Disregard anons
Psycho Joe's intern death already fact checked by AP
It's not a mystery
PB
>>9022876 New DJT twat w/CAP: “Concast” should open up a long overdue Florida Cold Case against Psycho Joe Scarborough. I know him and Crazy Mika well…
Disregard anons
Psycho Joe's intern death already fact checked by AP
It's not a mystery
PB
>>9022876 New DJT twat w/CAP: “Concast” should open up a long overdue Florida Cold Case against Psycho Joe Scarborough. I know him and Crazy Mika well…
anything with the caps?
FCC?
Coulda just said cold case without caps
May 4, 2020 05:38:11 AM “Concast” should open up a long overdue Florida Cold Case against Psycho Joe Scarborough. I know him and Crazy Mika well, used them beautifully in the last Election, dumped them nicely, and will state on the record that he is “nuts”. Besides, bad ratings! #OPENJOECOLDCASE
C FCC PJS CM E B #OPENJOECOLDCASE
“Unwrapped” Part 1: A strange way to die By Denis
Wright and Chris George
On the day Lori Klausutis’ body was found, police denied finding any sign of trauma to the body or any indication of foul play. In an August 6 press release, Dr. Michael Berkland, the Okaloosa County associate medical examiner, acknowledged that there was “a scratch and a bruise” on her head, and said the original denials “were designed to prevent undue speculation about the cause of death.” He declared that the death had been an accident, with the proximate cause a subdural hematoma caused by a blow to the head. The blow to the head, he said, probably happened when Klausutis’ head had hit a desk after she fainted. The fainting, he proposed, was due to a prolapsed mitral heart valve which, he added, would have killed her even had she not fallen and struck her head. how convenient Following this news release, further police investigation was effectively halted. The official police report contains only a few notes after August 6 pertaining to interviews with the security guard of the building in which Klausutis worked and with employees at a nearby restaurant. According to the medical literature, simple falls in young, healthy people,virtually never cause death.Berkland’s claim that injury opposite to the site of impact is observed only when a person’s head hits a stationary objectis also contradicted by the literature
Only after Ralph Routon of the Northwest Florida Daily News wrote an editorial urging the release of the records pertaining to Klausutis was the autopsy report released on August 24. The report, however,lacked any description of the death scene: there was no diagram of the location of the body, its position relative to furniture, or observations of superficial wounds.The autopsy describes the prolapsed mitral valve in great detail, claiming that the medical literature sustains the notion that this is likely to be fatal [see footnote]. Dr. Berkland contends in lengthy autopsy comments that “there are only about three entities that generally cause one to drop in midsentence or in midstride . . . pulmonary embolus . . . a ruptured aneurysm . . . and most common, is a sudden cardiac arrhythmia.” Yet, the medical literature suggests that neither pulmonary emboli nor aneurysms are likely to cause immediate loss of consciousness.A blow to the head is a common cause of loss of consciousness.
https://web.archive.org/web/20040719180319/http://www.onlinejournal.com/archive/11-10-01_Wright-George-printable.pdf
cont
In describing the head injuries, Dr. Berkland noted:
A 7 1/4 inch long skull fracture extending from the right forehead across the top to the left parietal bone.
A deep scalp hemorrhage in the back of her head.
“Eggshell” fractures deep inside the skull (in the anterior cranial fossa). * A 75–80 cc acute subdural hematoma in the left temporal area with underlying cortical contusion. The latter is called a contracoup hemorrhage since it occurs on the opposite side fromthe fracture. This collection of blood was reported to be so severe as to cause uncal herniation and cerebellar coning which occur only with the heart pumping blood into the brain, according to the medical literature.
Dr. Berkland asserts that contracoup injury can occur only if a “moving head [strikes a] stationary object.” not by a moving object striking a stationary head.This is contradicted by authoritative literature.In addition, the forensic literature says that an unguarded fall of at least four feet is required to fracture the skull and a contracoup injury would require substantially greater energy than would be produced by such a short fall. Furthermore, Dr. Berkland said that Klausutis fell because a cardiac arrhythmia made the heartbeat ineffectual without explaininghow the heart then pumped enough blood to produce an expanding collection of blood on the left side of the brain, the side opposite to the fracture?Finally, although the report shows the subdural hematoma was severe, it was far from the site deep in the brainstem that controls heartbeat and respiration. Dr. Berkland’s microscopics give no description of the brainstem and no evidence that it was damaged at all, leaving a question as to the exact cause of death.
Ed Friedlander, M.D., a noted forensic pathologist has stated that “A good rule of thumb is that nothing inside the head short of a gunshot wound through the lower brainstem will kill a person in less than 60 minutes.”
Before moving to Florida, Dr. Berkland had worked in Kansas City, MO. The August 30 edition of the Pitch Weekly, based in that city, noted in its Kansas City Strip column, “Former Jackson County coroner, Mike Berkland, provides the brains for a scandal in Florida.” The Pitch said, “Berkland claims he ‘sectioned’ Klausutis’ brain during her autopsy to determine that her head was injured by a fall, not by a blow from a weapon.But that’s the same sort of claim that got Berkland run out of Kansas City in 1996,= after he’d falsely reported that he’d sectioned brains later found whole by his boss—a mistake he blames on poorly proofread reports written with computer macros. No such mistake occurred with Klausutis’ brain Berkland told the Pitch. ‘You can rest assured it was sectioned,’ he says.” In a September 2 editorial (“An Untidy Wrapup for Klausutis Case”), the Northwest Florida Daily News wrote, “Despite weeks of furious speculation on the Internet, it’s likely that Lori Klausutis died exactly the way investigators say she died: She collapsed because of a heart condition, struck her head and suffered a fatal blood clot.”Dr. Berkland “serves at the pleasure of Dr. Gary Cumberland,interdasting Chief Medical Examiner for District I,” according to Dr. Stephen Nelson, Chairman of the Florida Medical Examiners Commission. Dr.Cumberland has not responded to requests asking him to review Dr.Berkland’s work and offer his opinion.
>But not details of report
>I member 1 contradiction
There's more than 1
>She was healthy and ran marathons but he determined underlying heart problems
>I just dont remember what she hit when she supposedly fell
See this article analyzing the fake autopsy
The shit you can find in the archives.
C_A believes it should run the country
By Carla Binion
October 31, 1999 | Who runs the country? High level C_A officials have said the C_A, and not the president or other elected officials, should run the country and world affairs.
C_A admits tolerating contra- cocaine trafficking in 1980s
By Robert Parry
In secret congressional testimony, senior C_A officials admitted that the spy agency turned a blind eye to evidence of cocaine trafficking by U.S.-backed Nicaraguan contra rebels in the 1980s and generally did not treat drug smuggling through Central America as a high priority during the Reagan administration.
"In the end the objective of unseating the Sandinistas appears to have taken precedence over dealing properly with potentially serious allegations against those with whom the agency was working," C_A Inspector General Britt Snider said in classified testimony on May 25, 1999. He conceded that the C_A did not treat the drug allegations in "a consistent, reasoned or justifiable manner."
Part 2
https://web.archive.org/web/20011123111411/http://www.onlinejournal.com/Special_Reports/George-Wright112101/george-wright112101.html
"Unwrapped"
Part 2: Dr. Michael Berkland in Missouri
By Chris George and Denis Wright
"Former Jackson County coroner Mike Berkland provides the brains for a scandal in Florida" —Pitch Weekly: Kansas City Strip, Aug. 30, 2001.
November 21, 2001—Prior to coming to northwest Florida, Dr. Michael E. Berkland served as Deputy Medical Examiner for Jackson County, Missouri, from 1994 to 1996. He was terminated from the medical examiner's office because he did not perform his duties as a medical examiner in a timely manner. He later lost the authority to perform autopsies in Missouri when the Circuit Court of Jackson County found that
he had indeed falsified autopsy reports.
Finally, in March 1999, Dr. Berkland lost his license to practice medicine of any kind in the state.
According to affidavits filed by Dr. Michael Young, the Acting Medical Examiner of Jackson County, and by Dr. Sam Gulino, the board-certified forensic pathologist who replaced Dr. Berkland, Drs. Young and Gulino were "conducting a review of files and specimens from autopsies handled by Dr. Berkland," when they "located eight unsectioned brains in containers of Formalin." When the doctors looked at Berkland's documentation, Dr. Young notes, "we discovered that Dr. Berkland provided false information on the eight accompanying autopsy reports." When these brains were sectioned and studied the findings did not in any way match the rather extensive notes contained within Berkland's completed autopsy reports. Dr. Berkland "made completed descriptions of the brain in eight of the cases. In each case, there is clear evidence of an intent to make up autopsy findings without performing the necessary examination," according to Dr. Young. A complaint was filed with the Administrative Hearing Commission of the State of Missouri.
Dr. Young provided testimony at the hearing, held in January 1998, as well as substantial documentation of the alleged falsified reports, including photographs of the unsectioned brains, a tabular analysis comparing Dr. Berkland's 'findings' with the actual findings and "possible sources of plagiarism for some of Dr. Berkland's descriptions."
The Circuit Court of Jackson County found in its ruling on February 19, 1998, that the "defendant poses a substantial probability of serious danger to the health, safety and welfare of his patients, clients and/or the residents of Missouri." The court continued that "respondent's conduct as set forth herein constitutes misconduct, fraud, misrepresentation, dishonesty, unethical conduct and unprofessional conduct in the practice of medicine." It also stated that Berkland exhibited incompetence and negligence and barred him from performing autopsies or from serving as a medical examiner in the state.
Dr. Berkland did not attend the hearing, but through his attorney he submitted a "Respondent's Answer to Complaint" in which he denied most of the state's allegations and stated that he possessed insufficient information to answer the allegations and "therefore denies same." He also denied "each and every allegation" that in the eight autopsy reports concerning the brains he "made autopsy findings without performing the necessary autopsy examinations."
Subsequently, on March 16, 1999, the Administrative Hearing Commission revoked Dr. Berkland's Missouri license with no application for reinstatement for a period of six years, effective immediately, citing the findings from the earlier hearing in 1998. While the previous judgment applied only to Dr. Berkland's ability to perform autopsies or to serve as a medical examiner with this new ruling Dr. Berkland was prohibited from practicing medicine in any capacity in the Missouri. Dr. Berkland filed an appeal, which was denied.
cont
This seems kinda important
Falsehoods and rumors regarding Klausutis' health history, first attributed to the imaginations of local writers,
were eventually traced back to Scarborough and his public relations. manager Mick Serrano
who, on the morning of the discovery, placed calls to various press outlets about Klausutis' supposed ill-health and epilepsy. The source of the rumors was confirmed in interviews with Tom Wahl and Anna Dobbins, Wear-TV (ABC), Pensacola, and with Ron Kelly, news director, WGTX Radio, 1280 AM.
The retractions and changing statements by public officials were not the only oddities in the case. Key witnesses also changed their stories as to what had happened. Juanita Bergmann, who along with her husband Andreas found the body, first said that it was obvious that Klausutis had suffered a seizure. Later Ms. Bergmann, a health worker, stated that since the family accepted the official findings that she would accept that the autopsy report was correct in finding no evidence of a seizure. She also said that she had not been contacted again by any investigative official subsequent to her initial deposition on the morning of the discovery.
Ms. Bergmann insisted in interviews that when they arrived for their early morning meeting that the lights in the office were off. Her signed police deposition, however, states that the lights were on when they arrived. Don Graham of D-Train Security originally stated, and his notes confirmed, that when he checked the office complex around midnight, the doors were locked and the lights off. Later, however, he changed his story, saying that he might have missed checking the lights and doors at all that night.