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02-11-2010, 06:10 PM
(This post was last modified: 02-11-2010, 06:22 PM by Peter Lemkin.)
David Guyatt Wrote:It now looks to me as though all this was news "management".
David, how polite of you....what a gentleman! It is [known to the powers that be] f_ucking Propaganda and LIES....but news management is what they'd call it, for sure....
My [sad] prediction: this will change nothing in the MSM nor in the legal [sic] situation...and least of all to the average person - with the exception of those few cognoscenti......:banghead:
It is a significant break in the story...but I've seen 'em before and almost no one notices.....but we 'conspiracy factists'..... tickyman: :goodnight:
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The official legend states that Abdelatif Redjil:
- stole Picassos;
- is suspected of a series of cash machine robberies;
-is known to underworld figures as "Goldfingers" or "The Locksmith" for his expertise in picking locks;
- is suspected of playing a leading role in the robbery of an Axa bank in February, in which robbers escaped with 33,000 euros (£28,500) in cash.
He is then described as a "common thief".
Rubbish.
If true, this makes Abdelatif Redjil a gifted thief, whose contacts could handle specialized objects such as stolen Picassos and the proceeds of bank heists. Of course thefts in the art world are often commissioned by rich and unscrupulous people.
I would venture that Redjil is a Mechanic for hire.
However, there is no visible suggestion of violence, or murder, in his current MSM legend.
So of what use was the skillset of this particular Mechanic for hire?
The actions of his "friend", Belkacem Bouzid, perhaps provides a clue:
Quote:Good Samaritan risked his life at Diana crash scene
By REBECCA CAMBER
Last updated at 00:48 23 October 2007
A good Samaritan risked his life to help Princess Diana's bodyguard at the scene of her fatal crash, an inquest heard yesterday.
Belkacem Bouzid is said to have held back a mob of paparazzi while tending to Trevor Rees-Jones in the Alma tunnel.
At the same time, petrol was pouring out of the Princess's wrecked Mercedes, threatening to turn the car into a fireball.
Joanna de Costa, an American tourist who stumbled upon the scene of the crash in Paris, gave a dramatic account yesterday of tweed-wearing Bouzid's heroics.
She heard the sound of the crash - on August 31, 1997 - and ran down the tunnel to try to stop cars piling into the wreckage.
Two men on a motorcycle forced their way through however.
The pillion passenger, identified by Mrs da Costa as photographer Serge Benhamou, jumped from the moving bike to start "snapping away" at the Mercedes.
"There was a motorbike that went through me, even though I was trying to stop him for his own safety,' she recalled.
"I was thinking, "Gosh, what a jerk" and here I am trying to stop them and he goes right by and he's going to hit that car.
"I remember him perspiring, his hair was wet. Their intention was to get to the crash scene. Nothing was going to stop them." Mrs da Costa described the tunnel as thick with smoke and the stench of burning tyres.
She retreated when she heard what she took to be fuel gushing from the Mercedes. "I stopped in my tracks and when I heard the liquid sound, this gentleman (Mr Bouzid) stood up," she said. "He was aiding the passenger that survived.
"He ran out of the tunnel and started throwing his hands above his head, yelling something in French.
"I ran out. We all thought the car was going to explode."
Mr Bouzid, who has yet to give evidence, returned to the tunnel to help Mr Rees- Jones and to warn other bystanders of the risk of an explosion.
Mrs da Costa added: "I could see his (Mr Rees-Jones's) feet outside of the passenger door and I could see that gentleman in the tweed suit was assisting him and he was holding his head. "This gentleman was trying to keep people away for obvious reasons, trying to stop the paparazzi trying to get to the Mercedes to take pictures.
"A lot of people were trying to get to the car and this gentleman would not let people mess with the car. He was waiting for either help or somebody to arrive in an official capacity."
It took police at least ten minutes to arrive and an ambulance was another five minutes behind that, she said.
The inquest also heard that a mystery biker was seen following the Mercedes before the crash that killed Diana, her lover Dodi Fayed and their driver, Henri Paul.
Grigori Rassinier described seeing the motorcycle amid the smoke billowing from the car. He said the rider braked and swerved sharply to dodge the wreckage before speeding off.
Mr Rassinier, who was driving the other way down the Alma tunnel in Paris, said he then saw Diana's "inanimate" body in the back of the car.
In a statement to police, Mr Rassinier said the vehicle's interior lights were on and he could see her lying still with her hand raised.
The High Court heard from another driver who was in the tunnel. Amel Samer said she saw two men, who had been standing with the paparazzi, drive off in a black car parked near the Mercedes.
The inquest continues.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-...z149gU5hwZ
Crowd control to prevent any imagery inconsistent with the Official Story, perhaps?
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Jan Klimkowski Wrote:...
If true, this makes Abdelatif Redjil a gifted thief, whose contacts could handle specialized objects such as stolen Picassos and the proceeds of bank heists. Of course thefts in the art world are often commissioned by rich and unscrupulous people.
I would venture that Redjil is a Mechanic for hire.
...
The actions of his "friend", Belkacem Bouzid, perhaps provides a clue:
...
Crowd control to prevent any imagery inconsistent with the Official Story, perhaps?
Good point about the contacts needed to fence Picassos.
Jan Klimkowski Wrote:...
...
So of what use was the skillset of this particular Mechanic for hire?
The actions of his "friend", Belkacem Bouzid, perhaps provides a clue:
...
Crowd control to prevent any imagery inconsistent with the Official Story, perhaps?
Bouzid's actions as volunteer crowd control officer are of particular interest I agree. Dire warnings that a car was about to explode in a tunnel were apparently effective.
Though I think photographers were already on the scene snapping pix of the Mercedes so that's a wrinkle. How would the mechanic do his work with cameras in his face?
I also wonder how common it is for pedestrians to be in the area of the tunnel in the middle of the night.
And I wonder where they were officially going on foot before the crash, or if they said.
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Myra Bronstein Wrote:How would the mechanic do his work with cameras in his face?
Speculatively, as above, because this Mechanic was not an object of interest to the photographers, and his job was to limit the amount of unauthorized imagery of the death scene.
His job was to limit access and the "Good Samaritan" article suggests that he controlled it very well.
Not all Mechanics are hit men.
"It means this War was never political at all, the politics was all theatre, all just to keep the people distracted...."
"Proverbs for Paranoids 4: You hide, They seek."
"They are in Love. Fuck the War."
Gravity's Rainbow, Thomas Pynchon
"Ccollanan Pachacamac ricuy auccacunac yahuarniy hichascancuta."
The last words of the last Inka, Tupac Amaru, led to the gallows by men of god & dogs of war
Myra Bronstein
Unregistered
Peter Lemkin Wrote:David Guyatt Wrote:It now looks to me as though all this was news "management".
David, how polite of you....what a gentleman! It is [known to the powers that be] f_ucking Propaganda and LIES....but news management is what they'd call it, for sure....
My [sad] prediction: this will change nothing in the MSM nor in the legal [sic] situation...and least of all to the average person - with the exception of those few cognoscenti......:banghead:
It is a significant break in the story...but I've seen 'em before and almost no one notices.....but we 'conspiracy factists'.....tickyman: :goodnight:
True. After all the UN Report on the Mavi Marmara Raid said that the Israelis carried out "extra-legal, arbitrary and summary executions." Yet that caused hardly a ripple in the universe.
Still, to the truth-based community community such information is a welcome beacon in the dark.
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A "reconnaisance team," for lack of a better term, had to be pre-positioned at the intended point of impact to determine if further action would be necessary.
And it was.
Myra Bronstein
Unregistered
Charles Drago Wrote:A "reconnaisance team," for lack of a better term, had to be pre-positioned at the intended point of impact to determine if further action would be necessary.
And it was.
Oh yes. If Diana had died on impact I suppose no further action would have been necessary. A triage of sorts.
Maybe the advance team helped determine how long the ambulance would have to dawdle (answer = 2 hours) to insure that Diana arrived at the hospital cold.
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