Difference between revisions of "Deborah Palfrey"

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==Activities==
 
==Activities==
[[Jessica Collins]] reported that Palfrey assisted [[Jeffrey Epstein]] in kidnapping young girls.<ref>https://invidio.us/watch?v=akDKyYaxj4A</ref>
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[[Jessica Collins]] reported that Palfrey assisted [[Jeffrey Epstein]] in her kidnapping.<ref>https://invidio.us/watch?v=akDKyYaxj4A</ref>
  
 
==Death==
 
==Death==

Revision as of 03:40, 8 September 2019

Person.png Deborah Palfrey   ISGPRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png
(9-11/Premature death, Epstein Affair/Premature death)
Deborah Palfrey.jpg
Born1956-03-18
North Charleroi, Pennsylvania, U.S.
Died2008-05-01 (Age 52)
Tarpon Springs, Florida, U.S.
Cause of death
Hanging
Alma materRollins College
Victim ofassassination
Ran an escort agency in Washington D.C. that was frequently used by Washington insiders, and was aware of some 9/11 insiders who let information slip before the event.

Deborah Palfrey operated Pamela Martin and Associates, an escort agency in Washington, D.C. that was used by some key 9-11 perpetrators.

A video by James Corbett

9/11 Foreknowledge

Palfrey reportedly told Wayne Madsen, ‘I have information that would have been of great interest to the 9/11 Commission – there’s information that they have (her call girls) that would have been very important for the 9/11 Commission to know having to do with intelligence they picked up about 9/11 before it happened’.[1]

Activities

Jessica Collins reported that Palfrey assisted Jeffrey Epstein in her kidnapping.[2]

Death

Deborah Palfrey story.jpg

Officially, she committed suicide by hanging. Vanity Fair painted her as a troubled woman on the path to suicide, but others have suggested she was far from suicidal but instead was fearful about a contract being out on her life. Palfrey made at least four public statements that she would never commit suicide, and that if it appeared so, it would have been murder.[1] Mark Gorton lists her murder among the crimes of the US Deep state.[3]

Court Decision

A 2016 the US Supreme Court rejected a bid to release Deborah Palfrey's phone records, despite claims they were "very relevant" to the presidential election.[4]

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References