He has been publicly named as Tommaso Stenico, and has confirmed that he gave the interview.
In the 23 years since he founded the company, he has bought and sold historical documents.
DeCoux, now 27, marvels at what he has accomplished in such a short time.
He has broken with the tradition of the secretive committee, whose members rarely discuss proceedings.
Interesting that he has a flak jacket, he's taking precautions on both sides of the fence.
He has broken sharply with the fiscal pattern of earlier Labour governments in one respect, however.
He has relied on diplomatic and political solutions, applying military might sparingly, strategically and powerfully.
He is leaving because he has achieved everything he set out to do at Radio 4.
He has time for his career, golf and Twitter, but online dating is just too time-consuming.
He has done so by completely overhauling his company to fit these straitened times.
For the past 34 years, he has been the best trapper in the area.
He has dismissed cyberterror in reports for the nonpartisan Center for Strategic andInternational Studies.
He has already re-arranged the board and put in place new marketing and finance directors.
He and colleagues in the United States are studying the rings in seashells he has found.
But he has since found a suitable alternative that turns out to be even better.
He has worked to become, among other things, a bicontinental travel baron with an Internet upside.
He has already appointed former Labour Culture Secretary James Purnell as director of strategy and digital.
He has made 17 appearances in all competitions this season and has scored eight tries.
He has made it clear that he will never accept any version of the Kyoto treaty.
He has also invited North Korea's reclusive leader, Kim Jong Il, to Tehran, his capital.
He has spoken against attempts to "demalvinizar" or gloss over the history of the war.
But he doesnt deny he has spent much of his life as a digital intruder.
Power prevailed, as he has every time someone has taken him to court in Russia.
An award-winning journalist, he has managed media projects in over 45 countries in transition since 1992.
Funding would come from a charitable trust he has established and from fees paid by guests.
He has written and edited 15 books and over 100 reports, papers, and articles on mountain issues.
The obvious, but only partial, answer is that he has raised existing taxes and imposed new ones.
But Universal Studios' House of Horrors ride in Hollywood remains the scariest ride he has been on.
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For years he has called for paper ballots and he says that time for delay is over.
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