3090 Vicente Street, San Francisco













Criminal Activity at Kaiser HMO | Kaiser - page 2 | Kaiser - page 3

















































 

This is the address sign at 3090 Vicente, San Francisco. The names of some of my Kaiser associates were scrawled on the side of this building. At the time, I passed by this building typically 4 or 5 times weekly. The projects I worked on at Kaiser were run on IBM 3090 mainframes.
 
For years, similarly attired individuals loitered near the Kaiser data center when I worked there, at a nearby apartment building where dozens of units were gutted after multiple candles were left burning on a couch, and later at 3090 Vicente Street after I moved to San Francisco.  These people were similarly attired to the extent that they covered their hair, wore either dark sunglasses or glasses with smoked lenses, wore long black coats, and wore black shoes.  Standing at the entrance to 3090 Vicente Street provided an excellent view of the elementary school across the street.  (Please see my earlier reference to Kaiser School on page 1.)
 
Approximately a mile away from 3090 Vicente Street, loud explosions were set many times weekly beginning in the 1980's at times that had "3" and "9" in them. They continued multiple times each week for over a one and half decades. The explosives used may have been of a type used in construction, according to an investigator at the Arson Task Force of the San Francisco Fire Department.

 

A string of incidents of much smaller explosions resumed shortly after September 11, 2001 and have continued. These are of much smaller magnitude, occur much less frequently, and generally seem to be at a greater distance from where I am.

 

NOTE: Similar explosions have occurred at my other residences in other California cities, beginning in 1984 when I was at work on the Kaiser project which found medical bills without matching hospitalizations and medical bills with charges which could not be explained. This was also the time I was preparing to send a tape to the California legislature with medical data about every billable hospitalization which had occurred at Kaiser over a twelve month period. This tape included diagnosis and procedure information, as well as other data.
Jim Ristrem
jimristrem@earthlink.net