Monday, January 28, 2019

The Sinking of the Shooting Star: the amazing FBI files, PART 2

 
Tom Fuentes: the 70s?
     SEE Part 1 from exactly one year ago:

(DtB, January 25, 2018)


     BELOW are the latest FBI files that have been secured by the Klein family, et al., in their efforts to learn what the FBI found (and were pursuing) in the years after the shocking 1974 Shooting Star tragedy.

Shooting Star
     Tom Fuentes was Supervisor Casper's chief assistant at the time; at the last minute, Fuentes opted not to join the group on the yacht. He did, however, leave a cooler full of goodies for his boss.
     You'll recall that the late SOCCCD Trustee (and local GOP kingpin) joined a seminary not long after the event. But it didn't take: he was back at his no-holds-barred style of politics after only a year.

     Here's the latest document. Some elements here are pretty jaw-dropping. (Note my commentary in red.) But it's hard to say how seriously to take some of this testimony. Who are these people? Why did the FBI close the case?
     Those who wish to learn more about the Fuentes/Shooting Star saga should go here and here.


So, who is being interviewed here?
And what's this about "two unknown hookers"?
The interviewee evidently believed that the "unknown" "13th passenger" was involved in the plot to sink the Shooting Star.
The OC District Attorney investigation mentioned above might be the investigation sparked by a citizen, Richard Jordan, who sought to develop property in OC but who was advised to talk with Caspers and his crew (including Fuentes). According to that citizen, who eventually contacted the DA, Caspers and his associate, Fred Harber (who owned the Shooting Star), demanded monthly payment in order to do business in OC. Just as Jordan was working out his cooperation with the DA's office (to nail Harber, Caspers, et al.), the yacht disappeared, with Caspers and Harber (among others) on board.

Just who is the Marine referred to here? See Part 1. The Gambler.

Who's a "flake"? Doesn't sound like Casper or Harber.

NOW who is being interviewed?
A "missile" used to sink the Shooting Star?
Cassette tape? WHICH cassette tape?
Bombs taken from the El Toro base just prior to the tragedy? Good grief.

An interviewee is claiming that the El Toro "bombs" were stored on the Shooting Star and caused its sinking. Sheesh!



     I should mention that pages 8 and 9 above were part of the jumbled set of documents that we received and discussed a year ago. It is now clear that those pages belonged here, with this document, not the earlier document.
     What a mess!
     Further: many pages of this report were entirely redacted.
     (If you wish to learn the basics of the mysterious "Shooting Star" saga, go here.)
     Here are the earlier pages (from a year ago) with slightly different, less intrusive, redactions:




Monday, January 21, 2019

March on


At the Orange County Women's March these educators were warmly greeted by fellow marchers, their colleagues (including some notable retirees) and many IVC students. 

Rebel Girl took first place in the Diorama category. 
LA Times: Thousands turn out for Women's March across the country

OC Register: Crowds bring bright signs, big goals as they gather for Women’s March 2019 in Santa Ana

Voice of OC: Orange County Women’s March Represents Local Objectives, Voices

See you next year!

*

Friday, January 11, 2019

Friday night bombshell

F.B.I. Opened Inquiry Into Whether Trump Was Secretly Working For Russia
New York Times
     In the days after President Trump fired James B. Comey as F.B.I. director, law enforcement officials were alarmed by the president’s behavior. Counterintelligence investigators had to consider an explosive question: whether Mr. Trump’s actions constituted a possible threat to national security.... (continue)

Thursday, January 10, 2019

Making America Grate Again


Global Higher Ed in Changing Times
Inside Higher Ed
WASHINGTON -- How can colleges seize control of their international strategies at a time when international student enrollments are falling at many American colleges and when federal immigration policies and public attitudes may be working against institutions’ internationalization goals?
. . .
     Jill Welch, deputy executive director for public policy at NAFSA: Association of International Educators, said she would add another "P" to the discussion -- the political. Advocates for international education have been deeply concerned by some of the visa and immigration policies pursued by the Trump administration, including changes to how “unlawful presence” is calculated for international students, new restrictions on the duration of visas for Chinese nationals studying for advanced degrees in certain high-tech fields and the travel ban, which continues to restrict entry to the U.S. for nationals of multiple Muslim-majority countries.
     The Trump administration has also signaled its intent to at some point overhaul programs that let international students stay in the U.S. to work after graduation, and at one point reportedly considered a proposal to ban students from China from coming to the U.S. altogether….
Trump’s New Order on Visas Could Make American Colleges Less Appealing Overseas
CHE
     Yet again a Trump-administration executive order has the potential to roil American campuses and their recruitment of international students.
     President Trump on Tuesday signed a measure that would target fraud and abuse in overseas guest-worker programs and increase federal oversight of the H-1B visa program for highly skilled foreigners.
     Higher education ranks third behind technology-related occupations as the largest industry sponsor of recipients of H-1B visas. But colleges’ chief concern is not likely to be the visa holders — typically, professors, researchers, and postdocs — on their payrolls.
     Rather, the order could have an impact on American colleges’ recruitment of students from abroad. For many international students, the opportunity to stay in the United States, even temporarily, after graduation and gain work experience is almost as valuable as an American degree itself. Any policy that might erect hurdles on the pathway from college to work could depress international enrollments….

Friday, January 4, 2019

Roy's obituary in LA Times and Register: "we were lucky to have you while we did"

  This ran in the Sunday December 24, 2023 edition of the Los Angeles Times and the Orange County Register : July 14, 1955 - November 20, 2...