30-07-2012, 11:30 PM
(This post was last modified: 31-07-2012, 07:00 AM by Adele Edisen.)
Apparently difficult to detect as a cause of death in ordinary situations. Just like the use of extremely high doses of LSD in its early days when there were no sure methods of detecting it, or the "CIA suicides" such as those of Frank Olson in 1953 and of Grant Stockdale in 1963 (thugs tossed them out of high windows). There's plenty more methods where those came from.
Rivera told me he had a research interest in the hemorrhagic fevers, unheard of in 1963. The Japanese Unit 731, their biology-chemwarfare research facility in Manchuria since the
1930s, had been working on one called Songo River Fever. The U.S. got all their data after the war ended in the Pacific.
Adele
Rivera told me he had a research interest in the hemorrhagic fevers, unheard of in 1963. The Japanese Unit 731, their biology-chemwarfare research facility in Manchuria since the
1930s, had been working on one called Songo River Fever. The U.S. got all their data after the war ended in the Pacific.
Adele

