HINCKLEY: HIT MAN FOR THE SHADOW GOVERNMENT?
And, of course, the engagement had been canceled. . . Then a peculiar
thing happened: The story vanished. To this day, it has never been reported in
the New York Times, Washington Post or many other metropolitan newspapers, never
again mentioned by any of the television news networks, and never noted in news
magazines except for a brief mention in Newsweek, which lumped it with two
ludicrous conspiracy scenarios as if the Bush-Hinckley connection didn't deserve
some sort of explanation.
Neil Bush, a landman for Amoco Oil, told Denver reporters he had met
Scott Hinckley at a surprise party at the Bush home January 23, 1981, which was
approximately three weeks after the U.S. Department of Energy had begun what was
termed a "routine audit" of the books of the Vanderbilt Energy Corporation, the
Hinckley oil company.
In an incredible coincidence, on the morning of March 30, three
representatives of the U.S. Department of Energy told Scott Hinckley,
Vanderbilt's vice president of operations, that auditors had uncovered evidence
of pricing violations on crude oil sold by the company from 1977 through 1980.
The auditors announced that the federal government was considering a penalty of
two million dollars. Scott Hinckley reportedly requested "several hours to come
up with an explanation" of the serious overcharges. The meeting ended a little
more than an hour before John Hinckley Jr. shot President Reagan.
Although John Hinckley Sr. was characterized repeatedly by the national
news media as "a strong supporter of President Reagan," no record has been found
of contributions to Reagan. To the contrary, in addition to money given to Bush,
a fellow Texas oilman, as far back as 1970, the senior Hinckley raised funds for
Bush's unsuccessful campaign to wrest the nomination from Reagan. Furthermore,
he and Scott Hinckley separately contributed to John Connally in late 1979 when
Connally was leading the campaign to stop Reagan from gaining the 1980
presidential nomination. The Bush and Hinckley families, of course, would do
better under a Bush presidency than it would under President Reagan.
Available evidence at the time made clear many other connections between
the Bush and Hinckley families. Reported "coincidences" involving the Hinckleys
and the family of H.L. Hunt also remained unexplored. Even the official
government line admitted that the Bush and Hinckley families "maintained social
ties." The deeply troubled Hinckley oil company obviously would fare better
under a president Bush.
The assertion by the media of course, was that the assassination attempt
was nothing more than the senseless act of a deranged drifter who "did it to
impress Jodie Foster." However, that all of these "coincidences" are thoroughly
ignored by the media is also suspicious. It is also essential to understand the
travesty of the trial of John W. Hinckley, presided over by Judge Barrington D.
Parker. In May 2001, Barrington D. Parker was one of the first eleven nominees
for appointment to federal appeals courts by President George W. Bush.
According to conspiratologist Barbara Honegger, White House correspondent
Sarah McClendon made the somewhat more subjective comment that Reagan's Secret
Service retinue wasn't in its "usual tight formation" around Reagan in front of
the Hilton. Were the Gipper's bodyguards out to throw the game?
He devoured books on Sirhan Sirhan, Robert Kennedy's assassin (suspected
by many conspiracy researchers to have been hypnotically programmed), and Arthur
Bremer, who shot George Wallace. Theorists ask the inevitable questions: Was
Hinckley a mind-controlled assassin, a Manchurian Candidate programmed to
"terminate with extreme prejudice"? They point to the CIA's longtime obsession
with mind control and the fact that during the 1980 presidential primaries, Bush
- the former director of Central Intelligence - enjoyed the zealous support of
Agency regulars, who preferred their former boss to Reagan.
For an antisocial pariah, Hinckley sure got around. In October 1980, he
had flown to Nebraska in an attempt to contact a member of the American Nazi
Party. Columnist Jack Anderson later claimed that Hinckley had ties to an
American faction of the pro-Khomeini "Islamic Guerrilla Army." According to
conspiracy author Barbara Honegger, a member of that group told Anderson he had
warned the Secret Service about Hinckley's designs on Reagan - two months before
the shooting. If Anderson's source is to be believed, the Secret Service did
nothing to stop the Jihad-happy gunman.
The day after his Nazi-seeking mission, Hinckley flew to Nashville to
stalk Jimmy Carter, but was arrested at the airport when authorities discovered
three handguns in his suitcase. Oddly, after only five hours in custody, this
unstable character - who had attempted to transport weapons across state lines
and into a city soon to be visited by the president of the United States - was
fined and released without further ado. Even more oddly, the authorities
apparently didn't bother to examine his journal, which in Dear Diary fashion,
detailed Hinckley's plans to kill Carter. Was this a case of bumbling negligence
or something more ominous? Most likely they had found a perfect fall guy,
similar to Oswald, to be used in some future covert operation.
However, it was still early in his first term, and the insiders still did
not feel comfortable with him in the White House. The insider Bush, the ultimate
brown-nose of the illuminati, was someone they could count on.
Word probably came down to Bush to proceed with the assassination
attempt. At the very moment the assassination was to take place, Bush was on his
way to speak before the sinister Trilateral Commission.
Reagan was no fool. He must have at least suspected what was really
behind the assassination attempt. Close associates claim he was never the same
again after that day. Whatever plans he may have had to go against the wishes of
the shadow government, ended on March 30 1981.The remaining 8 years of his
presidency, he was reduced to following orders of the secret government.
For spiritual help, visit WWW.FHU.COM.
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