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The Global Intelligence Files - Re: [alpha] INSIGHT-MEXICO-Anonymous kidnapping-US711 The Global Intelligence Files, files released so far... 1119 The Global Intelligence Files Index pages List of Releases by Date of Document unspecified 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 by Date of Release 2001-03-13 2010-03-10 2011-03-05 2011-03-15 2012-01-29 2012-02-27 2012-02-28 2012-02-29 2012-03-01 2012-03-02 2012-03-03 2012-03-04 2012-03-05 2012-03-06 2012-03-07 2012-03-08 2012-03-09 2012-03-10 2012-03-11 2012-03-12 2012-03-13 2012-03-14 2012-03-15 2012-03-16 2012-03-17 2012-03-19 2012-03-20 2012-03-23 2012-03-25 2012-03-26 2012-03-27 2012-04-01 2012-04-02 2012-04-24 2012-04-26 2012-04-30 2012-05-10 2012-06-18 2012-06-20 Our Partners ABC Color - Paraguay Al Akhbar - Lebanon Al Masry Al Youm - Egypt Asia Sentinel - Hong Kong Bivol - Bulgaria Carta Capital - Brazil CIPER - Chile Dawn Media - Pakistan L'Espresso - Italy La Repubblica - Italy La Jornada - Mexico La Nacion - Costa Rica Malaysia Today - Malaysia McClatchy - United States Nawaat - Tunisia NDR/ARD - Germany Owni - France Pagina 12 - Argentina Philip Dorling - Fairfax media contributor - Australia Plaza Publica - Guatemala Publica - Brazil Publico.es - Spain Rolling Stone - United States Russian Reporter - Russia Ta Nea - Greece Taraf - Turkey The Hindu - India The Yes Men - Bhopal Activists Sunday Star-Times - New Zealand Community resources Supporters Support Wikileaks Follow us on Twitter Twitter this Follow us on Facebook courage is contagious The Global Intelligence Files On Monday February 27th, 2012, WikiLeaks began publishing The Global Intelligence Files, over five million e-mails from the Texas headquartered "global intelligence" company Stratfor. The e-mails date between July 2004 and late December 2011. They reveal the inner workings of a company that fronts as an intelligence publisher, but provides confidential intelligence services to large corporations, such as Bhopal's Dow Chemical Co., Lockheed Martin, Northrop Grumman, Raytheon and government agencies, including the US Department of Homeland Security, the US Marines and the US Defence Intelligence Agency. The emails show Stratfor's web of informers, pay-off structure, payment laundering techniques and psychological methods. Re: [alpha] INSIGHT-MEXICO-Anonymous kidnapping-US711 Email-ID 3963716 Date 2011-11-11 13:59:34 From richmond@stratfor.com To alpha@stratfor.com List-Name alpha@stratfor.com We discussed the Anonymous case with our hacker buddies yesterday. They were surprised that the FBI hasn't taken advantage of this situation to generate chaos within the cartel community by using the Anonymous moniker to start to publish cartel leadership info. On 11/10/11 1:27 PM, Marc Lanthemann wrote: Source Code: US711 PUBLICATION: Yes ATTRIBUTION: STRATFOR Security source SOURCE DESCRIPTION: US Law enforcement Agent with Border Liaison responsibilities SOURCE RELIABILITY: A ITEM CREDIBILITY: D (source isn't able to confirm either way but this is his take) SPECIAL HANDLING: None SOURCE HANDLER: Fred I have just one question about this anonymous hacker being kidnapped article down below. If the hacker was anonymous then how could he/she be kidnapped as no one would know who he/she was, because he/she was anonymous. If he/she was kidnapped then he/she was not anonymous, because someone knew who he/she was to kidnap him/her in the first place. It is anonymous who is announcing the release of this kidnapped victim and not the Zetas. I do not think the Zetas would release a kidnapping victim anyway not under such threats. If they did they already know who anonymous is as I am certain they would have interrogated the anonymous victim before letting him/her go. This is why I do not even believe there was a kidnapping in the first place. If the Zetas can find out who anonymous is so can the Mexican and U.S. Governments. The Zetas are not that good above what the U.S. and Mexican Governments can do. Yep I think the kidnapping was a hoax. Mexican Drug Cartel Frees Kidnapped Anonymous Hacker http://img.ibtimes.com/www/data/images/middle/2011/10/05/169157-anonymous.jpg November 10, 2011 10:55 AM EST Anonymous Takes On Mexican Drug Cartel After Kidnapping of Hacker The unidentified hacker, who was kidnapped by the Zetas in the eastern Mexican port of Veracruz, was freed before the Nov. 5 deadline set by Anonymous, the Mexican TV station Televisa reported Wednesday. An Anonymous member using the nickname @anohispano announced the release of the kidnapped hacker on Twitter. Mexican authorities, who have no verification of the kidnapping, had no comment. The Anonymous in Mexico announced on a YouTube video last month its demand that Zetas release the kidnapped member warning that failing to do so will force hackers to reveal online the names of "taxi drivers, journalists and police officers" serving the violent drug trafficking group known for displaying the bodies of its executed victims in public. In the "Anonymous Veracruz" video, which the U.S. security consultancy Stratfor released, according to Courier Mail, a hacker wearing the mask of Guy Fawkes, spoke in Spanish threatening retaliation against the Zetas if the kidnapped hacker is not released. Stratfor warned on Oct. 28 that "loss of life will be a certain consequence if Anonymous releases the identities of individuals cooperating with cartels," according to the blog "eats shoots n' leaves by Richard Brenneman citing a report from The Guardians. Stratfor said the drug trafficking gang had hired security experts to track down the hackers and kidnap, hurt or kill them. The Guardians report also said that some Anonymous members disagree with the plan to expose collaborators of the Zetas while others claim that the kidnapping was a hoax. -- Jennifer Richmond STRATFOR w: 512-744-4324 c: 512-422-9335 richmond@stratfor.com www.stratfor.com

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