Posted on 03/22/2017 3:32:29 AM PDT by gaggs
A CIA secret weapon used for assassination shoots a small poison dart to cause a heart attack, as explained in Congressional testimony in the short video below. The dart from this secret CIA weapon can penetrate clothing and leave nothing but a tiny red dot on the skin. On penetration of the deadly dart, the individual targeted for assassination may feel as if bitten by a mosquito, or they may not feel anything at all. The poisonous dart completely disintegrates upon entering the target.
(Excerpt) Read more at commonsenseevaluation.com ...
Yeh ask Andrew Breitbart.
Reminds me of the pen invented in WWII that fired a phonograph needle. Used by Allied underground in France.
Then there was a claim a weapon could be made to shoot ice which would melt after killing the victim leaving no trace. Never heard anymore about it.
I imagine there are things out there we have no idea about.
Second that emotion!
Dig deeper, now we find not only a way to cause heart attacks, we’ve found ‘a way’ to hijack computers in cars that they can be seen to crash into trees, poles. Same difference, ‘They’ are able to kill us making it seem to be God’s plan when, in fact, it was THEIRS
Shine the light on these power players who wish us harm.
And how would that work? It has to cause trauma to kill. If an ice bullet, the guy would die of a gunshot wound with no bullet for examination, but the cause of death wouldn't be in doubt, there would be a hole.
That idea is mentioned at the beginning of the 1975 movie "Three Days of the Condor" starring Robert Redford...
In a tragic accident, he smothered himself with a pillow at a remote western ranch.
I’m familiar with the ice bullet concept, but the only ‘not a trace’ would be a lack of a slug, not a cause of death. If it kills you, there is a trace. A natural occurring substance, adrenaline, acetylcholine, can all be used ‘without a trace’ if the autopsy is less than thorough.
Death by impact always leaves a trace whether the impact producer is found or not.
Thanks, WildHighlander.
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