Banking conspiracy that few people in America have heard of. FOUNDATION X. 15 TRILLION euro scam.
25 2016-06-24 by YourMomsaHoax
Check out this old British guy with an an awesome name, lord James of blackheath, as he breaks a HUGE possible banking conspiracy. He speculates that a 3 letter government agency has gone rogue and is either seeking a 15 trillion euro payout or is attempting to launder tons of money via various banks.
Also, he mentions a man named Johannes (something). I can't understand the last name because sound quality is poor on my phone. Can anyone assist me with this? I'm unfamiliar with the name and if he is rich as he says he is I'd like to know more about him.
The video: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=eL5hqvTWkYg&ab_channel=allmoderncons
14 comments
2 ifltrdby 2016-06-24
And he is so sincere, and so ignored. Long live Sir Blackheath!!!
2 Zeno_of_Citium 2016-06-24
You need to read up on this lot
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Office_of_International_Treasury_Control
Commonly thought to be Foundation X. Same protocols for contact.
I once trolled them as a Royal aide and they rode along for a while eventually asking for money. It's an advance fee fraud.
1 onedialectic 2016-06-24
Can you please explain more. I'd love to hear about what happened.
1 Zeno_of_Citium 2016-06-24
In about 2009 I read about them, looked at their website and though that they couldn't possibly be real. I had a few hours to kill so set up a new email account in the name of a senior royal aide (Miles Hunt-Davis) who was then the private secretary to Prince Philip, the Queens husband and sent them an enquiry on behalf of a 'notable public figure' hoping that they would make the connection.
I stated that I was investing a huge amount of cash from various slightly shady deals and would like their help in making those investments confidentially to prevent any connection to my principal (Prince Philip).
They responded thus:
Thank you for your communication of which the content is duly noted.
Can I request that you provide us with a complete definitive report / resume of your funds to enable us to undertake a full due diligence, following the completion of which we will revert back to you.
Should the requested report prove to be substantial in size, please send same by UPS to our Correspondence Receiving Office as follows:-
Suite 905, AEK Udon, Blg. B, Phosri Road, Udon Thani, 41000, Thaland.
We look forward to your response. In the meantime, we remain,
Yours faithfully
K. Phonsen Administrative Manager
For and on behalf of:-
D.A.Sale.F.LLA. Deputy Chief of the Council for the Cabinet Special Global Envoy, Senior Commercial Advisor to H.E. The Chairman, The Office of International Treasury Control, UN Charter Control No: 10-60847
I then responded that the package had been sent and I awaited their reply but wanted to talk to someone on the phone. I had an old mobile number and gave them that. They didn't want to talk just yet and wanted to discuss an arrangement fee of $5000, just to show my seriousness. It would obviously be refunded (or course it would). It had to be sent Western Union because they didn't trust the regular banks...
So I sent a fake WU receipt (photoshopped from a 419 forum) for a location in the same city but on the other site with a stupid password like 'i am a cup of tea. drink me'.
Several emails went back and forth over a few days and I used different WU locations as they went to the various WU agents to try and cash this money and eventually they stopped responding. I said we should meet in London next time and there was no reply for a while until my old mobile number got a voicemail from an angry Asian man threatening me with high level retaliations and being blacklisted by the UN.
In all an amusing few hours. I hopefully wasted more time for them.
Edit : Added a bit more.
Edit2 : If you are interested in this whole scam sector why not try googling "Global Collateral Accounts". This is the backbone to a whole network of scammers and fraudsters based around the notion that there are trillions of USD in some bank accounts just waiting to be used for mankind.
There are many scammers who claim to be on the trail of these accounts, mixing real news in with their own stories. Men such as http://neilkeenan.com, http://benjaminfulford.typepad.com/ and many others. NESARA is another key word. Be warned, it's a rabbit hole.
1 onedialectic 2016-06-24
Wow, thanks so much for sharing. What is your conclusion? The people you talked to are scammers? The guy in the vid fell for the scam?
1 Zeno_of_Citium 2016-06-24
Oh yes they are scammers but very complex and plausible ones. They go for the big score, not a few hundred dollars.
The Lord speaking about them was probably taken in a little bit but the Lords do have a reputation for frivolous and humorous debate.
1 YourMomsaHoax 2016-06-24
He's almost like a British Bernie sanders.
1 Denmark1976 2016-06-24
Lord James of Blackheath - he is playing a dangerous game. The truth well forever be ignored by the corporate owned mass media.
1 RowdyRoddyPiper 2016-06-24
Johannes Riyadi...
1 YourMomsaHoax 2016-06-24
Apparently Johannes Riyadi may not even be his real name. And this is not the first time lord blackheath has uncovered a financial conspiracy. Who is this blackheath guy and how do I meet him?
http://www.billionairesnewswire.com/search-trillionaires-mystery-yohannes-riyadi/2/
1 NZ_NZ 2016-06-24
15 trillion sounds like the entire GDP of EU or US.
1 YourMomsaHoax 2016-06-24
That sounds about right.
1 louixiii 2016-06-24
HSBC was caught laundering money, and a guy was caught with a couple trillion in "fake" treasury bonds. Any connections?
1 YourMomsaHoax 2016-06-24
u/Louixxi not sure if there is a connection or not, but there a a lot of unanswered questions about this one.