CNN Guest Floats Wild Conspiracy Theory: Brian Thompson Hired His Own Assassin
CNN guest Neill Franklin floated a wild theory that UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson paid his own assassin to murder him on Friday.
But I also I want to say something else that I know these criminal investigators are looking into as it relates to motive. There have been times when people have orchestrated their own demise for certain reasons. We know that.
BASH: Wow.
FRANKLIN: I’m not saying this is the case, but as an investigator-
BASH: Like for insurance purposes?
FRANKLIN: Absolutely. Insurance purposes, you know, maybe they fear some type of investigation down the road. Maybe they want to leave their family in a in a good light. But there have been cases where people have orchestrated their own demise.
BASH: And just to say you’re saying in a nice language, you’re saying that it is a possibility that he hired somebody to kill.
FRANKLIN: Absolutely. It cannot be ignored. This is what is is really digging at me as a former criminal investigator. This guy knew too much about where he was going to be at a specific time. There’s no evidence that I’ve seen of him — when you look at the timeline of him coming to that area outside of the Hilton and where he was outside of the Hilton, it’s a very small window. Very small window. It’s not like he was roaming around. We have video of him roaming around going from one door to the next to the next, trying to figure out where he’s going to be at a specific time.
BASH: He knew.
FRANKLIN: He was laying in wait. Who would have that specific type of information as to what sidewalk he was going to be on?
https://www.mediaite.com/tv/cnn-analyst-...-assassin/
CNN guest Neill Franklin floated a wild theory that UnitedHealthcare CEO Brian Thompson paid his own assassin to murder him on Friday.
But I also I want to say something else that I know these criminal investigators are looking into as it relates to motive. There have been times when people have orchestrated their own demise for certain reasons. We know that.
BASH: Wow.
FRANKLIN: I’m not saying this is the case, but as an investigator-
BASH: Like for insurance purposes?
FRANKLIN: Absolutely. Insurance purposes, you know, maybe they fear some type of investigation down the road. Maybe they want to leave their family in a in a good light. But there have been cases where people have orchestrated their own demise.
BASH: And just to say you’re saying in a nice language, you’re saying that it is a possibility that he hired somebody to kill.
FRANKLIN: Absolutely. It cannot be ignored. This is what is is really digging at me as a former criminal investigator. This guy knew too much about where he was going to be at a specific time. There’s no evidence that I’ve seen of him — when you look at the timeline of him coming to that area outside of the Hilton and where he was outside of the Hilton, it’s a very small window. Very small window. It’s not like he was roaming around. We have video of him roaming around going from one door to the next to the next, trying to figure out where he’s going to be at a specific time.
BASH: He knew.
FRANKLIN: He was laying in wait. Who would have that specific type of information as to what sidewalk he was going to be on?
https://www.mediaite.com/tv/cnn-analyst-...-assassin/
teachings of the Bible are so muddled and self-contradictory that it was possible for Christians to happily burn heretics alive for five long centuries. It was even possible for the most venerated patriarchs of the Church, like St. Augustine and St. Thomas Aquinas, to conclude that heretics should be tortured (Augustine) or killed outright (Aquinas). Martin Luther and John Calvin advocated the wholesale murder of heretics, apostates, Jews, and witches. - Sam Harris, "Letter To A Christian Nation"