Tuesday, April 14, 2015

Killing Of Walter Scott Being Covered Up By Police; Seen As Initiation Into Police "Brotherhood"

By:  Marshall Ramsey II, Worthy News U.S. Correspondent

The following is an expounding of what happened in the shooting of Walter Scott.  It shows that Michael Slager, the police officer that shot and killed him, did it in cold blood, possibly as part of an initiation ritual designed to prove the loyalty of an officer for admittance into a secret police "brotherhood."  Words in italics are mine.


North Charleston officer chuckled about adrenaline rush after shooting Walter Scott

'Everything's OK. ... I just shot somebody,' Officer Michael Slager says in a call

By Jason Sickles, Yahoo
Yahoo News

Shortly after fatally shooting Walter Scott in the back, North Charleston police Officer Michael Slager nervously chuckled about his adrenaline "pumping," but also assured a caller that things would be all right, according to new audio clips published by two media outlets.

"Hey. Hey, everything's OK, OK?" Slager says in a phone call to someone believed to be his pregnant wife. "I just shot somebody. Yeah, he's OK."

        (Why did Officer Scott call his wife after shooting Walter Scott?  The only thing that comes to mind is Officer Slager knew the shooting was on purpose and called his wife in an attempt to deceive her before the news of him planting evidence, which is suggestive of a purposeful killing, reached her.)

If Slager meant Scott, then he wasn't OK. Slager fired his .45-caliber Glock eight times. Four bullets struck Scott in the back and one hit him in the ear. He died at the scene.

        (The number of shots fired by Officer Slager suggests that he intended to kill Walter Scott.  Combined with the pleasure in his voice says his adrenaline was pumping, suggests he also planned in advance to cover it up and had assurance that his fellow officers would help.)

The recording of the officer's phone call and a conversation with a supervisor at the scene doesn't show Slager -- It's audio only, from the patrolman's uniform microphone that's synched with his squad car's dashboard camera.

Last week, the South Carolina Law Enforcement Division (SLED) made public 4 minutes and 22 seconds of the dashcam video showing Slager stopping Scott for a broken taillight and then giving chase when Scott took off on foot prior to the shooting.

        (That the amount of dashcam video released is 4 minutes and 22 seconds is significant.  As reported in another story, the number 11 is often used as a call sign to "occult" members of allegiance to a particular group or cause.  The use of the number 22 (2x11) in the SLED release of dashcam footage indicates that Officer Michael Slager was "on the inside," and that SLED would be participating in the cover-up of Walter Scott's murder.

        (Another indication that Officer Slager is part of "the Brotherhood" is also contained in the length of dashcam footage released.  Two plus two equals four.  When you put both fours beside each other you get 44, or forty-four, which is arrived at by multiplying 4x11.  Since we have multiple occurrences of the number 11, this would suggest that Officer Slager's assassination of Walter Scott was ritualistic in nature, possibly an initiation into the 'Brotherhood,' a "secret" grouping of police officers who willingly cover up one anothers' crimes.)

But on Sunday, The Guardian published quotes from audio after the fatal shooting. The newspaper said Slager's patrol car picked up a total of about an hour of audio. On Monday, the Charleston Post and Courier obtained the same extended recordings.

        (This statement suggests that SLED deliberately suggested that there was not much footage and any "relevant" footage would show show that Officer Slager was guilty of anything except doing his job.  This is immediate proof of a cover-up by SLED, and proof that a secret "brotherhood" exists among law enforcement officials.)

Yahoo News emails to North Charleston Police and SLED, the agency investigating the shooting, were not immediately returned on Monday. Thom Berry, a spokesman for SLED, told The Guardian that he had not been able to confirm it, but that the person heard on the audio appears to have been Slager.

        (The weakly delivered statement by Thom Berry, spokesman for SLED, suggests that he knew Officer Slager was trying to become one of the "in crowd" but was unable to directly deny any guilt that would be assigned to Officer Slager because of a witness's cell phone video.)

The April 4 shooting was captured on another video taken by a witness. Police and Slager initially said that Scott, 50, was shot after a skirmish over the officer's Taser stun gun. But when the witness video showed Scott being shot eight times as he ran away, Slager was fired and charged with murder. The footage also shows Slager dropping an object -- which has the appearance of a Taser -- on the ground near Scott's body.

        (Another piece of evidence showing an attempt to cover up the guiltiness of Michael Slager is evidenced by the North Charleston Police Department's reaction before and after the witness video.  As evidenced in the text above, the police had prepared a statement saying that Officer Slager feared for his life and thus shot and killed Walter Scott.  However, when video surfaced that showed Mr. Scott running away from Officer Slager and even showed Officer Slager dropping what appeared to be a Taser near Mr. Scott, they quickly changed their story, arresting Office Slager and charging him with murder.

        (But what about the number 50 since the number 11 is being used?  In the Bible, the number 50 is connected to the year of jubilee, a time of great celebration for the Israelites.  It is possible that Officer Slager went through both the beginning and advanced stages of initiation into the 'Brotherhood' and completed them successfully.  The killing of Walter Scott appears to have been the final 'capstone' signifying his complete allegiance.  This would have been met with much celebration, likely in a private ceremony away from his girlfriend.)

In the audio clip the newspaper posted online, Slager answers a call after what sounds like an iPhone ringtone. After assuring the caller that he is OK, he appears to briefly describe what happened.

"He grabbed my Taser, yeah. Yeah, he was running from me. I'm good. I just wanted to let you know."

        (This appears to be the pregnant girlfriend.)

Through a spokeswoman, Andy Savage, Slager's defense attorney, declined to discuss the new audio recordings.

The conversation between Slager and the unidentified supervisor appears to come from inside a patrol car. The dialogue is standard fare following an officer-involved shooting, but the sort of stuff that is rarely heard by the public.

"What happens next?" Slager, an officer for five years, can be heard asking. The supervisor tells him he'll be transported to police headquarters before being taken home.

"Take your crap off, take your vest off, kind of relax for two or three," the senior officer says.

        (What is meant here is two or three days.)

"It'll be real quick," he continues. "They're gonna tell you you're gonna be out for a couple of days, and you'll come back and they'll interview you then. They're not going to ask you any kind of questions right now. They'll take your weapon and we'll go from there. That's pretty much it."

        (This describes Officer Slager's supervisor telling him what will happen as part of the cover-up.  It would seem that not only is Officer Slager and his supervisor invovled, but also other police in the department as well.)

The supervisor tells Slager that it is likely to be a few days before he has to give an official account of what happened.

        (What is not visible to the naked eye is the fact that during the time of the shooting of Walter Scott and the "official" investigation into his death, Officer Slager has plenty of time to write down what happened and then change it as best he can so that his "official" story takes away the blood guiltiness of his purposeful killing of Mr. Scott.)

"The last one we had, they waited a couple of days to interview officially, like, sit down and tell what happened," he says.

        (This statement let's us know that this sort of thing has happened before, on a repeated basis, and that cover-ups have been made by supervisors and internal investigators multiple times.  Any statement by SLED regarding their suspicion of Officer Slager's official story are false.  It is an attempt by them to cover up their own guilitiness and their attempt to cover up the existence of the brotherhood.  A known symbol of "the Brotherhood" is a black flag with a blue strip across the center.)

Then he leaves him with some advice.

"By the time you get home, it would probably be a good idea to kind of jot down your thoughts on what happened," he says. "You know, once the adrenaline quits pumping."

"It's pumping," Slager says, laughing nervously.

        (The distinctive sound of pleasure can be heard in Officer Slager's voice in the audio recording.  This suggests that not only did Officer Slager know that shooting Michael Scott was unnecessary, but shot Mr. Scott for 'the thrill of the kill.')



Source article:  http://news.yahoo.com/walter-scott-shooting-north-charleston-police-officer-michael-slager-audio-183104915.html

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