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Title: Air Force brigadier general dies of gunshot wound
Source: honoluluadvertiser.com
URL Source: http://www.honoluluadvertiser.com/a ... 200807281547/BREAKING/80728072
Published: Jul 30, 2008
Author: Associated Press
Post Date: 2008-07-30 21:31:32 by rack42
Keywords: suicide, general
Views: 2297
Comments: 20

ELMENDORF AIR FORCE BASE, Alaska — An Air Force brigadier general died of a gunshot wound that likely was self-inflicted, a spokesman said Monday.

Brig. Gen. Thomas L. Tinsley, the commander at Elmendorf Air Force Base in Anchorage, suffered a gunshot wound to his chest late Sunday night and was pronounced dead within a half hour, said Col. Richard Walberg, who assumed command at Elmendorf after Tinsley's death.

"To the best information, it's possible it was a self-inflicted gunshot wound," Walberg said at a news conference. The weapon was likely a handgun.

Medical responders rushed to Tinsley's home on base but were unsuccessful in trying to save him. Tinsley's wife and college-age daughter were home at the time of the shooting.

Tinsley was named base commander in May 2007. He had served as an F-15 instructor pilot, F-15C test pilot, wing weapons officer, exchange officer and instructor with the Royal Australian Air Force.

His previous 22-month assignment was executive officer to the Air Force chief of staff, Gen. T. Michael "Buzz" Mosely, who in June resigned under pressure in an agency shake-up.

Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates ousted both Mosely, the Air Force military chief, and Air Force Secretary Michael W. Wynne, the agency's civilian head, holding them accountable for failing to fully correct an erosion of nuclear-related performance standards. One concern was a cross-country flight in August 2007 of a B-52 carrying armed nuclear weapons.

Walberg said Tinsley was not under investigation or undue stress.

"Gen. Tinsley was under no investigation," he said. "As far as stress, sir, this job, by nature of being an Air Force officer in a nation at war, is stressful. Undue stress, no."

Walberg lives across the street from the base commander's home.

He and his wife went to bed at about 10 p.m. Sunday and the base command post called about 10 to 15 minutes later.

"The individual on the end of the line was fairly agitated and said there was a report of a gunshot at Gen. Tinsley's house and people are screaming."

The colonel bolted out of the house with his wife behind him and met Col. Eli Powell, the 3rd Medical Group commander and an orthopedic surgeon, inside. Powell, who lives next door to Walberg, had also received a call. He started resuscitation efforts on Tinsley as family members watched.

Tinsley was declared dead at 10:30 p.m.

Representatives of the Armed Forces Institute of Pathology will do a report and declare whether Tinsley's cause of death and determine whether it was a suicide, Walberg said.

"We're assuming it was, and I'm not prepared to make that statement," he said. A report takes an average of 30 days to complete, he said.

Tinsley's outstanding achievement was the care he showed for those under his command, Walberg said.

"Brig. Gen. Tom Tinsley's best accomplishment in the 15 months or so that he's been the commander is his absolute love, and I mean love with a capital L, for his airmen. His first thought in the morning, his last thought at night for his professional family was how can I better take care of these airmen who are being sent in harm's way."


Poster Comment:

Committed suicide by shooting himself in the chest? Official Biography

I'd put this in "Conspiracy" if such category existed.

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#16. To: rack42 (#0)

They told us that the only mustang CNO Adm. Jeremy Boorda had committed suicide with a handgun because he was distraught over exposure of his into "Valor device enhancements he wore on his Navy Achievement Medal and a Navy Commendation Medal (small brass Vs, signifying valor in combat), which the media report claimed he was not entitled to wear."

Then we read that "Boorda also faced unrelenting hostility from a majority of Naval Flag Officers who believed that Boorda had betrayed the Navy by allying himself with Clinton administration demands for reform in the wake of the Tailhook scandal. Aviators in particular were incensed [7] by the treatment of Admiral Stan Arthur, whose nomination for the post of Commander in Chief, Pacific, was withdrawn by Boorda at the behest of a single Senator after questions were raised over mishandling of a separate sexual harassment case."

But, according to the now deceased Sherman Skolnick Boorda was part of a group of flag officers who were planning to arrest Clinton for high treason, and most of the officers were killed in a single plane crash leaving only Boorda to be dealt with as a "despondent suicide."

No, this latest death has the smell of BushCo "strategery" all over it. An Air Force hero just doesn't commit suicide for the Hell of it.

Perhaps this comment "Brig. Gen. Tom Tinsley's best accomplishment in the 15 months or so that he's been the commander is his absolute love, and I mean love with a capital L, for his airmen." is intended to imply that he was involved in improper relations with subordinates.

This death is more than likely tied in with the 6 deaths around the time of the Minot incident one year ago.

And, because no federal investigators have expressed the slightest curiosity about the cluster, we should assume that our entire govt is now a criminal conspiracy to move as a single organism against the constitution and the people of these United States.

Yeah, somewhere is a hidden throne room where a pointed-tailed beast with great horns sits, and America as we knew it is already dead but the news has not yet been made public.

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2008-07-30   22:56:45 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#18. To: All (#16)

Two days before the Oklahoma bloodshed, on April 17, 1995, a plane-load of top military brass were murdered when their sabotaged plane blew up near Alexander City, Alabama. It was a real life version of "Seven Days in May". According to federal grand jurors we interviewed, there was an attempt, later blocked, by a grand jury to investigate this aborted coup. It was actually part of a series of events involving twenty four Admirals and Generals, some of the most patriotic flag officers in the history of this Republic. They vowed, under the Uniform Military Code, to arrest their Commander-in-Chief Bill Clinton, for his various acts of treason aiding and abetting sworn enemies of the United States, such as Red China and Iraq. If Clinton had them arrested for mutiny, they were prepared, if not assassinated, to defend themselves with their heavily documented charges of his treachery against the U.S. Constitution and the people of the United States.

Some of the coup plotters, deciding to be out of uniform, took up residence in a Paris suburb. The French CIA, aware of all this, used it to blackmail advantages out of the U.S. government. Such as, to blockade the U.S. Justice Department, itself a highly corrupt entity, from prosecuting some fourteen French nationals, resident in the U.S., who stole U.S. industrial and financial secrets. [The French used similar blackmail threatening to publicize their knowledge of Iran's complicity in the missile attack on TWA Flight 800. Eight top officials of the French CIA along with some 60 other French nationals died in the plane that had been scheduled for Paris. A top official, however, of the French CIA at the last minute refused to board Flight 800. The Clinton White House had a secret business/peace deal pending with the Teheran oligarchs which the missile disclosures would have wrecked.]

The purpose of several attempts to pull off a coup was NOT to install a junta [pronounced HOON-tah], that is, an evil military dictatorship. Rather, to restore by necessary force the American Republic, which has gone down hill since the overthrow, by the American secret political police, of the U.S. government, by way of the murder in 1963 of President John F. Kennedy.

In the months and years that followed the Alexander City incident, some ten like-minded Admirals, Generals, and other officials and former officials, were assassinated. Such as, Admiral Jeremy Boorda, Chief of Naval Operations, the highest naval officer in uniform. Such as General David McCloud, head of the Alaska Military District. Such as, former Director of Central Intelligence, DCI, William Colby. Our interviews with their family members, relatives, and confidants convinces us of the validity of our reports. The monopoly press wrote off their demise as "airplane accidents", "suicide", and "boat accident".

http://www.rense.com/general14/skolnick.htm

HOUNDDAWG  posted on  2008-07-30   23:37:33 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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