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Permalink Chapter: twelve  

Selected Essays by Sam Redman

  A conspiracy to "bear false witness"

An essay by Sam Redman

What follows, while interspersed with factual information, has speculative conclusions, based on conjecture and surmised circumstances. Skeeters may indeed be one of the primary culprits in the now famous recording deception, however his role may have been only a small part of a much wider and more detailed plot to manufacture evidence.

About the tape, what we know now is that irrespective of who caused this tape travesty, it was clearly an attempt to frame Deepak. It is apparent is that there is only one version of the tape that has any interest and that is the one with Deepak shaking his head in denial. As Arlene Shipper (the brilliant Aruban attorney, who comments on the case from time to time) pointed out, this body language denial is the crux of the matter. I think we can conclude that any other version, which appears elsewhere, is a lie and those tapes have no use in this case, except concerning the broader sinister plot of deception. This tape incident is merely another bizarre circumstance which leads one to believe that there was an apparent conspiracy to falsify evidence.

Consider the very strange peculiarity that the turning over of this tape, the altered (manipulated) version, which Dr. Phil promised to release, was to be tied with the elections in Aruba. Now, of course, that we know that the 2 hour version in Dr. Phil's possession was phony (and not just his 8 second snippet), we have an emphatic reason to wonder. Why was there a connection between turning this over and the election results?

First, consider this: Beth has been making accusations based on documents and confessions, which the police say they don't have. In fact, when Jug and Beth were at the police station and they told the police officer quotes from Jug's "confession documents," the policeman said, "No, Joran didn't say that." Jug, in the TV interview, told how clever he was (in his mind) to keep it a secret, that he had acquired his knowledge

from "confession" documents in his possession. Why didn't Jug turn those over (he could have kept his original in a safe) to the police? We can now conclude that Jug and Beth evidently planned to get information to the new authorities, which they assumed would be installed after the election.

Where did Beth and Jug get their "confession" documents? They came from Jossy Mansur, the primary advocate for a change in power in Aruba. One of the "confessions" was released (translated and published) and Eduardo Mansur, Jossy's son, told how they had come to possess it. It was left in an special mailbox outside of the newspaper which they own, a newspaper, which was the primary voice trying to overthrow the party in power

 

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Natalee Holloway, Essays & Theories - 12

Of the many individuals who wrote about this case, one to me stands above all the rest, Sam Redman. Sam posted on this case with a couple different names, Roger and Polemic on Scrux and Andrew at Blogs for Natalee. Whether I agreed with what he said at times or not, I still found his thoughts intriguing. Here are some of his most compelling essays. by     Sam Redman

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