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
__
I
lsrr'Nr
&
n"r,i
]
Includinc
nstructions
or extracting
he
deadly
I n r
I
ooison
''ricin-
frro,m
Casor
Beans.
Agent
of
| / I
I
rSlii'nii,,'ltt',,f;*9J$f;f"i'"H:'H,E#filA I
1
-neans
vith
Instrtctions:
.'_.
I
:M/fiffiilrySilNNla=fi'#@:
iffiN'ffi-::#f; i
ftififfi]Sffi&*- {
casnol'ut
I
f v,/,,,lt,f
rr
l\\if,ltt!r!$--\.rt
$4.a0
pN.
t
- -
I
I
1 Quantitt
Discounts
-10-^$-4.W^F:
-USA
I- ^r 50 $130.00pd. Ontv
I
rais
"i,otoru,
,tff--rlf$i$ffi
I
r
Y - - - - - - -
r
I
'
Moynard's
Avenging
Angel
SUPPIY
r
I
Maynard
CamPbell
I
'
hst Office
Box
53,
Ashla'nd,
rcgon
97520
r
L -
-r
rl
- r.
r r
r
r
r
r
r
rl
r
r
r
r
J
8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)
2/35
THISBOOK SNOT
COPYRIGHTED.
.
IT'SPURPOSES
TO
ENLIGHTENNDENCOURAGE
REE
PEOPLE.
PLEASE
FEEL REE O
OUOTE
T,
COPY T,
FAX T,
MASSPRODUCE
T,
BUTPLEASE,
DON"T AKE T
OUTOF
CONTETT
OR
TWIST TS TOTAL
CONTEXTUALNTENT.
THANKYOU,ANDMAYGODBLESS
YOURPERSONAL
FFORTS
OWARD
LIBERTY
WHICH
CARRIES
WITH
T
GREATBESPONSIBILITY.
MAYNARD
. CAMPBELL
R.
lst Printing
Mrch l99l
-
1Q000
opio
2d Printing
Rcvigcd Mry
l99l
-
50,00 copics
-r
Neither heauthor
or le
publisher
ssumes
- ..Ob
any
responsibility
or the-useor
misuse
f
lP.>-
information
ontained
n this book.
t is sold
-
for enterl,ainment
urposes
nly.
Be Warned!
Be Careful!
This is sold
as a
nove:lty tem only!
8/11/2019 Catalogue of Silent Tools of Justice - Maynard C. Campbell (Original)
3/35
-
ULTIMATUM
fi
{tb&ry2*eaat${*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
pages
0and
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