Hear Paul Fromm -- The Fighting Side of Me: Getting to the Truth
Written by Paul Fromm
Saturday, 30 July 2011 00:12
Hear Paul Fromm -- The Fighting Side of Me: Getting to the Truth


[image: Almeric Hugh Paget]
Lord Queensborough

Paul Fromm:

- Probes Chinese gangster Lai Changxing who was ordered deported, sought
“refugee” status in Canada but was involved with illegal gambling operations
with the Big Circle Boys;
- Reveals Zionist background of trash journalist master Rupert Murdoch;
- Points out Red China has a 99.88% conviction rate but Canadian Human
Rights Tribunal from 1979 to 2009, until the Lemire case, had 100%
conviction rate in free speech cases;
- Remembers intellectual banquet provided by *Instauration Magazine* for
25 years; now all on-line at
InstaurationOnline.com<http://instaurationonline.com/>thanks to Jamie
Kelso;
- Highlights contributions of Baron Almeric Hugh Paget (Lord
Queensborough) in exposing the origins of communism.
-
http://reasonradionetwork.com/20110719/the-fighting-side-of-me-getting-to-the-truth
 
Jeff Hughes Inquest, Day 1: Dissident Left to Die by Heavily Armed Officers Afraid t
Written by Paul Fromm
Tuesday, 26 July 2011 08:21
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Jeff Hughes Inquest, Day 1: Dissident Left to Die by Heavily Armed
Officers Afraid to Approach a Mortally Wounded Man

Nanaimo, July 25, 2011. The inquest into the police shooting and
killing of White Nationalist Jeffrey Scott Hughes, 48, on October 23,
2998, opened this morning before Coroner Marj Paonessa. The first
day’s testimony was marked both by what it contained that might
have been inflammatory or irrelevant and what it did not contain.

The seven person coroner’s jury – four men and three women, –
is, in the opening instructions of Coroner Paonessa “investigatory,
not accusatory. A member of our community is dead. You are a fact
finding body. You must decide the identity of the deceased and how
where, when and why he died.”

Today’s only witness, led by inquest counsel Rodrick Mackenzie, was
Detective Michelle Robertson of the Victoria Police Department. Her
department was called in to investigate the 2009 shooting of Mr.
Hughes by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. “It’s still police
investigating police,” Victoria lawyer Douglas H. Christie, who is
representing an interested party, said at the noontime break.

In an opening statement, Mr. Mackenzie summed up his version of the
fatal events. “On October 23, the RCMP in Nanaimo received a noise
complaint from the business manager of 521 Selby Street,. Officers
were dispatched. Loud music was heard coming from apartment 101, Mr.
Hughes unit.” According to Mr. Mackenzie, the RCMP knocked on his
door and identified themselves. “Hughes,” he said, made threats.

However, Doug Christie wonders, “How could they hear those threats
over all the noise?”

Then, said, Mr. Mackenzie, “Mr. Hughes left the apartment with what
police thought was a handgun and then went back inside. Somewhat
later, he came out with what they thought was a handgun and they shot
him.”

Witness Detective Robertson is a member of the Vancouver Island
Integrated Major Crime Unit which investigates mostly homicides and
in-custody police shootings, Her evidence was a computer presentation,
Special software allows her to string together recorded police
dispatches and telephone (but not cellphone) communications. She
demonstrated the exact time of each communication along with a
transcript or summary of what was said.

Her timeline opened with a call at 5:37 a.m., October 23, with a
noise complaint from the building manager of Mr. Hughes low rise
rental unit. In cross-examination,. Mr. Christie wondered why
complaints Mr. Hughes had phoned in earlier that morning about his
raucous neighbours in unit 104 had not been entered into evidence, if
we are to have a complete picture of the event.

Police were dispatched at 5:42 and arrived at 5:47. Dispatch first
told the officers that Mr. Hughes “had no previous history.”
Officers also saw blood on the carpet leading to Mr. Hughes door.

Mr. Christie has learned that Mr. Hughes confronted his drug dealing
neighbours about the noise and was beaten for his efforts – thus,
the blood in the passageway leading to his door.

The police check the Canadian Firearms Registry and learn Mr. Hughes
has no registered weapons.

At 6:03, police allege that Mr. Hughes says he’ll shoot them if they
try to enter his apartment and says he wants to die.

More officers arrive. At 6:05, the police call the Crisis Response
Team, a medical psychiatric unit. A message informs them that the unit
does not open until 7:00 and no messages will be returned until 7:00
a.m. Several more increasingly desperate calls will be made over the
next hour to the impersonal answering machine, with no better results.

At 6:25, the police reach the psychiatric unit of the local hospital
and are told that Jeff Hughes, of a different address, is “violent
and a high risk.”

At 6:37, RCMP Const. Ziegler warns: “Know your crossfire that
there’s no blue on blue.” It is still rainy and dark that
October morning.

Doug Christie asks of Const. Ziegler’s remarks: “Are these simply
precautions or are they already thinking of shooting Jeff Hughes.?”

The RCMP ERT team was summoned and were mustering. Despite repeated
calls to the cellphone and home phones of two negotiators, they were
never reached.

At 6:51 Const. Ziegler shouts: “He’s got a firearm. He’s waving
a revolver.”

Det. Robertson’s presentation then shows the picture of a stubby
flaregun. The flaregun was reportedly found in Mr. Hughes’ hands
after he was shot. In cross-examination. Mr. Christie learned that,
while the officers on the scene could not find a weapon initially. It
was found by Sgt. Kirby Anderson of the ERT after the shooting. Mr.
Christie got Det. Robertson to admit that the flaregun had not been
fired during the incident and would certainly have been seen as it was
still dark had it been discharged. “There was no evidence a flaregun
was discharged at the scene,” she said.

At 6.56. officers Long and Macfarlane report Hughes door is opening
and he’s coming out. Immediately. Const. Ziegler shouts: “Got a
green, we’ve got a green light, you guys!”

Not long after, the dispatcher says: “We’re going to do a perp
takeout.” Doug Christie had Det. Robertson replay the call four
times. She insisted that the voice said: “We’re going to do an ERT
(pronounced urt] pageout” – or call for the Emergency Response
Team (SWAT team). Many in the court felt Doug’s hearing was the
more accurate one.

Shortly after 6:56 a.m. numerous shots are fired at Jeff Hughes.
Almost immediately, concerned residents start calling 911 and are
curtly informed that the police are already there. One man says he
heard six shots.

At 6:58, the RCMP media unit is informed. Det. Robertson claimed this
is done to alert the public and keep them way from the crime scene. A
skeptical Doug Christie pointed out that the officers had already
established a secure perimeter in the area.

At. 6:59, Staff Sgt. Doug Hogg is called and informed that a “male
who was suicidal and who had barricaded himself has been shot.”

Const. Heather Cook is just around the corner of the building and can
see Jeff Hughes’ body illuminated by her flashlight. At 6:59, she
reports: “He’s still breathing,. Did anyone see where than gun
went? He’s moving his head and every now and then he puts his hands
on his crotch.”

At 7:00 a.m., she radios: “He’s not moving at all. I don’t know
where that firearm went”

At 7:01 Cpl. McIntosh says: “He’s still armed and no one is going
in until we can confirm that he’s not, okay.”

At 7:12 Const. McIntosh and Ziegler are still worried about being in
the open and refuse to approach the mortally wounded Mr. Hughes.

Indeed, apparently out of fear of being shot themselves by a man
they’d shot, who was not moving and near whom no weapon could be
seen, nearly a dozen RMCP officers left Mr. Hughes to die unattended.

At 7:16, RCMP Staff Sergeant Norm McPhail in Victoria is informed (and
not entirely truthfully): ”They had multiple shots fired from the
suspect and police. Suspect is down and haven’t been able to confirm
where the weapon is. They have the suspect in custody.”

In cross –examining Det. Robertson, Doug Christie asked, considering
all the phone calling the officers did; “Was any attempt made to
phone M. Hughes.”

“I don’t have any record of that,” she had to admit.

At 7:03 RCMP headquarters gets a phone call from the hospital with a
person reading a summary of old reports on Mr. Hughes which alleged
Mr. Hughes had “a borderline anti-social personality disorder.”
However, there were no records of contact with Mr. Hughes after 2004.
Mr. Christie argued that this summary of notes on Mr. Hughes should be
excluded from the inquest as the RCMP didn’t learn of it until AFTER
Mr. Hughes had been shot. The coroner interrupted to say that she had
earlier decided to admit the information.

In a testy exchange, Mr. Christie asked Det. Robertson to re-play a
call from RCMP dispatch to the ambulance services. This call, at 7:21,
informs the ambulance services that their vehicle is no longer needed.
When the driver asks if the man is dead, the female dispatcher laughs
heartily,.

Mr. Christie said such behaviour was reprehensible and asked for the
dispatcher’s name. The coroner demanded: “Why is that relevant,
Mr. Christie?”

Inquest counsel Mackenzie objected to providing names: “We’re not
here to assign blame,” he said.

The name is relevant “:for the jury to consider whether some may
have wanted Mr. Hughes dead and did not want the ambulance to arrive
too quickly,” Mr. Christie replied. Observers note that Canadian
officialdom’s obsession with secrecy often has less to do with
protecting people’s rights than it does to covering up
embarrassments or wrongdoing,.

One of the most interesting tidbits to emerge occurred when Doug
Christie challenged Detective Robertson: “You’ve been seen
entering and leaving this court with the coroner,” an unusual
relationship between a witness and a presiding judge/adjudicator.

“I’m security for the coroner,” the Victoria detective replied.

“Are there no sheriffs?” Mr. Christie shot back, in a court that
was filled with other police.

“I was tasked to do that,” Det. Robertson said.

Paul Fromm, Director of the Canadian Association for Free Expression,
gave extensive interviews to the Globe and Mail, CHEK (CBC) television
and the Nanaimo Daily News. He raised concerns that Mr. Hughes, well
known for his White Nationalist views, and a target of the B.C “hate
squad”, may have been victimized for his political views.

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Jeff Hughes Inquest, Day 1: Dissident Left to Die by Heavily Armed Officers Afraid to
Written by Paul Fromm
Tuesday, 26 July 2011 07:47
*Jeff Hughes Inquest, Day 1: Dissident Left to Die by Heavily Armed
Officers Afraid to Approach a Mortally Wounded Man*

* *

*Nanaimo**, July 25, 2011*. The inquest into the police shooting and killing
of White Nationalist Jeffrey Scott Hughes, 48, on October 23, 2998, opened
this morning before Coroner Marj Paonessa. The first day’s testimony was
marked both by what it contained that might have been inflammatory or
irrelevant and what it did not contain.



The seven person coroner’s jury – four men and three women, – is, in the
opening instructions of Coroner Paonessa “investigatory, not accusatory. A
member of our community is dead. You are a fact finding body. You must
decide the identity of the deceased and how where, when and why he died.”



Today’s only witness, led by inquest counsel Rodrick Mackenzie, was
Detective Michelle Robertson of the Victoria Police Department. Her
department was called in to investigate the 2009 shooting of Mr. Hughes by
the Royal Canadian Mounted Police. “It’s still police investigating police,”
Victoria lawyer Douglas H. Christie, who is representing an interested
party, said at the noontime break.



In an opening statement, Mr. Mackenzie summed up his version of the fatal
events. “On October 23, the RCMP in Nanaimo received a noise complaint from
the business manager of 521 Selby Street,. Officers were dispatched. Loud
music was heard coming from apartment 101, Mr. Hughes unit.” According to
Mr. Mackenzie, the RCMP knocked on his door and identified themselves.
“Hughes,” he said, made threats.



However, Doug Christie wonders, “How could they hear those threats over all
the noise?”



Then, said, Mr. Mackenzie, “Mr. Hughes left the apartment with what police
thought was a handgun and then went back inside. Somewhat later, he came out
with what they thought was a handgun and they shot him.”



Witness Detective Robertson is a member of the Vancouver Island Integrated
Major Crime Unit which investigates mostly homicides and in-custody police
shootings, Her evidence was a computer presentation, Special software allows
her to string together recorded police dispatches and telephone (but not
cellphone) communications. She demonstrated the exact time of each
communication along with a transcript or summary of what was said.



Her timeline opened with a call at 5:37 a.m., October 23, with a noise
complaint from the building manager of Mr. Hughes low rise rental unit. In
cross-examination,. Mr. Christie wondered why complaints Mr. Hughes had
phoned in earlier that morning about his raucous neighbours in unit 104 had
not been entered into evidence, if we are to have a complete picture of the
event.



Police were dispatched at 5:42 and arrived at 5:47. Dispatch first told the
officers that Mr. Hughes “had no previous history.” Officers also saw blood
on the carpet leading to Mr. Hughes door.



Mr. Christie has learned that Mr. Hughes confronted his drug dealing
neighbours about the noise and was beaten for his efforts – thus, the blood
in the passageway leading to his door.



The police check the Canadian Firearms Registry and learn Mr. Hughes has no
registered weapons.



At 6:03, police allege that Mr. Hughes says he’ll shoot them if they try to
enter his apartment and says he wants to die.



More officers arrive. At 6:05, the police call the Crisis Response Team, a
medical psychiatric unit. A message informs them that the unit does not open
until 7:00 and no messages will be returned until 7:00 a.m. Several more
increasingly desperate calls will be made over the next hour to the
impersonal answering machine, with no better results.



At 6:25, the police reach the psychiatric unit of the local hospital and are
told that Jeff Hughes, of a different address, is “violent and a high risk.”



At 6:37, RCMP Const. Ziegler warns: “Know your crossfire that there’s no
blue on blue.” It is still rainy and dark that October morning.



Doug Christie asks of Const. Ziegler’s remarks: “Are these simply
precautions or are they already thinking of shooting Jeff Hughes.?”



The RCMP ERT team was summoned and were mustering. Despite repeated calls to
the cellphone and home phones of two negotiators, they were never reached.



At 6:51 Const. Ziegler shouts: “He’s got a firearm. He’s waving a revolver.”



Det. Robertson’s presentation then shows the picture of a stubby flaregun.
The flaregun was reportedly found in Mr. Hughes’ hands after he was shot. In
cross-examination. Mr. Christie learned that, while the officers on the
scene could not find a weapon initially. It was found by Sgt. Kirby Anderson
of the ERT after the shooting. Mr. Christie got Det. Robertson to admit that
the flaregun had not been fired during the incident and would certainly have
been seen as it was still dark had it been discharged. “There was no
evidence a flaregun was discharged at the scene,” she said.



At 6.56. officers Long and Macfarlane report Hughes door is opening and he’s
coming out. Immediately. Const. Ziegler shouts: “Got a green, we’ve got a
green light, you guys!”



Not long after, the dispatcher says: “We’re going to do a perp takeout.”
Doug Christie had Det. Robertson replay the call four times. She insisted
that the voice said: “We’re going to do an ERT (pronounced urt] pageout” –
or call for the Emergency Response Team (SWAT team). Many in the court felt
Doug’s hearing was the more accurate one.



Shortly after 6:56 a.m. numerous shots are fired at Jeff Hughes. Almost
immediately, concerned residents start calling 911 and are curtly informed
that the police are already there. One man says he heard six shots.



At 6:58, the RCMP media unit is informed. Det. Robertson claimed this is
done to alert the public and keep them way from the crime scene. A skeptical
Doug Christie pointed out that the officers had already established a secure
perimeter in the area.



At. 6:59, Staff Sgt. Doug Hogg is called and informed that a “male who was
suicidal and who had barricaded himself has been shot.”



Const. Heather Cook is just around the corner of the building and can see
Jeff Hughes’ body illuminated by her flashlight. At 6:59, she reports: “He’s
still breathing,. Did anyone see where than gun went? He’s moving his head
and every now and then he puts his hands on his crotch.”



At 7:00 a.m., she radios: “He’s not moving at all. I don’t know where that
firearm went”



At 7:01 Cpl. McIntosh says: “He’s still armed and no one is going in until
we can confirm that he’s not, okay.”



At 7:12 Const. McIntosh and Ziegler are still worried about being in the
open and refuse to approach the mortally wounded Mr. Hughes.



Indeed, apparently out of fear of being shot themselves by a man they’d
shot, who was not moving and near whom no weapon could be seen, nearly a
dozen RMCP officers left Mr. Hughes to die unattended.



At 7:16, RCMP Staff Sergeant Norm McPhail in Victoria is informed (and not
entirely truthfully): ”They had multiple shots fired from the suspect and
police. Suspect is down and haven’t been able to confirm where the weapon
is. They have the suspect in custody.”



In cross –examining Det. Robertson, Doug Christie asked, considering all the
phone calling the officers did; “Was any attempt made to phone M. Hughes.”



“I don’t have any record of that,” she had to admit.



At 7:03 RCMP headquarters gets a phone call from the hospital with a person
reading a summary of old reports on Mr. Hughes which alleged Mr. Hughes had
“a borderline anti-social personality disorder.” However, there were no
records of contact with Mr. Hughes after 2004. Mr. Christie argued that this
summary of notes on Mr. Hughes should be excluded from the inquest as the
RCMP didn’t learn of it until AFTER Mr. Hughes had been shot. The coroner
interrupted to say that she had earlier decided to admit the information.





In a testy exchange, Mr. Christie asked Det. Robertson to re-play a call
from RCMP dispatch to the ambulance services. This call, at 7:21, informs
the ambulance services that their vehicle is no longer needed. When the
driver asks if the man is dead, the female dispatcher laughs heartily,.



Mr. Christie said such behaviour was reprehensible and asked for the
dispatcher’s name. The coroner demanded: “Why is that relevant, Mr.
Christie?”



Inquest counsel Mackenzie objected to providing names: “We’re not here to
assign blame,” he said.



The name is relevant “:for the jury to consider whether some may have wanted
Mr. Hughes dead and did not want the ambulance to arrive too quickly,” Mr.
Christie replied. Observers note that Canadian officialdom’s obsession with
secrecy often has less to do with protecting people’s rights than it does to
covering up embarrassments or wrongdoing,.



One of the most interesting tidbits to emerge occurred when Doug Christie
challenged Detective Robertson: “You’ve been seen entering and leaving this
court with the coroner,” an unusual relationship between a witness and a
presiding judge/adjudicator.



“I’m security for the coroner,” the Victoria detective replied.



“Are there no sheriffs?” Mr. Christie shot back, in a court that was filled
with other police.



“I was tasked to do that,” Det. Robertson said.



Paul Fromm, Director of the Canadian Association for Free Expression, gave
extensive interviews to the *Globe and Mail*, CHEK (CBC) television and the
*Nanaimo Daily News*. He raised concerns that Mr. Hughes, well known for his
White Nationalist views, and a target of the B.C “hate squad”, may have been
victimized for his political views.
 
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