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May 3, 2010

February 18, 2010, Joe Stack flew a plane into the Echelon Building in Austin, Texas. On February 19, the IRS Service Center in South Austin had what were believed to be secret service agents and other feds on ground. One of the top IRS executives discussed the situation with the South Austin Service Center employees. The incident was continually referred to as an accident until one employee became upset and demanded that it not be called an accident.

The following Monday, IRS employees in the South Austin Service Center were told that Echelon employees would be working out of that building. No employee was to be approached or talked to. The Echelon employees met with Tim Geithner and Doug Shulman and others. The contents of the meeting were not released, nor have I heard any rumours about what was discussed. Everyone involved seems to be silent on the subject.

The following two weeks were filled with a cleverly disguised attitude of 'them against us' in all communication from top IRS executives to all employees. I overheard discussions about the incident and how people were terrified that the South Austin Service Center would be the next target.

What people don't know is that one IRS employee in the Murrah building in Oklahoma City and in Echelon survived both attacks. This individual approached me and talked with me. What follows is the discussion I had with this person.

Source: Umm. Hi. I heard you listened to Alex Jones.

Free Thought: Yeah.

S: Can I talk to you for a minute?

FT: Sure. About?

S: Well, I don't know who I can talk to really.

FT: What's it about?

S: Look. I'm a little spooked and I don't know who I can talk to.

FT: Spooked? About what?

S: Has TIGTA (Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration) ever talked to you about listening to Alex Jones?

FT: No. Why?

S: I don't want to say. (A minute pause.) Here's the deal. I survived the Oklahoma City bombing. I also worked in the Echelon building.

FT: You were in both buildings?

S: Yeah.

FT: That must have sucked.

S: It did. I just have to talk to someone about this and I'm spooked.

FT: What's going on?

S: I don't want my name out there. I really don't.

FT: You haven't told me your name.

S: I know.

FT: What happened?

S: Oklahoma City had two bombs going off. Right?

FT: Right.

S: I made myself believe there was no government involvement in it. I didn't want to believe it. I really didn't, but after Echelon, I just can't ignore it anymore.

FT: What happened with Echelon?

S: You'd think a plane flying into a building would sound different than a bomb, but they sounded exactly the same.

FT: Are you kidding?

S: No. (about a minute pause) There was no difference. (Another minute later) I don't want my name out there. Nothing.

FT: People need to know this.

S: I can't have my name out there.

FT: You know I listen to Alex Jones.

S: I know.

FT: I want to report this.

S: I know. Do what you have to. Leave me out of it.

FT: Can I put a transcript of our chat on Free Thought?

S: What's that?

FT: My website.

S: Yeah, just leave my name out of it.

At this point, my source left and I was left with more questions than I had answers for. The key bit of information was the comment of how the two events sounded exactly the same.

The entire time I was talking with my source, the individual was acting paranoid, constantly glancing around and looking behind. It was almost as if this person had been told not to talk to anyone about it.

I will keep up on this and see if I can't get this person to agree to an interview with Alex Jones about the issue.

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