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Most Wanted Leaked Document or Recording Wish List. Nominations Wanted.
#1
WikiLeaks requests global nominations for the "Most Wanted Leaks
of 2009"-the concealed documents or recordings most sought after
by a country's journalists, activists, historians, lawyers,
police, or human rights investigators.

Prizes will be award to the winner for each country.

Nominations can be anonymous, or if necessary, confidential.

WikiLeaks will seek to obtain the leading candidates through the
legal system, and its network of journalists, intelligence
sources, volunteers and readers. If you email us
(wl-editor@sunshinepress.org) we will alert you when the record
has been obtained. Think of your nomination as an global Freedom
of Information Act request with no exemptions.

Winners for each country will receive a cash prize upto 1000 EUR,
depending on how many countries submit.

Be sure to ask your "offline" contacts for their nomination also;
we seek nominations that reflect every government, political group,
industry and oligarch.

Documents or other materials added nominated must:

* Be likely to have political, diplomatic, ethical or historical impact.
* Be known to exist or have existed.
* Be plausibly obtainable to a well motivated insider, outsider or
intelligence agent. For instance the entire collection of documents
held by the Chinese Ministry of Public Security is not plausibly
obtainable, but a specific document or collection of documents may be.
* Be described in enough detail so that a court, dissident insider or
visiting outsider not already familiar with the material or its
subject matter may be able to quickly locate it, and will be motivated
to do so.
* Should, where possible, list all organizations, locations and
computer systems suspected of holding the material or having
information leading to it.

If public nomination would cause the document to further concealed, the
nomination may be made priately.

See the nominations so far (order does not reflect the view of WikiLeaks):
https://secure.wikileaks.org/wiki/Draft:...ks_of_2009
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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#2
Partial Wish List. Please add your own and help where you can. Much to laugh at too. Some one wants to find Fox News' editorial policy! Confusedheep:





International organizations


  1. Bilderberg Group meeting minutes, papers and annual reports of since 1954. WikiLeaks has some years already. Bilderberg is an annual off-the record conference of transatlantic political, economic and ideological agenda setters.
  2. Documents regarding the founding and operation of Alliance Base.
[edit] Austria


  1. Source-code as well as certifications for the Austrian e-Voting system used in students elections.
[edit] Australia


  1. The complete police interview of Martin Bryant. The police radio log from 26th April 1996 Hobart ops room.
  2. The report of the national broadband network expert working group.
  3. Versions of the ACMA URL blacklist newer than 19 March 2009.
  4. Full details of filtering hardware/software vendors participating in government-sponsored ISP-level censorship technology trials, including (but not limited to):
    1. Any and all communications between filter vendors and government departments prior to, during, and after the trials
    2. Any and all transactions, contracts, and other financial arrangements involving filter vendors

  5. URL blacklist(s) used during above trials. Alleged (by government) to be ACMA URL blacklist.
  6. Full statistical breakdown of results of above trials (in the event that Enex Testlabs do not make them publicly available).
  7. URL blacklist as used by Watchdog NZ during private censorship technology trial by ISP Exetel in May 2009. Alleged (by Watchdog) to have been IWF list (see United Kingdom).
  8. Full statistical breakdown of results of Watchdog/Exetel's censorship technology trial - Exetel's official response seems lacking.
  9. Written exam NSW police officers must take annually before they can be issued with Tasers.
  10. Water flouridation in brisbane - Where does the fluoride physically come from i.e. what company & where?
  11. Queensland Governments plan to sell Government Owned Corporations. Which country is interested in buying?
[edit] Bahrain


  1. Documents disclosing the number of citizenships that have been granted in the last few years, in an effort to change the country's demography. See Political naturalisation[1].
[edit] Canada


  1. Censored Schedules from the Memorandum of Understanding signed between Frontenac Ventures Corporation, the Shabot Obaadjiwan First Nation, the Ministries of Aboriginal Affairs (Ontario) and Northern Development and Mines (Ontario) to allow exploratory drilling in the Frontenac region towards the development of a uranium mine. The Ardoch Algonquin First Nation and the Community Coalition Against Mining Uranium were sidelined because of their uncompromising stance against the potential uranium mine.
[edit] China


  1. A list of URLs and keywords censored filtered by the Great Firewall of China. WikiLeaks has previously released related information, for example, watch lists, policies and several thousand URLs for CCTV and Baidu, but not for general http filtering.
[edit] Colombia


  1. The DAS (Departamento Administrativo de Seguridad) is reported to have surveilled a wide array of public officials, private citizens, and organizations. Documents wanted: contracts to supply software for internet surveillance to Colombian policy agencies and details of the software supplied.


[edit] Finland


  1. The so called Tiitisen Lista, the list of 18 persons claimed to have been in active contact with East German security services (Stasi). The list was received from the West German intelligence services (BND) in 1990 and since classified by the order of President Koivisto as adviced by the head of the Finnish Security Police (Suojelupoliisi), Seppo Tiitinen. It is rumoured that several current or former top Finnish politicians appear on the list.
[edit] France


  1. The Monthly Health Report of President Nicolas Sarkozy, as promised by himself during the last presidential elections.
  2. Documents on civil nuclear energy ( blunders, leaks, illegal transport of toxic wastes, etc.)
[edit] Germany


  1. The censorship filter list for the proposed national, mandatory censorship system. The list will be compiled by German federal criminal police BKA and distributed to internet service providers.
  2. The contents of the contract between the BKA and some ISPs that has already been signed, but is kept secret due to "public safety" and copyright concerns (see http://blog.fefe.de/?ts=b4fa8af8).
  3. The Stasi files of Federal Chancellor Angela Dorothea Merkel (maiden name Kasner) and other leading politicians, which are known to exist, but withheld from public.
  4. The Stasi files relating to operation Gladio / stay behind organisations in relation to right-wing terrorism in Germany, as per a parliamentary request by the Green party.
  5. The List of Media Harmful to Young People (the censorship system already in place). The "virtual media" part of this list is distributed to search engine providers and is illegal to publish. It probably could be reverse engineered using the differences between google.com and google.de search results.
[edit] Greece


  1. Documents related to the Athens affair that have yet to be released (including those from countries other than Greece.)
[edit] Guatemala


  1. All documents on Plan Victoria 82, Plan Sofia and Plan Firmeza 83.
  2. Final report of United Nations' Historical Clarification Commission (CEH) into the killing of 200,000 Mayan people and the involvement of the US government and American corporations. The report official sources (militar interviews, campaign plans, etc) are kept secret by the UN in NYC.
  3. Documents on Canadian corporation named Goldcorp with a mining operation in Guatemala, especially information on where the Gold they extract is processed and who is buying the gold (we think it might be a Swiss company).
Detail:
PLAN VICTORIA AND PLAN SOFIA*
Within the process of trying to bring military personal involved in human rights violations and massacres that happen during the civil war in Guatemala to justice, the military have been required to declassify many war documents. In a case, that went all the way to the Supreme Court of Guatemala, the Court dictated a sentence that confirmed the obligation of the Ministry of Defense of Guatemala to hand over the official documentation of four specific military operations: Campana Sofia 82, Victoria 82, Firmeza 83 and Operacion Ixil. The Supreme Court sentence indicated that this achieves had to be declassified and made public yesterday.
These military operations were carried out in the 80s. According to the CEH, Historical Clarification Commission of Guatemala final report contained in "Guatemala: Memory of Silence", these military operations resulted in massacres and severe human rights violations.
The Minister of Defense Abraham Valenzuela only delivered partial information about plans Victoria 82 and Firmeza 83, two of the four requested plans. He indicated that he had no knowledge of the other two plans before he became Minister of Defense and that he ignores where the documentation could be. He stated that he could not deliver the complete plans "Victoria 82" y "Firmeza 83" because certain information was considered state secret and a concern of national security.
  • "Plan Sofia" a derivative of "Plan Victoria 82", was of special concern to
human rights activists; this plan was conceived in July 1982, four months after General Efrain Rios Montt came into power. *
  • SO WE WILL REALLY LIKE TO OBTAIN THE COMPLETE DOCUMENTS OF PLAN VICTORIA
82, PLAN SOFIAAND PLAN FIRMEZA 83*
  • CEH ARCHIVES*
The United Nations' Historical Clarification Commission (CEH) for Guatemala issued a report where the US government and several American corporations were accused of complicity in the genocide of nearly 200,000 Mayan people during Guatemala?s bloody 36-year civil war. The final 3,600-page CEH report clearly places the blame for most of the 200,000 deaths on the ?racist? policy of the Guatemalan government and holds the country?s military and paramilitary forces responsible for the actual killings, tortures and disappearances.
However, it accuses the US of directly and indirectly supporting a ?fratricidal confrontation? by providing sustained training, arms and financial aidThe report is based on the testimony of 9,200 people from all sides of the conflict and other documents*, classified and Secret, protected in the UN headquarters in NYC.* The CEH investigated 42,000 human rights violations, 29,000 of which resulted in deaths or disappearances and therefore, the documents under UN custody are fundamental for the prosecution of those responsible of the crimes.
  • GUATEMALA, SWITZERLAND AND CANADA*
A Canadian corporation named Goldcorp has a mining operation in Guatemala with poor environmental conditions and harming health of many workers and a community as a whole. We will like to know:
- Where the Gold they extract is processed.
- Who is buying the gold (we think it might be a Swiss company)
[edit] Italy


  1. All documents pertaining to Nazi Germany and the Vatican, as well as those relating to the post-war rat line to Argentina. Refer to http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/2611847.stm
[edit] Kenya


  1. The international investigative firm Kroll associates produced at least four reports on high level Kenyan corruption after first term of the Kibaki government. A draft version of one of the reports The looting of Kenya, was previously published by WikiLeaks. The reports were given to selected members of President Kibaki's cabinet at the time and are likely still held by http://www.kroll.com.uk/, notably lead investigator Andrew Marshall.
[edit] Madagascar

Both sides of the political conflict in Madagascar are crying fouls about the deals made by their counterparts with foreign entities. The release of the official documents with respect to contract negotiations about:

  1. Oil exploitation in the region of Bemolanga ( South of Madagascar) by Total & others
  2. an obvious one but the proposed final contract before rejection of the land deal with Daewoo Logistics.
  3. The recent agreement with Saudi investment group on staple products and proposed $2 billion USD investment.
  4. The revised mining exploitation agreement with Sheritt in Ambatovy and Rio Tinto in Fort-Dauphin.
  5. Least but not last, the complete list of current political prisoners and the charges against them.
[edit] México


  1. Zapotec indigenous people demand transparency from U.S. Scholar and full disclosure of all the agreements between U.S. Government and their agencies and U.S. geography scholar Peter Herlihy, especially confidential agreements with Foreign Military Studies Office. Prof. Herlihy failed to mention that he received funding from the Foreign Military Studies Office of the U.S. Armed Forces on the research of "México Indígena" project. Mexico Indigena Project forms part of the Bowman Expeditions, a more extensive geographic research project backed and financed by the FMSO, among other institutions. The FMSO inputs information into a global database that forms an integral part of the Human Terrain System (HTS), a United States Army counterinsurgency strategy designed by Foreign Military Studies Office and applied within indigenous communities, among others.
  2. Documents to unveil the real purpose of "Ruta Maya 2002 Isuzu Challenge". The convoy was commanded by Ben Nun Avihu, Israeli militar and Moshe Savir, geography expert and around 50 tourists in 40 Isuzu Jeep. Some communities linked the incursion with biopiracy. The terrain they explored is controled by the EZLN.
  3. Documents related with the fraud and corruption around FOBAPROA (Fondo Bancario de Protección al Ahorro).
  4. Documents of financial operations just before the financial crisis of 1994 (some say the government knew before that the crisis was coming and took advantage of the information protecting their interests).
  5. Documents related with the World Bank credit and application of the budget to combat swine flu.
  6. Documents related with the technology currently used in cellphones in Mexico to implement the RENAUT program Information about the security technology used to protect data collected from users.
  7. Documents related to the transparency of Plan Merida
[edit] Puerto Rico


  1. The FBI has not yet finished declassifying all the secret files related to surveillance of Puerto Rican individuals and organizations from the 1930-70's http://www.pr-secretfiles.net/index.html (not to mention, large sections of the files are blacked out by the FBI). In addition, there are thousands of secret files produced by Puerto Rican police that were only briefly made available to individuals themselves, and have now been closed off to the public. These documents provide evidence of quite a significant spying and intimidation operation by the United States and local police against leftists and independence movement leaders.
[edit] Russia


  1. Complete technical documentation of the "Perimetr" system (a.k.a. "Dead Hand"), along history of deployment and removal from deployment (if done). Political documents relating to the deployment of "Perimetr".
  2. Maps, floor plans, and blueprints of Mount Yamantaw and Kosvinsky Mountain, and any other facilities similar to the conjectured facilities there, including names and locations.
  3. Documents related to the VRYAN crisis, especially political documents, analyses of intelligence, and specific steps taken. Information on the mindset of the Politburo, as well as intelligence services, and what exactly they feared, and how credible they believed their fear to be.
  4. Soviet psychological profiles and political analyses of American politicians.
  5. Soviet/Russian analyses of American intentions and capabilities.
  6. Documents indicating who the Soviet Union believed was behind the assassination of JFK, RFK, and MLK, along with why they believed that. (Probably different organizations.)
  7. A list and description of the various agents prepared by the various Soviet and Russian bioweapons programs. Indications of whether they developed recombinant DNA based agents, and what those are specifically. Weaponization of agents, including re-entry vehicle mounting. Doctrine for use, including deniable use. Vaccines and treatments for affected personnel.
  8. Technical plans, manuals, and blueprints for the SS-27 Sickle B (Topol-M), along with the Bulava.
  9. Documents relating to nuclear warplans of the Soviet Union and Russia.
  10. Documents relating to orbital weapons systems, and whether the Soviets ever deployed them (or still deploy them) such as orbital HANE devices.
[edit] Syria


  1. All the documents related to the assasination, in 1965, of Mehdi Ben Barka still held in France, USA, Israel and Morocco. In 1976, thanks to the Freedom of information Act, the US governement recognized that the CIA had about 1800 classified documents about his assassination. Theses documents are still classified.
[edit] Switzerland


  1. The full Cornu Report. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Projekt-26#...rnu_Report
[edit] Swaziland


  1. Expense accounts of King Mswati, the Queen Mother and the King's wives.
  2. Intelligence memos from the Ministry of Defence or Police about the pro-democracy organization, PUDEMO.
[edit] Trinidad and Tobago


  1. The Report on the Commission of Enquiry into the construction of the new Piarco Airport. This identified corrupt practices in the spending of public funds. The Commission's report was delivered in August 2003. Nearly 6 years later, its findings have not been made public.
  2. The Report on the Caroni Bridge Collapse. A man was killed when a bridge collapsed a few years ago; again the public has not been made aware of the report's findings.
  3. Documents in relation to payments of attorneys by state. Numbers of these payments are being kept secret from the public.
  4. A copy of the contract for the billion-dollar Waterfront Development Project.
  5. List of recipients and amounts of scholarships sponsored by Ministry of Culture for study abroad.
  6. Report of the findings of the current Commission of Enquiry into the local construction sector
Detail:
As far as Trinidad and Tobago goes, our government tends to pay lip service to the principles of transparency and accountability. For instance, there is a Freedom of Information Act which, by law, allows the public to seek information from government departments. But quite often, when such attempts are made by the citizenry, the government bars full disclosure. Depending on how important a piece of information is to Joe Public, he may actually have to turn to the courts to "force" the government to reveal facts that should be disclosed voluntarily. Following are a few examples of
documents that should be made public, but have not been:
1. *The Report on the Commission of Enquiry into the construction of the new
Piarco Airport*. This identified corrupt practices in the spending of public funds. The Commission's report was delivered in August 2003. Nearly
6 years later, its findings have not been made public.
2. *The Report on the Caroni Bridge Collapse*. A man was killed when a bridge collapsed a few years ago; again the public has not been made aware of the report's findings.
3. The Opposition recently brought up in Parliament t*he issue of taxpayers' money being used to pay attorneys by state*. Although the public
has a right to know how much of its funds were used in paying said attorneys, the Attorney General refused to disclose the sums, saying it would be an invasion of the lawyers' privacy.
4. The same goes for a recent request in Parliament, whereby *the Minister of Planning and Development was asked to produce a copy of the contract for the billion-dollar Waterfront Development Project*. The Minister's response
was that she could not produce said contract for public discussion because there was a confidentiality clause contained therein (for a project being built with public funds).
5. *The Ministry of Culture recently awarded scholarships for students to study abroad* - when asked in Parliament to disclose the list of recipients and the dollar value of the scholarships, the response was that this was private information.
As such, many citizens are concerned that the findings of the current
  • Commission
of Enquiry into the local construction sector*, like many Commisions before it, will never see the light of day.
[edit] Uganda

The government of Uganda has recently signed a number of profit-sharing agreements with several oil companies that are conducting explorations in southwestern Uganda. My friend was in Kampala in January and spoke with a number of journalists who believe that releasing these documents would be a major step in increased transparency with respect to the country's emerging oil industry.

  1. Ugandan profit-sharing agreements with oil companies in south-western Uganda
[edit] United Kingdom

1. Censorship list for the United Kingdom's "voluntary" filter system. Known to be held by The Internet Watch Foundation.
Companies and their subsidiaries which are currently being supplied with the IWF list. Most ISP's in the UK have a copy of the IP's on the list. 2. Unredacted copies of receipts and documentation relating to MP's expenses as currently being released by the Daily Telegraph; in addition, any private communications regarding the leak of these expenses, especially if said communications are politically significant.
3. UK Government documentation into the investigation of Roger Hollis, head of MI5 between 1956 and 1965, including the report by Lord Trend, into the serious but apparently unproven allegations of being a Russian Spy.
4. The secret cabinet minutes and legal advice pertaining to the allegedly illegal war and ongoing occupation of Iraq.
5. List of current and expired D-Notices [2]
[edit] United States


  1. The missing five million White House emails--possibly no longer in existence.
  2. CIA detainee interrogation videos. While the CIA claims to have destroyed 92 of the videos, others are known to remain.
  3. Detainee abuse photos withheld by the Obama administration.
  4. The complete CIA Open Source Center analytical database. The database is extensive, unclassified, non-public, but relatively accessible to certain outsiders after jumping through hoops https://www.opensource.gov/
  5. The complete PACER database. The PACER database contains extensive US federal court records. They are public documents, currently behind a paywall. See http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/news/...-pacer.ars
  6. Unredacted Inquiry into the Treatment of Detainees in US Custody, 20 Nov 2008.
  7. Camp Delta (Guantanamo) Standard Operating Procedure 2005-2009.
  8. Iraq US Army Rules of Engagement 2007-2009 (SECRET).
  9. Unredacted copy of Dept of Justice's Office of Inspector General's "A Review of the FBI' s Actions Connection With Allegations Raised By Contract Linguist Sibel Edmonds" July 1, 2004 (redacted version here http://www.wbez.org/FILES/sibel.pdf )
  10. Correspondence between the National Security Agency and American telecom companies such as AT&T, Verizon, and Qwest, regarding the warrantless wiretapping program. Correspondence involving telecoms who cooperated with the NSA (e.g. AT&T) may give different information than telecoms who refused (e.g. Qwest), but both types would better shed light on the NSA's program. The existence of this correspondence is well documented in the media, for example that Qwest's lawyers refused to cooperate because the FISA Court had not signed off on it.
  11. Documents about Rep. Harman, AIPAC, and the NSA recordings.
  12. Chenney and Rumsfeld Archives
  13. Reports about Colombian 'falsos positives'
  14. The Editorial Guidelines for Fox News
  15. Important Documents...
    1. The SIOP.
      1. All versions from inception to the present, preferably in annotated form.
      2. OPLAN/CONPLAN 8022, 2003 revision.
      3. OPLAN/CONPLAN 8044, 2007 revision.

    2. The "Black Budget", from inception to present, with line items, hopefully annotated and explained.
    3. All secret annexes for, attachments to, unredacted versions of, and documents implicitly or explicitly referenced in the following documents, which may be partially available in unclassified form:
      1. National Security Presidential Directive 51, "National Continuity Policy", May 9, 2007, also known as Homeland Security Presidential Directive 20
      2. Federal Preparedness Circular 65, "Federal Executive Branch Continuity of Operations (COOP)", July 26, 1999
      3. Federal Response Plan [FEMA 9230.1-PL], April 1999
      4. Presidential Decision Directive 67, "Enduring Constitutional Government and Continuity of Government Operations", October 21, 1998
      5. Presidential Decision Directive 63, "Critical Infrastructure Protection (CIP)", May 22, 1998
      6. Presidential Decision Directive 62, "Protection Against Unconventional Threats to the Homeland and Americans Overseas", May 22, 1998
      7. FPC 65 Federal Response Planning Guidance 01-94, "Continuity of Operations (COOP)", December 4, 1994
      8. PDD 67 National Security Directive 69, "Enduring Constitutional Government", June 2, 1992
      9. FPC 65 Federal Preparedness Circular 61, "Emergency Succession to Key Positions of the Federal Departments and Agencies", August 2, 1991
      10. Federal Preparedness Circular 62, "Delegation of Authorities for Emergency Situations", August 1, 1991
      11. Federal Preparedness Circular 60, "Continuity of the Executive Branch of the Federal Government at the Headquarters Level During National Security Emergencies", November 20,1990
      12. National Security Directive 37, "Enduring Constitutional Government", April 18, 1990
      13. Executive Order 12656, "Assignment of Emergency Preparedness Responsibilities", November 18, 1988
      14. Executive Order 12472, "Assignment of National Security and Emergency Preparedness Telecommunications Functions", April 3, 1984
      15. NSD 69 NSDD 55, "Enduring National Leadership" September 14, 1982
      16. Executive Order 12148, "Federal Emergency Management", July 20, 1979

    4. A list of the actual facilities in the Federal Relocation Arc, as of the present time, along with their locations.
      1. Blueprints, maps, and floor plans of MWEOC.
      2. Blueprints, maps, and floor plans of Site R (Raven Rock).
      3. Blueprints and floor plans of all unmentioned facilities in the Federal Relocation Arc, including historical ones.

    5. A mirror of the Common Core database as of 11/1/2008.
    6. A mirror of the complete Intellipedia site as of 11/1/2008, including article history.
    7. CIA/DIA/NGA/NSA analyses of the VRYAN crisis of 1983.
    8. Technical specifications of the KH-11 and follow-on satellites with similar capabilities.
    9. Non-public documents related to HAARP. No, it isn't a mind control device like the tinfoil hat crowd thinks, but it's a technically interesting piece of kit, that, and yes, there is probably something going on that isn't publicly talked about. For instance, HAARP may be primarily civilian, but it may have certain military applications that are useful. Speculative areas where the capabilities of HAARP may be useful in are the field of remote non-destructive examination of buried and underwater objects, other nondestructive examination applications, communications applications, energy extraction, transfer, or dispersal applications, or even warfighting applications. It would be interesting to find them out. A good place to start would be whoever's funding it (DARPA/ONR?) and then see how deep the rabbit hole goes.
    10. The contents of the Football, and how they changed over the years during the different Administrations.
    11. Whatever Pollard stole and gave to the Mossad, the full text.
    12. US psychological profiles and political analyses of Soviet leaders.
    13. Documents relating to orbital weapons systems, and whether the US ever deployed them (or still deploy them) such as orbital HANE devices.

  16. Information about the PAN satellite and the agency responsible for it http://spaceflightnow.com/news/n0905/26milspace/
  17. Commander Directed Report of Investigation Concerning an Unauthorized Transfer of Nuclear Warheads Between Minot AFB, North Dakota and Barksdale AFB, Louisiana - 30 August 2007 (S//FRD//MR)
  18. Investigation into the Shipment of Sensitive Missile Components to Taiwan (ADM Donald Report) - 22 May 2008 (S//FRD//NOFORN)
  19. Air Force Comprehensive Assessment of Nuclear Sustainment (CANS) - July 2008 (S//FRD//NOFORN
  20. Minutes or notes for VP Cheney's Energy Conference.
  21. The 1141 pages of ACTA background documents not released to the EFF by the US Trade Representative (see [3])
  22. Some information on corruption concerning the drug trade.


[edit] Mormons

With recent leak of 1999/2006 Church Handbook of Instructions, pertinent documents and covertly photographed artifacts in the vault at Church Office building or subsidy in Salt Lake City, Utah which expose and negate Mormon Church's claim of divinity and its monopoly on "truth." I.e. the concealed remnants of diaries and letters written by former early Mormon apostle William McLellin [4]. McLellin diary and documents was the main point of interest for convicted double murderer/bomber Mark Hofmann's planned forgery attempt to deceive Mormon leaders to obtain in fraud by deception monetary reward to suppress truth of early Mormon history unfavorable to current Mormon religion. For more info, [5].
Documents of Mormon Church's billion-dollar investment in City Creek Mall and Condominium in SLC, which may put Mormon Church's IRS tax-exempt status in jeopardy if there is verification of the allegation the Church used tithe and offering monetary contributions by the members to fund the project under the umbrella of tax-exempted religious freedom. Mormon Church leadership's involvement in politics, such as correspondence to ecclesiastical subordinates (bishopric) on policy and attitude towards same-sex civil rights & other sensitive issues relevant and concerning to the leaders. As well as recorded correspondences between Mormon members of Utah legislation and Church leaders on sensitive political issues for legislation purposes which may contravene the separation of church and state. Uncovered film or audio recording featuring the play with the actor portraying Protestant minister encouraged by Satan/Lucifer (portrayed by actor) to spread false doctrines to attack all religions outside of Mormon religion as "abominable" which was exhibited for qualified "temple recommend" audiences in all of the existing temples prior to removal in 1990 (almost like leaked Scientology orientation video) [6]. Unearthed secret audio or video recording inside Mormon temple with the temple members swearing "blood oath" before removal in 1990. [7] Documented Church leaders' and lay clergy's cover-up of physical/sexual abuse and rape of minors by missionaries and members without reporting to law enforcement in some cases [8]. Older editions of Church Handbooks of Instructions from the first edition up [9] for comparison to recent leaked 1968 (truncated), 1999 and 2006 editions. -- Cyberdogg 02:45, 18 May 2009 (GMT)
"The philosophers have only interpreted the world, in various ways. The point, however, is to change it." Karl Marx

"He would, wouldn't he?" Mandy Rice-Davies. When asked in court whether she knew that Lord Astor had denied having sex with her.

“I think it would be a good idea” Ghandi, when asked about Western Civilisation.
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