U.S.
visas continue to be handled by foreign contractors, Foreign contractors are also involved in skimming from U.S.
visa fees. Wayne Madsen 12/15/15, Infowars.com
The U.S.
State Department, under both presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton and current
Secretary of State John Kerry, has continued a policy of outsourcing the
preparation and acceptance of U.S. visa forms by outside contractors. In fact, the U.S. embassy in
Islamabad referenced on its website a “new system” operating worldwide that
handles visa applications.
Accused San Bernardino Islamic State
terrorist Tashfeen Malik was approved for a K-1 fiance visa by the U.S. embassy
in Islamabad, Pakistan even though she had a history of involvement with
radical jihadist Salafist groups in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and
jihadist-oriented social media sites.
Malik obtained her K-1 visa after
she became engaged to U.S. citizen and fellow accused terrorist killer Syed
Rizwan Farook. Malik and Farook died during a shootout with police after they
shot up a San Bernardino County health facility’s Christmas party, killing 14
people. The corporate media is reporting
that Malik passed three background checks conducted by the U.S. visa office at
the U.S. Embassy in Islamabad.
However, what the State Department
is not saying is that foreign nationals, including Pakistani nationals at U.S.
visa offices in Islamabad and Karachi, are integrated into the visa application
process. Pakistani nationals who are both foreign service nationals (FSNs —
embassy and consular employees who are citizens of the host country) and
outside contractors who, among other tasks, collect visa application fees.
WMR previously reported on the
security and fraud pitfalls associated with the U.S. visa application process
being outsourced to foreign nationals. It is also noteworthy that after WMR
posted information discovered on the U.S. Islamabad embassy website about the
involvement of contractors at U.S. diplomatic missions in Pakistan, the State
Department quickly scrubbed the information faster than it deleted emails from
Mrs. Clinton’s private email server.
The following paragraph appeared on
the website of the U.S. embassy in Islamabad before it was deleted: “The
Embassy and Consulate General of the United States of America in Islamabad and
Karachi, Pakistan will transition to a new appointment and document delivery
service for the non-immigrant visa unit as of August 24, 2014. This new system,
which is being implemented in phases at U.S. Embassies and Consulates
worldwide, is designed to be more comprehensive and user-friendly. It replaces
the current appointment system of scheduling at Amex and Speedex locations in
Pakistan, though these contractors
will also be involved in the new system.”
If the outsourcing to contractors is
problem-free, it is certain the State Department, which is a notorious center
of status quo enthusiasm, would
not have pulled down the reference to contractors. Amex refers to American
Express Travel Services in Pakistan, which is but one of several contractors
involved in handling U.S. visa applications.
U.S. Visa screening and approval program involves foreign nationals and outsource firms. The system has been plagued with fraud and security lapses.
One outsource firm, Immigration and
Naturalization Service (INS) contractor Affiliated Computer Systems (ACS) of
Dallas, oversaw the approval of student visas. ACS was the firm that managed
the INS Student Processing Center in London, Kentucky.
On March 11, 2002, six months after
Mohammed Atta and Marwan al Shehhi allegedly flew planes into the World Trade
Center, their Venice, Florida flight school, Huffman Aviation, received INS
visa approval forms from ACS granting Atta and al Shehhi student visas for their
stay in the United States.
After this editor’s initial
investigative report about ACS appeared in mid-2004, I was contacted by veteran
investigative journalist Gary Webb. Webb stated that he read my story
about ACS and said he was pursuing another investigation of the company for its
alleged involvement in a fraudulent parking meter contract in the city of
Sacramento. Webb suggested that we periodically compare notes via email on what
we had discovered about ACS.
On December 10, 2004, after several
months of exchanging emails, Webb reportedly committed suicide at his Carmichael,
California home. It was officially concluded that
Webb shot himself twice in his head. Sacramento County Coroner Robert Lyons
stated, “It’s unusual in a suicide case to have two shots.”
Foreign contractors are also
involved in skimming from U.S. visa fees, especially on hefty fees required for
journalist visas.
On August 28, 2006, WMR reported on
these embassy “slush funds” — Copenhagen and Berlin, through a bank wire
contrivance, require visa fees to be paid into special bank accounts
established by the various U.S. embassies. In Germany, the Bush cronies have
cut a deal with a small outfit called Roskos and Meier OHG, a 23-person
subsidiary of the giant banking consortium, Alianz Group.
Roskos and Meier has only been
around since 1994 when Messrs. Roskos and Meier formed their company to provide
insurance and financial services in the Berlin-Brandenburg area.
Now they have a lucrative sweetheart
deal with the U.S. embassy to confirm that visa fees have been paid from
individuals applying for visas at the Berlin embassy and Frankfurt consulate.
The visa payments go to a special account established at Dresdner Bank AG
Berlin, Bank Routing Number (BLZ): 120 800 00, Account No. (Kontonr.) —
405-125-7600.
In Denmark, the journalist visa
money (600 Danish Kroner) is wired to a special embassy account at the Jyske
Bank Reg. No. 5013, account number 200200-2. Internet banking or bank-to-bank
payments are not permitted. The U.S. embassy in Helsinki requires journalists
to pay 85 Euros into Nordea Bank account #221918-16629.”
Our report continued: “In Spain,
$100 in Euros must be deposited with the Banco Santander Central Hispano
(BSCH), bank account: 0049-1803-54-2210316035. In China, a visa application fee
of 810 RMB (US$101) can only be paid at selected branches of the CITIC
Industrial Bank. In the United Arab Emirates, the $100 application fee must go
to the National Bank of Abu Dhabi. In Cyprus, 46 Cyprus Pounds (US$ 102) lands
in special LAIKI Bank account American Embassy – MRV — Account Number:
070-21-074824.
At the U.S. embassy in London, they
accept credit cards (but no debit cards) or bank transfer or bank cash payments
(Bank Giro) to a Barclays Bank special account.”
Morten Torkildsen, a special
investigator for the UN’s International Criminal Tribunal for Yugoslavia,
stated the following concerning the Nicosia U.S. embassy’s favorite Cypriot
bank in a 58-page report on Slobodan Milosevic’s secret foreign holdings.
‘Popular (LAIKI) Bank, the island’s
second largest bank, allowed a group of Yugoslav-controlled front companies to
operate in defiance of UN sanctions. These companies supplied Mr. Milosevic’s
government with fuel, raw materials, spare parts and weapons to pursue wars in
Bosnia in 1992-1996 and in Kosovo in 1998-1999.’
LAIKI’s largest shareholder (at 22
percent) is the powerful Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation (HSBC). Even with all the questions
surrounding LAIKI Bank and its involvement in money laundering for Milosevic
and his regime, the Cypriot bank easily purchased Belgrade, Serbia-based
Centrobanka in January 2005.
Just think of all the various and
differing U.S. embassy visa application fee requirements and bank accounts in
all the countries around the world. Considering all the other financial
malfeasance in the Bush administration, to what degree are these accounts
audited? Can anyone spell ‘slush fund?'”
The Obama administration,
particularly Hillary Clinton and John Kerry, did nothing to reform this visa
morass.
The day after our 2006 report, The Hindu newspaper of India
reported: “A senior State Department official has been charged with accepting
gifts and trips to Las Vegas and New York with exotic dancers from an Indian
national to speed up the visa process for a jewelry company.
The official, Michael John O’Keefe,
deputy Non Immigrant Visa Chief at the American Consulate in Toronto was
indicted on bribery and conspiracy charges, according to an indictment unsealed
on Friday.
Sunil Agrawal, a native of India and
the chief executive of New York-based STS Jewels, has also been charged. It is said that Agrawal sent the
State Department visa official the names of employees who needed to work in the
company and O’Keefe apparently scheduled them outside the normal visa process.
According to the indictment, O’Keefe supposedly ‘fast tracked’ the applications
and brushed aside objections from a subordinate who had noted that terrorists
use jewellery to raise money. In return for the expedited service, O’Keefe was
plied with gifts.
Friday’s indictment, however,
describes a scheme in which O’Keefe fast-tracked applications and approved some
that had been rejected. The prosecution has said that this June after five
approval visas for STS Managers, O’Keefe and two exotic dancers flew to Las
Vegas.”
It is virtually impossible to recoup
visa fees, even when the embassy makes a mistake. From our 2006 report: “. . .
refunds of fees are rarely granted, and generally only in cases in which the
embassy has made an error in processing the visa application. In the case in
which a visa request has been refused or an applicant has erroneously paid the
fee twice, a refund will not be approved.”
But it gets worse. “What happens if
the visa payment confirmation is delayed for some reason? Well, the journalist
can call the U.S. Visa Information Service. But it is at a cost.
Callers are charged 1.86 Euros
(US$2.37) per minute. In Spain and Andorra, the US embassy in Madrid has
figured out another phone scam.
Landline phone inquiries about US
visa status in Spain cost 1.09 Euros per minute but if someone calls on a cell
phone, the charge is higher, 1.51 Euros per minute ($1.93/minute).
That can get pretty expensive if
some bureaucratic nincompoop puts a caller on hold. If a journalist phones the
U.S. visa line in Spain from, say, Morocco or Portugal, an additional $10 per
transaction charge is assessed. But you can charge that to your Visa or Master
Card.”
On April 23, 2007, WMR reported on
the continued outsourcing of the U.S. visa handling process: “If someone wishes
to apply for a visa to come to the United States, the visa applicant contacts a
non-U.S. embassy local contractor to apply for a visa.
After the individual pays the visa
application fee, they are given a phone number and a PIN number. The applicant
phones a Call Center and has up to 8 minutes to ask questions. The applicant is
then given an appointment date by the Call Center.
When the applicant arrives at the
U.S. embassy Visa Section, the applicant’s documents are screened by another
local contractor in a waiting room before the applicant presents himself or
herself for an interview at the consular window with an American Consular
Officer.
This system, worthy of the Soviet
bureaucracy, increases the number of applicants processed per day. With the
application fee being non-refundable, whether or not a visa is issued, the
number of applicants in one U.S. embassy in Latin America is 300 in one day at
$100 per application, that is $30,000 for one day at one US embassy.
With most of the document scrutiny
placed in the hands of private contractors, where fraud is more rampant
than it is among U.S. consular officials, the Bush administration is putting up
“for sale” entry to the United States. Security is being sacrificed for
increased visa revenues, most of which go to slush funds in foreign bank
accounts.
In 2006, 5,836,718 Immigrant and
Non-Immigrant Visas were issued by U.S. Visa issuing offices around the world. At $100 per visa, that equals a
potential total of $583,671,800 in visa fees being collected by private
contractors under the new outsourcing system.
That does not include the local
bribes and kickbacks. Another Bush legacy will be the criminalization of the
U.S visa process.” On August 21, 2007, WMR ran an additional report on U.S.
visa fraud, this time concerning Israel.
“The Israeli media is reporting that
Chief Superintendent Asher Ben-Artzi, the chief of Israel’s INTERPOL branch, is
under official police investigation for using his contacts at the U.S.
Consulate in Jerusalem to help wanted criminals in Israel obtain visas to
visit the United States. The Russian government has a number of pending
arrest warrants, including INTERPOL Red Notice arrest warrants, for
dual Russian-Israeli citizens, many millionaires and billionaires, who are
living in exile in Israel or are traveling on Israeli passports.”
American visas continue to be for
sale to the highest bidder, whether or not they have a background with ISIL, Al
Qaeda, or the Kosher Nostra Mafia. Wayne Madsen is an investigative journalist who consistently exposes cover-ups from
deep within the government. Want to be the first to learn the latest scandal?
Go to WayneMadsenReport.com subscribe today!
http://www.infowars.com/u-s-visas-continue-to-be-handled-by-foreign-contractors/?AID=7236
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