A few days ago, Glen Shortliffe, another retired senior Canadian civil servant connected to the Water War Crimes "died unexpectedly of a heart attack at his home just a few blocks from the prme ministers residence" according to Canada's national propaganda outlet, the Globe and Mail, page s. 13, May 22, 2010.
This death marks the 12th sudden death of a Water War Crimes insider in the past 4 years commencing with Justice James Taylor from an unexpected sudden heart attack in January 2006. Visit Nine Dead Judges Don't Lie at the Water War Crimes Web Site for particulars of the death of James Taylor.
Mr. Shortliffe was the senior civil servant of Canada's from 1992 to 1994 which means that he would have approved the appointment of Water War Crimes insider Robert Edwards from position of Deputy Attorney General of British Columbia to a position of justice of the Supreme Court of British Columbia in Febrary, 1993. From 1988 to 1992, Mr. Shortliffe was Deputy Minister of Transport in charge of Canadian National Railways, in this position, he would probably have played a role in the appointment of British Columbia Attorney General, Brian Smith, to position of Chairman of Canadian National Railways in November, 1989, a few months after the Ministry of the Attorney General for British Columbia finally put in place the secret and illegal contract between the Government of British Columbia and W.C.W. Western Canada Water Enterprises Ltd. on September 25, 1989. The insider trade of 4.2 million shares and warrants in WCW took place four days later on September 29, 1989 and about 50% of those shares and warrants went to offshore accounts benefitting undisclosed insiders that the RCMP refused to investigate.
British Columbia lawyer, Jack Ebbels, who worked on the secret agreement, died of a sudden heart attack on February 25, 2010, a few weeks after his role was published here on this blog and at the Water War Crimes Web Site and former Deputy Attorney General Robert Edwards, died of a sudden heart attack on November 5, 2007, when his role in the Water War Crimes was exposed in court papers filed in October 2007, and British Columbia cabinet Minister Stan Hagen , a witness to many of the events due to his position as a member of Bill Vander Zalm and Gordon Campbell's cabinet, died of a sudden heart attack in January, 2009, when things began to heat up around Victoria.
Brain Smith, the former Attorney General of British Columbia, who is now a lawyer in Toronto should be very, very, careful. A "sudden heart attack" can be induced by a number of chemicals and it is an uncally co-incidence that we now have at least "five sudden heart attacks" among key witnesses to the Water War Crimes.
We also recommend that John Sims, the former Deputy Attorney General of Canada, be extremely careful. Mr. Sims suddenly resigned his position in March 2010 when caught making fradulent submissions in Canada 's Federal Court and the historical record shows that, co-incidentally, he was legal counsel at the Ministry of Transport prior to becoming Deputy Minister of Justice for Canada (1988 to 1992) which was the period when Brian Smith, the Attorney General of British Columbia was appointed Chairman of Canadian National Railways. Like Mr. Shortliffe and 13 others who suddenly died, Mr. Sims knows some secrets and his life may be at risk.
Admittedly, Mr. Shortliffe was already ill from cancer but the sudden "unexpected" death by "heart attack" suggests he may have been executed in order to silence him. So far 14 witnesses to the Water War Crimes have dropped dead or suddenly developed terminal illnesses and died as this case has moved forward.
Visit the Water War Crimes Web Site for more details
Hey
ReplyDeleteThis is a good story.
Keep it coming.
It explains a lot about this crooked little country.