1: The bullets were blanks. I've watched this shooting from both POV's dozens of times. Allison Parker (what was up with that black bracelet around her leg?) was shot five times in the neck, chest, torso, and shoulder area. She jittered and jerked a little, for effect, and opened her mouth and tried to look as terrified as possible, but if those had been real bullets, at that close range, there would have been instant blood, visible holes in her clothing, she would have been knocked back, and she would've dropped to the ground in only a few seconds. Remember the video of Walter Scott being shot and killed in North Charleston SC by policeman Michael Slager?
Walter dropped to the ground dead in seconds and was shot from a further distance away than Allison Parker was! But Allison took at least eight "bullets" at close range without even losing her footing, and then turned around and ran, breakneck speed, away out of view, continuing to scream and shriek the entire time, through lungs that should have been punctured. No bloodstains were visible on the boardwalk or on the wooden handrails. The older woman, wearing white, was shot too; no marks on her either. And that's the whitest black-man hand I've ever seen. Come on!
No muzzle flash. No shell casings were ejected. Those were blanks.
2. Chris Hurst, Parker's boyfriend, is a crisis actor. He tweeted about her death at 6:32. That's 14 minutes before it actually happened. Those tweets were removed. He spent all day tweeting. He was not grieving. He SMILED the entire time during his interview about what happened. He went on about how "uncomfortable" it was for him to be on the "other side" of the camera, and to "have cameras pointed in his face." When asked to recount what happened, from the beginning, he dodged the question and instead lauded her accomplishments at WDBJ 7 making sure to plug the station's call letters. (DBJ stands for Did a Bad Job)
Audio Interview of Chris Hurst
He was very desperate for attention, and his voice showed no signs of sadness, shock, or legitimate grief. He then bizarrely followed this up by showing reporters a scrapbook of pictures, to try to prove, in a "you believe me, don't you?" manner, that he was really in a relationship with Allison Parker.
This man is clearly a crisis actor. A worse actor than Robbie Parker of Sandy Hook. Odd how the name Parker keeps showing up wherever there is a government psy-op.
3. BBC's journalists Franz Strasser and Tara McKelvey were ordered by Virginia State Police to delete their footage of the crash of the suspect's car.
And of course our suspect, Bryce Williams a/k/a Vester Flanagan, is reported dead, by suicide. How typical.
4. Right away, a MANIFESTO from the suspect surfaces (but we're never shown the whole thing, just some quotes):
"Also, I was influenced by Seung-Hui Cho. That's my boy right there. He got NEARLY double the amount that Eric Harris and Dylann Klebold got... just sayin," Flanagan wrote. "Yes, it will sound like I am angry... I am. And I have every right to be. But when I leave this Earth, the only emotion I want to feel is peace [...] The church shooting was the tipping point... but my anger has been building steadily... I've been a human powder keg for a while... just waiting to go BOOM!!!!"
5. Right away, Hillary's ready to ban guns:
"We have got to do something about gun violence in America. And I will take it on," Clinton said. "It's a very political, difficult issue in America. But I believe we are smart enough, we are compassionate enough, to figure out how to balance the legitimate Second Amendment rights with preventive measures and control measures so that whatever motivated this murderer who eventually took his own life, we will not see more deaths, needless, senseless deaths." Clinton also called for universal background checks on guns.
THIS IS THE SLOPPIEST FALSE FLAG THEY HAVE EVER TRIED. Even sloppier than Sandy Hook!
Comment
BBC reporters Franz Strasser and Tara McKelvey encountered a big obstacle in their coverage of a double slaying of journalists at a Virginia mall.
The two reporters were covering the manhunt of the suspected shooter when they were ordered to delete footage by police. On Wednesday night, Corinne Geller, the statewide public relations manager for the Virginia State Police, tweeted at Strasser.
The incident occured after Allison Parker, 24, and Adam Ward, 27, were fatally shot while reporting live for WDBJ7 at a shopping mall in Monetta, Virginia. The woman they interviewed was also wounded.
During the ensuing manhunt, Vester Lee Flanagan, the suspected gunman, shot himself after police chased his car. The Virginia State police issued a statement on their Facebook page:
“The suspect vehicle refused to stop and sped away from the trooper. Minutes later, the suspect vehicle ran off the road and crashed. The troopers approached the vehicle and found the male driver suffering from a gunshot wound. He is being transported to a nearby hospital for treatment of life-threatening injuries,” the report says. Flanagan later died, the BBC reported.
The BBC reporters, Strasser and McKelvey, were reporting from the scene of the crash when they were told by police to delete their video footage.
According to Strasser’s Twitter feed, the reporters were left with only low-quality iPhone footage.
It’s not the first time reporters in Virginia have had trouble filming police. Just last year WTVR-TV in Richmond reported on two incidents involving police officers and cellphones in Petersburg and Norfolk. According to the ACLU of Virginia, their office has documented citizens who have been charged for filming police — usually as a violation of wiretapping laws.
Jeff Marks, the general manager of WDBJ, says Flanagan used to work at WDBJ, but was ousted two years ago for an undisclosed reason. Following his dismissal, Flannagan filed a complaint against the station in 2014 with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, accusing various staffers of making racial comments. That complaint was eventually dismissed. It wasn’t Flannagan’s first time making such allegations against an employer. In 2000, he filed a discrimination lawsuitagainstTallahassee TV station WTWC. The case was settled out of court in 2001.
Marks called WDBJ’s Parker and Ward “the kindest and nicest people who worked here…I can’t figure out any connection.”
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