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Wednesday, December 02, 2009
Cop Killings in Tacoma - Mind Control?
By Alex Constantine
"POSTAL" MASS MURDERS ON THE RISE: In November it was the Ft. Hood Killings, and as it happened, Major Nidal Malik Hasan, a military shrink, worked with radio-hypnotic intracerebral control technology (RHIC) - the very devices, perfected by the CIA, alleged by many mind control researchers to create "Manchurian Candidate" programmed killers. "The voice of God" is often heard by subjects of RHIC, so when four police officers are shot dead in Washington state, it is a fair question, not a crank one, to ask if the "God"-driven killer was radio-hypnotically programmed. - AC
And among these “experiments” conducted on US Soldiers by their government, and according to FSB files was a “research specialty” of Major Hasan’s, one was one called Radio Hypnotic Intracerebral Control Electronic Dissolution of Memory (RHIC-EDOM) which was pioneered for the US Military in the 1960’s by New York University Professor J. Anthony Deutsch who…“indicated that the mind is a transmitter and if too much information is received, like too many vehicles on a crowded freeway, the brain ceases to transmit. The Professor indicated that an excess of acetyl choline in the brain can interfere with the memory process and control. He indicated excess amounts of acetyl choline can be artificially produced, through both the administration of drugs or through the use of radio waves. The process is called Electronic Dissolution of Memory (EDOM). The memory transmission can be stopped for as long as the radio signal continues.”
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Unfortunately for the Americans, and who were undoubtedly warned by their Russian counterparts about this, the previous Soviet experiments using SSRM Tek software combined with RHIC-EDOM technology had a very dangerous side-effect of “triggering immediate battle memories” instead of “erasing” them and resulting in masses of Russian troops who were undergoing these experiments to “erupt” in “immediate violence” which left an estimated 37 of them dead when they began (for no apparent reason) to begin firing upon each other.
82_28 wrote:Yeah. I mentioned the snuff aspect upthread which mentioned that photo. I didn't even wanna link to it.
freemason9 wrote:lupercal wrote:If he'd been shot in the stomach by some as-yet-to-be-announced hero/ine, why wasn't he in bed?
He was on the run, baby, on the run. That's what happens with folks that are in the midst of a psychotic crisis.
The felon's behavior isn't unheard of. Sometimes fellas flip out.
What I'm saying here is that there really ARE such people in the world; sometimes serial killers and homicidal maniacs don't need any nudging.
The officer began doing the stolen vehicle recovery paperwork when something caught his attention. The officer turned around and noticed a subject walking in the street behind his patrol car, approaching on the driver’s side. . . . As the officer was drawing his gun the suspect reached into his waist area and moved. The officer fired several times striking the suspect at least twice.
lupercal wrote:freemason9 wrote:lupercal wrote:If he'd been shot in the stomach by some as-yet-to-be-announced hero/ine, why wasn't he in bed?
He was on the run, baby, on the run. That's what happens with folks that are in the midst of a psychotic crisis.
The felon's behavior isn't unheard of. Sometimes fellas flip out.
What I'm saying here is that there really ARE such people in the world; sometimes serial killers and homicidal maniacs don't need any nudging.
How likely is it that a guy skilled enough to waste four on-duty cops is then going to wander up and let himself get plugged by a cop writing a parking ticket?The officer began doing the stolen vehicle recovery paperwork when something caught his attention. The officer turned around and noticed a subject walking in the street behind his patrol car, approaching on the driver’s side. . . . As the officer was drawing his gun the suspect reached into his waist area and moved. The officer fired several times striking the suspect at least twice.
Maybe he was psychotic, and/or drugged and/or under MK, but I don't think he was the guy who shot the cops, conspicuous stomach wound or no.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska —
An Anchorage police officer was shot several times as he sat in his parked patrol car early Saturday in an apparent drive-by shooting, a police spokesman said.
The officer was in a residential area near downtown after taking a report about an assault that had occurred elsewhere in the city. Someone then drove up to the side of the cruiser and opened fire at about 2 a.m., police spokesman Lt. Dave Parker said.
A dark-colored early 1990s sedan was seen leaving the scene, police said. The officer, who wasn't immediately identified, was taken to an Anchorage hospital.
"He has survived his wounds," Parker said. "He has come out of surgery and we're very hopeful he will make a full recovery."
Police released few details, but Parker said no motive had been determined and no arrest made. He said the shooting was unrelated to the reported assault.
Parker said the incident was very similar to an Oct. 31 ambush on a parked patrol car in Seattle in which Officer Timothy Brenton was killed and another officer wounded. Christopher Monfort has pleaded not guilty to aggravated murder and attempted murder in that case.
That attack was the first of three on police officers in Seattle and nearby Pierce County last year that left six officers dead, including four gunned down Nov. 28 as they were doing paperwork in a coffee shop near Tacoma.
Until the assailant in Saturday's Anchorage shooting is caught there is no way to determine whether it was a copy of the Washington attacks, Parker said.
"But it's sure interesting that we've had so many recently," he said.
LONG BEACH, Wash. - A state trooper was shot in the head at point-blank range while on a routine call early Saturday, and now the State Patrol has launched a manhunt for the gunman.
In an afternoon update, WSP Chief John Batiste said the injured trooper's condition continues to improve, and that he shares the community's outrage over the shooting.
The incident began shortly before 1 a.m. Saturday along Highway 103 near 12th Street in the coastal community of Long Beach.
Trooper Scott Johnson was inventorying the contents of a vehicle about to be towed when a man walked up, said WSP spokeswoman Krista D. Hedstrom.
There was a short verbal exchange between the subject, Johnson and the tow truck driver. The gunman suddenly pulled out a small-caliber handgun and fired twice.
Johnson suffered two gunshot wounds, including one to the head.
The trooper was able to return fire as the gunman fled the scene, but it is unknown if the suspect was hit.
Johnson was rushed to Ocean Beach Hospital in Long Beach, then was transferred to Oregon Health Science University in Portland.
Hedstrom later reported that Johnson is alert and conscious at Oregon Health and Science University Hospital.
And in an afternoon update, Batiste said the trooper continues to improve.
"I am incredibly relieved to see Scott doing so well," Batiste said. "Despite having been shot in the head, he was laughing and joking with those around him. His behavior today sets a new standard for professionalism and heroism."
Johnson is a 25-year veteran of the State Patrol. He has worked in the Pacific County area his entire career.
The tow truck driver was not hurt.
An updated description of the gunman was released Saturday afternoon. He is described as white male, 35 to 40 years old, with a light tan complexion. He stands about 5-feet-10 or 5-feet-11 and weighs an estimated 185 to 200 pounds. He was wearing a dark-colored, insulated shirt and possibly a knit cap.
Police used K-9 dogs and helicopters to search for the suspect, but so far have found no trace of him. One person of interest was contacted this morning, but was quickly cleared by investigators.
Johnson's family and Batiste are with Johnson at the hospital.
"I am troubled that we've had yet another police officer ambushed while performing what should have been a simple law enforcement task," Batiste said.
"I’m exceptionally thankful that Trooper Johnson is doing well, and very grateful for the assistance we've received from the Pacific County Sheriff’s Office and police agencies in both Washington and Oregon," he added.
Gov. Chris Gregoire issued a statement on the shooting that said, in part:
"My thoughts and prayers are with Trooper Scott Johnson this morning as he recovers from this terrible shooting. ... This shooting is yet another reminder why we need to strengthen the protection of our law enforcement officers, their families and our communities."
The driver of the vehicle being towed had been arrested by another trooper for driving while impaired. She was at a nearby police station at the time of the shooting.
Hedstrom said there is currently no evidence to indicate the DUI arrest and the shooting are related.
Meanwhile, the search for the shooter continues. Anyone who has information about the shooting or who witnessed it is asked to call 1-800-283-7808, Hedstrom said.
"I know that local citizens are outraged at the ambush of a police officer who has served them so well for so long. We have every confidence that we’ll get the tip we need to solve this case," Batiste said.
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