This is why the coroner knows what happened and has known since the first few minutes he spent with the bodies. That report tells the story. If it supported LE it would be known. Go back and look at any other case you wish. These reports are only suppressed when they hurt the case. Look at Baltimore. The State Attorney still won’t release the report on Freddie Gray. When the report exonerates they have the coroner under the Klieg lights ASAP.
Exactly. If the police reports, medical reports, audiotapes and videotapes were exculpatory, they would already be out.
Instead, the Waco PD has clamped censorship over the entire case.
This was just copied from Aging Rebel’s latest:
WACO SO FAR
It has been 19 days since the worst episode of biker violence in the history of the United States.
There were no homicides at Hollister in 1947 or at two motorcycle riots in Riverside, California in the ensuing year. There were three homicides in Harrahs Casino during the Laughlin Riot in 2002. There was one homicide in the Sparks Shootout in 2011. There were nine homicides in the Waco Massacre on May 17 and although the police might not have killed all nine or shot 17 more they have been acting like they did ever since.
Waco police immediately sealed the entire shopping center, the Central Texas Market Place, in which the homicides and other injuries occurred and kept it closed for 72 hours while all evidence and possible evidence including an unknown number of private cars, trucks and motorcycles was removed and hidden. Police spokesman W. Patrick Swanton immediately tried to panic the nation into blind acquiescence with a storyline that made Tom Laughlins The Born Losers look thoughtful and subtle.
One hundred seventy-six people were arrested with the probable cause that they were bikers so they probably caused the deaths and injuries. Effectively, small town officials in Waco were given carte blanche to ruin the lives of scores of completely innocent people.
http://www.agingrebel.com/12981
More from Aging Rebel: “WACO SO FAR”
Habeas Corpus
Waco is not a murder story. Waco is first and foremost an example of how easily Americans can be denied fundamental human rights. Secondly, it illustrates how uninterested most of America is in the fundamental human rights of their fellow citizens. There is no national outcry over the falsely imprisoned. The President has not heard of it. Neither has Hillary Clinton.
It is particularly ironic that all this is happening so close to the 800th anniversary of the signing of the Magna Carta which established the basic right of all the English speaking peoples of habeas corpus which can be broadly defined to mean that a free man cannot be imprisoned without a formal statement of specifically what he did and to whom. Waco has repealed habeas corpus.
Yesterday, Waco also repealed the Texas Public Information Act which is intended to provide the public with basic information about police and other governmental affairs: Like for example, the unredacted front page of all police reports. Yesterday, 18 days after the massacre that sent the nation and most of the Western World into a panic, the Waco police released 19 random pages, including one mostly blank page, after repeated requests by local and national news media. In a formal request for the Texas Attorney Generals permission to break the law, an assistant Waco city attorney wrote, The need to withhold the information pertaining to an open and pending case in order to deal with the detection, investigation, and/or prosecution of a crime is a compelling reason for nondisclosure.