
According to Gordon Thomas, Eitan admitted the truth of this to him, per Thomas’ book and his affidavit, though the DOJ continues to deny the allegations.

Hamilton and others have identified Orr as being Eitan. DOJ’s bottom line was that “records must have been created re these two because they were on the DOJ payroll. The search efforts went well beyond this, contacting multiple offices and executives and searching record systems that stretched back decades. Instructions came down from Deputy Attorney General Edward Schmults, the number two man in the DOJ, to hire them as “experts.” They were employed and given a GS-15 salary, the highest tier possible before the “executive level,” which is reserved for the civilian equivalent of military generals. According to Bob Roeder, then administrator for the DOJ’s Office of Legal Policy (OLP), the two went to the OLP as part of a prior arrangement that he was unaware of. In 1982, two Israelis arrived in the United States and went to the DOJ. These facts lend a great deal of credence to the statements from Bill Hamilton and others that the phantom Israeli they met was none other than Eitan.

The DOJ later asserted that the records on the two Israelis mysteriously disappeared, leaving behind only a few memos and vague memories.

#Doj promis system software#
According to a Department of Justice (DOJ) memo, however, the man they claim they gave the software to wasn’t in the country at the time. Previous records and admissions acknowledged the fact that the software was given to Israel while insisting that it wasn’t delivered to Israeli Spymaster Rafi Eitan but instead went to Dr. Justice Department documents recently released by the National Archives confirm what some Inslaw witnesses have been saying for decades: that a copy of PROMIS software was given to Israel.
