira Singh] who suspected that Ptech, a computer software company in Quincy, Mass., had ties to terrorists. Ptech specialized in developing software that manages information contained in computer networks.
Bergantino’s investigation revealed that Ptech’s clients included many federal governmental agencies, including the U.S. Army, the U.S. Air Force, the U.S. Naval Air Command, Congress, the Department of Energy, the Federal Aviation Administration, the Internal Revenue Service, NATO, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Secret Service and even the White House.
“Ptech was doing business with every federal government in defense and had access to key government data,” Bergantino said.

Bergantino was ready to air the story by September, but the government had different plans. Federal authorities told Bergantino not to air the story because it would jeopardize their investigation and would threaten national security. According to federal authorities, documents would be shredded and people would flee if we ran the story, Bergantino said.
But Bergantino claims the government’s demand to hold off on the story was merely a pretext.
In October 2001, President George W. Bush signed an executive order freezing the assets of individuals linked to terrorism. According to Bergantino, the list identified Saudi Arabian businessman Yassin Al-Qadi as a key financial backer of Osama Bin Laden. As it turns out, Bergantino said, Al-Qadi also is the chief financier of Ptech. The government failed to investigate Ptech in October 2001 and didn’t start it’s investigation until August 2002 when WBZ-TV’s investigation called attention to Ptech.
Even if Ptech was unaware that the President’s October 2001 order contained the name of its chief financier, documents seized in a March 2002 government raid revealed Ptech’s connections with another organization linked to terrorism, Bergantino said. And again, the government failed to investigate Ptech.
Bergatino’s tipster was Indira Singh, who has said she recognizes the separate command and control communications system Mike Ruppert describes Dick Cheney to have been running on September 11th as having “the exact same functionality I was looking to utilize [for] Ptech.”
Now, how does Chertoff figure in the Ptech story? It goes back to the turf war of two years ago over Operation Greenquest, “the high-profile federal task force set up to target the financiers of Al Qaeda and other international terrorist groups.” The aggressive, Customs-led task force was folded into Homeland Security, sending both the FBI and its minders at the Department of Justice into a tizzy. They “demanded that the White House instead give the FBI total control over Greenquest.”
Now, consider this, also from the two-year-old Newsweek:
The FBI-Justice move, pushed by DOJ Criminal Division chief Michael Chertoff and Deputy Attorney General Larry Thompson, has enraged Homeland Security officials, however. They accuse the bureau of sabotaging Greenquest investigations by failing to turn over critical information to their agents and trying to obscure a decade-long record of lethargy in which FBI offices failed to aggressively pursue terror-finance cases.

One prime example of the tension is the investigation into Ptech, the Boston-area computer software firm that had millions of dollars in sensitive government contracts with the Air Force, the Energy Department and, ironically enough, the FBI. In what turned into a minor embarrassment for the bureau, the firm’s main investors included Yasin Al-Qadi, a wealthy Saudi businessman whom the Bush administration had formally designated a terrorist financier under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act. Al-Qadi has vigorously denied any connection to terrorism.
The Ptech case turned into an ugly dispute last year when company whistleblowers told Greenquest agents about their own suspicions about the firm’s owners. Sources close to the case say those same whistleblowers had first approached FBI agents, but the bureau apparently did little or nothing in response. With backing from the National Security Council, Greenquest agents then mounted a full-scale investigation that culminated in a raid on the company’s office last December. After getting wind of the Greenquest probe, the FBI stepped in and unsuccessfully tried to take control of the case.
The result, sources say, has been something of a train wreck. Privately, FBI officials say Greenquest agents botched the probe and jeopardized other more promising inquiries into Al-Qadi. Greenquest agents dismiss the charges and say the problem is that the bureau was slow to respond to legitimate allegations that an outside contractor with terrorist ties may have infiltrated government computers.
Whatever the truth, there is no dispute that the case has so far produced no charges and indictments against Al-Qadi or anyone else connected with Ptech. The company has denied wrongdoing.
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Messages In This Thread
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 12:14 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 12:17 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 12:20 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 02:44 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 02:45 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 02:49 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 03:00 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by Magda Hassan - 13-09-2009, 03:03 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by David Guyatt - 13-09-2009, 03:31 PM
Ptech aka GoAgile - by R.K. Locke - 25-10-2015, 12:14 AM

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