Didn't he [Parkes] just say there was a second explosion? Did he specify that the first one was also not in a suitcase?
Unless I'm getting my CTs mixed up here, Parkes is the proponent of the "PA103 was an accident" school of thought. I don't think he's proposing there were two explosions. In essence, the suggestion is that the plane was being used illegally to transport military ordnance of a specific type, and this "flechette" bomb was accidentally triggered by the FM radio signal from ATC Shanwick, to whom PA103 was talking at the time of the explosion.
He bases this on the fact that one area of the debris field was scattered with sewing-machine needles, which were part of the plane's cargo (he thinks these were flechettes), and on an isolated observation he thinks he made of the injuries to a particular girl on the plane. The pathologist however thinks these were gravel burns caused when her body landed.
I think this CT is even madder than Charles's, because it postulates that a huge and complicated cover-up exercise was immediately launched to plant evidence suggesting the crash was caused by a terrorist bomb - when he thinks it was caused by an accident nobody could have anticipated. And yet this fabricated evidence started being found as early as three days after the crash.
I sector mostly, a bit in H and K.
As I said, all over the place. Charles needs to get this idea of an identifiable suitcase being found right out of his head. How much of the suitcase do you think was actually recovered in the end? I'd estimate less than 10% by weight at a guess.
I'm not sure where that was found either, but they cut it open to remove something. Evidence things were being planted at the time?
The legend is that McKee's suitcase was found by CIA officers soon after the crash, and removed. A hole was cut in the side. I can't remember whether it was said to have been emptied or not. It was later replaced on the spot where it was originally found, for the legitimate searchers to discover.
Johnston hasn't said much about this for a long time. It was one of the points specifically rejected by the SCCRC, which said there was no evidence anything of the sort had happened. I'm not so sure, because the story was originally quite well attested-to, and it could easily have been covered up in the intervening 15 years.
I think it's quite possible McKee was carrying sensitive documents or other material in that suitcase, material the CIA would really, really prefer not to be found by the official Scottish searchers. That being so, Charles's suggestion that there was some sort of tracking device in the suitcase isn't entirely implausible - possibly incorporated in the structure of the case itself, hence the need to cut a piece out of the case to remove it. That would explain its being found so quickly by the US personnel.
So they located the case, retrieved it, cut out the tracking device and removed whatever sensitive material they wanted to remove, and then replaced the case to be officially "found". A reporter found out about this, and somebody over-reacted in the heat of the moment. The reporter had a very peculiar visit from some very aerated policemen. He ignored this and never heard anything about it again. Because cooler reflection obviously dictates that it's far better to pretend this didn't happen than to escalate the incident.
I just don't see that this need have anything at all to do with the actual explosion.
You decry the "ignorance" of posters here. Said ignorance is of your theory. You are now a member here. If you don't explain your theory and its supports clearly, who is to blame for that ignorance? Who else is supposed to explain it for you?
I rather think Charles is attacking the alleged "ignorance" of others to cover up his own ignorance. Here's what he won the July Stundies for, at a canter.
Charles said:
It is interesting that Rolfe asks for more facts. In my opinion facts is just what we don't need, as they are likely to be misleading or simply a distraction.
He seems to have spent far more time free-associating or brainstorming about this, than actually studying the evidence. Hence, after allegedly having studied the case for 20 years, he knows less about it than those of us who haven't studied it for 20 months.
Intriguing ideas are all very well, and I've had my share of them in relation to this case, but if you come up with a concrete fact that contradicts the idea, the idea has to go. That's what Charles hasn't yet learned.
Here are some questions you could address:
- Reasons why the CIA felt the bombing had to succeed.
- How two debris trails = two bombs
- How anything else = two bombs
- What exactly the original cover-up was to be, with its early clues pointing both to Malta and London origin
- Is there anything in your original theory that you're starting to re-think yet? Do you do re-thinking?
Don't hold your breath. I'd settle initially for being given the source for his claim that AVE4041 held only first-class luggage (and Karen Noonan's suitcase!), as I'm interested in any information that's to be had about the contents and loading of the container. He hasn't even come back with that one.
Rolfe.