But what? This is from the third investigation, by then-special counsel Robert Fiske. “It involved four lawyers, five physicians, seven FBI agents, approximately 125 witnesses, and DNA tests, the Washington Post reported in 1994. "According to Fiske," the paper said, "Foster’s death was a personal collapse, not a White House scandal." He complained to his physician in Little Rock, Ark., about depression and anxiety, and his symptoms worsened when he got to Washington to work in the White House. After he bore some of the political fallout from an incident that became known as "Travelgate," in which seven White House travel office employees were "fired amid hints of financial shenanigans," he became "increasingly obsessed" with the affair and the possibility of a congressional hearing, the Washington Post said. "Though he was confident he and the White House had done nothing wrong," the paper wrote, "he told his friend Webster L. Hubbell that ‘in Washington you are assumed to have done something wrong even if you have not.’" After a series of critical editorials in the Wall Street Journal, he became more distraught, Fiske found. "His anxiety over the congressional hearings deepened," according to the Post. He told his sister he was depressed. He ultimately shot himself once in the mouth with a gun.” The truth is out there, PP. https://www.politifact.com/factchecks/2019/nov/08/facebook-posts/decades-old-conspiracy-theories-about-vince-foster/ |
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I didn't go through all 37 pages, but have people mentioned Catherine Hoggle.
It's close to home in MoCo, and I don't believe the children have ever been found? |
| Maya Millete |
Same |
Wow. Sorry that you had this in your life. |
But there’s no mystery about who killed them. |
| Bradford Bishop. I learned about his murders from this forum, and shudder every time I go by his house. That poor family. |
Police have LONG had a suspect in the 1982 Chicago area "Tylenol murders," James Lewis, but could not manage to pin it on him. For 40 years! He recently died and there was coverage of his death, revisiting the Tylenol killings that ended seven lives. I truly wish law enforcement had been able to nail him down formally and legally as the killer, so that families of the victims could have at least a little satisfaction. https://www.nbcnews.com/news/us-news/james-lewis-prime-suspect-unsolved-1982-tylenol-murders-case-dies-76-rcna93459 That case is especially close to me because I had just moved to Chicago in 1982 about a month before the poisonings started happening. i vividly recall standing in a drugstore looking at the empty shelves where the Tylenol should have been. It was chilling. All my friends and I were very rattled, as was the whole region. |
| Paul Fugate’s disappearance. |
This is my pick |
I periodically search for updates on this case and follow the thread on Websleuths. The lack of media attention and long delay by the police to release the video seem very odd to me. I don't get it. |
z Interesting. I feel like this has been determined. She died in the Sept 11 attacks |
Same here! I also regularly check in on the Dulce Alavez case. |