| Overwhelming Evidence Points To Murder Of DC Madam |
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| Written by Holly_Hobby | |||
| Friday, 20 June 2008 10:03 | |||
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Evidence is stacking up to suggest that the
alleged "suicide" of DC Madam Deborah Jeane Palfrey was in fact a
calculated murder, as the manager of Palfrey's Florida Condo reveals
that Palfrey was not suicidal when he spoke to her Monday and told him
of her fears about a contact being out on her life.
The new testimony is backed up by at least four other recorded public statements on behalf of Palfrey attesting to the fact that she would never commit suicide and if she was found dead to immediately suspect murder. Despite these on-the-record statements, the majority of the corporate media has ignored each one and instead given credence to the unverified claim of a professional conspiracy debunker who has been caught fabricating statements in the past. The woman known as the "D.C. Madam" stood in the lobby of her condominium building near downtown Orlando, musing about the future. Deborah Jeane Palfrey said she was preparing for federal prison. She hoped she'd get time off her sentence for good behavior. She thought she might buy a place in Germany one day. "It's hard
to believe," said Joseph Strizack, a condominium-association manager at
Park Lake Towers who got to know Palfrey during her decade as an owner
there. "She did not seem the least bit distraught." A woman who worked for the escort service,
former University of Maryland professor Brandy Britton, killed herself
in January 2007 before she was scheduled to go to trial on prostitution
charges. Palfrey said afterward that she was humiliated by her
prostitution charges but added: "I guess I'm made of something that
Brandy Britton wasn't made of." On Monday, Palfrey seemed no different. She carried clothing, briefcases and suitcases down the stairs from her second-floor apartment to a rented car in the parking lot, stopping to chat as usual. She told Strizack she was taking her property to her mother's home in preparation for prison. Contrary to the U.S. Attorney's Office estimate, she told the condo manager she thought she might spend six or seven years behind bars. On one trip down the stairs, she lugged a 2-foot-wide box she suggested carried materials related to her infamous court case. "This is my evidence," she told Strizack before carrying it out the door. What happened to this damn Box? Source:: Duh!!
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