Alex Jones Detained On Orders Of Bilderberg Group
June 8 2006
By Paul Joseph Watson
PrisonPlanet.com
15 hours of hell at the hands of immigration who
knew they were coming
Alex Jones and his team were detained
by Canadian immigration on orders of the Bilderberg Group for a 15 hour
nightmare of interrogation, accusations and threats of arrests in anticipation
of the conference in Ottawa which starts today.
The group were detained at 11:45pm last
night and only released after 2pm today.
Customs openly told Alex as soon as they
brought him into custody that the Bilderberg Group was aware of his arrival
and that this was the reason for his detainment. All three members of the
team were instantly detained despite going through different immigration
desks.
Officials knew everything about Alex,
even the fact that George
W. Bush had once had him arrested in 1998.
"I was screamed at, I was cussed
at, I was interrogated," said Alex.
Jail threats were issued as officials
seized and searched through Alex's equipment for 15 hours. He was told that
if any trace of pornography was found on his three computers that he would
be arrested.
"They were talking about how I was
a criminal - they hooked our laptop computers up and said that if they found
any porn, even mainstream porn, that it's illegal to take it across lines
and that we'd be going to jail," said Alex, thanking God that no trace
of any porn was found on his office computers.
Searches continued throughout the night
and again in the morning.
Immigrations officials seemed to take
a gleeful satisfaction in detaining the team, claiming they were liars and
not part of the media despite one admitting to having seen an Alex Jones
documentary. Accusations of drugs and weapons smuggling were thrown around
without recourse.
"You Americans shit all over us
Canadians think you can do anything you want to us," said one immigration
official who was acting more like a drill sergeant.
Towards the end of the ordeal national
media, including the Ottawa Citizen and CBC, got wind of what was unfolding
and sent journalists to the airport to talk to Alex.
A CBC journalist vouched for the fact
that Alex was in the media and that she was planning on interviewing him,
after also being subjected to a barrage of questions by officials.
At this point immigration officials sharply
changed their attitude, reversed a likely decision to deport the team and
by the end were apologetic and conciliatory about the entire issue.
Alex would like to make it clear that
the immigration officials on the whole were just doing what they were told
in trying to prove who Alex was and they should not be the focus of any
vitriol. Alex himself admits that his behavior was not perfect and he smarted
off a couple of times when he should have remained quiet. The major element
of this story is that the pressure was brought to bear by Bilderberg.
The point to emphasize again is that it
was brazenly stated that the Bilderberg Group were behind the decision to
detain Alex and his team. Bilderberg have acquired a notorious reputation
of harassing journalists, including Jim Tucker and Daniel Estulin, who are
simply trying to report on a meeting of the world's most influential powerbrokers.
The immigrations officials said that their
reason for detaining Alex was because they feared he was in the country
to infiltrate the Bilderberg meeting.
Since being allowed to enter the country
the team have been watched and tracked by several nefarious individuals
and also followed by car.
The team booked a decoy hotel in order
fool Bilderberg security as to their real location. The decoy hotel has
been receiving numerous calls from individuals within Bilderberg's Brooke
Street hotel - despite the fact that Alex told no one he was staying there.
Further reports on this incident and developments
from the Bilderberg conference itself will feature here over the next few
days.
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