Sean475
New member
- Joined
- Mar 19, 2018
- Messages
- 57
I'm not sure if this has been covered before but I stumbled across this information the other day
and was quite shocked by what I see.. I'll put the link below.
http://www.renegadetribune.com/the-unsolved-jewish-ritual-murder-of-5-chicago-children-in-1955/
A woman called Mrs.Lyrl Clark Van Hyning 'who I'm led to believe was a member or the leader of the Mothers Movement' gave the father a copy of My Irrelevant Defence
after reading it he was shocked by what he had read and went to the Police 'wrong move' and was immediately arrested and eventually done away with....but it gets more interesting, Arnold Leese was on the case...
"British author Arnold Leese was provided with massive amounts of news clippings and information, including a transcript of the inquest, by his correspondents in Chicago, and he was at work on a definitive account of the Schuessler case as one of the best documented incidents in modern times when he suddenly died in the spring of 1956."
"None of the Schuessler papers, which he had been working on and which he showed to a number of friends and visitors, were found anywhere in his possession when his effects were inventoried after his death. The last loose end was tied up."
It was actually Jan 1956 when Arnold Leese died so just a few months after he got to work on the case.
What's the chance they broke into Leese's house? beat an old man up or even injected him with something?
and obviously got all the paperwork they needed that was no longer available to the public.
and was quite shocked by what I see.. I'll put the link below.
http://www.renegadetribune.com/the-unsolved-jewish-ritual-murder-of-5-chicago-children-in-1955/
A woman called Mrs.Lyrl Clark Van Hyning 'who I'm led to believe was a member or the leader of the Mothers Movement' gave the father a copy of My Irrelevant Defence
after reading it he was shocked by what he had read and went to the Police 'wrong move' and was immediately arrested and eventually done away with....but it gets more interesting, Arnold Leese was on the case...
"British author Arnold Leese was provided with massive amounts of news clippings and information, including a transcript of the inquest, by his correspondents in Chicago, and he was at work on a definitive account of the Schuessler case as one of the best documented incidents in modern times when he suddenly died in the spring of 1956."
"None of the Schuessler papers, which he had been working on and which he showed to a number of friends and visitors, were found anywhere in his possession when his effects were inventoried after his death. The last loose end was tied up."
It was actually Jan 1956 when Arnold Leese died so just a few months after he got to work on the case.
What's the chance they broke into Leese's house? beat an old man up or even injected him with something?
and obviously got all the paperwork they needed that was no longer available to the public.