ITAC

Maroon Office of the Secret Service

ITAC

Integrated Threat Assessment Centre

Threat assessments, intelligence briefings, and operational reports covering threats to the Sovereign State of Accompong, its institutions, lands, name, and people.

An ITAC intelligence product of the Maroon Office of the Secret Service

The Network Map

Each of these stories has been told as if it stood alone — the Lumi bank, the NUC “stablecoin,” the mining licences in Cockpit Country, the donation foundations, the disputed administration. Reported one at a time, each looks like an isolated curiosity.

They are not isolated. They share land, money, methods, and people. This map shows the threads.

What you are looking at

This is a link-analysis chart — the kind of map an intelligence office uses to show how separate people and entities are in fact connected.

Every circle (node) is a person, company, institution, or instrument.

Every line (edge) is a documented relationship between them — a contract, a court case, a payment, an appointment, a licence, a family tie.

Nothing on this map is decoration. Every connection traces to a public record, a court filing, a corporate registration, or a primary document held by this Office. Where a connection is an assessment rather than a settled fact, it is marked as one.

How to read it

The colours are groups. Nodes are coloured by the world they belong to — political parties, mining and resource companies, the Maroon leadership, the Moorish sovereign-citizen network, the financial schemes, and this Office. The legend names each group.

The lines carry meaning. Connections are typed, so the kind of line tells you the kind of relationship:

  • Financial — money, ownership, or shares moving between parties.
  • Authority — an official act, such as the granting of a licence or appointment.
  • Suspicious — a connection under the active scrutiny of this Office.
  • Opposition — conflict, dispute, or non-recognition between parties.
  • MOSS — the work of this Office: what it has exposed, published, or holds.

The clusters tell the story. The map is not arranged at random. The mining companies gather on one side; the Lumi and Wirecard money on another; the schemes around the disputed administration in the centre. The story lives where the clusters touch — the same land, the same money, and the same names appearing in places they should not.

Using the map

Click or tap any node to open the file on it.

Drag a node to rearrange; scroll or pinch to zoom.

Fit View resets the map to frame the whole network.

Back returns you to the ITAC Centre.

Open Map