113 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
113 lines
5.7 KiB
Plaintext
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Conspiracy Nation -- Vol. 9 Num. 38
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======================================
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("Quid coniuratio est?")
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WHITEWASH
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=========
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"Investigative Reports" "Examines" Vince Foster Death
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(A&E, October 5, 1996)
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First PBS's "Frontline" bites the dust. Then "60 Minutes" loses
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face. Now Bill Kurtis, host for "Investigative Reports," konks
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out.
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A portion of the October 5, 1996 "investigative report" dealing
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with the late Vince Foster showed the pain that Foster's friends
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and family are enduring due to a "small but vocal" group of
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"conspiracy theorists" who keep raising questions. Advised one
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Foster friend to "conspiracy theorists" -- "Get a life."
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"Oh it's the mystery. Americans love a mystery." That's
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supposedly why Vince Foster is not resting in peace.
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Says a representative from the New York Times: "Oh we would love
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to have a real story about a murder at that high of a level."
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So, it seems, obviously there's no cover up or else New York
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Times would be hot on the trail.
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Also seriously put forward by the "investigative report" was the
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idea that, because there are so many anomalies connected with the
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Foster death, then obviously there's not a cover-up; if a real
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cover-up was occuring, so many glaring inconsistencies and
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supposed screw-ups by investigators wouldn't have happened. Get
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it straight: only if the case had lacked its doubtful aspects
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could we assume that something fishy was going on -- real
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cover-up artists wouldn't have made so many mistakes. Or so,
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with a straight face, suggests the "investigative report."
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Three Park Police were shown at Fort Marcy Park discussing the
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case. Two of the three, all of whom had been among the first to
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arrive at the scene that July 20th, wore uniforms. Officer #1
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says he took photos that day, but they came out bad. Officer #2
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says he took Polaroid photos, but he lost many of them. The
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doctor who performed the autopsy couldn't take x-rays for some
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reason; apparently his x-ray machine wasn't working that day.
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But, according to the view presented by "Investigative Reports,"
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it's all an innocent coincidence feeding the fevered brains of
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"conspiracy theorists."
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Not really covered by "Investigative Reports" was the expert
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handwriting analysis showing the so-called "Foster suicide note"
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is a forgery. Not covered was that no skull fragments from
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Foster's exploding cranium were found at the scene. Not answered
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for were the carpet fibers on Foster's clothing nor the pristine
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condition of his shoes.
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Why didn't recoil from the pistol throw it away from Foster?
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Park Police say the thumb got caught in the trigger guard. Why
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no fingerprints on the pistol? Something to do with the pistol
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not conducive to retaining prints. Why the lack of blood at the
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scene? The "investigative report" suggests the heart stopped
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pumping and also that what blood there was got soaked into the
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ground. (But why did the trail of blood on Foster's face flow in
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three different directions, including uphill?)
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Given minor air time were Hugh Sprunt, Reed Irvine, G. Gordon
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Liddy, and Ambrose Evans-Pritchard. Given plenty of air time
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were the Park Police (two in handsome uniforms and all three shot
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at least once from a camera angle designed to make them appear
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quite large indeed.) Also given plenty of sympathetic coverage
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were grieving Foster friends (guitar softly strumming in the
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background) made to suffer the cruelty of "conspiracy theorists."
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Conclusion? These "conspiracy theorists" aren't after the truth,
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they're sickos and sadists.
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Congrats to Bill Kurtis on a slick P.R. job meant to persuade
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amateurs that Foster became suicidal due to Washington stress.
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To the underinformed (underinformed thanks to "investigative
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reports" like yours, Bill) your program came across as possibly
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an honest search for the truth. To this editor, among a minority
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that somehow has gained access to more of the facts -- facts
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which indisputably show Foster did *not* commit suicide where his
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body was found -- Bill Kurtis has revealed his true colors.
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Views expressed do not necessarily reflect those
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of Conspiracy Nation, nor of its Editor in Chief.
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Aperi os tuum muto, et causis omnium filiorum qui pertranseunt.
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Aperi os tuum, decerne quod justum est, et judica inopem et
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pauperem. -- Liber Proverbiorum XXXI: 8-9
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