It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
Twenty-three years ago during the Clinton administration, Deputy White House Council Vincent Foster was found dead in his car.
This scandal shocked the country, and raised massive questions about just how dangerous the Clintons are.
......
But over time, major questions have been raised about what may have really killed him. Now, recently discovered evidence blows the case wide open!
Discovered in the files of the National Archives and Records Administration, Starr’s lead prosecutor Miguel Rodriguez submitted a 2-page resignation letter and a 31 page memo about the injuries Foster sustained. Rodriguez notes in the letter details about injuries around Foster’s neck which were not reported in official government documents.
At the time, the FBi claimed that Foster’s neck injury photos were underexposed, and therefore useless to them.
These records indicate Foster didn’t really die from one .38 caliber gunshot… but two gunshots! The other shot was on the right side of his neck, made by a “Small caliber” bullet hole.
This raises serious questions about Foster’s motives for suicide. He was tied to Hillary Clinton’s roles in White House scandals at Whitewater and the White House Travel Office.
originally posted by: visitedbythem
My Pop is a 89 year old genius scientist. A couple months ago he brought all this up. He had all kinds of information. I was blind sided. More info then what is stated. He stated thar there was something sexual going on..... I always thought Hillary was lesbian
Hillary was fully clothed and stretched out on the bed sleeping when Hall's
wife and I arrived. "Hillary, I brought you something you'll really enjoy. Kind of an unexpected surprise. Bill ordered her out of the meeting and I look her to my bedroom and made an interesting discovery. She is literally a two- faced (referring to my vaginal mutilation carving) bitch,"
"Hmm?" Hillary opened her eyes and sleepily roused herself "Show me." Hall's wife ordered me to take my clothes off while Hillary watched. "Is she clean?" Hillary asked, meaning disease free.
"Of course, she's Byrd's," she responded, continuing the conversation as though I were not there, "Plus, I heard Houston say something about her being a Presidential Model, whatever the hell that's supposed to mean."
"It means she's clean," Hillary said matter-of-factly as she stood up. I was not capable of giving thought to such things back then, but I am aware in retrospect that all Presidential Model slaves I knew seemed to have an immunity to social diseases. It was a well known fact in the circles I was sexually passed around in that government level mind-controlled sex slaves were "clean" to the degree that none of my abusers took precautions such as wearing condoms.
originally posted by: elementalgrove
a reply to: xuenchen
It is almost poetic the way that the Shillary supporters deny all proof of the Clinton Cabal corruption as simply being a republican smear campaign.
They are some of the dirtiest of dirty politicians to exist in this world.
The only reason they still exist in politics is that the true rulers still have use for them.
Five investigations, including by independent counsels Robert B. Fiske Jr. and Kenneth Starr, concluded that Vince suffered from severe depression that caused him to be unable to sleep, unable to work, unable to think straight, and finally to take his own life.
I know this to be true because Vince lived with me when he came to Washington to serve as deputy counsel to the president. This is a grueling job in any administration, especially so at the start, and in the case of the Clinton White House, the counsel’s office — and Vince — were consumed with problems, including over the firing of employees in the White House travel office.
Vince and I were very close siblings — I was the older, by four years and two months — and there was not much we didn’t share with one another. After about three months, his family rented out their Little Rock home and Vince moved with them to a small Georgetown house.
Vince called me at my office in the Justice Department a few days before he died. He told me he was battling depression and knew he needed help. But he was worried that such an admission would adversely affect his top-level security clearance and prevent him from doing his job.
I told him I would try to find a psychiatrist who could help him and protect his privacy. After a few phone calls, I gave him three names. That list was found in his wallet with his body at Fort Marcy Park in McLean. I did not see a suicide coming, yet when I was told that Vince was dead I knew that he had killed himself. Never for a minute have I doubted that was what happened.
The Starr investigation (1997)
On Aug. 5, 1994, Kenneth W. Starr was named the independent counsel in the Whitewater matter. He launched a fifth investigation, more comprehensive than the first four, and his report was not issued until Oct. 10, 1997. The probe uncovered new evidence, all of which pointed to the same conclusion as the four previous probes. Starr also consulted with leading forensic experts, who reviewed the materials, with one medical doctor declaring that “to a 100 percent degree of medical certainty, the death of Vincent Foster was a suicide.”
Starr vigorously tried to tackle just about every conspiracy theory about the case. He definitively established that Foster owned the 80-year-old gun found in his hand. Investigators discovered that an oven mitt found in the glove compartment of Foster’s car came from his kitchen — and traces of lead from the gun found in his hand were also found in the mitt (which he used to transport the gun) and in his pants pocket (which he used to carry the gun in the park).
Five investigations, including by independent counsels Robert B. Fiske Jr. and Kenneth Starr, concluded that Vince suffered from severe depression that caused him to be unable to sleep, unable to work, unable to think straight, and finally to take his own life.
I know this to be true because Vince lived with me when he came to Washington to serve as deputy counsel to the president. This is a grueling job in any administration, especially so at the start, and in the case of the Clinton White House, the counsel’s office — and Vince — were consumed with problems, including over the firing of employees in the White House travel office.
Vince and I were very close siblings — I was the older, by four years and two months — and there was not much we didn’t share with one another. After about three months, his family rented out their Little Rock home and Vince moved with them to a small Georgetown house.
Vince called me at my office in the Justice Department a few days before he died. He told me he was battling depression and knew he needed help. But he was worried that such an admission would adversely affect his top-level security clearance and prevent him from doing his job.
I told him I would try to find a psychiatrist who could help him and protect his privacy. After a few phone calls, I gave him three names. That list was found in his wallet with his body at Fort Marcy Park in McLean. I did not see a suicide coming, yet when I was told that Vince was dead I knew that he had killed himself. Never for a minute have I doubted that was what happened.
The Starr investigation (1997)
On Aug. 5, 1994, Kenneth W. Starr was named the independent counsel in the Whitewater matter. He launched a fifth investigation, more comprehensive than the first four, and his report was not issued until Oct. 10, 1997. The probe uncovered new evidence, all of which pointed to the same conclusion as the four previous probes. Starr also consulted with leading forensic experts, who reviewed the materials, with one medical doctor declaring that “to a 100 percent degree of medical certainty, the death of Vincent Foster was a suicide.”
Starr vigorously tried to tackle just about every conspiracy theory about the case. He definitively established that Foster owned the 80-year-old gun found in his hand. Investigators discovered that an oven mitt found in the glove compartment of Foster’s car came from his kitchen — and traces of lead from the gun found in his hand were also found in the mitt (which he used to transport the gun) and in his pants pocket (which he used to carry the gun in the park).