Anonymous ID: 0a0680 July 29, 2018, 5:30 p.m. No.2345952   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>2345886

Except they also "remember" a lot of things you probably never knew. Very little of the stuff you "just discovered? with "research" doesn't even touch the surface.

 

Nephilims are so much more "interdasting"

 

So….. learn moar

 

The Franklin Cover-up Child Abuse, Satanism, and Murder in Nebraska

by John W. DeCamp

Second edition 1996

© 1992 AWT, Inc.

ISBN: 0-9632158-0-9

 

Born in Neligh, Nebraska, DeCamp joined the United States Army during the Vietnam War. In 1975 he initiated Operation Baby Lift, which evacuated 2,800 orphaned Vietnamese children.[2] He was later assigned to serve as an aide to former CIA director William Colby, who was Deputy Ambassador to Vietnam at the time. Beginning his campaign for election while still stationed in Vietnam, DeCamp was elected and served four terms as a Nebraska state senator, from 1971 to 1987.

 

"Are you serious?" Colby asked.

"Dead serious," I responded. "And I hope that word 'dead' does not turn out to be a prophetic pronouncement, as it

has for at least fifteen other Franklin-related personalities."

My statement to Bill Colby was not made lightly. Colby and his wife, Sally Shelton Colby, a United States

ambassador under President Jimmy Carter, were at that very moment warning me to get away from the Franklin

child abuse investigation, Larry King, and anybody else linked with Franklin, as quickly as possible for the sake

of my own life and safety.

 

Sally and Bill had never talked to me like this before. They sat me down, made it clear that this was not one of our

routine discussions about life and health and happiness, and emphasized to me the serious nature of what and

whom I was dealing with.

 

"What you have to understand, John, is that sometimes there are forces and events too big, too powerful, with so

much at stake for other people or institutions, that you cannot do anything about them, no matter how evil or

wrong they are and no matter how dedicated or sincere you are or how much evidence you have. That is simply

one of the hard facts of life you have to face. You have done your part. You have tried to expose the evil and

wrongdoing. It has hurt you terribly. But it has not killed you up to this point. I am telling you, get out of this

before it does. Sometimes things are just too big for us to deal with, and we have to step aside and let history take

its course. For you, John, this is one of those times," Bill warned, with Sally nodding her head in affirmation.

When a caution of this nature comes from someone of the stature and experience of Bill or Sally Colby, you have

to take it seriously, even if you do not want to. I had already had warnings enough, that unless I backed off from

the Franklin situation, I might be looking at life from a pine box six feet underground.

 

Bill Colby had ample reason to know the seriousness of the Franklin case. In secret, Colby had been hired a few

months earlier by the Nebraska Legislature's investigative committee, to look into the single-engine plane

crash, in which the Senate's private investigator, Gary Caradori, and his son were killed.

 

William Colby Death

On April 27, 1996, Colby set out from his weekend home in Rock Point, Maryland on a solo canoe trip.[15] His canoe was found the following day on a sandbar in the Wicomico River, a tributary of the Potomac, approximately a quarter mile from his home.[16] On May 6, Colby's body was found in a marshy riverbank lying facedown not far from where his canoe was found.[15][17] After an autopsy, Maryland's Chief Medical Examiner John E. Smialek ruled his death to be accidental.[17] Smialek's report noted that Colby was predisposed to having a heart attack or stroke due to "severe calcified atherosclerosis" and that Colby likely "suffered a complication of this atherosclerosis which precipitated him into the cold water in a debilitated state and he succumbed to the effects of hypothermia and drowned".[18][19]

 

Colby's death triggered conspiracy theories that his death was due to foul play.[20][21] In his 2011 documentary The Man Nobody Knew, Colby's son Carl suggested that his father suffered from guilt due to his actions in the CIA and committed suicide.[20][21] Carl's step-mother and siblings, as well as Colby's biographer Randall Woods, criticized Carl's portrayal of William Colby, and rejected the allegation that the former CIA director killed himself citing it as being inconsistent with his character.[20][21]