BStrong
Penultimate Amazing
HM isn't even trying anymore - wash rinse repeat and self contradictory posts are so 2017.
Evidence and Facts:
1. Colette's blood on inmate's pj top BEFORE it was torn - FACT
6. torn surgical gloves with Colette's blood on them in the MB bedding
10. No pj fibers or splinters in the living room where inmate alleged he'd been attacked.
11. No finger prints on the phones.
12. No fingerprints found on the knife inmate claimed to have removed from Colette's chest.
13. The knife inmate claimed to have removed from Colette's chest was never in her chest.
17. None of the "hippies" matched the description as given by inmate.
18. inmate lied about the extent of his injuries (and still does today)
19. murder weapons all came from the apartment
20. murder weapons all found just outside the apartment when MPs searched.
21. inmate's wounds are self-inflicted.......
these are just the first few of the FACTS.......just because you don't LIKE the FACTS henri doesn't mean they should be dismissed out of hand. FACTS inmate lied.....no way in hell he attempted to revive his family, in fact, what he did was wait until he knew they were beyond all help prior to calling for the MPs....
You are making it up. That is disputed by skilled professional advocates and real forensic experts.
The fingerprints on the phone and the knife were wiped by the military police.
The real serologist Glisson is in disagreement with Laber and Stombaugh about Colette's blood on the pajama top and pajama pocket before it was torn, to supposedly indicate a violent argument.
MacDonald's wounds were certainly not self-inflicted and that's a fact.
There is no evidence at all that the murder weapons came from the apartment, apart from the lies and perjury at the 1979 trial by Colette's mother and the babysitter.
The description given by MacDonald fit very closely to Stoeckley and her murderer pals.
Pajama fibers and blood were found at the exact spot MacDonald said he fell unconscious,
....but the jury were never informed of that because the information came from the Article 32 proceeding,
and Judge 'in bed with the prosecution' Dupree censored it on the spurious reason that it was ten year old information.
As BStrong pointed out, the landlord isn't even trying anymore. He knows that this is an open and shut case, but he still derives enjoyment from wearing the black hat in this case discussion. Speaking of black hats, the author of the People Magazine article that pushed for MacDonald being a tortured innocent, was fired this past Summer. Hmmm, I wonder why?
http://www.macdonaldcasefacts.com
I'm sorry to hear that that the author of that People magazine article was fired if that is true. That proves to me that the American media has always been biased against the innocent Jeffrey MacDonald. In the same way CBS has fallen into a trap in saying that nine year old Burke did it in the JonBenet case. If there is any justice in this world CBS, and others, will pay for it.
The Honorable Judge Dupree did no such thing.....IF he had, then there would have been grounds for an appeal. Inmate has never one an appeal and certainly did not use these alleged fibers/blood spots as a basis for an appeal. Making up lies and insulting your betters just makes your man crush look even more guilty. you cannot win an argument using facts so you make up allegations and insults with nothing to support the spurious and vitriolic comments you spew forth. Knock it off!
IN 2012 Errol Morris, a well-known and respected documentary film maker, wrote A Wilderness of Error—a wonderful, extensively-researched, and perceptive look at all the messiness of “the case.” (I was among those he interviewed.) In his New York Times review (August 29, 2012), David Carr judged that the book “may not exonerate [MacDonald], but it makes a forceful argument that his conviction was riddled with shortcomings.” Morris takes on, and devastates, Joe McGinnis’s bestseller Fatal Vision. Morris also dismisses the anguished-reporter plaint of Janet Malcolm’s The Journalist And The Murderer, which recounts how McGinnis betrayed a friendship to get a (sure-fire bestselling) story, because, she concludes, that’s how journalism works.Edited by Agatha:Trimmed to comply with rule 4
Indeed, the author of the biased magazine article and tv show done on inmate, that didn't even begin to fact check what smq told her, was fired. On at least 1 discussion forum she tried to make it seem as if she was let go as part of the Time Warner restructuring, but I have it from several very reliable sources that she was let go because of the article and tv show and the overwhelming proof that she didn't check even the most basic facts of the case. (As well as the overwhelming amount of negative feedback....I myself spent some time pointing out simple facts that she omitted, didn't check, overlooked on the magazine's discussion pages for the articles.......until they were shut down. Less than 1% of the people who posted there believe inmate/smq version of events).
inmate CLAIMED he fell unconscious however, that is medically impossible from the rest of his story and no, there were not any blood stains or pj fibers found "exactly" where he claimed to have gone down....there were a couple of fibers a few feet away and there was some blood in the hallway, but that matched Kimmie's blood type not inmate's.
Q But he never said the jacket was ripped?
A I don't believe he used that term. I would have to read the transcript of his statement again.
Q If fibers were found in the hallway near the living room, isn't it possible this got there from his falling down there and lying there with his hands entwined in the jacket for a period of time -- we don't know how long -- before he got up to go in the bedroom? Couldn't they have gotten there that way?
A If that happened, yes, they could have.
snipped Reference about the blood where he fell unconscious please? snipped
The idea that "drug crazed hippies" made it on, off and managed to murder HM's man crush's family in between without being detected and stopped is about as likely as HM arguing a case in front of the Supreme Court and winning.
That's pure speculation. The Stoeckley gang were drug addicted, and drug dealing, rogue soldiers. They were not big soft things. Mazerolle was described as a hard cookie by Detective Beasley. MacDonald fell unconscious all right and to deny that is just an opinion, and not a fact.
There is a fair and just article about the case at:
https://everything2.com/title/Misplaced+justice%3A+The+story+of+Dr.+Jeffrey+MacDonald