Friends,
Never give your
possessions voluntarily to the FBI. Read the article below and you will know
why.
Paul Watson at
infowars has the story:
"Workers at the
Route 91 festival during which Stephen Paddock unleashed his massacre have
reportedly been given back their phones and laptops by the FBI only to discover
that all messages and videos from the night of the attack have been wiped
clean."
"According to a
Las Vegas resident who posted a status update on Facebook, 'A bunch of people
that worked the Route 91 [concert] said they got their cell phones back today.
They all said that all their phones are completely wiped clean! All messages
and info from that weekend are completely gone. Anyone else experience
this'?"
"'A few
different people who were vendors there are all saying the same thing,' the
woman later comments."
"Later in the
thread, a Route 91 worker confirms the story, commenting, 'Of course. It's an
active federal crime scene. They can wipe it clean. I was the beverage manager
for the entire event. My laptop is wiped clean'."
What?
First of all, in a
recent article, I demonstrated in detail why you can never trust what the FBI
says about evidence in any investigation. There is a notorious history of the
Bureau cooking and slanting and inventing data to support prosecutions.
Second, who says the
FBI can take people's phones and laptops, watch and copy the video footage, and
then wipe it all away before returning the devices to their owners?
The FBI literally owns the crime scene AND any record of
what happened at that scene? Baloney.
The obvious reason for wiping out the footage: it
contained evidence that contradicts the official scenario. And most likely,
that evidence revealed multiple shooters.
As Vegas cops, the
FBI, and the owners of the Mandalay Hotel have changed and massaged the
official narrative, one assertion has remained constant: there was only one
shooter, and he was Stephen Paddock.
Law-enforcement
pounced on that claim early on, without the slightest justification. Without
interviewing multiple witnesses who state they saw other shooters.
"Okay, the mass
shooting happened yesterday and we know there was only one shooter. That's it.
Don't ask us any questions about this. Anyone who disagrees with us is
spreading rumors and impeding the investigation."
Admitting multiple
shooters is admitting there was cooperation, collusion, conspiracy, a plan, and
a purpose for that plan beyond "the lone gunman was crazy." This is
the door law-enforcement keeps slamming shut every time it opens.
And now we have
reports that the FBI has wiped witnesses' phones and laptops. No more footage
of the shooting. No more evidence.
Let's be clear: the
FBI is impeding the investigation.
There is no
Constitutional rule that states private citizens can't investigate crimes.
There never was. There never will be.
Law enforcement
doesn't OWN investigations.
If they did, every
time a journalist probes beneath the surface of a crime and uncovers important
information, the FBI could say, "Well, we just opened an investigation of
that very crime, and therefore we want all your notes and we want you to cease
and desist your inquiry. Shut up and go cover Sunday picnics."
In most cases,
law-enforcement doesn't have to worry about mainstream reporters. Those
denizens simply take dictation from local cops and federal cops and their
stories appear in papers and TV news broadcasts wiped clean of independent
thought.
That leaves the truth
a wide open field.
Private citizens and
non-mainstream journalists own that field, not through edict, but through
default. Don't blame us. If you were doing your jobs, we wouldn't have to do
them for you.
Your first rule would
be: stop lying.
Destruction of evidence is a felony. Those concert
workers whose phones and laptops were wiped clean had a felony committed
against them. By agents of government who have sworn to uphold and protect the
Constitution.
Thousands of smart
lawyers out there will say, "Come on, there's no way you could make a
charge like that stick." Well, maybe there would be a way, if enough of
you decided there has been enough destruction of the Constitution and it's time
to stand up and be counted, come hell or high water.
Meanwhile, whoever
can look past the lies and fabrications and distortions of a criminal
investigation can say something because they saw something.
Here is a quick
excerpt from a piece about the FBI's stance on crime probes. It should give you
a clue about the Bureau's attitude and reputation:
April 20, 2015, The
Atlantic: "...the Washington Post made clear Saturday in an article that
begins with a punch to the gut... 'Nearly every examiner in an elite FBI
forensic unit gave flawed testimony in almost all trials in which they offered
evidence against criminal defendants over more than a two-decade period before
2000,' the newspaper reported, adding that 'the cases include those of 32
defendants sentenced to death'."
In the Vegas shooting
case, the FBI is saying: Trust us. We're the pros. We do investigations the
right way. Now give us your cell phone so we can look at video footage of the
shooting and make a copy and wipe your phone clean and give it back to you.
Don't worry, be
happy. All is well. The centurions are on duty.
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