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Ex
International Web Police Members Speak Out!
Suzanna Westerlund - Government Employee
Below
is a statement from Suzanna Westerlund who is an employee of the New
Zealand Government. Suzanna raises some excellent points and sums up
InterGOV very well with her below statements. The items in bold are
items which Suzanna intended to be bolded and not items which have been
bolded by myself.
[I
certify that, to the best of my knowledge and belief, the testimonial
provided below with regards to my dealings with InterGOV International
and one Peter Hampton is true and correct]
I first happened across InterGOV International whilst undertaking volunteer
duties for another volunteer organization. I was quite impressed with
the site upon reading their stated purpose which included the following
paragraphs:
Our agency
is comprised of Law Enforcement Agencies, government officials, sworn
police officers and civilian volunteers located in 61 countries throughout
the world. The cooperation of both government and law enforcement agencies
in these nations allow us to address criminal activities anywhere in
the world. Our presence on the Internet allows instant communication
between victims of crimes and the appropriate agency to assist them.
Investigations
range from minor issues such as e-mail and chat room abuse, to major
crimes, such as: fraud, child abuse, drug trafficking, stalking, destructive
hacking and terrorism.
Our database
contains records of every criminal activity reported since 1986. These
records assist us in developing new procedures to prevent crime and
protect the Internet community.
It seemed too
good to be true. Here I thought was a volunteer organization that had
the complete backing of local and international government and law enforcement
agencies. As a government employee, I knew I had a lot to offer the
organization with my extensive experience in coaching new recruits,
investigative and research techniques, internal fraud investigations,
communications and case management. I wondered why I had never heard
of InterGOV before that day but in my enthusiasm to simply be a part
of the action, I put all questions aside and applied for membership.
In late 2000, within days of receiving my welcome letter
to IG, I was advised to attend the next Directors Advisory Council meeting.
I was taken aback by the email that was sent to me from the Executive
Director of Operations. I queried whether they had the right person
and he advised that I had been listed as the Director of Scamwatch (without
any expression of interest on my part). I declined to attend the Directors
Advisory Council meeting and also the position of Director until I had
at least gone through the basic training and learned more about the
internal workings of the organization. This was the first incident that
made me a little wary of InterGOV.
Basic training (as well as the intermediate and advanced training that
was offered) was very disappointing and not what I expected from an
organization that boasted investigations of major crimes such as destructive
hacking and terrorism.
After basic training, I was appointed to the position of Director of
Personnel and was shortly voted in as Executive Director. During this
time I began to get a feel of the organization. I would say that I spent
close to 30 hours per week on InterGOV related duties alone. I enjoyed
my position because it gave me a very extensive view of the day-to-day
operations as well as provide an opportunity to familiarise myself with
the policies and procedures for each Department, their staffing levels
and its turnovers. I can honestly say that during my time there the
average number of active staff was around 75 more or less. I can neither
confirm nor deny the number of covert staff on duty because I never
saw evidence of their existence.
It was around this time that I was approached by IT personnel at my
government job (my previous govt job, not the current one) concerning
my activities at InterGOV as InterGOV correspondence was flooding my
inbox at a rate of 50-70+ emails a day, on some days the emails increased
to the 100s (They were using eGroups at that time and I had elected
to receive all mail individually rather than as a daily summary. The
emails were meeting reminders, ebs checks, staff inquiries, new applicant
notifications, line tests etc. I was later advised by IT to disassociate
myself with InterGOV with no reason given. I continued my membership
but decided from then on to keep my govt work and my IG work separate
and use my alternate surname and an external email address for IG/Web
Police correspondence.
About the President: At first I found Peter Hampton to be
charming, courteous and very down-to-earth. He was a person I confided
in and I could talk openly to. My trust in him led to conversations
via telephone and chat (IRC and ICQ messenger). It was during one of
these conversations that I learned from Peter himself that he intercepted
his staffs emails and ICQ messages to weed out any possible spies.
He said that he had many enemies and he liked to keep an eye on them
and even allowed them to join the organization under false pretences.
He also stated that he joined other organisations also to find out what
they know. This bothered me quite a bit. It was the first time I realised
that things werent quite on the up and up. I became concerned
and just a tad paranoid at this stage.
I shared my concerns with another Executive Director who advised me
of other unethical actions made by Peter Hampton. I learned what was
previously shared to you by Captain Chet Bowen as well as information
regarding a former Executive Director of International Web Police
who was lured by Peter Hampton to the United States with promise of
employment only to be left penniless. I cannot verify the facts
personally as I did not personally know the victim. I am not sure what
became of him and his family but I will disclose his name to you in
case you are interested in tracking him down for a story.
It was at this time that I became extremely concerned with the organization.
I knew there were plenty of like-minded individuals who were only there
to provide a public service so I continued my membership in the hopes
that things would turn around
The focus needed to be on public safety and awareness rather than the
cloak-and-dagger politics that were emerging from within the ranks.
I started to spread myself thin by helping out with the backlogged complaints
that needed to go through the Case Screening Unit. It was there that
I found out that crime complaints were backlogged 6 months. I
spent several hours a week screening cases and noted that there were
several child pornography and cyberstalking complaints that were
not given the immediate attention that they deserved. At this time
I also started helping out with investigations but it seemed like an
insurmountable task.
It was around this time that I was appointed Senior Assistant
Vice President of InterGOV, Russ Kollmansberger to the position
of Executive Director of International Web Police and Brian
Heathfield to the position of Vice President of InterGOV.
During the Senior Advisory Staff meetings those of us who were concerned
about the backlogged cases raised it with the team but Peter Hampton
always gave the crime cases a very low priority. Instead, he
favoured and strongly encouraged items relating to fundraising activities
and marketing strategies. Peter started quoting astronomical figures
for website overheads in an effort to get support for his stance on
fundraising. Upon discussing these costs with the Executive Director
of Web Services at the time, I had found discrepancies with the costs
Peter had claimed to the actual costs paid for the sites. He had
deliberately misled the staff. Further digging had supported this fact.
There was several staff present at those meetings who were concerned
with the state of things and decided to meet in secret to discuss the
situation that had divided the organization. Many of us had felt misled
and used. It became very apparent that all Peter Hampton cared about
was fundraising and power playing his staff. It was our intention
to leave InterGOV once we were able to warn the remaining staff (who
were blissfully unaware of what was really going on) about Peters
underlying motivation for the org. Peter however had enlisted in the
aid of his so-called "special ops" team to snoop on the staff
and had obtained a log of our meetings and the planned walk-out before
our plan could be properly executed.
On my last day at InterGOV, I had emailed Pete advising him of my
intention to lodge a federal complaint against him for fraud. He responded
to me by threatening a counter-complaint to my employer for making unsubstantiated
allegations against him. I assured him that proof of his actions were
obtainable.
In April 2001, Peter lost his Senior Assistant Vice President, his Executive
Director and his Director of IWP as well as other Executive Directors,
Directors, Deputy Directors and Investigators (including his only 2
LEOs) in a mass walk-out of staff who refused to put Peters
needs ahead of the public. The empty titles meant nothing to us.
Personal integrity was what mattered.
The six months of service I gave to InterGOV has taught me some lifelong
lessons. Hypocrisy and abuse comes in all forms and we should always
be vigilant lest we fall victim to it.
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