Posted on 08/31/2015 4:10:15 AM PDT by don-o
Ive reported at length before about various reasons to question the official government narrative surrounding the chaotic and violent incident that resulted in nine people shot to death and 18 wounded and 177 arrested outside the Twin Peaks restaurant in Waco, Texas, on May 17.
It all happened outside a planned meeting of a mostly political biker club coalition, the Confederation of Clubs and Independents. See here for the most recent, and here the most thorough, of that reporting.
The gag order on people involved in defending the arrested, keeping information from flowing to the public on this controversy, was successfully challenged, then alas reinstated earlier this month.
A set of autopsy reports have been issued about the dead. They are available in full at the Waco Tribune.
The Aging Rebel website, which has featured a lot of interesting reporting and speculation casting doubt on the police story, sums up the somewhat vague basics in this post.
While they do not authoritatively state any judgment on to exactly what type of bullets from what type of gun did the killingsimportant to discover how many of the deaths and woundings were caused by police themselves as opposed to out of control feuding bikersthe Aging Rebel web site sums up what they dont tell us:
They do not .disprove the notion that all, or at least most of the dead men were killed by police using M-16s and FN P90 machine guns.
Thirteen of sixteen entrance wounds were .25 inches in diameter or smaller.
FN P90s fire a round with a diameter of .224409 inches. M-16s fire slightly smaller rounds with diameters of 0.218898 inches. All but one of the victims had wounds fired from a downward trajectory. Six of the nine dead had head or neck wounds. None of the wounds contained gunshot residue which indicates that the shots were fired from at least three feet away and probably five feet or farther away. The absence of residue casts doubt on claims by prosecutors of Bandidos executing Cossacks, and Cossacks executing Bandidos. Two of the dead had large wounds consistent with a 12 gauge shotgun slug. Ten of 16 wounds were in the back, indicating that the victims were running away when they died. Seven of the wounds were fired from right to left. Six were fired from left to right.
Nine millimeter bullets have a diameter of 0.35433 inches; forty caliber handguns fire a bullet that is four tenths of an inch in diameter and 357 magnums fire rounds that are about .357 inches in diameter
Most of the recovered bullets were either highly deformed or fragmented which indicates they were fired by high velocity ..
Most police ammunition in the United States is designed to penetrate a human body to a depth of 12 inches and for that reason that ammunition is usually copper jacketed. Most of the bullets that killed at the Twin Peaks were copper jacketed .
None of the autopsies include ballistics information. Notations by eight pathologists involved in the autopsies describe bullets and bullet fragments in very general and inconsistent terms .
In other Waco news, the examining trial hearings have been happening for various of the arrested. Those proceedings are meant to ascertain whether there was sufficient cause for an arrest in the first place such that the arresteds cases should go to a grand jury for actual indictment. The results have not been encouraging about the judicial system's attitudes toward this whole mess.
A 65-year-old Bandido (one of the two biker gangs most blamed by police for the chaos) chaplain, Lawrence Yager, was found justifiably arrested, mostly because he had (legally owned and carried) guns in his possession and in his truck, although, as the Waco Tribune reported:
Yagers attorney, Landon Northcutt, of Stephenville, argued after the testimonies of Department of Public Safety Lt. Steven Schwartz and Waco police Detective Sam Key that neither officer could offer evidence that Yager conspired to commit murder, assault or any crime that day.
Yager was not wearing his cuts or colors that day and serves as chaplain for the Bandidos, a VFW post and the Texas Association of Vietnam Vets, Northcutt said.
He was wearing a Christian T-shirt. He was there to minister to people who need him. That is what he does. He is retired. That is all he does, Northcutt told the judge.
The Waco Tribunes reporting from the examining trial (where standards for keeping the defendant in the system are far lower than probable cause) of married couple William and Morgan English is a good window into the standards that went into many, likely most, of the arrests that day:
Department of Public Safety Lt. Steven Schwartz, a 17-year department veteran, testified at the morning hearing that William and Morgan English wore patches that identified them as members of a group called Distorted .
He said he thinks the Englishes were aware of the rift between the Cossacks and Bandidos and they were there that day as a show of support for the Bandidos.
But under cross-examination from [the Englishes' lawyer Paul] Looney, Schwartz said neither he nor other DPS investigators were aware that the seven-member Distorted group existed before May 17
Schwartz said they wore patches that said they support the Bandidos, so that tells him they are at least somewhat involved in criminal activity.
He said he saw nothing that day and has developed no subsequent evidence to show the Englishes are involved in criminal activity ..
Schwartz agreed with Looney that the Englishes were cooperative and agreed to talk to investigators after the shooting.
He said they told police that one of their friends brought a gun with him, but they left it locked up in the car.
Other than that, all we have is that they were merely present at a murder. Correct? Looney asked.
Correct, Schwartz said.
Only two of the 177 bikers who were arrested on engaging in organized criminal activity charges remain jailed in McLennan County.
Texas Lawyer magazine sums up the grand jury process at work in this case, which wont see any of the arrested having any chance to clear their names until October, five months after the arrest.
Former Reason intern Jeff Winkler, writing in Texas Monthly, reports on various biker theories as to what was really up at Twin Peaks that day, reported from a planned rally in support of the arrested bikers that was shut down by a bomb scare last week.
Winkler's story ends with a touching scene of various bikers visiting the scene of the crime, treating it like an eerie combination of war memorial and live crime investigation, speculating on what sort of bullets from whom could have taken down biker comrades. (Many are quite sure a sniper was on the roof of a nearby restaurant shooting into the crowd.)
And two non-biker patrons on the scene are suing the restaurant for damages, claiming they were emotionally traumatized and received cuts and bruises at the scene, and that Twin Peaks was negligent for allowing the biker meeting to occur there in the first place after receiving warnings from police not to do so.
I talked briefly on the phone today with lawyer Clint Broden, who represents three of the people arrested that day. Besides confirming the history of the gag order being overturned then reimposed, when asked for any opinions about the relevance of, say, the inconclusive autopsy report, this lawyer representing clients in a matter of intense public interest involving possible criminal malfeasance by police could only beg off.
Hes under a gag order.
Long post with no real new information. That’s what I expect for the next two to three years as they drag this out until there is no coverage and the defendants are broken and desperate for anything. The Sixth Amendment means no more to these corrupt officials than the First through the Fifth.
Consider for a moment the response of the media had the dead been members of the Gansta Disciples, Crips, or La Raza.
I anticipate we will find out that law enforcement killed most or all of the people and that they will do their best to cover this up, as they have been doing. They will get away with murder.
I am aware of that. As this is being slow walked and the matter is under a gag order and the msm lost interest early, all we get is review and synopsis from "alternative media".
There are too many unanswered questions to let it just go away.
“Nine millimeter bullets have a diameter of 0.35433 inches; forty caliber handguns fire a bullet that is four tenths of an inch in diameter and 357 magnums fire rounds that are about .357 inches in diameter ”
The diameters of these rounds change as they go through a gun barrel and become ballistic, don’t they?
There must be something in the water around Waco. While this doesn’t rise to the level of the Branch Davidian massacre, this shows the same spirit of lawless government that has blood on its hands.
Bullets are a few thousandths of an inch bigger than the barrel so they will seal against it.
But the bigger issue is that by their very nature, entry wounds only can give a general indication of the size of the bullet. Bullet fragments are a far better indication.
This whole thing stinks. The liability tail for any local government agency who was anywhere near this debacle is going to be stunning. People on the government side must be frantic in their attempts to contain it.
Every level of gummint, local, state, etc. coast to coast is broke. One reason this is being dragged out is they can’t afford to pay. Notice the lottery winners in Illinois are being stiffed?
That is good. I loved that guy. There he was on CNN claiming the Americans were nowhere near Baghdad. In the background an M1 tank rumbles through. Priceless!
The one here is a “professional liar” like the clintons.
I have to admit the older I get the less I understand. It seemed once, lying was something one did in the hope of being believed. Lying has become so widespread, so common, and the lies just keep getting bigger and worse but never mind. Like a crap storm they just keep coming, now with not even a veneer of being believable. My rational mind asks, what is the point of telling a lie that is a steaming turd from the begining? That should not be happening but it is to the point we are living in a waste treatment plant. I guess it means I am finally getting old enough that it about time to go. The world just does not make sense at all anymore.
When I was growing up in New Mexico the “old cowboy” types had a way of telling stories that they would settle into after we had all had a few beers. They started with “I seen it with my own eyes...”. Or “This really happened”... While they were spinning their yarn they paid careful attention to your reactions. They would start with something that was plausible but connected to the next like sausage links. As long as you were taking the bait they would just keep feeding it out. Eventually they would spin one that was clearly preposterous and, finally you would call BS. It was a dang art form. In fact, Albequerque used to have an annual “Liar’s Convention” where they would all get together.
After one reached a certain level of maturity or exposure you learned you should have called BS right at “I seen it with my own eyes...”. Still, it was fun to watch ‘em do it again and again. So when they were doing it to “the new kid” you could just watch and appreciate the “art”.
Sure describes me , have a beer on me.
I will, at 5 PM. “Miller Time”.
“...M-16s fire slightly smaller rounds with diameters of 0.218898 inches...”
Wrong. The 5.7 x 28 FN cartridge uses a .224” diameter bullet, as does the 5.56X45 NATO (M-16) cartridge. So does the near-twin, the .223 Remington. So do the 22-250, .222, and .220 swift cartridges.
The 9mm has a bullet diameter of 9.01mm (0.355 in)
no
Sgt in the Air Force did that to me. Claimed he knew Bob Dylan in NYC. Kept me going for several days....
Hey, you dint due nuttin’....
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