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9/11
See other 9/11 Articles

Title: Former pilot and 9/11 conspiracy theorist shoots and kills 2 teen children, then himself
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://boingboing.net/2013/02/04/former-pilot-and-911-conspira.html
Published: Feb 5, 2013
Author: .
Post Date: 2013-02-05 21:53:12 by wudidiz
Keywords: None
Views: 18658
Comments: 236

Former pilot and 9/11 conspiracy theorist shoots and kills 2 teen children, then himself

Xeni Jardin at 6:41 pm Mon, Feb 4

Slaying victims Alex and Macaila Marshall with their father, Phillip Marshall.

Phillip (alternately, "Philip") Marshall, 54, a career airline pilot who claimed to have once served as a contract pilot for the CIA and DEA during the Iran-Contra affair, shot and killed his two teenage children, and the family dog, then killed himself.

The apparent murder-suicide was discovered at the family home in an upscale gated golfing community in Murphys, California.

According to local news reports, teen friends of Alex Marshall, 17 (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram), and Macaila Marshall (Facebook, Twitter, Instagram), 14, noticed the siblings had not been active via text or social media updates since Thursday and went by the house on Saturday to check on them.

The last posts made by either child to Instagram and Facebook were dated Thursday night.

The friends told police that when they arrived, they found Phillip Marshall, 54, "lying in a pool of blood inside the home," his 9mm Glock nearby.

Deputies believe the children were shot while sleeping on a couch.

The family dog was found shot to death in a nearby bedroom.

Marshall's estranged wife Sean, the children's mother, was out of the country at the time.

Phillip Marshall has been identified as a former pilot for Eastern and United airlines. He self-published a number of books, including at least two about his 9/11 conspiracy theories: "The Big Bamboozle" (February 9, 2012) and "False Flag 911: How Bush, Cheney and the Saudis Created the Post-911 World" (July 29, 2008).

A previous novel published in 2003, "Lakefront Airport, New Orleans," detailed his claimed experience as a pilot for the US during Iran/Contra.

In his books and his social media bios (including multiple Facebook accounts, his Twitter account and a Tumblr), he claims to have served as a contract pilot for the CIA's Special Activities Division during the Iran-Contra affair, flying shipments to and from Nicaragua.

He appeared on "outsider truth" shows like Coast to Coast to promote the theories in his books that 9/11 was an "inside job," the result of a plot between the US government and the Saudis.

From his author bio on Createspace.com, Amazon.com's self-publishing service:

Philip Marshall, a veteran airline captain and former government "special activities" contract pilot, has authored three books on Top Secret America, a group presently conducting business as the United States Intelligence Community.

Beginning with his role in the 1980s as a Learjet captain first as part of a Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) sting on Pablo Escobar, and later in the covert arming of the Nicaraguan Contras, Marshall has studied and written 30-years worth of covert government special activities and the revolving door of Wall Street tricksters, media moguls, and their well funded politicians.

I am unable to confirm the veracity of the claims in his self-authored bio at this time.

A Facebook page for "The Big Bamboozle" showed posts as recent as January 31 with titles like, "WHAT IS THE INTELLIGENCE COMMUNITY HIDING?," "THE ARAB WORLD KNOWS THE RAID WAS A HOAX," and posts about the Bin Laden assassination having been faked.

"PICTURES PAINT A THOUSAND WORDS," read one such Facebook post from Marshall about photographs of the assassinated Al Qaeda leader. "Since bin Laden died in 2001, these would be "alleged" photos of bin Laden. Give us a break."

He once also pitched those theories to a television news journalist with whom this blogger is acquainted.

A young friend of the two slain teens with whom this blogger is personally acquainted described them as "sweet, funny, lively, good kids."

A tweet from Macaila on January 25:

Would it be wrong if I threw my cat with his claws retracted at my dads face right now?... #pissoff— Macaila Marshall (@MacailaMarshall) January 25, 2013

Photos from the siblings' Instagram feeds suggest that they were outgoing, well-liked by friends, and loved one another very much. In one, Macaila is in the hospital after a "golf cart accident," with her father sitting in the background.

In the last self-portrait she posted on January 28, her brother blows a hair dryer at her while she goofs in the mirror.

"I pretty much just wanted to say how great of a big brother you are," Macaila writes to her brother in another Instagram caption, "I love you so much!"

A family photo Instagrammed by Alex shows the boy at a much younger age.

In it, he is helping his father mow the lawn with a toy lawnmower.

Macaila Marshall, from her Facebook profile.


Poster Comment:

L.A. Times - Two teens killed by father in apparent murder-suicide, officials say(9 images)

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#1. To: wudidiz, *Black Ops - Psyops* (#0)

This was obviously a state approved hit.


"The real deal is this: the ‘royalty’ controlling the court, the ones with the power, the ones with the ability to make a difference, with the ability to change our course, the ones who will live in infamy if we pass the tipping points, are the captains of industry, CEOs in fossil fuel companies such as EXXON/Mobil, automobile manufacturers, utilities, all of the leaders who have placed short-term profit above the fate of the planet and the well-being of our children." - James Hansen

FormerLurker  posted on  2013-02-05   23:09:23 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#2. To: FormerLurker (#1)

This was obviously a state approved hit.

He was a mental case, as all conspiracists are.

"Have Brain, Will Travel

Turtle  posted on  2013-02-05   23:15:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#3. To: FormerLurker (#1)

This was obviously a state approved hit.

I was thinking the very same thing. And what a tragedy. This reminds me of William Cooper and how he died in Nov of 2001 by those who ambushed him at gunpoint and shot him dead. It was also a hit by the upper echelons who wanted him dead too for his controversial book, "Behold a Pale Horse" where he was exposing everything from mind control to chemtrails. God Bless his soul.

purplerose  posted on  2013-02-05   23:30:11 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#4. To: wudidiz (#0)

"PICTURES PAINT A THOUSAND WORDS," read one such Facebook post from Marshall about photographs of the assassinated Al Qaeda leader. "Since bin Laden died in 2001, these would be "alleged" photos of bin Laden. Give us a break."

He was definitely right about that.


"It is the habit of unhappiness to rewrite our lives and from a different beginning come to a different ending. We cling to the past and what it could have been; what we wanted, or thought we wanted, before we were taught by a broken heart that our own good intentions have little effect on the way things are."
D. W. Buffa, Breach of Trust

James Deffenbach  posted on  2013-02-06   0:02:36 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: Turtle (#2)

He was a mental case, as all conspiracists are.

Uh huh. He had the model family. If he were such a mental case that wouldn't have been so.

Do you still believe Oswald, Sirhan Sirhan, Holmes, and Lanza were all lone gunmen who carried "magic bullets"?

Or how about the story about bin Laden being tossed out at see without any confirming photos?


"The real deal is this: the ‘royalty’ controlling the court, the ones with the power, the ones with the ability to make a difference, with the ability to change our course, the ones who will live in infamy if we pass the tipping points, are the captains of industry, CEOs in fossil fuel companies such as EXXON/Mobil, automobile manufacturers, utilities, all of the leaders who have placed short-term profit above the fate of the planet and the well-being of our children." - James Hansen

FormerLurker  posted on  2013-02-06   0:27:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#6. To: purplerose (#3)

This reminds me of William Cooper and how he died in Nov of 2001 by those who ambushed him at gunpoint and shot him dead.

From what I've read, Cooper did sort of have a gunfight with the local sheriff though. At least it didn't appear to be a suicide or an "accident".

This is more of a Senator Wellstone, Vince Foster, Terrance Yeakey, Gary Webb, or Danny Casalaro sort of thing.


"The real deal is this: the ‘royalty’ controlling the court, the ones with the power, the ones with the ability to make a difference, with the ability to change our course, the ones who will live in infamy if we pass the tipping points, are the captains of industry, CEOs in fossil fuel companies such as EXXON/Mobil, automobile manufacturers, utilities, all of the leaders who have placed short-term profit above the fate of the planet and the well-being of our children." - James Hansen

FormerLurker  posted on  2013-02-06   0:32:48 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: wudidiz (#0)

Phillip (alternately, "Philip") Marshall, 54, a career airline pilot who claimed to have once served as a contract pilot for the CIA and DEA during the Iran-Contra affair, shot and killed his two teenage children, and the family dog, then killed himself.

The apparent murder-suicide was discovered at the family home in an upscale gated golfing community in Murphys, California.

1. Murphys, CA is not an upscale community by a long shot. Good heavens - it's located in central CA near Stockton. Ouch!

2. If this pilot was a "career airline pilot" he would not be living in Murphys.

3. If this pilot worked for the CIA and DEA, he would not be living in Murphys.

4. This story is bullcrap.

scrapper2  posted on  2013-02-06   2:29:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: scrapper2 (#7) (Edited)

Murphys, CA is not an upscale community by a long shot.

Doesn't say that, scrap. It says, "...in an upscale gated golfing community in Murphys, California."

The amenities in this gated community make it a perfect get-away.

Immaculate home in gated golf course community

Forest Meadows is a gated community with golf, pools, tennis courts.

Golf, and then golf more. Welcome to the mountains! When you're done with your golf game you can swim, snowboard, hike, ski, fish, canoe, or just relax and enjoy the area. This level lot is in a gated mountain community on a frontage road for more privacy.

Still could be bullcrap though ;)


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   2:45:58 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#9. To: scrapper2 (#7)

3. If this pilot worked for the CIA and DEA, he would not be living in Murphys.

Well, he did live in Murphys and in his book

"...claimed to have once served as a contract pilot for the CIA and DEA during the Iran-Contra affair"


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   2:50:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#10. To: scrapper2 (#7)

2. If this pilot was a "career airline pilot" he would not be living in Murphys.

Problem with this one....

basically he was a career airline pilot and he actually did live in Murphys.

Well...

he died there anyway ;)


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   2:52:38 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#11. To: FormerLurker (#1)

This was obviously a state approved hit.

YOu have read a story. You have not seen a body. You assume too much from so little to make such grand pronouncements.

It could just as easily be a complete fabrication like sandyhoax with the intent to put people like us(not you personally) under a dangerous microscope.

_______ Their are only two kinds of americans left in the USA those opposed to the tyranny and those that are wrong. Resist propaganda, Support strict constitutional adherence!

titorite  posted on  2013-02-06   2:58:02 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: titorite (#11)

It could just as easily be a complete fabrication like sandyhoax

Yes and whether it is or not should soon be apparent.


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:04:05 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#13. To: titorite, FormerLurker, scrapper2, all (#11)

Tragedy in Forest Meadows


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:12:21 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#14. To: All, *Black Ops - Psyops* (#13)

www.calaverasenterprise.c...e2-99e8-001a4bcf887a.html

Friends and neighbors who knew Marshall had trouble believing he would have taken the life of his children. He was known as a good father, well-liked Little League coach, former pilot for Eastern and United Airlines and an easygoing guy with a good sense of humor.

“The actions don’t match the person we know,” said Merita Callaway, a county supervisor who lives four doors up the street from Marshall. She considered him a good friend. “I can’t tell you how many times we’ve had conversations over a cup of coffee together.”

“He was a wonderful man,” said Carolyn Greenwood, who is Marshall’s nextdoor neighbor and who has known him for more than 10 years. “I knew him long enough to know he was a regular guy. He was a good father, always there for his kids and a helpful neighbor.”

“When I heard what happened, I couldn’t believe it,” Callaway said. “He loved his children.”


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:20:50 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#15. To: wudidiz (#8)

Look, wud. I live in CA.

I live on the coast of CA.

That's upscale.

Murphys is inland.

It's not upscale.

An upscale golfing community in a non upscale town is non, nothing, nada.

Sorry.

This so-called uber successful pilot - if he was all that he said he was - would be living in a coastal town in CA.

That's the way it is in CA.

Ocean and proximity to ocean is everything.

You can own a shack in Santa Barbara and it would be worth 5x that of a house in an "upscale golfing community" in a town in central CA.

scrapper2  posted on  2013-02-06   3:25:59 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#16. To: wudidiz (#14) (Edited)

wud,

This is a non-story.

This guy is not who you think he is.

If he was, he would NOT be living in Murphys.

Experienced airline pilots earn $300,000+ per year.

They don't live in central CA.

scrapper2  posted on  2013-02-06   3:27:32 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#17. To: scrapper2 (#16)

Put down the bottle and step away from the keyboard.


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:30:14 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: scrapper2 (#15)

An upscale golfing community in a non upscale town is non, nothing, nada.

Sorry.

I'm not trying to sell you some real estate here, scrap ;)


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:32:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#19. To: wudidiz (#17)

Nice try.

Fail.

You are trying to be a tin-foil hero.

This is the wrong story to make your fame.

scrapper2  posted on  2013-02-06   3:33:01 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: scrapper2 (#16)

Experienced airline pilots earn $300,000+ per year.

I think he was retired.

"It's not how much you make, it's how much you save"


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:34:35 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: scrapper2, all (#19)

Nice try.

Fail.

You are trying to be a tin-foil hero.

This is the wrong story to make your fame.

I CAN'T WORK LIKE THIS PEOPLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:35:53 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#22. To: scrapper2 (#16)

wud,

This is a non-story.

This guy is not who you think he is.

If he was, he would NOT be living in Murphys.

Experienced airline pilots earn $300,000+ per year.

They don't live in central CA.

The "tragedy in forest meadows" link simply says he live in forest meadows.

Later stories derived from this say it's an "upscale gated community".

Maybe they got that from the real estate ads.

You know, the agents are always trying to make it sound like more than it is.

I'd appreciate it if you wouldn't ruin my dream of becoming a tin-foil hat hero.


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   3:45:26 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#23. To: wudidiz (#21)

I CAN'T WORK LIKE THIS PEOPLE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

The hammer comes down, this term.

God forbid dear leader power grabs for a third term. (Cryptic enough for ya?)

_______ Their are only two kinds of americans left in the USA those opposed to the tyranny and those that are wrong. Resist propaganda, Support strict constitutional adherence!

titorite  posted on  2013-02-06   3:52:57 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#24. To: titorite (#23)

a couple original sources:

Murder-suicide in Murphys

Update On Murder-Suicide


"Freethinkers are those who are willing to use their minds without prejudice and without fearing to understand things that clash with their own customs, privileges, or beliefs. This state of mind is not common, but it is essential for right thinking; where it is absent, discussion is apt to become worse than useless." ~ Leo Tolstoy

wudidiz  posted on  2013-02-06   4:21:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#25. To: FormerLurker (#1)

This was obviously a state approved hit.

Possibly, but the wife is still alive, so there might be more to this story. Killing him might make some sense for the elite, killing his kids makes no sense unless they knew something. And what about his wife? I would think she would know even more, yet she is still alive.

God is always good!

RickyJ  posted on  2013-02-06   4:44:55 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#26. To: scrapper2 (#16)

Experienced airline pilots earn $300,000+ per year.

I don't think they do. You got any sources to back that up?

God is always good!

RickyJ  posted on  2013-02-06   4:47:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#27. To: scrapper2 (#15)

This so-called uber successful pilot - if he was all that he said he was - would be living in a coastal town in CA.

This is funny. You are determining where people must live based on their job, as if it is a rule of some sort. It could be that he didn't make as much money as you think he did and that he was wise enough to not waste what he did make on overpriced real estate. I'm sorry if this offends you, but you are not making logical posts here and I think are way off on how much commercial airline pilots make a year.

God is always good!

RickyJ  posted on  2013-02-06   4:55:18 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#28. To: scrapper2 (#16)

Forest Meadows is a gated, private community in Murphys.

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   6:43:31 ET  (1 image) Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#29. To: RickyJ, FormerLurker (#25)

Gail Spiro’s family buried Ian next to Gail and the kids in England. They have never wavered in their insistence that detectives have settled on the wrong man— that the Ian they knew never could have turned into a murderous, suicidal monster.

They have relentlessly stoked the fires of the case, taking their story from U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno’s office to the British House of Commons, pushing theories that the Spiros were victims of Middle East assassins or rogue members of the intelligence community. They have called or written every imaginable politician and bureaucrat, including President Clinton and Lawrence Walsh, the special counsel who probed the Iran-Contra affair.

Colonel Oliver North, who directed the Iran-Contra affair from his White House basement office, mentions in his notebooks that Ian Spiro was suggested as a go- between in Lebanon.

There was an obvious hit 20 some years ago near San Diego, in an upscale neighborhood (Rancho Sante Fe) where they found the father (CIA Agent).

Murder in Rancho Santa Fe

by Kevin Brass

THE HOUSE IS FOR SALE NOW, priced to move at $985,000. “It’s been recently remodeled,” a real estate agent assures me. It sits on 1.7 acres, tucked into a Rancho Santa Fe hillside, a chip shot from the golf course where Bing Crosby first hosted his annual clambake.

At the top of the driveway, past the stone walls of the entrance, a white gate opens to the back and a cluster of three bedrooms with large windows. This is where the Spiro children were found.

Eleven-year-old Dina, 14-year-old Adam and 16-year-old Sara were tucked into their beds, gunshot wounds to their heads. Apparently the murderer was careful not to wake them before firing the fatal shots. Dina was neatly wrapped in her blanket, only her head and one arm poking out. Down the hall, at the other end of the house, is the master bedroom, where their mother, Gail Spiro, was murdered in a similar execution style.

No one heard the shots. Neighboring homes are barely visible from the house, masked by pine trees and well-tailored hedges. The bodies were not discovered for three days—not until neighbors came looking for Sara, who had missed a riding lesson.

That was three years ago.

The grisly discovery prompted the most expensive and comprehensive murder investigation in the history of the San Diego County Sheriff’s Department. At times, the case has been a media carnival, rumored to involve Ollie North, the Shah of Iran, Lebanese terrorists, the CIA, Colombian drug lords, the Japanese mafia and gun-running. But after three years of chasing leads, the case remained officially open and unsolved.

Over the years, the house has become a magnet for curiosity seekers, says the exasperated real estate agent. Neighbors complain about people stopping and gawking. The English couple who bought the estate several years before with dreams of someday retiring in sunny Rancho Santa Fe—and rented the house to the Spiro family—now want nothing more than to sell it.

When people call about the listing, the real estate agent feels she has to tell them first about the horrific events of November 1992. Then, she says, “A lot of people don’t want anything to do with the house.”

The first time I saw this house—my first of many trips to Avenida Maravillas— was the morning after the bodies were discovered. It was my first week as a reporter for KUSI-TV, and I was assigned to wait for the bodies of the Spiro family to be wheeled out by the medical examiner—the requisite picture when TV news covers a homicide.

By 10 a.m., TV crews from Los Angeles had arrived, lured by the news of mysterious murders in the wealthy enclave of Rancho Santa Fe. In the bright morning sun, the crews huddled at the bottom of the driveway—kibitzing, renewing friendships, gossiping—while the detectives and medical examiners went about their work.

Late in the morning, four or five young girls dressed in plaid skirts and white shirts, perhaps classmates of the young victims, tentatively made their way up the street, intimidated by all the people, holding hands for strength. Spotting them, several reporters nudged their photographers. A few started toward the girls, followed by a few more, setting off a stampede. The terrified girls ran back down the street, a deputy following to comfort them.

IT COULD HAVE HAPPENED anywhere, the locals like to say. But it happened here in Rancho Santa Fe, a world of eucalyptus trees and mansions rarely touched by such sordid and bloody affairs.

This world of exclusivity and luxury was invaded by Ian Spiro, father and husband, wheeler-dealer, a man who told friends he smuggled gold and negotiated with terrorists. But in his last days he couldn’t even pay his electric bill. Three days after the discovery of his murdered family, Spiro was found slumped over the wheel of his Ford Explorer in an isolated part of the Anza-Borrego Desert, dead from cyanide poisoning.

“We just want to get a fresh look from someone with the ability to spend 100 percent of their time on the case,” says Commander Myron Klippert, the man in charge of the new effort. “We need to come to some sort of resolution on this.”

By mid-September, there were rumblings within the department that the sheriff was finally ready to make a declarative statement about the case, to bring some sense of closure to the Spiro saga. But that doesn’t mean the story will go away.

In three years, those involved in the case—even investigators—have not been able to shake a lingering sliver of doubt, a doubt formed as much by personal emotion as by the convoluted trail of Ian Spiro’s life. It is the doubt of rational minds finding it difficult to accept that a father could kill his children. Even detectives who believe that Ian Spiro killed his family can’t fully explain what would cause a man to take such a wild leap over the edge of sanity.

“It disturbed me then, and I still think about that,” says Sheriff’s Commander James Marmack, one of the first detectives on the scene. “I constantly think: Why, why would someone do this?”

Gail Spiro’s family buried Ian next to Gail and the kids in England. They have never wavered in their insistence that detectives have settled on the wrong man— that the Ian they knew never could have turned into a murderous, suicidal monster.

They have relentlessly stoked the fires of the case, taking their story from U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno’s office to the British House of Commons, pushing theories that the Spiros were victims of Middle East assassins or rogue members of the intelligence community. They have called or written every imaginable politician and bureaucrat, including President Clinton and Lawrence Walsh, the special counsel who probed the Iran-Contra affair.

Colonel Oliver North, who directed the Iran-Contra affair from his White House basement office, mentions in his notebooks that Ian Spiro was suggested as a go- between in Lebanon.

According to a variety of reports, Spiro also helped Anglican Church envoy Terry Waite meet with Shiite terrorists. Spiro’s business activities reportedly included several deals in Iran and Lebanon. Greg Quarton, Gail’s half-brother, a businessman living in Vancouver, Canada, says Ian was a victim of the CIA or Mossad (Israeli intelligence). He’s not sure which, but says, “One thing for sure is that the assassination was sanctioned by the intelligence community.” He vows never to drop the case as long as Ian is suspected of murder.

The case has become something of a crusade for Quarton—and almost a full-time job. He has spent $40,000 following leads, interviewing “spooks” and former associates of his brother-in-law. He says he sleeps with a gun under his pillow.

Ken Quarton, Greg’s twin, breaks down when I ask him about the tragedy. It’s been three years, but the family was close, he says; they visited each other often. Gail Spiro’s mother spent a few months each year with Gail, Ian and the kids. “This has devastated our family,” he says through tears. “I don’t go a day without thinking about it.”

THE INCONSISTENCIES, the speculation about Ian Spiro’s deeds and companions, began almost the moment the bodies were discovered.

The first officers at the scene found the house locked; firefighters were forced to break down a door. But the neighbor who first called the police says the door to Ian Spiro’s office, an add-on to the garage, was open. He says nothing in the office seemed out of place—except there was a 6-foot string of faxes hanging from the fax machine. All carried frantic, searching messages: “Please call me back...” “No one is answering the phone...” “Where are you...?” The office was packed with papers and phone records, chronicling a vast array of business dealings.

Initially, detectives were reluctant to designate the missing Ian Spiro a suspect. “I don’t know that he’s not a victim,” homicide Lieutenant John Tenwolde told a reporter. However, by the time his body was found three days later, detectives were ready to issue a warrant for his arrest.

Perhaps most incriminating was an ominous meeting Spiro had with the family maid on Monday, November 2. The Latina maid, who speaks little English, says she had shown up for work to find a disheveled Ian Spiro blocking her way. He wouldn’t let her in the house and drove her home. At the time they took that ride, Gail and the children were already dead.

Investigators learned little from Rancho Santa Fe residents. The Spiros had moved to the United States from France in 1991, renting first in Del Mar and then in Fairbanks Ranch before renting the house on Avenida Maravillas for $5,000 a month.

Many locals who knew the Spiros describe them as a likable, social couple. He was “maddeningly secretive,” a man prone to big stories and “creative” business schemes. She loved tennis and bridge. They were members of the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club. Closer examination turned up little more neighborly insight.

Ian, 46, didn’t smoke or drink, except for an occasional glass of wine. He was known to retire early in the evening. He regularly picked up his children at school and attended all their extracurricular events. He was British and charming and eccentric, and people liked him.

Many chuckled at his outlandish stories. Still, they liked him. Gail had been a popular young English girl, captain of her school hockey team, who grew up to be a nurse. She and Ian met in Beirut, where she worked in a hospital and he conducted his various business schemes.

In hindsight, some call Ian an enigma. Others refer to his “dark side.” Almost with pride, he told one friend he didn’t support his daughters from a first marriage because their mother had run off with one of his partners.

In the final months, Spiro had talked of leaving Rancho Santa Fe, perhaps moving his family to Vancouver to live near Greg Quarton’s family, or to New York, near his uncle, Joseph Riina. But one day he mysteriously told Greg he “was not permitted to leave” and never talked of moving again.

Ken Quarton visited the Spiros in California in May, six months before the murders. “They loved California,” Ken says. “They loved the area. Gail had never been happier.”

IN RANCHO SANTA FE, curiosity about Spiro and the tragedy ebbed quickly. The Spiros were, after all, outsiders. Since they rented, they were not members of the elite Covenant. The Spiros were members of the Lomas Santa Fe Country Club, not the Rancho Santa Fe Country Club, the acknowledged social center of older Rancho.

“The media were much more interested in the continuing story than anyone who lived here,” says Walt Ekard, manager of the Rancho Santa Fe Association, which oversees the Covenant. “It was no longer cocktail-party conversation two weeks after it happened.”

Long after interest waned among locals, though, reporters were familiar figures outside exclusive shops and restaurants, asking about “the mood” of the community, seeking any tidbit about the family that few in Rancho had ever seen. Ekard was barraged with calls from reporters. One called from the airport asking when his limousine would pick him up, apparently confusing Rancho Santa Fe with a country-club resort.

Within a few days of the discovery of the bodies, dealing with media inquiries about the case all but became Commander Marmack’s full-time job. He was receiving 30 calls a day.

“The Spiro case didn’t go away,” says Marmack, who headed the homicide unit. “It kept going and going.”

Detectives wouldn’t discuss evidence, and they sealed all pertinent public- record documents, forcing reporters to undertake fishing expeditions. One print reporter called Marmack and said a psychic knew where the murder weapon could be found —did he care to comment?

Marmack and Tenwolde, who headed the investigative unit, were even offered movie deals. One producer was only slightly fazed when Marmack pointed out that it would be inappropriate and unethical for a working cop to take money from a movie company on an open investigation. “Well, how about taking the money when you retire?” the producer suggested.

The media blitz was spiced by British journalists, who were widely quoted and used as sources by other reporters. London journalist Con Coughlin, who had written a book on Middle East intrigue, flew to San Diego and made the rounds of TV news shows. Coughlin portrayed Spiro as a con artist but also linked him to all sorts of events in the spy world.

In a fairly typical example of British tabloid journalism, Coughlin authored a front-page story stating without equivocation—and without any attribution—that the Avenida Maravillas address was a “CIA safe house.” The international wires dutifully picked up the story, and the San Diego Union ran a prominent story with quotes from the owners of the house, denying their rental was a CIA front.

KUSI-TV did more than its share of Spiro mythmaking, providing one of the lowlights in coverage. When Ian Spiro’s body was found, a KUSI reporter in the field mentioned during an off-camera conversation an unconfirmed (and incorrect) rumor that the head was missing from the body. The anchor repeated the rumor on the air. Word spread. To the family of the victims, it became a symbol of the media coverage.

As one of the reporters, much of my time was spent following false leads. One would-be tipster repeatedly called the station to inform me that spy satellites were the key to the Spiro case. A far more reliable source told me Spiro’s Explorer had been clocked in at the border coming back from Mexico between the time of his family’s death and his own. I spent days tracking the tip with no luck. I finally filed with U.S. Customs for disclosure under the Freedom of Information Act. Weeks later, Customs officially responded: Spiro’s Explorer never appeared on its logs.

WHEN I TIRED OF CHASING RUMORS, I focused on Spiro’s finances, which appeared to be the key—and the weak link, relatives say—in the sheriff’s probable-cause case against Ian Spiro.

In homicide investigations, detectives always start with motive. In this case, motive is the most puzzling question. It is hard to argue with dozens who saw Ian as a loving father and husband. He went everywhere with his kids.

But it is true that Spiro was having severe financial problems, perhaps worse than he had ever faced. He was three months behind in his rent. He was overdue on almost all his bills. He was supporting a family in Rancho Santa Fe, including riding lessons, private schools and a country club, yet he owned almost nothing. Besides the leased Explorer, he leased a BMW 325i for himself at $500 a month, while his wife drove a leased Cherokee.

A credit check at the time of Spiro’s death revealed nothing more than a Visa card with a $1,000 line of credit and a few department-store cards. He used a letter from a London accounting firm to introduce himself. It claimed Spiro earned “in excess of sterling 225,000” (about $340,000) by “trading internationally in the commodity market, primarily between South America and the Middle East.” Despite a “general softening in the market,” Spiro was expected to earn about $225,000 in 1991-92, the letter says.

About six months before the murders, Spiro called his accountant in England and offered his services as a go-between. He struck the accountant as “a man looking for ways to survive.”

Spiro’s main local enterprise was a company producing 900-prefix phone numbers for dating, legal advice and other areas of interest for late-night TV viewers. He was trying to put together a new company to market 900 numbers, but late in 1992 he told another company’s account executive he couldn’t get the funding.

In Ian’s office, investigators found mounds of papers and phone records detailing a mind-boggling multitude of business dealings. Even his brothers-in- law tell conflicting stories. Ken says Ian was involved in selling “helicopter parts to South America” and “hospital supplies in Iran.” Greg says Ian was earning $225,000 a year selling “helicopter parts to Iran.”

In 1989, Channel Islands–based ANZ Grindlays Bank loaned Gail Spiro 300,000 pounds (about $450,000), first to buy a United Kingdom property and then to renovate a house in France. The bank also loaned Ian more than $3 million to buy and resell antique Porsche sports cars. The deal went bad. Ian told Greg that the Yakuza, the Japanese mafia, had stolen several of the cars

In January 1992, Grindlays formally told Spiro that it wanted its money—with interest, now around $4 million—back. In April, Spiro took out a $1.5 million life-insurance policy on himself.

By the end of his life, Spiro was buying hundreds of lottery tickets a week. Investigators found a Ouija board among his possessions; some speculate he used it to pick the numbers. According to public records, he owed $100,000 to his uncle, $100,000 to family friend Joe Zerboni, $26,000 to Ken Quarton and $16,000 to the company that moved the family from France, in addition to a half- dozen smaller creditors who put in claims against the estate.

There was little to claim. The Spiros had few possessions—mainly jewelry, watches and rugs. Faced with the mountain of unpaid debt, no one filed for the estate. It was auctioned by the county, netting $64,000. There is the $1.5 million insurance policy—with Spiro’s children from his first marriage as surviving next-of-kin beneficiaries—but it would be void if Spiro’s death should be declared a suicide.

Relatives laugh at the thought of money problems pushing Ian over the edge. He was always earning and losing fortunes, they say. “He thought of money as a commodity, like air,” Ken says.

The answers, they say, lie in the Middle East. They can’t offer any physical evidence but say their gut instincts and their own inquiries point to the intelligence community, most likely stemming from Ian’s role in Iran-Contra.

Ex-hostage Peter Jacobsen confirmed to the media that Spiro was indeed involved in the release of hostages in the Middle East. But investigators say Spiro “was no James Bond,” simply a low-level go-between—an image Greg says is ludicrous or at least naive.

“Let’s put it this way,” Greg says. “The hostage crisis in Beirut wasn’t working with the first connection. Ian’s connection made it work.”

But the scope of the investigation by the Sheriff’s Department has gone far beyond the Middle East. With the help of the FBI, investigators have been interviewing scores of Spiro’s business contacts, seeking real evidence to back various theories. Detectives also looked into his connection with a Chicago convict, jailed on drug charges, who is involved in the so-called Inslaw scandal. According to court documents filed shortly after the murders, Spiro was holding computer equipment essential for the inmate to prove a Justice Department conspiracy to steal sophisticated computer software.

As with most things involving Ian Spiro, there is just enough truth in each report to tweak the interest of investigators. Each time they ask, “Is it possible? Is it plausible this might have something to do with the murders?” Usually, in some way they’re just as plausible as a caring father killing his children.

In general, investigators are troubled as much by the evidence they don’t find as the evidence they do. A few weeks after the murders, three rain-soaked suitcases, packed with Spiro’s papers and an audiotape apparently made by Ian just days before his death, were found in a remote part of the desert near where Ian died. But they still didn’t have the so-called smoking gun—nor a note or any other clear sign that Ian Spiro went bonkers and slaughtered his family.

“Any logical person could say, ‘This should be here, why isn’t it?” says Jim Roache, who was sheriff during the first two years of the investigation. Roache believes the case will never be fully closed. When Ian Spiro left the house that November morning, leaving his family dead in their beds, he took too many answers with him. “Some things only the good Lord and Ian Spiro know for sure,” Roache says.

AS I SIFT THROUGH NOTES of interviews, some dating back three years, I am continually drawn to information about Ian Spiro’s last days. Recent talks with family and friends only reaffirm that whatever was in Spiro’s past, whatever kind of man he was before, there is little doubt something was terribly wrong in the last few weeks of his life. Those who saw and talked to Ian Spiro—even those who defend him—say he was “distraught” and “tense.”

Two weeks before the murders, he called Ken Quarton from his car phone, leaving a message on Ken’s answering machine. Agitated, he talked of threatening phone calls. He made a similar call to his uncle. At about the same time, Spiro asked a jeweler, a friend, for cyanide. He said he needed it to clean gold; the friend was skeptical and didn’t give it to him. Undeterred, a few days later Spiro bought cyanide from a downtown jeweler.

Spiro also was looking for a gun. “He asked me a couple of times; I just forgot about it,” says attorney James Street, who often socialized with the Spiro family. Two weeks before the murders, Spiro asked again. He said he had been getting threatening phone calls since he had approached a movie company with his story about events in the Middle East. Spiro said he was afraid for his family. This time Street gave him a gun, a .357 magnum that was “noisy as hell.”

“He seemed to be sincere,” Street says. “If it gave him some solace, it was a small thing to do. I spoke to him once after that, and he said he had heard footsteps around the house.” Spiro complained of not sleeping, saying phone calls were keeping him up. “He seemed to be under a great deal of pressure. Ian said something had come out of his past to haunt him.”

The last weekend of the Spiros’ lives was outwardly uneventful. They were planning a Thanksgiving dinner for friends. Sara went to a dance at school on Friday night. Ian made Gail breakfast in bed Saturday morning, and the couple played bridge with friends Saturday night.

On Sunday, the day of the murders, the Spiro family went to the stables to watch Sara ride. Ian seemed distracted, one witness recalls. He was unusually harsh with the kids, hustling them into the car. Normally meticulous in his appearance, he had grown a beard. That afternoon, Gail went shopping with friends; Ian stayed home.

Ken Quarton says, “Not a single person who knew Ian believes he killed his family.” That’s not true. Some of his closest friends, those who saw him in the last days of his life, believe it.

“It was all there for us to see, but none of us saw it,” says one. The sad truth is that some people do murder their children, she says. “It’s not unusual. It just happened to be in Rancho Santa Fe.”

“As far as I’m concerned, the guy ran amok,” says Street, who gave him the gun. (Detectives still refuse to say whether they believe Street’s gun was the murder weapon; nor will they discuss the size of the deadly bullets. “We don’t think it’s important for the public to know the caliber of the weapon,” Tenwolde says.)

Greg Quarton recently flew to San Diego to pick up the remnants of the Spiro family’s possessions, locked away since the county took over the house in 1993. There wasn’t much—family Bibles, pictures, kids’ yearbooks, “the stuff not slogged off at the bargain-basement sale,” he says bitterly.

Greg vows to pester, investigate and shake the cage until officials acknowledge that Ian Spiro is a victim, not a murderer. He’s writing a book with D. Wade Booth, a reporter for the Blade-Citizen, which has reported some of the more sensational allegations about Spiro’s compatriots. Greg asks me if I know any movie producers. “It’s the only way to raise capital to have an independent investigation,” he says.

Greg says he’s hopeful that the new team of detectives is sincere about the new approach, the new attitude toward the case. But he doesn’t sound hopeful. “I guess I’m waiting for the big break. The one guy who can’t bear it any longer and needs to talk,” he says. “I hope I don’t have to wait for a deathbed confession.”

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   7:09:51 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#30. To: RickyJ, FormerLurker (#25)

Gail Spiro’s family buried Ian next to Gail and the kids in England. They have never wavered in their insistence that detectives have settled on the wrong man— that the Ian they knew never could have turned into a murderous, suicidal monster.

They have relentlessly stoked the fires of the case, taking their story from U.S. Attorney General Janet Reno’s office to the British House of Commons, pushing theories that the Spiros were victims of Middle East assassins or rogue members of the intelligence community. They have called or written every imaginable politician and bureaucrat, including President Clinton and Lawrence Walsh, the special counsel who probed the Iran-Contra affair.

Colonel Oliver North, who directed the Iran-Contra affair from his White House basement office, mentions in his notebooks that Ian Spiro was suggested as a go- between in Lebanon.

There was an obvious hit 20 some years ago near San Diego, in an upscale neighborhood (Rancho Sante Fe) where they found the father (CIA Agent).

Murder in Rancho Santa Fe

by Kevin Brass

THE HOUSE IS FOR SALE NOW, priced to move at $985,000. “It%9

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   7:14:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#31. To: All (#29)

The answers, they say, lie in the Middle East. They can’t offer any physical evidence but say their gut instincts and their own inquiries point to the intelligence community, most likely stemming from Ian’s role in Iran-Contra.

Ex-hostage Peter Jacobsen confirmed to the media that Spiro was indeed involved in the release of hostages in the Middle East. But investigators say Spiro “was no James Bond,” simply a low-level go-between—an image Greg says is ludicrous or at least naive.

“Let’s put it this way,” Greg says. “The hostage crisis in Beirut wasn’t working with the first connection. Ian’s connection made it work.”

If you play with fire - often enough, you'll get burned.

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   7:21:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#32. To: All (#31)

But the scope of the investigation by the Sheriff’s Department has gone far beyond the Middle East. With the help of the FBI, investigators have been interviewing scores of Spiro’s business contacts, seeking real evidence to back various theories. Detectives also looked into his connection with a Chicago convict, jailed on drug charges, who is involved in the so-called Inslaw scandal. According to court documents filed shortly after the murders, Spiro was holding computer equipment essential for the inmate to prove a Justice Department conspiracy to steal sophisticated computer software.

The "drug dealer" mentioned is Michael Riconsciuto (sp) who is likely in prison on false charges.

Michael Riconosciuto

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Riconosciuto From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Michael Riconosciuto is an electronics and computer | date = 1992-01-19 | accessdate = 2008-09-02 | publisher = Seattle Times Company }}

Riconosciuto professed a defense centered on the Inslaw Affair (a legal case in which the U.S. Government was charged with illegal use of computer software). [1] Riconosciuto claimed to have reprogrammed Inslaw's case-management program (Promis) with a secret "back-door" to allow clandestine tracking of individuals. Riconosciuto stated that he had been threatened by a justice department official.[2] Riconosciuto provided an Affidavit detailing threats to a House Select Committee investigating the Inslaw Affair.[3][

I know I've drifted away from the most recent case but the Inslaw matter has never been satisfactorily concluded. It encompasses a myriad of events like Danny (The Octopus) Casolaro's murder (called suicide), Iran Contra, Promis Software stolen by the Reagan Administration, The Cabazon Indian Reservation, Wackenhut, Ed Meese, and lots more.

As a side note, Ted Gunderson had been trying to get Riconsciuto out of prison. I've been VERY interested in the Promis Software (Inslaw) matter for about 20 years. A guy named J. Orlin Grabbe had published a vast amount of info on his website until he died a few years ago. He was WAY ahead of anyone else in reporting this stuff. He was a math genius and had written College Level Calculus Books. He concentrated on "CIA stuff" and "encryption."

One thing's clear to me, the truth is hard if not impossible to get when the CIA cockroaches are involved. It's so sad to see youngsters caught up in the shit that their parents get into.

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   7:44:10 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#33. To: wudidiz (#0)

Phillip Marshall has been identified as a former pilot for Eastern and United airlines. He self-published a number of books, including at least two about his 9/11 conspiracy theories: "The Big Bamboozle" (February 9, 2012) and "False Flag 911: How Bush, Cheney and the Saudis Created the Post-911 World" (July 29, 2008).

A previous novel published in 2003, "Lakefront Airport, New Orleans," detailed his claimed experience as a pilot for the US during Iran/Contra.

Go to Amazon and see the price of these books. Lakefront Airport for example is available, there are 2 copies for sale. (2)used @ $97.47 and $213.92

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   8:28:37 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#34. To: scrapper2 (#15)

You're right about the CA coast: were it not for Prop13, my 89y.o. aunt could not afford to be in Corona del Mar, and whenever she no longer needs earthly housing, her home will be a tear-down for new construction.

One thing I truly envy about CA is your right to have, and exercise, Initiative and Referendum.

“The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable.” ~ H. L. Mencken

Lod  posted on  2013-02-06   9:17:16 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#35. To: scrapper2 (#15) (Edited)

Well, the coastlines may be upscale but due to heavy earthquake activity when the tsunamis hit those coastlines the value of the properties will be down to nothing. I lived in Ca for a long time and I was never too impressed with those coast line properties. And riding on top of the epicenter of earthquake '94 was a memory I will NEVER forget. It was hell for weeks. You do NOT want to be living by the ocean when a quake hits. Anybody who does deserves to lose their property. It is those who live inland that are safer. And yes, there are people who make $300K who live inland. Just sayin'.

purplerose  posted on  2013-02-06   14:15:22 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#36. To: noone222 (#29) (Edited)

Eleven-year-old Dina, 14-year-old Adam and 16-year-old Sara were tucked into their beds, gunshot wounds to their heads. Apparently the murderer was careful not to wake them before firing the fatal shots. Dina was neatly wrapped in her blanket, only her head and one arm poking out. Down the hall, at the other end of the house, is the master bedroom, where their mother, Gail Spiro, was murdered in a similar execution style.

No one heard the shots.

Street gave him a gun, a .357 magnum that was “noisy as hell.”

(Detectives still refuse to say whether they believe Street’s gun was the murder weapon; nor will they discuss the size of the deadly bullets. “We don’t think it’s important for the public to know the caliber of the weapon,” Tenwolde says.)

The police want people to believe that they all slept through the shooting sounds but there's no mention of a silencer? Seems like they were dead [Edit to add: or heavily sedated] before being shot.

-------

"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2013-02-06   14:18:07 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#37. To: GreyLmist, 4 (#36)

(Detectives still refuse to say whether they believe Street’s gun was the murder weapon; nor will they discuss the size of the deadly bullets. “We don’t think it’s important for the public to know the caliber of the weapon,” Tenwolde says.)

That says HIT right there.

“The most dangerous man to any government is the man who is able to think things out... without regard to the prevailing superstitions and taboos. Almost inevitably he comes to the conclusion that the government he lives under is dishonest, insane, intolerable.” ~ H. L. Mencken

Lod  posted on  2013-02-06   14:30:56 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#38. To: GreyLmist (#36)

That (Spiro) story is from quite awhile ago. This recent "murder-suicide" is similar but less confusing as far as the dad is concerned. In this latest case the dad is a baseball coach and pretty easy going. He has admitted his association with Iran/Contra, the CIA and etc., as a pilot and in addition he worked for two major airlines.

While cruising through articles I ran across one that happened to mention the string of murders that cause one to ask if they are related. Chris Kyle, the sniper (did he also do jobs for the CIA, in other countries that were drug war related), and there were a couple of more mentioned that I am unable to relocate. One was a guy that was a popular gun enthusiast or gun store owner, another was Aaron Schwartz ...

It's just not likely that this guy (who was recently on Coast to Coast with John Wells and considered cogent and rational) murdered his two children, their dog and himself. I also think it's weird that the articles claim the kids were asleep "on the couch" and each person was shot once in the head.

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   14:31:52 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#39. To: GreyLmist (#36)

From Coast to Coast:

Phillip Marshall starts at 30 minutes in.

We should all be livid. Stop acting like docile, mentally castrated pussies and grow a pair. It's time to get in their face. Why should we speak in hushed tones and act all polite when we are being raped every day?

noone222  posted on  2013-02-06   14:44:27 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  


#40. To: noone222 (#39)

Will listen to it this evening, thanks.

-------

"They're on our left, they're on our right, they're in front of us, they're behind us...they can't get away this time." -- Col. Puller, USMC

GreyLmist  posted on  2013-02-06   14:46:39 ET  Reply   Trace   Private Reply  



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