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Ted Gunderson describes a 27.5-year FBI career with 13 assignments across the United States, noting he never lived in the extreme Northeast. He says he handled counterespionage and counterterrorism in New York and Connecticut, negotiated with skyjackers at Philadelphia International Airport for two and a half hours on 07/12/1972, and led large divisions in Southern California with over 700 personnel. He personally investigated the Oklahoma City bombing, John F. Kennedy’s assassination, Robert Kennedy’s assassination, and the World Trade Center, labeling all as “huge cover up.”
Gunderson asserts that terrorism is being used as an excuse to strip constitutional rights and civil liberties, mentions the Bilderbergs, and identifies himself as the FBI veteran who retired in March 1979, having been the senior special agent in charge of the FBI Los Angeles division with more than 700 personnel and a $22.5 million budget. He says he was on the street for nine and a half years, then progressed administratively to supervisory roles, including being the numbers two man in Connecticut and Philadelphia, an assistant special agent in charge, chief inspector, and agent in charge in Memphis, Dallas, and then senior special agent in charge in Los Angeles with three other SACs under him and 24 supervisors.
Gunderson claims to have “information chiseled in stone” that the FBI had advanced knowledge of 9/11 and did nothing to prevent it. He states he watched the planes hit the towers on television and questions the feasibility of hijacking four planes without advance knowledge, asserting the US government has the most advanced intelligence and that there is no way they wouldn’t have known. He questions whether planes were remotely controlled and insists the towers were imploded, citing seismograph readings near the base and molten steel in the basement that burned for about 100 days, arguing that airplane fuel could not account for these effects.
He contends anti-terror legislation emerged in the mid-1980s under the George H. W. Bush administration, citing a female DOJ attorney who allegedly said, before passage, that “people have to be killed.” He references the 1993 World Trade Center bombing, noting an informant who helped plan the attack and claims the FBI knew in advance and supplied bomb ingredients, a claim he says appeared in the New York Times on 10/28/1993. He argues that insufficient deaths prevented anti-terror legislation, and, regarding Oklahoma City (1995), claims a pineapple electrohydrodynamic gaseous fuel device bomb was used, followed by a conventional bomb inside, suggesting multiple devices.
Gunderson mentions four unexploded devices retrieved from the Murrah Building, as reported in a Fireman’s Magazine article (Sept. 1995). He references news coverage of recovered unexploded devices marked with “US Army” on the side and asserts that McVeigh was a mind-control victim, alleging he was recruited by the CIA to be a professional assassin and involved with the CIA drug operation. He ties this to MKUltra and Monarch programs, stating he learned of these after leaving the FBI while investigating the Jeffrey R. MacDonald case.
He recounts his involvement with satanic cult allegations linked to the MacDonald case, claiming a Satanic cult distributed drugs along the East Coast and that a satanic ring operated internationally, including child kidnapping rings, with a focus on the Finders in Washington, DC. He discusses the 1960s–1980s era, mentioning the kidnapping of children like Johnny Gosch in Iowa, and asserts ongoing international trafficking and sex trafficking of children, including claims of flights of children to Paris and New York. He says he has provided documentation to the FBI multiple times but has been ignored, alleging covert CIA involvement in child trafficking. He mentions tips from airline employees and another informant, Paul Bonassi, stating that children were auctioned off for up to $50,000, with ages from two to 21, and that buyers bid on children like automobiles, all of which he says is occurring under nose of authorities, with copies of US customs reports supporting his claims.