Bill Warner private investigator, consultant to the FBI and ICE on support
of terrorism cases and the US Secret Service on money laundering cases.
WBI Inc Private detectives and investigators
use many methods to determine the facts.













Malpractice Suits/Worker's Comp.
WBI provides surveillance to save millions of dollars for
doctors, insurance carriers and government agencies by
exposing fraudulent and exaggerated injury claims.
In-depth Background Investigative Searches;
1).  Auto Accident history.
2).  Bankruptcies, liens and judgements.
3).  Marriage license records.
4).  Incarceration records, COUNTY, STATE AND FEDERAL
5).  Workman's Compensation Claim History.
6).  Motor vehicle, boat and trailer registration.
7).  Criminal searches - FDLE
8).  County criminal searches.
9).  Nationwide Wants & Warrants.
10).Social Security number trace.
11).Property & Casualty Searches.
12).Contractors Licensing Searches.
13),Driver's License Searches, history of accident reports.






WBI Inc private detectives and investigators are trained to
perform physical surveillance. They may observe a site, such
as the home of a subject, from an inconspicuous location or a
vehicle. They continue the surveillance, which is often carried
out using still and video cameras, binoculars, and a cell phone,
until the desired evidence is obtained. This watching and
waiting often continues for a long time, there is a $500.00 min.
start up fee and the hourly rate for an investigation is $50.00
per hour with a 10 hour min.

WBI Inc private detectives also may perform computer database
searches which allow investigators to quickly obtain massive
amounts of information on individuals’ prior arrests,
convictions, and civil judgments.











Online Dating; Everyone's doing it - over 40 percent of U.S.
singles are finding matches online. That's more than 40 million
single Americans cruising the Internet looking for love (based
on census results that say there are over 100 million single
Americans).
So the Internet must be a great place to find true love, right?
Not so fast. While online dating can be a great way to find
someone new, dating sites are littered with scam artists,
cheaters, and straight-up liars.  Don't believe everything you
see out there. In order to help sort out the winners from the
losers, contact
Bill Warner at WBI for a complete background
check, email address
wbi@comcast.net
CLICK HERE TO VIEW  THE DAILY BLOG OF PI BILL WARNER
________________________________________________












E-Sleuthing the E-Jihad
Private investigator Bill Warner in Sarasota Florida, has been e-
sleuthing and getting Islamic websites, the new enormous,
wide open battlefield for the global jihad,  taken down and
removed.

Ordinary "Joe's" are tracking down U.S. Web sites used by al
Qaeda and jihadi sympathizers and then using the Internet
(Newspaper Reporters) to persuade the service providers
(Hosting companies) to snuff out the sites and it is working.

One site hosted in Phoenix and shut down on February 1st 2008
was ek-ls.org  which was one of six previously
hosted in
Tampa, said Paul Henry, an Internet security specialist. It was
Henry who uncovered a new al-Qaida encryption program
hosted at al-ekhlaas.info, the web site taken down in Tampa on
Monday Jan 28th 2008.  The Arizona Republic story is available

here.......

The latest set of al-Qaida supported websites al-hesbah.com
fell today, February 19th 2008 in Tampa Fla. Not one of the al-
Qaida websites is back up and running.

This is the third major al-Qaida website that he, Howard
Altman Tampa Tribune, Robert Anglin Arizona Republic  have
shut down since Jan 28th 2008 . The site, www.alhesbah.net/v/
is now shut down, off the internet, no more Jihad propoaganda
(for now) for Palestinians to kill the Jews and Americans.

Al-Qaida Supporters' Web Site Hosted By Tampa Company (Is
now shut down) By HOWARD ALTMAN, The Tampa Tribune

TAMPA - One of al-Qaida supporters' oldest and most stable
Web sites is being hosted in Tampa and contains a 21-minute
audio clip calling for Palestinians to attack Jews and the
United States, according to organizations that track jihadists
online.  
http://wwwwbipicomlink.blogspot.com/

The site, www.alhesbah.net/v/,  is the "principal and largest
jihadi forum of supporters of al-Qaida and global jihad, and the
oldest existing forums," said Reuven Paz, director of the
Jerusalem-based
Project for the Research of Islamist
Movements. "However, it is much more than just a forum and
includes many other functions of very comprehensive and
thorough indoctrination, guidance, recruitment for support,
virtual military training and creation of global Islamic
solidarity."  In the recording, he "urges the Palestinians to
participate in the war against 'the unbelievers, headed by the U.
S., Europe and Iran' who are attacking Islam. He stresses that
they must begin by fighting the Jews, who are their nearest
enemies," according to
MEMRI.
_____________________________________________________________________________

"Cheaters"..... We know your moves






Sudden increase in time away from home.

Decreased sexual interest with you.

Cheating spouse is often distracted and day dreaming.

Cheating husband or wife is often “unavailable” while at work.





Cheating spouse attends new functions outside of work or not wants to
go alone,  involvement in "Swinger clubs" online.

Cell phone calls from you are not returned in timely fashion.

Cheating spouse leaves house or goes to other rooms to talk on the
telephone.

Cheating spouse uses computer alone and secretly.

Cheating spouse asks about your schedule more often than usual.

Mileage on car is high yet he / she reports only short distance errands.

Clothes smell of perfume or cologne.

Cheating spouse gets his / her laundry done independently.

Unexplained payments on bank statements.

Cheating spouse has more cash on hand without accountability.

Cell phone bills contain call with long duration.

Cheating spouse now has a phone card but never used one before.

Cheating wife or husband has unexplained receipts in wallet or purse

Cheating spouse has suspicious phone voice-mail messages.

Cheating spouse has suspicious cell phone numbers stored or dialed.

Internet web browser history list (this is a record of web sites visited)
contains unusual sites.

Cheating spouse begins to use new or free e-mail account.

Cheating spouse is suddenly deleting e-mail messages.

Contact
WBI Inc Private Detective Agency to find out the truth,
today..............
941-926-1926 or email wbi@comcast.net

______________________________________________________
SARASOTA PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR BILL
WARNER TRACKS AL-QAEDA WEBSITE TO TAMPA
By HOWARD ALTMAN, The Tampa Tribune
Published: February 22, 2008





Tampa continues to be the focus of an international game of Internet whack-a-
mole between jihadists who put up Web sites and organizations and
individuals who try to shut them down.

For the third time in a month,
Sarasota-based private investigator Bill Warner
has tracked to a Tampa hosting company what investigators call a significant
Web site used by jihadists for communications, recruitment and fundraising.
The company is based in the same building as the U.S. attorney's office.

The site, www.alekhlaas.info, appears to show images of mujahedeen firing on
U.S. troops in Afghanistan, among other images. The Web site was hosted by
Noc4Hosts Inc. until it was taken down this month after a call from The Tampa
Tribune.  Warner, who says he tracks jihadists online to disrupt their activities,
says he noticed today that the site once again is being hosted by Noc4Hosts.

Previous incarnations of the Web site have contained programs to give
jihadists more secure communications capabilities.

This week, another site considered to be a key conduit for jihadists was taken
down by Noc4Hosts after a call from the Tribune. That site, www.alhesbah.
net/v/, is considered the principal and largest jihadist forum of supporters of
al-Qaida and global jihad and the oldest, said Reuven Paz, director of the
Jerusalem-based Project for the Research of Islamist Movements.

That site remains offline, as per
Sarasota Private Investigator Bill Warner.

Warner says he goes after these sites, with the help of organizations such as
the Middle East Media Research Institute, because "the propaganda war is
being fought by al-Qaida and its affiliates on the Internet, and the USA hasn't
even stepped onto the court."  
http://wwwwbipicomlink.blogspot.com/

"Web sites such as www .alekhlaas.info provide inspiration and technical
advice for would-be terrorists all over the world,"
Warner said.

Noc4Hosts Inc. general manager Steven Eschweiler could not immediately be
reached for comment. In the past, he has said he takes down sites as soon as
he is informed about them.  Last month he said Noc4Hosts "is not in cahoots
with al-Qaida."

He said a site that his company took down "was one of several hundred
thousand the company hosts."  Web-hosting companies keep banks of
computer servers where individual Web sites are based.

"If there is anything anti-American, we will take them down," Eschweiler said
last month. "We work closely with authorities any time something like this
comes up."  Editor Howard Altman can be reached at 813-259-7629 or
haltman@tampatrib.com.
CLICK HERE FOR THE DAILY BLOG OF SARASOTA INVESTIGATOR BILL WARNER
_____________________________________________________________________

CONTACT BILL WARNER AT WBI PRIVATE
DETECTIVE AGENCY IN SARASOTA FL




WBI Private Detective Agency provides surveillance teams to
investigate cheating spouses, confidential reports with
information and photos of the "other" person, call 941-926-1926
or email Bill Warner at  
wbi@comcast.net
______________________________________________________

PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR BILL WARNER SHUTS
DOWN ANOTHER TERROR WEBSITE IN TAMPA FL







TAMPA (Bay News 9) -- There are radical Islamic web sites now being hosted by
U.S. companies and possibly even in Tampa.  

Sarasota private investigator Bill Warner said last year he discovered what is
known as one of the largest jihadist web sites currently online being hosted
through a web company in Tampa.  "This is how you sign up with al-Qaida
now," Warner said. "You don't have to go to Pakistan or Afghanistan anymore.
You do it on the Internet. Explosives training, arms training, everything you
need is on these web sites 24/7; jihad central." SEE
VIDEO HERE

Web hosting companies in the U.S. have expanding bandwidth and security
encryption, exactly what terror organizations such as al-Qaida are looking for.  
More Information  Watch the story E-mail TV Report Jason Lanning In a flash
video on one of the sites homepage an American minesweeper is blown up in
Iraq and what appears to be al-Qaida fighters firing on U.S. troops.  In the
forum section the user can find a detailed report of the death and destruction
terrorists caused U.S. troops in Iraq just last month.  Bay News 9 contacted the
Tampa based web hosting company about the site. And although late last year
the sites IP address traced to NOC4Hosts Inc. in Tampa, the site now takes on
a different IP address corresponding with a host in Amman, Jordan.
CLICK HERE FOR THE DAILY BLOG OF SARASOTA INVESTIGATOR BILL WARNER
_________________________________________________________________

WBI PRIVATE DETECTIVE AGENCY,
FIND OUT IF YOUR SPOUSE IS
CHEATING, CALL 941-926-1926
email wbi@comcast.net
Most affairs start out at work place given that we spend a good
deal of our time in the office especially if your work is project
base. If you regularly meet up with your spouse's co-workers
and one day if you find that the friendly camaraderie that exists
between you suddenly turns uncomfortable. Chances are your
spouse is having an affair with yours truly or they've had a
minor fling. That would explain the awkwardness that you are
experiencing.

A change in behaviour is apparent when you have something to
hide. This goes the same for spouses who are cheating too.
They'll be very edgy and when questioned, usually give a very
elusive kind of answer. Spending hours on end in front of the
computer long after you are in bed, giving the excuse that work
is piling up and when you check their mailbox, it is surprisingly
empty.

If your spouse suddenly shows extreme interest in a certain
activity which he or she has absolutely no interest in till
recently, you need not take a second guess that something is
amiss. This new interest is usually followed up by a
preoccupation with their appearance; such as a new hair style,
going on a shopping spree to replenish the wardrobe with the
latest fashionable clothes.

If that is not enough to arouse your suspicions, then the
frequent phone calls where conversations are carried out in a
low voice or barely audible whispers should sound the alarm in
your head. The next time you see your spouse receiving such
calls, walk up to him or her, chances are the conversation will
end before you are within earshot. And if you happen to pick up
your spouse call, the caller would immediately hang up, Now it
is time to call WBI Private Detective Agency 941-926-1926.

__________________________________________________________________

Cyber Vigilantes (Bill Warner) Track
Extremist Web Sites, Intelligence
Experts Balk at Effort

Saturday, March 22, 2008

By Carmen Gentile


MIAMI, Fla. —  While the debate grows on how to tackle global
jihadism on the Internet, some security experts warn that
"cyber vigilantes" — people who track and help shut down
terror-related Web sites — are compromising government
investigations with their amateur sleuthing tactics.

Michael Radu, a senior fellow at the Foreign Policy Research
Institute and an expert on terror-related Web sites, said the
government is already overburdened trying to monitor the
thousands of sites on the Web believed to contain radical
Muslim messages. These cyber vigilantes, he said, are not
helping.

“It is very unlikely they will find something of significance in
the Internet that the government doesn’t already know," Radu
said. "They are redundant at best.”

Cyber vigilantes typically troll the Internet, searching message
boards, Web sites and media sharing sites for incendiary
postings from people with ties to terror groups like Al Qaeda.
Using Arabic translation software, they monitor postings and
even assume fake identities to join online conversations.

One of them is
Bill Warner, a Sarasota, Fla.-based private
investigator and a self-proclaimed cyber-crusader.

Just last month alone,
Warner was instrumental in helping shut
down three Web sites hosted by a Tampa Internet service
provider (ISP) that contained text, images and video related to
attacks on U.S. troops in Iraq and Afghanistan.  Click
here for
more on Bill Warner.




One site contained footage of a U.S. military mine sweeper
being blown up by an Improvised Explosive Device (IED).
According to Warner, the site claims that all the troops aboard
the vehicle were killed. (
www.alekhlaas.info)

The same site, which is still operational, shows what appears
to be footage of fighters in Afghanistan firing on U.S. troops
and what is believed to be the destruction of an American mine
sweeper in Iraq.
Warner said the popular site is nearing 19 million hits over the
last 10 months, and is among a growing number meant to incite
would-be followers to join the ranks of extremist groups like Al
Qaeda and provide information on how to carry out attacks and
build weapons.

"This is what Al Qaeda does now,"
said Warner.  He said the
World Wide Web is where the real fight for global jihad is being
fought.

Sites such as these are often hosted by ISPs in the U.S.
because they have large bandwidth, making posting and
viewing large videos easier. Because of the anonymous nature
of the Internet and foreign language content, U.S.-based ISPs
can't provide sufficient screening and oversight.

Warner said he alerted the local police and the FBI in Tampa
after he identified three Web sites hosted by the Florida ISP. In
some cases the sites were removed within hours. But he said
others remained online for days after he reported their presence.

But not everyone thinks
Warner's vigilance is helpful.  "There
are a lot of weekend warriors and quasi vigilantes out there
that think they can do what the government can't," said a
private intelligence contractor for the U.S. government who has
been investigating jihadist Web sites for more than 15 years.
The contractor spoke to FOXNews.com on condition of
anonymity due to his continuing work with U.S. intelligence.

He said that when cyber-sleuths alert authorities or ISPs to the
whereabouts of an extremist site, the page is removed — only
to reappear somewhere else, and sometimes within hours.

"For those working in the intelligence community, it becomes
extremely costly, because then they have to go looking for the
sites all over again," said the private intelligence contractor,
noting that U.S. intelligence often knows of the sites for a long
time and monitors their traffic to look for clues to their origins,
creators and visitors.

When the site comes down, he said, intelligence investigations
can be ruined.  "They have good intentions, but end up doing
more harm than good," he said.

But Yigal Carmon, President of the
Middle East Media Research
Institute, a Middle East media monitoring group, said the sites
reported by Warner are tools of "ideological recruitment" that
should be removed from the Internet entirely, and especially
from American ISPs.

"Why is it that [an] American ISP can host them?" Carmon
asked. "When these sites appear there, the whole war on
terrorism becomes a joke."

Lt. Col. Joseph Felter of West Point’s Combating Terrorism
Center said the increased participation to battle online
terrorists is a good thing.

"The more people that we get involved combating the threat,
the better,” said Felter. “God knows the enemies are getting a
whole lot of people on board.”

But Radu warns that without specific knowledge of extremist
groups or languages like Arabic, Urdu and Farsi, Cyber
vigilantes don't always understand what they're looking at.

“Those people are nuisances, nuisances that already burden an
overworked government and should be discouraged,” Radu said.
“No matter what their intentions are, they are overburdening
the government” and “have nothing to contribute.”

Cyber vigilante Aaron Wiseburd has taken a similar approach to
Warner, tackling terror-related Web sites and reporting his
findings to authorities.

Wiseburd, the creator of the Web monitoring site Internet
Haganah, which collects and stores intelligence for
governments to use, said he was responsible for the
dismantling of thousands of extremist sites.

Weisburd's critics say posting of sensitive material on his site
may reveal too much and jeopardize ongoing investigations.

Wiseburd is reticent to discuss his efforts, due to safety
concerns — he said he has received death threats and a
handwritten note mailed to his home from a disgruntled site
creator. But he said he won't stop fighting the emerging threat
of cyber terrorism.

He and
Warner say their work is an important part of stopping
terrorist groups from gaining a recruiting foothold in the U.S.
and inspiring others to form their own spin-off extremist groups.

"If a Web site is calling for U.S. citizens to be killed, it should
be shut down,"
Warner said. "If it incites these wackos who
don't have direct allegiance to Al Qaeda to commit attacks,
then it shouldn't be on the Internet, period."

But a private intelligence contractor said winning the War on
Terror isn't just about shutting down sites; it's about tackling
the heart of the problem.  "Great. Somebody shut down a bunch
of websites. What we're trying to do is find out where the
terrorists are."
CLICK HERE FOR THE DAILY BLOG OF PI BILL WARNER
___________________________________________________________________


Al-Qaida Web site was hosted in Phoenix



Robert Anglen
The Arizona Republic
Feb. 1, 2008 12:00 AM

A Web site used by al-Qaida to recruit car bombers, encourage
war on the West and provide a forum for Islamic militants went
online from Phoenix this week.

The site, a well-known and popular forum for Islamic terrorists
and their sympathizers, was the first to report the death of
senior al-Qaida leader Abu Laith al-Libi in Pakistan this week.

The north Phoenix company hosting the site took it down
Wednesday, just hours after being contacted by The Arizona
Republic.

The Web site,
www.ek-ls.org , facilitates discussions on
weapons, explosives and propaganda and often serves as a
question-and-answer center for terrorists, a review of the Web
site shows.

Bob Cichon, president of Phoenix-based CrystalTech Web
Hosting Inc., said he was unaware of the site's content when
his company posted it earlier this week. He said his company,
which hosts thousands of Web sites, has no association with
extremists or terrorists.

"We are Americans," he said, adding that his staff had no way
to research the Web site because it was in Arabic. "The site is
down now."

The incident reflects a recent push by al-Qaida and other
terrorist groups to spread their message, often using Internet
hosts in the United States. Although private companies can
refuse to host any Web site, they often do little to monitor their
sites' content.

Cichon said the site was sold to CrystalTech by another
company. Computer records show the domain name is owned by
a person using the address of another Web-hosting company in
California. The company, Dynadot in Palo Alto, declined to
provide any information about the person.

The site includes video casts of an American tank being
bombed,
messages from al-Qaida leaders and forums in which
terrorist acts are openly discussed, according to the Middle
East Media Research Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based non-
profit group that tracks and translates Islamic Web sites.

"The Web site has ideological and operations functions. . . .
There is information about explosives, training, security and
technology," said Eli Alshech, director of the institute's Jihad
and Terrorism Studies Project. "It is very closely associated
with al-Qaida, if not directly related."

Alshech said the Web site's name is
Ikhlas, which means
"dedication of faithfulness or dedication to the jihad cause." He
said it is one of the most popular Web sites for Middle Eastern
extremists and was the first to report the death of Libi, an al-
Qaida commander in Pakistan.

Libi, 41, was on the military's most-wanted list and was
suspected of planning and executing attacks against the United
States, including the bombing of an air base in Afghanistan.

Although the Web site was taken down by the Phoenix hosting
company, Alshech said, it has other domain names and hosts
around the world that allow it to remain online using various
Web addresses.

"It is the most stable jihad Web site," he said, pointing out that
the site has had nearly 18 million page hits or viewers, 10
million of which were in the past 10 months.

"The public should be aware of it," he added.

Alshech said the disruption caused by the Phoenix shutdown
wouldn't last long.

"It moved from Tampa just a week ago to Arizona," he said.
"Let's see where it will pop up next. We'll know tomorrow."

FBI Special Agent Manuel Johnson of Phoenix said his agency
is aware of Web sites promoting terrorism but said he could not
talk specifically about the Phoenix site because of national-
security concerns.

"We investigate specific threats of violence while balancing
adherence to constitutional protections," he said. "With the
Internet today, there are blogs and Web sites advocating all
kinds of matters."

The U.S. Attorney's Office in Phoenix did not return calls
Thursday.

Among topics recently featured on the Web site:

• Pleas by an al-Qaida operative for Americans to turn against
their government.

• Calls for Palestinian militants and Saudi Arabia to attack
President Bush with "bombs and traps" during a visit to the
Middle East.

• The pros and cons of a terrorist attack in Paris posted by
someone calling himself Al-Murabit Al-Muwahhid, or the
Monotheistic Jihad Fighter.

• Questions about whether extremists residing in Great Britain
can carry out terrorist attacks on British soil.

• An announcement inviting the public to engage in a question-
and-answer session with Osama bin Laden's deputy, Ayman al-
Zawahiri, via the Internet.

• Death threats against the family and friends of a conservative
Dutch politician and filmmaker who plans to release a film
critical of the Quran.

















Bill Warner, a Sarasota, Fla., private investigator who has
worked with federal agencies on terrorist-related issues, has
been tracking terrorist-related Web sites for months.  "The Web
sites are a big part of the support network of terrorism
financially," he said. "They use the Web sites to request money
from the U.S. and the U.K. They ask people to take money to
Pakistan."

Warner said he blames Web-hosting companies for failing to
monitor content. Instead, he said, they wait until the site is
brought to their attention to take action.

"All you've got to do is look,"
Warner said, pointing to the
Phoenix Web site as an example. "You are one click away.
First, there is a very benign front page, but all of a sudden, you
see tanks being blown up and Osama bin Laden and martyrs. It
doesn't matter that you can't read Arabic."

Reach the reporter at robert.anglen@arizonarepublic.com or 602-
444-8694.  
Sarasota Private Investigator Bill Warner

_________________________________________________________________

Sarasota Private Investigator Bill
Warner, a blog dedicated to terrorism
research and confronting al-Qaeda
websites. email wbi@comcast.net


Do Cybersleuths Fight Terrorism or Cause Trouble  
Jun 19th 2008  By Howard Altman

Howard Altman is now Courts and Cops Team Leader/Editor
for The Tampa Tribune

If you haven't noticed, YouTube features much more troubling
fare than old clips of "The Muppet Show" and comedy routines
about the history of dance. Jihadi fighters regularly post
deaths of U.S. soldiers, assassinations of civilians and other
images intended to encourage violence against the West.

In late May, Sen. Joseph Lieberman (D-Conn) called for Google
to take down these videos that include incendiary speeches
by al-Qaida leadership."Islamist terrorist organizations use
YouTube to disseminate their propaganda, enlist followers,
and provide weapons training," the senator wrote in a letter to
Google. "YouTube also, unwittingly, permits Islamist terrorist
groups to maintain an active, pervasive, and amplified voice."

Responding on the YouTube blog, the editors thanked the
senator for alerting them to videos that violated their policies,
but stopped short of removing videos that don't have violence
or hate speech: "[R}ather than stifle debate we allow our users
to view all acceptable content and make up their own minds."
YouTube may be the biggest site where pro-jihadi videos are
posted, but it's far from the only one.

For more than seven years, a small cadre of civilians, who
often agree with Lieberman's stance, have taken it upon
themselves to wage war on al-Qaida's hijacking of the
information superhighway. But many in the intelligence
community say these amateur detectives -- who spend their
time trying to offending sites shut down or go online
pretending to be terrorists to capture the real ones -- are doing
more to cause trouble than solve crimes.

Shortly after 9/11, Glen Jenvey, an unemployed truck driver
living near Stonehenge, began pretending to be a Pakistani
man who believed in violent jihad. His counterterrorism, which
took place in the second-floor study of his stone house, helped
lead to the arrest of Abu Hamza al-Masri, one of Europe's most
vitriolic clerics. "You have to hand it to these people," says an
Indian military official who spoke on the condition that he only
be identified as "the brigadier."

Jenvey and other cybersleuths have "done some real work
that has had some real results."  
Working as a private
investigator in Sarasota, Fla., Bill Warner spends part of his
day chasing errant spouses and the rest of his time tracking
down jihadis. Playing a game of Internet Whack-a-Mole,
Warner
has helped take down nine jihadi Web sites in the past six
months, including one of the most important, Alhesbah, a
principal forum for supporters of al-Qaida.

"I started with the Islamic Thinkers Society site in June of
2005, before it became all private and password protected,"
recalls
Warner. "I downloaded a lot of their information and
photos posted of U.S. servicemen being killed or their bodies
mutilated after a firefight in Iraq or Afghanistan. I know what is
posted on these Web sites; they need to be shut down."

Beyond patriotism, cybersleuths state four main reasons for
getting involved in the fight:
Disruption of jihadi Web activities--
Intelligence gathering--
Amateurs are not bound by the legal restrictions governments
are--
Western governments aren't doing enough--
Yet government, military and counterintelligence officials
counter that cybersleuths may be doing more harm than good.

Everyone knows that you never really know who you are
talking to on the Internet.
Cybersleuthing opponents say that's one of several reasons to
leave the work to the professionals:--
Cybersleuths can interfere with government activities.--
There's potential to do more harm than good.--
The work can be dangerous.

Some cybersleuths report ongoing violent threats."I do not
believe it is a good idea for an amateur to pose as a jihadist to
gain entry into a site such as Alekhlaas," says Paul Henry from
SecureComputing.com, which routinely works with
government officials investigating jihadis."If the site is actively
being monitored by a government agency, your action could
result in wasted cycles of the agency taking a look at your
activities that perhaps could be better spent investigating a
real 'bad guy.'"

FBI spokesperson Richard Kolko concurs. "There is inherent
danger in conducting undercover operations and extensive
training is required. ... Furthermore, for evidence to be used in
court, it must be collected in ways that strictly follow the
appropriate laws. Those who are not trained in this area may
collect information or evidence that would not be admissible in
court."But is the government doing enough to fight the war
online?

When al-Qaida's No. 2 man Ayman al-Zawahiri wants the world
to know about the group's latest terrorist attack, he uses the
web as his bullhorn. A recent Senate report highlighted a letter
to the former al-Qaida commander in Iraq, Abu Musab al-
Zarqawi, from Ayman al-Zawahiri: "We are in a battle, and more
than half of this battle is taking place in the battlefield of the
media. And that we are in a media battle in a race for the
hearts and minds of our people."

Al-Qaida members go online to recruit jihadis, raise money
and train members with a combination of videos and manuals
that teach bomb-making, combat techniques and building
nuclear and biological weapons.

"The propaganda war is being fought by al-Qaida and its
affiliates on the Internet, and the USA hasn't even stepped
onto the court," cautions Warner. Pro al-Qaida Web sites are
filled with more than anti-U.S., Israel and Christian vitriol.
There are beheading videos, images of American vehicles
being blown up in Iraq and Afghanistan, calls for the slaughter
of U.S. and Israeli citizens and predictions of imminent terror
attacks.

Warner's frustration with government "inaction" has inspired
him to take the fight into his own hands by tracking Web sites
and getting IP providers to shut down online terrorist
destinations.
Cybersleuths like Warner have infiltrated well-
funded jihadi Web sites and wrought havoc. He says
cybersleuths like him are stepping up to a job the government
should be doing.

A Dallas housewife, who asks that she be identified only as
Mrs. Galt, spends her days going online and chatting with,
among others, lovelorn jihadis. A chain-smoking woman with
big hair, Galt sits in a wood-paneled den pretending to be a
Muslim-American sympathetic to Osama bin Laden. Using
rough, software-created Arabic translations, she's gathered a
great deal of actionable intelligence, according to the brigadier,
that was used by Mumbai in its ongoing battles with Muslims in
Kashmir.

Her work has also gotten the attention of powerful forces close
to home. One day, the FBI knocked on the door wanting to
know why she was online talking about plans for terror attacks.
That was the day Mrs. Galt's husband learned what she'd been
doing during all that time at the computer.

Former Montana judge Shannen Rossmiller says she has been
involved in more than 200 operations as a cybersleuth. On
Shannenrossmiller.com, she lists some of her successes:--
Convincing a man in Pakistan that she was a male, extremist
arms-dealer. After he offered her stolen U.S. stinger missiles
for the jihad, he was arrested. --

Acting as a "terrorism banker" in an al-Qaida chat room,
Rossmiller met a disgruntled American oil engineer named
Michael Curtis Reynolds. The man claimed he was organizing a
cell of Asian Muslims to truck-bomb three critical oil-storage
hubs in the U.S., including the Alaska Pipeline.

In 2006, Reynolds was sentenced to 30 years in prison.--
Meeting "Amir Abdul Rashid" in an al-Qaida chat room. He
revealed himself as an American Muslim convert in Seattle,
whose real identity is National Guard Specialist Ryan
Anderson. Four months of e-mails snared Anderson, who was
offering army battle plans and weapon secrets to al-Qaida. He
was arrested and eventually convicted at court martial of
trying to assist terrorists.But do these anecdotal success
stories add up to a cohesive plan of attack?

Amateur counterterrorists can't agree on whether it's wiser to
keep jihad sites up in order to infiltrate them, or take them
down to stop dissemination of propaganda.Warner fights to
take down jihadi Web sites. Rossmiller wants sites like www.
Alehklaas.info and www.Alhesbah.info -- main jihadi conduits
for recruiting, training, fund-raising and propaganda -- to stay
up so she can gain the trust of real-life jihadis and find out their
plans.

Rossmiller (and other like-minded cybersleuths) cite three
main goals when pretending to be jihadis:-- Intelligence
gathering: Learning what the jihadis are doing by talking to
them.-- Stings: Rossmiller's online activities have resulted in
several arrests, including that of a soldier in Washington State
who thought he was selling classified data to al-Qaida.--
Mis/Disinformation: By posting erroneous information,
cybersleuths hope to disrupt jihadi activities and create
discord among groups and individuals.Despite the success of
Rossmiller and others, many counterintelligence experts think
these sites should be taken down as soon as possible.

Jihadi watchers agree that sites like Alehklaas.info and www.
Alhesbah.info provide a key communications platform for far-
flung groups like al-Qaida, which lack any real hierarchy or
command-and-control apparatus. According to the recent
Senate study "Violent Islamist Extremism, the Internet, and
the Homegrown Terrorist Threat," Web sites and chat rooms
provide "the most accessible source of information" for
connecting "interested individuals with extremists around the
world."For the most part, military, counterintelligence and law
enforcement want these sites taken down immediately.

Keeping jihadi sites online, they say, allows al-Qaida,
Hizballah, Hamas and other fundamentalist groups to continue
spewing propaganda, raising funds and staying in touch."The
intelligence value of these sites is misguided," argues
intelligence investigator Joseph Shadaha. "You cannot have a
forum up, spreading information about how to behave like a
terrorist, hoping to catch someone by luck."Shutting down the
sites accomplishes two main goals, government investigators
say.-- Disrupting jihadi operations-- Reducing propaganda and
recruitment

The Web offers a rare and valuable portal into jihadi activities
that often take place in areas impossible to strike physically.
Jihadis take advantage of open U.S. communication
technology by having some of their sites hosted by U.S.
service providers, says Rossmiller, and we should continue to
let them. "What is important to keep in perspective is that the
jihadis are an enemy out of our reach in the real-world context,
and in the online context they facilitate the use of the Internet
as their weapon.

This is where the inherent value in not disrupting the jihadi
sites presents itself."Dr. Reuven Erlich, director of the
Intelligence and Terrorism Information Center at the Center for
Special Studies in Israel, agrees the sites should stay up."
Taking sites off the Web is only a tactical, short-term solution,"
he says. "The terrorist and jihad organizations quickly find
alternatives and go back online. Only a closely monitored
cooperative international effort can improve the situation."
Despite Erlich's assertions, those who want the sites down say
their approach is more successful.

As director of the Jihad and Terrorism Project at the Middle
East Media Research Institute (MEMRI.org), Eli Alshech spends
his days monitoring jihadi Web sites. What he sees is
terrifying. The Web sites help induce more people to blow up
more targets and amplify the justification. "Those who
advocate leaving those sites up -- e.g., intelligence agencies --
to allow better monitoring, assume that words, articles, and
indoctrination have a less destructive force than a bomb. As an
expert on religion and extremism I find this premise very odd.
Whereas a bomb is undoubtedly destructive, its destruction
radius is limited. In contrast, the negative effect of
indoctrination is potentially endless.

It is indoctrination that produces an ever-growing number of
bomb carriers, and, no less importantly, the necessary
audience that legitimizes and thus helps perpetuate the use of
bombs against civilians. Hence, without indoctrination, jihad
groups would find it more difficult to recruit bombers --
especially in Western countries -- and may find themselves
operating in an Islamic audience highly critical of their actions.
Our experience shows that such critical environment almost
always restrains jihad organizations -- even in Iraq."But even
Alshech agrees that the question of what to do with the sites is
separate from whether average citizens should get involved.

Fighting jihadis, says the intelligence community, is
complicated, dangerous work that takes training and skills --
including fluency in Arabic, Farsi, Urdu and other languages --
far beyond the capability of cybersleuths.Amateur
cybersleuthing, for the most part, "has no real value to it,"
says Carlos Paez, a counterintelligence planner at U.S. Central
Command in Tampa who includes monitoring jihadi
communications on his daily to-do list. "The most you can do
is knock a Web site off line. I can tell you right now if I got
knocked off line, I would go to another service provider and in
an hour, be back up."

There is another concern. Men and women working on their
own time make finding bad guys a self-fulfilling prophesy,
according to Clint Watts, former FBI agent and terror analyst at
West Point."These sleuths often search and find connections
that aren't there," says Watts, now a principle at international
security firm PJ Sage. "They create virtual networks that don't
add up on the ground and overstate the connections between
AQ affiliates and AQ central because that is what they are
looking for.

On the Internet, if you look hard enough, you'll always find
what you are looking for." Worse, says Dean Boyd,
spokesperson for the National Security Division of the
Department of Justice, is that cybersleuths can endanger
ongoing investigations or cross the line into illegality."There is
always a danger that members of the public could
unknowingly stumble across, disrupt, or even impede a
federal investigation should they attempt to conduct
undercover investigations on their own," Boyd says. "And, if a
member of the public knowingly commits a crime in
conducting an undercover investigation, he or she could be
held liable. For these and other reasons, we recommend that
undercover investigations be left to trained law enforcement
professionals."

In mid-May, cybersleuth Bill Warner posted a video on
YouTube of a suicide bomber blowing himself up at a
checkpoint in Iraq to make a point about what's happening "in
the war for minds with jihad propaganda that incites would-be
terrorists to violence against the USA."The result?
YouTube
removed Warner's video for having inappropriate content.
Bill Warner email
wbi@comcast.net
_____________________________________________________

FBI MOST WANTED TERRORIST HAS/HAD A VIRGINIA HOSTED
WEBSITE, IT WAS SHUT DOWN, AGAIN, BY SARASOTA
PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR BILL WARNER ON JUNE 24TH 2008.

Dr. Ramadan Abdullah Shallah (formerly of TAMPA FL), who
heads the Palestinian Islamic Jihad (PIJ) organization from his
hiding place in Damascus has his
new terrorist website hosted
in Ashburn Virginia, just outside Washington DC and the FBI
headquarters.

Ramadan Abdullah Shallah is on the FBI Most Wanted Terrorist
list see his
wanted poster here.  SEE video here.

Ramadan Abdullah Shallah makes no secret of Iran's
involvement in Islamic Jihad activities: "The Palestinian
Islamic Jihad is another fruit of the Ayatollah Khomeini's
fructuous tree," he said during a 2002 visit to Tehran.

RAMADAN ABDULLAH SHALLAH'S
TERROR WEBSITE
was shut down on May 22ND 2008 in Dallas TX at Softlayer
Tech by
Sarasota Private Investigator Bill Warner but has
resurfaced in Ashburn VA at;
Defender Technologies Group LLC... .
Org Abuse Phone: +1-703-621-3565
Org Abuse Email:
abuse@defenderhosting.com

AS OF 8:14PM 6/24/2008 THE WEBSITE OF RAMADAN
ABDULLAH SHALLAH, THE HEAD OF THE PALESTINIAN
ISLAMIC JIHAD TERRORIST ORGINAZITION HAS BEEN
SUSPENDED, SEE
www.falestiny.net

----- Original Message -----
From: <
abuse@defenderhosting.com>
To: <
wbi@comcast.net> Bill Warner
Sent: Tuesday, June 24, 2008 8:25 PM
Subject: RAMADAN ABDULLAH SHALLAH TERROR WEBSITE
http://www.falestiny.net/

Hi, Thank you very much for alerting us regarding this. The site
is down now. Let us know if we can assist you further.
Regards,
Pooja
Shift Supervisor
Defender Technologies Group, LLC./PowerVPS Support

74.200.79.99
Record Type:IP Address 74.200.79.99
OrgName: Web Hosting Company......
Defender Technologies Group, LLCOrgID:DTGL
Address: 44470 Chilum Place, Building 1
Address: Suite 1197
City:
Ashburn
State Prov: VA
PostalCode: 20147
Country: US

Bill Warner
WBI Inc Private Detective Agency
Sarasota Fl
email wbi@comcast.net
______________________________________________________

Private Investigator Bill Warner of WBI
Inc Private Detective Agency daily blog
dedicated to Terrorism Research and
confronting the websites of al-Qaeda  
http://wwwwbipicomlink.blogspot.com/


HISTORY OF WBI INC PRIVATE DETECTIVE AGENCY
           SARASOTA FLORIDA
      Florida License A-9500364
             
WWW.WBIPI.COM

WBI Inc Private Detective Agency began as Warner Bros.
Investigations in 1995 with offices at 1901 Wainwright Ave
Panama City Fl and at 603 Sarasota Quay Sarasota Fl.   WBI Inc
Private Detective Agency has worked on terrorism funding
cases in the State of Florida with the
FBI, the Bureau of
Immigration Customs Enforcement,
(ICE) a Division of the
Department of Homeland Security and the
U. S. Secret Service.

W.B.I. Inc. offers full-service investigations.

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W.B.I. Inc. is a professional full-
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W.B.I.'s
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W.B.I. provides superior services by its administrative and
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Today,
W.B.I. Inc. continues its growth with plans of expansion
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W.B.I. Inc's goal is to
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Call today 941-926-1926 or email
wbi@comcast.net

_______________________________________________________











We all know infidelity is wrong, yet up to
25% of men and 15% of women will cheat
on their spouse at some point in their
lifetime. Find out what makes a cheater
and how to avoid becoming involved with
one.

Infidelity happens with alarming frequency, as recent news
events can confirm. Although more than 95% of people think
that infidelity is wrong, over a lifetime 22%–25% of men and
11%–15% of women will admit to having extramarital sex, and
if you include emotional infidelity, the numbers grow— a lot;
some reputable surveys have estimated more than 40% of all
marriages have some form of infidelity.

So can you tell if someone is going to cheat?

Some people think they can make a conclusion based on
visual cues alone. They blame it on the testosterone levels of
the husband or the fact that the wife doesn’t make her
husband feel like a hero. They are wrong. You can’t tell from
his cheekbones or because his wife ignores him.

Who is Vulnerable?

Research has shown that there is no ONE reason why spouses
cheat on their wives/husbands. Some people do it because
they are powerful and think they can cheat and not get caught;
some because they are not getting love, intimacy or attention
from their spouses; and some because the hot stranger flirts
with them at just the wrong time. There are many reasons why
it happens, and the things that may lead to cheating can be
subtle and hard to see when they start.

Where does it start, and with whom? It’s not as simple as “He’s
a jerk” or
“She can’t control herself.” Researchers have done a
lot of work looking at the type of person who is more likely to
cheat and the type of marriage where cheating is more likely.
And it turns out the roots of infidelity can be very deep. There
are types of people that are more vulnerable to engage in
affairs. It’s probably not surprising that men are more likely to
cheat (especially those who feel powerless and socially
isolated), but both genders can easily fall into the following
groupings:

• Those who crave excitement

• Those who are not religious

• Those who have a history of divorce, sexual abuse or such
psychological problems as depression or bipolar disorder

The roots of cheating can also lie in the quality of the marriage.
Spouses who have a lot of conflict and little warmth and
closeness with their partners and tend to neglect or take for
granted the sexual aspects of their relationships are more
likely to become the perpetrators or the victims of infidelity.

But none of these things means that someone will cheat. No
one is destined to cheat. In fact, cheaters rarely intend to cheat.

Where is the Point of no Return?

More often cheaters find themselves sliding down a slippery
slope before they are ever aware of it. The eventual cheater
may find him- or herself denying the risks of a burgeoning
relationship by thinking, “It’s only lunch, it’s not that big of a
deal”; “It isn’t a big deal if I give her a present”; or “Sure I
kissed him, but we were drunk at the holiday party.”

noncheating spouse may sense that something is wrong
before the cheating occurs. But instead of dealing with the
problem, he or she might be frightened that the marriage will
end or happy at the thought of spending less time fighting. By
avoiding possible confrontation over the issue, the spouse
may actually empower the cheater to slide further down the
slippery slope. In fact, some clinicians argue that the road to
cheating can be paved by both spouses. Certain behaviors
both within and outside of the marriage can dictate the future
path. When one spouse withholds emotionally or physically,
the other spouse may fill that emptiness outside of the
marriage. For example, one spouse feels a need for intimacy
and casually flirts with someone else, and the other spouse
responds not through constructive confrontation but through
silent anger and avoidance/withdrawal. This often leaves the
potential cheater even less satisfied and looking for intimacy
somewhere else.

At some point that moment happens, and the relationship that
was previously innocent becomes something infinitely more
complicated. Some of the scientific evidence I reviewed stated
that cheaters often report that they do so because someone
came on to them and they were drunk, stressed or sad. Yet
their stories are even deeper than a reflexive reaction of lust.
Cheaters also report that infidelity often first happens after a
particularly big argument with their spouses or a spouse
refusing to seek professional help. These altercations leave
the cheating spouse feeling vulnerable or despondent about
the state of the marriage. Remember, marriages that are taken
for granted by either partner are susceptible to infidelity.

How Long do they Typically last?

When it does happen, an affair can last hours, weeks, months
or many years. One researcher reported that the average affair
lasted about six months. Despite what some experts claim,
there is surprisingly little credible work on why these
relationships continue. In fact, there is only one scientific
study on why people continue affairs, and it reported that
women who feel loving feelings toward the extramarital
partner are more likely to continue the relationship.

Ironically, cheaters often report feeling racked with guilt about
the affair and still want their marriages to succeed. So why do
they keep cheating? The cheater may worry that his or her
new partner will reveal the affair to the spouse, ending the
marriage. The extramarital partner may have genuine feelings
for the cheater and work hard to keep them engaged in the
affair. And if the spouse suspects an affair, he or she may
become even more disengaged in the marriage, driving his or
her partner deeper into the affair. As of now, there is no good
scientific work on the topic.

So while the pundits and experts argue about Eliot Spitzer and
if the affair was his or his wife Silda’s fault…or the fault of a
sex obsessed society…or the inevitable destiny of politicians
to have affairs (you get the idea), know that the real story
behind infidelity isn’t so simple.

What can you do?

We all know infidelity is wrong. It breaks the promises made in
a marriage and can cause irreparable damage to the
relationship. Many times it is the breaking point, tipping a
marriage that could be saved into one that is doomed to fail. It
hurts spouses, their children and their families. But it is
important to understand all the complexity of why it happens
and who is at risk. Casting blame without really understanding
the situation may be fun (when it isn’t your marriage or
someone you care about), but it doesn’t help us understand all
that we can do to prevent it.

There are things that you can do to make an affair less likely in
your marriage. Try to keep it novel, warm and connected.
Prioritize your marriage and keep other relationships squarely
in the friend zone. Work on your relationship sooner rather
than later—meaning if you sense changes in how you are
treating each other, don’t wait until the cracks become an
abyss between you both. Remember, lust can be a powerful
force that makes you do things you later regret, and it doesn’t
go away just because you are in a relationship.

If you are struggling in your marriage, stay away from
situations where you might be tempted, especially when you
are depressed, vulnerable or intoxicated and your judgment
may be weaker than normal. If you sense that your partner
may be tempted by another, confront him or her about it. Make
it clear that you do not, in any way, approve of an affair. And if
all else fails, get professional help—it’s better to admit an
attraction rather than an indiscretion. Go to couples counseling
to confront the problems in your marriage. It may not be easy,
but in the long run your marriage will be better for it.






______________________________________________________
SARASOTA PRIVATE INVESTIGTOR BILL WARNER    
WBI INC PRIVATE DETECTIVE AGENCY
PHONE     941-926-1926
E-MAIL   WBI@COMCAST.NET
SERVING SARASOTA FL AREA SINCE 1995
FL AGENCY LIC #A-9500364
CLICK IMAGE TO CONTACT BILL WARNER
  WBI INC PRIVATE DETECTIVE AGENCY       
CONTACT PRIVATE INVESTIGATOR  BILL WARNER
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