Christine Maxwell, sister of Ghislaine Maxwell, played a central role in the legacy of the PROMIS software scandal through her leadership of Information on Demand, a company founded by her father, Robert Maxwell. After Robert Maxwell’s death in 1991, Christine assumed control of the company and oversaw the sale of PROMIS—a government case-management software—into U.S. national laboratories, including Sandia National Laboratory, a key site in the U.S. nuclear weapons program. The software was allegedly embedded with a "backdoor" allowing foreign intelligence, particularly Israeli intelligence (Mossad), to access sensitive government data globally.
Following the collapse of Information on Demand, Christine co-founded Chiliad in 1996, a software company specializing in natural language search and big data analytics. Chiliad’s technology became the backbone of the FBI’s counterterrorism data warehouse, enabling real-time, cross-agency data searches across the CIA, NSA, DOJ, DHS, and Pentagon databases—processing over 700 million records from 50+ sources with sub-second latency.
This trajectory—from PROMIS to Chiliad—has led to investigative claims of a continuity in intelligence-linked surveillance infrastructure tied to the Maxwell family. While no direct evidence links Christine Maxwell to Epstein’s trafficking operation, her work in data mining and national security systems, combined with her family’s documented intelligence connections, raises concerns about systemic vulnerabilities in U.S. surveillance architecture.
What’s crazy is you can tie William Barr and Jeff Epstein (via Adnan Khasoggi and others) to the company Inslaw. Inslaw produced software called PROMIS that later was hijack by the DOJ and eventually the Mossad. They put a hidden back door and then sold it all over the world to foreign governments, including the US Govt. It gave Israel access to highly sensitive govt documents.
Billy Mays: But WAIT! ~ There's MORE!!
via Brave AI Twat:
Christine Maxwell, sister of Ghislaine Maxwell, played a central role in the legacy of the PROMIS software scandal through her leadership of Information on Demand, a company founded by her father, Robert Maxwell. After Robert Maxwell’s death in 1991, Christine assumed control of the company and oversaw the sale of PROMIS—a government case-management software—into U.S. national laboratories, including Sandia National Laboratory, a key site in the U.S. nuclear weapons program. The software was allegedly embedded with a "backdoor" allowing foreign intelligence, particularly Israeli intelligence (Mossad), to access sensitive government data globally.
Following the collapse of Information on Demand, Christine co-founded Chiliad in 1996, a software company specializing in natural language search and big data analytics. Chiliad’s technology became the backbone of the FBI’s counterterrorism data warehouse, enabling real-time, cross-agency data searches across the CIA, NSA, DOJ, DHS, and Pentagon databases—processing over 700 million records from 50+ sources with sub-second latency.
This trajectory—from PROMIS to Chiliad—has led to investigative claims of a continuity in intelligence-linked surveillance infrastructure tied to the Maxwell family. While no direct evidence links Christine Maxwell to Epstein’s trafficking operation, her work in data mining and national security systems, combined with her family’s documented intelligence connections, raises concerns about systemic vulnerabilities in U.S. surveillance architecture.
What’s crazy is you can tie William Barr and Jeff Epstein (via Adnan Khasoggi and others) to the company Inslaw. Inslaw produced software called PROMIS that later was hijack by the DOJ and eventually the Mossad. They put a hidden back door and then sold it all over the world to foreign governments, including the US Govt. It gave Israel access to highly sensitive govt documents.
https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inslaw