Public Access America

Donspirasies P3- Very Fishy


Listen Later

Thank you so very much for the attention. please review rate and subscribe on Apple Podcasts or where ever you listen to your favorite podcasts. Look, believe this stuff or don't. my thought is that if we see conspiracy everywhere we are bound to be right once. I think that's why people invest in them. like cheering for the underdog, we hope we bet on the long shot horse. it's cool, i mean i have hobbies too. Just understand that while you believe, normal people think that yes maybe, but who's place is it to actually investigate? Where is your evidence from, and If you don't believe the man, We deserve the same rights to not believe you. Go and document and investigate, That's the awesome American way. Best of luck.
Anybody can exclame conspiracy, most have sources that can corroborate. most don't shout conspiracy until they have that irrefutable evidence. Donald had none of that. he googled his opponent, Read the search result, and shouted headline until other filled in blanks for him. Donald Trump didn't win because he was better. Donald won because his opponents refused to be worse. In my opinion
Park Police discovered Foster, dead from an apparently self-inflicted gun shot wound to the head, in Fort Marcy Park off the George Washington Parkway in Virginia, on July 20, 1993. Foster was holding a gun in his hand. An autopsy and subsequent investigation later confirmed that Foster had committed suicide by shooting himself once in the mouth with the .38 caliber revolver found at the scene.
Subsequent investigations found that Foster was distraught over accusations and criticisms related to the White House Travel Office controversy. Foster had confided to friends and colleagues that he was considering resignation, but feared that he could not handle the "personal humiliation" of returning to Arkansas in defeat. Foster admitted to his sister that he was depressed shortly before his death, and he sought treatment for depression one day before committing suicide.
Although police found no evidence of foul play, several tabloids and right-leaning newsletters speculated that Foster's death may have been a homicide, possibly involving the Clintons themselves. Subsequent investigations by White House special counsel Robert Fiske, and the Senate Banking Committee concluded that there was no evidence of a homicide. A final investigation, led by White House independent Counsel Kenneth Starr also concluded that there was no evidence to support the claim that Foster was murdered. Starr's report addressed several additional questions about physical and forensic evidence that had previously fueled speculation about the case. The report established that Foster owned the handgun used in the suicide, and confirmed that the body had not been moved from its position prior to its discovery by police. The report concluded “In sum, based on all of the available evidence, which is considerable, the OIC-Office of Independent Counsel, agrees with the conclusion reached by every official entity that has examined the issue: Mr. Foster committed suicide by gunshot in Fort Marcy Park on July 20, 1993.”
The suicide has nevertheless continued to fuel speculation: then-presidential candidate Donald Trump made news in 2016 when he remarked in an interview with the Washington Post that Foster's death was "very fishy", and added "I will say there are people who continue to bring it up because they think it was absolutely a murder. I don’t do that because I don’t think it’s fair.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suicide_of_Vince_Foster
Body sourced from
https://youtu.be/Ynw8MUmt_v0
Public Access America
PublicAccessPod Productions
Footage downloaded and edited by Jason at PublicAccessPod producer of Public Access America
Podcast Links
Review us Stitcher: goo.gl/XpKHWB
Review us iTunes: goo.gl/soc7KG
Subscribe GooglePlay: goo.gl/gPEDbf
YouTube goo.gl/xrKbJb YouTube
“Not for ourselves alone, but that we must teach others.” Elizabeth Cady Stanton
...more
View all episodesView all episodes
Download on the App Store

Public Access AmericaBy Public Access America

  • 4.1
  • 4.1
  • 4.1
  • 4.1
  • 4.1

4.1

17 ratings