21-07-2015, 12:05 AM
Authorities are concerned about maintaining confidence in the confidentiality of US Census records to encourage
US residents to cooperate with the Census Bureau's efforts to extract reliable household names, locations, and other
data. They are also reluctant to disclose investigative sources and methods.
A thorough FBI investigation of Osbourne / Bowen would have included the matching of the dates and location of birth and the names of parents Bowen provided to the FBI while still attempting to maintain the ruse that he was Bowen and not Osbourne. Using the 1880 and 1900 census records (national 1890 records were destroyed in a fire at the archive, except for a very small portion of date of a couple of US states), the FBI would have obtained the same leads and verification that I obtained and then built upon. I have no idea if they could have checked WWI military draft records.
This is an example of the census records search capabilities in the early 1940's, described in unrelated testimony sourced from the maryferrell.org archive. Ordinary US residents are barred from access to US census records less than 70 years old, and similar privacy concerns were the excuse for originally withholding the Warren Commission records until 2038.:
http://maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docI...D%20bureau
US residents to cooperate with the Census Bureau's efforts to extract reliable household names, locations, and other
data. They are also reluctant to disclose investigative sources and methods.
A thorough FBI investigation of Osbourne / Bowen would have included the matching of the dates and location of birth and the names of parents Bowen provided to the FBI while still attempting to maintain the ruse that he was Bowen and not Osbourne. Using the 1880 and 1900 census records (national 1890 records were destroyed in a fire at the archive, except for a very small portion of date of a couple of US states), the FBI would have obtained the same leads and verification that I obtained and then built upon. I have no idea if they could have checked WWI military draft records.
This is an example of the census records search capabilities in the early 1940's, described in unrelated testimony sourced from the maryferrell.org archive. Ordinary US residents are barred from access to US census records less than 70 years old, and similar privacy concerns were the excuse for originally withholding the Warren Commission records until 2038.:
http://maryferrell.org/showDoc.html?docI...D%20bureau
Peter Janney's uncle was Frank Pace, chairman of General Dynamics who enlisted law partners Roswell Gilpatric and Luce's brother-in-law, Maurice "Tex" Moore, in a trade of 16 percent of Gen. Dyn. stock in exchange for Henry Crown and his Material Service Corp. of Chicago, headed by Byfield's Sherman Hotel group's Pat Hoy. The Crown family and partner Conrad Hilton next benefitted from TFX, at the time, the most costly military contract award in the history of the world. Obama was sponsored by the Crowns and Pritzkers. So was Albert Jenner Peter Janney has preferred to write of an imaginary CIA assassination of his surrogate mother, Mary Meyer, but not a word about his Uncle Frank.