Put On Your Tin Foil Hats: Did Someone Know the Rig Was Going to Blow?

by Mac Slavo | Jun 9, 2010 | Alex Jones | 29 comments

[dipl_text_animator animated_text=”Do you LOVE America? | Do you WANT our borders secured? | Don’t miss on the latest news | Subscribe and stay informed!” animation_layout=”zoom” animation_time=”740ms” animation_hold=”5010ms” _builder_version=”4.24.0″ _module_preset=”default” global_text_settings_text_align=”center” global_text_settings_text_color=”#FFFFFF” global_colors_info=”{}”][/dipl_text_animator]
[contact-form-7 id=”6521033″ title=”Article Subscribe”]

Share

As more pre-explosion evidence is uncovered, signs are suggesting that there may have been foreknowledge that an accident was imminent.

Though we’re not criminal investigators, if we were asked to look into the possibility of criminal activity surrounding the rig explosion, the following items would seem very coincidental, some of them highly suspect.

Of course, we’ll never know the “real” story, but we will most definitely feel the ramifications of the BP oil rig event in months and years to come, likely in the form of restricted domestic drilling, higher energy prices, mandated alternative energy policies and cap & trade taxes.


Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag

By: Steve Watson, Paul Joseph Watson & Alex Jones
Source: Prison Planet

Troubling evidence surrounding the Deepwater Horizon explosion on April 20th suggests that the incident could have been manufactured.

On April 12th, just over one week before the Deepwater Horizon rig exploded, Halliburton, the world’s second largest oilfield services corporation, surprised some by acquiring Boots & Coots, a relatively small but vastly experienced oil
well control company.

The company deals with fires and blowouts on oil rigs and oil wells. It was responsible for putting out roughly one third of the more than 700 oil well fires set in Kuwait by retreating Iraqi soldiers during the Gulf War.

The deal itself is still under scrutiny with Boots and Coots facing an ongoing investigation into “possible breaches of fiduciary duty and other violations of state law”

Where this information gets really interesting is with the fact that Halliburton is named in the majority of some two dozen lawsuits filed since the explosion by Gulf Coast people and businesses who claim that the company is to blame for the disaster.

Halliburton was forced to admit in testimony at a congressional hearing last month that it carried out a cementing operation 20 hours before the Gulf of Mexico rig went up in flames. The lawsuits claim that four Halliburton workers stationed on the rig improperly capped the well.

As the New York Times noted on May 26th, “BP officials chose, partly for financial reasons, to use a type of casing for the well that the company knew was the riskier of two options,”

Workers from the rig and company officials have said that hours before the explosion, gases were leaking through the cement, which had been set in place by the oil services contractor, Halliburton. Investigators have said these leaks were the likely cause of the explosion.”

According to a 2007 study by Minerals Management Service, cementing was a factor in 18 of 39 rig blowouts in the gulf between 1992 and 2006.

Another intriguing connection Boots and Coots has to the Deepwater Horizon explosion comes via Pat Campbell, the man BP has employed to cap the well beneath the ruined rig. Campbell worked for Boots and Coots as general manager for many years.

BP has admitted to buying Yahoo and Google keywords in an attempt to control publicly available information in the wake of the catastrophe. It seems that the company is taking all the flack for the spill while the Halliburton link is being roundly ignored.

BP’s prepared testimony briefing, which has since leaked online, also intriguingly notes that the Hydraulic Control System on equipment designed to automatically seal the well in an emergency was modified without their knowledge sometime before the explosion.

“the extent of these modifications is unknown at this time” states the report on page 37.

Evidence Points To BP Oil Spill False Flag  080610BP

Possible prior knowledge of the explosion is also evident via huge dumping of stocks and shares in the weeks and days prior to the incident.

Goldman Sachs dumped 44% of its shares in BP Oil during the first quarter – shares that subsequently lost 36 percent of their value, equating to $96 million.

Other asset management firms also sold huge blocks of BP stock in the first quarter. Though the amounts pale in comparison to Goldman’s holdings, Wachovia, owned by Wells Fargo, sold 98% of its shares in BP and Swiss bank UBS sold 97% of its BP shares.

Furthermore, as reported by the London Telegraph on June 5th, Tony Hayward, the chief executive of BP, sold £1.4 million of his shares in the fuel giant weeks before the spill.

In the days before the Deepwater explosion, Obama had announced a new effort to explore for and lease new drilling locations in the deep Gulf and in Alaska. In the wake of the disaster, these plans have been cancelled and BP is taking a PR bashing.

All of which has been capitalized on by the Obama administration to reinvigorate talk of a carbon tax and has created the opportunity to reintroduce the idea of nationalizing oil, which the Democratic leadership has long sought.

The full story of what is happening in the Gulf of Mexico is yet to emerge, there are rumours of more spills and an ongoing coverup. The site represents a $2.2 trillion source of wealth and power, a motive along with a plethora of suspicious activity that needs to be investigated further.

Source: Prison Planet

[the_ad_group id=”24571″]

URGENT ON GOLD… as in URGENT

It Took 22 Years to Get to This Point

Gold has been the right asset with which to save your funds in this millennium that began 23 years ago.

Free Exclusive Report

The inevitable Breakout – The two w’s

[email-download download_id=”345496″ contact_form_id=”19fc5e7″]

Related Articles

[the_ad_group id=”30340″]

Comments

Join the conversation!

It’s 100% free and your personal information will never be sold or shared online.

0 Comments

Submit a Comment

Commenting Policy:

Some comments on this web site are automatically moderated through our Spam protection systems. Please be patient if your comment isn’t immediately available. We’re not trying to censor you, the system just wants to make sure you’re not a robot posting random spam.

This website thrives because of its community. While we support lively debates and understand that people get excited, frustrated or angry at times, we ask that the conversation remain civil. Racism, to include any religious affiliation, will not be tolerated on this site, including the disparagement of people in the comments section.

[dipl_ajax_search search_placeholder=”Article Search” display_fields=”on|on|off|off” search_result_box_bg_color=”#870404″ search_icon_font_size=”20px” search_icon_color=”#870404″ loader_color=”#870404″ _builder_version=”4.17.4″ _module_preset=”default” search_result_item_title_font_size=”14px” search_result_item_excerpt_font_size=”11px” border_color_all_form_field=”#870404″ global_colors_info=”{}”][/dipl_ajax_search]

[the_ad_group id=”30343″]

[the_ad_group id=”30344″]

[620studio_custom_posts post_type=”report” columns=”1″ limit=”1″ category_id=”23503″ caption=”no” date=”no” title=”no”]