Monday, August 10, 2020

Ron Brown Assassination



https://web.archive.org/web/20140719200514/https://www.americanthinker.com/2014/03/ron_browns_house_of_cards.html

whatreallyhappened.com/WRHARTICLES/brownupdate.html


Wide Shot of the Crash



Inside Rear Cabin


Close Up of the Wound


AFIP Investigation

Kathleen Janoski was the Chief of the Forensic Photography Division at the Office of the Armed Forces Medical Examiner in the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology ("AFIP") and a 22-year veteran of the Navy.

Thirty three of the bodies from the Croatia plane crash, including Ron Brown's, were flown to Dover Air Force Base, Delaware, where they were examined by AFIP personnel.  

On November 24, 1997, shortly after the Air Force released a voluminous report of its investigation of the crash, an article concerning the report was published in the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review.  On December 3, another article included statements by one of the pathologists on the AFIP team, Lt. Colonel Steven Cogswell (USAF), that there was a perfectly round hole, inward-beveled, in Mr. Brown's skull that looked like a bullet hole.  However, no autopsy was performed.

On December 5, Cogswell was put under a gag order.  At about that time, he was escorted to his home by military police who seized all case materials on the Brown case.

On December 9, Lt. Colonel David Hause (U.S. Army) another AFIP pathologist and a leading expert on gun shot wounds, confirmed Cogswell's statements.  The gag order was broadened to include all AFIP personnel.

On January 8, 1998, the Department of Justice reported that it had looked into the matter and saw no reason to launch an investigation.  No one from DOJ talked to Cogswell or Hause.

On January 9, the Washington Post reported that the AFIP had convened a review panel of all its pathologists that had unanimously concluded that Brown died of blunt force trauma and that the hole was not a gunshot wound.  But Cogswell says he refused to participate in the review and that the only pathologists with expertise in bullet wounds dissented (i.e. himself, Hause & Major Thomas Parsons of the USAF).

Shortly after the Post article, Major Parsons came forth to indicate his dissent to the so-called "unanimous" board conclusion.

On January 13, a fourth member of the AFIP team, Chief Petty Officer Janoski, came forth to confirm the account of the skull hole.  She further indicated that she had been told by Jeanmarie Sentelle, a Special Agent with the Naval Criminal Investigative Service, that x-rays of Brown's skull had been destroyed after the "lead snowstorm" was discovered.  According to Sentelle, a "lead snowstorm" on x-rays is caused by bullet fragments when a bullet disintegrates upon impact.

These four members of the AFIP team lost their careers because they refused to sign off on the U.S. Government's whitewash of Brown's death.

Niko Jerkuic Murder

Niko Jerkuic was the man responsible for the airport’s aviation systems. Three days after the crash, a day he just happened to be off work, he was found with a bullet hole through his chest. The USAF had been scheduled to interview Jerkuic the next day. Jerkuic's death was called a suicide by authorities. 

Kitty Kelly Murder

Although I can find no evidence to confirm it on the internet, I believe Ted Gunderson when he reports that a fight attendant named Kitty Kelly who was on the Ron Brown flight and survived the crash died later of a broken neck.  She was very likely murdered as part of the cover up of Ron Brown's assassination. 

More to Come

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