-Caveat Lector-
this is an article from Guardian unlimited written in June this year 4 soldiers have commited suicide in army baracks and the body of collinson is being exhumed today with the consent of his parents they do not believe their son committed suicide, I hope they get to the bottom of this.In my mind it smacks of mind control.
And what about your busdriver in the states?We did not get much news on this here in england.It is the second one to occur over there is this mind control as well?
Delta Programming known as killer programming has been used to train special agents and elite soldiers in covert operations. Subjects are devoid of fear and very systematic in carrying out their assignments.Self destruct or suicide instructions are layered in at this level.
The Mermaid x
 Key evidence on deaths of soldiers destroyed

Nick Hopkins, crime correspondent
Friday July 26, 2002
The Guardian


Crucial evidence at the heart of reinvestigation into the mysterious deaths of two soldiers at an army barracks in Surrey has been destroyed, the Guardian has learned.

Surrey police's inquiry into the shootings of privates Geoff Gray and James Collinson has been severely hampered because clothes and documents relating to rifles have not been kept by the army.

In the case of Pte Gray, 17, detectives were particularly keen to re-examine the gloves he was wearing on the night he died, as well as other items of his kit. But police have been told all these possessions have been destroyed.

Relatives of the two soldiers have challenged the army's assertion that the two teenagers committed suicide when they were based at the Queen Elizabeth barracks, headquarters of the Royal Logistics Corps at Deepcut, Surrey. Pte Gray died in September last year and Pte Collinson in March this year.

The relatives have demanded a public inquiry and they are bound to be dismayed by the latest developments.

Concern about the circumstances of the deaths, which were originally investigated by the army's special investigation branch, led Surrey police to launch its own inquiry involving 30 officers.

Since then, the force has also agreed to reinvestigate the deaths of two other soldiers, privates Sean Benton, 20, and Cheryl James, 18, who died at the Deepcut base within six months of each other in 1995.

Earlier this month, the Commons defence committee declared it intended to launch its own inquiry into all four deaths once detectives had completed their work.

Loss of evidence in the cases of Pte Gray and Pte Collinson has frustrated police efforts. A senior army officer has told the inquiry that all Pte Gray's clothes had been destroyed. Log books recording serial numbers of the SA-80 rifles he and Pte Collinson were as signed on the days they died were also destroyed within hours of the shootings.

This means Surrey police cannot corroborate whether the weapons that were found by their bodies were their own, or were assigned to other soldiers at the base.

Detectives also discovered that the rifle found alongside the body of Pte Gray had been earmarked for destruction and was only retained by chance.

Campaigners, including MPs, have found Pte Gray's death particularly perplexing. He was shot twice - the bullet wounds were above each eye.

His body was found 50 minutes after shots were fired at a spot near a perimeter fence that had already been searched four times.

The army has consistently played down fears that Pte Gray and the other soldiers were victims of crime and said suicide rates within the armed forces are no higher than in civilian life.

However, the Ministry of Defence has been stung by a string of recent allegations regarding bullying at the barracks.

Yesterday a former soldier, Trevor Hunter, 27, claimed Pte Benton suffered vicious verbal attacks and humiliating abuse that may have led him to commit suicide. He was found with five bullet wounds to his chest in June 1995.

Mr Hunter said Pte Benton was beaten up in his quarters and was thrown out of his second storey bedroom window. He claimed one sergeant took a particular dislike to him.

"This sergeant would pull him out in front of everyone and push him around. He would brag about the bullying. Sean was a genuinely good bloke, and I would say he had the makings of a good career in the army, but unfortunately certain people at that time didn't like him."

Surrey police refused to comment about developments in the investigation. "This is an ongoing inquiry and it would be inappropriate," said a spokeswoman.

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