Come on guys, let’s put away the tin-foil.
Megan Kelly was clear that Di-Natale had just learned of a serious medical condition.
As a cancer survivor, I’m not justifying suicide.
I’m just saying that Megan seemed pretty matter of fact about the motivation.
If it’s a deniable hit, it has to be a plausible cause of death. Breitbart, stressed and overweight, “heart attack.” Michael Hastings, new high-speed Mercedes coupe (with wi-fi link) accelerates to top speed of 130mph and hits a tree without touching the brakes.
Sure, this could be suicide. But if a target had PTSD or depression, an overdose or a bullet in the head would be logical choices.
Once a Romanian exile writer was jabbed with an umbrella and died from Ricin injected in a tiny particle. One Russian exile had radioactive polonium dust sprinkled on his salad.
Sometimes a hit is meant to be known as a hit. Sometimes it’s meant to appear to be a natural or plausible death.
The intel services can even put drops in your shoes that will poison you very slowly.
And poison is very sneaky. Many organic compounds break down naturally in the dead body, and are not traceable after the first few days. Unless the pathologist knows the exact poison suspected and test for it immediately, (out of thousands of compounds), it will never be traceable later on.
Murder is one of the easiest crimes for crooked intel agencies to carry out and get away with.
There just seems to be a lot of these medical conditions of reporters and journalists who just happen to be on our side.
>> “Megan Kelly was clear that Di-Natale had just learned of a serious medical condition” (right after he died!)
Nothing better than convincing your target they have an extremely fatal disease and having them kill themselves. No 'evidence' to deal with.
Here is an AOL post with photos and a lot of comments.
http://www.aol.com/article/2014/12/12/veteran-news-correspondent-found-dead/21115385/?cps=gravity