Saturday, December 15, 2012

The facts surrounding Jacintha Saldanha’s death simply don’t add up to ‘suicide’.

The fact that the corporate media aren’t subjecting the alleged ‘suicide’ of Jacintha Saldanha to serious scrutiny should tell us that they are colluding in concealing a crime; just as they did in the aftermath of Princess Diana’s supposed ‘accident’.
The facts surrounding Jacintha Saldanha’s death simply don’t add up to ‘suicide’.
She was mother of two from a close-knit family, a highly regarded nurse working at a top-notch hospital and, most importantly, a devout Catholic too.   
Roman Catholicism frowns upon suicide.
What’s more Jacintha Saldanha did nothing more than pass on a phone call from two Australian DJ’s pretending to be British Royalty. What she did was hardly a crime, and certainly nothing to feel so guilty about as to commit suicide.
Moreover, in the aftermath of the prank call she expressed no undue distress over the incident. She wasn’t reprimanded by hospital managers and she didn’t even mention it to close family and friends. Yet at the scene of her alleged suicide she left not one but THREE suicide notes, one of which was reportedly critical of her colleagues.
Was this meant to silence any untoward questions from them with the burden of implied guilt?
Her family have already been effectively prevented from appearing before the media by establishment flunkey Keith Vaz.
So we have to ask: who would benefit from Jacintha Saldanha’s alleged ‘suicide’?
The only real beneficiaries, if one can call it that would be the next heirs to the British throne. In so far as it would deter others from trying to embarrass them or at least do anything involving them without prior approval.
The implied threat to journalists and news editors is clear: ignoring these ‘guidelines’ could have fatal consequences.
Now we are not saying that the members of the Royal House of Windsor ordered Jacintha’s death. More likely, it was elements within the British establishment with a vested interest in the continuation of the Royal House of Windsor that did so. In a similar way, although using different mode of operation, as they once did with Princess Diana.

Prank nurse ‘critical of hospital’ in one of three suicide notes

Megan Levy – Brisbane Times Dec 14, 2012

An apparent suicide note left by a nurse at the centre of the royal hoax phone call was critical of staff at the London hospital where she worked, according to a report.

Jacintha Saldanha, 46, was found dead at staff quarters near King Edward VII hospital in central London, just days after taking a prank phone call from 2Day FM radio presenters Mel Greig and Michael Christian.
A coronial hearing into the mother-of-two’s death was told in London on Thursday morning (local time) that investigators found three apparent suicide notes, handwritten by Ms Saldanha.

One of those notes was addressed to her employers at the hospital and “contains criticism of staff there”, The Guardian reported, adding that it had received the information from two separate sources.
Another note dealt with the hoax call made by the two Sydney radio presenters, who posed as the Queen and Prince Charles in the prank call, while the final letter detailed Ms Saldanha’s requests for her funeral, the newspaper reported.

Two of the notes were found in the apartment where Ms Saldanha died and one in her belongings, and police have given Ms Saldanha’s family typed copies of the letters, The Guardian said.

Scotland Yard is investigating a number of emails which the inquest heard were relevant to the nurse’s death.
Detective Chief Inspector James Harman told Coroner Fiona Wilcox that police were investigating whether telephone calls made to and from Ms Saldanha’s phone in the days before her death could throw any light on her death, however the details of those emails and phone calls were not released at the brief hearing in London.

A spokeswoman for the King Edward VII hospital told The Guardian that no one in senior management knew the contents of the letters left by Ms Saldanha.

She said the hospital management “were very clear that there were no disciplinary issues in this matter”.
Both the nurses involved had been offered “full support” and “it was made clear they were victims of a cruel journalistic trick,” she told the newspaper.

The hospital has offered bereavement counselling for the family in Bristol, which they have decided to take up.

Ms Saldanha was found dead in her apartment three days after the DJs made the prank call.
She took the initial call and put it through to a colleague on the ward where the Duchess of Cambridge was being treated for morning sickness, who gave out information about her condition.

The hearing overnight heard that Scotland Yard detectives would be in contact with New South Wales police to interview witnesses and “put the best evidence before you” about the circumstances of the death.
The London inquest has been adjourned until March 26 next year.
Source

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