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Author Topic: Yale's sexual predator prof Joseph Schlesinger still an Annie Le murder suspect?  (Read 116555 times)
Dig
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« Reply #280 on: September 16, 2009, 07:15:22 AM »

Guys, this is not the end for this lab tech and I pray for justice. I really am humbled by the whole thing and am mostly sad that I personally lack the communication skills and the connections to convey how completely dangerous this "sphere of influence of the illuminati" is. The only reason we know that the Anthax murderers are still around is because the patsies they tried to set up were too powerful or were executed. I fear this 24 year old does not have that influence to stand up to Rothschild/Murdoch/Illuminati.  Or worse, that he may have assisted the Chair of Pharmacology execute this voice for humanity.

I have read the following and all I can say is "The bigger the lie..." Just read it and see that there are like 20 pieces of innuendo convicting this guy with neuro-linguistic predictive programming techniques and supposed "police confirmed" evidence when they will not even release the autopsy for fear of "too much information". The reason they do not release the autopsy is not, as others have suggested, because they do not want _____________ (fill in the blank). It is so that they can control the leak of information and present only one of 1,000 scenarios that sticks in people's subconsience to discredit other theories later.

In any case, look at this article which basically releases only 1/1,000 pieces of suppoesed evidence that has not been confirmed and could just be completely made up. Notice how every single solitary piece of this supposed evidence fits only one possible scenario. Notice how that scenario is about the most absurd thing you could ever dream up? Notice how there are over 100 people investigating who all probably have slightly different opinions? Notice how again only one line of theory is presented thus setting up the patsy even before he can breathe? I have few times before ever felt the Cassandra Syndrome so powerfully.

_______________________________________


Could tale of slain Yale student Annie Le
and 'person of interest' Ray Clark be about
MICE?

[WTF??]


"The bigger the lie, the more believable it will be."

- Adolf Hitler





http://www.nydailynews.com/news/ny_crime/2009/09/16/2009-09-16_could_brutal_tale_be_about_mice.html?print=1&page=all
Michael Daly Tuesday, September 15th 2009, 10:48 PM


Along with the defensive wounds and the flunked lie detector test, investigators looking into the murder of Yale student Annie Le focused on a lab technician named Raymond Clark because of e-mails about the care of laboratory mice.

In the e-mails, Clark is said to criticize Le for not adhering to the protocols for tending the mice kept in the basement as part of her lab's ongoing experiments.

Le is said to have responded in a conciliatory tone, promising to keep to the protocols. Investigators wonder if Clark was not satisfied, if resentment suddenly flared to rage, if as crazy as it may seem this was a case of mice and murder.

Investigators also noted swipe card records that are said to show Clark usually went through the building in an orderly fashion in accordance with the demands of his work.

But the swipe card records from the day Le disappeared show Clark moving from room to room with no apparent logic, at points going to places unrelated to his job.

Such a pattern might fit somebody who was frenetically searching for a place to hide a body.

Clark left the building at the time of a fire alarm. Surveillance camera footage is said to show him looking considerably more distraught than could be explained by a simple evacuation.

As suspicious as all this seems, the evidence outside the forensics is still largely circumstantial. The investigators have remained cautious about describing the technician as anything beyond "a person of interest."

They continued to call Clark that even after finally taking him into custody yesterday evening, using a "body search warrant" for "DNA and physical evidence." They now await the results of DNA tests before they decide whether to charge him.

The investigators would be shocked if the forensics fail to point to Clark. But they also do not want to charge him and then discover they had the wrong guy. Nobody wants Clark to become the Yale version of Richard Jewell.

Clark asked for a lawyer after he flunked the polygraph so the investigators cannot question him now that he's in custody. Do not expect a real-life version of the cable TV drama "The Closer." The case against the scientist's suspected killer will depend on science.

Clark was surely aware before he was picked up that he is the "person of interest" reported in newspapers and media outlets around the world.

He knows that he flunked the lie detector test if not necessarily the particular question that sent the machine into a tizzy.

He knows that the scratches on his chest are considered defensive wounds.

He knows that there is blood evidence.

Clark also likely knows that swipe card systems record exactly who passes through a door and at exactly what time.

He must further be aware that investigators would be able to retrieve copies of the e-mails from Le's computer.

So in writing details of the case as recounted by law enforcement, I am only reporting what Clark surely knows the police know.

What only Raymond Clark knows for certain is whether the killing of a remarkable young scientist five days before her wedding really was a case of mice and murder.

[W T F ?]


[Racist depiction of a Juden Rat. The zionazis love to blame rats for false flags, fricking spooky. I guess that was the best they could do. An email saying, "Hey Annie, take better care of the f**king mice." Then wham-o, they got their storyline perfect for the soap opera reduced MSM. And they call us conspiracy "theorists?"]
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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
cardio
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« Reply #281 on: September 16, 2009, 07:35:47 AM »

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#ixzz0R6W1cgSQ

This guy had defence wounds all over and failed 2 polygraphs

What about testing the DNA under her fingernails /bloody shirt to see if it matches his?

'member what I posted way back on page 3?   Test for his DNA under her fingernails (and on her body) !  Got it from Websleuths.

Anyways, if he did do it, it could tie back into the NWO who helped to create the modern "enivronmental" movements including  violent offshoots, ....
You know those who say humanity is evil, rats are more valuable than us.  Don't forget, that's a form of brainwashing too.  
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cardio
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« Reply #282 on: September 16, 2009, 08:03:32 AM »

But yeah ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ the "Rat Avenger" scenario seems HIGHLY HIGHLY unlikely even from even the most ardent, passionate, gung-ho animal rights activists.
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Kilika
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« Reply #283 on: September 16, 2009, 08:04:29 AM »

Failed 2 polygraphs and has "defensive wounds" on his chest? According to whom? "Sources"? That isn't right to say things that aren't confirmed as fact using unnamed sources. That is called rumor. What if the guy is innocent? Yet again the media is trying to convict even before anyone is charged.
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sociostudent
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« Reply #284 on: September 16, 2009, 08:17:51 AM »

Guys, this is not the end for this lab tech and I pray for justice. I really am humbled by the whole thing and am mostly sad that I personally lack the communication skills and the connections to convey how completely dangerous this "sphere of influence of the illuminati" is. The only reason we know that the Anthax murderers are still around is because the patsies they tried to set up were too powerful or were executed. I fear this 24 year old does not have that influence to stand up to Rothschild/Murdoch/Illuminati.  Or worse, that he may have assisted the Chair of Pharmacology execute this voice for humanity.

I have read the following and all I can say is "The bigger the lie..." Just read it and see that there are like 20 pieces of innuendo convicting this guy with neuro-linguistic predictive programming techniques and supposed "police confirmed" evidence when they will not even release the autopsy for fear of "too much information". The reason they do not release the autopsy is not, as others have suggested, because they do not want _____________ (fill in the blank). It is so that they can control the leak of information and present only one of 1,000 scenarios that sticks in people's subconsience to discredit other theories later.

In any case, look at this article which basically releases only 1/1,000 pieces of suppoesed evidence that has not been confirmed and could just be completely made up. Notice how every single solitary piece of this supposed evidence fits only one possible scenario. Notice how that scenario is about the most absurd thing you could ever dream up? Notice how there are over 100 people investigating who all probably have slightly different opinions? Notice how again only one line of theory is presented thus setting up the patsy even before he can breathe? I have few times before ever felt the Cassandra Syndrome so powerfully.


Cassandra Complex
Cassandra (metaphor)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
This article is about the psychosocial phenomenon. For other uses, see Cassandra (disambiguation).
Painting of Cassandra by Evelyn De Morgan.

The Cassandra metaphor (variously labelled the Cassandra 'syndrome', 'complex', 'phenomenon', 'predicament', 'dilemma', or 'curse'), is a term applied in situations in which valid warnings or concerns are dismissed or disbelieved.

The term originates in Greek mythology. Cassandra was a daughter of Priam, the King of Troy. Struck by her beauty, Apollo provided her with the gift of prophecy, but when Cassandra refused Apollo's romantic advances, he placed a curse ensuring that none would believe her warnings. Cassandra was left with the knowledge of future events, but could neither alter these events nor convince others of the validity of her predictions.



The metaphor has been applied in a variety of contexts such as psychology, environmentalism, politics, science, cinema, the corporate world, and in philosophy, and has been in circulation since at least 1949 when French philosopher Gaston Bachelard coined the term 'Cassandra Complex' to refer to a belief that things could be known in advance.[1]
Usage

[edit] Psychology

The Cassandra metaphor is applied by some psychologists to individuals who experience physical and emotional suffering as a result of distressing personal perceptions, and who are disbelieved when they attempt to share the cause of their suffering with others.

[edit] Melanie Klein

In 1963, psychologist Melanie Klein provided an interpretation of Cassandra as representing the human moral conscience whose main task is to issue warnings. Cassandra as moral conscience, "predicts ill to come and warns that punishment will follow and grief arise."[2] Cassandra's need to point out moral infringements and subsequent social consequences is driven by what Klein calls "the destructive influences of the cruel super-ego," which is represented in the Greek myth by the god Apollo, Cassandra's overlord and persecutor.[3] Klein's use of the metaphor centers on the moral nature of certain predictions, which tends to evoke in others "a refusal to believe what at the same time they know to be true, and expresses the universal tendency toward denial, [with] denial being a potent defence against persecutory anxiety and guilt."[2]

[edit] Laurie Layton Schapira

In a 1988 study Jungian analyst Laurie Layton Schapira explored what she called the "Cassandra Complex" in the lives of two of her analysands.[4]

Based on clinical experience, she delineates three factors which constitute the Cassandra complex:

   1. dysfunctional relationships with the “Apollo archetype”
   2. emotional or physical suffering, including hysteria or ‘women’s problems’,
   3. and being disbelieved when attempting to relate the facticity of these experiences to others.[4]

Layton Schapira views the Cassandra complex as resulting from a dysfunctional relationship with what she calls the "Apollo archetype", which refers to any individual's or culture's pattern that is dedicated to, yet bound by, order, reason, intellect, truth and clarity that disavows itself of anything dark and irrational.[5] The intellectual specialization of this archetype creates emotional distance and can predispose relationships to a lack of emotional reciprocity and consequent dysfunctions.4] She further states that a 'Cassandra woman' is very prone to hysteria because she "feels attacked not only from the outside world but also from within, especially from the body in the form of somatic, often gynaecological, complaints."[6]

Addressing the metaphorical application of the Greek Cassandra myth, Layton Schapira states that:

    What the Cassandra woman sees is something dark and painful that may not be apparent on the surface of things or that objective facts do not corroborate. She may envision a negative or unexpected outcome; or something which would be difficult to deal with; or a truth which others, especially authority figures, would not accept. In her frightened, ego-less state, the Cassandra woman may blurt out what she sees, perhaps with the unconscious hope that others might be able to make some sense of it. But to them her words sound meaningless, disconnected and blown out of all proportion.[7]

... 'Cassandra dilemma' in which one can see the most likely outcome of current trends and can warn people about what is happening, but the vast majority can not, or will not respond, and later if catastrophe occurs, they may even blame you, as if your prediction set the disaster in motion.[16] Occasionally there may be a "successful" alert, though the succession of books, campaigns, organizations, and personalities that we think of as the environmental ANTI-GLOBALISM movement has more generally fallen toward the opposite side of this dilemma: a failure to "get through" to the people and avert disaster. In the words of Atkisson: "too often we watch helplessly, as Cassandra did, while the soldiers emerge from the Trojan horse just as foreseen and wreak their predicted havoc. Worse, Cassandra's dilemma has seemed to grow more inescapable even as the chorus of Cassandras has grown larger."[17] (FIXED.)  Wink
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luckee1
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« Reply #285 on: September 16, 2009, 08:19:12 AM »

Quote
The investigators would be shocked if the forensics fail to point to Clark. But they also do not want to charge him and then discover they had the wrong guy. Nobody wants Clark to become the Yale version of Richard Jewell.

WTF  Jewell was tried in the media and had his life ruined by it.  He was a friggin security guard who actually was doing his job!  Is this the media's attempt at a mea culpa?  But here again the media is trying this guy!  I really do not believe this was a single perp crime!

Sane I didn't know that there was something officially called the 'Cassandra syndrome'.  Do they have a shot for that?  Cheesy
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Dig
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« Reply #286 on: September 16, 2009, 08:20:37 AM »

Failed 2 polygraphs and has "defensive wounds" on his chest? According to whom? "Sources"? That isn't right to say things that aren't confirmed as fact using unnamed sources. That is called rumor. What if the guy is innocent? Yet again the media is trying to convict even before anyone is charged.

Also, you know they looked forever for the scarriest looking picture of tis patsy...if the one in the article is the scarriest picture of him, then wow.

Also notice how they have the standard response from a neighbor concerning a patsy: "he seemed like a nice person." Notice how they very perfectly push into the subconscience... "SEEMED"

SEEMED...

SEEM...

PAST TENSE

A.K.A. "No longer is"

A.K.A. "He no longer is a nice person."

It is not that noticable, but if you are used to all of this shit from VTech, Columbine, Binghamton, etc. This follows a very distinct pattern.

The predictive programming wheels are in motion and the Rothschild clan is now personally involved in the cover up.

AGAIN, WHERE ARE ALL THE SUPPOSED "ANTI-ZIONISTS"?

WHERE THE F*CK ARE THEY?

DOES THIS PROVE THEY REALLY ARE CONTROLLED OPPOSITION?

Hey anti-zionists... low hanging fruit...

Now does everyone understand why I call them zionazis? They are two sides of the same damn coin. You have Israeli Pharmaceutical companies working with Siemens and Roche...HOW ARE THEY NOT ON THE SAME SIDE?
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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
Dig
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« Reply #287 on: September 16, 2009, 08:22:26 AM »

WTF  Jewell was tried in the media and had his life ruined by it.  He was a friggin security guard who actually was doing his job!  Is this the media's attempt at a mea culpa?  But here again the media is trying this guy!  I really do not believe this was a single perp crime!

Sane I didn't know that there was something officially called the 'Cassandra syndrome'.  Do they have a shot for that?  Cheesy



Yeah, and the Chair of the Big Pharma Department at Yale owns the patent for it Smiley
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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
luckee1
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« Reply #288 on: September 16, 2009, 08:25:05 AM »



The predictive programming wheels are in motion and the Rothschild clan is now personally involved in the cover up.

AGAIN, WHERE ARE ALL THE SUPPOSED "ANTI-ZIONISTS"?

WHERE THE F*CK ARE THEY?

DOES THIS PROVE THEY REALLY ARE CONTROLLED OPPOSITION?

Oh Aerioch where are you? ? ?  Turn that acute eye on this will you?
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sociostudent
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« Reply #289 on: September 16, 2009, 08:25:24 AM »


Yeah, and the Chair of the Big Pharma Department at Yale owns the patent for it Smiley

nIIICE..
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donnay
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« Reply #290 on: September 16, 2009, 08:50:05 AM »

Lab Tech Released From Custody in Yale Slaying
By JAMES BARRON and SERGE F. KOVALESKI

The 24-year-old graduate student whose body was found in a Yale University medical building had made no complaints about being stalked or harassed in the weeks before her death, the police said on Wednesday after taking DNA and hair samples from a lab technician described as a “person of interest” in the case.

The technician, Raymond Clark III, 24, was released at 3 a.m. Wednesday after complying with a search warrant to take the samples, said Joe Avery, a spokesman for the New Haven police. Mr. Clark had been a focus for investigators at least since Monday, when unmarked police cars pulled up to the apartment complex in Middletown, Conn., where he lives.

The body of the graduate student, Annie Le, was found Sunday in a basement wall inside the building. The case has been classified as a homicide, but the cause of death has yet to be released publicly.

On Tuesday night, Chief James Lewis of the New Haven police said Mr. Clark III was in custody but did not call him a suspect.

Chief Lewis said investigators had taken about 150 items from the crime scene with potential DNA evidence they could compare. He also said they had interviewed 150 people and watched 700 hours of surveillance video from cameras in and around the building where the body of Ms. Le was found — and where Mr. Clark also worked.

Mr. Clark was held for about five hours in the Connecticut State Police Barracks in Middletown before being released to his lawyer, Mr. Avery said on Wednesday morning. Although the chief said on Tuesday that Mr. Clark would either be charged or exonerated within 24 to 72 hours, Mr. Avery added a note of caution to that prediction, saying, “Who knows? DNA sometimes takes a while.”

Mr. Avery also said that there had been no complaints made by Ms. Le against Mr. Clark before her death, at least to the knowledge of his department. In fact, he said, the slain woman had made no complaints of any type of harassment against anyone. It remained unclear on Wednesday morning whether there was any connection between Ms. Le and Mr. Clark beyond the fact that they worked in the same facility.

Neighbors of Mr. Clark said that on Sunday afternoon, around the time Ms. Le’s body was discovered, he left with his companion, who is also a technician at the Yale lab. The neighbors said they got into a Ford Taurus that drove away. It was not clear when he returned — no one answered the door in midafternoon. But the police picked him up there around 10 p.m. on Tuesday, a week after Ms. Le disappeared and two days after she was to have been married on Long Island.

For much of Tuesday, officials declined to say officially if anyone was considered a suspect. And when Chief Lewis appeared at the news conference, he said that investigators were still looking at other people who had access to the building, which is near the Yale Medical School.

“We are making sure there are not any other suspects, making sure we don’t have tunnel vision,” Chief Lewis said. He declined to discuss how Ms. Le had died. Early in the day, the chief state medical examiner’s office said it would release the cause of death on Tuesday afternoon. But it did not do so, saying the state’s attorney in New Haven had asked that the information not be released “in order to facilitate their investigation.”

A researcher at another Yale lab in the building where Ms. Le’s body was found said that Mr. Clark had not been at work for several days. Besides his companion, his sister and brother-in-law also work as animal research technicians at Yale.

The researcher said Mr. Clark was “very officious and very demanding” and that Mr. Clark had given graduate students who worked as investigators a hard time.

“For example, you’re supposed to wear shoe covers on your feet, and he would make a big deal of it, instead of just requesting that they wear them,” said the researcher, who asked not to be identified. “I told his supervisor.”

Ann Marie Goodwin, a resident at a Victorian-style house in New Haven where Mr. Clark and his companion lived until about a year ago, described him as “very unsociable.”

On Tuesday night, a man who identified himself as Pastor Dennis Smith read a statement on behalf of the families of Ms. Le and her fiancé, Jonathan Widawsky, whom Ms. Le met at Rochester and who is now a graduate student at Columbia University.

Standing outside Woodbridge Hall on the Yale campus, the pastor said the families wanted “to thank everyone in the community and around the nation for the thoughts and prayers.” He cited a number of law enforcement agencies, including the New Haven Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, for the “professional and compassionate manner in which they are conducting the investigation.”

“Our loss would have been immensely more difficult without their support,” he said. After thanking the president of Yale, Richard C. Levin, he left, answering no questions.

Ms. Le, who often worked with laboratory mice in the building where she was found, was part of a research team led by a faculty adviser, Anton Bennett. According to its Web site, his laboratory was doing enzyme research that could bear on cancer, diabetes and muscular dystrophy.

Vanessa J. Flores, a medical student at the University of Pittsburgh, said she met Ms. Le in 2005 when they both applied for a scholarship program at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. Both were accepted, and they spent time together that summer. They had kept in touch, and Ms. Flores had planned to attend Ms. Le’s wedding.

Ms. Flores said Ms. Le and Mr. Widawsky were introduced by a mutual friend. Both were shy about relationships, Ms. Flores said, and it took some time for a friendship to evolve into something romantic.

Going to different graduate schools was a difficult decision, Ms. Flores said, but they had decided to make it work.

“That’s why Jon was such a perfect fit for her,” Ms. Flores said. “He would never make her feel like her career had to come second.”

When a guest Ms. Le had invited to the wedding jokingly complained in an e-mail message to many of their friends that he would have to miss a New York Giants game to attend, Ms. Le responded that they were also going to miss the finals of the United States Open tennis tournament, the MTV Video Music Awards, a Mets doubleheader and a pet expo.

“It hurts me too,” Ms. Le wrote, according to Ms. Flores.
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Dig
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« Reply #291 on: September 16, 2009, 09:05:15 AM »

SUBCONSCIENCE PREDICTIVE PROGRAMMING FROM ANNONYMOUS SOURCES AND FLAGRANT INNUENDO

This stuff is so fricking obvious.

How is this not slander, obstruction of justice, lible, conspiracy to commit murder after the fact?

WTF?


Lab Tech Released From Custody in Yale Slaying
By JAMES BARRON and SERGE F. KOVALESKI

The 24-year-old graduate student whose body was found in a Yale University medical building had made no complaints about being stalked or harassed in the weeks before her death, the police said on Wednesday after taking DNA and hair samples from a lab technician described as a “person of interest” in the case.

The technician, Raymond Clark III, 24, was released at 3 a.m. Wednesday after complying with a search warrant to take the samples, said Joe Avery, a spokesman for the New Haven police. Mr. Clark had been a focus for investigators at least since Monday, when unmarked police cars pulled up to the apartment complex in Middletown, Conn., where he lives.

The body of the graduate student, Annie Le, was found Sunday in a basement wall inside the building. The case has been classified as a homicide, but the cause of death has yet to be released publicly.

On Tuesday night, Chief James Lewis of the New Haven police said Mr. Clark III was in custody but did not call him a suspect.

Chief Lewis said investigators had taken about 150 items from the crime scene with potential DNA evidence they could compare. He also said they had interviewed 150 people and watched 700 hours of surveillance video from cameras in and around the building where the body of Ms. Le was found — and where Mr. Clark also worked.

Mr. Clark was held for about five hours in the Connecticut State Police Barracks in Middletown before being released to his lawyer, Mr. Avery said on Wednesday morning. Although the chief said on Tuesday that Mr. Clark would either be charged or exonerated within 24 to 72 hours, Mr. Avery added a note of caution to that prediction, saying, “Who knows? DNA sometimes takes a while.”

Mr. Avery also said that there had been no complaints made by Ms. Le against Mr. Clark before her death, at least to the knowledge of his department. In fact, he said, the slain woman had made no complaints of any type of harassment against anyone. It remained unclear on Wednesday morning whether there was any connection between Ms. Le and Mr. Clark beyond the fact that they worked in the same facility.

Neighbors of Mr. Clark said that on Sunday afternoon, around the time Ms. Le’s body was discovered, he left with his companion, who is also a technician at the Yale lab. The neighbors said they got into a Ford Taurus that drove away. It was not clear when he returned — no one answered the door in midafternoon. But the police picked him up there around 10 p.m. on Tuesday, a week after Ms. Le disappeared and two days after she was to have been married on Long Island.

For much of Tuesday, officials declined to say officially if anyone was considered a suspect. And when Chief Lewis appeared at the news conference, he said that investigators were still looking at other people who had access to the building, which is near the Yale Medical School.

“We are making sure there are not any other suspects, making sure we don’t have tunnel vision,” Chief Lewis said. He declined to discuss how Ms. Le had died. Early in the day, the chief state medical examiner’s office said it would release the cause of death on Tuesday afternoon. But it did not do so, saying the state’s attorney in New Haven had asked that the information not be released “in order to facilitate their investigation.”


~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ANNONYMOUS SOURCE REVEALS NOTHING OUT OF THE ORDINARY,
BUT IT IS SPUN TO LOOK LIKE "EVIDENCE"
HOW THE F*CK ARE THOSE STATEMENTS EVIDENCE?
A researcher at another Yale lab in the building where Ms. Le’s body was found said that Mr. Clark had not been at work for several days. Besides his companion, his sister and brother-in-law also work as animal research technicians at Yale.

The researcher said Mr. Clark was “very officious and very demanding” and that Mr. Clark had given graduate students who worked as investigators a hard time.

“For example, you’re supposed to wear shoe covers on your feet, and he would make a big deal of it, instead of just requesting that they wear them,” said the researcher, who asked not to be identified. “I told his supervisor.”

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
AND THIS SENTENCE HAS TONS OF INFORMATION AND PROBABLY A 2 HOUR INTERVIEW
MAYBE 1,000 WORDS REDUCED TO TWO WORDS/FIVE SYLLABLES
Ann Marie Goodwin, a resident at a Victorian-style house in New Haven where Mr. Clark and his companion lived until about a year ago, described him as “very unsociable.”

On Tuesday night, a man who identified himself as Pastor Dennis Smith read a statement on behalf of the families of Ms. Le and her fiancé, Jonathan Widawsky, whom Ms. Le met at Rochester and who is now a graduate student at Columbia University.

Standing outside Woodbridge Hall on the Yale campus, the pastor said the families wanted “to thank everyone in the community and around the nation for the thoughts and prayers.” He cited a number of law enforcement agencies, including the New Haven Police Department and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, for the “professional and compassionate manner in which they are conducting the investigation.”

“Our loss would have been immensely more difficult without their support,” he said. After thanking the president of Yale, Richard C. Levin, he left, answering no questions.

Ms. Le, who often worked with laboratory mice in the building where she was found, was part of a research team led by a faculty adviser, Anton Bennett. According to its Web site, his laboratory was doing enzyme research that could bear on cancer, diabetes and muscular dystrophy.

Vanessa J. Flores, a medical student at the University of Pittsburgh, said she met Ms. Le in 2005 when they both applied for a scholarship program at the National Institutes of Health in Bethesda, Md. Both were accepted, and they spent time together that summer. They had kept in touch, and Ms. Flores had planned to attend Ms. Le’s wedding.

Ms. Flores said Ms. Le and Mr. Widawsky were introduced by a mutual friend. Both were shy about relationships, Ms. Flores said, and it took some time for a friendship to evolve into something romantic.

Going to different graduate schools was a difficult decision, Ms. Flores said, but they had decided to make it work.

“That’s why Jon was such a perfect fit for her,” Ms. Flores said. “He would never make her feel like her career had to come second.”

When a guest Ms. Le had invited to the wedding jokingly complained in an e-mail message to many of their friends that he would have to miss a New York Giants game to attend, Ms. Le responded that they were also going to miss the finals of the United States Open tennis tournament, the MTV Video Music Awards, a Mets doubleheader and a pet expo.

“It hurts me too,” Ms. Le wrote, according to Ms. Flores.
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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
sociostudent
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« Reply #292 on: September 16, 2009, 09:15:33 AM »

They even went so far as to call him a "sad individual" on fox news b/c he wrote an email.
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« Reply #293 on: September 16, 2009, 09:16:56 AM »

Yep...  PATSY  UP!!
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« Reply #294 on: September 16, 2009, 09:33:13 AM »

Anybody else notice a pattern of spin here?
The guy was a stickler for rules...or so it seems...so what??
I don't get it.  I would think that following protocol in a lab would be of utmost importance, no?
Are they seriously suggesting that this guy got so mad over some mice that he killed her?
Not saying it's impossible but it sure seems like a weak motive.
Also seems funny that they are tying it to mice when the security camera pic of her sure looks like she's carrying something alive like maybe mice in those boxes.
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« Reply #295 on: September 16, 2009, 09:57:33 AM »

Immediately reminded me of this thread...another Yale student murdered.

    
Suzanne Jovin was murdered by the 9/11 perps in '98..
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=23793.0
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« Reply #296 on: September 16, 2009, 10:32:17 AM »

Oh Aerioch where are you? ? ?  Turn that acute eye on this will you?

Apologizes for taking so long to chip in on this topic.


It seems that Yale University does indeed have a Bio-Defense "Research" facility on campus utilized by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

There is a 77pg. 7.2mb .PDF on the program at Yale University here ...  

http://www.sunshine-project.org/

1. Click click on "BioDefense" Tab

2. Find this entry and follow it:
Quote
25 April 2007
Biosafety Archive for Biodefense Public Accountability
Backyard bioweapons in your neighborhood? Find out out here (maybe)

3. In the "Educational" window ...scroll down to "Yale University" and click on it for the .PDF file.


It isn't a coincidence that the labs entire body of work was confiscated.  I would attempt to link this lab, or it's cover-up/investigation to the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army_Medical_Research_Institute_of_Infectious_Diseases

So it isn't a very big leap in logic to tie this graduate's students work with weapons related vaccines, and or the actual weaponization of existing viruses.
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« Reply #297 on: September 16, 2009, 10:45:38 AM »

Quote from: Aerioch date=1253118737
Apologizes for taking so long to chip in on this topic.

It seems that Yale University does indeed have a Bio-Defense "Research" facility on campus utilized by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.  There is a 77pg. 7.2mb .PDF on the program at Yale University here ... 
http://www.sunshine-project.org/
1. Click click on "BioDefense" Tab
2. Find this entry and follow it:
3. In the "Educational" window ...scroll down to "Yale University" and click on it for the .PDF file.

It isn't a coincidence that the labs entire body of work was confiscated.  I would attempt to link this lab, or it's cover-up/investigation to the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

Yes the scenario continues....

Cornell Cyber Expert Husband slashes thoat of Biomedical wife - burns house

Blazej Kot is charged with second-degree murder in the death of 28-year-old Caroline Coffey. The bio-medicine researcher at the Ivy League school was found in a local park with her throat slashed.
 
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« Reply #298 on: September 16, 2009, 11:00:13 AM »

What I find most interesting isn't what the U.S. Media is reporting on, IT IS WHAT THEY ARE NOT MENTIONING!

FauxNews, ZNN and the like will go into great detail about the security measures in place at this building, yet they won't even mention the work being done inside. Multi-angle camera coverage, exterior key-card entry, and then even further security measures needed to get into the basement lab itself.

All this detailed information yet these "Super Slueth" journalists fail to mention, intentionally one would assume, to inform us what all the security was for to begin with.

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« Reply #299 on: September 16, 2009, 11:04:49 AM »

As for the surveillance pic. It looks like an open book. You can see the the pages on the left side(right side looking at pic) kind of curled as a book would look. It would also explain the the way she was leaning.
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« Reply #300 on: September 16, 2009, 11:08:05 AM »

What I find most interesting isn't what the U.S. Media is reporting on, IT IS WHAT THEY ARE NOT MENTIONING!

FauxNews, ZNN and the like will go into great detail about the security measures in place at this building, yet they won't even mention the work being done inside. Multi-angle camera coverage, exterior key-card entry, and then even further security measures needed to get into the basement lab itself.

All this detailed information yet these "Super Slueth" journalists fail to mention, intentionally one would assume, to inform us what all the security was for to begin with.


Well said -- yes, they're making an issue of how strictly he enforced the rules; (and now we know why it was important that he did such a good job at that!)... so if they tell the truth about the nature of the work being done, it would weaken one aspect of the patsy case.  I have no doubt that anyone, anywhere - even the most outstanding humanitarian - could be patsy-fied in a heartbeat with the help of corporate-fascist media.
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« Reply #301 on: September 16, 2009, 11:11:41 AM »

Apologizes for taking so long to chip in on this topic.


It seems that Yale University does indeed have a Bio-Defense "Research" facility on campus utilized by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

There is a 77pg. 7.2mb .PDF on the program at Yale University here ...  

http://www.sunshine-project.org/

1. Click click on "BioDefense" Tab

2. Find this entry and follow it:
3. In the "Educational" window ...scroll down to "Yale University" and click on it for the .PDF file.


It isn't a coincidence that the labs entire body of work was confiscated.  I would attempt to link this lab, or it's cover-up/investigation to the United States Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_Army_Medical_Research_Institute_of_Infectious_Diseases

So it isn't a very big leap in logic to tie this graduate's students work with weapons related vaccines, and or the actual weaponization of existing viruses.

Noe that is what you call a true Anti-Zionist researcher!

thanks Aerioch!
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« Reply #302 on: September 16, 2009, 11:13:58 AM »

What I find most interesting isn't what the U.S. Media is reporting on, IT IS WHAT THEY ARE NOT MENTIONING!

FauxNews, ZNN and the like will go into great detail about the security measures in place at this building, yet they won't even mention the work being done inside. Multi-angle camera coverage, exterior key-card entry, and then even further security measures needed to get into the basement lab itself.

All this detailed information yet these "Super Slueth" journalists fail to mention, intentionally one would assume, to inform us what all the security was for to begin with.



They did the same thing when Bush executed his hooker (and JFK, Jr.) and when Clinton executed Vince Foster. Men/Women of power blaming suicide, mysterious developments, natural causes, or patsies for the crimes.

[just couldn't resist huh ; ) No but really, thanks for the USAMRIID stuff, adds a key piece of info that we all overlooked.]
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« Reply #303 on: September 16, 2009, 12:14:36 PM »

In case anyone did not realize it yet...

Redbird has blessed this site with providing the latest talking points by disinfo artists to generate a most absurd story line that circumvents the truth.

Now previously I have deleted all of his bullshit because it was just so ridiculous and offered zero value.

But now he has exposed the direction that the Rothschild "project patsy" is going.  I will quote what was deleted and hope that he will stay to provide us with more of this non-fact based BUT predictive program conditioning based disinfo...


Here is what the entire post looked like:

Maybe that day he was off his meds and in a terrible mood.  When she brought in that box of mice or something else maybe.
Didn't I see on TV some pictures of her and a guy that looked like him cutting on a dead dog.  Maybe it looked like she brought in something that looked tortured and he went crazy.  He could have used one of the knives they use on mice.
Now, I am beginning to think it was not romantic just he was an animal lover as his girlfriend said on her twitter or facebook.



One more question:  Could not another scientist pick up where these people left off with their experiments, a real one, not student?HuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuh??

I will break it down sentence by sentence, very revealing the level of psyops in this one...

Quote from: Redbird
Maybe that day he was off his meds and in a terrible mood.  

OK, so looks like they might have seen that he took an aspirin in 1998 or something and will use it against him. Since the Chief of Big Pharma at Yale is the one that needs the patsy the most, it would not take much to pull his medication list and come up with various scenarios to trick the public. In addition, this gives us insight in knowing that the NWO will use this technique with anyone else to justify almost anything (duh look how Redbird exposes how this disinfo psyops is being used with this case, perhaps we can backtrack to other cases thanks to this important info. Another thing this let's us know guys...use their tools against them, do not go nutso on monumentally obvious disinfo artists, from them we get the whole script before it hits the MSM. I guarantee this point and others will hit the MSM within 48 hours.  Same thing happened when they electrocuted the UF student in front of another Skull and Bones event.  


Quote
When she brought in that box of mice or something else maybe.

OK, looks like he is letting us know that it was mice, was this special weaponized mice? Why was she carrying this herself, where did she get it? why was her head away from them, were they infected? Well many good questions from this talking point (thanks again Redbird)

Quote
Didn't I see on TV some pictures of her and a guy that looked like him cutting on a dead dog.

OK, this is fricking amazing because I have not seen this shit but it probably exists. Similar to the Cho stuff, you will be "shocked and awed" by the image and open to absurd suggestive mind control. This is psychological trauma based mind control/memory manipulation.

This was how they got so many (like me) to believe 9/11 happened as they said.  When you are shocked with images, your capacity to deal logically in the processing of information is hindered. SO that seems to be the plan. They were doing medical experiments on animals and now it looks like they are going to say he was some PETA nut. Well AJ revealed that PETA is 110% NWO. So Skull and Bones could easily have PETA say whatever they needed PETA to say including fabricating evidence if necessary. Watch for this it is surely coming.

Quote
Maybe it looked like she brought in something that looked tortured and he went crazy.  

OK, now again although this makes little sense, always remember Adolf Hitler "the bigger the lie". So he was supposed to go crazy, then engage the steam alarm with no help, have a fireman bring him a change of clothes, and escape with the firemen undetected. ok. Of course there is actual evidence like cameras, swipe cards, clothing that was bloody, history of sexually molesting subservient staff, history of a "god" complex by stealing over $900 million in patents, having the power and connections to stop the release of an autopsy, having the power to call in over 100 "cleaners", having the power to have the MSM circle jerk us for 3 days about her being a runaway bride and not to worry, having the MSM talk about polygraphs that we know are not admisable in court becuae they reveal nothing, have the MSM only talk about the patsy scenario rather than other scenarios, have certain police only "pro-patsy" innuendo to reporters and nothing else, have trolls go around forums to whisper these "pro-patsy" innuendo in order to shift conversations based on logic and evidence.

 
Quote
He could have used one of the knives they use on mice.

Holy f-ing shit, this talking point means that the reason for holding up the autopsy is definitely bullshit, they are already leaking the murder weapon, wtf. Wow, i did not expect this to be leaked to the troll brigades from what Omnicom, Rendon, Lincoln? Or maybe just freelance trolling who knows, but this is a blockbuster. thanks.


Quote
Now, I am beginning to think it was not romantic just he was an animal lover as his girlfriend said on her twitter or facebook.

OK, this is also revealing. Looks like since it was revealed that the guy was engaged to be fricking married in 2011, they know that the "romantic" bullshit would not fly. So again with the help of the CIA social network data matrix systems, the second choice seems to be "crazy PETA nut".

Notice also that if they find no evidence of medication, the whisper is already in our subconscience so we believe B because of A, but if A is never mentioned again, we still for some reason think that B has circumstantial evidence backing it up. Very impressive troll droppings I must say.


Quote
One more question:  Could not another scientist pick up where these people left off with their experiments, a real one, not student?HuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuhHuh??


Ok, this is standard to release the mind control. It is a quick transition to something completely immaterial. That locks the information in the subconscious ready to be brought alive again with repetition by MSM, more blogs, bars and restaurants, etc.

This psyops undoubtedly is blanketed and many forms of information accumulation will be compromised (like the PP forum Smiley )

Also for some reason they need to minimize her un-matched and unique work and skills.

Like Aerioch uncovered, this may have military bio engineering implications and they do not want anyone to know that she was one of the best, if not the best. Doing things no one else could do.
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« Reply #304 on: September 16, 2009, 12:33:23 PM »

So far we have confirmed that:

1.  Yale University does indeed have a Bio-Defense "Research" facility on campus utilized by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

2.  Annie Le's Lab Director Anton Bennet, has received grants for researching MKP1.

3.  MKP1 based vaccines could have a role in "preventing this type of overreaction....Hence a drug based on it  could conceivably stop mass death from the H5N1 virus"

4.  All the facts converge upon a murder case just weeks before the "Flu Session" begins, and the world wide H1N1 vaccine is about to be launched.


Nice catch Notgonnatakeit!

Bird Flu Connection???

 If you do a google search of Annie Le's Lab Director, Professor ANTON BENNETT  it seems that he got a multimillion dollar grant to study the immune modulator, "MKP1"--  or MKP-1.  Annie may or may not have been working on this line of research on MKP1-- but investigators should verify this important clue.

This chemical-- MKP1--- is very important in regulating the immune response to CYTOKINE STORM.... A key factor in death from H5N1-- i.e.--- the lungs over react to the the virus and drown the victim.    MKP1 may play a role in preventing this type of overreaction....Hence a drug based on it  could conceivably stop mass death from the H5N1 virus....  

http://www.pubmedcentral.nih.gov/articlerender.fcgi?artid=2680050

Here's the key paragraph in the pubmed article link above:  

"Upon challenge with Toll-like receptor ligands MKP-1 knockout mice produced dramatically greater amounts of inflammatory cytokines, developed severe hypotension and multi-organ failure, and exhibited a remarkable increase in mortality. More recent investigations using intact bacteria confirmed these observations and further revealed novel functions of MKP-1 in host defense against bacterial infection. These studies demonstrate that MKP-1 is an essential feedback regulator of the innate immune response, and that it plays a critical role in preventing septic shock and multi-organ dysfunction during pathogenic infection."

Anyway.. the above is just my intuitive hunch...  Annie probably has nothing to do with the MKP1 research at Bennett's  lab... but.. if her research was key... then..... perhaps she was murdered for this reason.

My thoughts and prayers go out to Annie's family and to her fiance-- who must be beyond himself in grief!! What a great loss for the world...

Imagine if Annie Le just discovered real way to snip the balls off your weaponized virus, and didn't wish to play along with your next false flag.
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« Reply #305 on: September 16, 2009, 12:37:16 PM »

Being anal about lab policies and procedures is not a motive for murder. Anyone who has been in a University lab knows that the people in charge of running them are always strict with the rules. The reason for that is because people put in charge of labs are held liable for damage and are generally picked for the job because they are strict.

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« Reply #306 on: September 16, 2009, 12:51:28 PM »

A Yale grad student whose body was found stuffed behind a wall in a campus lab was strangled, the Connecticut medical examiner disclosed Wednesday.

Dr. Wayne Carver in a brief statement said an autopsy of Annie Le determined that she was murdered by "traumatic asphyxia" due to neck compression. There were no other details immediately available.

Earlier Wednesday, the Yale lab technician arrested in connection with Le's murder was released after authorities collected DNA samples from him, questioned him and searched his apartment.

Animal research technician Raymond Clark III, 24, said through his lawyer that he wanted to cooperate with the investigation. No charges have been filed against him.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,550740,00.html

Update
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« Reply #307 on: September 16, 2009, 12:58:32 PM »

So far we have confirmed that:

1.  Yale University does indeed have a Bio-Defense "Research" facility on campus utilized by the U.S. Army Medical Research Institute of Infectious Diseases.

2.  Annie Le's Lab Director Anton Bennet, has received grants for researching MKP1.

3.  MKP1 based vaccines could have a role in "preventing this type of overreaction....Hence a drug based on it  could conceivably stop mass death from the H5N1 virus"

4.  All the facts converge upon a murder case just weeks before the "Flu Session" begins, and the world wide H1N1 vaccine is about to be launched.


Imagine if Annie Le just discovered real way to snip the balls off your weaponized virus, and didn't wish to play along with your next false flag.

Oh crap I forgot to add:

5. The Head of the Yale Phara Department (the dept. that has oversite of this lab) also sits on the Board of Compugen, a company that is currently working with Teva. Two Israeli based firms seeking to mass-produce the vaccine for the worldwide vaccination program for H1N1.   Who stand to make Zillions off this virus.
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« Reply #308 on: September 16, 2009, 12:59:28 PM »

A Yale grad student whose body was found stuffed behind a wall in a campus lab was strangled, the Connecticut medical examiner disclosed Wednesday.

Dr. Wayne Carver in a brief statement said an autopsy of Annie Le determined that she was murdered by "traumatic asphyxia" due to neck compression. There were no other details immediately available.

Earlier Wednesday, the Yale lab technician arrested in connection with Le's murder was released after authorities collected DNA samples from him, questioned him and searched his apartment.

Animal research technician Raymond Clark III, 24, said through his lawyer that he wanted to cooperate with the investigation. No charges have been filed against him.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,550740,00.html

Update

looks like they may go after patsy #2...Bennett. I have already seen the whispers, just waiting for Redbird to confirm.
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« Reply #309 on: September 16, 2009, 01:00:04 PM »

Again similar to the Cornell - Coffey case - New Stem cell research center is inaugurated and a tragic "sacrifice" soon follows...


10 Amistad Street

Yale student's killing wasn't random, police say

NEW HAVEN, Connecticut (CNN)  -- The killing of Yale student Annie Le was not random and could have been committed by one of only a small number of people with access to the building where her body was found, authorities said.

Le's body was found hidden in a wall in the basement of a Yale medical research building Sunday, the day she was supposed to be married. The 24-year-old graduate student had been missing for almost a week. Bloody clothes were found hidden above tiles in a drop ceiling elsewhere in the building, investigators said.
...
Security cameras captured video of Le as she entered the four-story lab building at 10 Amistad Street, about 10 blocks from the main campus, on September 8. After poring over hours of surveillance tapes, authorities said they had not found images of her leaving the building. Video Watch timeline leading up to Le's death »
...

http://www.imakenews.com/cure/e_article000932833.cfm?x=b11,0,w

New Amistad Facility Houses Yale's State-of-the-Art Stem Cell Research   - November 2007

Yale School of Medicine Oct 5 celebrated the opening of a new four-story building on Amistad Street that will house three interdisciplinary research programs: a human and translational immunology program, a program in vascular biology and therapeutics, and the Yale Stem Cell Center.

“This building,” said Yale Medical School Dean Robert Alpern, “focuses on what everybody calls the future of medicine: interdisciplinary science.”

The Oct 5 celebration included a scientific symposium featuring presentations by Salvador Moncada of University College, London; Marc Feldman of Imperial College, London; and Douglas Melton of Harvard University. Melton, introduced by Haifan Lin, the director of the Yale Stem Cell Center, spoke on “Stem Cells for Pancreatic Development and Diabetes.”

Unlike traditional biomedical research teams — often composed of members of one discipline working in a single animal model — the three research programs housed in the new building draw from multiple departments and have shifted their focus from animal studies alone to better understanding what works, and doesn’t work, in humans.

One of the three new research programs in the building, the Interdepartmental Program in Vascular Biology and Therapeutics, focuses on heart disease and cancer, as well as on engineering artificial tissues to replace diseased blood vessels, heart valves, and other parts of the human body. Vascular biology is the study of the cells and molecules that interact in the vascular system, which supplies the organs and every cell in the body with oxygen and nutrients.

The mission of the new Human and Translational Immunology program is to accelerate the application of new developments in immunology to the treatment of human diseases such as diabetes. Some of the diseases the group will be targeting relate to organ transplantation. They will also be studying the application of immunotherapies to infectious disease or cancer, and the basis for autoimmune disorders, such as asthma, type 1 diabetes and lupus. In addition, the group will look at other diseases, such as arteriosclerosis, which lend themselves to therapeutic interventions by means of the immune system.

The Yale Stem Cell Center focuses on understanding the basic properties of stem cells in order to pave the way for future medical therapies.

With his associate director, Diane Krause, professor of laboratory medicine and pathology, Haifan Lin is recruiting four more faculty members to conduct basic stem cell research and to investigate applications. They recently recruited Natalia Ivanova, formerly of Princeton University.

The 120,000-square-foot building at 10 Amistad Street contains many environmentally friendly features, such as high-efficiency and occupancy sensors for lighting, a rainwater collection cistern, bike racks and showers to encourage biking to and from work, recycled construction materials, ultra-low-flow water fixtures, and dual-flush toilets.
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« Reply #310 on: September 16, 2009, 01:01:51 PM »

Oh crap I forgot to add:

5. The Head of the Yale Phara Department sits on the Board of Compugen, a company that is currently working with Teva. Two Israeli based firms seeking to mass-produce the vaccine for the worldwide vaccination program for H1N1.

dude, why do you think I have been asking you about Compugen?

sheesh, please review my other analysis. We could use your expertise.

Please review the main purpose of Compugen which is "Predictive analysis" of new drugs/vaccines.  This seems to be a market analyst company to help "pump and dump big pharma stock. They are funded by those israeli companies and Roche, J&J, Siemens, Merck, and others. I have also identified 11 other similar companies set up for the same reason.

With the initiation of 12 power brokers to pump and dump big pharma stocks, obviously that is a set up for market manipulation like compliance in forced vaccinations, pandemics, FF bioterror (similar to enron calling the power station engineers and forcing them to do shut downs).

Anyway, please review.

TahoeBlue too.

Thanks
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« Reply #311 on: September 16, 2009, 01:03:48 PM »

Immediately reminded me of this thread...another Yale student murdered.

    
Suzanne Jovin was murdered by the 9/11 perps in '98..
http://forum.prisonplanet.com/index.php?topic=23793.0
Quote
In 1998, Suzanne Jovin, a student at Yale University (Home of the Skull and Bones Society) was brutally murdered on the 4th of December. She was stabbed 17 times. She was finishing her senior thesis, which was due in 4 days. Suzanne Jovin's parents worked for the Max Planck Institute of Germany, her mother was a cell biologist in the department of molecular biology, which her father was the chairman of.


Looking over this again, there are two things that pop out at me that perks my interest now. The high security clearance he has and one other thing. Without paying attention.... this crime was nearly 10 years ago, and he was never arrested for anything, that wont stop you from getting a clearance necessarily, and a thorough background check is conducted on you to get a clearance, but he got his clearance the same year he was a suspect and being investigated for a murder. I've been in the Army and the Air Force. I've had lots of background checks and high security clearances. It's difficult for me to believe that you can attain a top secret clearance or higher with a murder investigation going on you. This doesn't look right.

From Dec 8 2000 article:
http://web.archive.org/web/20020823120227/www.yaledailynews.com/article.asp?AID=13935

".S. Navy Lt. Cmdr. Stephen Pope said Wednesday that Van de Velde, the only named suspect in the Suzanne Jovin '99 murder investigation, has been working for the U.S. Defense Department in an active military role for nearly a year"

Asked if the security investigation found any problems in Van de Velde's past, Pope replied, "None whatsoever."

She was Killed in Dec of 1998, most of 1999 he was a suspect and evidently got a Top Secret Clearance? I don't see how that's possible.....unless.........<hence my interest now>...

And this got my attention....this article was written in 1999....most folks didn't know about bin laden in 1999.

http://query.nytimes.com/gst/fullpage.html?res=9401E4DF1F3AF931A2575AC0A96F958260&sec=&spon=&pagewanted=3

After briefly interviewing him on Monday, detectives asked Van de Velde to the station Tuesday evening for what, after an hour of softballs, turned into an interrogation, by his account. They showed him grisly pictures of Jovin's body, he said. ''They would say things like: 'We know it wasn't the thesis, we know it wasn't the thesis. Just tell us what it was.'''

That's pretty weird. Why are they saying this? Well, this is what he says, they were saying to him. This is odd.

Curious...both of her parents are molecular biologists.  Coincidence?

The number one suspect in her murder was a suspected spook who worked for the Pentagon.
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« Reply #312 on: September 16, 2009, 01:11:45 PM »

dude, why do you think I have been asking you about Compugen?

sheesh, please review my other analysis. We could use your expertise.

I'm just trying to bullet/Cliff's notes everything in this thread, Sane. 

I wouldn't have known anything about the Dept. Head/Compugen connection without going through the 8plus pages here, and reading your posts.
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« Reply #313 on: September 16, 2009, 01:14:20 PM »



The 120,000-square-foot building at 10 Amistad Street contains many environmentally friendly features, such as high-efficiency and occupancy sensors for lighting, a rainwater collection cistern, bike racks and showers to encourage biking to and from work, recycled construction materials, ultra-low-flow water fixtures, and dual-flush toilets.


Lighting Occupancy Sensor Controls
http://www.energysavers.gov/your_home/lighting_daylighting/index.cfm/mytopic=12210

Occupancy sensors—indoor lighting controls—detect activity within a certain area. They provide convenience by turning lights on automatically when someone enters a room. They reduce lighting energy use by turning lights off soon after the last occupant has left the room.

Occupancy sensors must be located where they will detect occupants or occupant activity in all parts of the room. There are two types of occupancy sensors: ultrasonic and infrared. Ultrasonic sensors detect sound, while infrared sensors detect heat and motion. In addition to controlling ambient lighting in a room, they are useful for task lighting applications, such as over kitchen counters. In such applications, task lights are turned on by the motion of a person washing dishes, for instance, and automatically turn off a few minutes after the person stops.

These things can determine any movement whatsoever and are integrated with "smart systems that can do predictive analysis.
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« Reply #314 on: September 16, 2009, 01:18:50 PM »


 Very impressive troll droppings I must say.


Thank you for a fascinating stroll down to troll hollow... that was very instructive.
I'm glad we have the date/timestamp info on that OP - it will be interesting to watch it unfold.
Also - I wonder if these little minions have templates for this stuff? Filling in fields in a form to generate this bs?
I doubt they have the intellectual capacity to do this without some sort of pre-packaged template.

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« Reply #315 on: September 16, 2009, 01:20:10 PM »

Lighting Occupancy Sensor Controls
http://www.energysavers.gov/your_home/lighting_daylighting/index.cfm/mytopic=12210

Occupancy sensors—indoor lighting controls—detect activity within a certain area. They provide convenience by turning lights on automatically when someone enters a room. They reduce lighting energy use by turning lights off soon after the last occupant has left the room.

Occupancy sensors must be located where they will detect occupants or occupant activity in all parts of the room. There are two types of occupancy sensors: ultrasonic and infrared. Ultrasonic sensors detect sound, while infrared sensors detect heat and motion. In addition to controlling ambient lighting in a room, they are useful for task lighting applications, such as over kitchen counters. In such applications, task lights are turned on by the motion of a person washing dishes, for instance, and automatically turn off a few minutes after the person stops.

These things can determine any movement whatsoever and are integrated with "smart systems that can do predictive analysis.


So, the fact that the media's working on patsy #2 means the clean-up crew REALLY did a good job at wiping the computer data.
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« Reply #316 on: September 16, 2009, 01:24:46 PM »

http://www.foxbusiness.com/story/markets/industries/health-care/compugen-reports-second-quarter--results/

Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Compugen Reports Second Quarter 2009 Results

 

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TEL AVIV, Israel, Jul 28, 2009 (BUSINESS WIRE) ----Compugen Ltd. (NASDAQ:CGEN) today reported its results for the second quarter ending June 30, 2009. Included in these results is the financial impact of Compugen's sale during the quarter, to a single buyer, of 1.0 million of the 2.15 million Evogene Ltd. shares previously held by Compugen, for net proceeds of $3.6 million.

Compugen co-CEO Martin Gerstel stated, "Last week we disclosed the positive results achieved for CGEN 25017 in a retinopathy disease model. This announcement was the latest in a series of recent announcements documenting Compugen's successful development of new platforms, discovery of new product candidates, and broader and deeper in vivo validations of a rapidly growing inventory of attractive product candidates in key areas of industry interest. Although we are very proud of these accomplishments, from an overall corporate standpoint, by far the most significant recent achievement was not described in any press release, but in large part has occurred as a result of these disclosed accomplishments. This is the substantial change that has occurred with respect to the industry's prior strong skepticism that Compugen, or any organization, could successfully use computer models to predict, completely in silico, novel molecules and their anticipated in vivo activities."

Mr. Gerstel continued, "Given the large number of past failures by other companies to achieve this capability, and their associated enormous internal and external expenditures with little if any useful results, it is easy to understand the reasons for this skepticism. But now, in view of our many recently disclosed successes, particularly in terms of the experimental validation of in silico predicted molecules utilizing the same animal disease models that they rely on, it is also easy to understand why this skepticism is rapidly becoming less of an issue for us as we pursue broader "discovery on demand" collaborations. As mentioned in the past, these broader collaborative "discovery on demand" arrangements are critical to fully leveraging our unique and highly diverse predictive discovery capabilities. We will, of course, continue to license specific discoveries on a case by case basis as we move forward with this process during the coming months."

Revenues for the second quarter of 2009 were $225,000 compared to $40,000 for the second quarter of 2008. Revenues for the six months ended June 30, 2009 were $225,000, compared to $321,000 for the same period in 2008.

Reflecting the sale by Compugen during the most recent quarter of a portion of the Evogene Ltd. shares previously held by it, Compugen reported Other Income of $3.6 million for the second quarter of 2009, compared with $11,000 for the second quarter of 2008. Other Income for the six months ended June 30, 2009 was $3.7 million, compared to $27,000 for the same period in 2008.

Again reflecting the sale of the Evogene shares, Compugen's net income for the most recent quarter was $2.4 million (including a non-cash expense of $350,000 related to stock based compensation) or $0.08 per share, compared with a net loss of $3.0 million (including a non-cash expense of $416,000 related to stock based compensation), or $0.10 per share, for the corresponding quarter of 2008. The net income for the first six months of 2009 was $63,000 (including a non-cash expense of $629,000 related to stock based compensation), or $0.01, compared with a net loss of $5.5 million (including a non-cash expense of $743,000 related to stock based compensation), or $0.19 per share, for the same period in 2008.

Research and development expenses of $1.5 million for the second quarter of 2009, compared to $2.4 million for the second quarter of 2008, remain the Company's largest expense, representing approximately 70% of total operating expenses. These amounts are before the deduction of governmental and other grants, which totaled $368,000 for the second quarter ended June 30, 2009, compared with $169,000 for the corresponding quarter in 2008.

As of June 30, 2009, Compugen had $6.5 million in cash and cash equivalents, not including the 1.15 million Evogene marketable shares continuing to be owned by the Company. With the inclusion of the current market value for these Evogene shares, the Company would have sufficient resources to meet its expected cash requirements through early 2011, assuming no significant milestones, upfront fees, or additional capital from any other source was obtained prior to such time.

Conference Call and Webcast Information

Compugen will hold a conference call to discuss its second quarter results on Tuesday, July 28, 2009 at 10:00 a.m. EDT. To access the conference call, please dial 1-888-668-9141 from the U.S. or 972-3-9180610 internationally. The call will also be available via live webcast at this link.

A replay of the conference call will be available from July 28, 2009 at 1:00 PM EDT through July 30, 2009 at 1:00 PM EDT. To access the replay, please dial 1-866-726-1002 from the U.S. or 972-3-9255901 internationally. The replay may also be accessed at www.cgen.com.

About Compugen

Compugen is a leading drug and diagnostic product candidate discovery company. Unlike traditional high throughput trial and error experimental based discovery, Compugen's discovery efforts are based on in-silico (by computer) prediction and selection utilizing a growing number of field focused proprietary discovery platforms accurately modeling biological processes at the molecular level. The resulting product candidates are then validated through in vitro and in vivo experimental studies and out-licensed for further development and commercialization under various forms of revenue sharing agreements. Compugen's current collaborations include Biosite, Medarex, Inc., Merck & Co., Inc., Merck Serono, Ortho-Clinical Diagnostics (a Johnson & Johnson company), Roche, Siemens Healthcare Diagnostics, Inc., and Teva Pharmaceutical Industries. In 2002, Compugen established an affiliate, Evogene Ltd. www.evogene.com (TASE: EVGN.TA), to utilize certain of the Company's in-silico predictive discovery capabilities in agricultural biotechnology. For additional information, please visit Compugen's corporate Web site at www.cgen.com.

This press release may contain "forward-looking statements" within the meaning of the Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995. These statements include words such as "may", "expects", "anticipates", "believes", and "intends", and describe opinions about future events. These forward-looking statements involve known and unknown risks and uncertainties that may cause the actual results, performance or achievements of Compugen to be materially different from any future results, performance or achievements expressed or implied by such forward-looking statements. Some of these risks are: changes in relationships with collaborators; the impact of competitive products and technological changes; risks relating to the development of new products; and the ability to implement technological improvements. These and other factors are identified and more fully explained under the heading "Risk Factors" in Compugen's annual reports filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

COMPUGEN LTD.
   CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED STATEMENTS OF OPERATIONS
   (U.S. dollars in thousands, except for share and per-share amounts)
   Three Months Ended      Six Months Ended
   June 30,                June 30,
   2009        2008        2009        2008
   Unaudited   Unaudited   Unaudited   Unaudited
   Revenues                                                               225         40          225         321
   Cost of revenues                                                       -           -           -           7
   Research and development expenses                                      1,510       2,378       2,923       4,309
   Less: governmental and other grants                                    (368)       (169)       (517)       (335)
   Research and development expenses, net                                 1,142       2,209       2,406       3,974
   Sales and marketing expenses                                           213         355         485         663
   General and administrative expenses                                    409         700         988         1,514
   Total operating expenses *                                             1,764       3,264       3,879       6,151
   Operating loss                                                         (1,539)     (3,224)     (3,654)     (5,837)
   Financing income, net                                                  279         259         36          361
   Other income, net                                                      3,619       11          3,681       27
   Net income (loss) from continuing operations                           2,359       (2,954)     63          (5,449)
   Income (loss) from discontinued operations                             5           (13)        -           (13)
   Net income (loss)                                                      2,364       (2,967)     63          (5,462)
   Basic and diluted earnings (loss) per ordinary share from continuing   0.08        (0.10)      0.01        (0.19)
   operations
   Basic and diluted earnings (loss) per ordinary share from              -           -           -           -
   discontinued operations
   Basic and diluted net earnings (loss) per ordinary share               0.08        (0.10)      0.01        (0.19)
   Weighted average number of ordinary shares used in computing basic     28,512,440  28,395,118  28,512,440  28,372,204
   net earnings (loss) per share
   Weighted average number of ordinary shares used in computing diluted   28,754,207  28,395,118  28,746,311  28,372,204
   net earnings (loss) per share
   * Includes stock based compensation
   

COMPUGEN LTD.
   CONDENSED CONSOLIDATED BALANCE SHEETS DATA
   (U.S. dollars, in thousands)
   June 30,   December 31,
   2009       2008
   Unaudited  Audited
   ASSETS
   Current assets
   Cash, cash equivalents, short term deposits and marketable securities  6,483      7,248
   Cash held in favor of other consortium partners                        48         233
   Investment in Evogene                                                  4,281      3,858
   Trade receivables                                                      125        -
   Receivables and prepaid expenses                                       616        768
   Total current assets                                                   11,553     12,107
   Long-term investments
   Long term deposits                                                     29         41
   Severance pay fund                                                     1,072      1,038
   Total long-term investments                                            1,101      1,079
   Property and equipment, net                                            855        1,058
   Total assets                                                           13,509     14,244
   LIABILITIES AND SHAREHOLDERS' EQUITY
   Current liabilities
   Accounts payable and accrued expenses                                  1,270      2,881
   Deferred revenues                                                      62         100
   Liabilities related to discontinued operations                         12         12
   Total current liabilities                                              1,344      2,993
   Accrued severance pay                                                  1,211      1,248
   Total shareholders' equity                                             10,954     10,003
   Total liabilities and shareholders' equity                             13,509     14,244
   

SOURCE: Compugen Ltd.

   Compugen Ltd.
   Marjie Hadad, +972-54-536-5220
   Global Media Liaison
   marjie@cgen.com
   
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« Reply #317 on: September 16, 2009, 01:27:23 PM »

   Compugen wins major deal, plans IPO

Daily Edition]
Jerusalem Post - Jerusalem
Author:    NICKY BLACKBURN
Date:    Mar 3, 2000
Start Page:    11.A
Section:    Economics
Text Word Count:    304

Biotechnology company Compugen has won a multimillion dollar contract to carry out research for US company Human Genome Sciences Inc. (HGS) for an initial period of a year with an option to extend.

Dr. Michal Preminger, the company's vice president of marketing, said that the new deal will help raise interest in Compugen, which aims to go public on the Nasdaq within six months.

Under the terms of the deal scientists at both Compugen and HGS will work together to analyze HGS's collection of human genes using Compugen's computational analysis platform, Leads.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.
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« Reply #318 on: September 16, 2009, 01:33:08 PM »

Compugen Receives Outstanding Server Service Award From IBM
Compugen Receives Outstanding Server Service Award From IBM Canada

TORONTO, ONTARIO -- (MARKET WIRE) -- 12/04/08 -- Compugen is pleased to announce that it has received the Outstanding Server Service Award from IBM Canada for the past year for its high quality server service delivered across Canada.

The award recognizes Compugen, an IBM Premier Service Partner, for its achievement in delivering a high level of quality service on IBM Servers in Canada.

The recognition was granted to only the top two percent of IBM Service Partners in Canada based on scores in achieving a number of service benchmarks.

Compugen received special recognition as the only "National" IBM Service Partner for national coverage and the highest number of warranty claims successfully completed.

Gerry Skipwith, VP, Services at Compugen, said, "This award from IBM Canada indirectly acknowledges the skills and commitment of our personnel, and the many investments we have made in continuing education, ITIL processes, parts and service dispatch automation and our establishment of a 24 x 7, bilingual service to the entire country, from Newfoundland to British Columbia-wherever and whenever our customers need help to keep their critical infrastructure running. It also confirms what our customer satisfaction metrics are telling us: over more than half a million service calls, we are getting it right."

About Compugen

Compugen, one of the largest Canadian-owned IT solution providers and PC systems integrators, has been providing practical, real-world IT infrastructure solutions since it was founded in 1981. Today, Compugen's experienced team of IT professionals helps medium-size and large corporations and government agencies across Canada with enterprise-level solutions that optimize IT costs and leverage technology for better business results.

For more information on how Compugen can help you keep your infrastructure running smoothly, visit http://www.compugen.com/or contact us for details about our CoverIT programs.

Contacts: Press Contact: Compugen Inc. Donald Anderson, Marketing Projects Manager (905) 695-5111 x 5123 Email: danderson@compugen.com Website: www.compugen.com
Last Updated: December 4, 2008 10:00 EST
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« Reply #319 on: September 16, 2009, 01:41:25 PM »

   Compugen wins major deal, plans IPO

Daily Edition]
Jerusalem Post - Jerusalem
Author:    NICKY BLACKBURN
Date:    Mar 3, 2000
Start Page:    11.A
Section:    Economics
Text Word Count:    304

Biotechnology company Compugen has won a multimillion dollar contract to carry out research for US company Human Genome Sciences Inc. (HGS) for an initial period of a year with an option to extend.

Dr. Michal Preminger, the company's vice president of marketing, said that the new deal will help raise interest in Compugen, which aims to go public on the Nasdaq within six months.

Under the terms of the deal scientists at both Compugen and HGS will work together to analyze HGS's collection of human genes using Compugen's computational analysis platform, Leads.
Reproduced with permission of the copyright owner. Further reproduction or distribution is prohibited without permission.

Tuesday, August 25, 2009  |  Modified: Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Human Genome Sciences: A takeover target?Washington Business Journal - by Jeff Clabaugh and Vandana Sinha Staff Reporters
http://washington.bizjournals.com/washington/stories/2009/08/24/daily33.html

"Market rumors and published reports suggesting Human Genome Sciences Inc. could be acquired by pharmaceutical behemoth GlaxoSmithKline PLC sent its shares up by as much as 16 percent Tuesday to a seven-year high...."
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~ Thomas Paine, A Dissertation on the First Principles of Government, 1795
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