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"The murder of Kurt Cobain was no aberration,
rather, it was more in the way of business as usual."
To reiterate, there is no evidence, or even any contention
by SPD, that they ever treated the Cobain home or garage
as a true crime scene where they were gathering evidence
on April 8 to determine in the time after the body was found,
if they were dealing with a suicide or homicide. This investment
of 200 hours of time appears to have been to serve no purpose
other than to protect the reputation of the SPD by doing
some cursory work, while of course avoiding any evidence
that might persuasively indicate homicide was the manner
of the death, not suicide, the verdict they reached rather
irrevocably on April 8.
Given
the examples of other major rock celebrities
who have
died young and left a substantial body of work
to be
exploited, it is clear that the ultimate value
of the estate should not be considered less than
possibly more than a hundred million dollars
as it is marketed over many years. Love's apparent
false reporting of the missing persons report,
in at least as much as
impersonating Cobain's mother and incorporating
all of the elements that were to play a
part in his death discovered 4 days later (shotgun, heroin,
suicide) all cast her role in his death under
grave suspicion.
Add to this what looks like possibly a self- engineered
arrest for narcotics by the Beverly Hills, California
police later that week (the perfect alibi for anything
is being in jail at the time it happens)... also
Ms.
Love's very active public relations campaign
to eliminate
doubt but that Cobain's death was a suicide… her
aggressive attempt to denounce her husband as
a narcotics
user in the last days of his life, she seems to have
been in a not very good position at all in
terms of her relations with him. The picture that begins
to
develop when you take these factors and
many others into the scenario gives a
weight of circumstantial evidence that is hard
to ignore. [Given her implication, was
Courtney top of the pyramid?]
The less
immediate context of the Cobain murder is where we
find our greatest interest
at this time, while of course
understanding
that the more broadly we cast our gaze to perceive
the real political events around us, the more we venture
into a zone that many in
the corporate press may use to brand us a "conspiracy
nut"..."You can bet that the press
isn't going to go after entertainment executives,
because
they're
basically in control of the media." Read
More.
"Two Detectives in New Roles: Suspects".
Sergeant Cameron was suspended in March 1999.
He was suspended under an accusation by a fellow
detective [Detective Steiger] that he staged a crime
scene, a crime scene at which an individual was killed
by the Seattle Police Department, and allegedly $10,000
were taken. So the question is: If Sergeant Cameron
along with Earl "Sonny" Davis, one of his
detectives would facilitate and participate and coordinate
the staging of evidence at that crime scene, who's
to say that he didn't stage the crime scene in numerous
cases, including, of course, the case which is the
focus of our investigation here, which is the Kurt
Cobain case.
I have found that the evidence clearly tends
to point in one direction, that being that Cobain
was a homicide victim and that that fact was concealed
through the active efforts of KCME and SPD. If
one is not willing to consider the very real and
distinct
possibility of falsification by these authorities,
one can get nowhere in discovering the truth about
the death, the murder of Kurt Cobain.
[The theory of corruption is hard for some to
comprehend
but in this case it would only need to involve the select
few who
could engineer the vital decisions for their respective department
- Nikolas Hartshorne, Sgt. Cameron.
- "The Cobain
case involves influencial and powerful people in the
entertainment business. They are well connected. They
are adept at
manipulating and even silencing the media when their
own personal interests are at stake." - Tom
Grant]
"If it hadn't been Kurt Cobain, the case
would have been closed after the medical examiner's
verdict.
We never took the possibility of homicide very seriously." -
Sergeant Don Cameron (WKKC?, p. 160)
"They [SPD homicide unit] came to the
scene because of the popularity of the individual.
I mean
Elvis is still walking around out there, and when
you have somebody this prominent, you like to get
the best people in there to make sure all your i's
and t's are crossed." - Nikolas Hartshorne
(WKKC?, p. 161)
If the KCME Office and/or Hartshorne
were corrupt, it's possible he could have omitted
any number of items from the autopsy and his testimony
to the SPD; for one, any possible indications of
a struggle.
"We don't normally even investigate suicides. You know, this was a kind of a high profile person,
so our homicide detectives did go out to the scene
that day to do an investigation, but our case is
closed. It has been determined that it was a suicide,
self-inflicted, and we aren't doing any further investigation
regarding his death. We have done a thorough investigation." -
Vinette Tichi SPD spokeswoman, 13th April
1994 (speaking to Richard
Lee)
One cannot
cease
to investigate
a suicide as it is merely an admission no effort
was made to even determine whether or not they were
actually dealing with a suicide to begin with!
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