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April 12, 2014

Bogus missing child poster used to intimidate Plaintiff in lawsuit against Florida Department of Law Enforcement?

State of Florida Missing Endangered Persons Information Clearinghouse used to advance criminal agenda?

by Timothy Charles Holmseth

The Florida Department of Law Enforcement (FDLE) is presently publishing a ‘missing child ’ poster for Alec Thomas Hash, 17. The poster states Alec Hash has been missing since May, 2013.

On February 3, 2014, the FDLE filed a Motion to Dismiss; asking a judge to throw out a lawsuit filed by Dr. Mark Hash, Alec Hash’s father, against the FDLE.

So what’s the issue?

This - Alec Hash is alive and well - according to the judge in Georgia that emancipated him in February of 2014.

The circumstances of Alec Hash gone 'missing' has created questions about the integrity of the Missing Endangered Persons Information Clearinghouse (MEPIC), which is implemented through the Criminal Justice Information Services department at the FDLE.

Is the FDLE playing along with fake kidnapping scenarios, and exploiting the suffering and plight of actual missing children, to intimidate advesaries in lawsuits - as well as their children?

Or worse...is the FDLE attempting to institutionally kidnap Alec Hash because he is a ‘witness'?

In November of 2009, Dr. Hash was arrested by the FDLE per allegations he knowingly assisted another person to receive a controlled substance by fraud. The charges were eventually dropped and Dr. Hash sued the FDLE. The 15 page Complaint contains serious allegations against Special Agent Matt Sears and the FDLE.

The details behind Dr. Hash's arrest and subsequent lawsuit may shed light as to why his son Alec Hash suddenly became 'wanted'.

According to Dr. Hash, Special Agent Sears had been told by suspects during the FDLE investigation of a weight loss clinic, that Dr. Hash’s DEA license had been used without his knowledge to obtain amphetamines. The FDLE hid the exculpatory evidence and continued on with the charges for quite some time before finally dropping them.

Dr. Hash’s lawsuit states the FDLE is guilty of “condoning and encouraging its officers in the belief they can violate the rights of persons such as the plaintiff in this action with impunity, and that such conduct will not adversely affect their opportunities for promotion and other employment benefits. Condoning and encouraging the fabrication of evidence, included but limited to the filing of materially false police reports.”

The extended facts and circumstances surrounding the investigation of the weight loss clinic by the FDLE are quite compelling. According to Dr. Hash, he has evidence that the individuals obtaining the illegal amphetamines were government officials – including a State’s Attorney.

Amidst the legal firefight between Dr. Hash and the FDLE, Dr. Hash’s son, Alec Hash, became the central focal point of a bizarre custody case spearheaded by members of the Tallahassee Police Department (TPD), which, along with TPD victim’s advocate Melanie Tudor, partnered with Dr. Hash’s ex-wife, Reschin Moore.

In a flurry of legal wrangling concerning the ‘best interest of’ Alec Hash, Judge Karen Gievers reversed a decade of rulings regarding Dr. Hash’s sole custody of his son, and declared Dr. Hash had fooled the entire judicial system, in several states, and in reality was an abusive dangerous man that brainwashed people. .

The FDLE has been publishing Alec Hash’s name globally as “missing” since May of 2013, despite knowing he was emancipated by a judge in February of 2014.

The FDLE has been contacted for comment but had not replied by the time of publication.

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