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« Reply #80 on: September 14, 2009, 11:01:20 AM » |
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Police: Killing at Yale University not random acthttp://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/national_world&id=7013734By PATRICK SANDERS (AP) – 50 minutes ago NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Police are hunting for the killer who stuffed a body believed to be that of a Yale University graduate student behind a wall in the high-security laboratory building where she worked. Police found the body around 5 p.m. Sunday, on what was to have been 24-year-old Annie Le's wedding day. An autopsy was underway on Monday to verify the identity of the body, found in a cable duct in the Yale medical school building. Police would not say Monday if they have a suspect, but said that nobody is in custody. "We're not believing it's a random act" said Officer Joe Avery, a police spokesman. He would not provide any further details, but said no one else is in danger. The building where the body was found is part of the university medical school complex about a mile from Yale's main campus and is accessible to Yale personnel with identification cards. Some 75 video surveillance cameras monitor all doorways. "It's a frightening idea that there's a murderer walking around on campus," said 20-year-old Muneeb Sultan, a chemistry student. "I'm shocked that it happened in a Yale building that had key-card access. It's really sad." Police have not provided any details on the condition of the body found or how the woman died. A friend said Monday the doctoral student never showed signs of worry about her own personal safety at work, although she did express concerns about crime in New Haven in an article she wrote last year. "If she was concerned about (it) she would have said something to someone and they would have known," Jennifer Simpson told CBS' "The Early Show." "And Jon (her fiance) would have known, her family would have known, friends would have known." Simpson called Le, a pharmacology student from Placerville, Calif., friendly and affable to everyone. "She was a people person," Simpson said. "She loved people. She loved life. We just can't imagine anybody wanting to harm Annie." Another friend, Laurel Griffeath, echoed those thoughts on NBC's "Today" show. "I can't even imagine someone mad at Annie, much less wanting to hurt her," Griffeath said. Police are analyzing what they're calling "a large amount" of physical evidence. They will not discuss suspects, other than to say Le's fiance is not a suspect and has assisted in the investigation. Campus officials have said that the security network recorded Le entering the building by swiping her ID card about 10 a.m. on Sept. 8, and have been baffled before Sunday's gruesome discovery that she was never seen leaving. The university planned a candlelight vigil at 8 p.m. Monday at the Ivy League university. The Yale Daily News says an e-mail to the Yale community invites participants to "bring a candle and join us in solidarity." Yale President Richard Levin offered support to Le's family and her fiance, Columbia University graduate student Jonathan Widawsky. The couple was to marry Sunday in Syosset, N.Y., on Long Island's north shore. "The family and fiance and friends now must suffer the additional ordeal of waiting for the body to be positively identified," Levin said. Le wrote an article that was published in February in the medical school's magazine. The piece, titled "Crime and Safety in New Haven," compared higher instances of robbery in New Haven with cities that house other Ivy League schools. It also included an interview with Yale Police Chief James Perrotti, who offered advice such as "pay attention to where you are" and "avoid portraying yourself as a potential victim." "In short, New Haven is a city and all cities have their perils," Le concludes. "But with a little street smarts, one can avoid becoming yet another statistic." Le, who worked in a laboratory in the five-story building's basement, was reported missing Sept. 8. Her ID, money, credit cards and purse were found in her third-floor office. More than 100 local, state and federal police had been searching the building for days, using blueprints to uncover any place where evidence or Le's body could be hidden. Investigators on Saturday said they recovered evidence from the building, but would not confirm media reports that the items included bloody clothing. Authorities also sifted through garbage at a Hartford incinerator Sunday, looking through trash that was taken from the building in the days since Le went missing. No one answered the door at the Widawskys' gray, ranch-style in Huntington, N.Y. on Monday. "He is a very nice young man," next-door neighbor George Mayer said of Jonathan Widawsky. "His family, they're all just wonderful people — very, very nice people." Both families belong to the same temple. Mayer, whose mother had been invited to the wedding, said he hopes whoever committed the crime "gets justice — that he gets whatever he deserves." Yale students on Monday called the finding sad, but some said the discovery doesn't make them feel less safe at Yale. "Obviously it's a city and there are safety concerns," said 18-year-old Peter Spaulding, a student from Maryland. "It can happen anywhere. You have to go on with life." Law student Lindsay Nash of West Chester, Pa., said she doesn't sense a heightened level of fear on campus. "There's always an attention to safety here," she said. "I think there's perception that you need to be careful regardless."
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #81 on: September 14, 2009, 11:02:09 AM » |
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Look at the masks wearers at the end of V for Vendetta. THAT is how you defeat the NWO, and that alone is all you would have to do, the building destroyed in the movie wouldn't have to be destroyed at all-because the hearts and minds of who was once your enemy are now your true friends, and are now the enemy of the puppet masters themselves, en masse, thus the power structure of the NWO itself is now decapitated and defeated peacefully by mass resistance even in the face of death. There is no other way. Information is obviously the key to facilitating global, mass, unmovable resistance.
QFT. That is what the NWO loses sleep over.. we blast away at their myths and lies; they can't survive an assault of TRUTH.
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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nofakenews
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« Reply #82 on: September 14, 2009, 11:12:52 AM » |
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Suspect in Yale Murder Failed Polygraph, Sources Say Authorities investigating the murder of Yale graduate student Annie Le have focused their efforts on a suspect who failed a lie detector test, sources told ABC News.That suspect has what appear to be defensive wounds, a key piece of circumstantial evidence. In addition, the suspect, who authorities believe knew Le, failed a lie detector test, sources told ABC News. Sources also told ABC News that bloody clothing removed from the lab belonged to the likely killer. Investigators have been looking at everyone from Yale maintenance people to people who worked in the lab and fellow students. http://abcnews.go.com/US/evidence-annie-le-murder-lead-killer/story?id=8565647
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #83 on: September 14, 2009, 11:13:02 AM » |
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Police: Killing at Yale University not random acthttp://abclocal.go.com/kgo/story?section=news/national_world&id=7013734By PATRICK SANDERS (AP) – 50 minutes ago NEW HAVEN, Conn. — Police are hunting for the killer who stuffed a body believed to be that of a Yale University graduate student behind a wall in the high-security laboratory building where she worked. Police found the body around 5 p.m. Sunday, on what was to have been 24-year-old Annie Le's wedding day. An autopsy was underway on Monday to verify the identity of the body, found in a cable duct in the Yale medical school building. Police would not say Monday if they have a suspect, but said that nobody is in custody. "We're not believing it's a random act" said Officer Joe Avery, a police spokesman. He would not provide any further details, but said no one else is in danger. "I'm shocked that it happened in a Yale building that had key-card access. It's really sad." So a Yale employee did it, or someone is missing a key card... (does it also require a swipe of the card and a four or five digit entry code on a keypad? -as many newer security systems do... if it needs a number, that's significant). Facilities people: electricians, janitors, etc. might have seen or heard something. You can bet that Yale set out a broadcast warning to all employees - "If you want to keep your job, then STFU." Police have not provided any details on the condition of the body found or how the woman died.
Police are analyzing what they're calling "a large amount" of physical evidence.
More than 100 local, state and federal police had been searching the building for days, using blueprints to uncover any place where evidence or Le's body could be hidden.
Investigators on Saturday said they recovered evidence from the building, but would not confirm media reports that the items included bloody clothing. ... Authorities also sifted through garbage at a Hartford incinerator Sunday, looking through trash that was taken from the building in the days since Le went missing.
Yes... this is going to take a massive spin effort to contain. No word on surveillance camera showing other people who left the building... they MUST have footage... No word on condition of her body. No information about the bloodstained clothes found. No word on what was in the garbage.
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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« Reply #84 on: September 14, 2009, 11:15:19 AM » |
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EVIDENCE OF CONDITIONING FOR ABSURD MOTIVES AND LONE GUNMAN THEORIES THIS IS THE PROOF AND THE CONSPIRED OBSTRUCTION OF JUSTICE IN PLAIN SIGHT ------------------------------------ Killing of Yale grad student Annie Le not 'random,' say police http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/09/14/2009-09-14_killing_of_yale_grad_student_annie_le_not_random_say_police.html?print=1&page=allBY Matthew Lysiak AND Barry Paddock In New Haven, Conn., and Samuel Goldsmith In New York DAILY NEWS WRITERS Monday, September 14th 2009, 12:36 PM Police hunting for the killer who stuffed a body believed to be missing student Annie Le in a wall at her lab say they don't think a serial killer is stalking the campus. "We're not believing it's a random act" said Officer Joe Avery, a police spokesman. He would not elaborate, but said cops don't think anyone else is in danger. Medical examiners began an autopsy Monday morning after cops pulled the body from the basement of a Yale medical school building Sunday night. Law enforcement is working under the assumption that the body is the missing student. "It's a frightening idea that there's a murderer walking around on campus," said 20-year-old Muneeb Sultan, a chemistry student. "I'm shocked that it happened in a Yale building that had key-card access. It's really sad." Le was last seen in the secure five-story building on Tuesday. The body was found in an area that houses utility cables that run between floors, police said. "Our hearts go out to the family of Annie Le," said Yale President Richard Levin. New Haven Police Assistant Chief Peter Reichard said cops found "a large amount" of physical evidence. The case is being treated as a homicide. More than 100 investigators from the FBI and three police departments spent five days poring over blueprints and surveillance footage, and used bloodhounds to search every inch of the building. [For One Person? Really? Sounds like a black ops CLEAN UP crew rather than an investigative team for ONE PERSON, WHO DO YOU THINK YOU ARE F-ING FOOLING?]Investigators spent Sunday searching for Le's remains and evidence in a Hartford garbage dump. Cadaver-sniffing dogs and officers in hazardous material suits picked through the trash for hours. The grisly find came hours after Le was expected to walk down the aisle with fiancé Jonathan Widawsky in an outdoor ceremony on Long Island. Levin met with Le's family, Widawsky and his family on Sunday and pledged the university's full resources to solve the crime. Widawsky is not a suspect and is assisting with the investigation, police said. A police source said cops questioned a Yale student about Le's disappearance and he had failed a polygraph test. Reichard refused to answer questions about the other student. Le, a 24-year-old pharmacology student, swiped her identification card to enter the lab building Tuesday about 10 a.m. There was never any record of her leaving the building at the medical school complex, about a mile from the main campus. The California-bred daughter of Vietnamese immigrants was poised to marry Widawsky, 24, in an outdoor ceremony in Syosset, L.I., Sunday. Some 160 guests were expected. "I feel so badly for Jonathan," said Cantor Sandra Sherry of Temple Beth El in Huntington, L.I., who would have led the wedding service. "This really makes a mark on your whole life." The North Ritz Club in Syosset was empty and dark Sunday. Widawsky, a physics graduate student at Columbia, started dating Le when the two were freshmen at the University of Rochester. The couple had planned to fly to Greece for their honeymoon later this week. "It was a lovely day . . . and now it's just sad," said Lucille Mayer, a neighbor and family friend of the Widawskys. "It's not only horrible for Annie's life being gone, but for Jonathan and his life being changed forever," she said. The gruesome discovery plunged an already weary campus into mourning and fear. Students received an e-mail from college President Levin titled "Tragic News." "It shows that Yale is no different then any other place in this country," said engineering student Ken Hargrove, 26. "This idea that despite all the crime around New Haven, Yale was somehow immune was burst in a heartbeat." [See the conditioning? this is "New Haven" crime, not a planned operation including breach of a 75 camera security system, 5 days of no investigation, and media obfuscation.]Le had penned an article for the medical school's magazine in February in which she noted higher instances of robbery in New Haven compared with other Ivy League college towns. She told fellow students that street smarts was the way to "avoid becoming yet another statistic." "It's ironic," said Sherry, the cantor. "It was as if someone tried to prove her wrong - that they could get to her anyway." W T F ? Someone thought they would teach her a lesson for an article about security? Really? For Real? ugggghhhhhhh they must have gotten over 1,000 quotes to sift through and came up with the ones in this article, see how the "lone gunman" theory works in psyops? could not be more obvious.]
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #85 on: September 14, 2009, 11:18:53 AM » |
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100 investigators and dogs, LOL.....no crime scene contamination going on there. 
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"The receptivity of the great masses is very limited, their intelligence is small, and their power of forgetting is enormous." --Adolph Hitler, "Mein Kampf"
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #86 on: September 14, 2009, 11:22:13 AM » |
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"Our hearts go out to the family of Annie Le," said Yale President Richard Levin.
"But our souls belong to Satan."
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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« Reply #87 on: September 14, 2009, 11:23:51 AM » |
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Monday, September 14, 2009 8:02 a.m. As TV cameras stand sentry, 10 Amistad St. remains cordoned off BY THE YALE DAILY NEWS http://www.yaledailynews.com/crosscampus/2009/09/14/tv-cameras-stand-sentry-10-amistad-st-remains-cord/YDN The authorities are maintaining a one-block perimeter around 10 Amistad St. this morning as the investigation continues into the apparent killing of Annie Le MED ’13, who was found yesterday hidden behind a wall in the building’s basement. Predictably, the area behind the police cordon is something of a media circus, with camera crews packing virtually every inch of the sidewalk near the intersection of Cedar Street and Washington Avenue. Le’s apparent killing was the top story on NBC’s “Today” show, which had a correspondent broadcast live from Washington Avenue at precisely 7 a.m., and representatives from all of Connecticut’s local television stations were also on hand.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #88 on: September 14, 2009, 11:38:12 AM » |
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FEMALE BODY FOUND AT 10 AMISTAD ST.; POLICE SUSPECT IT IS ANNIE LE MED ’13http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/university-news/2009/09/14/female-body-found-10-amistad-st-police-suspect-it-/By Harrison Korn and Paul Needham Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Monday, September 14, 2009 Police declared the Yale research building at 10 Amistad St. the site of a homicide investigation on Sunday after a female’s body was discovered in the building’s basement. Five days after Annie Le MED ’13 was last seen, the authorities found what they believe to be her body on Sunday behind a basement wall in the Yale research facility at 10 Amistad St. The case is now classified as a homicide and will be investigated primarily by the New Haven Police Department. Peter Reichard, the NHPD’s assistant chief of investigations, said at a press conference Sunday evening that law enforcement officials have still not identified any suspects in the murder of Le, who was supposed to be married yesterday. Speaking to reporters outside Woodbridge Hall late Sunday night, University President Richard Levin conveyed the “deeply felt support of the entire Yale University community” and said “our hearts go out to the family of Annie Le, to her fiance, to her friends.” “The investigation will continue,” Levin said, adding that authorities are conducting an autopsy and identification of the remains. “We have every hope that it will be successfully resolved.”Law enforcement officials have now sealed the building at 10 Amistad St. where the body was found shortly after 5 p.m. on Sunday. Footage from security cameras shows Le entering the building at 10 a.m. Tuesday but never leaving; now the investigation will focus on what she did and where she went once inside.Deputy Secretary Martha Highsmith, who oversees campus security, said earlier this week that access to the rooms and labs inside the building is restricted and digitally monitored. Authorities said...
they know who was in the basement at the time when Le entered.
Robert Alpern, dean of the Yale School of Medicine, where Le was studying for a Ph.D. in pharmacology, said in a telephone interview Sunday night that access to the basement where Le was found is limited to certain people with approved Yale magnetic identification cards, as it is at all University facilities where research is conducted on animals.“I think that it suggests it was someone who could get into that space,” he said. “It certainly would be extremely difficult for someone from outside of Yale to get into that space. Not impossible, but extremely difficult.” Still, there remain more questions than answers about the circumstances of Le’s death. Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said last week that Le’s fiance, Jonathan Widawsky , was not a suspect and that there was “not a worry” about his involvement in what was at the time considered a missing person case. She added that he and Le’s family has cooperated with authorities. Along with the NHPD, the Federal Bureau of Investigation, the Connecticut State Police and the Yale Police Department all remain involved in the investigation. In a campuswide e-mail titled “Tragic News,” Levin said the autopsy to identify the body will be performed by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner in Connecticut. Authorities first learned of Le’s disappearance when a roommate reported her missing at about 9 p.m. Tuesday, YPD Chief James Perrotti said. The police quickly began investigating the matter and learned that she took a Yale Transit bus from her apartment at 188 Lawrence St. to her office at the Sterling Hall of Medicine early Tuesday morning.
Later in the morning, she walked from that office to 10 Amistad St., leaving her purse, cell phone and wallet behind. She took her Yale identification card with her, and the surveillance footage shows her carrying another object as she entered the building. Officials have not said what she was carrying.
At 12:40 p.m. on Tuesday, a fire alarm sounded in the building. The special agent in charge of the FBI in Connecticut, Kimberly Mertz, said at a press conference Saturday that the alarm was caused by a release of steam from a laboratory hood. She said it was possible that the steam was intentionally released by a person.There were few other leads in the investigation until the weekend. Authorities seized bloody clothes on Saturday, though a Yale police source said the fabric was not a piece of clothing that Le was known to have been wearing and said it was not clear at the time whether the fabric had human blood or animal blood on it.On Sunday, after lead investigators arrived at Amistad Street in the morning, dogs from the Connecticut State Police were seen entering the building. The bloodhounds had been part of the search since Thursday, as had more than 100 law enforcement officials from the various agencies.Some of those officers were in Hartford on Sunday searching through trash at the garbage incinerator there. Other authorities had searched through trash in the dumpsters outside the Amistad Street facility in prior days. Mertz said Saturday that authorities had already interviewed “numerous people” who saw Le inside the building on Tuesday, but she declined to give any further details. There are 75 cameras around the building and in the surrounding area; investigators spent a large part of their time examining all the video footage to determine if Le, who was 4-feet-11-inches and weighed 90 pounds, could be seen exiting. The killing is the first homicide in New Haven since mid-March and, assuming the body is identified as Le’s, the first killing of a Yale student since Suzanne Jovin ’99 was stabbed to death on Dec. 4, 1998. Reporting was contributed by Isaac Arnsdorf, Nora Caplan-Bricker, Florence Dethy, Zeke Miller, Martine Powers, Colin Ross, Divya Subrahmanyam, Victor Zapana and Esther Zuckerman. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ All items bolded are bolded for a reason all items in red are in red for a reason
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #89 on: September 14, 2009, 11:41:52 AM » |
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look how ridiculous this is...
the National Reconaissance Office has every phone call, every text, every email, every internet connected surveilance camera. they have triggers if there appears to be a violent act.
WHY WOULD SHE GO WITHOUT HER CELL PHONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
SHE WENT WITHOUT HER CELLPHONE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
SO SHE COULD NOT BE TRACKED!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
WHO TOLD HER TO GO
WHO WAS SHE MEETING
WHAT PACKAGE WAS SHE BRINGING?
This is like fricking enemy of the state shit, WTF?
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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sociostudent
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« Reply #90 on: September 14, 2009, 11:43:29 AM » |
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this is so f'd up, guys. What was she involved in? What was she refusing to be involved in?
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Anti_Illuminati
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« Reply #91 on: September 14, 2009, 11:47:00 AM » |
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Here's my speculation at teh moment:
They will say an unauthorized user tampered with the video footage and thats why it isn't there. This may or may not be tied to the fire alarm thing (i.e. "he did it when the fire alarm went off, or he set off the fire alarm to tamper with the tapes".
Of course they will be blaming the patsy, and insinuating that joe blow citizen would out of the blue be able to figure out how to specifically edit out the digital video info of a specific person or some shit amongst everyone else that would have been caught in the video.
When it would require inside job knowledge of how to pull that off.
Watch for the topic of the Internet get dragged into this on MSM later on.
The cameras may already be AI based in a localized enterprise architecture database.
But what they could say is that their weren't strong enough electronic security controls/authentication in place that would have stopped the so-called "camera hacker". And thus you have the motive for this if they say that. To propagandize and scare the hell out of people that if there isn't mass adoption of biometric authentications (IPv6 RBAC/Internet2) then suddenly more people will mysteriously turn up dead with no evidence for authorities to track down the real killer etc.
This is a 2.0 psyops amalgamation of the McCarren airport DHS false flag combined with the DC sniper false flag case. Highly sophisticated, and too obscure for most anyone to see through the multiple veils of what is really going on here.
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #92 on: September 14, 2009, 11:49:02 AM » |
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Dr. Rocky Tuan, director of the center for cellular and molecular engineering at the University of Pittsburgh medical school, advised Le at the NIH.http://www.sacbee.com/topstories/story/2174812.htmlSo maybe she spoke to Rocky (who, btw, has tons of research articles; mostly on dental-related bone research)... and Rocky spoke to NIH.. who knows. But this NIH connection is being completely avoided in press. I search for NIH reactions to their dear former colleague's death.. nothing.
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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sociostudent
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« Reply #93 on: September 14, 2009, 12:00:14 PM » |
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No body's been found, authorities say FBI: Student's body has not been found By Harrison Korn and Paul Needham Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Saturday, September 12, 2009 Raymond Carlson/Staff Reporter University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer speaks to reporters outside Woodbridge Hall on Saturday regarding the disappearance of Annie Le MED '13. Reports that Annie Le's MED ’13 body was recovered from the lab where she was last seen Tuesday are untrue, law enforcement officials said Saturday.  Ginger Jiang/Contributing Photographer Kimberly Mertz, a special agent with the FBI, addresses reporters outside Woodbridge Hall on Saturday as University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer, at right, looks on.  Ginger Jiang/Contributing Photographer The Yale Police Department and the FBI, led in Connecticut by Special Agent Kimberly Mertz, above, are running the investigation into the disappearance of Annie Le MED '13.  Philip Hu/Staff Photographer Reporters at the press conference outside Woodbridge Hall regarding the disappearance of Annie Le MED '13.  Sergio Zenisek/Staff Photographer Camera crews lined the sidewalk in front of 10 Amistad St. on Saturday. At a press conference outside Woodbridge Hall this evening, officials from the University and law enforcement agencies also confirmed that evidence had been retrieved from the research facility at 10 Amistad St., but said that it had not yet been tied to Le. A New Haven Police Department official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation, said earlier today that bloody clothes and other items had been retrieved from a ceiling in the building, and two Yale Police Department officers said that 10 Amistad St. is now the site of a crime scene. Still, authorities at the press conference said there was no evidence of foul play in Le's disappearance. "We are not in the position today to conclude whether this is a missing person case, or whether criminality is involved," FBI Special Agent Kim Mertz said. "We have conducted numerous interviews, and I can assure you no lead is going uncovered." Media reports emerged on Saturday afternoon that Le's body had been found inside the Amistad Street building. Those reports were quickly dismissed. "I will categorically say a body has not been found," Mertz said Le started her Tuesday morning working in the Sterling Hall of Medicine, where her lab was located, Yale Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said. Le left the lab around 10 a.m. to walk to 10 Amistad St. three blocks away, where she frequently went to conduct experiments, Lorimer said. A surveillance photograph distributed by the YPD shows Le entering the building at 10 Amistad St. on Tuesday morning. University officials have yet to locate Le exiting the building. Mertz said Saturday that authorities have spoken to "numerous people" who saw Le inside the facility at 10 Amistad St. but declined to give any further details. A fire alarm that sounded in the Amistad Street facility at 12:40 p.m. on Tuesday is thought to have been a false alarm, Mertz said. Someone working in the lab produced steam that tripped the alarm, she said. Yale officials have said it could be difficult to pick out Le, who is 4-feet-11-inches and weighs some 90 pounds, in the footage of the subsequent evacuation. Some officials have suggested that Le may have changed into a lab coat while in the building, which would make it even harder to identify her. Le, who was scheduled to be married on Sunday, left her purse containing her cell phone, credit cards and money in her office in Sterling, Lorimer said. Her wedding has since been canceled. Le's family and fiance, Columbia University graduate student Jonathan Widawsky, are cooperating with the investigation. Officials asked that the media respect the family's privacy. Le was last seen wearing a knee-length brown skirt, a bright green short-sleeved T-shirt, brown shoes and a brown necklace, the YPD said. She does not have access to a car. As part of that investigation, FBI agents undertook several complete sweeps of 10 Amistad St., bringing in bloodhounds and even combing through trash in a dumpster outside the building. They searched Le's apartment at 188 Lawrence St. as well as her computer and phone for clues. As the search perimeter expanded, agents also searched medical school buildings in the surrounding area. Anyone with information pertaining to Le’s disappearance is asked to call the FBI tip line at 1-877-503-1950. Victor Zapana and Colin Ross contributed reporting.
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lavosslayer
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« Reply #94 on: September 14, 2009, 12:04:13 PM » |
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WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON!? NOW THERE IS NO BODY!? WHAT THE HELL DID THEY FIND THAT THEY SAID WAS A BODY THEN?! THIS IS SO SCREWED UP!?
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"Those who would trade freedom for security deserve neither" -- Benjamin Franklin
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« Reply #95 on: September 14, 2009, 12:04:58 PM » |
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Surprise.....
NICE DISTRACTION AND "TERRORIST" THREAT TO CALL IN THE COVERT ANTI-TERROR SQUAD AND FULL SPECTRUM SURVEILLANCE /SATELLITE MONITORING SYSTEMS
EYE IN THE SKY WAS ALL OVER THE CAMPUS TO WEED OUT ANY REBEL FORCES TO THE EMPIRE
EASILY MANIPULATED DISGRUNTLED EMPLOYEE WAS "HANDLED" TO CAUSE SOME FUN ON THURSDAY
FUNNY HOW AP/REUTERS/MSNBC/CNN MISSED THIS ONE
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Gunman accused of targeting HR office released from custody http://www.yaledailynews.com/news/university-news/2009/09/14/gunman-released/ By Victor Zapana and Isaac Arnsdorf Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Monday, September 14, 2009
A man arrested Thursday for bringing a shotgun and ammunition in his car to a Yale building has been released from custody. John Petrini, 61, was released Friday on a promise to appear at an arraignment hearing on Oct. 1. He is charged with breach of peace, threatening, carrying a dangerous weapon, carrying a weapon in a motor vehicle and driving with a suspended license, the Yale Police Department said. Although he currently is free, Petrini has signed an agreement with the YPD saying that he will never set foot on Yale’s campus again, University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said Sunday. If Petrini needs anything from Human Resources, YPD Chief James Perrotti will personally manage those concerns. Petrini, a Yale physical plant employee who retired in 2002, allegedly had an unloaded shotgun and ammunition in his car, and University officials said they believe he may have been targeting human resources staff at 221 Whitney Ave. Although officials stress that they do not know why he may have wanted to target them, Petrini was denied an appeal last year after the University refused to pay him retirement benefits. Petrini’s attorney, Jamie E. Alosi, said he was released because, with no criminal record, he was not considered a threat. Petrini’s shotgun was seized, she added. At a Sunday evening news conference related to the suspected murder of Annie Le MED ’13, Perrotti was asked if Petrini’s release is a threat to campus safety. “We’re working on it,” Perrotti said. “We have a plan in place.” (He declined further comment.) No one answered the door at Petrini’s apartment Sunday night, and neighbors and Yale colleagues said they did not know him. Alosi declined to make Petrini available for an interview. Over the summer, staff members from Human Resources department moved from 155 Whitney Ave. to 221 Whitney Ave., 500 feet away. They moved in preparation for the Whitney Avenue building to be razed and the four-acre plot nearby to become the new campus for the Yale School of Management. Petrini apparently did not know about the move — a mistake that may have saved lives. On Thursday, he walked into 155 Whitney Ave. and asked an employee for the new location of the Human Resources office. The employee told Petrini of the office’s new location, at 221 Whitney Ave. After Petrini left, the employee notified the Yale Police Department using a campus blue phone. One minute later, after Petrini got out of his car at a parking lot near the new building, police arrested him. “[The employee] thought he looked suspicious and carried some kind of package that was suspicious,” Vice President for Human Resources and Administration Michael Peel said in an interview. “It was certainly exemplary behavior that may have saved us from a tragic outcome.” Petrini had a previous dispute with Yale. He filed a complaint with the University in 2008 because he claimed he did not receive his deserved retirement pension. Petrini’s appeal was denied because he left the University in 2002, and did not meet the minimum age requirement of 55 to be eligible for retirement benefits, Peel said Friday. No further discussion between the University and Petrini has occurred since the appeal was denied, Peel added. “We’re just surmising that was what his issue was,” he said. “I don’t know for a fact that was why he was heading to the Human Resources office.” Alosi said Petrini never took the shotgun out of his car. She said she did not know why he went to the building. The Yale community was notified of the incident in a 1:33 p.m. e-mail message Thursday from Yale Police Chief James Perrotti. The University has an emergency ALERT system in place — which sends a text message, phone call and e-mail to all members of the Yale community — to disseminate facts about potential security issues as they come. But in this case, University President Richard Levin said, a text message alert was deemed unnecessary because the suspect was apprehended within a minute. Harrison Korn contributed reporting.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #96 on: September 14, 2009, 12:06:03 PM » |
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WHAT THE HELL IS GOING ON!? NOW THERE IS NO BODY!? WHAT THE HELL DID THEY FIND THAT THEY SAID WAS A BODY THEN?! THIS IS SO SCREWED UP!?
look at the dates, check the dates. we are publishing every single thing we can to keep a complete paper trail, but you have to check the dates
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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sociostudent
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« Reply #97 on: September 14, 2009, 12:07:53 PM » |
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Police: Bloody clothes found at student's lab_jpg_900x2000_q85.jpg) By Harrison Korn and Paul Needham Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Saturday, September 12, 2009 Police have found bloody clothes at the research facility at 10 Amistad St., where graduate student Annie Le MED ’13 was last seen, a police source close to the investigation said. Thomas Cain/The Associated Press An unidentified state police officer stands on Saturday near dumpsters behind 10 Amistad St., where missing graduate student Annie Le MED '13 had her lab. The clothes were found in a ceiling at the building, according to the source, a New Haven Police Department official who spoke on the condition of anonymity to discuss an ongoing investigation. The University announced that law enforcement officials are holding a press conference outside Woodbridge Hall at 5:30 p.m today. University President Richard Levin said Saturday afternoon that he could not confirm reports of bloody clothes being found at 10 Amistad St., the research facility at which Le was last seen. Levin said a body had not been found inside the building, though two Yale Police Department officers confirmed that 10 Amistad St. is now the site of a crime scene. Police and University officials had previously said there was no indication of foul play in Le’s disappearance. In a telephone interview, Levin said that he had no information that would definitively point to foul play at this point. "As far as I know, we cannot make inferences about what has happened to her," he said. But the president — who said Yale officials have met with Le's family and her fiance — expressed grave concern about the situation. "This is as bad as it gets," he said. Le has not been seen or heard from since Tuesday morning, when she left her belongings in her office at the Sterling Hall of Medicine and walked three blocks to Amistad St. A roommate reported her missing that night and investigators immediately began their work. A surveillance photograph distributed by the Yale Police Department shows Le entering the University-owned research facility at 10 Amistad St. on Tuesday morning. University officials have yet to locate Le exiting the building. A fire alarm that sounded in the Amistad Street facility at 12:40 p.m. on Tuesday is thought to have been a false alarm, Deputy University Secretary Martha Highsmith said, though she acknowledged that it could be difficult to pick out Le, who is 4-feet-11-inches and weighs some 90 pounds, in the footage of the evacuation. Highsmith also said it is possible that Le changed into a lab coat while in the building, which would make it even harder to identify her. Le, who was scheduled to be married on Sunday, left her purse containing her cell phone, credit cards and money in her office in Sterling, Lorimer said. Her wedding has since been canceled. Le was last seen wearing a knee-length brown skirt, a bright green short-sleeved T-shirt, brown shoes and a brown necklace, the YPD said. She does not have access to a car. There are now 100 officers from four different agencies investigating the disappearance, Yale officials said Friday.
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sociostudent
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« Reply #98 on: September 14, 2009, 12:11:10 PM » |
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Grad student goes missingGRADUATE STUDENT GOES MISSING By Harrison Korn, Colin Ross, Paul Needham and Florence Dethy Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Thursday, September 10, 2009 A 24-year-old graduate student at the Yale School of Medicine was declared missing on Wednesday by the Yale Police Department. According to the police, Annie Marie Le MED ’13 — whose wedding is supposed to take place on Sunday — has not been seen or heard from since Tuesday morning. Deputy University Secretary Martha Highsmith, who oversees campus security operations, said there is no evidence to suggest foul play in the disappearance but declined to elaborate further Wednesday evening, saying she would not comment on an ongoing investigation. The Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Connecticut State Police are assisting the YPD in the search.  Paul Needham/Staff Reporter Police searched Annie Le’s last known location, 10 Amistad St., late last night, but they did not locate the doctoral student. The Yale Police Department is seeking information about Le’s whereabouts.  Office of Public Affairs Annie Le MED '13 is seen entering 10 Amistad St. on Tuesday morning, when she was last seen.  Office of Public Affairs The Yale Police Department says Annie Le MED ’13, pictured above, has not been seen or heard from since Tuesday morning. A surveillance photograph distributed by the University shows Le, a native of Placerville, Calif., entering a Yale research facility at 10 Amistad St. on Tuesday morning. Officials say she has not been seen or heard from since. Le, a 4-foot-11-inch Asian female who has shoulder-length brown hair and brown eyes, was last seen wearing a knee-length brown skirt, a bright green short-sleeved T-shirt, brown shoes and a brown necklace. The police believe she does not have access to a car. A 2007 graduate of the University of Rochester who is now studying for a doctorate in pharmacology and molecular medicine, Le started her Tuesday morning working in her lab at the Sterling Hall of Medicine, University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said. Le left the lab at some point that morning to walk the three blocks to the Amistad Street facility where she frequently works on experiments, Lorimer said. She brought her Yale identification card with her — records show that she swiped into the building at about 10 a.m — but left her purse, which contained her cell phone, credit cards and money, in her Sterling office, Lorimer said. The search for Le on Wednesday was largely focused on the Amistad Street building, where she was last seen. Several dozen police and security officers searched the building and the connected parking garage late last night, but they did not find Le. The search took about an hour, though the police paused at times to obtain keys to certain remote areas of the building. People continued to enter and exit the facility as the search continued. Several students and workers confirmed that there had been an unexpected fire alarm in the building at about 1 p.m. on Tuesday, and the building was evacuated as a result. Although security cameras are stationed all around the building, Lorimer said the University has not been able to confirm that Le left the facility at any point after she entered it. “We have been looking now at all of the tapes of every exit and entrance over the entire 24 hours, just to see if there’s any information we can give to the law enforcement agencies,” Lorimer said late Wednesday evening. No e-mail was sent to the campus community to inform students and faculty of the disappearance. Le’s fiance, Jonathan Widawsky, a graduate student at Columbia University who attended Rochester with her, could not be reached for comment Wednesday, though NBC Connecticut reported that he was in New Haven helping with the search on Wednesday. Efforts to reach Le’s parents were also unsuccessful. Le worked in the pharmacology lab of Anton Bennett, an associate professor of pharmacology. Police confiscated her belongings from that lab yesterday and were still examining her lab space Wednesday evening. Bennett, for his part, said he was first contacted by police late Tuesday after Le’s roommate reported her missing. He emphasized that his eight-person laboratory team, of which Le is a member, works closely together and, as such, her colleagues noticed her absence quickly. “There was certainly immediate concern about her whereabouts,” Bennett said. “And they grew over the course of the day,” especially after she missed a pathology class for which she is a teaching assistant. Bennett described his advisee as an extremely diligent and well-organized student. He added that she was always aware of her surroundings and took appropriate precautions when leaving the lab late at night. Colleagues interviewed universally described Le as a bundle of energy — an always upbeat and friendly individual, who, while petite, is readily recognizable by the clickety-clack of her high heels on the lab floors. School of Medicine Dean Robert Alpern said he was notified about Le’s disappearance late yesterday afternoon, just before the Department of Pharmacology met and was briefed on the situation. “The biggest thing we’re worried about right now is ‘Is she okay?’ ” he said. Anyone with information on Le’s whereabouts is asked to contact the YPD at (203) 432-4400.
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« Reply #99 on: September 14, 2009, 12:13:53 PM » |
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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Mike Philbin
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« Reply #100 on: September 14, 2009, 12:14:26 PM » |
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hmm, she's carrying something like you would a BABY or DELICATE ANIMAL or something ALIVE. 
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sociostudent
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« Reply #101 on: September 14, 2009, 12:15:36 PM » |
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Search continues for missing studentBy Harrison Korn and Paul Needham Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Friday, September 11, 2009  Grant Smith/Staff Reporter Investigators searched the dumpster behind 10 Amistad St., Annie Le’s MED ’13 last known location, on Thursday afternoon in search of clues regarding the missing graduate student’s whereabouts. After a full day of work, authorities have no good news to report in the search for Annie Le MED ’13. Investigators interviewed Le’s friends and colleagues Thursday and continued to search the research facility at 10 Amistad St. where she was last seen Tuesday morning. Agents from the Federal Bureau of Investigation were seen entering her apartment at 188 Lawrence St. at about 1 p.m.; after two hours of searching, they removed a bag of items from the house. Still, University and law enforcement officials said there were no major developments yesterday and that they will continue searching Friday. Eva Galvan/Staff Reporter  “We are responding to this at this point as if it could be any kind of bad situation,” University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said in an interview. “You don’t just not go home for a couple of days.”   The 24-year-old Le, who is studying for a doctorate in pharmacology and molecular medicine at the Yale School of Medicine, is scheduled to be married Sunday to Jonathan Widawsky, a graduate student at Columbia University who attended the University of Rochester with her. Lorimer said Thursday that Widawsky is cooperating with investigators and that “there’s not a worry about” his possible involvement in the disappearance. Deputy Secretary Martha Highsmith said Le’s mother has also been helpful to the investigation, which is being led by the Yale Police Department with assistance from the FBI, Connecticut State Police and New Haven Police Department. Neither Widawsky nor Le’s parents have spoken publicly about Le’s disappearance. Lorimer said officials continue to examine every frame of security tape footage from the Amistad Street building but have not yet found any evidence that Le left that facility after she entered at about 10 a.m. Tuesday. Cameras cover every exit of the building, Highsmith said. While police said Le entered the facility wearing a lime green shirt, Highsmith said it is possible that she changed clothes or put on a white lab coat while in the building. If she did, investigators will have an even harder time identifying her in the footage. A fire alarm that was sounded at 12:40 p.m. Tuesday is not thought to be related to her disappearance, Highsmith said. She added that a malfunctioning smoke detector caused the alarm and that investigators do not believe anyone tampered with the fire system. Just outside the Amistad Street building on Thursday night, a team of investigators wearing yellow protective suits searched trash dumpsters for evidence related to the disappearance, though the search did not seem to reveal any information. Another team of investigators from the FBI searched inside the building Thursday, following a Wednesday night search by Yale police and security officers. Bloodhounds from the Connecticut State Police were also on the scene for most of the day, though officers said they will have a more difficult time picking up scents of Le as time passes. One officer added that it may be impossible for the dogs to do their work after 72 hours have passed from the time when Le went missing. Le’s roommate was the first to notify authorities of Le’s disappearance Tuesday night. Yale Police Chief James Perrotti said in an interview that the YPD began investigating between 9 and 10 p.m., immediately after they learned that Le was missing, and quickly learned that Le had left all her belongings in her Sterling Hall of Medicine office early Tuesday before she walked three blocks to the facility at 10 Amistad St. where she often conducted research. Police began interviewing friends and colleagues of Le late Tuesday and continued that work on Wednesday and Thursday. The University did not, however, send an e-mail to the entire campus until 10:42 a.m. Thursday, though media outlets were informed of the disappearance on Wednesday afternoon. Perrotti said there was a delay in alerting the media and the community because the police “do get reports of missing persons, and most of the time, through our investigation, we are able to figure out where the person is.” University President Richard Levin added in a telephone interview Thursday night that while Yale students have gone missing before, “fortunately it has in most cases turned out to be a student simply voluntarily leaving without giving notice to people. Every time it happens, we take it with the utmost seriousness.” Electronic billboards across Interstates 91 and 95 will display a photo of Le in the coming days and will ask motorists with information to contact the FBI. As of Thursday, police said they still have no suspects and no evidence of foul play in her disappearance. Anyone with information pertaining to Le’s disappearance is asked to call the FBI tip line at 1-877-503-1950.
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lavosslayer
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« Reply #102 on: September 14, 2009, 12:15:37 PM » |
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look at the dates, check the dates.
we are publishing every single thing we can to keep a complete paper trail, but you have to check the dates
hah good point. The date wasn't at the top and I thought it was current since up until that post, the rest have been chronologically correct...
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"Those who would trade freedom for security deserve neither" -- Benjamin Franklin
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« Reply #103 on: September 14, 2009, 12:17:13 PM » |
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hmm, she's carrying something like you would a BABY or DELICATE ANIMAL or something ALIVE.  WHERE IS THIS/THESE OBJECT/OBJECTS?
 WHAT IS SHE CARRYING?
WAS THIS EVIDENCE OF SOMETHING SHE DISCOVERED?
WAS THIS SOMETHING SOMEONE GAVE TO HER?
WAS SHE ABOUT TO BE ACCEPTED INTO A SECRET SOCIETY?
WAS THIS GOING TO BE INITIATION NIGHT?
WAS IT JUST A BIG DINNER PREPARED FOR LATE STUDYING?
WHATEVER THE DEAL, WHERE IS THIS ITEM/ITEMS NOW?
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #104 on: September 14, 2009, 12:20:57 PM » |
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Monday, September 14, 2009 9:20 a.m. Police shoot down report about polygraph BY THE YALE DAILY NEWS http://www.yaledailynews.com/crosscampus/2009/09/14/police-shoot-down-report-about-polygraph/The past few days have seen a number of incorrect rumors about Annie Le MED '13, including that a professor was the prime suspect in her disappearance (reported Friday), that her body had been recovered (reported Saturday) and that she was buried somewhere in a landfill in Hartford (reported Sunday). Today brought another such report: The New York Post and the New York Daily News suggested in their stories that a student may have failed a polygraph regarding Le's disappearance — a report that police officials quickly shot down. “It’s absolutely not true,” New Haven Police Department Assistant Chief Stephanie Redding said by telephone late last night.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #105 on: September 14, 2009, 12:25:37 PM » |
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Surprise.....
John Petrini, 61, was released Friday on a promise to appear at an arraignment hearing on Oct. 1. He is charged with breach of peace, threatening, carrying a dangerous weapon, carrying a weapon in a motor vehicle and driving with a suspended license, the Yale Police Department said. Petrini, a Yale physical plant employee who retired in 2002, allegedly had an unloaded shotgun and ammunition in his car, and University officials said they believe he may have been targeting human resources staff at 221 Whitney Ave. Although officials stress that they do not know why he may have wanted to target them, Petrini was denied an appeal last year after the University refused to pay him retirement benefits.
Petrini’s attorney, Jamie E. Alosi, said he was released because, with no criminal record, he was not considered a threat. Petrini’s shotgun was seized, she added.
So this is our 'lone gunman' in the wings...and he's a former employee.. presumably has an access card/id (although they would have asked him to return it when he retired).. he was a 'physical plant' employee.. knew his way around. Yep. Sounds like a patsy.
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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Anti_Illuminati
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« Reply #106 on: September 14, 2009, 12:29:25 PM » |
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http://www.yalesecurity.yale.edu/Announcing new, extended hours for the Access Control Department located at 344 College St, Phelps Gate: Monday - 8am-4:30pm Tuesday-Fri 8am-8pm Saturday - 12pm-8pm, Sheldon Gatison 203-432-1150 Introduction The Department of University Security Programs, established in March 1996, is located at 100 Church Street South. The department is staffed 24 hours by trained security officers and management personnel. The primary purpose of the department is to protect facilities and personnel and support the activities of the Yale Police Department. The Yale Security Department provides integrated security services for the Yale campus, including: Security Systems: Administration and coordination of University Security systems (CCTV camera, access control, intercom, and alarm systems), including installation, service, and monitoring. Security systems are monitored 24 hours a day, 7 days a week by the Yale University Security Central Alarm Station. Project Management: Security design and planning for construction of new and renovated buildings. Security Officer Operations: Management and supervision of a 151 member security officer force assigned to fixed posts in buildings and parking facilities, vehicle, foot and bicycle patrols of the Yale campus. In addition, the department provides safety services, such as escorts, theft deterrent programs, lockout services, and response to residential college alarms. Click here to view a complete list of services offered by Yale Security, Yale Police, and Security Awareness. _______________________________________________________________ 24/7 monitoring huh? Mmkay.
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« Reply #107 on: September 14, 2009, 12:30:17 PM » |
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So this is our 'lone gunman' in the wings...and he's a former employee.. presumably has an access card/id (although they would have asked him to return it when he retired).. he was a 'physical plant' employee.. knew his way around.
Yep. Sounds like a patsy.
NO NO NO NO NO he was the yellow team.... he was the distracting crazy man showing up after the disappearance to force the interoperability risk analysis system (Ptech type) to initiate automated countermeasures... if a guy comes in threatening the HR office of an ivy league school (after VTECH these automated systems were put in place, maybe before), even if he is not really a threat, automated reactions come into play that deploys anti-terror special ops, and satellite surveillance of the scene. this allows false flag clean up crews to get into the area of a crime scene. it allows heightened surveillance of all "civilians" to make sure only one controlled investigation is conducted. the guy did nothing but act all crazy at an HR office. they have a student in custody - that is the lone gunman patsy so far.
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #108 on: September 14, 2009, 12:33:52 PM » |
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http://www.yalesecurity.yale.edu/Announcing new, extended hours for the Access Control Department located at 344 College St, Phelps Gate: Monday - 8am-4:30pm Tuesday-Fri 8am-8pm Saturday - 12pm-8pm, Sheldon Gatison 203-432-1150 Introduction The Department of University Security Programs, established in March 1996, is located at 100 Church Street South. The department is staffed 24 hours by trained security officers and management personnel. The primary purpose of the department is to protect facilities and personnel and support the activities of the Yale Police Department. The Yale Security Department provides integrated security services for the Yale campus, including: Security Systems: Administration and coordination of University Security systems (CCTV camera, access control, intercom, and alarm systems), including installation, service, and monitoring. Security systems are monitored 24 hours a day, 7 days a week by the Yale University Security Central Alarm Station. Project Management: Security design and planning for construction of new and renovated buildings. Security Officer Operations: Management and supervision of a 151 member security officer force assigned to fixed posts in buildings and parking facilities, vehicle, foot and bicycle patrols of the Yale campus. In addition, the department provides safety services, such as escorts, theft deterrent programs, lockout services, and response to residential college alarms. Click here to view a complete list of services offered by Yale Security, Yale Police, and Security Awareness. _______________________________________________________________ 24/7 monitoring huh? Mmkay. Central Alarm Stationwonder who was in that room that night
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #109 on: September 14, 2009, 12:37:14 PM » |
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gunman releasedGunman accused of targeting HR office released from custody  By Victor Zapana and Isaac Arnsdorf Staff Reporter, Staff Reporter Published Monday, September 14, 2009 A man arrested Thursday for bringing a shotgun and ammunition in his car to a Yale building has been released from custody. John Petrini, 61, was released Friday on a promise to appear at an arraignment hearing on Oct. 1. He is charged with breach of peace, threatening, carrying a dangerous weapon, carrying a weapon in a motor vehicle and driving with a suspended license, the Yale Police Department said. Although he currently is free, Petrini has signed an agreement with the YPD saying that he will never set foot on Yale’s campus again, University Vice President and Secretary Linda Lorimer said Sunday. If Petrini needs anything from Human Resources, YPD Chief James Perrotti will personally manage those concerns. Petrini, a Yale physical plant employee who retired in 2002, allegedly had an unloaded shotgun and ammunition in his car, and University officials said they believe he may have been targeting human resources staff at 221 Whitney Ave. Although officials stress that they do not know why he may have wanted to target them, Petrini was denied an appeal last year after the University refused to pay him retirement benefits. Petrini’s attorney, Jamie E. Alosi, said he was released because, with no criminal record, he was not considered a threat. Petrini’s shotgun was seized, she added. At a Sunday evening news conference related to the suspected murder of Annie Le MED ’13, Perrotti was asked if Petrini’s release is a threat to campus safety. “We’re working on it,” Perrotti said. “We have a plan in place.” (He declined further comment.) No one answered the door at Petrini’s apartment Sunday night, and neighbors and Yale colleagues said they did not know him. Alosi declined to make Petrini available for an interview. Over the summer, staff members from Human Resources department moved from 155 Whitney Ave. to 221 Whitney Ave., 500 feet away. They moved in preparation for the Whitney Avenue building to be razed and the four-acre plot nearby to become the new campus for the Yale School of Management. Petrini apparently did not know about the move — a mistake that may have saved lives. On Thursday, he walked into 155 Whitney Ave. and asked an employee for the new location of the Human Resources office. The employee told Petrini of the office’s new location, at 221 Whitney Ave. After Petrini left, the employee notified the Yale Police Department using a campus blue phone. One minute later, after Petrini got out of his car at a parking lot near the new building, police arrested him. “[The employee] thought he looked suspicious and carried some kind of package that was suspicious,” Vice President for Human Resources and Administration Michael Peel said in an interview. “It was certainly exemplary behavior that may have saved us from a tragic outcome.” Petrini had a previous dispute with Yale. He filed a complaint with the University in 2008 because he claimed he did not receive his deserved retirement pension. Petrini’s appeal was denied because he left the University in 2002, and did not meet the minimum age requirement of 55 to be eligible for retirement benefits, Peel said Friday. No further discussion between the University and Petrini has occurred since the appeal was denied, Peel added. “We’re just surmising that was what his issue was,” he said. “I don’t know for a fact that was why he was heading to the Human Resources office.” Alosi said Petrini never took the shotgun out of his car. She said she did not know why he went to the building. The Yale community was notified of the incident in a 1:33 p.m. e-mail message Thursday from Yale Police Chief James Perrotti. The University has an emergency ALERT system in place — which sends a text message, phone call and e-mail to all members of the Yale community — to disseminate facts about potential security issues as they come. But in this case, University President Richard Levin said, a text message alert was deemed unnecessary because the suspect was apprehended within a minute. Harrison Korn contributed reporting.
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #111 on: September 14, 2009, 12:42:32 PM » |
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Annie Le was last seen Tuesday at her laboratory at 10 Amistad St. She was wearing a knee-length brown skirt, a bright green short-sleeved t-shirt, brown shoes and a brown necklace. (Courtesy Of Yale University)Missing Yale Graduate Student Annie Le: Slaying "Not Random," Police SayBody Found In Yale University Building Believed To Be Missing Studenthttp://www.courant.com/community/new-haven/hc-missing-yale-student-body-found-annie-le-seo2,0,1169328.storyNEW HAVEN — - The Yale graduate student presumed to have been killed in her lab building and stuffed into a wall there was probably not the victim of a random act, police said Monday. Police found the body around 5 p.m. Sunday, on what was to have been 24-year-old Annie Le's wedding day. She was reported missing Tuesday, and her ID, money, credit cards and purse were found in her third-floor office at the high-security Yale medical school building where the body was found. Other news outlets have published contradictory information about the progress of the investigation, but The Courant and Fox61 have not independently confirmed those reports. An autopsy was under way Monday to verify the identity of the body, found in a cable duct. Police would not say Monday whether they have a suspect but said nobody is in custody."We're not believing it's a random act," said Officer Joe Avery, a police spokesman. He would not provide further details but said no one else is in danger. The body was found at 10 Amistad St., a research building of the Yale School of Medicine complex, where Le was last seen. Police would not say in what area of the building the body was found. Le's family has been contacted, New Haven Assistant Police Chief Peter Reichard said. Investigators hunkered down on the crime scene Monday morning, sealing off a building that had been open to Yale employees and contractors while the search for Le continued through the weekend. The building is closed to all students and employees as the investigation continues, according to Dorie Baker, a Yale spokesperson. Contractors hired to remodel a portion of the building were told to halt work and have been questioned by investigators. An FBI agent was seen at a nearby Lowe's hardware store purchasing a number of large blue tarps. The agent declined to comment but said such tarps are often used to block the view of a crime scene from the public. Police put up crime scene tape and have blocked off streets leading to the building. The road closures snarled morning traffic and forced police to reroute motorists down one-way roads in both directions. Yale University officials are planning a candlelight prayer vigil for Le at 8 p.m. Monday on Cross Campus at the Ivy League university. An e-mail to the Yale community invites participants to "bring a candle and join us in solidarity." Yale President Richard C. Levin met this morning with a group of Yale community members in Annie Le's academic area and briefed them on the status of the investigation and steps Yale has taken to assist it, said Yale spokesman Tom Conroy. Levin was joined by the University Chaplain, the head of Yale's mental health services, the dean of the graduate school and the dean of the medical school, as well as campus security officials, Conroy wrote in a release. Meanwhile, Yale Vice President Linda Lorimer reported that those with essential research responsibilities in the Amistad building are being accompanied into the building by police. Others in the building are being given an extra day of paid time off. When the building does reopen, there will be extra security at the facility for the foreseeable future. Also, Yale has increased security and police patrols on the streets in the area and added a new bicycle patrol. Yale also added security personnel inside Sterling Hall of Medicine, where Annie Le had her lab, Lorimer said. By the end of the day, the university expects to have a web page for updates on the investigation at http://opa.yale.edu/investigationupdate. A Yale employee sitting outside Sterling Hall of Medicine, where Le left her purse and cell phone before going to the 10 Amistad St. building, said it is unnerving that it appears Le was killed in a Yale building that can be accessed only with a swipe card. "We're all up in arms that it could be an employee," said Gail Novey, who works in pediatrics at the university, said this morning. Still, she said, Yale is generally a safe place to be. "They are very safety conscious, I'll tell you that," she said of university administrators. She said the university sends out e-mail alerts to employees and students when there is a serious crime, and that it has been notifying the Yale community of developments in Le's disappearance. Donna DeMarinis, who sat outside with Novey, said she noticed Yale bicycle police riding by more often than usual today. DeMarinis works for Yale-New Haven Hospital. A first-year graduate student who also sat outside Sterling Monday said she was one of the many people to receive the e-mail last night about the discovery of a body inside 10 Amistad St. "I was shocked because it was in the building," said the woman, who asked not to be named because a killer is now at large. She doesn't usually carry Mace, but she was sure to drop some in her backpack. "I just put it in my bag last night," she said. Le, from Placerville, Calif., was to have been married Sunday at the North Ritz Club in Syosset, N.Y., to Jonathan Widawsky, a graduate student at Columbia University in New York. Police have said that he is not a suspect and is helping with the investigation. New Haven police are now the lead investigators in the case, which is considered a homicide investigation. Yale University police, the FBI, state police and the New Haven state's attorney's office are assisting with the investigation. Reichard would not say if police have any suspects. "Detectives and investigators right now have a large amount of physical evidence at the scene, which they're going through to determine" if it's relevant to the investigation, he said. From about 10 a.m. Sunday to sundown, law enforcement officials were at the lab building on Amistad Street. Search dogs were brought into the building. Late in the afternoon, two flatbed trucks entered the parking lot of the lab building and took up position as if ready to haul away trash containers. Saturday night and for much of Sunday, investigators searched the Connecticut Resources Recovery Authority's trash facility on Maxim Road in Hartford. Investigators wearing protective clothing sifted through piles of trash with machines and dogs. Reichard said that the search was done as "a routine part of the investigation" in an attempt to follow the trail of any trash that came out of the New Haven lab building. He did not say if the search yielded any clues. Shortly after Reichard made his statement, Yale President Richard C. Levin gave a brief press conference on the university's campus. "Our hearts go out to the family of Annie Le, to her fiancé, to her friends," Levin said. "The family and fiancé and friends must now suffer the additional ordeal of waiting for the body to be positively identified. I met earlier this evening with Annie's family and with the fiancé and his family and I conveyed to them all the deeply felt support of the entire Yale University community." He added that Yale has "pledged the university's full resources" for the investigation. On Friday, Yale said that it would offer a $10,000 reward for any information that led to Le's whereabouts. Le entered the laboratory building about 10 a.m. Tuesday and that was the last time she was seen. Officials viewed the building's security tapes repeatedly for any evidence that she had left the building but found none. A friend said Monday the doctoral student never showed signs of worry about her own personal safety at work. "If she was concerned about (it) she would have said something to someone and they would have known," Jennifer Simpson told CBS' "The Early Show." "And Jon (her fiance) would have known, her family would have known, friends would have known." Simpson called Le, a pharmacology student from Placerville, Calif., friendly and affable to everyone. "She was a people person," Simpson said. "She loved people. She loved life. We just can't imagine anybody wanting to harm Annie." Another friend, Laurel Griffeath, echoed those thoughts on NBC's "Today" show. "I can't even imagine someone mad at Annie, much less wanting to hurt her," Griffeath said. The building where the body was found is part of the university medical school complex about a mile from Yale's main campus and is accessible to Yale personnel with identification cards. A network of some 75 video survelliance cameras are trained on every door. Campus officials have said that the security network recorded Le entering the building by swiping her ID card about 10 a.m. on Sept. 8, and have been baffled before Sunday's gruesome discovery that she was never seen leaving. Le wrote an article that was published in February in the medical school's magazine. The piece, titled "Crime and Safety in New Haven," compared higher instances of robbery in New Haven with cities that house other Ivy League schools. It also included an interview with Yale Police Chief James Perrotti, who offered advice such as "pay attention to where you are" and "avoid portraying yourself as a potential victim." "In short, New Haven is a city and all cities have their perils," Le concludes. "But with a little street smarts, one can avoid becoming yet another statistic." Le, who worked in a laboratory in the five-story building's basement, was reported missing Sept. 8. Her ID, money, credit cards and purse were found in her third-floor office. More than 100 local, state and federal police had been searching the building for days, using blueprints to uncover any place where evidence or Le's body could be hidden. Investigators on Saturday said they recovered evidence from the building. Police sources told The Courant that bloody clothing was discovered above a ceiling tile. On Sunday morning, a state police van drove down a ramp into the building's basement area. Authorities also sifted through garbage at a Hartford incinerator Sunday, looking through trash that was taken from the building in the days since Le went missing. Yale students on Monday called the finding sad, but some said the discovery doesn't make them feel less safe at Yale. "Obviously it's a city and there are safety concerns," said 18-year-old Peter Spaulding, a student from Maryland. "It can happen anywhere. You have to go on with life." Law student Lindsay Nash of West Chester, Pa., said she doesn't sense a heightened level of fear on campus. "There's always an attention to safety here," she said. "I think there's perception that you need to be careful regardless."
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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nofakenews
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« Reply #112 on: September 14, 2009, 12:44:08 PM » |
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Don't know if this is important but listen to this video around 1:10 they say they don't know who did it but they took a photo of the dhs document and they blew the whole f**king story over and you could read everything. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LoQ3acOuGQ4&feature=channel
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Spark of Truth Inc.
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« Reply #113 on: September 14, 2009, 12:47:39 PM » |
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hmm, she's carrying something like you would a BABY or DELICATE ANIMAL or something ALIVE.  and she's leaning her chest and head into the other direction to keep her hair away from the something she's carrying. 12 monkeys comes to mind.
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Walk tall, kick ass, love music and always remember you're coming from a long line of lovers, truth seekers and warriors.
- Hunter S. Thompson (RIP)
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #114 on: September 14, 2009, 12:49:20 PM » |
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CBS is doing shock and awe with ... http://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/09/14/crimesider/entry5309589.shtmlAnnie Le Case: Grisly Yale Murder "Freaks" StudentsSeptember 14, 2009 11:45 AM NEW HAVEN, Conn. (YALE DAILY NEWS VIA UWIRE) As news spread Sunday night that a body had been found at 10 Amistad St., the Yale building where Annie Le was last seen, students across campus expressed fear and uncertainty about their safety. Photos: Missing Yale Student Annie Le "It’s really sad, and it’s also really terrifying for campus mentality because it was in a Yale building," Laura Vrana said, standing in a small group of students in the lower courtyard of Davenport College. Le, a doctoral candidate in pharmacology, has been missing since Sept. 8, when she was seen on security cameras entering the red-brick medical school building where she regularly conducted experiments. In an e-mail Sunday night to the Yale community, University President Richard Levin announced that the body of a female had been found in the building’s basement. While the medical school campus was quiet as police established a one-block perimeter around 10 Amistad St., Levin’s message elicited shock from many students walking around central campus. "I’m kind of creeped out because it happened probably less than half a mile from my dorm," Zach Dean said as he left the Branford College library for his Old Campus suite. Other undergraduates said Le’s disappearance seemed remote from central campus because it occurred at the medical school, where undergraduates rarely venture, but all students interviewed said they felt uneasy about the news that a body had been recovered. (Facebook Photo)Photo: Annie Le in a Facebook photo. "The med school feels distant,” Sarah Mich said. “It’s a different crowd, but if it were anywhere else on campus, it would feel different." But, she went on, "If they don’t find anyone who did it, that will be really frightening." Kasey Garcia, sitting beside Mich on a wall in one of Saybrook College’s courtyards added "It was in a Yale building. That’s what confused me the most, and that really kind of freaks me out." Like Garcia, Casey Blue James was most unnerved by the knowledge that the medical school building was protected by the same security swipe system used in all Yale-owned buildings — including the residential colleges, where students must use their University-issued ID cards to gain entry. "It’s pretty terrifying knowing that in a keycard-accessed building, in broad daylight, this could happen," James said. "It kind of makes me not want to go anywhere by myself." Despite the atmosphere of worry created by Levin’s e-mail, some students said they still felt safe within the confines of central campus and would not change their habits in the future — especially if the potential homicide was a premeditated act. "I was mostly surprised because I've always felt perfectly safe on campus," Christopher Ell said. "If it was a privately motivated crime, it's not really that scary, but if it was a random act of violence, then yeah." The incident does not reflect the general safety of Yale’s central campus, Ell continued, though it did serve as a reminder of the hazards of a large city. "It doesn’t make me feel less safe as a Yalie," agreed Guillermo Peralta as he returned to his Branford College room around 10:15 p.m. alone. "This could happen on any campus." Meanwhile, on the otherwise quiet medical school campus, four graduate students left bouquets of carnations, roses and daisies and two burning candles by the entrance to Amistad Park, across the street from Le’s laboratory. A prayer vigil for Le will take place in the Davenport courtyard today at 8 p.m. Story written by Vivian Yee and Esther Zuckerman, staff reporters for the Yale Daily News. Zeke Miller also contributed reporting. This story appears courtesy of UWIRE, a news service powered by student journalists at more than 800 universities. To learn more, visit UWIRE.com. Photos: Missing Yale Student Annie Le and Fiance Jonathan Widawsky ANNIE LE CASE: FULL COVERAGE
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #115 on: September 14, 2009, 12:51:49 PM » |
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More from CBS: September 14, 2009 1:55 PM Yale Student Annie Le: Could Bloody Clothes Catch a Killer?http://www.cbsnews.com/sections/crimesider/main504083.shtml?keyword=annie+le&tag=contentMain;contentBodyNEW HAVEN, Conn. (CBS/AP) Could bloody clothes lead to a suspect in the disappearance and presumed murder of Yale graduate student Annie Le? Investigators on Saturday said they recovered a "lare amount" of evidence from the high-security laboratory building where the 24-year-old Le worked and was last seen alive. On Sunday, a female body, presumed to be Le's, was found stuffed in a wall filled with cable ducts. Investigators would not confirm media reports that the recovered items included bloody clothing. If true, the blood stained cloth could potentially provide DNA evidence that links the killer and victim. In a story published Saturday, the Yale Daily News quoted an unnamed New Haven Police Department official as saying bloody clothes were found in a ceiling at the building. The official spoke to the newspaper on the condition of anonymity so the official would be free to discuss an ongoing investigation. Police found the body around 5 p.m. Sunday, on what was to have been 24-year-old Le's wedding day. An autopsy was underway on Monday to verify the identity of the body. The building where the body was found is part of the university medical school complex about a mile from Yale's main campus and is accessible to Yale personnel with identification cards. Some 75 video surveillance cameras monitor all doorways.
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #116 on: September 14, 2009, 12:54:11 PM » |
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September 14, 2009 12:50 PM Search for Annie Le Suspect: Killing Not Random, Say Policehttp://www.cbsnews.com/blogs/2009/09/14/crimesider/entry5309972.shtml?NEW HAVEN, Conn. (CBS/AP) Police say the killing of a person whose body was found stuffed behind a wall in a high-security laboratory building at Yale University is not a random act. That body is widely believed to be that of 24-year-old Yale graduate student Annie Le, who went missing five days before her wedding. New Haven police spokesman Joe Avery told The Associated Press on Monday that police don't believe that anyone else on the campus is in danger. MSNBC has reported that police have a suspect and that he has defensive wounds. Avery would not confirm that information and said no one is in custody. She was last seen in the building on Tuesday. An autopsy is being performed to verify that the body is Le's. ----------------------------------------------- Note the timestamps on CBS posts to their "crimesider" news blog. Wonder when they started writing all of this?
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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Dig
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« Reply #117 on: September 14, 2009, 12:54:38 PM » |
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about the polygraphs... Monday, September 14, 2009 9:20 a.m. Police shoot down report about polygraph BY THE YALE DAILY NEWS http://www.yaledailynews.com/crosscampus/2009/09/14/police-shoot-down-report-about-polygraph/The past few days have seen a number of incorrect rumors about Annie Le MED '13, including that a professor was the prime suspect in her disappearance (reported Friday), that her body had been recovered (reported Saturday) and that she was buried somewhere in a landfill in Hartford (reported Sunday). Today brought another such report: The New York Post and the New York Daily News suggested in their stories that a student may have failed a polygraph regarding Le's disappearance — a report that police officials quickly shot down. “It’s absolutely not true,” New Haven Police Department Assistant Chief Stephanie Redding said by telephone late last night. btw polygraphs are bullshit
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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« Reply #118 on: September 14, 2009, 12:56:30 PM » |
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and she's leaning her chest and head into the other direction to keep her hair away from the something she's carrying. 12 monkeys comes to mind.
and cradling it like a baby animal or something
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All eyes are opened, or opening, to the rights of man. The general spread of the light of science has already laid open to every view the palpable truth, that the mass of mankind has not been born with saddles on their backs, nor a favored few booted and spurred, ready to ride them legitimately
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Satyagraha
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« Reply #119 on: September 14, 2009, 12:57:40 PM » |
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and cradling it like a baby animal or something
Or lab stuff.. testtubes.. stuff she might have been working on...
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"He that would make his own liberty secure must guard even his enemy from oppression; for if he violates this duty he establishes a precedent that will reach to himself."
~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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