PBI’s Christmas Sale: Buy One Crime, Get Four Cover-Ups for Free
by M. SHAKER•December 24, 2025•
PBI’s Christmas Sale: Buy One Crime, Get Four Cover-Ups for Free
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PBI’s Christmas Sale: Buy One Crime, Get Four Cover-Ups for Free
What happened to Shaker International Scholarship Programs (SISP) in Bangladesh is not a misunderstanding, not a paperwork issue, and not a “minor dispute.”
It was robbery. It was destruction. It was the complete wiping out of an international private NGO that came from the United States of America to serve the people of Bangladesh.
SISP was built to serve students, families, and communities. Instead, it was robbed, violated, dismantled, and destroyed by three college students and their family members—people who were trusted, supported, fed, and elevated.
The money was stolen. Operations were sabotaged. Evidence exists. Videos exist. Witnesses exist.
Nine months have passed. Five to six months of investigation by the so-called elite investigative body of Bangladesh have passed.
When Investigation Becomes Humiliation
And what does the Police Bureau of Investigation (PBI) do?
They reduce a serious international crime to kindergarten-level games—“orange and apple” questions. They ask the victim what kind of blog the criminals wrote while they were working.
That is not investigation. That is humiliation. That is protection.
It feels like a Christmas sale.
Pay for one cover-up—get four more for free.
This is not incompetence. This is not confusion. This is not delay.
This is failure with intention.
When Silence Is Bought
When investigators ask irrelevant questions instead of confronting bank trails, digital records, financial transfers, video evidence, and sworn witnesses, it becomes clear what is happening.
The criminals didn’t just steal from SISP—they bought silence. They paid once, and PBI delivered multiple layers of protection.
Let us be clear: PBI has failed the nation of Bangladesh.
The most sensitive arm of law enforcement—the supposed heart of the police—has been sold cheaply. So cheaply that it insults every honest officer in the country and disgraces the Bangladeshi flag.
We come from the United States of America. I traveled over 10,000 miles to serve the people of Bangladesh.
And instead of justice, we were handed back to the criminals. Instead of accountability, we were asked insulting, irrelevant questions—as if evidence does not matter.
If this were the FBI in the United States, this case would have taken two hours and five questions before arrests were made.
That is the difference between law enforcement and law enforcement on sale.
PBI Is Now Part of the Crime
In my eyes, as the founder of SISP, PBI is now part of the crime.
When an institution protects criminals, delays justice, and shields theft, it becomes a participant.
When an organization helps bury evidence and exhaust victims, it commits institutional violence against justice itself.
Now we can easily see and understand why Bangladesh—with 170,000,000 people—is in this CHAOS.
This Story Does Not End Here
This is a shame—not just for PBI, but for Bangladesh.
Understand this clearly: This story does not end here.
No one in my life has ever robbed me and walked away untouched. Not once. Not ever.
After Christmas, the calendar will turn.
2026 will be the year of justice. The year of accountability. The year when organized crime—whether wearing civilian clothes or police badges—faces consequences.