There are many reports and stories about Bill Clinton and the drug cartels flowing through Arkansas for years. You can believe these stories or not,
but when you combine all the evil surrounding the Clinton's
at some point you must start to pay attention.
but when you combine all the evil surrounding the Clinton's
at some point you must start to pay attention.
The Boys on the Tracks - Probably the most famous cold case in Arkansas is the deaths of Don Henry and Kevin Ives. Their bodies were found mangled next to railroad tracks in Bryant.
In the pre-dawn hours of August 23, 1987, a 6000 ton cargo train made its regular night run to Little Rock, Arkansas. The train was just over a mile long and was traveling at a speed of 52 miles per hour. The train had been riding smoothly as engineer Stephen Shroyer approached the small town of Bryant, Arkansas. Suddenly, he saw something in his path, but couldn’t tell what it was. As the train drew closer, Shroyer made the horrifying discovery that two boys were lying motionless across the railroad tracks:
“From the time that we had placed the train into an emergency position and laid down on the horn, I would estimate about three to five seconds to impact. And that may not sound like a very long period of time, but when you’re bearing down a couple of children, it’s an eternity, honestly.”
They were found lying on the tracks with their arms at their sides covered partially with a green tarp which the train conductor testified to but it vanished by the time they started looking for it after they were run over. . Their deaths were initially ruled accidental, but after the family petitioned for the case to be reopened, new details emerged.
The engineer that noticed them and was unable to stop his train in time to prevent running over them; he later rationalized that due to the noise of his oncoming train, that the boys had to have been dead and positioned on the tracks.
The local police suspiciously rushed to a solution in the case, judging the boys had died from drug abuse on the tracks, but their families are convinced that they were murdered and that there was a police cover-up of a CIA operation. They were positioned in ways that it was impossible for someone under the influence of marijuana to end on. A few months after the deaths, the boys parents held a press conference, and the case was reopened. A grand jury over-ruled the ruling of accidental death and changed their deaths to probable homicide. An investigator found that a similar case occurred in Hodgen, Oklahoma, in which two young men were found lying on railroad tracks and ran over in 1984, positioned almost identically to the boys. However, police have found no suspects in their deaths.
In the pre-dawn hours of August 23, 1987, a 6000 ton cargo train made its regular night run to Little Rock, Arkansas. The train was just over a mile long and was traveling at a speed of 52 miles per hour. The train had been riding smoothly as engineer Stephen Shroyer approached the small town of Bryant, Arkansas. Suddenly, he saw something in his path, but couldn’t tell what it was. As the train drew closer, Shroyer made the horrifying discovery that two boys were lying motionless across the railroad tracks:
“From the time that we had placed the train into an emergency position and laid down on the horn, I would estimate about three to five seconds to impact. And that may not sound like a very long period of time, but when you’re bearing down a couple of children, it’s an eternity, honestly.”
They were found lying on the tracks with their arms at their sides covered partially with a green tarp which the train conductor testified to but it vanished by the time they started looking for it after they were run over. . Their deaths were initially ruled accidental, but after the family petitioned for the case to be reopened, new details emerged.
The engineer that noticed them and was unable to stop his train in time to prevent running over them; he later rationalized that due to the noise of his oncoming train, that the boys had to have been dead and positioned on the tracks.
The local police suspiciously rushed to a solution in the case, judging the boys had died from drug abuse on the tracks, but their families are convinced that they were murdered and that there was a police cover-up of a CIA operation. They were positioned in ways that it was impossible for someone under the influence of marijuana to end on. A few months after the deaths, the boys parents held a press conference, and the case was reopened. A grand jury over-ruled the ruling of accidental death and changed their deaths to probable homicide. An investigator found that a similar case occurred in Hodgen, Oklahoma, in which two young men were found lying on railroad tracks and ran over in 1984, positioned almost identically to the boys. However, police have found no suspects in their deaths.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The two victims were identified as 16-year-old Don Henry and 17-year-old Kevin Ives, best friends and popular seniors at Bryant High School. Kevin and Don were typical teenage boys. They loved to work on their cars. They loved to hunt. Don was a natural comedian and Kevin was his best audience. Most weekends, the two double-dated with their girlfriends. However, on the night of Saturday, August 22, 1987, Kevin and Don met a group of friends at the commuter parking lot, a favorite gathering place for the local teenagers. Around midnight, the two boys left to go back to Don’s house. Kevin waited on the porch while Don went inside to talk with his father, Curtis Henry: “And he came in at approximately 12:15, and told me where he was going and everything. I told him just to be careful and he took one of my spotlights with him and took his .22.”
The two boys set off to go “spotlighting,” a form of night hunting which is illegal in Arkansas. One of them would shine a light in the animal’s eyes, transfixing the prey, while the other fired. That night, the boys chose their usual hunting ground, along the railroad tracks that ran behind Don’s house. Three hours later, the train came speeding down Bryant Hill. The boys were lying exactly parallel on the tracks, their arms straight down by their sides.
An independent group of researchers in Arkansas are charging that Governor Bill Clinton is covering up an airport used by the CIA and major cocaine smugglers in a remote corner of the Ozark mountains. According to Deborah Robinson of In These Times, the Inter mountain Regional Airport in Mena,Arkansas continues to be the hub of operations for people like assassinated cocaine kingpin Barry Seal as well as government intelligence operations linked to arms and drug smuggling.
The two boys set off to go “spotlighting,” a form of night hunting which is illegal in Arkansas. One of them would shine a light in the animal’s eyes, transfixing the prey, while the other fired. That night, the boys chose their usual hunting ground, along the railroad tracks that ran behind Don’s house. Three hours later, the train came speeding down Bryant Hill. The boys were lying exactly parallel on the tracks, their arms straight down by their sides.
An independent group of researchers in Arkansas are charging that Governor Bill Clinton is covering up an airport used by the CIA and major cocaine smugglers in a remote corner of the Ozark mountains. According to Deborah Robinson of In These Times, the Inter mountain Regional Airport in Mena,Arkansas continues to be the hub of operations for people like assassinated cocaine kingpin Barry Seal as well as government intelligence operations linked to arms and drug smuggling.
The Rise and Demise of Jean Duffey’s Task Force by Jean Duffey
https://flyingtigercomics.wordpress.com/2014/07/10/mena-the-boys-on-the-tracks-why-drug-runner-satyriac-clinton-and-his-lesbionymphomaniac-wife-were-made-president/
https://flyingtigercomics.wordpress.com/2014/07/10/mena-the-boys-on-the-tracks-why-drug-runner-satyriac-clinton-and-his-lesbionymphomaniac-wife-were-made-president/
This story is connect toJeb Bush and the Murder of CIA Drug Smuggler Barry Seal in 1986 http://www.americaismyname.org/jeb-bush-crook.html