Chapter
21:
BOMBED
Timothy McVeigh,
the man convicted
of blowing up
the Murrah Federal Building
in Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, with its
resultant toll in human
lives, may have been another
mind controlled murderer. This
possibility is first noted in
the statements of friends
and acquaintances of
McVeigh who say
that his personality dramatically
changed after a
counseling session that took place after the
Persian Gulf War,
when he attempted
to enter Special Forces.
Turned down, McVeigh
is said to
have become disgruntled and left the army.
Still, "He
didn't seem terribly
depressed," fellow enlisted man
William Dilly said
of McVeigh's mental
state at the time. Also, after McVeigh left the army, he
joined the National Guard, hardly the action of a man disillusioned with the
military.
Few make
the connection that
McVeigh's alleged accomplice, Terry Nichols, also
left the army
under mysterious circumstances. Lana
Padilla, Nichols' ex-wife,
questioned the family emergency
that reportedly caused
Nichols to drop
out of the military:
"I've always wondered
just why he was
released, less than a
year after enlisting,
and always been
told it was because
he had to
take care of
[his son] Josh.
But this theory never
washed with me
because he'd had
Josh with him all along..." [1]
Like Lee
Harvey Oswald and John
Hinckley, who shot
Ronald Reagan, Timothy McVeigh
may have had
"doubles" of himself active prior
to the bombing.
This might have
been to confuse his
trail, but also
possibly to incriminate
him. According to the
Los Angeles Times,
"The investigators said
authorities theorize that [McVeigh's
companion] John Doe
2 could be
two people, and that
McVeigh and his
alleged conspirators could have
used different men to
accompany him in order
to serve as 'decoys' and confuse investigators trying
to trace his movements." [2]
The New
York Times noted,
"Mr. McVeigh lived
in theKingman [Arizona]
area for a year until
he was evicted
from a trailer park last June.
The owner of the trailer park said Mr.McVeigh
had lived there
from February to
June 1994. Residents of the
Canyon West Mobile
Park drew a
picture of an arrogant loner who worked as a security
guard for a now-defunct trucking company, lived
with his pregnant
girlfriend, expressed deep anger
against the federal
government and often
caused trouble for his
neighbors."
Not in
the headlines but
only relegated to
a tiny blurb
on a back page
of a few
papers was the news that
the owner of the
trailer park later
changed his mind. He
said that the
man had not been
Timothy McVeigh after
all. "They were
the same height, the
same age, they
looked alike," he
stated, also mentioning that
both men had
recently been released from
the army. [3]
McVeigh complained
that while in
the army he
had been implanted with
a microchip in his buttocks.
One acquaintance said that
McVeigh believed he
was being mind-controlled through the
chip. After McVeigh
was arrested, one
of the few things
that he complained
about was the
discomfort the chip was causing him.
After leaving
the military, McVeigh
soon had ajob
with Burns International Security
Services, dispatched to
the Calspan organization in
Buffalo, New York.
Calspan is engaged
in a number of
top secret projects,
working in areas
such as aeronautics, electronic
warfare, microwave technology,
and electronic telemetry. Monitoring
by microchip is,
by definition, electronic
telemetry.
Additional possible
substantiation of mind
control comes from McVeigh's army
acquaintance Todd A. Regier, who said he was
"kind of cold.
He wasn't enemies
with anyone. He
was kind of almost
like a robot.
He never had a date
when I knew
him in the army.
I never saw
him at a
club. I never
saw him drinking. He never had good friends. He was a
robot. Everything was for a purpose." [4]
Walter "Mac" McCarty,
a gun instructor
who believed that McVeigh and
Fortier were trying
to involve him
in a plot in Kingman,
Arizona, also has
strange things to
say about the mindset
of the men
who allegedly did
the Oklahoma City bombing:
"He [McVeigh] was
upset about things
happening in this country
to the point
of being disoriented... I know brainwashing when
I see it,
those boys had
really gotten a good
case of it." [5]
Is it
possible that like Lee
Harvey Oswald, as
many researchers believe, McVeigh
left the army
for the purpose
of being recruited into a more secret military unit engaged in domestic work—particularly for
the infiltration of
the right-wing patriot underground?
This is substantiated
by a letter
that Timothy McVeigh sent
to his sister Jennifer,
claiming that he had
been working in
a military Special
Forces group involved in criminal
activity. The contents
of that letter,
to my knowledge, have never
been mentioned in
either the mainstream
electronic or print media. [6]
Recall the
words of Daniel
Sheehan of the
Christic Institute: "We have
talked to half a dozen
individuals who have told a startlingly similar
story about how,
at a very
young age, usually between twenty
and twenty-five, they
were contacted, usually within the context of military
training, and told: 'Look, we've
got a special deal
for you. You're
going to come
into the service under
the normal designation
of being an
infantryman but you're going
to leave the
service after a while and
you're going to have special
training, and you're
going to be
brought into a special program. They're
sent to special
places where they
are trained by mercenaries
and then they're
told: 'You're going to
be called upon from time to time
to do some things for us.'"
NOTES:
1.
Padilla and Delpit,
By Blood Betrayed.
(New York: Harper
Paperback, 1995)
2.
"Feds charge Terry
Nichols in bombing", Los
Angeles Times, May 10, 1995
3.
"Timothy James McVeigh:
Tracing One Man's
Complex Path to Extremism", New
York Times, April
25, 1995; Kifner, John.
"Arizona Trailer Park Owner
Remembered the Wrong Man", New York Times, April 25, 1995
4.
McFadden, Robert D., New York Times, May 14, 1995
5.
Schaffer, Mark, "Gun
class sheds new
light on McVeigh", the
Arizona Republic, May 28, 1995
6.
Myers, Lawrence W.,
"OKC Bombing Grand
Jurors Claim 'Cover-Up', Media
Bypass magazine, November 1995
Chapter
22:
BERSERKERS
In recent
years there have
been an increasing
number of instances of
"berserkers," people who
go crazy and
commit murder. A common
thread links many
of these cases:
their belief that they are mind-controlled.
—The San
Francisco Chronicle for March 17,
1984, featured a story
titled "Incident near
White House: Gunman's
bizarre claims,"
detailing the arrest
of a man
near the White
House who claimed that
he had been
injected with a
"crystalline implant" that broadcast
messages telling him to kill
the president. A far-
fetched claim, until
one remembers that
the technology for
such implants does exist, and has apparently been in usefor decades.[1]
—Another case
with a familiar
ring to it
is that of Emmanuel Tsegaye, a
33-year-old bank teller
in Bethesda, Maryland, described as
"rarely violent to
others," who killed three
fellow- employees at the Chevy Chase Federal Savings Bank.
In the past he had been
placed in psychiatric
facilities, and had
received undefined
treatments at St.
Elizabeth's Hospital, a facility infamous for
CIA experimentation. Tsegaya
said, in a letter to the
judge who committed
him, "I used
to hear... voices
both from space and
as... exact repeated words...
I used to hear a
person speaking from
[the] distance about
the things I was speaking." Describing
his state of
mind after an
attempted suicide, Tsegaye wrote,
"I was depressed,
mentally and physically weak...
from the voices
I used to
hear and inadequate sleeps." [2]
—On May
5, 1991, Carl
Campbell went to
a bus stop in the parking
lot of the
Pentagon, and fired
five gunshots into
the chest and abdomen of Navy Commander Edward J. Higgins, who worked as
an arms control
specialist for the
Department of Defense. Campbell
was examined by
psychologists who reported that Campbell
had been haunted
by voices, and
believed he had been injected with a microchip by the
CIA. Although Campbell was charged with
first degree murder,
he was ruled mentally incompetent to stand trial.
[3]
—On December
2, 1993, Alan
Winterbourne, a computer systems engineer,
went on a killing rampage
at a Ventura County, California, unemployment
office. Winterbourne had been employed
in classified scientific
work, and had
resigned after complaining of
harassment by workers
and that his
phone was tapped. Winterbourne's problems
had begun after
he had written a
letter to his
congressman requesting a
federal investigation of illegalities
that he believed
were taking place at Northrop.
Before his murderous
spree he had
told his sister, "they're working
on terrible things
at Northrop that
would kill millions of innocent
people. Things you can't imagine." [4]
—William Tager,
now in prison
for killing an
NBC stagehand outside the
Today show studio
in 1994, believed
that messages were being
broadcast directly to his brain
from the media. In 1986 he is reported to have been one of
two men whophysically beat newsman Dan
Rather, asking him
repeatedly, "Kenneth, what's the
frequency?" Tager—and his
accomplice—apparently believed
that Rather knew
the electronic frequency
of his believed mind control
bombardment. [5]
—Shortly after
9 a.m. on December 14,
1995, 26-year-old Ralph Tortorici
took hostage a history
class at the State University at
Albany, New York. Tortorici shot
one student in the
leg. After capture
by the police, Tortorici
yelled to bystanders "Stop
government experimentation!" as he
was being led away.
Tortorici believes that
the CIA has
implanted a microchip in his brain.
[6]
—The case
of Robert Joe
Moody is an
unusual one in the
annals of mind
controlled murder. Moody
was arrested for
the murder of Michelle
Malone, age 36,
and Pat Magda,
56. Moody had been
part of a
sexual threesome with
Malone and his girlfriend, Dora
Lee, while Magda was his next-doorneighbor, as well as being the wife of an Air
Force officer.
Moody claimed,
even before his
arrest, that he was
commanded by extraterrestrial aliens,
or rather, what
he calls "Extrasensory Biological
Entities", to murder
the two women
so that he would
accomplish his "ultimate mission," to be
lethally injected and be
resurrected by the
alien entities. In
an attempt to explain
why he was
representing himself in
court in October 1995, Moody
said, "I have
never denied my
participation in that... [but]
it wasn't voluntary...
I had no
conscious control of what was going on."
Mind control researcher
Walter Bowart, who has written about
the Moody case,
believes that even
though the man has been
found competent to
stand trial he
is a Multiple
Personality Disorder case, switching
from personality to
personality during interviews. During
the jury trial,
according to Bowart,
Moody's various personalities fought with each other.
Of extreme
interest is the
fact that Moody
was trained with the
Navy Seals, had
received a Top Secret
clearance, and that during
his time as a
Seal, he had experienced
"missing time."
Moody also told the court
that the EBEs had originally contacted him
while he was
serving as a weather observer
for military aircraft. This took
place, Moody says, shortly after he had
read a top secret government
document of the
crash of a
flying saucer craft with
alien bodies. Might
this have been
the bogus MJ-12 document, and if so, who gave it to
Moody?
According to
Bowart, Moody may
have been set
up for execution earlier
than his conviction.
Bowart states, "There even was
one uncomfortable moment
when Prosecutor David White
placed one of
the murder weapons,
a large butcher
knife, in an opened bag on Moody's desk for his inspection.
"I could
imagine Moody taking
it, making a
sudden menacing gesture before
being shot down
in the crossfire
of the three deputies in the courtroom."
Prosecutor White
focused on the
EBE's in his
closing statements,
presumably concerned that
Moody might receive
an acquittal by reason
of insanity. White
asked, "Did the
aliens need the money
to buy plutonium to
fuel their spaceships?"
White's contention
was that Moody
was making up the
aliens in order to
feign insanity for
the jury. "The
aliens are innocent!" the prosecutor concluded. He
may have been on to something.
As Walter
Bowart said, "Many
were disappointed that the aliens were not called to
testify." The jury found
Moody guilty on two counts
of first degree murder. [7]
NOTES:
1. Krawczyk,
Glenn, "Mind Control
& the New
World Order," Nexus magazine, February/March 1993
2. Constantine;
Alex, Psychic Dictatorship
in the U.S.A.
(Venice, California: Feral House, 1995); The Washington Post, February
17, 1989
3. Constantine
4. Ibid.
5. Hidell,
Al, "Paranotes," "Dan
Learns the Frequency," Paranoia magazine, Spring, 1997
6. "Hoffman
II, Michael A.,
"The Invocation of
Catastrophe: The Unabom Ritual
in Alchemical Process," Independent
History and Research newsletter, All Hallows Eve, 1995
7. Bowart,
W.H.. "The Aliens
are Innocent!: The
Trial and Conviction
of
a 'EBE
Possessed' Serial Killer,"
MindNet Journal, volume
1, issues 8a,
8b, 8c, obtained on the Internet
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