[Home] [Headlines] [Latest Articles] [Latest Comments] [Post] [Sign-in] [Mail] [Setup] [Help]
Status: Not Logged In; Sign In
World News See other World News Articles Title: Did Brits Kill New York City Cops to Get U.S. into WWII? For 77 years the culprits behind a July 4, 1940, terror bombing at the New York Worlds Fair have never been found. Is this the answer? The sequence of events appears to tell a damning story: On June 4, 1940, Nazi Germany shoved the last British troop off the Continent at Dunkirk. Adolf Hitler moved his forces into position for a final cross-Channel invasion and occupation of England. That same month the new British Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill, dispatched a shadowy figure, Sir William Stephensonlater most famous as the original of Ian Flemings James Bond, Agent 007to set up a spy shop for Britains MI6 in Midtown Manhattan. A hero of World War One and self-made multi-millionaire, Stephenson was on neutral ground in America, but he and Churchill shared the conviction that nothing was more important to their nations chances for survival than winning American support for the war against Hitler. Then, on July 4, 1940, with throngs of holiday visitors at the New York Worlds Fair, a time bomb planted in the British Pavilion exploded, instantly killing two New York City policemen and badly mauling five others. Was Stephenson behind the blast in an attempt to frame Nazis and their American sympathizers? Were these officers sacrificed to win American sympathy and draw a reluctant United States into the Second World War? This past Independence Day marked the seventy-seventh anniversary of the unsolved crime. Its a cold case, but still an open case, New York City Police Lieutenant Bernard Whalen tells me. He has scrutinized the original bombing case files while researching two books he wrote on the history of the NYPD. There was a massive investigation at the time. The FBI was involved. No effort was sparedexcept to get at those he believes were likeliest to have knowledge of the bomb, the security staff of the British Pavilion itself. Although the United States was officially neutral, in the midst of a world at war, it was fast becoming a shadowy battlefield. New York teemed with spies, political agitators, and foreign agents, many with violence in mind for their enemies, some desperate enough to go to any length to sway American public opinion. While Whalen wont pin blame on any single possible culprit, he says after his own studies of the case, You could draw the conclusion that it was an inside job. At one point the NYPD suspected as much, but were stopped from getting to the bottom of the case. Post Comment Private Reply Ignore Thread
|
||
[Home]
[Headlines]
[Latest Articles]
[Latest Comments]
[Post]
[Sign-in]
[Mail]
[Setup]
[Help]
|