Carla_Danger
Platinum Member
You are absolutely shameless. I don't care what he did, you once again show that death is nothing but a tool to exploit.
Let's review what he did....
It's not that he embezzled thousands of dollars for "travel expenses, mortgage payments, personal gym membership, adult websites, facilitating personal loans, and unaccounted cash withdrawals."
It's not that he forged signatures to "requisitions for federal surplus equipment and official police explorer documents."
It's not that his electronic messages, which he thought he had deleted, included not only evidence of his crimes but also his scheming against a Fox Lake administrator — including thoughts of burying her in "the Volo Bog," a state nature area.
It's not that, before fatally shooting himself, he tried to camouflage his suicide as a homicide by leaving "a staged trail of police equipment at the crime scene" — his pepper spray, baton and glasses. To make himself look like a shooting victim, he also fired a first shot from his .40-caliber handgun into the abdominal area of his cellphone and bullet-resistant vest, which absorbed most of that impact.
Gliniewicz's most loathsome act isn't even his long and cunning betrayal of the public's trust, although it feels that way to many people in Lake County and far beyond. His final, opportunistic villainy had Americans coast to coast wondering if rising antipathy to police officers had cost this one his life.
Nor was his most loathsome act the risk he created for the hundreds of officers who wanted justice for their fallen brother. Any frantic manhunt — with its speeding police vehicles, heavy weaponry and pumping adrenaline — creates myriad dangers for cops and civilians alike.
No, the apparently most loathsome act of this man whose death drew officers from 1,000 police forces to a funeral fit for a pharaoh was something investigators never will prove: Authorities suggested at the close of their news conference that, based on their analysis of surveillance video recording, Gliniewicz may well have seen two white men and a black man on the morning of Sept. 1 — and then put his plot into motion knowing they'd appear to be the killers.
That is, Gliniewicz may well have settled on three particular suspects, called in his suspicion of them and tried to frame them for his own murder. Officers did track down three men recorded by the cameras but soon concluded the three had no link to Gliniewicz's death.
Full story @
'G.I. Joe': Fox Lake's diabolical hero