The allegations surrounding the PROMIS software, the Bank of Credit and Commerce International (BCCI), Systematics Inc., and connections to Hillary Clinton form part of a long-running controversy known as the "Inslaw Affair." This saga, which unfolded primarily in the 1980s and 1990s, involves claims of government theft of proprietary software, intelligence agency surveillance, money laundering, and political influence operations. Much of the information stems from congressional investigations, court rulings, declassified documents, and investigative journalism, though some elements remain unproven or disputed as conspiracy theories. I'll expand on the key connections step by step, focusing on the claims of Systematics as an NSA front and the laundering of PROMIS sale proceeds.
PROMIS (Prosecutor's Management Information System) was developed by Inslaw Inc., a Washington, D.C.-based company founded by William and Nancy Hamilton in the early 1980s. It was originally a case-management database for the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) to track prosecutions, but it evolved into a powerful tool for integrating disparate databases. Allegations emerged that the DOJ stole an enhanced version of PROMIS through "trickery, fraud, and deceit," as ruled by a bankruptcy judge in 1987. The software was purportedly modified with a "backdoor" for surveillance purposes, allowing agencies like the NSA and CIA to monitor users remotely. This bugged version was then allegedly sold internationally to foreign governments, intelligence services, and banks, generating illicit profits.
The international distribution involved intermediaries, including Israeli intelligence (via Rafi Eitan, as discussed in prior contexts) and figures like media mogul Robert Maxwell, who helped market the software. Proceeds from these sales are claimed to have been laundered through complex financial networks to fund covert operations.
Systematics Inc. (later renamed Alltel Information Services after a 1990 acquisition) was an Arkansas-based financial software company founded in 1968 and owned by the billionaire Stephens family (Jackson Stephens was a key figure). It specialized in banking software and data processing. According to allegations, Systematics served as a front for the NSA, modifying and distributing the bugged PROMIS software to banks worldwide for surveillance and money-laundering tracking.
These claims were probed in a 1992 House Judiciary Committee report and a 1996 CIA status update to Congress, which acknowledged inquiries into Systematics' "money-laundering role for the intelligence community."
BCCI, founded in 1972 by Pakistani financier Agha Hasan Abedi, was a multinational bank that collapsed in 1991 amid one of the largest financial scandals in history. It was accused of laundering money for drug cartels, terrorists, dictators (e.g., Manuel Noriega, Saddam Hussein), and intelligence agencies, including the CIA for covert ops like funding the Afghan mujahideen.
BCCI's fraud was exposed in a 1991 Senate report, leading to its shutdown and fines, but investigations into intelligence ties were limited.
Hillary Clinton's alleged involvement centers on her work at the Rose Law Firm in Little Rock, Arkansas, during the 1970s and 1980s.
These connections paint a picture of a shadowy nexus between intelligence agencies, private firms, and political figures, where PROMIS enabled surveillance and generated laundered funds via BCCI and Systematics. The Inslaw Affair led to lawsuits (Inslaw won some rulings but lost appeals), congressional hearings, and ongoing speculation in books like Whitney Webb's One Nation Under Blackmail. While court documents and declassified files substantiate the PROMIS theft and BCCI's criminality, the NSA front and laundering claims rely more on whistleblowers and circumstantial evidence. No definitive proof has emerged of direct Clinton orchestration, and defenders dismiss it as partisan smears from the "Clinton body count" era. Recent discussions continue to link it to modern surveillance tech.