Convenient suicide

Ames family gathering
Two types of events that should always raise eyebrows in national and international politics: Important people killed in small plane crashes, and convenient suicides*.

A Washington Post story about an anthrax settlement case (Stevens v. US) that was settled by the government with a $2.5 million payment. After settlement, the Justice Department tried to file a notice of errata seeking to correct evidence it had presented that contradicted its own findings in the case of Bruce E. Ivins, the dead man who was pinned with the 2001 anthrax killings. One part of the justice department claimed that Ivins’ work could not have been related to the attacks, and that the strain used bore much more similarity to a strain developed by laboratories in Ohio. I would have said Iowa. Typo? How many fricking anthrax production facilities do we have?

Bruce Ivins was accused of being the anthrax killer, and then committed suicide. Case closed.
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*The reader might note with this link that the Boston Globe is doing easy journalism by speculating on mischief in a suicide in Russia, a place known to harbor evil people.

2 thoughts on “Convenient suicide

  1. Bruce Ivins definitely committed suicide and was driven to it by the aggressive investigation of the feds. Whether he actually committed the attacks and if he did whether he had unknown accomplices we obviously have no idea…no matter what the investigation “concluded”. The whole thing has always been a bit peculiar.

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  2. Russia isn’t quite as good at covering up their own false flag attacks(not that Im neccesarily implying that the anthrax or any other incidents in the US were). The apartment complex explosions blamed on Chechen terrorists were obviously done by the govt itself, they even got caught in the act. Didn’t matter of course. A conspiracy theorist might say they set the perfect template for the 9/11 attacks.

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