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Obama Mystery Theater: Stanley Ann’s Passport Renewal of 1968 -- WTPOTUS, Miri

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  • Obama Mystery Theater: Stanley Ann’s Passport Renewal of 1968 -- WTPOTUS, Miri

    Obama Mystery Theater: Stanley Ann’s Passport Renewal of 1968

    We the People of the United States

    Miri
    4/4/2014

    Excerpt:

    Ann Dunham Soetoro Passport photos 4 of them CWe’re going to look at a few pages from Stanley Ann Dunham Obama Soetoro’s alleged passport files, which were released under a Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request. We have many questions about these pages, especially because requests concerning “White House equities”, ever since 2009, “need” to be routed through the White House, as revealed by a recently disclosed memo.

    In 2009 the FOIA was effectively rewritten or extra-legally “amended” by former White House Counsel Greg Craig to ensure the White House has hands-on oversight. One wonders, then, why these particular pages were released to the public and not redacted, as so many other documents have been heavily redacted out of alleged concern for the “privacy” of living people (that being Barack Obama, among others, such as his sister).

    ..................................

    The page ...
    (shown in the post) is an application by Stanley Ann Dunham Soetoro (henceforth referred to as Ann) to renew a previously issued passport (#F777788, which was dated July 19, 1965). She made the renewal (not amendment) request on August 13, 1968 (only days after her son Barry’s alleged 7th birthday). Ann made the application from Djakarta, Indonesia, where she then resided. She listed no current U.S. residence. She affirmed at that time that she was a U.S. citizen, born in Wichita, KS, on November 29, 1942 (with the 2 in the year appearing overwritten).

    Ann paid $5.00 and received a renewal through July 18, 1970, which apparently was the remainder of the 5 years for which a 1965 passport would have been valid. Implicit in this application is the presumption that either the July 1965 passport was her first passport (originally issued under the name Soetoro) or else that at some point prior to August 1968, she had already amended the 1965 passport to reflect her new married name. Apparently, she did amend the passport: On June 29, 1967, Ann applied to change the name on her passport to “Stanley Ann Soetoro” (see here and here). Why she then used the fuller name “Stanley Ann Dunham Soetoro” when she applied in 1968 to renew that same passport remains a mystery. (The 1967 amendment will be discussed later.)

    Whatever the case, this seems to indicate that the passport issued in July of 1965 was not under her newest married name. (Ann had married Soetoro in March 1965, just four months before.) Apparently Ann decided to retain her previous name (whatever it was on her passport) until she changed her mind in June 1967, and amended her passport to read Soetoro. Perhaps it was easier or safer for her, now living in Indonesia, to use an Indonesian surname.

    The 1965 passport itself might have represented a renewal of a previous passport, issued either in her maiden name or her alleged first married name, Obama. Oddly enough (or not), the application for the passport of July 1965 is very conveniently missing and possibly destroyed. No other passport records for Ann prior to that date have been released, which is not to say that they never existed. They may also have been conveniently “lost” or “destroyed”, even though the rules seem to require retention of applications for 100 years. The documents were allegedly not found and so were not released to the public, even though multiple backups of the database are regularly created.

    Note that there are multiple passport record databases (PRISM, TDIS, PIERS, PLOTS, MIS, and CLASP). One or more of these databases were illegally accessed in 2008 by an employee of a current member of Obama’s administration (John Brennan), effectively, an anonymous source stated, “cauterizing” Obama’s passport files of “embarrassing” information. Even so, it’s highly unlikely anyone would have been able to “cauterize” all the backups, too.

    It could be important for someone to hide the existence of any previous passport that Ann may have possessed, such as a passport issued 5 years before the one dated July 1965. She may have been issued a passport in July 1960, after she graduated from high school and right about the time that her family moved to Hawaii, where she subsequently is said to have almost immediately met Barry’s African father, got impregnated by him, and then married him.

    In late 1965, now married to Indonesian citizen Lolo Soetoro, Ann may have been planning to relocate to his country. We might presume that she obtained or renewed a passport in anticipation of the move. Her husband eventually preceded her to Indonesia in July 1966, where he allegedly made preparations for Ann and Barry to join him. Barry and his mother, according to Barry’s memoir, were awaiting immunizations and passports for about a year.

    Returning to the 1968 renewal application: On the page shown above, Ann gave the name of the person to notify in case of emergency as “Stanley Armour Dunham, Bank of Hawaii, Honolulu”. Despite instructions to the contrary, she provided no relationship, street address, or even state (although Hawaii can be inferred).

    But her father never worked for the Bank of Hawaii and, at that time, his wife, Madelyn, was not yet a vice president at the bank. Although she worked there in some capacity, she presumably was not yet an officer of the bank. Why didn’t Ann use her mother as the emergency contact, if she used her mother’s place of employment for the address, an incomplete address at that? If she wanted to use her father as the emergency contact, why did she not use his home address? Did she not know where her own father lived? It makes no sense.

    How could anyone contact Stanley Armour Dunham at the bank without a complete address? In 1968, did they have the Yellow Pages for Honolulu, Hawaii, in Jakarta, Indonesia (or anywhere else in the world that Ann planned to travel)? Even if someone managed to find the correct address, would the U.S. Postal Service deliver a letter addressed to a man at a location where he neither lived nor worked? How could anyone find a phone number, without an address? Surely the bank had more than one location. Since Ann’s father never worked at the bank, he wouldn’t be in the employee directory, so how could anyone associate him with a particular branch or office?

    ....................................

    View the complete post at:

    http://wtpotus.wordpress.com/2014/04...newal-of-1968/
    Last edited by bsteadman; 04-05-2014, 02:49 PM.
    B. Steadman
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