Las Vegas Eyewitness Commits Suicide Following FBI Raid
YourNewsWire.com
A
key eyewitness in the Las Vegas mass shooting committed suicide and
killed his daughter shortly after the FBI raided his home.
John Beilman was wanted by federal agents in connection to a
communications device discovered in Stephen Paddock’s hotel room at the
Mandalay Bay.
The FBI had raided Beilman’s home one day before he shot his disabled
daughter and then himself, according to sources close to the
investigation.
Neon Nettle reports:
Agents executed a search warrant and raided Beilman’s
Williamsburg Drive home the day before he took his daughter, Nicole,
into the backyard and shot her and then himself in the back of the head
with a 12-gauge shotgun.
According to this report, upon the FBI searching the Mandalay Bay Hotel room used by CIA gun runner Stephen Paddock, a cell phone charger was discovered that
had no accompanying phone—with SVR technology experts noting that this
type of charger is used to charge a CP502520 3.0V 600mAh Li-MnO2
Non-rechargeable Thin Cell Battery used in various communication devices by both US Special Forces and CIA forces.
The company making this unique lithium battery, this report details,
is Ultralife Corporation, based in Newark, New York, that specializes in
military communications systems for the Pentagon—and whose lead
engineer for this particular communication systems development was John
Beilman.
Listing himself as
a “product design and manufacturing professional”, this report
continues, John Beilman was employed by Ultralife Corporation between
2007-2012 where he worked on various top-secret communications systems
for the US military—thereafter his leaving to become a top engineer at
the General Motors research facility located in Rochester New York.
Fearing that Ultralife Corporation had been secretly funneling their US
military communications systems to the CIA, this report notes, this past
Tuesday (3 October), the FBI raided the home of John Beilman under
a secret US Federal Court warrant—and that caused Beilman, less than 12
hours later, during the early morning hours of Wednesday (4 October),
to wheel out his severely disabled daughter Nicole into his home’s
backyard where she was executed, with Beilman then killing himself
too—and that was followed 48 hours later (6 October) by the Pentagon awarding Ultralife Corporation new contracts valued at over $49 million.
The CIA, this report further notes, has long been known to eliminate
witnesses to their “murder sacrifice” “false flag” operations—and that
includes the hundreds of witnesses mysteriously killed following the 9/11 “Tower Sacrifice”, and the, likewise, hundreds of witnesses mysteriously dying following the “King Sacrifice” murder of President John F. Kennedy—and that London’s Sunday Times reported the “the odds against these witnesses being dead by February 1967, were one hundred thousand trillion to one.”
The FBI claim they didn’t protect, or at the very least put under
24-hour surveillance, John Beilman following their raid on his home, due
to American domestic intelligence experiencing a manpower shortage in
their Las Vegas massacre investigation.
According to D&C, John Beilman committed the murder-suicide shortly after 5:20 a.m., Fairport police say.
Fairport police said Beilman’s wife, Donna Beilman, was inside the home
and did not hear the shots that took the life of her husband and
daughter.
Fairport Police Chief Samuel Farina said John Beilman left behind a
“goodbye note” to his wife that indicated the circumstances of the
shooting but not a motive.
A neighbor of Beilman reported that he saw two police cars near the home
the day before the killings. Farina said this week that police had not
responded to any calls at the home.
The FBI and federal prosecutors declined to comment.
A federal magistrate judge would have approved a search of the home.
However, approval of a search does not ensure a crime was committed;
instead, it is a search for evidence of a crime.
Records of federal searches are often filed under seal, and there was no
public record available Friday of the search of the Fairport home.
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