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Is Milosevic at risk from the authorities at The Hague 'tribunal'? Prof. 
Gil-White examines the alleged suicide of Slavko Dokmanovic...

Part 2: Murder At The Hague?  
by Francisco J. Gil-White 

[Posted 4 November 2002] 
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
http://www.psych.upenn.edu/~fjgil/

Continued from Part 1 at http://emperors-clothes.com/gilwhite/d1.htm 

================================================== 
** The Washington Post Weighs In **

In the following report, published on June 30th (the day after Dokmanovic's 
death was announced), the Washington Post brought the story to new heights of 
creativity. [7]

[Start Washington Post Quote]

“Officials at the U.N. war crimes tribunal in The Hague concluded that the 
death of Slavko Dokmanovic, 48, was a suicide. He had complained of 
depression, they said, and on a doctor's recommendation Sunday night had been 
put under medication and subjected to stepped-up monitoring with his cell 
lights permanently switched on. Dokmanovic's 13-square-yard cell was lighted 
when a guard passed on a half-hourly round at 11:30 p.m., tribunal sources 
said. But at the midnight check, the lights were off -- deliberately 
short-circuited.

The suspect had been able to get the locked cell door open, and in the 
darkness hanged himself with an unspecified kind of cord suspended from a 
door hinge, the sources said.

...Christian Chartier, a spokesman for the tribunal, said the monitoring of 
Dokmanovic was ‘not a suicide watch.’

However, he said that in 1997 ‘for the same reasons’ Dokmanovic had been put 
under even closer observation that included round-the-clock video 
surveillance.”

[End Washington Post Quote]

Deconstructing the absurdities in this tale takes some work because there are 
so many of them, and so we have to take turns holding some of them constant 
while considering the others. For example, we are told that Dokmanovic 
*unlocked his cell door*! Why would Dokmanovic do that? 

According to Facts on File, the ICTY’s detention center is a 
“heavily-monitored high-security prison.”[8] I consulted Sergeant Walsh, of 
the 18th District Philadelphia Police Department, about how such a prison 
functions. He told me that in high-security prisons, the cell doors open 
*out* -- that is, away from the prisoner's cell. This puts the hinge knuckles 
outside the cell, so that prisoners cannot get to them.

Therefore, Dokmanovic cannot use the hinge of his cell door to hang himself 
unless he first opens the door, looping the "unspecified cord" around the 
hinge. Apparently this is why the Washington Post 'explains' that Dokmanovic 
unlocked the door to his cell.

Sergeant Walsh told me that the locks on cell doors in high-security prisons 
are not the sort of thing anybody can pick. A world-class professional 
burglar or locksmith would have a difficult time even if (1) he had ample 
time; (2) he did not fear discovery; and (3) he was on the *outside* of the 
cell. 

On the outside...!

As sergeant Walsh explained, in such prisons, “The doors are perfectly smooth 
on the inside…there is no door knob and there is no way-lock.”

It is worth pausing a moment to ponder that point: there is nothing to pick 
on the inside.

Even if Dokmanovic, a small-town mayor, had the skills of a world-class 
burglar who could pick the lock to a cell in a “heavily monitored 
high-security prison”; even if he could do this despite the fact that he was 
an especially monitored prisoner who was checked every 30 minutes; even if he 
could do it in under 30 minutes and still have time enough to short-circuit 
the light, hang himself, and suffocate to death... ...even with all this, he 
couldn't very well pick a lock that wasn't there!

What is going on here...?

Let's begin with the *least damning interpretation*.

This would say that the tribunal authorities indeed did find Dokmanovic 
hanging from the hinge to his cell door. When they realized that Dokmanovic 
could only have done this by first unlocking the door, they concluded that he 
unlocked it.

But, of course, if interpreting Dokmanovic's death as 'suicide' requires that 
he perform miracles, the Tribunal authorities should really be concluding 
that *he was murdered*. So you see the problem: they did *not* conclude that. 
And so the *least* damning interpretation asks us to believe the Tribunal 
authorities are mentally retarded.

We should prefer an interpretation that does not force us to accept 
absurdities or to assume the Tribunal authorities are imbeciles. 

Such an alternative interpretation is readily available.

Suppose the Tribunal *lied* when they claimed that Dokmanovic committed 
suicide by hanging himself on the hinge to his cell door. And suppose the 
Tribunal authorities did so in order *to hide their complicity in 
Dokmanovic's murder*.

Like most hastily concocted lies, it wasn't very good. After telling the lie, 
someone realized that for the official story to be true, Dokmanovic would 
have to unlock his cell door in order to get to the hinge and thus hang 
himself. So what The Hague did was simply claim just that: Dokmanovic somehow 
"had been able to get the locked cell door open."

My hypothesis that the Tribunal officials are 

covering up a murder easily accounts for their absurd and contradictory 
explanations. What it doesn't account for, however, is why the Washington 
Post and other papers print these absurdities without the slightest bit of 
analysis -- nay, without the slightest bit of surprise! Why, for example, did 
the Post not ask how Dokmanovic could possibly have picked the lock on his 
cell door? Why didn't they at least *remark* on what a spectacular feat this 
was? A feat worthy of Houdini!

It is clear by now that the Tribunal (and the Washington Post?) must be lying.

However, it is worth looking at the remaining details, because they are 
chock-full of absurdities that are, again, consistent with a hasty cover-up, 
rather than a straightforward reporting of the facts.

For example, notice that for the Tribunal's story to be true, it is not 
sufficient for Dokmanovic to have *unlocked* the door. In order to hang 
himself, he would also have to open his cell door *all the way*, for only 
then could he pass the "unspecified cord" completely *around* the hinge. The 
looping of the cord isn't easy because the opening is narrow. If you try this 
at home you will see the difficulties. 

According to Sergeant Walsh, there is always a guard on duty in the cellblock 
of a high-security prison. How can a prisoner “subjected to stepped-up 
monitoring” in a “heavily-monitored high-security prison” get away with 
opening his cell door *all the way*, and fiddling awkwardly to pass the 
"unspecified cord" around the hinge without the guard noticing? And why 
didn't the Post ask this question?

This is not the end of the absurdities. The Post wrote that:

[Start Post Excerpt]

...on a doctor's recommendation Sunday night [Dokmanovic] had been put under 
medication and subjected to stepped-up monitoring with his cell lights 
permanently switched on.... But at the midnight check, the lights were off -- 
deliberately short-circuited.

[End Post Excerpt]

Sergeant Walsh explained that, in a high-security prison, “any lights that 
would go off in the cells should be noticed immediately…[because] there is a 
‘turn-key,’ who is a cell block attendant, who monitors the cells the whole 
time. There is always somebody in the cell block.” 

So, given that Dokmanovic was, according to the Post, “subjected to 
stepped-up monitoring with his cell lights permanently switched on,” 
wouldn’t the fact that his light suddenly went off be noticed -- and noticed 
immediately? And with alarm? After all, a short-circuit would either blow a 
fuse or bust a circuit breaker and cause other lights to go off as well!

And yet, the Post would have you believe that Dokmanovic *first* shorted the 
light, and *then* -- despite calling attention to himself in this way -- 
managed to commit suicide without getting noticed...

And why on earth would Dokmanovic *want* to short-circuit his light in the 
first place? The Post doesn't even ask the question (the most elementary 
analysis is apparently not their trade). The fact is, there is simply no good 
reason for Dokmanovic to do this, which becomes obvious if we consider the 
various possibilities.

For example, imagine Dokmanovic shorting the light before he miraculously 
picked the nonexistent door lock. This only adds to his miracles, because it 
means he performed this impossible feat *in darkness*. Or imagine Dokmanovic 
shorting the light *after* he opened the door. As noted above, this would 
attract attention just at the moment when Dokmanovic needed to open the door 
wide, pass the "unspecified cord" over the hinge, and then shut the door 
again. So that doesn't work either. But if we imagine instead that Dokmanovic 
shorted the light after he shut the door again, this is hardly better. That 
would attract attention to himself when he needs a bit of time to suffocate.

There is simply no good reason for a suicidal Dokmanovic to short the light 
in his cell!

Liars often add novelistic details. The tidbit about short-circuiting the 
light generates the image of a carefully planned jail break, pulled straight 
out of some genre movie. The reader suspends disbelief and imagines a 
Dokmanovic determined to commit suicide. But liars often to talk too long, 
and add too many details. A brief examination has made it clear that a 
suicidal Dokmanovic would have to be an idiot to think that shorting the 
light would help him commit suicide (and yet a genius to pick a high-security 
lock that isn't even there).

Finally, consider the prevarications of the Tribunal spokesman, Christian 
Chartier.

In the Associated Press story quoted earlier, we read that, "Chartier said 
Dokmanovic had complained to guards Sunday afternoon that he was not feeling 
well, and he was placed on a suicide watch." [3] But according to the Post, 
"Christian Chartier, a spokesman for the tribunal, said the monitoring of 
Dokmanovic was ‘not a suicide watch.’" [7]

If Dokmanovic was murdered, then Chartier's initial claim that Dokmanovic was 
on suicide watch was meant to make him appear suicidal (only a plausibly 
suicidal person would be put on suicide watch). But perhaps then somebody 
pointed out that a suicide watch involves round-the-clock video surveillance, 
in which case how could Dokmanovic hang himself? To fix this, Chartier 
reversed himself, telling the Post that "the monitoring of Dokmanovic was 
‘not a suicide watch’".

But notice that he *again* insinuated that Dokmanovic was suicidal by stating 
that "in 1997 ‘for the same reasons’ Dokmanovic had been put under 
round-the-clock video surveillance." In other words, *for the same reasons* 
that brought about his death by suicide!

As with the Tribunal's other attempts to patch up their lies, this patch has 
problems. According to Chartier, says the Post, “[Dokmanovic] had complained 
of depression…and on a doctor's recommendation…had been put under medication 
and subjected to stepped-up monitoring with his cell lights permanently 
switched on.” 

Let's get this straight. In the past, "for the same reasons" (i.e. suicidal 
behavior) Dokmanovic was put on 24-hour video surveillance -- also known as a 
*suicide watch*. But *this* time, despite becoming so depressed that he was 
medicated and subjected to stepped-up monitoring, he was *not* put on suicide 
watch?

That is absurd.

Continued in Part 3 at http://emperors-clothes.com/gilwhite/d3.htm

[Footnotes Follow The Appeal]
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FOOTNOTES
*********

[7] The Washington Post,  June 30, 1998, Tuesday, Final Edition,  A SECTION; 
Pg. A11,  551 words,  Serb Found Hanged in U.N. Prison; War-Crime Suspect's 
Death Called Suicide,  Charles Trueheart, Washington Post Foreign Service,  
PARIS, June 29

[8] “Hague officials also said that an investigation would be launched into 
questions of how the suicide had gone undetected in the heavily monitored 
high-security prison, which was located in the nearby town of Scheveningen.” 
Facts on File World News Digest,  July 2, 1998,  EUROPE ; Croatia,  Pg. 458 
G3,  163 words,  War Crimes Suspect Commits Suicide;

“Red brick walls stretch around the high-security compound here, the largest 
prison in the Netherlands, with close to 750 inmates. Within this compound, 
invisible from the road, lies the modern, independent cell block, built by 
the Dutch government and leased to the tribunal. Last year, its budget was 
$3.3 million, paid for by the United Nations.” The New York Times,  July 15, 
2001, Sunday, Late Edition - Final,  Section 1; Page 8; Column 1; Foreign 
Desk,  1502 words,  Milosevic's Abode: 10 by 17 Feet but No Dungeon,  By 
MARLISE SIMONS,  SCHEVENINGEN, the Netherlands
 
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