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Inventor of self powering car battery found dead

J. James

Friday 7 December 2007, 10:21AM

By J. James

1,751 views

The inventor of a self powering battery that would have revolutionised the car industry has been found dead in his car in Charlotte Douglass International Airport in North Carolina. Mr M. DeGeu was taken to hospital where he died a short time later, of what officials said was natural heart failure. Mr M.DeGeu was 45.

Unbeknown to all involved Mr DeGeu had demonstrated his technology earlier in the week to people who were seeking to raise money for its advancement.

Given the significance of his invention on the auto industry and the worlds attempts in seeking alternatives to burning fossil fuel Mr De Geus death has trigged speculation as to whether he was taken out or did actually die of natural causes, given he was said to be a healthy 45 year old before his sudden death.

Tom Bearden, Retired Lieutenant Colonel U.S. Army  says in a report on DeGeu’s death that

“question arises as to whether this was just a simple “accidental” heart attack, or whether it could have been a very professional assassination to suppress the inventor and his invention. While we cannot definitively answer that question, we can explain exactly how such an assassination could have been done, which would have given the victim a massive heart attack or stroke or both, resulting in his death”

According to Mr Bearden there have been other similar incidents pointing to the death of Stan Meyer who- according to witness “rushed from a restaurant and shouted “They’re killing me!” (Some reports stated he shouted “They’re poisoning me”), and then collapsed and died"

He then goes on to give a explain how this could happen

“The standard method of assassination to provide a certified autopsy report of “death by natural causes” is the little EM beam “shooter” using the Venus ECCM technique – i.e., warping of its wavefront – to destroy the body’s control of its heartbeat. There are two basic sizes: One is about the size of a dime-store pocketbook, and has an effective range of something like 30 feet or so. The other is the size of a bazooka (shoulder-held rocket launcher) and its beam is effective at a range of about 200 feet or so. It also is often used with infrared sighting, to fire through a wall at a person (say, in a room on the second floor) by aiming at his infrared change and signature detected outside the building.

A person struck by this Venus-technique warped wavefront beam has a sudden interruption of all control of his heartbeat, and so his heart goes into instant, uncontrolled, and violent fibrillation. Exposure to the main beam for 10 seconds or more is almost certain to result in death of the individual, by a resulting massive heart failure, stroke, or both.

My colleague Ken Moore and I were struck with just such a beam from a small Venus beam shooter, in the inside breast coatpocket of the assassin, in a restaurant here in Huntsville several years ago. We both felt the beam and the instant fibrillation. I personally saw the assassin, about 20 feet away from us and well-dressed in suit and tie, pull back his coat front and point that book-sized shooter at us. Fortunately we were seated right beside the emergency exit from the dining room, and I knew about Venus technique shooters and their drastic effects. So we just immediately jumped right through that exit, setting off all the alarms, but getting out of the beam in just a few seconds. So we lived to tell the tale.

If this were indeed used in the DeGeus death case, it would have been very simple for the assassin to simply approach him while he was still sitting in his just-parked car, hit him with the beam and hold it on him for, say, 30 seconds to a minute, then close his coat and simply walk away. And no one would have been the wiser, till the victim was found by someone in his car, either dead or dying.