Friday, 17 December 2010
mark lane new film
An early preview of a new documentary film by Mark Lane, author of "Rush To Judgment" and "Plausible Denial." The new film A RUSH TO JUDGMENT is still in production with an anticipated release date in 2011. The film updates the watershed 1967 film with new interviews and new findings by Lane regarding the JFK assassination that remains unresolved after nearly 50 years.
This preview includes an interview with Abraham Bolden, the first African American secret service agent who talks about the attitudes of the men who served on President Kennedy's secret service detail on November 22, 1963.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=px-7IRJpMZE
Sunday, 21 November 2010
Oswald In Mexico
ccording to the Warren Commission, Lee Harvey Oswald traveled to Mexico City in the fall of 1963, in search of a visa for travel to Cuba and the Soviet Union. He failed in that effort and returned to Dallas, where 7 weeks later he shot President Kennedy.
Allegations of a Cuban or Soviet conspiracy, based on events and stories related to this visit, bloomed in the aftermath of the assassination. They were apparently instrumental in the creation of the Warren Commission, and over the years more and more has trickled out regarding a trip which ultimately remains enigmatic.
The record on Mexico City is wildly muddled and mysterious. Was Oswald impersonated there? Who is the "mystery man" caught by photo surveillance? Why are CIA records on the trip at sharp variance with participant's memories? Were the witnesses who reported events indicating a Communist conspiracy telling the truth, spinning false tales, or perhaps reporting on staged incidents? Did Oswald, or someone pretending to be him, threaten the life of JFK in the Cuban Embassy?
Despite the mysteries, one thing is certain. The events in Mexico City had a profound effect on the federal government's response to the assassination. President Johnson invoked fears of nuclear war in putting together the Warren Commission, finally enlisting a recalcitrant Earl Warren by telling him "what Hoover told me about a little incident in Mexico City."
The Fourteen Minute Gap - A short documentary about an erased Presidential phone call in which Johnson and Hoover a Mexico City impersonator.
Oswald's Visits to the Cuban and Soviet Embassies - Discusses the Oswald embassy visits and the resulting CIA cable traffic.
The Mexico City Tapes - Focuses on recorded telephone conversations of a man using Oswald's name, who was apparently not Oswald.
Valeriy Kostikov and Comrade Kostin - Examines the KGB Department 13 "wet affairs" connection and the curious letter written to a "Comrade Kostin."
Photo Surveillance and the Mystery Man - Looks at the man caught on surveillance cameras, apparently originally thought to be Oswald.
Monday, 18 October 2010
Dr David Kelly
mbulance chiefs face renewed pressure to explain the loss of a key medical record relating to the death of Dr David Kelly after the investigating police force said it had no record of ever having received the document.
Bosses at South Central Ambulance NHS Trust were criticised last month when The Mail on Sunday revealed they could not find the patient report form (PRF) completed by paramedic Vanessa Hunt, who attended the scene of the former weapons inspector’s death in 2003.
A spokesman for the Trust claimed that they had probably handed over a copy of the form to Thames Valley Police at the time of its original investigation into Dr Kelly’s death.
But this version of events appears to have been undermined by a new disclosure obtained by The Mail on Sunday under the Freedom Of Information Act.
In response to a request about the PRF, Thames Valley Police said that it had
‘no record of such a form being completed, or having requested such a form or being in possession of such a form or copy’.
The admission will embarrass ambulance chiefs and increase demands for an inquest into the death.
Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat MP who has long maintained that 59-year-old Dr Kelly was murdered, said: ‘It is pretty extraordinary that a document of this importance appears to have vanished and neither body will take responsibility for it.’
Dr Michael Powers QC, who is leading a group of doctors campaigning for an inquest into Dr Kelly’s death, accused the Ambulance Trust of trying to shift the blame.
He said: ‘This document has either been intentionally or incompetently lost. It can only be one or the other.
‘The document is the closest thing to a full record of what the ambulance team at the scene saw and noted down. I would have expected such a form to have been filled out and to have been kept, particularly given national and international interest in the case.’
All ambulance crews have to fill out a PRF for every call-out. The details recorded include pulse rate, blood pressure and skin condition, the timing and location of an incident, and any action taken.
The information can play a key role at an inquest. Paramedics giving
evidence normally rely on the PRF.
The South Central Ambulance NHS Trust insists the form was completed in accordance with the rules.
At the time of the death, Ms Hunt and her colleague Dave Bartlett, who also attended the scene in woods near Dr Kelly’s home, worked for Oxfordshire Ambulance Trust, which has since merged with three others to form South Central Ambulance Trust.
Mr Bartlett’s claim in The Mail on Sunday last month that Dr Kelly’s body had been moved added to the increasing demand for an inquest.
The two paramedics lifted Dr Kelly’s eyelids, felt for a pulse and applied a heart monitor. These actions should all have been recorded on the PRF.
A copy of the document was not submitted to Lord Hutton’s inquiry into Dr Kelly’s death. Lord Hutton’s 2004 report, which concluded that Dr Kelly slit his wrists to kill himself, was branded a whitewash by critics who pointed to the lack of blood at the scene and other unanswered questions.
A spokesman for the Trust last night said it stood by its previous statements on the PRF and that it could not comment further.
A spokesman for Thames Valley Police said they had never received a copy of the form.
Bosses at South Central Ambulance NHS Trust were criticised last month when The Mail on Sunday revealed they could not find the patient report form (PRF) completed by paramedic Vanessa Hunt, who attended the scene of the former weapons inspector’s death in 2003.
A spokesman for the Trust claimed that they had probably handed over a copy of the form to Thames Valley Police at the time of its original investigation into Dr Kelly’s death.
But this version of events appears to have been undermined by a new disclosure obtained by The Mail on Sunday under the Freedom Of Information Act.
In response to a request about the PRF, Thames Valley Police said that it had
‘no record of such a form being completed, or having requested such a form or being in possession of such a form or copy’.
The admission will embarrass ambulance chiefs and increase demands for an inquest into the death.
Norman Baker, the Liberal Democrat MP who has long maintained that 59-year-old Dr Kelly was murdered, said: ‘It is pretty extraordinary that a document of this importance appears to have vanished and neither body will take responsibility for it.’
Dr Michael Powers QC, who is leading a group of doctors campaigning for an inquest into Dr Kelly’s death, accused the Ambulance Trust of trying to shift the blame.
He said: ‘This document has either been intentionally or incompetently lost. It can only be one or the other.
‘The document is the closest thing to a full record of what the ambulance team at the scene saw and noted down. I would have expected such a form to have been filled out and to have been kept, particularly given national and international interest in the case.’
All ambulance crews have to fill out a PRF for every call-out. The details recorded include pulse rate, blood pressure and skin condition, the timing and location of an incident, and any action taken.
The information can play a key role at an inquest. Paramedics giving
evidence normally rely on the PRF.
The South Central Ambulance NHS Trust insists the form was completed in accordance with the rules.
At the time of the death, Ms Hunt and her colleague Dave Bartlett, who also attended the scene in woods near Dr Kelly’s home, worked for Oxfordshire Ambulance Trust, which has since merged with three others to form South Central Ambulance Trust.
Mr Bartlett’s claim in The Mail on Sunday last month that Dr Kelly’s body had been moved added to the increasing demand for an inquest.
The two paramedics lifted Dr Kelly’s eyelids, felt for a pulse and applied a heart monitor. These actions should all have been recorded on the PRF.
A copy of the document was not submitted to Lord Hutton’s inquiry into Dr Kelly’s death. Lord Hutton’s 2004 report, which concluded that Dr Kelly slit his wrists to kill himself, was branded a whitewash by critics who pointed to the lack of blood at the scene and other unanswered questions.
A spokesman for the Trust last night said it stood by its previous statements on the PRF and that it could not comment further.
A spokesman for Thames Valley Police said they had never received a copy of the form.
Sunday, 10 October 2010
Wednesday, 4 August 2010
Sunday, 14 February 2010
Las Malvinas
Britain as started to drill for oil in the Las Malvinas we pissed the middle east off now we are pissing argentina off as well.
Analysts say that as many as 60 billion barrels of high-grade oil could be found in a 200 sq mile zone surrounding the islands, which is to be developed by Desire, AGR and Diamond Offshore Drilling. That could make the Falklands one of the world’s largest oil reserves, comparable with the North Sea, which so far has produced about 40 billion barrels.
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