SOME DRUGS KILL BY HEART ATTACK |
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Compiled by American-Buddha.com Librarian Jack Shewmaker, aka goddesshathor.com wrote:
Name: Jack Shewmaker Pentaflouroethyl ether can be used to kill by inducing heart attack by fillibration as can sodium flouroacetate (compound 1080) and flouroacetamide (compound 1081 made in Israel). These poisons are undetectable with antidote of ethyl alcohol or acetic acid (vinegar) since they effect the Krebs Cycle (acetate cycle) in humans and animals. Microwaves at six different frequencies will kill or disable humans especially if used with photosenthetizing agents. Webster G. Tarpley & Anton Chaitkin in "The Unauthorized Biography of George Bush" wrote: On May 16-17, 1973, Deep Throat warned Woodward that "everybody's life is in danger." On May 18, while the staff of the Ervin committee were pondering their next move vis-avis Russell, Russell suffered a massive heart attack. This was the same day that McCord, advised by his lawyer and Russell's, Fensterwald, began his public testimony to the Ervin committee on the coverup. Russell was taken to Washington Adventist Hospital, where he recovered to some degree and convalesced until June 20. Russell was convinced that he had been the victim of an attempted assassination. He told his daughter after leaving the hospital that he believed that he had been poisoned, that someone had entered his apartment (the Bellino-Birely safe house in Silver Spring) and "switched pills on me." [fn 28] *** Is it possible that Jerris Leonard communicated the contents of Leon's memorandum to the RNC and to its Chairman George Bush during the days after he received it? It is possible. But for Russell, the game was over: on July 2, 1973, barely two weeks after his release from the hospital, Russell suffered a second heart attack, which killed him. He was buried with quite suspicious haste the following day. The potential witness with perhaps the largest number of personal ties to Watergate protagonists, and the witness who might have re-directed the scandal, not just towards Bellino, but toward the prime movers behind and above McCord and Hunt and Paisley, had perished in a way that recalls the fate of so many knowledgeable Iran-contra figures. Carol Marshall in "The Last Circle" wrote: An Associated Press news story entitled, "Deaths Linked to Spy Network," published in the Merced Sun Star newspaper, outlined the death of Ian Stuart Spiro, 46, who was found dead of cyanide poisoning in the Anza Borrego desert on November 8, 1992, one week after his wife and children were found shot to death in their Rancho Santa Fe home. The news story, originating from the Oceanside Blade Citizen, noted that "documents and U.S. intelligence sources implicated Spiro in the Iran Contra arms-for-hostages affair and an alleged Justice Department conspiracy to pirate software from a private company and sell it to foreign intelligence agencies." Spiro's name also appeared in Lt. Col. Oliver North's personal notebooks documenting the Iran Contra affair, according to the National Security Archives in Washington D.C.. Former hostage David Jacobsen told the Blade Citizen shortly after Spiro's death that Spiro helped negotiate the release of hostages in the Middle East. After obtaining a copy of a follow-up Blade Citizen article dated June 3, 1993, entitled, "Spiro Probers Want to Talk to North" by Wade Booth, Stacy Finz and Michael Williams, I learned that Ian Spiro lived in Beirut, Lebanon during the 1970's and 1980's where he "made contacts with Lebanese religious leaders and the Islamic Jihad." Greg Quarton, Spiro's brother-in-law, told reporters at the Blade Citizen that Spiro maintained communication with Lebanese business associates until the time of his death, but investigating officers had possession of Spiro's phone bills, and as of this writing, they had not released them. San Diego sheriff's Capt. Jim Marmack said detectives were investigating allegations by Spiro's relatives that his file cabinets and business papers were missing. The week of the Spiro family's death, Robert Corson, a business associate of Spiro's indicted in a savings and loan scam, was found dead in an El Paso, Texas, motel room. Corson, who reportedly worked for the CIA, died of a heart attack, officials said. The Blade Citizen reported that Corson once carried money to South America in a deal to deliver covert weapons. Corson also allegedly associated with California investor Wayne Reeder who was seen at a Wackenhut/Contra meeting in Riverside county (See Chapter 10). Harry V. Martin in The Napa Sentinel wrote: All these things, with the exception of Standorf, were written off as suicides. And Michael May, who we wrote of as being tied into that, and who had had communications with Casolaro…. and also, he was the man who supposedly filtered the forty million dollars to the Iranians as the down payment on the "October Surprise"– we wrote about him on a Friday in June, and on a Wednesday in San Francisco he was found dead. They said it was a heart attack. Later on, the autopsy revealed that it was polypharmaceuticals that were in his system, and it was not a heart attack. June Campbell in "Traveller in Space" wrote: As an example of what might happen, I was told that, in a previous life, the lama I was involved with had had a mistress who caused him some trouble, and in order to get rid of her he cast a spell which caused an illness, later resulting in her death. I was also told that this woman must have been a powerful demon, and that the lama had only invited her to participate in sexual acts through compassion, but her trouble-making had become impossible to bear and posed a threat to the lama's position. This kind of information was compounded by a more concrete example of what might befall me. Some time into my own relationship with this high lama, a young Tibetan woman in her late teens, who had been taken as a second songyum, unexpectedly died suddenly from -- it was said -- a heart attack. Martin A. Lee & Bruce Shlain in "Acid Dreams" wrote: At the outset of the CIA's behavior control endeavors the main emphasis was on speech-inducing drugs. But when acid entered the scene, the entire program assumed a more aggressive posture. The CIA's turned-on strategists came to believe that mind control techniques could be applied to a wide range of operations above and beyond the strict category of "special interrogation." It was almost as if LSD blew the Agency's collective mind-set -- or was it mind-rut? With acid acting as a catalyst, the whole idea of what could be done with a drug, or drugs in general, was suddenly transformed. Soon a perfect compound was envisioned for every conceivable circumstance: there would be smart shots, memory erasers, "antivitamins," knock-out drops, "aphrodisiacs for operational use," drugs that caused "headache clusters" or uncontrollable twitching, drugs that could induce cancer, a stroke or a heart attack without leaving a trace as to the source of the ailment. There were chemicals to make a drunk man sober and a sober man as drunk as a fish. Even a "recruitment pill" was contemplated. Rayelan Allan Russbacher wrote: Ross Perot was one of the first people to contact us after Gunther had been sentenced to 21 years in prison. I now realize that he was planning on running for President, and wanted to know what Gunther knew about George Bush. At the time, I knew Ross Perot only by reputation. Perot had funded missions in South East Asia to look for POWs. Gunther had been a POW for 18 months in our undeclared war with Laos. Shortly after Perot talked with Gunther, the world would know that he was planning to form a third party and run for President. On the day that Perot's men were scheduled to visit Gunther, Gunther had a heart attack and was taken to the Columbia Unirversity Hospital. I will never forget that day. My telephone rang. It was Ross Perot. In his twangy Texarkana accent, he told me, "Miz Russbacher, your husband is in the hospital. He is alive. He had a heart attack. Can you get to San Francisco and catch a plane to St Louis?" Martin A. Lee & Bruce Shlain in "Acid Dreams" wrote: [At the CIA] deadly chemicals were concocted for the sole purpose of inducing a heart attack or cancer without leaving a clue as to the actual source of the disease. David Wise and Thomas B. Ross in "The Invisible Government" wrote: Another interesting case was that of Anatoli Skachkov -- a Russian emigre who joined Radio Liberty on January 1, 1957. Skachkov died on July 22, 1959. On November 5, 1962, Izvestia carried an article which accused Radio Liberty of being staffed by CIA men. It listed eight alleged agents by name. In the course of the article, Izvestia said Skachkov had fallen from favor with American intelligence: "He was seized at his place of employment and sent to a mental hospital. The next day two Americans, Valerio and Sanker, bearing flowers and a bottle of cognac, visited Skachkov. After their visit, he died. The physicians attributed his death to poisoning." The tale of poisoned cognac is colorful, but Radio Liberty tells a different story. According to the radio station, Skachkov was an alcoholic who developed a persecution complex. As a result, he was committed to the State Institute for the Mentally Disturbed. He died, said Radio Liberty, of "a heart attack." Radio Liberty employed a Joseph Valerio and a Paul Sanker in its news department, but "neither Valerio or Sanker ever visited Skachkov, so the whole premise is a fabrication." Kenn Thomas and Jim Keith in "The Octopus, Secret Government and the Death of Danny Casolaro" wrote: "With the help of Wackenhut and the Cabazons, according to Ben-Menashe, the U.S. developed its own version of the back-door and the U.S. and Israel began looking for a neutral company through which it could sell the program to foreign intelligence services. The company chosen for the task was Degem, a computer firm with offices in Israel, Guatemala and the South African Bantustan homeland. It had been taken over for the purpose by Robert Maxwell, the publishing mogul who drowned under mysterious circumstances in 1991. Maxwell's body was found floating in the ocean near his yacht, the Lady Ghislaine, off the Canary Islands on November 5, 1991. He had not been seen for hours preceding his death. These types of rumors, of connections to Mossad and other international spy groups, had long circulated about Maxwell, and his publishing empire's finances had come under official review. Nevertheless, Spanish authorities concluded that Maxwell died of a heart attack, although he had no history of heart disease. Maxwell's daughter Ghislaine said the family was satisfied with the investigation, but his sons, widows and lawyers insisted that the death was accidental, perhaps with an eye toward Maxwell's $35.8 million insurance against accidental death. ('Maxwell's Mysterious Death Raises More Questions," MIN Media Industry Newsletter, No. 47, Vol. 44, November 25, 1991.) Mat Wilson in "Blackmail and Murder" wrote: Liddy goes on and on talking about all kinds of different ways to murder people and about illegal FBI operations which were always staged in a manner that made it appear as though the FBI was absolutely blameless. Indeed J. Edgar Hoover routinely authorized criminal activity like illegal surveillance, mail openings, unauthorized bugging, illegal wiretaps, break-ins and murder -- and it was all successfully covered up through the overriding obsession to avoid discovery. Gordon Liddy embodies the fact that murder was the ultimate consequence of Hoover's obsession to control a particular target, and like all illegal FBI activity, it was done in a manner that "proved" that it was not the fault of the FBI even though it was. Ernest Hemingway was precocious enough to characterize the murderous capacity of Hoover's FBI, but he was ignored and at least four decades ahead of his time. We are still just beginning to appreciate the significance of Hoover-directed tyranny. Would-be assassins like Gordon Liddy should certainly erase every single shred of doubt about the fact that J. Edgar Hoover cultivated and worked with murderers. To be sure, Gordon Liddy has never been prosecuted for murder, but like Al Capone who was also accomplished in the art of covering up criminal operations, allegations of murder follow him as closely as is evidently warranted. According to Washington attorney Bernard Fensterwald: "G. Gordon Liddy has been reliably linked to two separate alleged murder plans during his work for Nixon's top aides, and one other actual completed murder, during his previous FBI service." [6] When Liddy became Nixon's crony and the cozy relationship between Hoover and the Nixon White House soured, Liddy and his faithful Cuban partners in crime were responsible for break-ins at Hoover's apartment and "a poison of the thyon-phosphate genre was placed on Hoover's personal toilet articles." [7] The poison induces fatal heart attacks. Howard Hunt had indicated that he had been ordered to kill Anderson with an untraceable poison and while the scheme was dropped, the simple fact that zealots with a proclivity to commit politically motivated murder had access to such diabolical resources, is in itself revolting. Electrocution looks like a heart attack. If you surge enough amps through dad's hand or another body part his little heart will stop. It will look like he had a heart attack! Volts won't work! Use amps! I can't think off-hand where one might come up with a good source of high amperage except for those taser stunner thingys. Just press it into him for about 10 minutes. Blowfish toxins are very good as they aren't usually checked for and it looks like a heart attack. Karen Watkins in an "All My Children Daily Recap" wrote: The doctor pronounces Mateo just fine, saying he'll check on him in the morning. Hayley thanks him, but says they won't be here in the morning. Chris tells the guard to start with a name. As he begins to speak, the guard falls to the ground, gasping for breath. Chris opens his collar and shouts that he's having a heart attack! Mateo calls for help, as he watches his hopes die before him. Hayley waits with Mat in his cell. Chris comes back around the corner, not saying a word. "No!" Mateo says, "No way!" Stamp tells them the doctor said he had a massive coronary, he didn't make it. Mateo says he was their only link to Proteus; that was too pat, too neat - he was about to give it up to the FBI…. Chris says he doesn't buy it either. Hayley asks if he's saying the guy gave himself a heart attack? Stamp tells her no, but somebody else may have. He tells them when he first came to this town, there was a bad cop who was after Tad Martin. Hayley and Mateo remember -- it was Officer Sweeney. Chris says he died the exact same way, he just keeled over; they haven't changed the cause of death, but there was a needle mark in his neck. Mat asks if he's saying they could have used some kind of untraceable drug? Hayley says that's crazy! Chris says there's a pattern here; all he has to do is find one convenient heart victim who survived, and he's got Proteus dead to rights! He makes a phone call, asking for a list of every heart attack victim in every hospital in the area for the last six months. Hayley watches suspiciously, then asks Mateo is he's 100% sure about this guy - this whole thing seems a little too convenient for her! She says if he's Proteus, this is a perfect cover-up! Mateo doesn't think he's lying, but agrees to keep an eye on Stamp. Chris gets off the phone and says this is good, they're getting close! Hayley says the only thing good is that she gets to take Mateo out of here now! Chris tells her he's sorry, but he can't do that -- he needs Mateo to work with him here, and if he doesn't, he'll face the pending charges! Hayley exclaims, "He was almost killed here tonight!" Chris tells her he doesn't have a choice, and neither do they! Hayley just looks at her husband. Anders Sandberg in "Asatru -- The Nordic Subtradition of the Verbena" wrote: Brew Venom (Life 2 Prime 2 Entropy 1) While the Vikings regarded poison as foul, some of the modern mages use it in the defence of their homes and traditions. By boiling together a foul mixture of blood, salt, yeast, earth, iron, ice and some drops of snake venom under invocations of the powers of death, they create a potent and untraceable poison. The poison can be applied in food or drink, placed on weapons or even on surfaces. The poison will seek out the weakest point of the victim and make him very sick or kill him. [The poison works as an infection or other disease, completely coincidental. Typical effects can be heart attacks, allergic reactions or food poisoning. It will find the weakest point in the body of the victim using an effect like Dim Mak and then strike. It does three times the number of successes damage levels.] Rick Endres, in "Teresa" wrote:
In the guise of a monk, Valkris had watched with fists clenched in
helpless rage as earth-moving machines shoved heaps of Klingon bodies into
a deep pit at the edge of the forest. An angry mob of weak, pathetic
Humans stood by, jeering and heaving rocks at the warriors' corpses. While
it was true the bodies were empty shells without the spirit of the
warriors within, Valkris had wanted to kill, then. But she had been sent
merely to observe. She had turned away before the urge to kill overwhelmed
her, and led to her undoing. |