Deep State Clones Expire After Three Years, Cloning Scientist Tells Military
Deep State clones exist for only three years once they leave their maturation chambers and are recalled to a reclamation center at least one week before they expire, according to a Deep State cloning scientist who was arrested by U.S. Special Forces in early January and taken to an undisclosed safe house for a lengthy interrogation.
A source in General Eric M. Smith’s office told Real Raw News that military interrogators began questioning the 49-year-old German-born scientist, now identified as Harald Kraus, at once after his arrest. A reticent Kraus refused to answer questions after being told he could cooperate or face a military tribunal with a 100 percent conviction rate over the last two years.
Before that, interrogators used gentle language trying to persuade Kraus to disclose the whereabouts of cloning centers in the United States. They described Kraus as intelligent but also timid and fragile, and feared that coercion might make him crack—just not the way they wanted. They promised him protection from Deep State retaliation and said if they turned him loose on the streets, the Deep State would surely kill him, since it knew he was in the hands of the White Hat partition of the U.S. military.
“If we release you, I give you 24 hours, probably less, before they find you. Even if you tell us nothing, they’ll assume we broke you, they’ll assume you talked. We’re the good guys here. If you’re lucky, they’ll kill you quickly, painlessly, but your bosses aren’t known for being merciful,” one interrogator reportedly told Kraus.
That was mild language, our source said.
Kraus got royal treatment—quality food tailored to his diet and ample recovery time between isochronous interrogation sessions, and he stayed in a room with a bed instead of a cell with a rickety, uncomfortable cot. The interrogators hoped their generosity would elicit a confession. But Kraus, headstrong and palpably fearful of his former employers, still answered questions with an indignant shoulder shrug and proclamations of “I really don’t know anything.”
His convenient amnesia continued into March, frustrating the interrogators who had extended him every possible courtesy and were assiduous in trying to earn his trust through acts of kindness.
In mid-March, Kraus stopped eating, telling interrogators that captivity caused depression and that he had lost his appetite. He said he was homesick, not for work but for his wife and 12-year-old son who lived in Hamburg, Germany.
The interrogators saw an opening.
“All our research and we had no clue this guy has a wife and kid still in Germany,” our source in Gen. Smith’s office said. “He told investigators they lived in Germany because the wife is a part-time caregiver for her sick mother, and he hadn’t seen them in a year, when they visited him in Boston. So, the investigators considered he might be lying, playing the sympathy card and all, but deduced through his body language and attitude that he was probably telling the truth. And they used that to their advantage.”
The interrogators amplified their tactics, telling Kraus that only through them would he again see his family.
“You do know they go after families and friends too,” an interrogator told Kraus. “Just because your wife and son are overseas doesn’t mean they’re safe, and if they come back to the U.S. looking for you because they haven’t heard from you, believe me, they will be in jeopardy. The people you worked for—you don’t know what they’re capable of, Harald, you just don’t know.”