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The case was heard by an appointee of Pete Wilson, the
.38 caliber, former Republican governor, and any
allusion to federal involvement of mind control from
accused murderer Susan Pol in the courtroom was met
with intense skepticism in the courtroom and press.

I know for a fact, since I was in contact with a
number of mind control victims at the time, that they
knew of 9/11 in advance. I did as well, because one of
them told me about it in advance. Susan Polk states
the same in her case, though she refers to it as
"psychic" knowledge. (Electronic mind control seems to
be "psychic," but it is no more occult than a radio
signal pulsed at the victim's specific brain
frequencies.)

In researching mind control. I am often treated as
incompetent or bizarre by "mainstream" reporters and
researchers. Supposedly, I am a dumpster diver because
the topic is not palatable to insufferable egoists who
think of themselves as reporters. CIA mind control has
a long, complex history that most reporters completely
ignore and refuse to understand. I am not a dumpster
diver for knowing something about CIA mind control
operations - reporters who take dictation from lying
government officials and police officials ARE dumpster
divers. They leave their garbage on the front pages of
major newspapers, and don't even ask about public
radio and the "alternative" press. They practice mind
control. Is it "bizarre" and "wild" of me to say so?
No, it's bizarre and wild of them to engage in it ...

- AC
--
http://www.findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4176/is_20060425/ai_n16227535

Keep an open mind, Polk tells jury


Oakland Tribune,  Apr 25, 2006  by Jason Dearen, STAFF
WRITER
MARTINEZ -- Susan Polk told jurors Monday that her
murder defense is a tale as thrilling and strange as a

Stephen King novel.

"Do you believe that spies only exist in novels and
newspaper stories?" Polk asked the jury as she opened
her defense. "Do you know brainwashing and
mind-control techniques can be learned by anyone with
a library card?"

The 48-year-old former Orinda housewife told jurors
she is not crazy, and that they need to keep an open
mind as she presents her side of the story.

That story, Polk explained, will include information
about her psychic abilities, her former husband's
secret life as a spy and his refusal to tell the
government about her warnings of the terrorist attacks
on the World Trade Center in New York City on Sept.
11, 2001. Polk said she knew of the attacks
beforehand, and tried to prevent the tragedy from
occurring by telling her husband, who refused to alert
authorities.
Prosecutors say Polk murdered her 70-year-old
psychologist husband, Felix Polk, in October 2002
after losing money and child custody during their
divorce. Susan Polk, who is representing herself,
claims she stabbed her husband in self-defense of a
violent attack after enduring years of mental and
physical abuse.

Assistant District Attorney Paul Sequeira rested his
case Monday morning, which included the testimony of
two of Polk's three sons. Gabriel and Adam Polk
testified they believe their mother is delusional and
murdered their father in cold blood. Adam Polk
described his mother as "Cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs"
during his testimony Thursday, and did little to hide
his disdain for her.

Susan Polk's third son, Eli, who is in a jail in
Contra Costa County on charges of evading arrest,
testified briefly Monday and will continue this
morning. Polk described Eli Polk as the only one who
is not "on the Susan Polk-is-crazy bandwagon" and who
has the courage to tell the truth.

As the first witness, Susan Polk called her mother,
Helen Bolling, 72. Bolling testified Polk's own father
tried to sexually abuse her when she was 14.

At age 14, Polk, then Susan Bolling, met Felix Polk
when she began seeing him for therapy sessions. Susan
Polk said she and Felix Polk began an illicit
relationship while she was in his care, and he used
hypnosis and drugs to keep her under his control.

Bolling said at the time, her daughter started
boasting of having a boyfriend. When pressed, Susan
Polk finally said she was seeing her therapist.

Bolling said she called a meeting to confront Felix
Polk. "I said, 'You've had sexual activity with Susan
and you're not exactly what I had in mind for a
son-in-law,'" she testified.

Bolling said Felix Polk assured her he would do what
was right. But no further actions were taken.
Authorities were not called, and Susan Polk was
apparently allowed to continue as his patient.
"(Felix) had an ability to take you in and make you
believe him," Bolling said.

After Susan Polk graduated from college, she married
Felix Polk and had three children. The marriage lasted
more than 20 years, and Susan Polk was estranged from
her mother until her arrest for Felix Polk's murder.
Bolling said she blames "the head doctor," Felix Polk,
for convincing Susan Polk she had been sexually abused
by her father and mother as a child. Polk now claims
she does not believe she was molested.

"I certainly made a terrible mistake with Felix Polk
and I believe God will make me pay," Bolling said.

Susan Polk told the jury they will be amazed at what
they hear during an expected three weeks of testimony.

Polk said her husband was waging a campaign to
discredit her because he was trying to protect
himself. "My husband was trying to (label) me as crazy
and delusional to hide what he'd done to me as a
14-year-old," Polk told the jury.

Polk said Felix Polk studied extra-sensory perception
and mind- control techniques, which he used to
dominate her and their boys.
Polk claimed she is psychic, and that for years she
helped the U.S. government by reporting terrorist
attacks at home and abroad, including the attacks of
Sept. 11, 2001. She said she understands it sounds
hard to believe, "but the truth is we're surrounded by
mystery every day of our lives."

Some jurors furrowed their brows. Others appeared
amused, while others looked at each other with raised
eyebrows at moments during Polk's presentation....
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http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,173772,00.html




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MARTINEZ, Calif.  —  The mother of the suspect charged
with the slaying of a prominent lawyer’s wife was
arrested Thursday morning, FOX News has confirmed.


Esther Fielding was arrested on charges of accessory
for murder and bail was set at $500,000, according to
the Contra Costa (search) Sheriff’s Department.

Her son Scott Dyleski (search), 16, was charged Oct.
19 with first-degree murder for the death of Pamela
Vitale, the wife of lawyer and TV pundit Daniel
Horowitz (search).

Vitale’s body was found in a pool of her own blood on
Oct. 15 with a four-inch stab wound to her abdomen in
a mobile home on the Lafayette estate where she and
husband were building their 7,000-square-foot dream
home.

She also had a traumatic head injury and multiple
wounds on her legs, and investigators found a bloody
shoeprint on the lid of a storage container at the
crime scene, according to an affidavit filed by the
sheriff's deputy.

Details were released Thursday regarding what
authorities believe a 16-year-old accused killer did
after the murder of a defense attorney's wife in
Lafayette.

An affidavit for a search warrant reveals that
authorities believe Dyleski went to a friend's house
after killing Vitale. The affidavit also says that
friend told authorities Dyleski went to his
girlfriend's house to have sex with her.

Deputies searched Dyleski’s home on Oct. 19 and seized
two laptops, a computer central processing unit,
bedding, knives and a duffel bag from Dyleski's house,
just down the hill from Horowitz and Vitale's estate.

Also, a neighbor told Lafayette police that his credit
card had been stolen and used to buy hydroponic
growing equipment — often used to cultivate marijuana.

The equipment was scheduled for shipping to Horowitz
and Vitale's address, according to the affidavit. The
supplier withheld the shipment, believing the purchase
was fraudulent.

The neighbor, Doug Schneider, contacted police because
he believed the purchase may have been related to
Vitale's murder, according to the affidavit, parts of
which were sealed.

Authorities believe Dyleski went to the home looking
for the equipment and got in a fight with Vitale, an
investigative source speaking on condition of
anonymity told the San Francisco Chronicle last week.

http://cbs5.com/local/local_story_167141002.html
Jun 16, 2006 1:30 pm US/Pacific

Jurors Find Susan Polk Guilty Of 2nd Degree Murder

(CBS 5 / AP / BCN) MARTINEZ A jury Friday convicted
Susan Polk of second-degree murder in the stabbing

death of her millionaire therapist husband, whom she
had met as a 14-year-old girl in treatment, in the
wealthy San Francisco suburb of Orinda.??The suburban
housewife sat calmly as the verdict was read. She
served as her own attorney in the nearly 14-week,
circus-like trial in which two of her sons testified
against her and she discussed her psychic powers.??The
Contra Costa County jury, evenly split with six women
and six men, deliberated since Tuesday before
convicting Susan Polk of second-degree murder in the
stabbing death of 70-year-old Felix Polk in October
2002 at the couple's home in Orinda, about 15 miles
east of San Francisco.??"Susan had no right to take
him from us," reacted one of her sons, Adam Polk,
after the verdict was read.??Prosecutors had sought a
first-degree murder conviction, arguing the 48-year
old Polk had plotted to kill her husband so she could
get his multimillion-dollar estate. ??But Polk said
her husband died after she fought back in self defense
following years of abuse. Polk testified that she was
able to grab a kitchen knife away from her husband
when he attacked her and stabbed him, although a
pathologist testifying for her said Felix Polk died of
a heart attack.??The prosecution argued Susan Polk had
no defensive wounds that would indicate a violent
struggle.??Polk met her husband when she was a
teenager and he was her therapist. Polk testified to
beatings and abuse by her husband, who she said kept
her isolated and viewed sex as "essentially
rape."??Prosecutors told jurors that while they might
not approve of Felix Polk beginning a relationship
with Susan Polk while she was 14-years old and his
psychotherapy patient, he was not a monster.??It was a
wild trial to say the least.??Jurors were presented
with curious behavior from Polk throughout the trial.
Polk represented herself and at times gave strange
statements when questioning witnesses and testifying
herself.??On the witness stand herself, Polk spoke
about secret government experiments, psychic powers
and the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks.??She claimed she
could have thwarted the World Trade Center attacks if
her husband hadn't prevented her from alerting
authorities.??Scores of observers came to the
courthouse during the trial to see Polk in action and
hear sensational stories of illicit affairs, mind
control and family dysfunction.??Polk was animated and
often angry throughout the trial. She talked over the
judge, insulted prosecutor Paul Sequeira and
continually called for a mistrial.??In perhaps the
trial's most memorable moment, Polk's son Adam called
his mother "bonkers" and "cuckoo for Cocoa Puffs," on
the witness stand, referring to the catchphrase used
in advertisements for the children's breakfast cereal.
The judge had to hold back laughter.??In closing
arguments, prosecutors urged jurors to disregard the
strange testimony and instead focus on what happened
the night Felix Polk was killed. Sequeira argued Susan
Polk was a manipulative liar who turned on anyone who
didn't agree with her version of reality.??During her
closing argument, Polk said she was being railroaded
because people in power thought she was delusional.
"Am I on trial for saying I predicted the 9-11 terror
attacks or am I on trial for murder?" she asked the
jury.?
-----------------






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http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/c/a/2005/10/21/MNG3OFC2721.DTL
TEEN HELD IN BIZARRE SLAYING ?16-year-old's scheme to
finance pot-growing enterprise with fraudulent credit

card numbers led to death of high-profile lawyer's
wife, sour/ THE SUSPECT: Some students say he was
angry, brooding; others call him kind, caring

Marsha Ginsburg, Leslie Fulbright, Chronicle Staff

Writers
Friday, October 21, 2005

Scott Dyleski seemed like a typical suburban kid. He
loved baseball. He was a Boy Scout. He earned
excellent grades.
That started to change in the eighth grade, and by the
time Dyleski moved from Stanley Middle School to
Acalanes High School in Lafayette, friends and fellow
students said, he'd gone from slightly nerdy to

sincerely strange.
His smile disappeared. He favored dark clothes. He
dyed his brown hair black. He donned dark eyeliner,
shaved his head in odd places and wore a trench coat.
His fingers sported silver jewelry and black nail
polish.
But despite his brooding personality, classmates said,
Dyleski was generally considered a kind and caring
kid.
At some point, investigators said, his demeanor turned
truly sinister.
Investigators said Dyleski concocted a scheme to grow
marijuana and finance it with stolen credit card
numbers -- a plan they said led him to bludgeon Pamela
Vitale to death and carve a T-shaped "gothic
signature" on her back.
Dyleski is 16 and lives with his mother on Hunsaker
Canyon Road about a mile from where Vitale lived with
her husband, attorney and TV commentator Daniel
Horowitz. His sister Denika was killed two years ago
in a car crash at age 18, and according to court
records, his father and stepmother of more than 10
years filed for divorce on Oct. 12.
Students at Acalanes High School said Dyleski was a
nonconformist who walked with his head down and
withdrew into drawing and painting. He studied hard
for the GED because he despised high school and wanted
to leave. When he did, he enrolled in art classes at
Diablo Valley College.
Word that he was a suspect in Vitale's death spread
quickly around Acalanes High School on Thursday, after
teachers read a short announcement about his arrest.
The news left the school reeling. Recently, one
student's mother stepped in front of a car in an
apparent suicide, and a former student who had
graduated last year hanged himself.
"It's been a bad week," the mother of one student
said, declining to give her name.
School principal John Nickerson refused to comment and
told students not to speak to reporters.
Still, many did, and some said Dyleski was a caring
boy who prided himself on being different. Others said
he was creepy.

Keith Kingon, who attended middle school with Dyleski,

called him a devil worshiper who read the satanic
bible at lunch "just to get everyone shocked."
"It was like a Charles Manson-type thing," Kingon
said. "He shocked people in a negative way. He was an

instigator."
Kevin McDonald, an 18-year-old Acalanes graduate, said
"I always thought he was trying to get attention, but
he seemed like a nice guy, not someone who would ever
do something like this."
Whatever his personality, students said Dyleski wasn't
known for trouble. The only incident anyone could
recall occurred when a sixth-grader commented on
Dyleski's appearance. He reportedly punched the boy in
the face. School officials reacted by banning trench
coats, but Dyleski kept wearing black every day.
"It wasn't just the coat and the things on his hands,
it was his attitude and his personality," a fellow
student said. "He seemed angry."
Although many said Dyleski hung out with the "goth
group" at school, his former stepfather Glen
Hirschberger told The Chronicle that phase of his life
had faded.
"He was into that a little bit," Hirschberger said.
"But he's a pretty sensible kid."
One of Dyleski's friends from middle school, who asked
not to be named, said he often grew angry when other
students said bad things about Dyleski and said people
didn't like Dyleski because of the way he looked. Once
you got to know him, the boy said, Dyleski was
likable.
"We all knew he would become something good," the
17-year-old said.
Wilma Holgerson of Lafayette was a friend of the
Dyleski family and called the teen's mother "one of
the sweetest, caring and loving women you could ever
meet."
"She was the kind of single mom you take your hat off
to, when you see someone who does everything you
should do to raise a kid," Holgerson said.
She said Dyleski was a quiet child who took a fair
share of teasing from classmates.
"He was always on the periphery and one that other
kids shunned," she said. "They were not nice to him.
He was always by himself. I never saw an odd duck,
just a kid who was lonely."
Chronicle staff writer Rick DelVecchio contributed to
this report. E-mail the writers at
mginsburg@sfchronicle.com and
lfulbright@sfchronicle.com.
Page A - 1
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Mk-Ultra - 9/11Encyclopedia

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The Abu Ghraib-Titan- 9/11 Connection
911 Ommission Torture Act
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Maher Arar - 9/11Review

Alex Constantine
Alex Constantine open index

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