http://www.smartfellowspress.com/smokinggun/Eyes_06.html
Yes I can remember this article - written by the CIA LAB and it fingers MARK FUHRMAN.
Why?
Ostensibly - he was the one who discovered what had happened - the CIA LAB remote-viewed events and found out what had really happened.
FUHRMAN was the mind control programmer of O J SIMPSON.
FUHRMAN had been present through out the murder - telling O J SIMPSON what do to - FUHRMAN was sitting on a chair, instructing SIMPSON in what to do and when to do it...watching the whole thing - FUHRMAN was 'enjoying' himself -FUHRMAN is as sadistic as it is humanly possible to be - a bit like MARK R.
O J SIMPSON was in 'zombie' mode - he had no control of himself, his body or mind - whatsoever.
MCDONALD was to interview FUHRMAN later on, as one 'ill cult programmer' to another and FUHRMAN admitted that watching the murder - instructing SIMPSON to murder his own wife - the woman that he loved - had been one of the best moments of his entire life. Yes, FUHRMAN had enjoyed it, that much.
"Brief eye contact is a big part of public speaking. Among most white Americans it is a sign of fear, guilt or deception not to sustain eye contact when you speak to anyone. Among non-affluent African-Americans, sustained eye contact is considered aggressive or rude. Mark Fuhrman and F. Lee Bailey looked each other in the eye when they did battle in court. But of all the things anyone in the case had to say about eyes, what Fuhrman said in Murder in Brentwood about Nicole and her murderer was the most provocative. He said that in her final seconds of life she looked into her killer’s eyes. Shades of Jack the Ripper."
http://www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/Simpson/Fuhrman.htm
MARK FUHRMAN
A Los Angeles Homicide detective, Mark Fuhrman became one of the most controversial figures in the Simpson trial. Fuhrman arrived at the murder scene and was responsible for the significant discovery of the "bloody glove" on Simpson's property.
Most officers in the L.A. Police department responding to Brown-Simpson's domestic abuse calls would defer to Simpson and refuse to take him to jail. Fuhrman, however, took Simpson to jail, resulting in Simpson's plea of "no contest" to domestic abuse charges.
Fuhrman gave a taped interview in 1985 to Laura McKinney, an aspiring screenwriter working on a screenplay about female police officers. Fuhrman bragged about his membership in the secret organization within the LAPD known as MAW, or Men Against Women. In further interviews, Fuhrman bragged about beating and torturing gang members, "we had them begging that they'd never be gang members again, begging us." Fuhrman's negative attitude toward African-Americans was also evident in the taped interview. He said that he would tell blacks, "You do what you're told, understand, nigger?"
His perjurious denial of the use--in the ten years prior to the trial--of the term "nigger" brought immediate world-wide condemnation. Even the prosecution denounced Fuhrman in their closing arguments, calling him a "bad cop."
Following the trial Fuhrman apologized "from the bottom of [his] heart" that he had used racist terms and denied ever having been a racist. Fuhrman was uncomfortable with the attention the trial brought to him and wished things had been different. "I want my private life back and I'm never going to have it." Denying having ever planted evidence, Fuhrman stated, "there was never a shred, never a hint, never a possibility--not a remote, not a million--, not a billion-to-one possibility--I could have planted anything. Nor would I have a reason to."
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