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Open Questions and
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Diana,
cause of death: ambulance ride which took one
hour to travel 6 kilometers, 4 miles, to
hospital. Why has no one focused on this platform
of inquiry?
- Assuming driver, Henri Paul, was at fault due to
intoxication, accept the reality that Princess Diana
was not dead after the accident. She was
very much alive and talking.
- The hospital to which she
was taken, Pitie-Salpetriere Hospital, was 4 miles (6 kilometers)
from the accident, occurring after
midnight on a holiday weekend, with many
away and the city streets quiet.
- Accept the reality that
there has been no focus by the media on
the at minimum, one hour, ambulance ride
to travel 4 miles.
- Accept the reality that
the time she slipped into the throes of
death was during the one hour plus
ambulance ride to the hospital.
- Le
Parisien and Reuters reported that during the
ambulance trip, the ambulance stopped to
give her a massive injection of
adrenaline.
- Le Parisien and Reuters
further reported that the Interior
Minister, Jean-Pierre Chevenement, and the police chief for
Paris, France, Phillippe
Massoni, two of the
most powerful figures in the land, were
mystified about the whereabouts of the
ambulance due to its failure to timely
reach the hospital.
- Assuming that ambulances
in Paris, France in 1997 have radios or
phones, answer why two men, among the
most powerful in France, couldn't pick up
a telephone and get an answer to the
mystery.
- Further,
consider whether the ambulance was sent
without a police escort, and, if so, why.
- Subsequently
the hospital asserted Diana received no
injection of adrenaline during the
ambulance ride. Was she treated at the
hospital, upon her arrival, without full
knowledge of what transpired during the
ambulance ride? What did transpire? At
the hospital was she (again) injected
with adrenaline? Who was on the
ambulance? What happened during an
inordinate one hour trip with a VIP on
board?
- Why isn't
the media actively and aggressively
pursuing this important matter? If a
parent found out it took one hour for an
ambulance with his or her child to travel
four miles after midnight to a hospital,
would the parent be justified in being
quite angry and entitled to know what
happened. If that child was Prince
William, would the focus of the inquiry
be different than it apparently is with
Diana? Would the English newspapers, and
others throughout the world, declare:
'One Hour to Get to the Hospital!'
CONCLUSION:
Based on the above, one can fairly assert that
the death of Princess Diana may have its nexus
more to the ambulance ride and the treatment
during that ride than to the accident itself.
With billions of people throughout the planet
interested in her death and the cause thereof, it
is a deep mystery of why the focus of
investigators and media circumvent this critical
area of inquiry, which paradoxically seemed to be
a mystery to the French Interior Minister and the
Police Chief of Paris as well. Our mystery ties
in as to why a VIP may have been traveling
without a police escort in an ambulance taking,
without acceptable explanation, one hour to get
to a hospital. The answers have been to transport
the injured Diana safely and to "avoid
bumps." In that case, it seems every other
ambulance throughout the world operates on a
different basis, in recognizing a need to get an
injured person quickly to a hospital; here, where a team
of doctors, awaiting Diana's arrival,
may have saved her. To our minds, and the minds
of any reasonable man or woman, the one hour trip
is inexcusable and carries compelling questions
which demand detailed answers.
JB Ehrlich
Geopolitical Analyst
Sender, Berl & Sons Inc.
September 14,
1997
E-mail:
SenderBerl @ aol.com
Internet Links:
http://www.senderberl.com
http://www.senderberl.com/recapturing/america
Diana, cause of accident (September 20,
1997):
http://www.senderberl.com/diana2.htm
Diana, cause of tragedy (October 19, 1997):
http://www.senderberl.com/diana3.htm
Diana, open questions and issues:
http://www.senderberl.com/diquestions.htm
Diana, updated analysis web page:
http://www.senderberl.com/diupdate.htm
Free to copy, distribute,
disseminate contents with clear credit to http://www.senderberl.com/diana.htm
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