

Why is the flag upside down?
The upside down flag is an international sign of distress.
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The Mysterious Deaths of
Top Microbiologists
http://www.whatreallyhappened.com/deadbiologists
The pattern became obvious with Don
Wiley.
<> On November 15th, 2001 Harvard Professor Don Wiley
left a
gathering of friends and colleagues some time after 10:30 PM. The next
morning,> Memphis police found his rental car stopped on a
bridge,
with a full tank of gas and keys still in the ignition. There
was no
financial or family trouble. Indeed Wiley was supposed to meet
his
family at the Memphis airport to continue on to an Icelandic
vacation.
Neither was there any history of depression or mental illness.
<> In the report printed in the New York Times on
November
27th, the FBI's Memphis office distanced itself from the case saying
that
the available > facts did not add up to a suspicion of foul
play. I guess
at the FBI it's a perfectly everyday occurrence for a Harvard
Professor to stop his rental car on a bridge in the middle of
the night
before he is supposed to leave for Iceland and just walk away
into the
Tennessee dark.
<>
The NYT report of November 27th also downplayed Professor
Wiley's expertise in virology, quoting Gregory Verdine, a
professor of chemical > biology at Harvard, said, "If
bioterrorists were to
abduct Don Wiley, they'd be very disappointed," because his
research
was in studying the component parts of viruses, and "that
doesn't really
help you make a more dangerous version of the virus."
<>
But this statement is not consistent with the facts of
Professor Wiley's full range of knowledge. Wiley has, in
conjunction with another > Harvard Professor, Dr. Jack
Strominger, won several
academic prizes for their work in immunology, including a
Lasker prize. Don
Wiley is a Harvard professor, but he is also a researcher at
the
Howard Hughes Medical Institute, and the National Institute of
Health.
The Howard Hughes Medical Institute is located in Chevy Chase,
Maryland, and performs biological research, sometimes jointly
funded by
the Department of Defense and the NIH. Don Wiley's peers at
Harvard include professors such as John Collier performing
research on
Anthrax.
<>
So, contrary to the dismissive tone of the New York Times
report, Professor Wiley would be of great value to anyone
developing biological > weapons. This makes the FBI's obvious
disinterest in the
case highly questionable, indeed reminiscent of the FBI's
obvious
disinterest in the numerous witnesses in Oklahoma City who had
seen Tim
McVeigh in the company of additional perpetrators not to
mention the witnesses who had seen additional bombs.
Especially in light of the events of 9/11, the vanishing
of a scientist with Professor Wiley's expertise in virology and
immunology should have been expected to be an issue of critical
national
importance, yet the official tone of the government was that
this is nothing
to worry about. Move along citizen, nothing to see.
<>
In the context of the Anthrax letters being sent through
the mail, any > disappearance of any microbiologist under
questionable circumstances should have set off alarm bells
across the nation. but it
didn't. Professor Wiley was assumed to have committed suicide,
end of story.
<>
The professor's colleagues expressed doubts about the
official > "suicide" explanation for his disappearance.
Then, more biologists started to
die under suspicious
circumstances.
The Very Mysterious Deaths of Five
Microbiologists.
<> The body count of infections disease experts continued
to
climb. Connections to weapons research began to surface.>
<> As many as 14 world-class microbiologists died between
9/11/2001 and 3/2/2002, and on 6/24/2002 yet another microbiologist was
added
to the list.>
<> Still the US Government acted as if nothing was amiss,
as
silent on the question of dead microbiologists as they are on the
question of the > Israeli spies and their connection to 9-11.
<> In fact, the official silence on the question of how
so
many top experts in infectious diseases could die in such a short
time span is > deafening.
Now, statistically, it's possible, even likely, that one
or two of these microbiologists legitimately were killed in
random
accidents. But for so many to die in such a short while exceeds
all
reasonable bounds of statistics. Prudence would demand an
investigation,
not the "ho hum" attitude of the government which even today
continues to
issue dire warnings to the general population of how much we
are all
in danger from "bioterrorism".
<>
So, let's take a moment and step away from the perpetual
fear-mongering of the media (and Rumsfeld) as they assure us another
attack IS coming > (with a certainty which suggests inside
information on
the subject) and assume for a moment that some party has indeed
decided to
"liquidate" weapons research infectious disease experts.
<> There is really only one reason to kill off a
bunch of
scientists. To keep them from doing something they are able to do.>
What were these scientists able to do? Maybe blow the
whistle if an artificially created disease was about to be used
in a
manner those who created it did not approve of.
Regardless of the exact reason, there does seem to be a
clear pattern of targeted microbiologists, and paired with it,
an
obvious government disinterest in the matter.
I leave it to you to figure out why.
THE LIST
<> November 6, 2001: Jeffrey Paris Wall's body was found
sprawled next to a three-story parking structure near his office. Mr.
Wall, 41, had > studied at the University of California, Los
Angeles. He
was a biomedical expert who held a medical degree, and he also
specialized in patent and intellectual property. It had been
alleged
that Jeffrey Wall had a connection to Biofem.
<> November 16, 2001: Dr. Don Wiley, 57, disappears
during a
business trip to Memphis, Tennessee. He had just bought tickets to take
his son to > Graceland the following day. Police found his
rental car
on a bridge outside Memphis. His body was later found in the
Mississippi River. Wiley was one of the world's leading
researchers of
deadly viruses, including HIV and the Ebola virus. He was an
expert on
the immune system's response to viral attacks.
<>
November 21, 2001: World-class microbiologist and
high-profile Russian defector Dr. Vladimir Pasechnik, 64, dies of a
stroke.
Pasechnik, who > defected to Britain in 1989, succeeded in
producing an
aerosolized plague microbe that could survive outside the
laboratory.
He was connected to Britain's spy agency and recently had
started his own company. "In the last few weeks of his life he
had put
his research on anthrax at the disposal of the [British]
Government, in
the light of the threat from bioterrorism.
<>
November 24, 2001: Three more dead microbiologists: A
Swissair flight from Berlin to Zurich crashes during its landing
approach; 22 are > killed and nine survive. Among those killed
are Dr.
Yaakov Matzner, 54, dean of the Hebrew University school of
medicine; Amiramp
Eldor, 59, head of the haematology department at Ichilov
Hospital in
Tel Aviv and a world-recognized expert in blood clotting; and
Avishai
Berkman, 50, director of the Tel Aviv public health department
and
businessman.
<> December 10, 2001: Dead microbiologist: "Dr. Robert
Schwartz, 57, was stabbed and slashed with what police believe was a
sword
in his > farmhouse in Leesberg, Va. His daughter, who
identifies
herself as a pagan high priestess, and three of her fellow
pagans have
been charged." [Globe and Mail, 5/4/02] All were part of
what they called a coven, and interested in magic, fantasy and
self-mutilation.
The police have no motive as to why they would have wanted to
kill
Schwartz, who was a single parent and said to be very close to
his
children. Schwartz worked at Virginia's Center for Innovative
Technology on
DNA sequencing and pathogenic microorganisms.
<> December 14, 2001: Dead microbiologist: Nguyen Van
Set,
44, dies in an airlock filled with nitrogen in his lab in Geelong,
Australia. The lab > had just been written up in the journal
Nature for its
work in genetic manipulation and DNA sequencing. Scientists
there had
created a virulent form of mousepox. "They realized that if
similar genetic manipulation was carried out on smallpox, an
unstoppable
killer could be unleashed."
<>
January 2002: Two dead microbiologists: Ivan Glebov and
Alexi Brushlinski. Glebov died as the result of a bandit attack
and > Brushlinski was killed in Moscow. Both were well known
around the world and members of the Russian Academy of Science.
<>
February 9, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Victor Korshunov,
56, is bashed over the head and killed at the entrance of his home in
Moscow, Russia. > He was the head of the microbiology
sub-faculty at the
Russian State Medical University and an expert in intestinal
bacteria.
<> February 11, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Dr. Ian
Langford,
40, is found dead, partially naked and wedged under a chair in his
home in Norwich, > England. When found, his house was
described as
"blood-spattered and apparently ransacked." He was one of
Europe's
leading experts on environmental risk.
<> February 28, 2002: Two dead microbiologists in San
Francisco: While taking delivery of a pizza, Tanya Holzmayer, 46, is
shot
and killed by > a colleague, Guyang Huang, 38, who then
apparently shot
himself. Holzmayer moved to the US from Russia in 1989. Her
research
focused on the part of the human molecular structure that could
be
affected best by medicine. Holzmayer was focusing on helping
create new
drugs that interfere with replication of the virus that causes
AIDS.
One year earlier, Holzmayer obeyed senior management orders to
fire Huang.
<>
March 24, 2002: Dead microbiologist: David Wynn-Williams,
55, is hit by a car while jogging near his home in Cambridge, England.
He was an > astrobiologist with the Antarctic Astrobiology
Project
and the NASA Ames Research Center. He was studying the
capability of
microbes to adapt to environmental extremes, including the
bombardment of ultraviolet rays and global warming.
<> March 25, 2002: Dead microbiologist: Steven Mostow,
63,
dies when the airplane he was piloting crashes near Denver, Colorado.
He worked at > the Colorado Health Sciences Centre and was
known as
"Dr. Flu" for his expertise in treating influenza, and
expertise on
bioterrorism. Mostow was one of the country's leading
infectious disease
experts.
<> November 12 2002: Dr. Benito Que, 52, was "an expert
in infectious diseases and cellular biology at the Miami Medical
School. Police > originally suspected that he had been beaten
on in a
carjacking in the medical school's parking lot. Strangely
enough, though,
his body showed no signs of a beating.
<>
June 24, 2003: Dr. Leland Rickman, a UC San Diego expert
on infectious diseases and, since Sept. 11, 2001 a consultant on
bioterrorism. He was > 47. Rickman died while on a teaching
assignment in
Lesotho, a small country bordered on all sides by South Africa.
He had complained of a headache, but the cause of death was not
immediately
known. The physician had been working in Lesotho with Dr. Chris
Mathews, director of the UC San Diego Medical Center's Owen
Clinic,
teaching African medical personnel about the prevention and
treatment of
AIDS.Rickman, the incoming president of the Infectious Disease
Assn. of
California, was a multidisciplinary professor and practitioner
with
expertise in infectious diseases, internal medicine,
epidemiology,
microbiology and antibiotic utilization
<> July 18, 2003: David Kelly, a British biological
weapons
expert, was said to have slashed his own wrists while walking near
his home. Kelly > was the Ministry of Defence's chief
scientific officer
and senior adviser to the proliferation and arms control
secretariat, and to the Foreign Office's non-proliferation
department. The senior
adviser on biological weapons to the UN biological weapons
inspections teams(Unscom) from 1994 to 1999, he was also, in
the
opinion of his peers, pre-eminent in his field, not only in
this
country, but in the world.
November 20, 2003: Scientist Robert Leslie Burghoff, 45
was killed by a hit and run driver that jumped the kerb and
ploughed into
him in the 1600 block of South Braeswood, Texas. He was
studying the
virus plaguing cruise ships. April 2004: Mohammed Munim
al-Izmerly, a distinguished Iraqi chemistry professor dies in
American
custody from a sudden hit to the back of his head caused by
blunt
trauma. It was uncertain exactly how he died, but someone had
hit him
from behind, possibly with a bar or a pistol. His battered
corpse
turned up at Baghdad's morgue and the cause of death was
initially recorded
as "brainstem compression". It was discovered that
US doctors had made a 20cm incision in his skull.
<>
May 5, 2004: A Russian scientist at a former Soviet
biological weapons laboratory in Siberia died after an accident with a
needle laced with > ebola. Scientists and officials said the
accident had
raised concerns about safety and secrecy at the State Research
Center of
Virology and Biotechnology, known as Vector, which in Soviet
times
specialized in turning deadly viruses into biological weapons.
Vector
has been a leading recipient of aid in an American programme.
<> May 14, 2004: Dr. Eugene F. Mallove, a Norwich Free
Academy graduate, 56, died after being beaten to death during an
alleged
robbery. Mallove > was well respected for his knowledge of
cold fusion. He
had just published an "open letter" outlining the
results of and reasons for his last 15 years in the field of
"new energy
research." Dr. Mallove was convinced it was only a matter of
months before the world
would actually see a free energy device.
<>
June 22, 2004: Astronomer and physicist, Austrian born
Thomas Gold famous over the years for a variety of bold theories that
flout > conventional wisdom died of heart failure. Gold's
theory
of the deep hot biosphere holds important ramifications for the
possibility of life on other planets, including seemingly
inhospitable
planets within our own solar system. He was Professor Emeritus
of Astronomy
at
Cornell University and was the founder (and for 20 years
director) of Cornell Center for Radiophysics and Space
Research. He was also
involved in air accident investigation.
<>
July 3, 2004: Dr Paul Norman, 52, of Salisbury,
Wiltshire, was killed when the single-engine Cessna 206 he was piloting
crashed
in Devon. He > was married with a 14-year-old son and a
20-year-old
daughter, and was the chief scientist for chemical and
biological defence
at the Ministry of Defence's laboratory at Porton Down,
Wiltshire. The
crash site was examined by officials from the Air Accidents
Investigation Branch and the wreckage of the aircraft was
removed from the site to
the AAIB base at Farnborough.
<>
July 21, 2004: Dr Bassem al-Mudares' mutilated body was
found in the city of Samarra, Iraq*. He was a phD chemist and had been
tortured > before being killed.
<> July 29, 2004: 67-year-old John Mullen, a nuclear
research scientist with McDonnell Douglas dies from a huge dose of
poisonous
arsenic. > Police investigating will not say how Mullen was
exposed
to the arsenic or where it came from. At the time of his death
he was
doing contract work for Boeing.
<>
August 12, 2004: Professor John Clark, head of the
science lab which created Dolly the sheep, was found hanging in his
holiday
home. Prof. > Clark led the Roslin Institute in Midlothian,
one of the
world's leading animal biotechnology research centres. He played
a crucial role in creating the transgenic sheep that earned the
institute worldwide fame. Prof Clark also founded three
spin-out firms from
Roslin - PPL Therapeutics, Rosgen and Roslin BioMed.
<>
September 5, 2004: Mohammed Toki Hussein al-Talakani
Iraqi nuclear scientist* was shot dead in Mahmudiya, south of Baghdad.
He was a > practising nuclear physicist since 1984.
<> December 21, 2004: Taleb Ibrahim al-Daher Iraqi
nuclear
scientist was shot dead north of Baghdad by unknown gunmen. He was on
his way to work > at Diyala University when armed men opened
fire on his
car as it was crossing a bridge in Baqouba, 57 km northeast of
Baghdad.
The vehicle swerved off the bridge and fell into the Khrisan
river.
Al-Daher, who was a professor at the local university, was
removed from
the submerged car and rushed to Baqouba hospital where he was
pronounced dead.
<>
January 7, 2005: Korean Jeong H. Im, retired research
assistant professor at the University of Missouri - Columbia and
primarily a > protein chemist, died of multiple stab wounds to
the
chest before firefighters found in his body in the trunk of a
burning
car on the third level of the Maryland Avenue Garage. MUPD with
the
assistance of the Columbia Police Department and Columbia Fire
Department are conducting a death investigation of the
incident. A
person of interest described as a male 6' - 6'2" wearing some
type of
mask possible a painters mask or drywall type mask was seen in
the area
of the Maryland Avenue Garage.
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