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The May 1970 Kent State Ohio National Guard Student Massacre Terry Brown FBI Informant COINTELPRO ROTC Campus Building Burn Down Vietnam War Cover-Up. Corruption, #73
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- FormatePub
- ISBN8235329638
- EAN9798235329638
- Date de parution27/06/2026
- Protection num.pas de protection
- Infos supplémentairesepub
- ÉditeurIoakim Ioakim
Résumé
From May 1 to May 4, 1970, college students at Kent State University in Kent, Ohio, protested Nixon's announcement on live television that he planned to expand U. S. involvement in the Vietnam War into Cambodia by sending U. S. and South Vietnamese forces into this Indochinese country. Their anger over escalation of the conflict after 37th President of the United States Richard "Tricky Dick" Nixon made this announcement stemmed from Nixon's previous promise to end U.
S. involvement in the war through Vietnamization, which was the 1969 Nixon policy of gradual withdrawal of U. S. ground troops and the transfer of combat responsibility to South Vietnamese forces. The students-who were also against the draft because of their friends, brothers and neighbors dying in the war that was financially benefiting weapons manufacturing companies, began to protest by conducting sit-ins in downtown Kent, smashing some business windows and setting bonfires.
However, not all of the property damage in Kent, Ohio, was done by the protesters. Read in this informative report how by May 2, 1970, undercover plain clothes police operatives were involved in the burning down of the Kent State Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) building to make the student protest look more violent so that Kent, Ohio, Mayor Leroy Satrom could call in the Ohio National Guard, which began to arrive on the campus between 10 p.m.
and 11 p.m. on May 2, 1970. After roughly 25 hours of military occupation of the Kent State University campus by Company A and C of the 1st Battalion 145th Infantry and Troop G of the 2nd Battalion 107th Armored Cavalry of the Ohio National Guard, 28 of these guard soldiers fired their M-1 rifles on the crowd of demonstrators at Kent State, killing students Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer and William Schroeder, while wounding nine others.
Find out in this revealing review of the events at Kent State from May 1 to May 4, 1970, how under cover Kent State University police department informant and FBI informant Terry Norman was instigating violence against the Kent State protesters by throwing rocks at the protesters and was the only other individual on the campus other than the Guardsmen that had a firearm. Find out how an audio recording made from the dorm room window of Kent State University freshman Terry Strubbe, which was subsequently analyzed by audio experts using a professional technology enhanced analysis of the tape after the Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper commissioned these audio experts to analyze a copy of the tape, revealed that there were four pistol shots fired before Ohio National Guardsmen fired 67 shots in 13 seconds on the crowd of demonstrators on May 4, 1970 at 12:24 p.m.
with their M-1 rifles. Given that FBI informant Terry Norman, who was photographing students on campus during the protests, was the only other person on campus other than the Guard to admit having a gun, it seems likely that these pistol shots may have come from Norman, which means his gunfire would have been responsible for the Ohio National Guard reacting with deadly force against the Kent State students because of their rigid combat military response training that teaches them to shoot back when perceiving that they are under enemy fire.
None of the Kent State student protestors had firearms on the Kent State University Campus during the events that occurred from May 1 to May 4, 1970.
S. involvement in the war through Vietnamization, which was the 1969 Nixon policy of gradual withdrawal of U. S. ground troops and the transfer of combat responsibility to South Vietnamese forces. The students-who were also against the draft because of their friends, brothers and neighbors dying in the war that was financially benefiting weapons manufacturing companies, began to protest by conducting sit-ins in downtown Kent, smashing some business windows and setting bonfires.
However, not all of the property damage in Kent, Ohio, was done by the protesters. Read in this informative report how by May 2, 1970, undercover plain clothes police operatives were involved in the burning down of the Kent State Reserve Officer Training Corps (ROTC) building to make the student protest look more violent so that Kent, Ohio, Mayor Leroy Satrom could call in the Ohio National Guard, which began to arrive on the campus between 10 p.m.
and 11 p.m. on May 2, 1970. After roughly 25 hours of military occupation of the Kent State University campus by Company A and C of the 1st Battalion 145th Infantry and Troop G of the 2nd Battalion 107th Armored Cavalry of the Ohio National Guard, 28 of these guard soldiers fired their M-1 rifles on the crowd of demonstrators at Kent State, killing students Allison Krause, Jeffrey Miller, Sandra Scheuer and William Schroeder, while wounding nine others.
Find out in this revealing review of the events at Kent State from May 1 to May 4, 1970, how under cover Kent State University police department informant and FBI informant Terry Norman was instigating violence against the Kent State protesters by throwing rocks at the protesters and was the only other individual on the campus other than the Guardsmen that had a firearm. Find out how an audio recording made from the dorm room window of Kent State University freshman Terry Strubbe, which was subsequently analyzed by audio experts using a professional technology enhanced analysis of the tape after the Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper commissioned these audio experts to analyze a copy of the tape, revealed that there were four pistol shots fired before Ohio National Guardsmen fired 67 shots in 13 seconds on the crowd of demonstrators on May 4, 1970 at 12:24 p.m.
with their M-1 rifles. Given that FBI informant Terry Norman, who was photographing students on campus during the protests, was the only other person on campus other than the Guard to admit having a gun, it seems likely that these pistol shots may have come from Norman, which means his gunfire would have been responsible for the Ohio National Guard reacting with deadly force against the Kent State students because of their rigid combat military response training that teaches them to shoot back when perceiving that they are under enemy fire.
None of the Kent State student protestors had firearms on the Kent State University Campus during the events that occurred from May 1 to May 4, 1970.























