Subject: ALEX JONES ——► [investigation] GLENN BECK KILLED HIS MOTHER
From: "Ras Mikaere Enoch Mc Carty" <moaulanui@hotmail.co.nz>
Date: 13/12/2018, 18:43
Newsgroups: alt.paranet.ufo,alt.ufo.reports



  ALEX JONES ——► [investigation]  GLENN BECK KILLED HIS MOTHER


  ALEX JONES ——> [?] KILLER GLENN BECK [?]:

  MOTHER MARY BECK  "suicide",
  ONGOING INVESTIGATION

       NEWS WARS
   *  http://www.newswars.com

   ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ ᵘˢᵃ

  GLENN BECK:

  EARLY YEARS NOXIOUS BECK, WITH MOCKERY OF
  WISCONSIN SENATOR [R] JOSEPH MC CARTHY.

  GLENN BECK /  MORMON MASONIC

 ——> ''MORMO'' IS THE NAME OF THEIR
             FEMALE DEMON "god" !

  GLENN BECK QUEER MORNING CREW,
  DRAMA 'QUEEN'.

  * ANTI-MOSES,
     BABYLON SORCERY CONSPIRACY.

  GLENN BECK QUEER MORNING CREW,
  DRAMA 'QUEEN'.

  GLENN BECK WITH A VENDETTA AGAINST ALEX JONES.
  ALEX JONEX MENTIONING HOW TREACHEROUS
  AND TOTALLY EVIL GLENN BECK IS.

            THE "SUICIDE" OF MARY BECK,
               GLENN BECK'S MOTHER.

               [?]  KILLER GLENN BECK  [?]
                       INVESTIGATION
                            (BELOW)

ᵘˢᵃ ᵐᵒˢˢᵃᵈ ᵘˢᵃ ᵐᵒˢˢᵃᵈ ᵘˢᵃ ᵐᵒˢˢᵃᵈ ᵘˢᵃ ᵐᵒˢˢᵃᵈ ᵘˢᵃ ᵐᵒˢˢᵃᵈ ᵘˢᵃ

     ——>   * GLENN BECK
                    THE DEATH OF MARY BECK INVESTIGATION:

http://www.sharethisurlaboutglennbeck.com/2011/07/glenn-becks-story-is-fiction-of.html

The Death of Mary Beck

The facts behind Beck’s claim that his mother’s death was a suicide were
first called into question by Alexander Zaitchik’s in an article that was
published by Salon.com, on September 21, 2009. (Even though Beck continues
to assert that he was 13 at the time of his mother’s death, he was 15).

Early one morning in May 1979, a 41-year-old divorcee named Mary Beck went
boating in Washington's Puget Sound. Her companions on the expedition were a
retired papermaker named Orean Carrol, whose boat she helped launch near the
Tacoma suburb of Puyallup, and Carrol's pet dog. What happened next remains
shrouded in morning mist, but among the crew, only the dog would survive the
day.

The boat was recovered late that afternoon adrift near Vashon Island, just
north of Tacoma. It was empty but for two wallets and the frightened animal.
Mary Beck's body was discovered floating fully clothed nearby. Carrol's
corpse washed ashore at the Vashon ferry terminal the following morning.

The county coroner found no evidence of violence on either body. Police
investigators told Tacoma's News Tribune that the double drowning appeared
to be a classic man-overboard mishap -- a failed rescue attempt in which
both parties perished.

In a New York Times interview  dated September 29, 2010, writer Mark
Leibovich asked Beck how he knew that his mother’s death was a suicide.  The
slam-dunk answer that Beck should have given Leibovich is the same one that
he told Rick Farrant of the Ft. Wayne Journal Gazette seven years earlier:
“My mother left a suicide note next to the family’s Crock Pot.”  A
handwritten note is prima facie evidence of suicide.  No other explanation
is needed.  Nothing he could say would be more persuasive than “my mother
left a suicide note.”

But Beck didn’t mention the existence of the suicide note to Leibovich.
Instead he laid out a rambling, nonsensical, and unconvincing scenario that
raised more questions than it answered.

“The man who drowned with her was that same abusive boyfriend, he said.
Either the two of them jumped overboard at the same time, or Mary fell in
and the Navy man jumped in to save her — and that was unlikely. Why? Beck
said he been out on a boat with the boyfriend before, and the man preached
to him never to jump in and save somebody who is drowning. It only endangers
the would-be rescuer. Throw in a life preserver instead. Plus, the Navy man’s
clothes were found neatly folded, along with his wallet and watch.”

How could Beck possibly know the sequence of events?  He ignores the very
real possibility that Mr. Carroll, when faced with the reality of his friend
Mary Beck struggling in the cold waters of Puget Sound, ignored his own
advice and dove in to save her.  He also doesn’t consider the possibility
that it was Carroll who fell into the water and Mary Beck dove in to save
him.  Beck’s claim that Carrol’s clothes were neatly folded and his wallet
and watch were still in the boat, are puzzling non sequiturs.

The joint investigation, conducted by the Tacoma Police Department and the
Coast Guard makes no mention of the suicide note.  The note is not in the
police file.  On the day of Mary Beck’s death, the then 15 year old Glenn
Beck told police officers that his “mother left to go fishing and never came
home.”  If a suicide note was subsequently discovered, Beck’s family never
notified authorities.  And if Beck knew of the note in 2003 why didn’t he
mention it to the New York Times in 2010?  It wasn’t true and he forgot his
2003 lie.  If Mary Beck had written a suicide note, Glenn Beck would have
remembered.

From GlennBeck.com, June 13, 2008.

“And I’m going to be real honest with you. My mom wasn’t mother of the year.
My mother, my mother had real deep, deep problems. She was doing her best,
but she left the family to deal with suicide when I was 13 years old.”

For Beck to say that “she left the family to deal with suicide” is another
lie.  Mary Beck didn’t leave her family.  She left her husband.  Big
difference. She sought and was awarded custody of her two underage children,
Michelle and Glenn, and moved with them to Puyallup, Washington after the
divorce was final.  She didn’t leave Glenn… in fact she went to court to
keep him.

*    *    *    *

“Tonight, I want to talk to you a little bit about the truth. It’s actually
a pretty simple concept.”

Glenn Beck, August 10, 2010

In the interview with Ft. Wayne Journal Gazette, Beck revealed to journalist
Rick Farrant that he had a brother-in-law who committed suicide during the
same time period as Mary Beck’s death.  However, in subsequent interviews
and comments, Beck referred to the male suicide victim as his brother
instead of his brother-in-law. To further confuse matters, the most widely
reported versions of the event claim that the person was Beck’s stepbrother.

The process of determining exactly who the “male relative” was that took his
own life severely challenged Beck’s assertion that “the truth is a pretty
simple concept.”

The following version of events appears dozens of times in pieces written
about Beck, including his “official” Wikipedia article and there is no
evidence that Beck or his PR people have ever attempted to correct or
clarify the conflicting record.

“After their mother's death, Beck and his older sister moved to their
father's home in Bellingham, Washington, where Beck graduated from Sehome
High School in June 1982. In the aftermath of his mother's death and
subsequent suicide of his stepbrother, Beck has said he used "Dr. Jack
Daniel's" to cope.”

In the Journal Gazette piece, Mr. Farrant wrote:

“But the same year he started in radio, his alcoholic mother, Mary, left a
suicide note by the family's crock pot and drowned herself in a bay near
Tacoma.

Later, one brother-in-law would commit suicide in Wyoming and another would
have a fatal heart attack in the same bay where Beck's mother perished.

Beck, like his mother, became an alcoholic (and a drug user), burying his
insecurities and anger over his mother's death in copious amounts of Jack
Daniels.”

Beck had discussed the death of his mother as far back as March 17, 2000 but
the Journal Gazette interview may have been his first public reference to
the suicide of his brother-in-law. Farrant’s article implies but does not
explicitly state that the two events happened within a short time span.

On November 25, 2006, Glenn Beck spoke to Lynn Arave of the Deseret News
(Salt Lake City).  Arave wrote:

He (Beck) is a self-described reformed alcoholic and drug addict. And
there's more darkness in his past -- his mother committed suicide when Beck
was 13, and his brother also committed suicide.

In the aftermath of those two family tragedies, Beck said he used "Dr. Jack
Daniels" to cope. That led to his alcoholism and drug use and also his
divorce from his first wife.

In this piece, written three years after Farrant’s article, Beck identified
the victim of the second suicide as his brother, rather than his
brother-in-law.  Arave’s article makes a clear point that both suicides
contributed to Beck’s substance abuse problems.

To resolve the discrepancy between “brother-in-law” and “brother,” I
contacted both Mr. Farrant and Mr. Arave.  In both a phone conversation and
email exchange Mr. Farrant told me:

“Had I acquired the information by some other means, I would have attributed
it to the source, especially since it is so sensitive. Then I would have
asked Glenn about it.  Another piece of supporting evidence: Glenn told me
he read the article and liked it. He did not dispute a single thing in the
article”.

In an email response to my query, Mr. Arave stated:

“I interviewed Beck for 45 minutes on the phone to put that story together.
Beck really scrutinized the article, because he was headed to Salt Lake the
following week to meet with some LDS General Authorities.

The only thing he changed (and the article includes this change) was a
single word.
I had originally written that Beck had said he was God's most IMPORTANT
child, when he really said most IMPERTINENT child.

Even my notes have most “impertinent” child written down, I had just
mistyped “important” for the word. That's quite a mistake I originally made.
Other than that, Beck approved everything else, so I'd say you can trust the
article as much or more than anything that's out there on him.”

From a November 24, 2008 article that Beck himself posted on GlennBeck.com:

“This note could have been written by me in 1995. It could have been written
for me in 1984. I had two serious bouts with Depression that went, and my
mother committed suicide, my brother I lost to suicide. I understand it. I
get it. If I would have gone then, I convinced myself, ‘Gee, I’m not good
for anything; I just keep hurting people, everybody I meet, everything I
touch.’”

*    *    *    *

Brother, stepbrother or brother-in-law?

Glenn Beck never had a brother.  According to public documents, William and
Mary Beck were married in 1956 in Everett, Washington, 30 miles north of
Seattle. They had three children; Coletta, Michelle, and Glenn. This was the
first marriage for both.  According to one of Glenn Beck’s relatives, who
requested anonymity, neither Mary nor Bill brought any children into the
marriage.

In 1977 they divorced, citing that the marriage was irretrievably broken.
Mary Beck was awarded custody of Michelle and Glenn.  Coletta, who was of
legal age at the time, was not a party to the child support or custody
issues.

During this same time period William Beck moved north to Bellingham,
Washington and on September 30, 1978 he married Dee (last name withheld).
Dee had a 14-year old son named Jeff from her prior marriage.  Dee and her
first husband divorced in 1975 and divorce records indicate that Jeff, 10 at
the time, was their only child.

In 1979, immediately after the death of Mary Beck, Michelle and Glenn moved
to Bellingham to live with William, his new wife Dee, and her son Jeff.
Jeff is Glenn Beck’s only stepbrother and he is very much alive and living
in the Bellingham area.

Sadly, it turns out that Glenn Beck did have a brother-in-law (name
withheld) who took his own life.  So was this the tragic event, along with
the suicide of his mother that propelled the teenaged Beck into his long,
dark period of drug and alcohol abuse?

No it wasn’t.

The death of Glenn Beck’s brother-in-law took place on June 15, 2003… 24
years after the death of Mary Beck.  Beck was 15 when his mother drowned and
39 when his brother-in-law died.

The death of his brother-in-law occurred eight years after Beck took his
last drink, smoked his last joint, and snorted his last line of coke. By
2003 Beck had published his first bestseller, “The Real America,” his
nationally syndicated radio program was growing by leaps and bounds, and he
was married to Tania, the love of his life.  He also had embraced the Mormon
faith, which culminated with his baptism into the church.

The death was no doubt a devastating loss for Beck, but for him to falsely
link it to his own alleged substance abuse problems, displays a heartless
disregard for both the truth and the dignity of his own family.  But
apparently Beck sees nothing wrong with co-opting a family crisis in order
burnish his phony credentials as a man who has seen the depths of hell, and
found his way to a 5:00 pm time slot on Fox News.

Tim Hattrick, Beck’s colleague at KOY-FM in Phoenix, told me, “You could
never talk about anything, and I mean anything with Beck without him trying
to figure out how to somehow work it into the show.”

*    *    *    *

The Lies Surrounding Beck’s First Paid Gig

Glenn Beck has often shared the story of when he sent his audition tape to
KUBE Radio in Seattle, at the ripe young age of 15. KUBE management, not
aware of Beck’s youth and inexperience, were impressed enough with the tape
to give the kid a shot. He worked weekend shifts and because he was too
young to drive, he had to take the Greyhound Bus to Seattle and sleep on
KUBE’s conference room floor. In later interviews Beck would state that his
father drove him the ninety miles to Seattle. It doesn’t matter which way
Beck tells the story; both versions are false.

According to Beck’s Sehome High School friend and classmate Pat Wolken, Beck
was 17, not 15, when KUBE hired him. Wolken said, “Glenn got that job in the
summer between our junior and senior years. When I read that he said that he
took the Greyhound Bus I laughed my head off. Glenn had a car and he drove
to Seattle. Also, when he went down to Seattle he stayed at one of his
relatives.” The fact that Beck drove to KUBE’s studios is corroborated by
Beck classmate Marcus Purnell.

Proving Wolken’s claim that Beck was 17 and not 15 when he began the job is
the fact that KUBE Radio didn’t exist until March 17, 1981, just weeks
before the summer between Beck’s junior and senior year and a month after
Beck’s 17th birthday. Before that the station was known as KBLE-FM, and
presented a Christian format.

On the surface this seems like a harmless lie but it goes to Beck’s
inability to accept the events of his life as is without trying to make them
seem more compelling.

Glenn Beck’s phony teenaged drinking problem.

Paula Zahn began a March 15, 2007 segment of her CNN show “Paula Zahn Now”
with the following:

“We're devoting a whole hour to addiction and one of my colleagues has a
remarkable story of his own to tell. Headline Prime's Glenn Beck started
drinking and doing drugs when he was just about 13, just after his mother,
an addict herself, committed suicide. He smoked pot every day between the
ages of 13 and 30. And then his life started to unravel. His doctor told him
he would die within six months if he didn't change. I recently spoke with
him about his struggle in a very raw and emotional interview.”

This is another of many times that Beck has been given the opportunity to
correct the record on his age at the time of his mother’s death, but
declined to do so. In his latest book, “The 7” which was published in
January, 2011, he not only sticks with the lie but repeats it four times.

While Beck almost certainly developed substance abuse problems later in
life, they didn't exist when he was a kid or young adult, according to high
school classmates and a colleague at Y95 radio in Phoenix.

Sehome High School classmate and former Beck roommate Marcus Purnell said
that Beck was a very occasional user of marijuana. Purnell said, “He talks
about how he was so addicted to pot and drinking. The reality is that isn’t
true. He used pot occasionally on weekends, in moderation… it was the
seventies and eighties. Glenn did not by any means have a problem. He was
very straight-laced compared to the other students at Sehome and he took
great pride in that.”

Purnell continued, “So again here’s another situation where [Beck] took
something and used it to his advantage by playing the victim and aligning
himself with people, which he does very well. He makes them feel comfortable
with him, while he’s feeling victimized, so they can put him on a pedestal
as someone who knows how to solve the problems of the world. He’s always
played the victim role. Nothing has changed.”

Andy Somers was another one of Glenn Beck’s high school friends. “Glenn’s
focus was always on excellence and how he presented himself and in the way
that he sold himself… how others perceived him,” Somers said. “In high
school he bought a small two-seater sports car. He wanted to be perceived as
this dashing kind of guy”.

When asked about Beck’s alleged substance abuse problems Somers said, “I
never knew him to drink. He was a “Biff”… preppie… very much into projecting
that image. I’d be very surprised if he was ever an alcoholic. As far as
drugs, in high school he didn’t do much of anything and I would have known
because I did pretty much everything. There may have been a time when he got
high in my presence but I don’t remember it. He always came across as pretty
straight-laced. He never hung out with the stoners.”

Somers lost a girlfriend to a drug overdose. “I’ve dealt with people with
serious drug and alcohol problems all my life. I know what those people are
like. Glenn isn’t one of them. If he ended up with a drug problem it
certainly wasn’t happening in high school.”

In 1988, when Beck was 24 and supposedly up to his neck in drinking and drug
problems, he went to work for Y95 radio in Phoenix. His partner was a local
man named Tim Hattrick. I asked Hattrick about Beck’s substance abuse
problems. “I never saw any evidence of drug or alcohol use,” Hattrick said.
“Beck wouldn’t let anything get in the way of his focus, his drive, his
ambition. I spent a lot of time with him both at the studio and away from
the studio. My wife and I used to get together with him and Claire (Beck’s
first wife)… go to dinner. He never even had a glass of wine because he
never wanted to wake up with a hangover.”

Alcoholics and drug addicts are very adept and masking or hiding their
disease but they don’t live in a vacuum. It would have been impossible for a
15 year old Glenn Beck to be high and drunk every day without the knowledge
of his friends and colleagues.

*    *    *    *

Glenn Beck sells the sizzle not the steak and somewhere along the way he
came to the conclusion that his life story just didn’t have enough sizzle.
“My brother-in-law took his own life eight years after I got clean and
sober,” isn’t nearly as theatrical as Beck’s version of the story.

“I drove my own sports car to my gig in Seattle when I was 17,” doesn’t pack
the same punch as “I got hired when I was 15 and had to take the Greyhound
Bus 90 miles one-way to work.”

When you’re selling the public stories of faith and redemption, the number
one rule is, “Ordinary doesn’t sell.”

*    *    *    *

Glenn Beck, like nearly every other person on the planet, has suffered
misfortune in his life, but unlike the vast majority of his fellow
Americans, he has also experienced phenomenal success.  While he no doubt
possesses more than his share of inner-demons, by all accounts he’s living
the life that he always dreamed of.

According to Purnell, Beck’s “lifelong goal was to make it big in radio and
become rich and famous.”  Mission accomplished.

Beck (or his ghostwriter) wrote in, “The 7”:

When I turned eight she [Mary Beck] gave me a collection of comedy and drama
productions from the 1930’s and ‘40’s called “The Golden Age of Radio.” I
became mesmerized by how the words on those albums created pictures in my
mind.”

According to various biographies, Beck listened to those records constantly.
During long afternoons and late evenings the gifted kid from the Skagit
Valley holed up in his bedroom and honed his craft.  He studied the masters.
He developed a flare for the dramatic.  He listened.  He learned how to be
creative. He idolized Orson Welles and wanted to be just like him when he
grew up.  He developed his own voice.  He learned how to become Glenn Beck.

Or maybe that’s all bullshit too.  I didn’t fact-check it.

*    *    *    *

“We have to question with boldness and we have to stop taking listening and
taking things at face value… even on this program.  CHALLENGE YOURSELF DAMN
IT!  Read.  Question what I tell you.”  Glenn Beck, “The Glenn Beck Show,”
January 24, 2011

“Question what I tell you.”  Now that’s some damn good advice.

Update, 7/15/2011: Two days ago, Beck made a big deal on his radio show that
President Obama  supposedly "lied" about his mother's death. From "Obama
caught in a massive lie" is this from Beck's mouth:

September 1995 [Obama's mother] traveled to New York for an evaluation at
renowned Memorial Sloan‑Kettering.  She returned to Hawaii, began a new
course of treatment.  She died in November.  A dozen years later her son
turned ordeal into a campaign pitch for national healthcare.  But the story
Obama told Scott Wright was abbreviated.  The abbreviation was to leave out
the fact that she had health insurance and it paid for her treatment.
Though he often suggested that she was denied health coverage because of a
preexisting condition.  It appears from her correspondence in her own
writing that she was only denied disability coverage.  That’s a different
story altogether but one that nobody in the press seems to care.

Beck's hypocrisy has been documented extensively here. This is the 25th
example of hypocrisy on Beck's behalf in a little over a year. One would
think that anyone demonstrating hypocrisy as often as Glenn Beck does would
have few if any followers, but one would be wrong. Beck has a cult
following, and they believe what Beck wants them to believe. Beck tells them
that he's a "principles and values guy;" that is what his gullible followers
choose to hear. The many examples of his hypocrisy are ignored by people who
choose to hate and oppose those who Beck hates. Such is political life on
Planet Beck. Because Beck is now off television, nobody in the press needs
to care.

Update, 7/24/2011: The liberal media watchdogs, Media Matters for America
has done research to debunk Beck's false claim that Obama "lied" about his
mother's struggle with insurance companies. See, "Right wing media make
false claims about Obama's mother and her insurance fight." So Beck is
demonstrating hypocrisy and deceiving his listeners with his claims at the
same time. That's not the first time that has happened.







ﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣﺣ
Ras Mikaere Enoch Mc Carty
Maangai Kaawanatanga - Tainui Kiingitanga - Te Aotearoa
http://www.exorcist.org.nz — Ko te Mana Motuhake
http://www.exorcist.org.nz/iankahi_eriya_nation_john_frum.html
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