
Alfred
Labremont Webre on Secret Message TV.
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Vancouver-based
international
war crimes judge Alfred Lambremont Webre spoke to Secret
Message TV , offering his views on a new analysis of
soundtracks from the 2002 Robert Pickton cellmate
interview video tapes released last Friday. During the show,
chilling secret
messages encrypted in the prisoner's spoken comments were revealed
when the videotapes were played in reverse. These messages described the
worst serial
killer case in Canadian history in a context of ritual murder and
blood sacrifice. In his remarks, Mr. Webre reflected on how the
mirror-encrypted messages revealed that Pickton was not acting alone,
but through connections with a Project
MKULTRA-like Canadian domestic
assassination program targeting economically vulnerable Aboriginal
women.
The soundtrack of this show will also be broadcast on
Vancouver Coop Radio, CFRO 102.7 FM www.coopradio.org on Monday August
16, 2010 at Noon – 1 PM Pacific.
Message in the
mirror
The messages detected in Pickton's voice were
discovered during a study that monitored the mirror-filtered audio
waveforms of the soundtracks from the interview video tapes. This
procedure has been publicly demonstrated as effective in near real-time
detection of factual military, forensic, clinical and executive
intelligence.
In the last decade this reporter Jon Kelly has
received international radio and television coverage for providing
forensic analysis in a number of high-profile cases including Bonnie Lee
Bakley (Robert Blake), Kobe Bryant, the BTK Killer, Waco, the Jonestown
Massacre and the Cell Phone Stalker.
On one occasion,
Sheriff's department insiders spoke off the record to one radio host for
a Denver, CO news-talk radio station, explaining how this reporter's
analysis of Kobe Bryant's public apology described details of the 2003
sexual assault complaint known only to police investigators.
Canada's
worst?
One source
describes
Robert Pickton as “… a former pig farmer and serial killer convicted
of the second-degree murders of six women. He is also charged in the
deaths of an additional twenty women, many of them prostitutes and drug
users from Vancouver's Downtown Eastside. In December 2007 he was
sentenced to life in prison, with no possibility of parole for 25 years –
the longest sentence available under Canadian law for murder.
“During
the trial's first day of jury evidence, January 22, 2007, the Crown
stated he confessed to forty-nine murders to an undercover police
officer posing as a cellmate. The Crown reported that Pickton told the
officer that he wanted to kill another woman to make it an even 50, and
that he was caught because he was "sloppy"."
The cellmate
interview tapes were released on Friday. Eight years after Robert
Pickton's arrest, development of a new and alternative transcript of the
interview had begun.

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