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National data bases don’t show 6 adults were killed at Sandy Hook school

13-5-2018 < SGT Report 53 414 words
 

by Dr. Eowyn, Fellowship Of The Minds:


We are told that on December 14, 2012, lone gunman Adam Lanza went on a shooting spree in Sandy Hook Elementary School (SHES) in Newtown, Connecticut, killing 20 children and 6 adults.


The six adults are the principal, teachers and school psychologist at SHES:


Rachel Davino: teacher’s aide; age 29.
Dawn Hocksprung: principal; age 47.
Anne Marie Murphy: teacher’s aide; age 52.
Lauren Rousseau: teacher; age 29.
Mary Sherlach: school psychologist; age 56.
Victoria Soto: teacher; age 27.


Strangely, three national data bases do not show that the above six adults had actually died.


(1) SOCIAL SECURITY DEATH MASTER FILE
To begin, neither the 6 adults nor the 20 children show up in Social Security’s Death Master File — the data base for the Social Security Death Index that’s reported on genealogy websites. I addressed this in my post, “No one died in Sandy Hook: Testimony from Social Security Death Master File“.


(2) FBI CRIME STATISTICS
Then, there is the FBI’s 2012 crime statistics for Connecticut, which show the number of homicides (“murder and nonnegligent manslaughter”) for the city of Newtown in 2012 as zero (0). Here’s a screenshot of the table, which I’d taken from the FBI website as recently as April 28, 2018.



Some claim the reason for the zero homicide is because the FBI uses only data reported by city and town law enforcement, but the Sandy Hook incident was handled by the Connecticut state police, which explains why Newtown police reported to the FBI zero homicides in 2012.


Indeed, the FBI does say this about its data sources:



The data used in creating this table were from all city and town law enforcement agencies submitting 12 months of complete offense data for 2012.



But how do we know that the reason why the FBI table shows zero homicide for Newtown in 2012 is because Newtown police left the reporting to the state law enforcement?


The FBI’s methodology for compiling its annual reports on crimes in the USA does not support that claim. The FBI states:



The national UCR Program published the Uniform Crime Reporting Handbook (revised 2004), which details procedures for classifying and scoring offenses and serves as the contributing agencies’ basic resource for preparing reports. The final responsibility for data submissions rests with the individual contributing law enforcement agency.



Read More @ FellowshipOfTheMinds.com



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