Saturday, April 01, 2006

Hostage Working Group - Iraq

The following is a sampling of articles and briefings that mention a little known group, the US Department of State Hostage Working Group, organized by the US Embassy in Baghdad in the summer of 2004 to monitor hostages in Iraq.

It is unknown if the group is looking into the disappearance of Kirk von Ackermann.

A general overview can be gleaned from a job listing posted June 22, 2005 at USAJobs.org for the Department of State:

Hostage Working Group Coordinator for Iraq

MAJOR DUTIES:

* Serves as the US Embassy's lead for identifying, tracking and monitoring non-military missing persons/hostages in Iraq. Coordinates via the State Department and, as appropriate, foreign governments on the status of missing persons;

* Provides advisory support for the planning, development, and execution of hostage negotiations within a broad and complex foreign affairs arena.

* Advises DOS, US Embassy, DOD, MNF-I, and CENTOM on all hostage-taking incidents of US citizens, coalition forces/contractors and Interim Iraqi Government (IIG) officials;

* Acts as the liaison between IA, DOD, IIG and international representatives to promote information sharing, intelligence relay and coordination via diplomatic, military, intelligence and law enforcement channels;

* Assists IA intelligence efforts by disseminating intelligence products among relevant agencies and players;

* Advises on tactics, techniques and procedures for detering, preventing and reacting to hostage incidents;

* Develops analysis of the hostage threat to personnel;

* Reviews current PR training profile for the Embassy and makes recommendations to improve and augment the current PR training for all individuals assigned to US Embassy Baghdad.
U.S. Hostages Kept Low Profile In Ritzy Baghdad Neighborhood
By Larry Kaplow, Cox News Service, September 9, 2004
A couple of months ago, the U.S. Embassy formed a "hostage working group" that now meets weekly to bring together officials from the FBI, the Defense Department, the State Department and the Iraqi government. Officials do not publicly discuss the actions they can take against kidnappers.

An American coordinator of the working group, who asked for his identity to be protected, said recently that most of the information the officials receive about hostages comes from the media, primarily the threatening or gruesome videos made by the kidnappers.
Daily Press Briefing
US Department of State, March 7, 2006
QUESTION: There's a hostage working group in Baghdad that works towards the release of Americans. Can you describe what efforts are undertaken to seek the release of other Westerners who may be kidnapped in Baghdad?

MR. MCCORMACK: Well, the way this works, and I'm not going to get into the details of what exactly the hostage working group does, is in the case of American citizens, clearly they're deeply involved. They're really at the center of the action and they work very closely with the Iraqi Government as well as other governments who might have helpful or useful information. In terms of other foreign nationals, when the U.S. hostage working group can offer assistance and that assistance is accepted, they do engage but we stand ready to help out other governments when they face this difficult situation. And if there's a request to us then certainly we help them out.
Kidnappers grab Iraqis, mostly
by Vanessa Arrington, AP, March 31, 2006
At least 13 Americans kidnapped in Iraq remain held, among at least 42 foreigners, the U.S. spokeswoman said. The cases of at least three Americans have been reported. Some of the others are believed to be Iraqi-Americans or perhaps have families who have chosen to keep the abductions private.

[...]

Data compiled by the Hostage Working Group at the U.S. Embassy shows that, on average, between 10 and 20 Iraqis have been kidnapped every day since April 2003, shortly after the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq.

Thursday, March 30, 2006

FBI

The good news today is that kidnapped American journalist, Jill Carroll, of the Christian Science Montior has been released.

But a comment from an FBI spokesman, Richard Kolko, raises questions regarding the depth of the investigation into the disappearance of Kirk von Ackermann - missing since October 9, 2003.

Reaction to reporter Carroll's release

Richard Kolko, FBI spokesman, said, "We are obviously pleased that Jill Carroll has been released. Many U.S. government agencies and the FBI worked diligently behind the scenes on the Jill Carroll kidnapping case. The FBI's Office for Victim Assistance will now work to reunite Jill with her family."
Have the FBI and many U.S. government agencies also worked with the CID in investigating what happened to Kirk von Ackermann? And, if so, have they been equally as aggressive and diligent? If not, why?

Readers may certainly accuse me of having taken too cynical a view in light of the great news that Carroll has been safely released. But I can't help but wonder, why has the disappearance of former Air Force Captain Kirk von Ackermann received so little attention?

Friday, March 24, 2006

Missing in Iraq

A new blog was launched on March 21, 2006: Missing in Iraq.

The blog posts are signed "For Kirk".

Two and a half years ago Kirk von Ackermann went missing in Iraq. He was the first American contractor to disappear. During that time we have waited and hoped while the investigation went on. Now we know it's time for us, his family, to do somethings ourselves.

So this is for Kirk. To our friends and family, it's a place to learn what we know, to see where we are now. For us it's somewhere to tell Kirk's story and ours and maybe find a place of resolution.
I'm going to assume the blogger is Kirk's wife, Megan.

Please visit the blog.

Sunday, March 12, 2006

Technorati

I've added The Missing Man to Technorati to assist in monitoring other blogs that might link to the Newsweek article.

Technorati Profile

Kidnapped and Missing in Iraq

Newsweek has released an article on those believed to be missing or kidnapped in Iraq. There is a very brief mention of Kirk von Ackermann. This is the first such mention of von Ackermann in the main stream media, that I am aware of, in over a year.

The Missing
by Rod Nordland, Newsweek, March 11, 2006

Just how many foreigners are being held hostage in Iraq? The numbers are higher than most people realize—partly because victims’ relatives and employees don’t publicize disappearances for fear of jeopardizing negotiations for their release. Newsweek’s calculations, however, show that at least 45 kidnapped foreigners, including 14 Americans, are still missing inside the country.

[...]

Kirk von Ackerman [sic], a military contractor, disappeared Oct. 9, 2003, from the Tikrit area, although whether he was actually kidnapped is unclear; the U.S. military has been investigating his disappearance, as well as the murder of a colleague of his shortly later.

Wednesday, March 08, 2006

Letter of Appreciation

Letter accompanying the US Joint Forces Command Certificate of Appreciation presented to Capt Kirk Von Ackermann, USAF from Capt J. M. Dundas, US Navy of the Joint Forces Intelligence Command.

Appreciation

The Joint Forces Intelligence Command (JFIC) is now known as the Joint Transformation Command for Intelligence (JTC-I) located in Norfolk, Virginia.

Saturday, February 18, 2006

Waterskiing on the Tigris pt 2

Susan Brannon is a photographer who has worked extensively in the Middle East including Iraq. Her photo of a British tourist accompanied the article, My Waterski Hol on Saddam River. It was published on the front page of the London tabloid, the Sun. She also took a photo that day of another waterskiier: Ryan Manelick.

Waterskiing_1
© 2003 Susan Brannon. Ryan Manelick waterskiing on the Tigris River in Iraq on September 19, 2003. Photo courtesy of Susan Brannon Photography

I hung out with Ryan at our hotel in the evenings after everyone came in for curfew. He told me about his family and how excited he was for being able to make a bunch of money to get ahead in life.

I am so sorry to have heard about what happened.
- Susan Brannon
Colin Freeman also wrote an article on waterskiing in Iraq. Although this one contains no mention of Ryan Manelick, it is linked below.

Take it easy and waterski through Baghdad
by Colin Freeman, The Scotsman, October 26, 2003

Thursday, February 16, 2006

One Year

The first post to The Missing Man was one year ago today. Unfortunately, there's been little mention of Kirk von Ackermann or Ryan Manelick in the mainstream media since March.

Please be sure to visit the Bibliography. It lists all known articles and news reports of the two men to date and is updated regularly.

Monday, January 23, 2006

Joint Service Commendation Medal

Capt Von Ackerman [sic] receiving the Joint Service Commendation Medal, presented by CAPT Santez, on April 26, 2000.

Commendation

The Joint Forces Intelligence Command (JFIC) is now known as the Joint Transformation Command for Intelligence (JTC-I) located in Norfolk, Virginia.

Saturday, December 10, 2005

Wikipedia

Wikipedia is an encyclopedia written collaboratively by many of its readers.
As far as I can tell, in August of 2005 a new entry was begun:
Foreign hostages in Iraq.
Kirk von Ackermann, a contractor, went missing on October 9, 2003 near Tikrit. His whereabouts are unknown; the U.S. government believes he was either abducted or fled the country due to illegal activities in Iraq.
There is currently no individual entry for Kirk von Ackermann at Wikipedia.

Update:
But there is now: Kirk von Ackermann

Sunday, November 27, 2005

A Book

Google has added a new feature, book search. A search shows there is a short reference to Kirk von Ackermann in a book published by Seven Stories Press, which is excerpted below. Book search showed no references to Ryan Manelick at this time.

Iraq, Inc.: A Profitable Occupation
by Pratap Chatterjee, Seven Stories Press, November 2004

Excerpt from page 144:

Certainly there are many intelligence contractors whose names have only become public once they were killed or disappeared. Kirk von Ackermann of Moss Beach, California was one such contractor; he disappeared on October 9, 2003. His car was found abandoned between the cities of Tikrit and Kirkuk. Found inside the vehicle were his satellite phone, a laptop computer, and a briefcase containing around forty thousand dollars, suggesting that he had not been the victim of a robbery.

His immediate employer was Ultra Services, a company based in Istanbul that furnishes supplies and logistics help for U.S. Army bases in Iraq. A former U.S. Air Force captain who worked for Impact Intelligence, he had been a member of a Pentagon group that provided intelligence on terrorism, espionage, information warfare, and other threats. Previously he had served as deputy director of intelligence for NATO operations in Bosnia.

Tuesday, September 13, 2005

Obituary for Ryan Manelick

The obituary for Ryan Manelick appeared in two local Pennsylvania papers shortly after his death. While it's listed in the Bibliography below, it was not originally posted at the Missing Man, an oversight on my part.

Ryan G. Manelick, Air Force linguist
Intelligencer Journal, December 18, 2003

Ryan G. Manelick, 31, formerly of Lancaster, died Sunday after being shot in Baghdad, Iraq. Results of an autopsy, performed at Dover Air Force Base in Delaware, have not been released.

Manelick was chief operations officer and logistics and services manager of Ultra Services/Irex of Baghdad.

He served in the U.S. Air Force where he worked in the intelligence department as a linguist.

A 1991 graduate of Conestoga Valley High School, Manelick attended First Baptist Church of Pequea.

He enjoyed art, computers, hunting, football and fishing.

More...

Monday, August 08, 2005

Waterskiing on the Tigris

This short article dates from 2003. It's a shame it's no longer available online as it was apparently accompanied by photos.

My Waterski Hol on Saddam River
by Philip Cardy, The Sun, September 22, 2003

Robert spotted some old speedboats in a disused marina and paid one owner £120 to take him and Texan pal Ryan Manelick, 30, out on Saturday.

The pair braved the perils of poisoning from sewage, unexploded bombs - and crackpot gunmen on the banks. Business consultant Robert, below, of Notting Hill, West London, said: "I'd done a spot of waterskiing but only off Dorset. We went for lunch by the Tigris and realised it was beautiful for waterskiing. [...]

Ryan, a US Army contractor said: "I know it was crazy but I thought, what the hell."

More...
For Americans who might be unfamilliar with The Sun, it's a very popular British tabloid.

Update February 18, 2006. Also see Waterskiing on the Tigris pt 2

Thursday, August 04, 2005

Bibliography

A rough and tumble attempt at a bibliography of news reports and articles that mention Kirk von Ackermann and/or Ryan Manelick.

Note: some of the following are no longer available online. Some have now been archived and are pay-to-view.

A quick trip thru the Missing Man archives, just to the right, should help in locating a few excerpts. The two articles by Colin Freeman, also linked to the right, are the most comprehensive to date. They are also included below.

Bibliography

My Waterski Hol on Saddam River
by Philip Cardy, The Sun, September 22, 2003

Two injured in Tikrit army base blast
Thomas Crosbie Media, October 12, 2003

Mystery surrounds US businessman missing in Iraq's 'Sunni triangle'
by Colin Freeman, Telegraph, November 9, 2003

Bay Area civilian vanishes in Iraq
by Colin Freeman, San Francisco Chronicle, November 11, 2003

Moss Beach man missing in Iraq
San Mateo County Times, November 12, 2003

Local mysteriously vanishes in Iraq
Burlingame Daily News, November 12, 2003

News In Brief
by Amy Goodman, Democracy Now!, November 14th, 2003

U.S. Civilian Contractor Killed in Iraq
by Jim Gomez, The Associated Press, November 14, 2003

Contractors' Deaths Add to Iraq Toll
by Seth Porges, Editor & Publisher, November 14, 2003

C'est l'histoire de deux chefs d'entreprise - interview with Ryan Manelick
24 Heures, November 18, 2003

Von Ackermann: 'a regular guy?'
by Jeanine Gore, Half Moon Bay Review, November 24, 2003

Family mourns CV grad killed in Iraq ambush
by Cindy Stauffer, Lancaster New Era, December 18, 2003

Drive-By Shooting In Iraq Kills Civilian CV Graduate
WGAL Channel, December 18, 2003

Two men with ties to county fall victim to Iraqi violence CV graduate shot to death in Baghdad
by Justin Quinn, Intelligencer Journal, December 18, 2003

Ryan G. Manelick, Air Force linguist - obituary
Intelligencer Journal, December 18, 2003

Ryan G. Manelick, Air Force linguist - obituary
Lancaster New Era, December 18, 2003

WLMI News Briefs
WLMI, 11:00 AM, December 30, 2003

Outsourcing the War
by Peter W. Singer, Salon.com, April 16, 2004

Iraq, Inc.: A Profitable Occupation
by Pratap Chatterjee, Seven Stories Press, November 2004, page 144

Hostage Families Face Tough Choices
by Libby Lewis, NPR, Morning Edition, February 7, 2005

Suspicion surrounds missing Bay Area man
by Colin Freeman, San Francisco Chronicle, February 13, 2005

US Army launches fraud probe in Iraq contractors' killing, disappearance: report
by Andrew Hay, Agence France-Presse, February 13, 2005

Foul Play in Iraq?
by Douglas Waller, Time Online, February 13, 2005

Without A Trace In Iraq
by Douglas Waller, Time Magazine, February 13, 2005

Murder mystery in Iraq
by David Batstone, Sojourner, February 17, 2005

An Iraq Murder Mystery for Negroponte?
by David Corn, davidcorn.com, February 18, 2005

Winters business employed murdered, missing workers
by Debralo Guercio, Winters Express, Ferbuary 24, 2005

Graves found at depot pose puzzle in Iraq
by Harry Esteve, The Oregonian, March 03, 2005

The Missing
by Rod Nordland, Newsweek, March 11, 2006

One Missing, One Dead: An Iraq Contractor in the Fog of War
by Susie Dow with Steven Reich, ePluribus Media, May 15, 2006

Military: Missing soldiers found dead
by Cesar G. Soriano, USA Today, June 20, 2006 - side bar to article

13 Americans still listed as missing
AP, June 20, 2006

American soldiers and civilians kidnapped or missing in Iraq
AP, June 21, 2006

Soldiers' bodies recovered
by Kim Gamel, AP, June 21, 2006 - side bar to article

Rules usually protect GIs from capture
by Ryan Lenz, AP, June 21, 2006 - side bar to article

Military releases new details about killing, recovery of kidnapped soldiers
AP, USA Today, June 27, 2006 - side bar to article

Family's nightmare begins at gunpoint Part 1
By Deborah Hastings, AP, Salt Lake Tribune, December 24, 2006

Kidnapped Americans in Iraq
By Deborah Hastings, AP, Salt Lake Tribune, December 24, 2006

Von Ackermann - obituary
The Albuquerque Journal, January 14, 2007

Death of a Contractor: Greed and Murder in Iraq's Lawless Desert - original link expired

Death of a Contractor - alternative source
pp. 70-74, 76-69 (print version includes photos)
By Dan Halpern, Rolling Stone, March 8, 2007, Issue 1021

Missing Contractor: US Military Mechanics may Hold the Keys
By Susie Dow, ePluribus Media, April 21, 2008

Curse of the Al Dulaimi Hotel: And Other Half-truths from Baghdad
By Colin Freeman, Monday Books, July 2008

Iraq calmer but copycat kidnappings spread
By Pamela Hess, Associated Press, October 13, 2008
(includes photo of Kirk von Ackermann)

EXCLUSIVE: New Documents Claim Intelligence on Bin Laden, al-Qaeda Targets Withheld From Congress' 9/11 Probe - about von Ackermann's former intelligence work
By Jeffrey Kaye and Jason Leopold, Truthout, June 13, 2011
Related: Attachment - Unclassified FOIA Response - PDF (must read)

Report: Intelligence Unit Told Before 9/11 to Stop Tracking Bin Laden - about von Ackermann's former intelligence work
By Jeffrey Kaye, Truthout, May 23, 2011
Related: Review of Joint Forces Intelligence Command Response to 9/11 Commission - PDF
Deputy Inspector General for Intelligence
Department of Defense
September 23, 2008

This post will be updated on occasion as new articles appear in the press.

Thursday, July 07, 2005

Short Clip

Democracy Now! hosted by Amy Goodman, had included a brief mention of Kirk von Ackermann as part of its regular radio broadcast. Approximately 3:13 - 26 into the recording.

News In Brief for November 14th, 2003

The U.S. military also is looking into the reported disappearance of an American contractor, Kirk von Ackermann who went missing last month while driving between Tikrit and Kirkuk.
Democracy Now! is broadcast on Pacifica, community, and National Public Radio stations, public access cable television stations, satellite television (on Free Speech TV, channel 9415 of the DISH Network), shortwave radio and the internet.

Wednesday, June 29, 2005

An Open Request

The only known photo of Kirk von Ackermann was originally published by the Half Moon Bay Review accompanying the article, Von Ackermann: 'a regular guy?', by Jeanine Gore, on November 24, 2003.

I am unaware of any photos on the web of Ryan Manelick.

I would be grateful if members of either of the two famillies would kindly consider emailing me a photo of Kirk von Ackermann or Ryan Manelick for posting on the Missing Man. Privacy of senders will be respected.

susie dot dow at gmail dot com

Thank you for your attention and consideration. My apologies to those of you whom this request might offend.

Update: Replaced old yahoo email address with new gmail address.

Tuesday, June 07, 2005

Reports of Corruption in Iraq

Rare or widespread?

Colin Freeman reported in his February article, Suspicion surrounds missing Bay Area man, that both von Ackermann and Manelick had raised concerns about corruption.

In recent months, news stories on contract fraud in Iraq have been appearing in the press much more frequently. While the following sample of articles discuss companies and people unrelated to Kirk von Ackermann or Ryan Manelick, it provides a glimpse into the bigger picture of the overall business environment that some contractors are working in.

Most of the articles on fraud and corruption seem to cover mismanagement, over billing, kick backs, and missing funds.

The first article is rare in that it also reports the death of another civillian contractor who had complained about corruption. The circumstances, however, are much different than those surrounding von Ackermann and Manelick. The contractor, Dale Stoffel, was working with the Iraqi Defense Ministry, the amount was 20 times that of the Ultra Services' contract for containerized offices, Stoffel's death was one year after Manelick was gunned down, and finally, Stoffel was an arms dealer.

A long article on contractor Dale Stoffel can be read in this month's Washington Monthly, The Unquiet American, by Aram Roston, June 2005.

For the purposes of brevity, and this post is getting long, I am linking to an earlier article from the Los Angeles Times.

Army Ignored Broker on Arms Deal
by Ken Silverstein and T. Christian Miller, Los Angeles Times, March 15, 2005

Soon after interim Prime Minister Iyad Allawi took office last summer, he announced plans to create a tank division for the new Iraqi army.

The $283-million project was supposed to display the power of Iraq's new government. But under the guidance of a task force overseen by one of America's top generals, it has become another chapter in a rebuilding process marked by accusations of corruption.

The U.S. contractor working on the project repeatedly warned the task force headed by Army Lt. Gen. David H. Petraeus that a Lebanese middleman involved in the deal might be routing kickbacks to Iraqi Defense Ministry officials. But senior U.S. military officials did not act on the contractor's pleas for tighter financial controls, according to documents and interviews.

"If we proceed down the road we are currently on, there will be serious legal issues that will land us all in jail," the contractor, Dale Stoffel, wrote in a Nov. 30 e-mail to a senior assistant to Petraeus.

Eight days later, Stoffel was shot dead in an ambush near Baghdad. The killing is being investigated by the FBI, according to people who have been interviewed by the bureau.

More…
Whistle-Blower Suit May Set Course on Iraq Fraud Cases
by Eric Eckholm, New York Times, May 22, 2005
In September 2004 the Pentagon, citing evidence of fraud and a continuing criminal investigation of Custer Battles, barred the company from receiving more federal contracts, halting what had been the company's explosive growth. The company was founded in 2001 by two veterans with more ambition than assets, and by mid-2004 it had $100 million in Iraq contracts.

The company's critics say its owners, Scott Custer and Mike Battles, benefited from the frantic awarding of contracts in 2003 and the constant turnover of monitors.

The whistle-blower suit accuses the company of defrauding the government through actions as large as the creation of shell companies to pose as suppliers and increase billable costs and as small as the repainting of Iraqi Airways forklifts, then claiming to have leased the machines for thousands of dollars per month.

More…
Audit of Iraq Spending Spurs Criminal Probe
by Griff Witte, Washington Post, May 5, 2005
Investigators have opened a criminal inquiry into millions of dollars missing in Iraq after auditors uncovered indications of fraud in nearly $100 million in reconstruction spending that could not be properly accounted for.

The money had been intended for rebuilding projects in south-central Iraq. But auditors with the Office of the Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction found that of $119.9 million allocated, $7.2 million could not be accounted for at all, and $89.4 million in reported spending could not be backed up with sufficient documentation, according to a report released yesterday.

[…]

Criminal investigators with the office of Special Inspector General Stuart W. Bowen Jr. will be looking into whether anyone involved committed fraud, the audit says, although it does not disclose who is being investigated.

More…
Iraq is becoming 'free fraud' zone
by Tom Regan, Christian Science Monitor, April 7, 2005
A former senior advisor to the US-led Coalition Provisional Authority (CPA), which ran Iraq until the election of an interim Iraq government last January, says that the US government's refusal to prosecute US firms accused of corruption in Iraq is turning the country into a "free fraud zone."

Newsweek reported earlier this week that Frank Willis compared Iraq to the "wild west," and that with only $4.1 billion of the $18.7 billion that the US government set aside for the reconstruction of Iraq having been spent, the lack of action on the part of the government means "the corruption will only get worse."

[…]


The Christian Science Monitor reported on other allegations of corrpution in Iraq leveled against companies, including a "report by special inspector Stuart Bowen [which] found that $8.8 billion dollars had been disbursed from Iraqi oil revenue by US administrators to Iraqi ministries without proper accounting."

More…
Fraud and corruption
by George Monbiot, The Guardian, February 8, 2005
Last week a British adviser to the Iraqi Governing Council told the BBC's File on Four programme [sic] that officials in the CPA were demanding bribes of up to $300,000 in return for awarding contracts. Iraqi money seized by US forces simply disappeared. Some $800m was handed out to US commanders without being counted or even weighed. A further $1.4bn was flown from Baghdad to the Kurdish regional government in the town of Irbil, and has not been seen since.

More…
See the following section for information on Fighting Fraud and Corruption.

Fighting Fraud & Corruption

The current investigation into the disappearance of Kirk von Ackermann and the death of Ryan Manelick is being handled by the U.S. Army Criminal Investigation Command's Major Procurement Fraud Unit. See previous post for more details.

To combat fraud, the Coalition Provisional Authority lists a Fraud Hotline as well as provides an on-line complaint form at their website.

The Hotline is your means to report significant instances of fraud, waste, abuse of authority, and gross mismanagement. It is government policy to combat fraud, waste, abuse and mismanagement in programs and operations funded by the Iraq relief and Reconstruction Fund. The Hotline strives to ensure that allegations are properly evaluated and examined, and that appropriate remedial, corrective, and judicial actions are taken.

Special Inspector General for Iraq Reconstruction
SIGIR Fraud, Waste and Abuse
400 Army Navy Drive
Arlington, VA 22202-4704
(866) 301-2003
(703) 602-4063
(703) 602-5993 fax
http://www.cpa-ig.com/fraud_faq.html
In addition to the efforts to combat fraud by the CPA, Rep. Henry Waxman (D-CA) has established a Tip Line and on-line complaint form to help alert Congress to contract fraud in Iraq.
This tip line has been established to assist the Special Investigations Division in investigating potential fraud, waste, and abuse in the awarding and execution of contracts to rebuild and rehabilitate Iraq, including actions by U.S. government agencies, prime contractors, and subcontractors. The confidentiality of any person providing information will be strictly preserved.

Rep. Henry A. Waxman
Special Investigations Division - Iraq Contracting
Committee on Government Reform Minority Staff
B350A
Rayburn House Office Building
Washington DC 20015
(202) 225-5051
http://www.house.gov/waxman/
Note: click 'Iraq Contracting' on the right hand side bar for the on-line form.
The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has a general tip line thru their website.
While the FBI continues to encourage the public to submit information regarding the September 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, this form may also be used to report any suspected criminal activity to the FBI.

Federal Bureau of Investigation
J. Edgar Hoover Building
935 Pennsylvania Avenue, NW
Washington, D.C. 20535-0001
(202) 324-3000
http://www.fbi.gov
Tip line:
https://tips.fbi.gov/

Monday, May 30, 2005

Memorial Day

To the best of my knowledge, there have been no new articles since the one brief mention of Kirk von Ackermann on March 3, 2005.

Ryan Manelick
December 14, 2003

Kirk von Ackermann - missing
October 9, 2003

The Missing Man formation is performed as a symbolic farewell to fallen airmen. At the moment at which the formation passes over the ceremony, one of the planes leaves the formation and heads for the skies.

Saturday, May 14, 2005

WGAL

I recently came across a very short news blurb that mentioned Irex Corp* as an employer of Ryan Manelick. While the news dates from 2003, I am including it here as it is the second known reference to Irex Corp.

Drive-By Shooting In Iraq Kills Civilian CV Graduate from the WGAL Channel, December 18, 2003

A civilian with ties to Lancaster County was killed while working in Iraq.

Ryan Manelick, 31, was killed Sunday in a drive-by shooting after leaving a military base in Baghdad.

Manelick was in Baghdad working for Ultra Service-Irex Corp. Manelick's stepfather told News 8 his stepson was fearful of living in Iraq and planned to come home Sunday for the holidays.

Manelick was a 1991 graduate of Conestoga Valley High School in Lancaster County.
According to their website, WGAL is the the exclusive NBC affiliate for the Harrisburg-Lancaster-York-Lebanon area of Pennsylvania.

* See previous post, Irex Corp