It's May 14, 2024, 06:53:00 PM
im not saying who did this im just saying i dont believe he was alive when they did this. my opinion no hard facts
Quote from: rampant on May 16, 2004, 07:16:59 AMim not saying who did this im just saying i dont believe he was alive when they did this. my opinion no hard factsI never saw the video and never will, but wasnt it said that he was on his knees in front of them and said his name and shit?
Quote from: 7even the Harbinger on May 16, 2004, 07:37:00 AMQuote from: rampant on May 16, 2004, 07:16:59 AMim not saying who did this im just saying i dont believe he was alive when they did this. my opinion no hard factsI never saw the video and never will, but wasnt it said that he was on his knees in front of them and said his name and shit? yea but there could have been a time lapse.
Why cover his face and then give his name? - Yes - this is a good point. That is what you would do if you weren't who you say you are. And it's one of those add on reasons that supports my conclusion.
Actually, Max, it's NOT worth a read. That's your problem, you read too much bullshit and your young mind gets clouded.
WASHINGTON (CNN) -- A coalition spokesman said Friday that U.S. military police may have been at the Iraqi facility where Nicholas Berg was held before he was killed, but he insisted that Berg was never in U.S. custody, despite reports to the contrary.
"To our knowledge, he was detained by theIraqi police in Mosul," coalition spokesman Dan Senor told CNN. "He was in Iraqi police custody. He was met by U.S. officials, he was visited three times by the FBI, but at all times, he was in Iraqi custody."
MOSUL, Iraq - Iraqi police never detained an American whose decapitated body was found last week in Baghdad, the police chief said Thursday, despite U.S. insistence that Nicholas Berg was held by local authorities here shortly before he disappeared last month. Berg's family blames American authorities for detaining the 26-year-old telecommunications businessman until a flare-up of anti-American violence, which set the stage for his abduction and death. The young man was beheaded on a video posted Tuesday on an al-Qaida-affiliated Web site. It bore the title ``Abu Musab al-Zarqawi shown slaughtering an American,'' referring to an associate of Osama bin Laden believed behind a wave of suicide bombings in Iraq. In Baghdad, U.S. officials said Iraqi police arrested Berg in Mosul on March 24 because local authorities believed he may have been involved in ``suspicious activities.'' He would not elaborate but insisted American authorities had not held Berg although the FBI visited him three times before he was released April 6. However, police chief Maj. Gen. Mohammed Khair al-Barhawi told reporters Thursday that his department had never arrested Berg. `The Iraqi police never arrested the slain American,'' he said. ``Take it from me ... that such reports are baseless.''