SUBJECT: FEDERAL CORRUPTION                                  FILE: UFO2771



PART 4



   Filename: Harry4.Art
   Type    : Article
   Author  : Harry Martin
   Date    : 03/29/91
   Desc    : Federal Corruption Series Part IV

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                BANKRUPTCY COURT EXAMINES SOFTWARE ALLEGATIONS
                     AGAINST JUSTICE DEPARTMENT PIRATING
                              By Harry V. Martin
                            Fourth in a NEW SERIES
                         (c) Copyright Napa Sentinel
                                March 29, 1991
                Reprinted with permission of the Napa Sentinel


     If you own a VCR or rent or buy movies, you will be familiar with the
   warning  that appears on your screen that the film you are  viewing  is
   protected  by a copyright and that the Federal Bureau of Investigations
   or  Interpol  can arrest you for copying the film.  The warning  is  to
   prevent "pirating" of someone else's copyrighted material.

     But what's good for the goose is not always good for the gander.  The
   United States Justice Department stands accused of pirating copyrighted
   material--having  supplied it to the Canadian government,  the  Israeli
   government and Iraqi government . . . and to the FBI, itself.

     That  is how deep the INSLAW computer software case has become.   The
   case  started  out  when  the  Justice  Department  bought  PROMIS,   a
   copyrighted  software  program  that  helps  to  track  criminal  cases
   throughout  the  United  States.  When friends and associates  of  then
   Attorney  General  Edwin Meese attempted to buy the  software  company,
   INSLAW  turned them down and then life was made miserable  for  INSLAW.
   Within  90  days the Justice Department reneged on their contract  with
   INSLAW and refused to pay for the software program,  even though it was
   using  it.   The  Justice Department is accused by  federal  judges  of
   attempting  to bankrupt INSLAW and then hasten the bankruptcy court  to
   declare  them insolvent.  Instead,  the courts ruled that  the  Justice
   Department used "fraud, deceit and trickery" against INSLAW and awarded
   the small computer software company $6.8 million in damages.

     The  case  became  deeper when friends of Meese  began  to  sell  the
   program  to foreign military establishments and the Justice  Department
   began  to  provide the copyrighted material to other  U.S.   government
   agencies.   A  man who was once fired from INSLAW was put in charge  of
   INSLAW's  payments--which  were  never  forthcoming.   Another  Justice
   Department official, who is now a Federal Judge in Northern California,
   was a direct competitor to INSLAW in California. The Judge who made the
   $6.8   million  ruling  lost his job.  The  attorney  for  the  Justice
   Department  who  fought against the Judge's ruling was promoted to  the
   Judge's vacant position.  There have been wholesale changes and firings
   at the Justice Department over the INSLAW case.

     The  Justice  Department  is  now  under  investigation  by  a  House
   subcommittee and this committee is receiving many documents to  support
   the  premise  that the Justice Department has a skeleton in its  closet
   that stinks greater than Watergate.

     But  new documents emerging in the case demonstrate a wider  scandal.
   In an affidavit dated February 17,  1991, Ari Ben-Menashe describes his
   12   year service for the Government of Israel in foreign  intelligence
   and  provides  an  eyewitness account of a presentation to  an  Israeli
   intelligence agency in 1987 in Tel Aviv, by Earl W. Brian of the United
   States.

     Brian is a close associate of Meese from his California days.   Brian
   and  Meese were both in Ronald Reagan's California Cabinet when  Reagan
   was governor.

     According  to Ben-Menashe's affidavit,  Brian stated in his  presence
   that  he  had  acquired  the property rights  to  the  PROMIS  computer
   software and that as of 1987 "all U.S. intelligence agencies, including
   the  Defense Intelligence Agency,  the Central Intelligence Agency  and
   the National Security Agency, were using the PROMIS computer software."
   Ben-Menashe  further  states in his affidavit that Brian consummated  a
   sale  of  the PROMIS computer software to the Government of  Israel  in
   1987.

     He  further claimed that Brian also sold the PROMIS computer software
   to  Iraqi Military Intelligence.  According to Ben-Menashe's affidavit,
   the   Israeli  intelligence  officer  learned  of  this  sale  from  an
   eyewitness who helped Brian broker the sale in his office in  Santiago,
   Chile--Carlos Carduen of Carduen Industries.  Carduen has been a  major
   supplier to the Government of Iraq with weapons and munitions.

     The  Federal Government of Canada has admitted that  INSLAW's  PROMIS
   software  is currently operating in at least two  federal  departments,
   including the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. The Mounties are using the
   program in 900 locations in Canada.

     INSLAW never sold its software to Canada,  Iraq, Israel,  the Central
   Intelligence  Agency or the National Security Agency.  It also has  not
   been  paid  by  the Justice Department for its use,  despite  the  $6.8
   million ruling in INSLAW's favor.

     The Justice Department insists that the FBI is not using  the  PROMIS
   program.   Yet  FBI  Director William  Sessions  and  Deputy  Assistant
   Director  Kier Boyd,  have made it clear that the FBI now is unable  or
   unwilling  to provide assurances that pirated software is not  included
   in the case management information system used by FBI field offices.

     And  in  a  startling development,  a  man named  Charles  Hayes  has
   asserted  that  the  U.S.  government has pirated the  PROMIS  computer
   program.   The Justice Department has sued Hayes in the U.S.   District
   Court in Lexington, Kentucky, seeking to compel him to return copies of
   computer software left on equipment Hayes'  salvage business  purchased
   from  the  U.S.   Attorney's Office in Lexington.  Hayes  has  publicly
   claimed  that  the  salvaged  equipment  contained  pirated  copies  of
   INSLAW's PROMIS software.

     One cover-up begets another cover-up? This is how Watergate spread.




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