Lost and Found ID

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Concept.png Lost and Found IDRdf-entity.pngRdf-icon.png 4
Lost and Found ID.jpg
Typepattern
A recurring theme in deep events, whereby the perpetrators supposedly leave behind them a trail of very revealing information such as identity documents.

Lost and Found ID syndrome is (as Russ Baker noted in 2015) a simple trail of identity documents for investigators to pick up on, a common feature of various acts of "watershed violence".[1] This provides a very straightforward parallel construction of how "lone nut" killers can quickly be identified - an important part of false flag events to minimize the time spent time available for critical reflection on possible perpetrators.

Classic Examples

Oswald’s military ID, said to have been stained by FBI fingerprinting fluid

JFK Assassination

Lee Harvey Oswald, the supposed "lone nut" killer of John F. Kennedy purportedly dropped his wallet, which was found at the murder scene of J. D. Tippit. This story was soon revised to claim that the police took the wallet from him after he was arrested.

Ziad Jarrah's passport.jpg

MLK Assassination

James Earl Ray, the supposed "lone nut" killer of Martin Luther King had escaped from a prison shortly before the attack, and left a bundle of items on the sidewalk - included his rifle, binoculars, clothing, prison radio, and a newspaper clipping revealing where King would be staying.

Saeed al-Ghamdi's passport.jpg

9-11

Three of the 19 hijackers' passports supposedly survived the fiery crashes of the planes which took their lives on 9-11. In New York, Satam al-Suqami and in Pennsylvania Ziad Jarrah and Saeed al-Ghamdi. No explanation has been proffered for how a passport could survive a crash which purportedly destroyed all the planes black boxes. FBI agent A. Todd McCall said the hijackers "thought their identification would be destroyed during the attacks," but, he added, "They were wrong."[2][3] The 4th and final passport that supposedly survived was that of Abdul Aziz al Omari, supposedly recovered from luggage that did not make it from a Portland flight to Boston on to the connecting flight which was American Airlines flight 11.[4]

Recent examples

Said Kouachi's ID card.jpg

The pattern of ID papers helping authorities to pin down suspects continues.[5]

Charlie Hebdo, 2015

Said Kouachi, a supposed perpetrator of the Charlie Hebdo attack left his identification card in the abandoned getaway car.[6]

2015-11 Paris attacks, 2015

The Independent reported that "A Syrian passport has been found on the body" of one of the suicide bombers who committed the 2015-11 Paris attacks.[7] Al Jazeera "spoke to explosives and forensic experts, who offered an explanation for how a paper document could survive a suicide blast despite close proximity to the bomber."[8]

2016 Berlin truck attack

After the 2016 truck attack in Berlin, a "German security official" told CNN that the suspect was known to the authorities and had been arrested for use of forged documents on his way to Italy but was released. CNN reported that "The suspect’s identity papers were found inside the truck."[5]

 

An example

Page nameDescription
Fake passport

 

Related Quotation

PageQuoteAuthorDate
2010 United States diplomatic cables leak/Middle East“You know better than I that we cannot deal with these people (the Guantanamo detainees). I can't detain them. If I take their passports, they will sue to get them back. I can talk to you into next week about building a rehabilitation center, but it won't happen. We are not Saudi Arabia; we cannot isolate these people in desert camps or somewhere on an island. We cannot compel them to stay. If they are rotten, they are rotten and the best thing to do is get rid of them. You picked them up in Afghanistan; you should drop them off in Afghanistan, in the middle of the war zone.”Sabah Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah
Wikileaks
2010


Rating

4star.png 25 August 2016 Robin  How can a passport survive a plane crash better than a black box?
In deep events ID seems to survive even when none of the perpetrators do. The page collects the suspicious evidence of what Russ Baker calls "Lost and Found ID" syndrome.
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References