Taking Back Our Stolen History
Alltel VP, Charles Miller, who Helped Create the Government ‘Big Brother’ Database for the Clinton Administration Shoots Himself Twice and Submerges Weapon in Nearby Water
Alltel VP, Charles Miller, who Helped Create the Government ‘Big Brother’ Database for the Clinton Administration Shoots Himself Twice and Submerges Weapon in Nearby Water

Alltel VP, Charles Miller, who Helped Create the Government ‘Big Brother’ Database for the Clinton Administration Shoots Himself Twice and Submerges Weapon in Nearby Water

Charles Wilbourne Miller was vice president and board member for Alltel, the company that created the White House’s “Big Brother” computer system.

As WND reported, an Arkansas medical examiner concluded “suicide” after Wilbourne Miller, 63, was found dead of a gunshot wound to the head in a shallow pit about 300 yards from his ranch house near Little Rock. Police found a .410 gauge shotgun near Miller’s body and a Ruger .357-caliber revolver submerged in water. Investigators concluded the Ruger was the weapon used by Miller to kill himself. Yet, two rounds in the handgun’s cylinder had been spent. How could a suicide victim use two weapons or even fire two shots to kill himself?

Miller was no ordinary citizen of Arkansas. He had long served as executive vice president and member of the board of directors for Alltel and was deeply involved in his own software engineering company until the day he died. Alltel was the successor to Jackson Stephens’ Systematics, that company that provided the software for the White House’s “Big Brother” database behind the Clinton administration’s plan to develop the secret computer “Clipper” chip to bug every phone, fax and email transmission in America. There was at least one other high-profile “suicide” among the inner circle involved with the project – Vince Foster.

Only in Arkansas does a suicide victim use two shots — not to mention two weapons — to kill himself.Source: WND.com