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Michaek
Dorris | Gary Webb | Pierre Berton |
Al Giordano's good-bye |
Hunter S. Thompson

On February
20, 2005, Hunter S. Thompson exercised a fundamental right --
to leave. Those of us who remain at this grotesque party to see
what is going to happen next will miss him.
I do not
advocate the use of dangerous drugs, wild amounts of alcohol
and violence and weirdness -- but they've always worked for me.--Hunter S. Thompson
Hunter S. Thompson, 65, Author,
Commits Suicide
By MICHELLE O'DONNELL,
New York Times, February 21, 2005
Hunter S. Thompson, the maverick
journalist and author whose savage chronicling of the underbelly
of American life and politics embodied a new kind of nonfiction
writing he called "gonzo journalism," died yesterday
in Colorado. Tricia Louthis, of the Pitkin County Sheriff's Office,
said Mr. Thompson had died of a self-inflicted gunshot wound
at his home in Woody Creek, Colo., yesterday afternoon. He was
65.
Mr. Thompson, a magazine and
newspaper writer who also wrote almost a dozen books, was perhaps
best known for his book, "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas,"
which became a Hollywood movie in 1998. But he was better known
for his hard-driving lifestyle and acerbic eye for truth which
he used in the style of first-person reporting that came to be
known as "gonzo" in the 1960's, where the usually-anonymous
reporter becomes a central character in the story, a conduit
of subjectivity.
"Nobody really knows what
it means, but it sounds like an epithet," he said in an
interview that, for him, journalism "can be an effective
political tool."
Hunter Stockton Thompson was
born in Louisville, Ky, on July 18, 1939, the son of an insurance
agent. He was educated in the public school system and joined
the United States Air Force after high school. There, he was
introduced to journalism, covering sports for an Air Force newspaper
at Eglin Air Force Base in Florida. He was honorably discharged
in 1958 and then worked a series of jobs writing for small-town
newspapers.
It was in the heat of deadline
that gonzo journalism was born while he was writing a story about
the Kentucky Derby for Scanlan's magazine, he recounted years
later in an interview in Playboy magazine.
"I'd blown my mind, couldn't
work," he told Playboy. "So finally I just started
jerking pages out of my notebook and numbering them and sending
them to the printer. I was sure it was the last article I was
ever going to do for anybody."
Instead, he said, the story
drew raves and he was inundated with letters and phone calls
from people calling it "a breakthrough in journalism,"
an experience he likened to "falling down an elevator shaft
and landing in a pool of mermaids."
He went on to become a counter
cultural hero with books and articles that skewered America's
hypocrisy.
"He wrote to provoke,
shock, protest and annoy," Timothy Crouse wrote in his book
"The Boys on the Bus," about the 1972 presidential
campaign.
Mr. Thompson influenced a generation
of writers who saw in his pioneering first-person, at times over-the-top
writing style.
As a young man, he was heavily
influenced by Jack Kerouac and wholeheartedly followed Kerouac's
approach in which the writer revels in his struggles with writing.
Among his books were "Hell's
Angels," "Fear and Loathing in Las Vegas," "Fear
and Loathing on the Campiagn Trail '72," "The Great
Shark Hunt," "Generation of Swine" and "Songs
for the Doomed."
Copyright 2005 The
New York Times Company
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Truth can never be
told so as to be understood, and not be believ'd. William Blake, The Proverbs of Hell
Truth suppress'd, whether
by courts or crooks, will find an avenue to be told. Sheila Steele, injusticebusters.com
If you hold the mouth
of Truth, It will burst out its rib-cage. Somali proverb
Publisher : Sheila
Steele
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Another target
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Index to Saskatoon Police stories
This is a pretty good scrapbook
for the 1998-2002 period.

Inquiry into the malicious prosecution of David
Milgaard untanling 36 years of Saskatchewan police and Crown
misconduct: : Opening day |
2 | 3
| 4 | 5
| 6 | 7
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- Stephen
Williams: Canadian
writer subject to Stasi-like treatment by Canadian police
- Terry
Arnold: : Snitch a
suicide?
- RCMP
scenario stings: Brian
Hutchinson starts digging
- Gary
wells: Faulty eye-witness
testimony
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- Tulia,
Texas
- Gilmer,
Texas
- Willie
Upshaw
- Wrongfully convicted in Canada
- Foster Parent false accusations
- Martensville
- Don
Smith obscenity trial: an obscene conviction
- James
Lockyer
- Hurricane
Carter
- Johnny Cochran speaks up for
Bill Sampson
- Vopnis
- Abdulai
Mohamed

The Terrible Story behind the Atif Rafay and
Sebastian Burns convictions

Trial
set for June 15
We
know part of this disclosure is a forged statement and perjured
affidavit from a Winnipeg cop
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-
-
-

The
Crown is still fighting Fred Poirier -- and they are losing.
Secret Commissions Case from Northern B.C.
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- 2005: In
the United States the proven wrongful convictions just keep coming
at us!
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