From:
http://www.investmentwatchblog.com/surgeon-who-criticized-clinton-foundation-fraud-after-haitian-earthquake-mysteriously-killed-in-ny-home/
Last Dec. 13, 2017, Dr. Dean Lorich, age 54, was found dead at his apartment in New York.
The blogger at "Investment Watch" is flabbergasted:
Snopes attempts to debunk the speculation that something untoward happened, here:
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/surgeon-clinton-foundation-corruption-haiti/
Reading the Snopes article, their "debunking" is based on a version of the story from yournewswire.com, an arguably dubious source. Yournewswire said:
Quote:
Yournewswire's account is not strictly accurate, as Snopes points out. Dr. Lorich did go to Haiti immediately after the earthquake. He wrote an editorial which ran in the Wall Street Journal and at CNN, which was devastatingly critical of the relief effort. Here's the editorial --
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/01/25/doctors.haiti.hardships/index.html
Dr. Lorich and his colleagues wrote:
The article did not name the Clintons or their foundation, and was not sent to the Clintons. However, they did receive a copy by way of another doctor. And, the fact is, the Clintons were in charge of relief operations. See:
http://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2016-37826098
Quote:
The Clintons were definitely carrying on a PR campaign at the time, attempting to falsify the record on the Haiti situation. A letter by their own daughter Chelsea is particularly damning. As explained at:
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/09/hillary-clinton-email-213110
Quote:
A question that goes totally unaddressed in the Snopes report, is why anyone would imagine that Dr. Lorich would commit suicide by stabbing himself in the chest. Whereas the question everyone should be asking, is: "Who has the power to shut down a police investigation of an obvious murder, cold in its tracks?"
http://www.investmentwatchblog.com/surgeon-who-criticized-clinton-foundation-fraud-after-haitian-earthquake-mysteriously-killed-in-ny-home/
Last Dec. 13, 2017, Dr. Dean Lorich, age 54, was found dead at his apartment in New York.
The blogger at "Investment Watch" is flabbergasted:
Despite the fact police were called to the property regarding an “assault“, they instantly registered the death as “suicide” and closed the case…
Police said that there were no signs of forced entry at the apartment on the Upper East Side? The doorman alerted 911 after the child called him? What kid wouldn’t dial 911 themselves? There must be a security system in place if there is a doorman and they would have caught someone on camera. How big is the home, that the child wouldn’t have heard someone coming or going or shout?
Police said that there were no signs of forced entry at the apartment on the Upper East Side? The doorman alerted 911 after the child called him? What kid wouldn’t dial 911 themselves? There must be a security system in place if there is a doorman and they would have caught someone on camera. How big is the home, that the child wouldn’t have heard someone coming or going or shout?
Snopes attempts to debunk the speculation that something untoward happened, here:
https://www.snopes.com/fact-check/surgeon-clinton-foundation-corruption-haiti/
Reading the Snopes article, their "debunking" is based on a version of the story from yournewswire.com, an arguably dubious source. Yournewswire said:
Quote:
Dr. Lorich was part of the relief effort sent by the U.S. to assist the relief effort led by the Clinton Foundation in Haiti after the devastating 2010 earthquake. However Dr. Lorich was disgusted by the “shameful” Clinton Foundation operation, and voiced his concerns to Hillary Clinton directly.
Yournewswire's account is not strictly accurate, as Snopes points out. Dr. Lorich did go to Haiti immediately after the earthquake. He wrote an editorial which ran in the Wall Street Journal and at CNN, which was devastatingly critical of the relief effort. Here's the editorial --
http://www.cnn.com/2010/OPINION/01/25/doctors.haiti.hardships/index.html
Dr. Lorich and his colleagues wrote:
The lack of support for our operation by the United States is shocking and embarrassing and shows how woefully unprepared we are for the realities of disasters. We came to understand that our isolated operation may work in a mission, but not in a disaster. ...
We implore an official organization to step up and take charge of the massive ongoing medical effort that will be necessary to care for the people of Haiti and their children. And to do it now.
We implore an official organization to step up and take charge of the massive ongoing medical effort that will be necessary to care for the people of Haiti and their children. And to do it now.
The article did not name the Clintons or their foundation, and was not sent to the Clintons. However, they did receive a copy by way of another doctor. And, the fact is, the Clintons were in charge of relief operations. See:
http://www.bbc.com/news/election-us-2016-37826098
Quote:
Mrs Clinton was Secretary of State and Mr Clinton was UN Special Envoy to Haiti when the January 2010 earthquake struck, killing an estimated 220,000 people.
Some $13.3bn (£10.9bn) was pledged by international donors for Haiti's recovery.
Mr Clinton was appointed co-chairman of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission (IHRC), along with Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive.
Some $13.3bn (£10.9bn) was pledged by international donors for Haiti's recovery.
Mr Clinton was appointed co-chairman of the Interim Haiti Recovery Commission (IHRC), along with Haitian Prime Minister Jean-Max Bellerive.
https://www.politico.com/magazine/story/2015/09/hillary-clinton-email-213110
Quote:
It’s hard to find anyone these days who looks back on the U.S.-led response to the January 12, 2010, Haiti earthquake as a success, but it wasn’t always that way. Right after the disaster, even as neighborhoods lay in rubble, their people sweltering under tarps, the consensus—outside Haiti—was that America’s “compassionate invasion” (as TIME Magazine called it) had been “largely a success” (Los Angeles Times), offering further proof that “in critical moments of the history of mankind … the United States is, in fact, the indispensable nation” (Expresso, Portugal).
As the latest release of Hillary Clinton’s personal emails by the U.S. State Department Monday revealed, that perception was not an accident. “We waged a very successful campaign against the negative stories concerning our involvement in Haiti,” Judith McHale, the under-secretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs, wrote on February 26, 2010. A few weeks before, the public affairs chief had emailed newspaper quotations praising U.S. efforts in Haiti to Secretary Clinton with the note “Our Posts at work.” Clinton applauded. “That’s the result of your leadership and a new model of engagement w our own people,” she replied. “Onward!”
But one person even closer to the secretary of state was singing a different tune—very, very quietly. On February 22, after a four-day visit to the quake zone, Chelsea Clinton authored a seven-page memo which she addressed to “Dad, Mom,” and copied their chief aides. That informal report tells a continuing story of the unique brands of power and intelligence wielded by the Clinton family in Haiti and around the world—and of the uniquely Clinton ways they often undermine themselves.
As the latest release of Hillary Clinton’s personal emails by the U.S. State Department Monday revealed, that perception was not an accident. “We waged a very successful campaign against the negative stories concerning our involvement in Haiti,” Judith McHale, the under-secretary of state for public diplomacy and public affairs, wrote on February 26, 2010. A few weeks before, the public affairs chief had emailed newspaper quotations praising U.S. efforts in Haiti to Secretary Clinton with the note “Our Posts at work.” Clinton applauded. “That’s the result of your leadership and a new model of engagement w our own people,” she replied. “Onward!”
But one person even closer to the secretary of state was singing a different tune—very, very quietly. On February 22, after a four-day visit to the quake zone, Chelsea Clinton authored a seven-page memo which she addressed to “Dad, Mom,” and copied their chief aides. That informal report tells a continuing story of the unique brands of power and intelligence wielded by the Clinton family in Haiti and around the world—and of the uniquely Clinton ways they often undermine themselves.
A question that goes totally unaddressed in the Snopes report, is why anyone would imagine that Dr. Lorich would commit suicide by stabbing himself in the chest. Whereas the question everyone should be asking, is: "Who has the power to shut down a police investigation of an obvious murder, cold in its tracks?"