Anonymous ID: a7b2da Nov. 2, 2018, 12:41 a.m. No.3697237   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>3694106 pb

 

MAYO CLINIC:

 

BEEN OVER 3 YEARS SINCE READ THIS ARTICLE OR DOCUMENT THAT:

MAYO CLINIC HAS A SECRET OPERATING ROOM FOR ELITES ONLY WHERE THEY WOULD DELIVER A KIDNAPPED PERSON BRING IN THE ELITE HAVE THE TRANSPLANT, DO IT RIGHT THERE WITHOUT ANY RECORD

 

IF THAT HELPS WITH FOCUSING IN ON WHAT ROLE THEY PLAY

Anonymous ID: a7b2da Nov. 2, 2018, 2:35 a.m. No.3697615   🗄️.is 🔗kun

Published on 8 Feb 2017

On Tuesday, February 8, 1977, Tony Kiritsis took Dick Hall hostage in Indianapolis, Indiana. After walking into the building at 129 East Market Street he went up to the 4th floor where the Meridian Mortgage offices were located. There he tied his dead man's line around Richard Hall and then dialed 911. This video is the entire 911 call made that day from Kiritsis. Please be warned this video has a lot of expletives.

 

Go here to download full 911 transcript

On Tuesday, February 8, 1977, Kiritsis went to Hall's office and wired a sawed-off shotgun to his head. The other end of the wire was connected to the trigger and then to Hall's neck. This "dead man's line" meant that if a policeman shot Kiritsis, the shotgun would go off and shoot Hall in the head. The same would happen if Hall tried to escape. Kiritsis called the police from Hall's office and told the police he had taken Hall as a hostage.

Kiritsis held Hall hostage for 63 hours. During this time, most of which was spent in Kiritsis's apartment, he frequently made calls to 1070 WIBC newsman Fred Heckman, who broadcast what Kiritsis said. Finally, a lawyer said Hall had signed a document stating that he had mistreated Kiritsis, would pay him $5 million, and that Kiritsis would not be prosecuted or even arrested. Kiritsis then held a speech in front of live TV cameras, declaring himself "a goddamned national hero." His speech became so emotional that some journalists thought he would shoot Hall, so they terminated the live broadcast. Eventually, however, Kiritsis released Hall. To prove the gun had been loaded, he fired it into the air, and was immediately arrested. He was found not guilty by reason of insanity.

Most people who knew Kiritsis had good things to say about him and were surprised at what he had done. Kiritsis is described as "always helpful and kind to his neighbors, a hard worker, and a strict law-and-order sort of man". Kiritsis also said several times that he didn't want anyone to get hurt and apologized for the way he treated Dick Hall. At his trial psychiatrists said he was psychotic and in a "paranoid delusional state" during the hostage incident.

Later life

Kiritsis was released from a mental institution in January 1988, after the state could not prove he was still a danger to society. Kiritsis died in January 2005 at his home of natural causes. He was 72 years old.

Effects of the case

At the time of the trial, Indiana law (and that of some other states) required the prosecution to disprove a defendant's claim of insanity, i.e. to prove the defendant sane, beyond a reasonable doubt. Directly as a result of the Kiritsis trial—particularly the testimony of chief defense psychiatrist Larry M. Davis—and the trial of John Hinckley, Jr., Indiana among other states substantially revised their law to place the burden of proof for insanity-pleading defendants squarely on the shoulders of the defense.

John H. Blair, a freelance photographer for UPI, took a photograph of the incident which won him the 1978 Pulitzer Prize for Spot News Photography.

Footage of the incident was included in the 1982 documentary The Killing of America as one of many examples of violence in the United States.

 

I COMPLETELY RELATE TO HIS RAGING ON THE 911 CALL LOTS OF SWEARING……

 

KINDA REFRESHING😵 IT'S BEEN SO LONG SINCE PEOPLE HAVE BEEN ABLE TO CUT LOOSE AND VENT

JUST SAD HE WAS DRIVEN TO SNAP

from 1977

 

late night entertainment/ sadly they see him as the problem not the corrupt bankers lenders