Murder, Alaska

Informações:

Synopsis

The Murder, Alaska podcast covers crime, law, and deep state events. In the words of John Judge, you might call me a conspiracy theorist, and in turn I'd characterize mainstream political pundits to be coincidence theorists. I am Leo Helmar, a paralegal currently working for the City Attorney in Juneau and previously employed in the same capacity at the Public Defender Agency. I have been doing long-term research into the Benolken murders, a 1982 double homicide in my hometown of Juneau, Alaska for which I believe defendant Newton Lambert was falsely convicted. I am also deeply interested in the events of 9/11 and the subsequent Anthrax attacks, the Vince Foster murder mystery and all of the other deep state events surrounding the Clinton era (OKC bombing, Waco, Chinagate, and the Mena connection to name but a few).

Episodes

  • Interview with Dr. Jack Cashill about his book "Ron Brown's Body"

    07/12/2017 Duration: 01h03min

    Dr. Jack Cashill and I talk about his book "Ron Brown's Body: How One Man's Death Saved the Clinton Presidency and Hillary's Future". The book focuses on the April 3rd, 1996 plane crash that killed sitting Secretary of Commerce Brown and 34 others on a mysterious trade mission in Croatia. In this interview we talk about the lead up to the plane crash and the multiple fronts of trouble facing Brown before the crash including an ongoing Independent Counsel review and a complicated natural gas deal in Oklahoma that allowed Clinton mega-fundraisers Gene and Nora Lum to siphon off tens of millions of dollars from consumers by overcharging for natural gas. This natural gas theft was being abetted and protected by members of the Clinton white house including Chief of Staff Thomas "Mac" McLarty and Ron Brown as well as Ron Brown's son Michael Brown. Show notes and links: Amazon page for Dr. Cashill's book and the subject of this interview "Ron Brown's Body: How One Man's Death Saved the Clinton Presidency and Hilla

  • Interview with Mike Campbell about his book Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last - Part II

    16/10/2017 Duration: 57min

    In part two of my interview with author Mike Campbell about his book "Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last" we briefly cover again the circumstances of Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan's disappearance. Mike then recounts the timeline of the official narrative and the mainstream acceptance of other ideas like the crashed-and-sank hypothesis and the Gardner Island or Nikumaroro-landing hypothesis and why they have no merit. Mike then talks about the work of TIGHAR and Ric Gillespie and the almost performance art-like expeditions that they've engaged in including using cadaver dogs to try and unearth evidence of Earhart on Nikumaroro many years after her disappearance. Mike also details the dearth of evidence for these ideas and analyzes why the media continues to support them despite their lack of substance. Show notes and links: Mike Campbell's book "Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last" 2nd edition published by Sunbury Press on Amazon: http://a.co/hDfWlry Mike Campbell's blog which contains many articles u

  • Interview with Mike Campbell about his book Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last - Part I

    09/10/2017 Duration: 59min

    Part one of my interview with author Mike Campbell, a researcher who has written the definitive book about Amelia Earhart's disappearance "Amelia Earhart: The Truth at Last" and also writes a blog at earharttruth.com that contains articles full of pictures and reference materials about Earhart and her final flight. We discuss Amelia Earhart's flying career and how she got to the point where she attempted her fateful flight in 1937, a world record attempt to fly around the globe. We then get into the evidence that exists of what became to Earhart and her navigator Fred Noonan after they took off from Lae, New Guinea and  disappeared according to the mainstream account. These include witnesses who saw Earhart come down near Mili Atoll in the Marshall Islands, witnesses on Saipan which had been occupied by the Japanese until the end of World War II and where Earhart was said by witnesses to have kept as a prisoner, and military personnel involved in the U.S. takeover of Saipan in 1944 who saw evidence of Earhar