Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

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  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    1/35

    l o n l

    I

    SII,ENT TOOLS

    OF

    TASIICE-

    I

    l t ' I

    I I I I I I I -

    loidtcated

    rc

    Rat

    Kitting,l

    I

    arations

    nd

    elivery,

    rc.

    OlffifiIfi1

    |

    lcarAlocug, i

    : knowledge,nd techniques

    I

    anovwutvt urtu 'so""'tnoo

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    I

    lsrr'Nr

    &

    n"r,i

    ]

    Includinc

    nstructions

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    he

    deadly

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    ooison

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    frro,m

    Casor

    Beans.

    Agent

    of

    | / I

    I

    rSlii'nii,,'ltt',,f;*9J$f;f"i'"H:'H,E#filA I

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    -neans

    vith

    Instrtctions:

    .'_.

    I

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    - -

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    Discounts

    -10-^$-4.W^F:

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    rais

    "i,otoru,

    ,tff--rlf$i$ffi

    I

    r

    Y - - - - - - -

    r

    I

    '

    Moynard's

    Avenging

    Angel

    SUPPIY

    r

    I

    Maynard

    CamPbell

    I

    '

    hst Office

    Box

    53,

    Ashla'nd,

    rcgon

    97520

    r

    L -

    -r

    rl

    - r.

    r r

    r

    r

    r

    r

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    rl

    r

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    J

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    2/35

    THISBOOK SNOT

    COPYRIGHTED.

    .

    IT'SPURPOSES

    TO

    ENLIGHTENNDENCOURAGE

    REE

    PEOPLE.

    PLEASE

    FEEL REE O

    OUOTE

    T,

    COPY T,

    FAX T,

    MASSPRODUCE

    T,

    BUTPLEASE,

    DON"T AKE T

    OUTOF

    CONTETT

    OR

    TWIST TS TOTAL

    CONTEXTUALNTENT.

    THANKYOU,ANDMAYGODBLESS

    YOURPERSONAL

    FFORTS

    OWARD

    LIBERTY

    WHICH

    CARRIES

    WITH

    T

    GREATBESPONSIBILITY.

    MAYNARD

    . CAMPBELL

    R.

    lst Printing

    Mrch l99l

    -

    1Q000

    opio

    2d Printing

    Rcvigcd Mry

    l99l

    -

    50,00 copics

    -r

    Neither heauthor

    or le

    publisher

    ssumes

    - ..Ob

    any

    responsibility

    or the-useor

    misuse

    f

    lP.>-

    information

    ontained

    n this book.

    t is sold

    -

    for enterl,ainment

    urposes

    nly.

    Be Warned!

    Be Careful!

    This is sold

    as a

    nove:lty tem only!

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    3/35

    -

    ULTIMATUM

    fi

    {tb&ry2*eaat${*8d*$9datv

    STATEOFIDAHO,

    Plaintiff/Respondent

    vs ,

    MAYNARD

    C. CAMPBELI.

    JR.,

    DefendanVAppellant

    ATTORNEY

    CENEN,ALS

    FINAL SENTENCE

    SAYS I'IY I}AMAGE

    CLAIMS

    CANNOT BE

    AD.

    DRE.SSED

    N

    THE CO['NT.

    TT THAT

    IS SO, THEN

    IwY

    NNAL

    R]'PI.Y TS.

    IF These

    CRIMINAL

    thugs think

    they cen rsreult mc, botcr me.

    tfucrtcn

    me, kidnrp

    me,

    jeil

    me,

    rteal over

    $50,0fi)

    frqn

    me,

    $2tf(D

    in orh,

    $20,fiD

    in

    gold,

    over

    $20,(tr0

    in fnrdulerr

    legrl rc-

    tims, destrry my

    femily,

    reprtatim,

    budnell md

    lifein

    gencnl.'lcrtroy

    invcrqnqrt! vith

    r

    vdue

    in

    millions,

    r iny locr

    of

    'orci

    $250,0(I)

    md t

    I

    yerrr

    of my lifc,... AND

    do

    l rtl with

    mc heving

    NO

    RECOURSE

    ut

    to

    quietly wdk rwey... they havc mother think coming. Therc rre lhingr

    worsc

    ECOURSE

    but

    to

    quietly

    wdk rwey... they havc molher

    I

    than dearh,

    and oleraiing

    ruch injusticc

    would

    bc

    one of than.

    In dre FINAL ANALYSIS.

    evcn

    the illitcratc rrvtte

    q

    In dre FINAL

    ANALYSIS,

    evcn

    the illitcratc rrvtge

    w$ gnrted

    hir

    "Liule

    Big Horn"

    He

    willingly chosc rhort

    term rctrihrtion

    in

    qite

    of lcrg tcrm ddeet,

    MANFULLY RECOGNUING

    the

    neeii

    to setisfy

    RIGIIT

    md

    JUSTICE!

    CUSTER HN) n COilING... rnd

    I rm much

    nrore

    wilingly chosc rhort

    term rl|r|trttron

    rn JFte

    or lqrS tcrrn ddc

    the

    neeii

    to setisfy

    RIGIIT

    md

    JUSTICE!

    CUSTER HN) n

    than an llitenlc

    ravage.

    Those

    in ruthority

    rre u mudr

    bqtnd by ttteir dtu mr

    to

    infringc my hwful

    rfhtr,

    u I

    em

    bcrnd to obcy,

    "the

    law." Thercby,

    it netunlly

    folloryr.

    thet

    es thc

    'officid"

    rcrr himrelf

    rbove the

    lew, hc loscs

    hir

    authority in his tynnny.

    He doer, o rll

    intanu

    md

    prrporcr,'unruthorizc'himrelf

    by acting out

    of and beycrd

    the spherc

    which tlrc C-qrsriution dlowr

    him lo move in, end

    in sudr

    ceseshc hrs no morc

    right to bc obeyed

    or hcld blemcler thrn eny othcr crimind.

    To recirt him, rrd

    hold him rccqrntrHc

    rs under'Nrturct

    Lew," ir no more

    m ect

    of rcbcllion thu to reeirt

    m

    rrmcd,

    plunderin3,

    murdering,

    forcign

    invadcr. To aoquicsce to thesc thugr

    wold

    bc

    foly, for I know b',

    rad

    expcriancc thet

    their tender mercies

    rre crucl.

    The

    propcr

    obi:o

    of

    cuurtntcd power

    ir

    to pro-

    tect, nc invede

    penonal

    libcrty.

    Tyranny end rrbitnry

    porcr

    ere uucrly

    inccrriltrnt

    with,

    urd

    rub

    vcrrive of thc

    vcry design of civil

    govcmmc-nt.

    God

    never

    trve

    lny

    mur

    thc right to

    tnmple

    cn thc libcrty, riglrr, c

    pryny

    of

    rnother,

    nor

    can

    eny number

    of metr cmfer such

    r right,

    whigh

    thcy thernrclver do

    nc

    pocrcrs.

    You

    peqle

    ulk

    of

    dghu, drrc

    proccss,

    usticc,

    pcrccful

    debltc,

    ...Lct

    thc ryrtan hrndlc it, ..J nrnind

    yoo.

    it hrsl Cm

    yor

    PLESTORE

    O ME TllE TIME THAT IS PAST? C.rn

    you

    RESTORE TO ME MY FORMER

    ESTATE?

    Can

    ycr

    HEAL THE DESTRUCTION OF MY FAMILY brurgh ebolt

    by r crooked

    dnrg deeling slreriff, or

    r comrpa, rdrerning

    pluecutor,

    or r dcgcncntc.

    inc6, ti-rcxud mrgistnrc?

    I think na. There

    ere injwics

    whicl

    naun CANNOT forgive, rhe

    wanld

    ccese to be nrnrrt

    if rhc

    did. Our Crcator implented

    in us rhcse rmertinguisheble feclings

    for

    8md

    md wirc

    prrposer.

    Thcy

    arc

    the

    guardirnr

    of

    HIS image

    in

    qrr

    herrtr. They dirtinguirh us

    fiom

    thc

    herd of common

    mimdr.

    The

    social otxnprct

    would

    dissolve,

    end

    usticc

    bc extirpaad fr.cm rhe crrth, or heve

    only r crsuel

    cxistencc,

    were we cellous to thc

    toudrcs

    ofcorotion

    The robber

    end the

    mur&rcr

    would oftcn escepe wpunidrcd, did

    nc thc inftrier which our rcm-

    pers

    sustai4

    provoke

    us intojusticc.

    I harrc been

    rteted as en oudaw, but it ir the

    peqle

    of

    "thc

    rystan"

    who

    rrc rcelly hwlesr rnd

    withort

    monl rertrrint or cursciencc

    inprt- Their unbridled predetory

    instindc,

    couflcd

    with

    e ccr-

    ganital cowerdice, have cqnbined

    to lead thern

    into

    poeirions

    of

    gorrcmrnent.

    They hrv: rbusod

    thdr

    posltlons so completely

    thrt

    I now fully reJect rrt trusg

    contldnce, ff support

    of

    thcm.

    By

    thls document I

    reJect rny further rcqulescencc

    to lhmr or eny of thclr

    rullngq llndlngg

    lews or prctended ruthorlty. There is no longer eny point in trying to ccnply with I ryrtern per-

    meated

    nrith criminals,

    as it crly encdtn8e! thqn.

    All my

    pcrccful

    cntrceties hevc bean

    rcjecred

    with dirdain,

    with only

    tends

    to canvince me that nching

    flancn

    vmity,

    or

    cqrlirms obstinacy,

    morc

    than rcperted

    petitioning.

    The Boise

    County

    govemment

    i3 so conupt rnd degenersic

    rs to bc

    aood

    for rnthing, ...srve to

    frrel

    the fires of

    justice

    and rctriburion

    So olt

    of the ruins of my life,

    wranght

    by m

    erdl

    torremmcnt,

    r ncw revolutiqr mry

    yet

    bc

    bom.

    They shall find their heartbum is only

    the

    begfuning

    of hell'r

    fire. I

    will bccomc their wont

    nightmarc.

    In

    spite of cvtrything...

    wcll

    docunented, ...thc

    Auomcy Gcnerrl'r

    officc hrs chcen to

    pley

    an

    evil role in

    this

    urgoing

    trarrcsty.

    Now it's

    your

    um,

    so

    go

    ahcad

    and Mtc otl aU

    yot

    lhin* yot

    cat

    chcw.

    ANDTHEN

    THE

    COMPLAINANTS,

    N COLLUSION

    ruH A CORRUIrT

    HERIFI''

    DtsrRlgl

    AT-roRNEY,

    NDMAGlSTftlrq

    consrIRED

    ANDACTED

    OAS'tO

    DE'

    iruVn

    Un

    oF My

    pRdPERfi,

    RIcttT

    To SELF-DEFENSE

    R AccESs

    To

    JUSTIcE.

    rT CUIPTTXITED

    ITHME

    BEING

    AILED

    OR

    A CRIME

    DIDNOT

    COMMIT.

    Howcvcr,

    rhcir crimcs

    pdc

    in

    canparison

    wirh

    rhc

    out11goous

    rtrocitics

    the

    comrpt

    boise

    cqrnty has

    dc

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    4/35

    News from the Idaho World

    F,.Boise

    County Bench

    "This

    is the

    paft

    of

    Patsy's

    ourt lute!

    WhenMayrurd efised

    o,

    the

    bi-sexrcl

    bitch

    ailed

    him!

    Since

    fi.ese

    uficinl

    Wfrores

    tuist

    on

    uiping

    tfuir

    oss

    ulitfi

    our

    [su)s,

    from

    twu)

    on

    weregonna

    u)we

    6

    -

    ass

    ui

    fri[e

    r99I T.JNPUBLISHEDPIMON NO.5I}!)

    IN

    THE

    COURT

    OT'APPEALS

    F

    THE

    STATE

    OF

    DAHO

    No.

    1E552

    '

    &,rl rrr*,

    and

    thpos

    ter?l

    srfu/lu,au

    unve

    andttoro;'

    STATEOFIDAHO,

    Plaintiff-Respondent,

    vs ,

    MAYNARD

    C.

    CAM

    PBELI.

    JR.

    DefendanrAppellant

    Filed:

    April

    3,

    l99l

    Frederick

    C. LyorL

    Clerk

    30O

    So.StraughonAve.

    Boisc,

    dala

    208t

    4

    3 4

    20

    Thls

    b rn

    unpublbhcd

    Oplnlon

    rnd

    mry

    not bc

    clted

    s

    Auihorlty

    we.

    have

    considered

    ampbell's

    other

    argumenls

    and

    asserrions

    f

    error.

    we

    find

    no ba-

    srs 1o

    set asrde

    he

    udgment

    of

    conviction.

    Accordingly.

    it is

    affirmed.

    5

    --

    2a9anouy3./3

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    5/35

    As always,

    DEDICATION

    This

    catalogues

    dedicated

    o

    my

    oppressors ho

    provided

    he

    n-

    centive

    or me

    to write it.

    $

    Judge

    D. Duff

    McKee-3128

    Lakeridge

    lace, oise,

    daho

    208f/'340M

    $

    Judge

    Patricia

    Young-109

    Wall,Idaln

    iry,daho

    208R92-4263

    o

    Judge

    Byron

    Johnson-I09

    Wall,Idaho

    City,Idaho

    $

    ProsecutorEdrvin

    W.

    Stockley-S

    mi So.

    of

    daho

    City,

    on

    Hwy

    2 ,

    North

    Sideof Hiwoy, Idaho

    City,

    Idaho

    20813924943

    O

    Sheriff Craig

    Landers-Idaho

    Ciry,

    Garden

    alley,ldaho

    208R92-Mll

    S DeputyLarry Tibbetts--Bear un d.,ldalniry,daln

    208R924352

    O

    Deputy

    Gm. Erskin-Idaho

    City,Idaho

    o

    Mayor Ray

    Robison-206

    Matur,Idaho

    iry,

    dalo

    208R924472

    $

    CountyRecorder rlene

    Kolar-Idaho

    City,Idaho

    O

    AttorneyDanHawkley

    10490

    Tree ine,

    Boise,

    daho

    home

    2Ogn78-O218;

    ffice 2O8R43406/

    O

    AttorneyVern K.

    Smith, 1900Main,Boise,Idaho

    2081322-7427

    The

    entire

    Idaho

    Apellate

    nd

    o

    Suprerne

    ourt,

    451

    W.

    State,

    Boise,ldaho,

    nd

    O

    daho

    Attorney

    General'sOllice,

    State

    Capitol

    Bldg,Boise,ldaho,

    s hey are

    simplyLYING

    WHORES

    prorecr.ing

    theabove!

    .

    These

    qaggots,

    rmjustly,

    unlawfully,

    and

    mrnmdly

    conspired

    and actod,

    o de-

    p!y!-!!ry

    -qf

    r_ny_rypgtttion!roperbr,

    iberry,

    and alrnosr

    my

    life, WHEN

    THEY

    KNEW

    HAD BROKEN

    NO IAW!

    Furrher,

    hould

    anythinCh.ppor

    o

    nre,by any

    b'ranch

    f

    goverrtrnent,

    ou

    can

    be sure heseperverts

    pliyed

    i roli, whether

    corirmit-

    ment,

    ndictment, ncarceration,

    r demise.

    .

    I sincerelypray

    hat

    may bear

    moral respomibility,

    or their premature

    rrival

    into

    lhe hres of

    hell,

    which

    rhey

    so richly

    deserve, ince

    TYRANNY

    is a

    ]{31

    f.flgg

    andcarries

    MANDATORY

    DEATH sentence!

    ,,

    STATE

    SPONS

    REDTERRORI

    M

    /S AN

    ACT

    OF

    WAR...

    AND

    MUST

    BE

    RETALIATED

    AGAINST

    "

    PRESS

    SECRETARY

    _THE

    WHITE

    HOUSE

    TnXrrV

    FROM

    an

    article

    mers

    Report

    36,

    Decfan,

    69341:

    by

    lrn

    Martin n

    Farmers

    & Consu-

    1989/90,

    .O.

    Box

    41,

    Gering,NE

    Reprlnted

    from

    Klngdoms

    at Warl

    WITH

    JUSTICE

    FOR

    NONE'

    Garry

    Hall

    is on a

    forcedvacation

    because

    e stopped

    sonre

    hie'es

    from

    stealing

    ome

    property

    of

    his dar.rghter.

    r,r.ent

    ike hS.

    .

    Gprty-

    iscoruered

    hree

    rustlers n

    the

    process

    of stealing

    a horse crurned

    Py

    tp

    9yghter..ln-hopes

    of

    persrading

    he rustlers

    o

    sto!.

    C,arry

    gnbbed

    his

    double-barrel

    hotgun

    and confronted

    he thieves.

    Hd dianl-iritena

    to

    gry

    it,

    he

    hoped

    t r^,oirld

    care

    he thier,es

    nto

    leaving.

    n afant *rp*l

    ffre

    thievescameat him. lnsteadof shooting hem, he

    n

    t aorrn his qun and

    tqgk

    4""-r

    on,

    physically-all

    three of them. Neightrors

    alled

    he 3t*tift

    office

    or.help.

    But

    they weren't

    needed--ary

    ha-ndled

    he three

    hle{,es

    ll

    bv himself.

    After

    he

    had

    escorted

    hem

    off

    his and,

    sheriffs

    depnies

    arrirpd,

    arrested

    GamT-and

    ook

    him

    to

    pil

    where

    he was

    charged

    witir

    assault

    nd

    eronlqrs

    use

    of

    a firearm.

    Beliewrg

    there

    was

    ustke

    ir

    Anrerica,

    Garrv fqrqht

    the

    charges

    r court--and

    losf.

    n the

    process,

    he lo*

    hrs

    honre, 6na

    aia

    sur-

    ings,

    and

    because

    f

    the tenslon

    his

    wife

    had

    a mirarriage.

    .-.$ry

    Spenge,

    an

    attomey

    out

    in Jackrcn,

    Wpming,-wrote

    hr hts book

    With

    Justice

    or

    None':

    "unless

    we

    are weahhy

    or

    po,rrerful

    enough

    o btry

    t, well

    rarely

    orperi-

    ence

    ustice.

    "The

    tnrth-is,

    here

    sno

    lu{ice

    In

    Arnerica

    or

    the

    people.

    "our

    forefatherc,

    ed

    by

    creorge

    washington

    ana ihonr.r

    Jefferson,

    argued

    hat

    no law

    was

    valld

    f it

    deprived

    a

    rnan

    of hts

    nah'at

    riqhb."

    The

    problem

    aglng

    he

    hw-abiding people

    of

    Anrerica

    b

    thai o'r

    cq't

    :.Vtlg-

    has.placed

    ludges

    n the

    posltion

    of a

    god{he

    god

    is l.r-rcifer,

    ignF

    Itgd

    ry

    the

    black

    obe

    he

    frdge

    wears

    whib

    on the

    throie

    in cq.rrt.

    It often

    hasbeen

    said

    hit

    the

    hw is uihat

    a

    Judge

    ap

    it G.

    .

    Todays.ludglf

    use $?tu!o.y.lawas their gute und ig.ror= he htgherlaw-the

    constihrtion

    which

    s based

    on Godrs

    aw-the

    God

    of the

    c-hris-

    tians.

    one

    basic

    aw

    is the

    rbht

    9f

    a

    person

    o

    protct

    the

    rife

    and

    property

    of

    himself

    nd

    his

    family.

    But

    dont-tell

    hat to

    a

    xdge.

    He's aeat-in

    h "-

    and

    can't

    hear

    out

    of

    the other

    wtren

    t

    cortes

    o 6d's

    hw

    and the

    constF

    tution.

    Garry

    Hall

    found

    his

    out

    the

    hard wav

    and

    he's

    behind

    bary--a

    firre-

    year

    stretch-$ecause

    of the

    warped

    nentality

    of

    sheriffs

    deptrties,

    frose-

    cuting

    attomey

    nd

    a

    udge."

    _+NDoFeuoTE

    ,,.1T y

    qpj*"1

    the

    only remaining

    ay

    ro

    ger

    ustice

    or

    GarryHall s

    for the

    mlllua

    ur AUr

    !

    Dutv

    must-put

    n the

    sword

    of

    vengerrce,

    o hc

    terriblebeauty

    of REAL

    lusrICE can

    blbssom

    n

    our ianor-parrihs

    rlio"td

    ,i"i"rlilea-

    *tL

    habis

    and

    home

    ddresses.o-f

    -th"

    gdgg,_prosecutoni,

    heriff

    and'the

    eputiesn-

    volved.

    TIIEN

    action

    should

    e

    riteit

    'I'would

    nor'be

    o

    u.astt s

    o

    gI"e

    com-

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    6/35

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    7/35

    mist,a

    radical

    and

    even

    a

    terrorisL

    Your

    phone

    will be

    taPpeg'

    our name

    will

    d;lipd;n

    tt"

    nt""

    of

    inteltigence

    nd

    eniorccmcnt

    gencies

    rom.thc

    rrcal

    r-

    lice O

    other

    state

    nd

    ederal

    gerrcies.

    oSt

    Amencans

    arve-ly

    cllcve

    Docause

    ;;;;

    ili6s

    and

    parricipard

    n orher

    ilusory

    -qapping.s

    t

    a

    free

    pcople.yl

    eniov

    iberty.

    Get

    anesred

    ttd

    see

    what

    happeni.

    ou

    will

    havea

    record

    or

    litc

    ;'fr;ffi;;6fi

    r*

    soifry

    or

    nnment.

    The

    niinces

    of

    police-brutality

    nd

    unjusti'

    fired hodtings

    r6

    nc-reasing

    s

    he

    courts

    hold the

    policc

    tu.ve

    no obllSUon

    )

    ;r*i-G

    firircn.

    Judges

    xercise

    udicial

    yranny

    by creating

    aw

    rather han

    lnr"rp*ting

    it

    as

    specili-ed

    y

    the

    United

    Slates

    onstitution'

    If

    you

    are

    happywith Monday ightFmtball, aerobicslasses,

    n evening f

    wine

    and

    cheese t

    The Pointe,

    Club

    Med

    vacations

    r any

    of $e other rinkets

    afforded at, complacent nd

    willing whores, trcndepart

    rom

    us

    n

    peace

    t this

    time. Continue

    o

    lick

    the bootsof

    your

    masleni

    and

    perform

    he

    other dutiesof

    a

    prostitute.

    But know that

    you

    arean

    enemyof

    those

    who count reedom

    above

    comfort.

    We who ove liberty

    more

    hansecurityseek

    no

    quarrel

    with

    any

    man.

    But, neitherwill we wear

    he

    chainsof subjugation.

    ake

    our weapors

    and

    we

    will

    take

    your

    ife.

    Take

    warning,he

    line has

    been

    drawn. f

    blood s lo

    be

    shed,

    let it

    begin

    here.

    Should lre

    flamesof

    violence

    consume s, history will mark

    for fuhre

    generations

    he courageand

    passing

    of

    free men. If

    the Almighty

    grants

    an undeserving

    eople

    mercy orce again

    before

    lte light flickers

    ino

    darkness,

    ree men

    and

    womenwill take

    heir

    weapons

    n hand,

    plrce

    the

    point

    of the sword against he throar of the errcmy ud

    no

    quarter

    shall be

    given.

    "Citizens

    are

    being

    arrestedfor

    failure

    to

    surender

    identification.

    -

    "Show

    me

    Your

    PaPers"

    cannot

    be toofar

    awaY-')

    Gov.EzNMENr

    louLp

    RULE

    v

    Goa/s

    Lj.u!

    To

    P@TEC-|

    ,Fe

    ANA

    TSOpEerr/.

    TAE lrA-rE HAg /uO OrHE,? eozfu.iE.,

    Citizens

    n Arimna

    are

    being

    arrcsted

    or

    failurc

    to surrender

    dentification'

    "Show

    me

    your

    papers"

    annot

    be

    oo

    ar away.

    The same

    officials,

    politicians, social

    acti-vists,

    nd

    -loboto-mized

    olers that

    fra"e adrocafeO

    nd

    esiablished

    h6

    policies

    of

    open

    eritorial

    borders,

    he aban-

    Oonr*t

    of-6ui

    atti*,

    Oe

    waste

    of 6ver

    50,m0

    American

    qo.l4ers

    n

    the

    ungles

    ;i'firh-E"ri

    /Gi",'thosaiatist

    vomit being

    ed

    orn

    children

    n

    the

    public

    ;h"tr,-;*rpr

    potitiChns,abusive

    pott

    " -3

    government fficia!

    disorted

    iiielii

    tenortiric.

    he

    rape

    of

    our

    hnd,

    the

    poiso-ning.of

    q

    wltq-and

    air,

    the

    il.ttc"-t"ffi;iifl'nee

    enfitptise

    by

    rnega-buslness,

    hC

    nsanity

    of

    affirmative

    ac-

    lffi

    i"O

    t

    "ttot and

    pnlecuri6n

    ot-citizens

    or self

    defense

    re he

    same

    ab-

    Ut"

    *tr"

    *in trfJ

    yogr

    igtre,

    csrfiscate

    your weapons

    nd

    castrate

    ouf

    spirit.

    ,\J

    A'

    i ;

    Reprinted

    wlth

    Permlsston rom the

    author and

    Nd

    &

    Abet

    Nerooletter, P.O. Box

    8787,

    Phoenix,AZ

    85066

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    8/35

    Reprttedftom:

    SITENT

    WEAPOIVS

    ntR

    ga[rBr

    IryARS

    Tools

    of

    Jusuce

    and

    retrtbuuon

    speclflcally

    tallored

    for

    this

    present age

    of

    oppresslve

    viciousness

    and

    corrup-

    tion, where evil APPEARS to reign supreme, unhin-

    dered,

    and

    unchallenged.

    Nature's

    God

    has

    provtded

    us

    more

    than

    one

    way

    -to

    "klll-a-rat."

    Our

    functton

    is

    to

    seek

    out

    the

    meth;ods,

    gind

    t/nen

    root

    out

    thre

    eluil

    rats!

    It's

    very

    late

    tn the

    htstory

    of

    free

    men

    and

    women,

    but

    not

    to6

    late

    to

    "send

    them

    a

    message."

    'We

    need to

    reach

    out

    and

    touch

    someone.

    God

    wtlb

    ltl God

    D&

    ffAfVDS

    ltl

    With these

    weapons,

    we eloquently,

    and

    si-

    lently,

    'Uust

    Say

    NOl"

    to

    plunder,

    oppression,

    tyranny'

    and

    evil.

    Sooner

    or

    later,

    E:VF'RY

    yrant

    mrrst

    set

    down

    to a

    ban-

    quet of

    consequences.

    "

    Gentlemen

    an d.

    ladies..

    .

    I

    propose rrtoast...

    INTRODUCTION

    In

    earlier,

    impler

    imes,when

    men ived

    n

    small

    bands

    lose

    o na-

    ture,

    here

    xistedn

    each

    anda very respected

    nd

    special

    ndividual

    o

    whom

    was

    entrustedhe

    ancientnowledge

    f

    thehedling

    and

    other

    spe-

    cial

    properties

    f the

    plants

    which

    grew

    n

    the area.

    his-person

    as'the

    shaman

    r medicine

    man

    of the ribe,

    and t is

    one

    part

    of his

    craft

    which

    we

    will

    celebrate

    n

    this

    book.This

    book s

    a celebration

    f

    that

    ancient

    and

    ine

    art,

    he art

    ofpoisoning,

    racticed

    oday

    by

    such

    people

    s

    doc-

    tors,

    bartenders,

    obacco

    enders,

    rug

    pushen,

    otiticians,

    n,i

    ailen.

    The

    advance

    f medical

    nd

    chemical

    echnology

    n

    recent

    imeshas

    made

    uccessful

    oisoning

    more

    o.irlgutt

    han t

    wls

    in

    the

    days

    of the

    shaman.

    he

    simple nd

    easily

    vailable

    oisons

    uch

    s at

    poisbn

    r ar-

    seruc

    an

    all

    be_asilydetectedn the.body f tlrevictim f a horough u-topsys done.n

    the

    case

    f inorganic

    oisols

    such

    as

    arsenic,

    mercury,

    cadmium,

    tc.,

    he

    ell-tale

    racesbf

    hese

    ubstances

    an

    be

    found

    n

    tlie

    Fdy 9f

    ttp

    deceased

    or

    as ong

    as the

    rcmains

    re

    around

    o

    be an-

    4yzeo.

    t

    makes

    o

    differcnce

    f

    ihe

    body s

    embalmed

    r

    cremated,

    or

    these

    ubstances

    rc

    chemical

    lements

    nd

    can't

    be

    destroyed

    y any-

    thing

    short

    of nuclear

    ellfire,

    or a

    corrupt

    court,

    price

    isr'available

    n

    request-appellate

    ourts

    lighuy

    higher).

    For

    his reason,

    he

    zuccessful

    poisolel

    must

    avoid

    such

    quick

    hxei

    and

    etum

    o nis

    cuiturat

    roots,

    tre

    knowledge

    f the

    shaman,

    f he

    s

    to

    avoid

    detection,

    ..unless

    rc

    s

    sim-

    ply

    trying

    o

    send

    hem

    a message.

    It

    is

    a

    sad

    commentary

    n the

    brutish

    imeswe

    ive

    in

    that

    heuse

    of

    deadly

    ubstances

    s

    a

    means

    f

    homicide

    s

    virtually

    unheard

    f.

    Instead

    of the

    quiet

    dignity

    of an

    effective

    poision,

    trose

    iittr

    homicidal

    ntent

    seem

    o impulsively

    each

    or

    a

    gun,

    knife,

    or club.

    All

    these

    rude n-

    struments

    eave

    o

    doubt

    as

    o he

    cause

    f

    death.

    WHATMAKES

    A GOODPOISON?

    (RAT

    POISONING

    OR

    FUN,

    OR

    IISTICEll

    deadly

    effect

    on

    the

    when

    considering

    he arge

    number

    of substances

    hich

    canexert

    a

    dly

    effect

    on the human

    bodv. the ouestion nehrrnllv comec rrn

    ,'ll/hqr

    !ody,

    the

    question

    aturally

    omes

    p,

    "What

    makes

    ne

    substance gcnq

    pdison,

    nd

    another

    nehoi

    sogoid

    o,

    ac-

    tually

    bad?"

    ie

    answerto

    hat

    question,

    f

    course,

    epends

    fon

    the

    cir-

    cumstanoes

    n which

    he

    poison

    s

    to be

    used.what

    riay

    be

    an excellent

    war gas

    may

    not

    be very

    suitable

    o the

    assassination

    f one

    person.

    nd

    argas

    may

    ot

    bevqry

    slitable

    o the

    assassination

    f one

    person,

    nd

    Ii!.

    y.lsu..ph.go;1nghg ightpoision

    or

    rhe

    ob

    s

    ike

    calliirg

    he ight

    play

    in

    football.

    It

    requires

    knowledpe

    of the ubiecr and use oTnsvchirt-

    lay

    in

    football.

    It

    requires

    ge

    of the

    subject

    nd

    use

    for

    the

    ob

    is

    like

    calling

    the right

    ofthe

    subiect

    nd

    useofosvchbl-

    ray.rn

    ogtDalr.

    t.

    -rcqurlel

    mowtedge

    f the

    subject

    nd

    useof

    psychol-

    ^opy_lgr111c9.

    he ight

    choice.-Thery.are,

    owevei,

    ome

    eneral

    iles

    of

    thumb

    o follow

    which

    make

    he

    subject

    onsiderably

    mfiter.

    l 3

    to

    reedom...

    tojusttce...

    to

    well

    esrned

    consequences!'l

    'Gorrcrnmcnls

    need

    armies

    to

    protect

    them

    their

    cnslartd

    and oppressed

    subjecls."

    -ko

    Toktoy

    (183)

    t2

    against

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    9/35

    The

    first two

    general

    ules are

    he

    golden

    rules

    of

    rat

    poisoning,

    which

    s

    only

    righl,since

    most argets

    are

    rats

    any{al.

    Rule number

    one

    s

    that

    t'he

    ittle

    goodie

    o be

    delivered

    o

    the subject

    must

    not be

    overly

    unpalatable.

    his rule,of

    course,

    s

    ust

    common

    elT'but

    it is

    also

    he

    mbst

    violated

    ule of

    good

    poisoning.t

    is

    unbclievable

    ow of-

    ten

    people

    do

    srupid

    hings

    ike

    puf

    ye or cleaning

    luid

    n

    an

    ntended

    targifs

    boffee,

    uit

    to

    hav-et spai

    iglit out.

    _You

    an

    magine

    he

    kind

    of

    sceles

    his

    blurider

    an

    ead o, espeiially

    when he

    would-be

    oisoner

    s

    serving

    he

    drink.

    A

    great

    deal

    of bmbarrassment

    an

    be avoided

    y

    pa,y-

    ing

    so-me

    ttention

    6

    how the

    ntended

    arget

    s.likely.to

    eact

    o the

    oeioty

    substance

    eing

    offered.

    f the

    poiqons

    going

    o

    be administered

    bv

    m6uth.

    t maybe

    wise

    o

    choose

    nbof

    the

    asteless,

    dorless

    oisons

    d6scribed

    n rhiS

    book.

    A

    good

    mix for

    really

    foul-tasting

    oisons s a

    shot

    f

    whiskey, r

    coke.

    The second olden ule of rat

    elimination

    ays

    hat

    the

    material

    should

    not cauS

    bait shyness

    efore

    a lethaldoses consumed. ever-

    al

    factors ome

    nto

    play

    here.

    Most

    mportant

    s the

    ength

    of

    time

    be-

    tween

    onsuming

    helitile

    goodie

    and he

    onset

    of

    the

    symptoms

    f

    poi-

    soning.

    or exui-ple,

    et'ssay

    he

    mark

    s a slow

    eater,

    rd

    s

    being

    given

    one

    oT he

    materiils

    which

    shows

    ome

    arly

    effect

    such

    as

    numbness

    r

    buming

    of

    the

    mouth oon

    after

    any

    s consumed.

    his could

    ead

    o fail-

    ure

    of itre

    mission, nd

    he

    mostdiie consequences

    or the

    would-be

    oi-

    soner.

    his

    problem

    ecomes

    ery ricky

    when

    a

    arge

    gmup s

    to

    be at-

    Uicked

    t

    once, ince

    eople aturally ecome

    ery

    wary

    when

    hey start

    to se

    heir

    associates

    eeling

    over.

    I

    see

    several

    waysaround

    his

    problem. int of all,

    one

    of

    the slow-

    acLing

    oisons

    uch

    s lrc castor

    dan

    r botulin

    may

    E

    servgp.

    s

    an al-

    temali"e,

    one

    of tlrc

    many ine

    gases

    may be

    used.

    wouldespecially

    recommerd

    hosgene,

    rsine

    and

    phosphine

    r

    nitrogen

    ioxide

    n this

    respect,

    eca'gse

    'rey

    don't

    have

    much

    6dor

    at

    lethal

    concentrations,

    nd

    theireffects

    re

    delayed

    o hat

    anentire

    group

    can

    be

    aken

    ut

    f

    so

    de-

    sircd.

    The third general ule of goodpoisoning s thathow

    quickly.a

    poi-

    son

    acts

    s

    cruiial

    o

    its

    value n any

    mission.

    o my

    wayof

    thinking

    n

    this subject,

    poison

    hould

    either

    cause

    eath

    ery-quickly

    efore

    help

    can

    be

    ieached-,

    r

    its actionshould

    e

    very

    much

    delayed

    o

    cause

    he

    victim to be

    unable

    o

    pinpoint

    he cause

    f

    his

    distressing

    ondition.

    n

    this

    respect,

    feel

    sorire

    f the

    cancer-causing

    gents

    overed

    n this

    book

    ari

    very

    appealing-

    heir use

    equires

    atience, ut

    he

    knowledge

    that

    a time b,5mbhas

    een

    lanted

    n

    ttre

    maric nd

    s

    ticking

    away

    can

    be

    very

    satisfying,

    ncredably o!

    The

    fourth

    general

    rule of

    good

    poisoning s that

    he

    material

    should

    eavaila6ie

    ithout eaving

    raiiof suspicious

    urchaseso

    ead

    the

    inger of

    guilt pointing

    back

    o the

    perpetrator.

    or tliq

    re1s.on,

    oi-

    sons

    w:hich an f obhined

    fnom

    plants

    arc

    emphasized

    n this book.

    Many

    very

    -beaytifuf

    lants

    have

    very

    deadly

    effects.

    Growing

    a few

    of

    them

    would

    aise

    absolutely-

    o_-suspicion.

    n

    addition,

    here-are

    many

    wild plants

    which

    are

    also

    deadly

    poisonous. good

    ield

    guide

    booi(

    available

    t

    any ibrary

    or book

    store,would eveal

    o

    the ead"er

    whole

    new

    world

    of which

    he was

    previously

    nawarc.

    -

    It

    is

    also mportant

    hat

    hematerial

    e

    ocally

    availabte.

    can

    see it-

    ile

    value

    n

    a

    substance

    hich

    onemust

    ravelhilf

    way

    around

    heworld

    to

    obtain.

    n

    this

    same ein,

    herc

    aremany ine

    deadry

    ubstances

    hich

    can-easily

    e

    stolen

    or

    "bonowed"

    (my

    friends

    nd use

    he erm

    "liber-

    at-ed'l!)

    f

    a

    person

    nows

    where

    o lo6k

    for

    them.

    ee

    trc ist

    at

    the

    end

    of this

    book

    of

    the

    chemicals

    entioned

    n

    this

    book

    alongwith

    their

    ma-

    jor

    industrial

    and

    commercial

    uses or

    hints

    on

    where

    d

    nor ior

    these

    deadly

    ubstances.

    The ifth and inal-gcneraluteof goodpoimning ictateshat he

    substance

    sed

    hould

    be very

    difiicui"t

    o ditect

    in

    t"he

    ody,both

    be-

    fore

    death,

    o frustrate

    treat-rnent,

    nd efter

    death,

    o

    rrriitiate

    ttre

    ensuing

    nvestigation.

    o

    make

    his easier,

    he sympoms

    atto

    ppr.t-

    ance

    of

    tE

    booy

    should

    mimic

    one or more

    natural

    diseases,

    o nat

    death

    may

    be

    attributed

    o

    this

    disease

    t

    autopsy.

    t is

    also

    mportant

    hat

    the

    substance

    eing

    used

    s

    effective

    n

    very

    sinall

    amounts,

    o nat its

    pfT.ng.

    does

    191jgmp

    out

    ar

    rhe

    person

    ding

    he ab

    resrs

    r

    autopsy.

    Much

    more

    on his

    atet

    but

    suffice

    t

    to

    say

    now

    hat f

    the

    subsun&

    s

    e-xotic,

    t is

    not

    ikely

    to

    be

    ooked

    or

    in

    lhe

    corpse

    t autoDsv.

    nd f

    they

    do

    not

    ook

    for it,

    it

    will

    not

    be

    ound.

    Along-this

    ine,

    I

    brice

    again

    have

    o.sing

    he

    praises

    f

    the

    ime-delay oisomlThese

    onoernl

    tittte

    gems,

    ike

    the

    cancer-causing

    gents hich

    can

    be

    extracted

    rom

    plants,

    or

    obtained

    rom

    ndustrial

    ources,

    r

    cooked

    p

    on

    your

    ot*n,

    guirantee

    3lmost

    omplete

    afery

    of

    the

    poisoner.

    o lon!

    as ie

    doesniiuoast

    or

    Itls

    cyryrlng,.or

    et

    gaugh!n

    the

    acr,

    seeno *ay

    for his

    deeds

    o

    land

    rum

    behind

    ars.After

    all,

    if

    the

    cause

    f an ndividual

    case

    of cancer

    could

    be

    proven,

    obacco

    ompanies

    ould

    have

    been

    sued nto

    bank-

    ruptcy ears

    go.

    -

    one quickwordherebeforewe move

    on. It is

    a natural

    human

    en-

    dency

    9 believe

    hat f

    a ittle

    is

    good,

    morB

    must

    be

    better.This

    could

    not

    be farther

    rom

    the

    ruth

    n

    rtreReto

    of

    good

    poisoning.

    he human

    stomach

    s

    a

    sensitive

    rgan

    n!

    may

    very w6tt

    cuetagainit

    being

    given

    111ggaO91e

    j.?ny

    subsrance.

    n

    un-rimeiy

    uack

    f vdmiting

    couid-very

    well

    lead

    o

    failure

    of

    the

    mission,

    with

    ihe most

    dirc

    consjquences

    or

    those

    nvolved.

    A

    good

    general

    ule s

    to never

    use

    morc

    hai

    twice

    ore

    re_commended

    ose,

    nless

    he

    victim

    s very

    at.

    There

    s

    an added

    en,

    efit

    n

    this,

    as

    smaller

    osages

    rcmore

    difn;ult

    to detect

    ater-

    /ourerll-.rrett

    w1

    FUaS

    oF zHE

    l/ozta

    5.41/,^lPE/uE/tlgFF

    e,Ue zUeU

    U,ttfu

    fie

    toEo:

    AA/2

    / /5 n1

    Carszrtlt?

    -A-ndtG

    TlF

    /Y47/O/V5."

    Pga/rrz ZZ:

    ZZ

    za

    -

    l 5

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    10/35

    HBAVY

    METALS

    Thesematerials

    ave

    nothing

    o do

    with rock music. nstead

    t is

    a

    term

    used o

    rfer

    o

    mercury, ead,

    cadmium

    nd

    the

    compoundshat

    they

    form. Since

    noneof the

    heavymetalsare normally

    ound n the

    body

    n any large amount,

    inding them at autopsy

    will

    be

    evidence

    enough

    o

    prove

    poisoning.

    test

    or

    the

    prsenae

    f

    heavymetals

    s

    a

    standad

    part

    of everyautopsy

    where

    oisoning

    s

    suspected.

    ercury

    s

    presy

    presentative

    f the

    whole

    group,

    o will

    just

    describe

    ts

    effects.

    Most of us are

    pmbably

    amiliarwith

    mercurymetal,

    he silvery

    iq-

    uid that

    fills

    some

    hermometers.

    t is called

    quicksilver,

    nd

    s not

    par-

    ticularly

    dangerous,

    xcept

    or is vapors. hat

    s

    because

    t

    does

    ot dis-

    solve

    nto he

    water n

    the

    body,so

    t

    can't

    get

    around o do

    ts work.The

    sals of

    mercury re

    muchmore

    poisonous,

    nd of these, onosive

    ub-

    limate,HgClz, s probablyhewont. A personwhoswallows omem-

    mediately

    otices hanh

    metal

    aste

    n his mouth, ollowedby a buming

    feeling

    n

    the

    stomach.

    oonafter hat,bloody

    vomit

    starts

    oming,

    and

    later,bloody

    dianhea.

    he kidneysstop

    working,

    so the

    flow of urine

    comes o

    a tnlL

    Deathcan occur within one

    hour fiom

    a big dose,

    but

    it

    is more

    ikely

    to

    occurdays

    ater from exhaustion.he atal dosedepends

    on

    how

    soon

    aftereating

    he

    poison

    hevictim begins o vomit.

    f vom-

    iting does

    not

    occur,

    2

    gram

    will

    be enough

    o cause eath.

    For more

    n-

    formation, ee

    TheAnerican Jourtul of

    Medical Scierrce, olume

    185,

    page

    149

    1933).

    heauthor

    s Peters.

    TETRAETHYL

    LEAD

    This

    substance,

    ormerlyaddedo

    gasoline

    o

    lessen

    knocks"

    is

    fatal

    in

    the

    amountof

    150milligmms. t causes egenerative

    esions

    n

    the

    brain

    and other

    issues.

    our

    target

    will experience xcitement f

    the

    central

    ervous ystem

    ith deliriumandmaniabeforc

    he

    dies.

    This is

    found n leaded

    asoline

    n the amountof .0019o.

    errce, ne

    gallonof leadedgasoline ontainsabout3-12 gm. of this substance,

    which s

    quite

    a

    ot. About a tenthof a

    gallon

    of

    leaded

    as

    would

    yield

    plenty

    or a case f

    "Justice"!

    Tetraethyl

    ead

    boils

    at

    4000Fahrenheit.

    asoline oils at between

    85oand 390p

    Fahrcnheit,

    epending n

    the

    ime

    of

    year

    in

    the

    winter,

    lighter,

    aster-boiling ydrocarbons rc used han

    n

    the summer).

    De-

    pending

    n the ime of the

    year

    ard

    your geographic

    ocation, oil

    gas-

    oline somewherc

    etween 5f and 39tr

    Fahrcnheit.

    e

    sure

    no open

    flame s anywherenear!

    CYANIDE

    (Also

    See

    Prussic

    Acid

    -The

    Gas

    Form)

    One

    of

    the

    morc

    popular

    poisons

    f

    modem

    imes, yanide s

    mercly

    the combination

    f two

    of our

    mostcommon

    elements,

    arbonandnitro-

    gen

    the

    cyanide

    adical,

    CN).

    Potassium

    yanide

    will kill anyone

    n theamount f .2

    gm.,

    usually

    n

    under

    15 minutes.

    Symptoms

    egin

    mmediately

    nd nclude

    giddiness,

    headache,

    alpitation,

    nconsciousness,

    nddeath.

    HCN btild

    at26"C,

    which

    s normal

    oom

    emperaure.

    ven

    well

    be-

    low

    that

    emperaturc

    t evaporates

    ff ftmes

    ike

    crazy.

    f

    you

    have

    ever

    fooled around

    with ether,

    you

    know what

    I

    mean.

    These umesarc very

    deadly,

    ne

    part

    per

    2000air

    is a

    deadly

    oncentration.

    f

    you

    must ool

    aroundwith hestuff, OrganicSyntheseseportshat f yousmoke cig-

    arette

    while around

    HCN,

    ttre

    asteof

    the smoke

    will

    become

    npleasant

    if

    you

    arebreathing

    n any HCN.

    The atal dose_f sodium_or

    ntassium

    cy-anide

    s

    about

    l

    gram.

    For HCN

    t is about 05

    gram 50

    milligrams).

    This

    s

    a

    ittle over

    f20

    of

    a

    quart

    of

    gas,

    f inhaled

    ircctly.

    ETHYLENE

    GLYCOL

    AND

    DIETHYLENE

    GLYCOL

    Ethylene

    lycol

    is lethal only

    in amounts f 3.5 to

    4.0

    ounces,

    et

    it

    hassome

    nteresting haracteristics

    hich may

    make t

    a

    good

    expedient

    poison.

    irst, t

    is

    univenally

    available

    s

    anti-freeze.

    econdly,

    t hasa

    3weetish,

    greeable

    aste.

    And

    thirdly,

    it

    produces

    n effect similar o

    drunkenness.

    eathusuallyoccurs

    n aboutan

    hour

    o

    an

    hor"rr

    ndone-

    half from the

    ime of

    ingestion,due o

    respiratory

    ailure,

    though

    t may

    occur

    omewhat

    ater rom

    pulmonary

    dema

    r renal

    ailurc.

    Diethylene

    lycol

    causes imilarsymptoms.

    t

    is

    more

    oxic

    (about

    5

    oz. s a ataldose) ut ess eadilyavailable.

    THALLIUM

    Along

    with diamond

    ust, hallium

    s

    the

    mostheinous f all

    poisons.

    It is completely

    odorlessand

    tasteless, nd

    fatal in

    the

    amountof one

    gram.

    The

    symptoms

    egin

    one

    to three days from the time of

    ingestion.

    They

    nclude xtreme

    ain,

    nausea,

    aresthesias

    n theextremities,

    em-

    atemesis

    @loody

    omiting),

    bloody

    diarrhea,

    oss

    of

    hair, convulsions,

    lethargy,

    cyanosis,

    remors,

    ataxia,

    psychological

    epression,

    ever,

    bleedingfrom

    he

    pores,

    kinswelling,

    raindamage, nd

    death.

    l 7

    The residue ill

    be etraethyl

    ead.

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    11/35

    All

    this

    takes

    place

    over

    a

    period of

    six

    weeks.

    Beyond

    immediatc

    emesis,

    here

    s

    no

    cure.

    PRUSSIC

    ACID

    -Gas

    Frussic cid,or

    hydrocyanic cid,

    s

    so

    deadly hat

    ts

    discovercr, ci-

    entistKarl Wilhelm

    Scheele,

    askilled

    from its fumes.

    Prussic cid

    s the

    most

    oxic

    form of cyanide,

    eathoccuning n a

    matter

    of

    minutes.

    t is the same

    ubstance

    sedby

    govemments

    n

    gas

    chambers.

    Hydrocyanicacid

    is formed

    by the action of

    srong acids

    on

    po-

    tassium r sodium

    yanide.

    Onecould

    quickly

    clear

    out an

    arcaby dtopping

    a few

    ourrces f

    po-

    tassium

    cyanide

    n a

    pyrex

    bowl

    of

    acid, and

    hen exiting the

    scene

    as

    quicklyaspossible.

    Another

    methodwhich

    would offer

    varying

    degrees

    f time delays

    would

    be a

    compact

    aboratory

    aucet apparatus lowly dripping small

    amounts f

    acid

    nto

    a beaker

    artially

    illed

    with

    cyanide alts.

    HYDROGEN

    SULFIDE

    Gas

    With

    a toxicity

    only slightly

    ess

    han that of

    prussic

    acid, hydrogen

    sulfidehassome

    haracteristics

    f

    interest

    o those

    wishing

    o create

    us-

    tice.

    The

    gas

    s naturally

    ccuning

    n swamps,marshes,ndsewer

    ines

    hence,

    ts name

    f

    "sewer

    gas."

    Although ts characteristicmellof rotten

    eggs

    an

    serve

    sa

    wamingsignof

    its

    presence,

    he

    actionof this

    gas

    on

    the olfactory

    nerves

    s

    such as

    o

    quickly

    deaden hem and

    make

    hem

    unaware

    f anyunusual mells.

    Justabout

    nyonewho s a camper,

    isherman,

    r

    huntermayenterar-

    easwhere herewouldconceivably e ethalconcentrationsf hydrogen

    sulfide.

    All

    you

    have o do

    s terminate ucha targetwith hydrogen

    ul-

    fide anddrag

    his

    body

    nto a swamp r

    marshy

    rea.

    lf

    you

    ive in

    the

    country,

    you

    probably

    know of one or two swampyareas hat smell

    strongly

    f sulfur.

    These

    re

    perfect.)

    The

    manufacturc

    f

    hydrogen ulfide s as

    simple s

    prussic

    cid. t is

    created y

    water oming

    nto

    contact

    with

    phosphorousentasulfide.

    Thallium

    and

    water

    emlock

    are

    poisons pecifically

    ut

    on

    his

    earth

    by

    God

    for comrpt

    govemment

    rlkes

    and

    ttreir

    amilies,

    after

    all.

    tliese bastards risy- hemselves estroyingo$ families, so we

    shouldn't

    esitate

    o-respond

    n

    kind,

    "sauce

    for

    the

    goose""'!

    NITROGEN

    DIOXIDE

    -Gas

    This

    is one

    of

    our

    favorites.

    A short

    exposure

    o

    250-300

    parts

    per

    miffion

    w111

    nobablynot 5g

    noticed,

    excepf

    perhaps

    or.a.slight

    pain

    in

    the

    chest.

    Several

    hours

    or several

    days

    atei,

    edema

    will develop,

    and

    your

    arget

    dies.

    It is

    madcby

    dropping

    copper

    ilings

    nto

    dilute

    nitric

    acid'

    l 8

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    12/35

    THT

    WO

    SIDES

    TlT.

    @$T

    OTODEYING

    PHOSPHATE

    ESTERS

    (Insecticides!)

    Dscovered

    by

    the

    Germans

    n

    WMl,

    phosphate

    stel

    ary.now

    pri-

    *fi"

    rt"d

    as

    risecticides.

    ymptoms

    egin

    wi-thin

    minutes

    f

    ingestion

    il'fidi;A;

    t"Jrft"ss,

    unsteidiiess,

    blurrcd

    vision,

    pains n the

    chest

    ffi

    ilil.h,

    "o*iting,

    diarrtrea,

    remors,

    yanosis,

    oma.,

    .convulsions,

    rfi

    ;iriiilr*enry-fouT'hours,

    death.

    hese

    an

    be

    utilized

    by

    ingestion,

    inpctions,

    breathid,

    r

    simply

    skin

    contact!

    Listed

    below

    are

    some

    of

    these

    nsecticides

    and

    the

    lethal

    dose

    for

    each:

    BOTULISM

    As

    .000028

    f one

    gram

    will kill

    a man,

    his

    poison

    s

    quirc

    ethal.

    When ngested,

    ymptoms

    ccur

    n

    nrelve o thirty-six

    hours,

    and n-

    clude

    arigue,

    dizziness,

    eadache,

    onstipation, ertigo,

    difficulty

    in

    swallowing

    and

    n

    speech,

    he regurgitation

    f

    fluids from

    the nose-and

    mouth,

    muscularncoordination,

    ndeventual

    eath rom respiratory

    ail-

    ure.

    Taken

    hrough

    he

    bloodstrcam,

    eath s

    quick

    and relatively

    symp,

    tornless.

    Botulism

    s

    fun and

    easy

    o

    mahe.

    ill

    a

    ar

    with

    oom,

    green

    beans,

    r

    clopped

    beas. Drop

    in

    a few

    pieces

    of meat

    and about

    a tablespoon

    f

    ftesh

    dirt. Now

    po-ur

    n water

    until surface

    ension

    brings t above

    lre ope$Se-g{he q, thenscrewon the cap tightly.If doneproperly,

    heft

    should

    e

    no

    air or next

    o no

    air rapped n

    the

    ar.

    It may-hetp

    f

    you

    blend

    he vegetable

    sed.Rrt

    this

    ar

    in

    a dark,moderately

    warm-area

    or

    ten

    days.At

    the end

    of this

    perid,

    you

    shouldnotice

    a

    blbat

    o the id

    of

    the

    ar

    and

    small

    amounts

    f

    a

    brownishmold.

    These

    are he

    culturcs

    of

    Cbstridiwtt

    botulinun,

    which

    produce

    tlrc

    boulimu

    exotoxin,

    alsn

    known

    asbotulism,

    s

    a by-product

    f

    digestion.

    As

    this can

    be a

    hit-and-miss

    method,

    use

    wo or

    thrce

    ars

    at a

    time.

    y{

    attempl.todescribe

    xactlyhow

    botulism

    germs

    an

    be

    gmwn,

    and

    their exceedingly

    oisonous

    roduct

    used

    or

    both assassination

    rrposes

    and

    asa

    weapon

    f mas

    destruction.

    Every

    once n

    a while,

    a

    story comes

    o ttrc

    public's

    attention

    about

    some

    poor

    unfornnate(s)

    alling

    victim

    to botulism

    as a result

    of eating

    improperly

    prcserved

    ood.

    If a

    commercial

    product

    s

    at fault,

    a mad

    scramble

    nsues

    s

    the

    authorities

    ry

    to

    gpt

    a recall in

    motion

    before

    morc

    victims

    succumb

    o the ainted

    asties. n

    these nvestigations,

    here

    is-.always

    _rygg-d

    f

    tragic

    accident nd

    misfortune,

    hicliis

    why

    bot-

    ulism s-sohigNy recommendedsa tool of assassination.t is always

    assumed

    hat

    cases

    f

    botulism

    rcaccidential

    esults

    f

    eating

    bad ood,

    not

    trehandiwork

    f a crafly

    executioner.

    Botnlism

    s

    a

    disease

    enerally

    caused

    by eating ood

    in which

    the

    bacteria

    bstridia

    bonlinum

    has

    grown.

    Thb

    bacteria

    roduces

    most

    exceedingly

    oisgnogs

    rotein,

    bonrlin,

    as

    a

    normal

    part

    of its

    gnowth.

    the

    poigo-n

    roduction

    s

    the

    bacteria'sway

    of claiming

    a

    piticular

    chunk-of

    ood

    t is

    growing

    on as

    ts

    own. Death s

    the

    penalty

    or

    any

    giry4_ryg$ess

    enough

    o snatch

    t from

    its

    grasp.

    Do

    you

    ndtice

    how

    NATURAL

    t is

    thar a

    CAUSE

    ields

    a

    JUSTRESULIZ

    Even

    a

    simple

    "bacteria,"

    when

    "put

    upgn"

    by an

    "oppressor,"

    VIOLENTLY, (al-

    though

    u-!tly).'

    erminateC,it's

    ppressor,

    6gardless

    f the

    cost

    or

    doing

    so.

    t's

    called

    the

    Law

    of theJungle,"

    ndAIN,T T

    GRAND/?,

    Onlt

    2l

    Trade

    Narne

    TEPP

    Di-syston

    Guthion

    EPN

    SYstox

    OMPA

    Phosdrin

    Trithion

    Parathion*

    MethYl

    Parathion

    Neme

    Gases

    or

    ComParison

    Tabun

    Soman

    Sarin

    *Parathion

    s very

    similar

    o

    newe

    gas!

    70

    lzthal

    Dosage

    l0O

    mg.

    30O

    mg.

    30O

    mg.

    40Omg.

    20O

    mg.

    350

    mg.

    250

    mg.

    900

    mg.

    200

    mg.

    250

    mg.

    under

    mg"

    under

    mg.

    under

    mg.

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    13/35

    modem

    subiecs

    of

    ooPiesi=vg,eovemment'

    tyrarury)'

    rc

    "expected"

    to

    6il'ttrE

    ortrerctreet

    Well

    folkg

    ...Governmcnt

    an

    KISS

    MY

    CHEEKS!

    Botulin

    is

    the

    second

    most

    powerful

    poisonknown'

    ta!i18

    the

    run-

    ner

    up

    position

    o

    a

    poiioo

    miOi'

    Uy

    an

    exbtic

    suain

    of

    South

    Pacific

    co-

    ;i;i.ffi;'ffi-ririiOose

    of

    puri

    bo-tulin

    s

    in the

    neighborhood

    f l

    ii'rciiigi.il,

    i

    thcp

    ori-t

    ^tttion

    fatal

    doscs

    n

    a

    gmm

    of

    pure

    botulin'

    The

    bacteria

    hat

    makes

    botulin,

    clostridia

    botulinum,

    s found

    all

    o"ri

    tt*

    *orrd.

    a

    ranoomly

    hosen

    oil

    sample

    s.likely

    o.contain

    uite

    ;i;;s;;;i-oi

    rrrir

    Ui.teria.

    Spqres

    re

    ike

    seeds

    or bacteria,

    nd

    can

    iiti"t.fio

    ".ry

    harsh

    teaunent.

    nis

    propertv

    wllt co11t1i:yl3-dJ

    i1

    ""J-"it"roii6 s,o*

    Uotufist

    getms, e'cauie

    ther

    germs

    q

    E

    wiped

    ;i

    fr;;;ii"s

    lfinot

    *rt"r,leaiing

    ttrg.sqgres

    o

    germinate nd

    ake

    over

    ;"*ih"t codldown.Muchmoreon his ater'

    Another

    ery

    mportant

    Property

    {

    4!4llt"

    germs.ishat

    hey

    can't

    survive

    exposure

    o

    air.

    rn'e

    olre-en

    n

    it

    kills

    them,

    but

    does

    not

    kill

    Itii

    rpor"i-

    Wtratevei-toiin

    nri!t*t

    made

    beforc

    heir

    demise

    also

    i,i"";i"fi

    iirit

    treeJto

    ^"lude

    air

    rom

    he

    environment

    here

    lte

    gg$s

    rt" e-*ins

    is

    $re

    most-difficult

    engineering

    hallenge

    o

    ttre

    aspiring

    culti-v

    tor

    f

    C

    os

    ridia

    bo

    uli

    num'

    Finallv.

    all

    botulism

    erms

    are

    not

    crcated

    qual'fJ"T"

    ry.*bgroups

    *iriti"[[iprcies

    that

    i'ake

    oxins

    hat

    vary

    mmensely.

    n their

    potency'

    ifiiil

    *iled

    types:

    A,

    B, C,.D'.E-F

    q

    &4'Type

    A

    is by

    far

    the

    most

    i.u,ifi,

    ioUo*.0

    6y

    iyp,i

    B'and

    84.

    Thqother

    onei

    we

    won't

    even

    bother

    iJ?il'"ilii.

    mro

    *initi

    a

    single

    ype,

    herc

    are

    ndividual

    differences

    n

    ilil-;";h

    roxin

    a

    given

    stiain

    ililt

    produce.

    Breeding

    nd.

    ene ma-

    ffiffi;;

    hi"Ja

    nfto

    do

    with

    this,

    aird

    our

    governmenl

    a$

    tlrc

    Russ-

    fili.r

    well)

    have

    put

    a

    ot

    of

    effort

    nro

    pickihg- ut

    strains

    hat

    make

    an

    i*tOi""t"

    amount

    f

    toxin.

    The champion

    s of

    about

    30

    years

    ago

    w:ls

    ;i;;'H.1ft*tn,

    Uut

    lm

    surc

    rhar

    hey'ie

    come

    up

    *iF

    Pn..thing

    better

    Ji*iirc"lft

    Haff

    sirxin

    of

    type

    A

    ,r.as

    ble

    o

    make

    300

    human

    atal

    doses

    f botulinperml of bnotht grew n'

    Herc

    we will

    explore

    he

    wo

    major

    evels

    of use

    or

    botulin

    as

    an

    at-

    t".i-.,""upon:

    the

    ndividual

    or

    smail

    group.assassination,

    nd

    he

    arge

    li.fl

    .rii"tt

    wirh

    he

    poison

    n

    a

    manner

    imilar

    o

    nerve

    as.

    SMALL

    SCALE

    ATTACK

    On

    this

    level

    of

    attack,

    the

    need

    or training-in

    bacteriology

    almost

    Oisappears.

    U

    nit

    ir

    n"".i"O

    it an

    ability

    to

    work carefully,

    and

    a basic

    ffi;f.dg.

    of

    sterile

    i.ittniqu..

    The.

    wide-spread

    cultivation

    of

    p.agic-

    rurttr-fir

    is eviOence

    nougtl

    that

    these

    ski'lls

    can

    be

    found

    outside

    of

    the

    traditional4

    yearcollege

    setting'

    Forthisattackplan,thebcstannroa;} istheonelcal l ' ' theaccidental

    clumsy

    canner."

    his line s chosen ecause

    t is so simple,and s also

    the

    way

    hat

    most

    cases f

    accidental otulism

    oisoning

    ccur.

    The

    process

    f carming

    s

    ideally

    suited

    or

    getting

    a

    horde

    of bor

    ulism

    germs rowing.

    This s

    because

    he

    process

    f canning

    if

    not

    done

    in

    a

    pressure

    ooker)

    s

    onewhere he canof

    goodies

    s heatedn

    a water

    bath

    with

    a sealant overon the can.

    The

    contents f

    the can

    get

    heated

    enough

    o

    kill living

    germs,

    ut

    not spores.

    he

    air

    n

    thecan

    gets

    driven

    out,

    and replacedwith

    steam.

    As the can

    cools

    down,

    he sealant ap

    keeps

    air

    from

    retuming

    o the

    can

    and

    a vacuumdevelops.

    he

    rcsult s

    an

    oxygen ree

    boulism

    paradise.

    The

    only

    reasonwhy

    such

    home

    canned

    oodies

    re

    not rampantwith

    botulism s

    that therc s another actor very important o

    ttrc

    growth

    and

    happiness

    f botulism

    germs.

    They arc fussy about

    what

    they like to

    grow

    n, its pH, and he emperature. ll of theseactorsare easilycon-

    trolled

    by an anacker

    o

    give

    the botulism

    germs

    a happy and healthful

    (for

    them)home.

    The

    conditionsmost avorable or

    growing

    a

    vigorousculftrc

    of bot-

    ulism

    germs

    nclude

    a

    food

    source hat

    is rich in

    protein,

    a

    pH

    that

    is

    nearly

    neutral

    the

    ideal

    starting

    pH

    is

    7.2,

    which s

    so close o neutral

    that

    indicatingpH paper

    will

    show

    no

    differencebetween7.2 md ttte

    neutral

    7.0), and

    a

    nice

    warm

    place

    to

    grow

    in

    undisturbed

    or a few

    days.Their avorite

    emperaturc

    s

    35"C

    (9OO.

    They

    can

    handle

    ooler

    temperaftres,

    ut

    warmer

    emps

    may

    do

    great

    damageo the culture

    of

    germs.

    Now

    that

    the

    basics

    have

    beencovered,how

    exactly

    would the

    "ac-

    cidental lumsy

    canner"

    acack

    plan

    be canied

    out?

    The irst

    step

    s to ob-

    tain

    some pores

    f the botulism

    erm.

    These

    re

    not

    Ore ort of things

    one

    picks

    up

    at the comer

    dnrg store,so a field

    trip

    is in

    order o obtain

    soil

    samplesikely

    to

    contain he spores

    of Clostridia boulinum,

    pref-

    erably ype A for

    maximum

    ffectiveness. lot

    of

    research as

    been

    done

    on the ypes

    of soil most ikely

    to contain argeamounts f spores.

    can summarize.theindingsby saying hat C/. boulirum prefers ark,

    rich,

    airly wet

    soil that s rich n

    organicmatter.Sandy oil s mt so

    well

    suited

    or

    Cl.

    bonlinwr. It is

    alsomore heavily

    populated

    n warm e-

    gions

    han

    cold

    ones.

    Finally,

    ype

    A is

    the

    predominant

    ype of botulisn

    germ

    n

    the

    US,

    with

    virgin

    soil

    holding

    ttre

    greatest reponderance

    f

    typeA

    germs.

    The following

    articles

    will

    prove

    nvaluable

    n

    fleshing

    out these

    en-

    eralities ith more

    concrete

    pecifics:

    "Incidence

    and Distribution

    f CL boruIinwnn

    Soils

    of lllinois"

    by

    M.T.

    Jones, d.Res.,

    ol.

    10,

    page

    38

    l%5)

    "Survey

    of Soils or

    Spores f

    C

    .Botulinum"

    by C.G.

    Knock,

    I.Sci.

    FdAgric.,Vol3,

    page

    6

    1952)

    "The

    Distribution

    f Spores

    f

    C/.

    Botulinumn

    Califomia" y

    K.F.

    23

    IJ

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    14/35

    Meyer,J.

    r{ect.

    Diseases,

    ol.3l,

    p_age54l

    1922't

    Same

    itle

    or US

    ibid.,

    Page

    59

    Same

    itle

    for

    Alaska

    ndCanada

    ibid.,

    page

    595

    "Spors

    of

    CI. botulinurn

    n

    Georgia

    Soil" by

    R.E. Morse,Fd. Res.,

    Vol.

    15,

    page454

    1950)

    "Prev-alence

    of C/.

    BoruIinwt

    n

    Soils

    of Central

    New

    York

    State"

    by

    E.W.

    Parry,

    Fd.

    Res,

    Vol.

    I l,

    page

    03

    l%6)

    This

    s

    all

    very easy.

    t is moredifficult

    to

    find soil sampleshat do

    not

    have bonrlism

    germs

    n them

    han o

    find those hat

    do.

    The

    sample

    should

    e

    taken

    a

    few

    nches

    below he

    surface.

    With several

    ikely samples

    n hand,

    t

    is

    time

    to begincuuung'

    A

    sood

    home

    medium

    or

    growing

    botulism

    germs

    s

    grcasy

    eef.

    Some

    dheap,

    atty cus

    are

    deboned,

    nd

    run throug!

    a blender.

    An

    equal

    amount f iap water s addedo themush,and

    t is

    put

    in niurow-mouth

    quart-size

    anning

    an.

    They should

    e

    nled

    nearly ull, so hat here s

    riotmuch

    air

    space

    eft

    n ttrem.

    Then

    about

    alf

    a

    ablespoon

    f soil

    sam-

    ple

    s added

    o

    each

    ar.

    Two

    an

    fqr each

    oil sample

    hould-proveuf-

    hcient.

    The

    ids arc

    put

    on

    for canning,

    nd he

    sample

    s shakeno

    mix

    it through

    each

    ar.

    The

    an

    arc hen

    placed

    n a

    argekettle containing

    boiling.water,and

    heated

    or

    45 minutes

    o

    one

    hour,

    ust

    ike canning

    omato

    uice.

    Micro-

    biologists

    all this

    step

    heat

    shocking."

    t

    wipes

    9ut-ttrc

    iving

    germs,

    leaving

    nly ttrc

    sporcs

    o

    survive.

    The

    purpose

    f the

    at

    n the beef

    s

    to

    melt,

    rise to

    ttre op and

    seal

    off the

    beef

    rom any

    possible

    ir on cool-

    ing.

    The airless

    ondition

    of the

    an

    after

    he,lids

    seal uponcooling

    meanshat

    only

    anaerobic

    means

    hey

    grow

    n

    the absence

    f air) spore:

    formingbacteria

    ill be

    able

    o

    gmw

    n the

    ars.

    This

    still

    leaves everal

    specieiof

    germs

    besides

    ondism

    germs

    o

    conurminatelrc brcw, but

    many

    of thCm,

    ike tetanus,

    make

    poisons

    f their own,

    andso will

    not

    cause

    rat

    harm.

    After

    the

    heat

    shocking,

    he

    an

    are aken

    out

    to cool.

    The

    ars

    are

    put

    in awarmplaceogrow.They should ot be shaken, r n anyotherway

    disturbed,

    s his

    mightcause

    ir o

    get

    nto

    he

    hoth.

    Thecanning

    ings

    may

    be

    ooserrcd

    s soon

    as hey

    cool

    down,because

    rowing

    botulism

    gerins

    make

    hydrogensulfide

    gas

    (rouen

    egg

    _odor)

    an{ this

    gas

    ,may

    6uih

    up

    pressurc

    nd

    ausehe

    an

    !o

    explode

    f theycan't

    ent

    t

    off.

    After a

    few days o

    a

    week at 90oF,

    he

    an

    shouldbe

    ust

    about

    ready.

    he

    an

    contining

    otulism

    ultures

    will

    be easy o

    recogniz.e.

    he

    meat

    will have umed

    black,

    andbe

    at

    east

    partly

    digested

    y the

    ittle

    devils.

    A

    foul-snelling

    gas

    will havebuilt

    up

    in the

    an,

    and

    uined he

    seals

    n the

    ids of rhe

    an.

    The nextstep

    s to

    test he

    posion evel n

    promising

    ars.

    Mice, ham-

    sters nd

    guinea

    igs

    come

    n handy

    or

    this.

    Wearilg

    rubFl

    gloves,

    he

    lid

    is carehrlly cracked

    pen

    a

    little bit,

    and a

    few

    dropsof the

    brew

    are

    SIAVERY

    Justas

    n

    GeorgeOnvell's

    984, worrds

    sd

    by

    the

    rnass-

    medb

    mean he

    opposlte

    f

    ufrat they

    say.Massmdh

    n4r.

    trology-

    oublespeaks'freedom"

    vtren

    dawry ls

    tre reallty.

    People

    wrongly

    assune rat

    Jwt

    because

    hery

    aw

    W:rr.,

    rnaterlal

    hlngs,

    entertalnnrent,

    nd

    creature

    omforts,

    hey

    are iree. haT

    mlss he

    fact

    hat thrurgh

    trkery

    ttrerfhav6

    become

    ntangledn

    a stlclqrryeb

    f

    llcen-ses,

    ermts

    nA

    conbacts'hlch

    are

    belng

    used

    by

    the

    state o

    conhd

    and fle

    themdown.

    .ltrd

    lke

    n

    the

    oH rno\rles

    boutNad

    C*nnany,

    hdrpapen

    mu$

    be h

    order,

    ard Era,l

    annot

    do

    any0rhrg tthqri

    those

    papers,

    trkh

    can

    onb be

    granted

    o

    ttrenr

    by

    ffrdr

    rusbr,

    thc

    statet

    TNE

    AXIEPII(AN

    QEAIVT

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    15/35

    PPOTESSING

    TIEI"ISELVES

    O

    DE

    WIST,

    Tnff

    DECAI-'1[

    DLS,

    .. PoMAlrs

    ??

    This

    is

    your

    mind:

    This

    is a

    church:

    This

    is

    what

    churches

    do to

    your

    mind:

    ..A,,,^,-.. . -

    lkPlt

    ,

    -

    rl

    ry'ffr'd

    4'xffW

    ./

    M-

    26

    removed

    ith

    an

    !y!

    dryp-pgr,

    he

    brew

    hen

    goes

    own

    he

    mouth

    of

    the

    unforrunare

    esr

    ictim.-wittrin

    few

    days,.rt;

    animJin"iri't

    dead,

    f

    it

    is

    a

    good

    atch.

    he

    d_ellv

    ll few

    davsis

    dd

    drh;;;;;

    Iime

    poi-

    sion,

    and

    s not

    an ndicatioh

    f

    howgooO

    t

    e

    batch

    s.

    With

    the irst

    test

    passed,.

    henext

    step

    s

    to

    test

    t

    on

    a larger

    animal

    to

    seehow.potent

    he

    brew

    s.

    Rats

    make

    excgilent-tesisrulecrg

    nd

    thev

    ome

    n

    a varietv

    f

    sizes,

    rom

    he

    'nqi gru."i"ili,iiir;i;;r:

    er,

    black

    obed,

    *g:,_uqg.a.tvF.

    l9

    signs

    rdidnin!-ilil..pinerr,

    vomiting,loose

    owels, aratysis

    nd

    deafr.

    ^

    with.the

    preliminaries

    aken

    are

    of,

    the

    botul_i1

    s

    rcady

    or

    its

    rarget.

    I

    so.oc

    arch

    hould

    have

    several

    ethal

    doses

    f

    bonrlin

    der

    ml

    of

    broth

    in

    a

    ar.

    This

    small

    amount

    fJoul-smelting

    iog

    -_riiifiiti'OisguiseO

    in.3

    s..trol8-rasting

    ixer,

    such

    as

    chili,

    oi

    cortei.

    bare'i,,iriL

    r"r.n

    with

    rhe

    borulin

    hat

    t nor

    be

    subiected

    o hrling *.r"i oi sirira, rugr,temperature.otulin s a protein,no wiu

    ue

    oenitureo

    no

    *udl

    n"*_

    less

    by heat.

    .

    once.

    he

    -symptoms

    f

    botulism

    appear,

    he

    antitoxins

    hat

    medical

    science

    as

    developed

    rc

    completely'riseress.

    trether

    rlirti,

    tiuo

    or

    dies

    asa resulr

    -fborulism

    tipendi

    oiiiy

    on nowia.ge

    ooil"rtre

    vic_

    tim

    has

    eceived,

    nd

    how

    tough

    lre

    victim'is.

    rearnefirbeior"

    i*

    st.n

    of

    symptoms

    ffers

    some

    hope]

    o ong

    as

    oo

    massive

    Oose

    aJmt

    in_

    gested.

    In

    is

    earlier

    tases,

    otulism

    n

    humans

    s

    often

    misdiagnosed

    s

    such

    lhing_ls

    stomach

    Iue, polio,

    6an

    dubtr,

    or heavy

    d;ii:d;;

    nouna_

    ing.^

    owevg.r,

    y hg

    ime

    he

    arersiigei'or

    elufress'i.J",i.Tr,.o,

    *

    1Tl1TLrytly

    have

    t

    lgureo

    ul

    For-rhis

    as'n,

    trc

    ssasiin

    o",

    nor

    rery

    on

    me

    unexplained

    ystery-

    isease

    shis

    irn

    or

    eiense.

    n.t

    rd,

    the

    ine

    aken

    s

    he

    one

    or

    accihent,ar

    ot

    "rinatr;";}rdl;;iupp,r.

    DMso

    should

    e an

    -excellenr

    elivery

    eftod.

    se;-iie"fin"

    auout

    DMSO

    n

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    1.

    LARGESCALE MASS

    .

    DESTRACTIVE

    ATTACK

    -

    The

    arge

    cale

    roduction

    f

    botulin

    oxin

    s

    an

    altemative

    o

    the

    use

    of nervegases

    or

    issault.on

    Emy poprrriion

    cente^.

    This

    may

    at first

    su pri

    e.

    _o.,

    ur.

    he

    c

    ude

    produciii,n'tecnniqG

    f

    iil

    ir"rf

    Lrr"

    r,-

    tack

    and

    rhe

    accidental

    lurirsy

    anner''

    -

    1i-r1giCarrii""ip6"!o

    upon

    to

    yield

    mass

    uanrities

    f

    teni$,ingly

    potent

    borufinioi'in.---r-v

    '

    v!

    The

    use

    f

    botulin

    has

    several

    dvantabes

    ver

    Sarin

    r the

    V_gases

    s

    an

    agent or

    devastating

    nemy

    ities.

    Fint

    ano

    oremosi,

    otuii,ii,

    ,""_

    eral

    hundred

    imes

    more

    poteirt

    han

    even

    te,oiipor.*

    V-j*.

    rni,

    |.y.gt

    ugp

    in

    toxicity

    means

    hat

    one

    reasonabry

    arge

    bomber

    prane

    (like

    a.

    essna

    u-b)

    ourd

    c1g.y payroad

    hat

    wourd

    wreak

    havoc

    with

    an

    entiremerropolitan

    rea.

    his

    s

    b6cause

    otutin

    s quii.

    o".or!*n.n

  • 8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)

    16/35

    inhaled

    even

    morc

    so han

    when

    eaten) o a bombdesign imilar

    o

    the

    one

    or Sarinand he

    V-gases

    esults n a

    punch

    rivaling that of a

    tac-

    tical

    nuke! EqualOpporanry

    tlumphs agoin!

    The

    second

    dvantage

    f

    botulin

    manufacture

    ver

    nerve

    gas

    pro-

    duction

    s

    that

    t does

    not

    us he

    arge

    amounts

    f chemicals

    hat

    are

    necessary

    or

    a

    massive caleassault

    with

    the nerve

    gases.

    his allows

    ttre

    attack

    group

    o

    evade

    any

    scrutiny

    hat may

    be covering

    he

    chem-

    icals used or

    nenve

    as

    manufacturc.

    his

    scrutiny

    s not likely

    to

    be

    covering

    tp

    basic

    prccursors

    mphasized

    n

    this work,

    but one

    never

    knows

    how

    pervasive

    ig Brothe/s

    nooping

    s. The recent

    xplosion

    f

    biotechnology

    ompanies nd

    microbreweriesreates n excellent orest

    for the botulin

    producer

    o

    hide n.

    A ftird

    factor o be

    kept n mind

    with

    botulin

    production

    s that a

    per-

    son

    can

    be

    vaccinatedgainst

    oisoning

    y botulin.

    This s

    standard

    ro-

    cedureor theworkersn theArmy's hemicalesearchacility.Three n-

    jections

    of the

    "toxoid"

    provide

    reasonable

    rotection

    againstsmall

    exposures

    o botulin.

    Attempts

    o

    get

    vaccinatedhrough ormalmedical

    channels ould

    arouse uspicion, o

    making homemade

    oxoid

    may

    be

    called

    or.

    *e Journal

    of

    Inunurclogy, olume

    55,

    pages

    45 o

    254, or

    dircctions.

    he author

    s C. Nigg.

    This

    comparesavorably o nerve

    gas

    production,

    where

    he

    only

    protection

    s

    to avoid all expozure o the

    chemical.

    Finally, the

    poison

    is all

    nalural, and

    is madc without

    re-

    sorting to

    prcsenatives,

    artificial colorings or

    flavors.

    fust

    the

    down

    home

    goodness

    f

    Mother Naturc.

    Botulin

    keepswell so ong as

    t is kept

    cold and

    out of the

    ight.

    When

    it makes

    ts way

    out

    nto the world,

    more

    dangers wait t. As wasmen-

    tioned

    earlier,botulin

    s a

    protein

    and so is

    denatured

    y

    hear It

    also

    can'tstandbasic

    conditions, ut does

    not mind

    exposureo dilute acids.

    The

    combination

    f

    hot and

    basic

    water

    quickly

    does t in. Cold

    water

    that

    s neutral

    r

    slightly acid

    will not harm

    he botulin,

    so

    poisoning

    f

    watersupplies

    s

    an altemative

    or a botulin attack.While

    considering

    this,one mustkeep n mind thevery smallpercentagef a city'swater

    supply

    hat

    goes

    nto human

    rinking

    purposes.

    uch arger

    amounts

    o

    into ndustrial

    rocesses,

    rd

    flushing

    oilets.Botulin

    ainted

    water

    hat

    s

    used o

    flush

    a oilet,

    s

    ust

    botulindown

    he drain.

    t is

    also

    well

    to

    keep

    in mind the hugesizeof the typical

    eservoir.

    When

    ull, they

    usually

    have

    enough

    water

    n

    them o

    last or

    a

    year.

    Poisoning

    he

    whole res-

    ervoir

    would equire ugeamounts

    f toxin, and

    would

    be

    wasteful.

    Be-

    yond

    hat here

    s

    the

    water

    purification

    ystem

    or

    the

    botulin

    o

    make

    t

    past.

    A more

    direct

    water upplyattack

    maymake

    more

    sense, uch

    ascon-

    taminating

    well

    or

    pipeline

    which

    serves n enemy

    omplex.

    Details

    of

    this

    attack

    plan

    are

    bcst

    left to the fertile imaginations

    f

    the

    attack

    grou''

    2E

    THE

    CASTOR

    BEAN

    BEHIND

    it's

    nnocent

    xterior

    hebeanhides

    a sinister

    ecret.

    t

    con-

    tains

    a

    very

    deadly

    nd

    difficult

    o

    detect

    oison.

    The

    deadly

    eeds f

    the

    bean re

    about

    he

    sizeof a

    pea.

    Beneath

    he hard

    coat

    of thg

    sgeds,n

    the

    pulp

    of the

    seed, s

    a most

    fasc.inating.poison,

    n unusualplant oi-son,

    eqauset

    is

    a

    brotiiil,

    i-ti

    conrrasr

    o the

    great

    nlajo-nty

    f

    plant

    poisons,

    which

    are

    alkaloids.

    his

    ll l

    v,ery

    lqprlgr

    point

    because

    ll

    rhe alkaloids

    annow

    be easily

    de_

    tected nd

    dentified

    by use

    of-a

    gas

    chromatograph

    ass

    spectrometer.

    formelly

    excellenr

    oisons

    uchar nicotine

    r icoiritine

    arc'now

    viniin--

    ly

    useless

    ecause

    f the

    ease

    f detection

    f tiny-

    quantities

    f

    ,

    poison

    po-sible

    with

    the

    pc-mass

    spec.

    roteins,

    on rhe

    drr6r

    nano

    an

    be

    ver"

    dtfncult

    o detectn

    a body.

    This s

    because

    f the needle

    n

    the

    havstack

    effect.

    with

    all

    the rhousairds

    f

    different

    prueins

    n

    a

    uoov,

    o

    ;lift-u;

    one

    hatdoesn'r

    elong

    here s very

    difficirlt,

    especially

    r

    it'is

    rioiGire

    t11"Hgg.q!prtri1s._$9n9r

    lass

    f

    compounds

    rut rrireniiciuaiiii c,i

    orrncutt etecuonrequatemarymmoniumomoounds.

    Ricin

    from

    castor

    beans

    s

    one

    of the deadliest

    f all

    poisons,

    035

    mg:

    -hlng

    enough

    !o

    kill if

    inhaled

    r

    injected

    ntravenoustfar

    s

    consio

    era.blyess

    oxic when

    ngested,

    hough

    onewell-chewed

    istbr

    beanwill

    ff2:-^r_!g

    e,*r.raction

    roces.s

    s

    simple

    and he

    castor

    bean

    plant

    irself

    can

    De

    oDtarneo

    t many

    nuNeries

    crcss

    he countrv.

    .

    The Bulga{g!

    exile and

    oumalist

    Georgi

    Markov

    was

    killed

    nor

    roo

    rong

    ago

    DJa rigts_qgent

    ith

    a iny metal

    ball

    containins

    icin.

    No

    ricin

    was

    ever ound

    n

    Markov's

    body,

    he anrount

    sed

    o kill

    him

    beine

    so

    tg{g,!gSg1^ry_{glection

    1rl}F"

    s.ymproms

    nd

    he

    prominenG

    }

    tnelqafl(

    suggest

    oisoning

    y hi