The 'evidence' against Barry George was never compelling. But at the time of the Jill Dando murder on April 26, 1999, one of Tony Blair's wars was well underway. British planes had bombed Radio Television Serbia in Belgrade, killing 16 civilian employees in typical, cowardly, cold-blooded Zionist fashion.
Reporters at the scene said they saw the almost decapitated body of one man dangling from the rubble, and the body of a make-up artist. Another man was trapped between two concrete blocks. Doctors amputated his legs at the site but he later died. [...]
Tony Blair declared the television station to have been a "legitimate target".
A mere three days after the TV station bombing, BBC presenter Jill Dando was forced to the ground and killed with a single shot to the head. The weapon was never found, and the murder bore the hallmarks of a professional contract killing rather than the act of a local oddball and village idiot.
Miss Dando, 37, had been grabbed by the arm and quickly forced to the ground, where a pistol was pressed so tightly against her head that it muffled the sound of the fatal shot.
The murder took less than 20 seconds before the killer walked calmly away in broad daylight, leaving no clues at the scene except the bullet itself, which had been crimped into its cartridge by hand, indicating the murderer was an expert in guns.
The idea that a shambling oddball with a habit of drawing attention to himself could have executed such a clinical crime was, not surprisingly, dismissed out of hand.
Barry George’s family believe the police’s interest in him should have ended there. Mr George, who had suffered from emotional and behavioural difficulties since childhood, had an IQ of just 75, putting him in the bottom five per cent of the population, and the jury at his retrial was told that his ability to organise and perform tasks was in the bottom one per cent of the populace.
Whilst the killer appeared to have a specialist knowledge of guns, possibly converting a starter pistol to fire live ammunition and then adapting the bullet by hand, Mr George was so hopeless with gadgets that he once had to ask a local shopkeeper to load film into his camera for him.
So the "Barry George carried out a professional-style murder avoiding eyewitnesses in broad daylight in west London" lone assassin thesis is about as credible as the claim that Hani Hanjour flew a Boeing 757 into the Pentagon with the engines clearing the lawn by two feet. The favored theory has to be that the murderer was a Serbian hitman, probably linked to Radovan Karadzic and the warlord known as Arkan who was assassinated in January 2000.
As ever, the authorities needed a scapegoat. The government was desperate to cover up the fact that a well-liked television presenter and journalist had died as a result of Tony Blair's warmongering. Subsequently, they were unable to do so in the case of Dr David Kelly, yet officially this murder was dressed up as a "suicide", as with numerous other cases ranging from James Forrestal to Bruce Ivins. In the latter case the FBI are having to play the role of "idiots" who are "baffled" as to the motive for the 2001 anthrax attacks. Related to that motive, we find the bizarre 'coincidences' that Jerry Hauer, a Jew with a background in "counter-terror" (i.e. false-flag terror) and a specialized knowledge of biological warfare who is linked to Kroll Inc. and Rudy Giuliani's OEM, who found John O'Neill a job at the World Trade Center just before it was destroyed, identified his remains even though the cockpit voice and flight data recorders from AA 11 and UA 175 were never found, and was on the news channels within hours of the attacks arguing that it must have been the "velocity" of the plane impacts and "intense heat" of the fires that brought down the Towers.
To get back to Barry George, he had been convicted of indecent assault and attempted rape in 1982 and 1983, and is a nutter, fantasist and stalker. But there is no evidence he is a killer. The prosecution case had relied heavily upon a tiny speck of firearms residue found in the pocket of George's coat. The consensus now is that this evidence is useless because "it was, in fact, no more likely that the particle had come from a gun fired by Barry George than that it had come from some other source". Following George's retrial and acquittal, he is now likely to receive compensation for spending eight years behind bars for a crime which he did not commit.
