The George Floyd Event Was Faked. The following video with Candace Owens is interesting, but I suspect that her info is only half true. The papers and video after her transcript below seems more likely accurate, i.e. that the death was all faked. Why is Owens deceitful? Her documentary must have been faked, just as the mainstream story was faked. Listen to the Bitchute video at the end to get closest to the truth, IMO.
JD: You know, you mentioned Black Lives Matter protests before. I didn't see any of your coverage of that. Could you just give us, what was your take on all that whole summer of protests? (CO: No, the summer of love.) JD: I was just about to say that, yeah, in the summer of love.
CO: But I was nine months pregnant and could have walked down the street because people were, I guess black people were being told by the media that it was their rights to break into places, to steal flat screen TV's, do whatever they wanted, Because George Floyd had died. And I had my most viral video that I've ever done, because it was so weird for me to watch the media, absent any facts, try to convince people that this was just some good guy who was hunted down on the basis of being black. I ended up doing a documentary on it. Look, it's a sad story. He was a drug addict, and drug addiction is always a sad personal story. But this was not about race whatsoever. And the media intentionally withheld different angles from that video. Derek Chauvin should not be in prison. It's actually very sad. If you wanna talk about prosecuting something by the media, if you go watch my documentary and see the different angles from when he was quote/unquote on his neck, he was actually in a police position that they're told to put people in. That's on there. It's basically from where you're sitting. If I do this, it looks like I'm holding my hand on my neck, but I'm not. It's actually on my upper back. And further, which is even more astonishing, George Floyd asked to be put on the ground. They tried to arrest him peacefully for a very long time. And then he said, I don't want to go in the police cruiser. I don't wanna go here. I can't breathe. I also showed his prior arrest where he said the exact same thing. He said I don't wanna do this. I can't breathe. So he was a repeat offender in that city, who had used that same language, even the lie, by the way, that he called out for his mom. They never showed you this. He said I want Mama. That was his nickname for his girlfriend. He had a Caucasian girlfriend, also ironic, given this was all about race, who testified that that was her nickname. And in previous cases he said the same thing. I want Mama. I wanna call Mama. And that was his girlfriend. So there were so many lies that were told. And the thing that was so sinister and evil about it was that it led to full division in our society along racial lines, people hating each other. And the media was complicit in it, the truly evil state media - Operation Mockingbird. What the state wanted was division ahead of an election and they were willing to use the story of George Floyd, which is actually a sad story. I am compassionate towards his struggles after having met with his roommates about his drug addiction. It was to further the divide that they wanted.
JD: Why do you why do you hate black people? Do you think it's like, I guess I thanked him, that too. I think it's so crazy where they're so angry at you that they just go you're the first black white supremacist.
CO: I'm like, yeah, sure. I wanna help build a society that I can't live in. That's exactly what I want to do every day. I'm like, how can I just get us back to Jim Crow laws? Don't know nothing more insane.
JD: So now when you say you have different camera angles on George. So I didn't know. I haven't seen your documentary. I apologize. I should have because I know the way the media reported the Kyle Rittenhouse story. It got me worked up. I hated Kyle Rittenhouse cause I thought he was a white supremacist who brought guns to a Black Lives Matter protest to shoot black people and he shot 3 black people. Then I watched the court. Turns out he did live in that community. He was a lifeguard in that community. He didn't cross state lines with guns and he didn't shoot 3 black people. He shot 3 white people and they were pedophiles and they were all criminals. And when I learned the first one was a pedophile, I'm like, well, that's different, that's a different story. And then of course you find out that all three of those people that he shot were attacking him. The one guy was let out of a looney bin that morning and he threatened to kill Kyle all day long. And then we know he attacked him because his fingerprints are on the gun barrel. And then when Kyle started running towards the cops, two other criminals came and hit him over the head with a skateboard and another guy pulled a gun on him. And then Kyle shot the guy in the arm with who had the gun. I think we should hire Kyle to teach cops how to disarm people because, if that was a cop, he would have shot him in the face, shot his wife and shot his dog. But so after that I saw Matt Orfila did an amazing video which showed you all this, what really happened. It wasn't right off camera. It was right on camera, what had happened, this guy threatening Kyle, all that stuff. And so I completely flipped on that story once I realized that was the reason why. And people are mad at me, saying, why are you defending Kyle Rittenhouse? I'm not defending Kyle, I'm defending the truth. And why aren't you upset that the corporate media lied to you about a 16 year old kid so they could divide the country? And that's what they did with the George Floyd case. And so now you're telling me the same thing with George Floyd?
CO: Yeah. They only showed an image of a girl as a bystander. Her name was Darnella Frazier, who had recorded from the front. So if you record something from the front, it looks entirely different. They fought tooth and nail not to release the police cam. If you could watch his full arrest, it's stunning. I mean, everything goes away. You realize what likely happened. I mean his drug levels showed it. They called the cops about a counterfeit bill and the police arrived there. They weren't hunting him down because he was black. They were literally called to the scene of the crime. He was sitting in the car with his drug dealer and he likely just ingested all of the fentanyl {that he was buying}. And he's a repeat offender. And that's in the report, he ingested the fentanyl. So just to make it clear, he died of a fentanyl overdose. He did not die because of anything that Derek Chauvin did. It's stunning that this man is sitting in prison. And I genuinely keep him in my prayers, because what happened to him was so wrong. The cops were trying to arrest him peacefully. All the police officers are like, hey, man, why are you acting funny? What's going on? Like, are you good? He's like, I don't wanna get in the police cruiser. They put him in the police cruiser. He gets up. He's a big dude, really big. And eventually he asks to be put on the ground. There is a police position that they are trained in the Academy to subdue someone when they're on the ground. And that is where Derek Chauvin put his knee on. I don't know what this bone is called, but it's just beneath the neck on the back. And they had that footage and the state fought for it never to be released. OK, you can now find that, if you watch, the documentary showed the entire arrest. And when you see it from the back, and they showed it in court, they never showed the court footage on the news. And they asked the police officers, where would you say, from this angle, his knee is on and they were all like, his back. So it was just the angle of her camera (that looked like the neck). So this has been the biggest lie heard around the world. And again, it was to divide Americans along race lines before an election. Well, it's easier then to say that you hate black people.
JD: The Asian cop who saying turn that camera off. You're supposed to have an ambulance for a guy on drugs like that. So that guy was supposed to be while they're subduing Floyd, that guy was supposed to be getting an ambulance, not telling people not to film it. I don't know if an ambulance showed up, but that's massive negligence on a police report. But if I had to guess, they're not going to say the Asian guy's at fault when they got a white guy, right?
CO: Well, no, the Asian guy as well was sentenced and it was his first day on the job. He was literally there to shadow Derek Chauvin. I mean, what has happened to those police officers is a crime. They should all be released. George Floyd died of a drug overdose as he had been a drug addict for a very long time. He's a drug addict and a criminal and, unfortunately, he met his maker that day, because he could not get over his addictions. Now, like I said, I spent time with his roommates. They met him in rehab. They talked about his struggles. The media turning him into some sort of an Angel who died for the sake of black people is an absurd lie, a dangerous lie. It's a deranged lie. And I just reserved such anger in my heart for people who think that Derek Chauvin or any of those police officers deserve that after you watch the full arrest. You walk away and say, what did these men do wrong? Telling people to clear out when people started coming around, that's what you're supposed to do, right? They're coming around, starting to film. You've got a guy, holding him down. You're arresting him. He's been saying he can't breathe since he was standing up. So unless he's going to tell you, hey, I just ingested enough to a kill a horse because that's how much fentanyl he ingested, enough to kill a horse, you're just thinking this is somebody that's just trying to avoid an arrest and they keep asking him, dude, why are you acting weird? What's going on? He's standing. He's standing up and saying I can't breathe, I'm claustrophobic. I don't want to get into the police cruiser. Put me on the ground. The fact that you don't know these things really shows you how demented and dishonest our corporate media is. And So what do you do? You know what the autopsy's cause of death was? So they had an autopsy that showed literally, you gotta watch my documentary, he had enough fentanyl in him to kill a horse. So that's probably, you know what happens when you take fentanyl. I can actually tell you, because I had foot surgery with it. Basically, it makes you stop breathing. That's when it's working. It slows down your breathing. And the idea that he even had the ability to take as much as he did and would still be alive for as long as he was is what's shocking. Well, maybe that's not it. Maybe the Innocence Project will take up the case of Officer Chauvin. I genuinely hope that somebody does. And I hope that just us talking about it, people will be outraged about what happened to those police officers.
That pic above is the cover photo for a 2020 paper on Miles Mathis’ site at http://mileswmathis.com/floyd.pdf
That image makes me think Candace Owens may be wrong, because it sure looks like Chauvin’s knee is on Floyd’s neck there. Or is that really Floyd? See below.
Mathis wrote a follow-up paper in 2023 called The Ongoing George Floyd Fake at http://mileswmathis.com/chauvin3.pdf.
In 2021 Jim Fetzer interviewed a cop about Mathis’ Sackett paper about George Floyd and both agreed that the theory of faking Floyd’s death made sense. The video is called Mathis on Chauvin Trial at https://www.bitchute.com/video/nVE8C5r2gfR8. Fetzer said early in this video that someone else was used in place of Floyd in the pic above.
This is the paper that the Bitchute video discusses: http://mileswmathis.com/chauvin.pdf. And following are
1) Chauvin tried to plead guilty to 3rd degree murder, but we are told US Attorney General Bill Barr wouldn't accept that plea. Ridiculous, because the US Attorney General had nothing to do with accepting that plea or not. This is just legal storytelling for the unwashed. Chauvin was being tried by the State of Minnesota, not by the Feds. That's why they call it State of Minnesota v. Derek Chauvin. And even if this had been tried in federal court, the plea would be accepted by prosecutors in the case, not by the Attorney General.
2) It was the first criminal trial in Minnesota to be entirely televised and the first in state court to be broadcast live. Since the state had previous statutes against televising trials—that's why they never had—we should be told why and how that statute was bypassed. Did the legislature pass a variance? No. Did the judge decide it on his own authority? No, because he didn't have that authority. That decision is not invested in judges. That by itself indicates the whole trial was faked by the CIA. Only fake CIA trials are televised, as I have established in many previous papers.
3) Special Agent James Reyerson of the Minnesota Bureau of Criminal Apprehension testified in cross examination by the defense that normal procedure was not followed in the Chauvin case. He admitted that normally the BCA investigates the case and writes a report, which is then delivered to the proper authorities, who then decide whether to press charges. But in this case charges were brought immediately, before any state investigation was even started. Of course this indicates the entire event was pre-planned, and was rushed to the newspapers and then to trial for political purposes. Although the page on the trial at Wikipedia mentions Reyerson's testimony, it conspicuously fails to include this.
4) In similar cross examination, it was admitted that 50 BCA officers, 27 FBI agents, 440 reports, and 400 witnesses stood against Chauvin in trial, including his entire department and his police chief. Why would 27 FBI agents be involved? Again, this wasn't a federal crime and the FBI had zero jurisdiction. . . unless it was a manufactured event. It also didn't require 50 BCA officers or 440 reports. It required one report filed by a handful of officers. Also, it is very abnormal for a police department and chief not to support their own officer, especially in a case where a heavily drugged “victim” was involved. Despite that, within a month of the incident, long before a trial or investigation, Chauvin's chief Medaria Arradondo called him a murderer in the press. Arradondo also appeared on 60 Minutes within that month.
5) Yes, it was admitted in trial that Floyd had three times a fatal dose of Fentanyl in his system at the time. So Chauvin's department and chief had plenty of cause to support him. And yet they lined up to testify against him, though they weren't present at the event. Very strange. Once again, it supports the thesis this was all staged.
6) Eric Nelson, Chauvin's alleged attorney, was almost asleep during jury selection, paying no attention to the process. He let the prosecution select whomever it wanted. Again, this indicates a hoax, since jury selection would be vital to any hope of an acquittal. But Nelson clearly knew it didn't matter: the whole thing was scripted, so objecting to jurors would have been a waste of time.
7) Nelson failed to ask for a change of venue, and allowed all the jurors to come from Minneapolis. This would almost guarantee a prejudice. Another indication the trial was scripted. No real defense attorney would fail to object and file motions at this point.
8) Nelson's chief witness for the defense just happened to be a white guy from South Africa. Brilliant ploy by Nelson, right, calling up this pathologist from a famous apartheid state to defend Chauvin. In fact, this David Fowler already had a reputation as a racist coming in, since he was also involved in the case of Anton Black in 2018. This should tell you that, as usual, Chauvin was being prosecuted from both tables, proving once again the whole thing was staged.
9) In the video, we see that when the ambulance arrives, two guys in khaki bulletproof vests, khaki short sleeved shirts with brown pockets, and brown pants and caps get out of it rather than EMTs. This is a huge red flag and oversight by the directors. Those uniforms are state troopers, not Minneapolis police or EMT. Why would state troopers be getting out of an ambulance? State troopers are not EMTs: their job has to do with the roads and motorists.
10) There was a failure to sequester the jury, which should have caused a mistrial.
11) Despite failing to sequester, the fake judge issued a gag order on the trial. A gag order on a trial that is supposed to be fully televised? Make sense of that!
12) We are supposed to believe Chauvin was evil enough to choke Floyd to death while he begged for air, but not evil enough to confiscate the cellphone or camera of the person standing right in front of him, filming the whole thing? If you had just killed someone, either accidentally on purpose, would you happily allow someone to film it and then watch them walk away?
13) The films don't match. In the grainy film from behind, wide angle, where all four cops are on Floyd, we can see that no other people are filming or witnessing this at all.
14) In trial, prosecution admitted the time reported all over the world, nine minutes and change, wasn't even close to being accurate. They dropped it to four minutes and no one blinked an eye.
15) Chauvin was charged and convicted of three separate crimes for the same event: 2nd degree murder, 3rd degree murder, and 2nd degree manslaughter. That makes no sense. Only one man is allegedly dead, so you can't be charged for three murders or manslaughters there. The prosecution would be expected to pick one. It would be like stealing one car and being convicted of grand theft auto, petty theft, and conspiracy to commit theft.
This paper has 51 points in all. And the two commentators in the video reviewed all of them, I think, and agreed, and also added some more info.
The fall of Minneapolis:
https://www.twitch.tv/gigaohmbiological/v/2167710220?sr=a