LATEST VIDEO Putin’s Novichok assassins identified. Pictured smiling, walking UK streets (Video)
The
Duran
The
Impossible Photo
5
September, 2018
Russia
has developed an astonishing new technology enabling its secret
agents to occupy precisely the same space at precisely the same time.
These
CCTV images released by Scotland yard today allegedly show Alexander
Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov both occupying exactly the same space at
Gatwick airport at precisely the same second. 16.22.43 on 2 March
2018. Note
neither photo shows the other following less than a second behind.
There
is no physically possible explanation for this. You can see ten yards
behind each of them, and neither has anybody behind for at least ten
yards. Yet they were both photographed in the same spot at the same
second.
The
only possible explanations are:
1) One of the two is travelling faster than Usain Bolt can sprint
2) Scotland Yard has issued doctored CCTV images/timeline.
1) One of the two is travelling faster than Usain Bolt can sprint
2) Scotland Yard has issued doctored CCTV images/timeline.
I
am going with the Met issuing doctored images.
UPDATE
A
number of people have pointed out a third logical possibility, that
the photographs are not of the same place and they are coming through
different though completely identical entry channels. The problem
with that is the extreme synchronicity. You can see from the photos
that the channel(s) are enclosed and quite long, and they would have
had to enter different entrances to the channels. So it is remarkable
they were at exactly the same point at the same time. Especially as
one of them appears to be holding (wheeled?) luggage and one has only
a shoulder bag.
I have traveled through Gatwick many times but cannot call to mind precisely where they are. Can anybody pinpoint the precise place in the airport? Before or after passport control? Before or after baggage collection? Before or after customs? The only part of the airport this looks like to me is shortly after leaving the plane after the bridge, and before joining the main gangway to passport control – in which case passengers are not split into separated channels at the stage this was taken. I can’t recall any close corridors as long as this after passport control. But I am open to correction.
Skripal Case: Gaping Holes in New Narrative
5
September, 2018
The
Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) named their suspects in the poisoning
of Sergei Skripal et al. today. The two men – named as Alexander
Petrov and Ruslan Boshirov – entered the country on legal VISAs but
are alleged to be travelling under aliases. The CPS has charged the
men with a laundry list of offenses, but not applied to Russia for
extradition as it is forbidden, by the Russian Constitution, for the
Russian federation to extradite a citizen.
These
are the new facts, but like all the previous announcements in this
bizarre odyssey, they present more questions than answers.
1. Why did two alleged GRU agents travel under false names and fake passports, but still use Russian names and Russian passports? If they had used EU passports – say from Lithuania or Estonia for example – they wouldn’t have needed a visa, thanks to EU freedom of movement agreements, and could still have spoken Russian without raising suspicion.
1. Why did two alleged GRU agents travel under false names and fake passports, but still use Russian names and Russian passports? If they had used EU passports – say from Lithuania or Estonia for example – they wouldn’t have needed a visa, thanks to EU freedom of movement agreements, and could still have spoken Russian without raising suspicion.
2.
Was the novichok gel or liquid? We’ve
never been given clear information on the actual poison – how
deadly it is, how it’s made, where it was applied, how long it
takes to work – all of these are complete unknowns. What sparse
information we HAVE been given is contradicted by today’s
announcements.
We
were told previously that the novichok allegedly used on the
Skripal’s was in “gel
form” and “smeared” on the front door.
Whereas the poison that Rowley and Sturgess later came in contact
with was in a perfume bottle, and therefore a liquid capable of being
atomised. These were never referenced as the same thing, until today.
Speaking
to the BBC, Scotland Yard’s Assistant Commissioner Neil Basu
claimed:
the manner in which the bottle and packaging has been adapted makes it a perfect cover for smuggling the weapon into the country, and a perfect delivery method for the attack against the Skripal’s front door”.
So
was the poison sprayed on, or smeared on? Do they have any idea?
Which brings us to the next question…
3.
How did they re-seal the perfume bottle? Assuming
that Basu is right, and the perfume bottle WAS used to attack the
Skripal’s front door, how did they re-seal it afterwards? Rowley
has always been very sure the bottle of perfume was in a sealed box
and wrapped in cellophane – here’s
a link,
with a screencap below just in case it gets memory holed.
The
police themselves don’t seem to sure on this point, Basu said:
We don’t yet know where the suspects disposed of the Novichok they used to attack the door, where Dawn and Charlie got the bottle that poisoned them, or if it is the same bottle used in both poisonings.”
We
DO know where Dawn and Charlie got the bottle that poisoned them,
Charlie said he took it from a charity
donation bin in
Amesbury on June 27th.
So
maybe they didn’t re-seal the bottle, they just brought another
one.
So
did the suspects bring TWO (identical?) bottles of poison with them?
Did they use one and leave the other one in a charity donation box in
Amesbury? Why would they do that? We are told the suspects left the
country after the attack on the Skripals on March 4th, so they must
have dumped the “perfume” the same day? Why go 8 miles out of
their way to Amesbury to do it? If they didn’t, how did it wind up
there? And how did it sit undisturbed in a charity bin for nearly 3
months?
4.
Why did no one at their hotel get sick? The
police have claimed that the hotel the two men stayed at
was “contaminated
with novichok”,
and yet no one has reported and symptoms at all.
How
can a hotel room be “contaminated” with novichok? Novichok is not
radioactive, it is a nerve agent. To contaminate the room the
suspects would have to physically apply the poison to it, and since
they allegedly left country on March 4th – the same days as the
alleged attack – the contamination must have happened BEFORE Sergei
Skripal was poisoned. How? The police are telling us the suspects
must have opened their bottle of “deadliest poison ever” the
day before they needed it AND in
their own hotel room.
Why would they do that?
We’re
told that novichok is especially potent and does not degrade, and
despite 2 months passing between the attack and police searching the
hotel, not one single person was affected. Why not?
As
usual with the Skripal Case, more questions than answers.
UPDATE:
Further
questions have been raised regarding the released “evidence” of
CCTV captures. Namely that 2 separate stills, of two separate men,
from the same CCTV camera display the exact same time, down to the
second:
This
calls into question the reliability of all the photographic/video
evidence. MoonofAlabama has an excellent write-up on this issue here,
as does Craig
Murray,
who has done great work on this case..
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