Wednesday, February 17, 2016

An expert's reaction on investigation into the death of #AntoninScalia: "I almost fell out of my chair"

That was the reported reaction of a Bill Ritchie, a retired police chief and chief of criminal investigations of D.C. police to how the investigation into the death of Antonin Scalia was handled, or, rather, mishandled.

Ritchie who reportedly taught in a homicide investigation school, indicated that any death is considered a homicide until homicide is ruled out through an investigation. 

So.

It is not some much maligned "conspiracy theorist" raising questions I've been raising from the first time when Scalia's death, and how it was investigated, was reported in the press and social media.

It is a homicide expert.

As I said in my previous post on this subject, while the body was hastily embalmed without an autopsy, and some evidence is irreversibly destroyed, a lot of people who were around the place, remained.  Years and greed will do the job of disclosure.  People will come forward selling their stories.  Of course, it could be the right way - the way of government investigation into the death of a sitting U.S. Supreme Court justice under suspicious circumstances.  

Yet, if the government - as always - wants to quash embarrassing or potentially criminal information about rich and well-connected individuals who may be involved in this whole situation, we will have to rely upon greed and time to reveal the truth.


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