(Transelated from the Dutch newspaper "telegraaf" )
Famous nuclear physicist killed
AMSTERDAM - The 54-year Rijswijker from the day before Christmas was found dead in his apartment house Rijswijk, shows the leading nuclear physicist Dr. Antonio Ferrigno be. The researcher, head of the European Patent Office, is a crime killed.
The lifeless body of the Italian scholar was found by his family. According to witnesses, his hands tied and he lay in a pool of blood. Who is behind the brutal murder, is still a mystery.
Possible forms Ferrigno's recent and remarkable discoveries in the field of pacemakers motif. The nuclear physicist, who is very high global repute, the regular telephone recently been threatened, said one insider.
A translated article to english: http://translate.google.com/translate?js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=1&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ilmessaggero.it%2Farticolo.php%3Fid%3D85691%26sez%3DHOME_NELMONDO&sl=auto&tl=en (http://translate.google.com/translate?js=y&prev=_t&hl=en&ie=UTF-8&layout=1&eotf=1&u=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.ilmessaggero.it%2Farticolo.php%3Fid%3D85691%26sez%3DHOME_NELMONDO&sl=auto&tl=en)
Besides medical patents are worth billions. And the working field of him was pacemakers..
I wouldn't be surprised if someone had invented a "lifetime" working pacemaker.. In other words: Some kind of free energy.. While patenting the pacemaker.. someone find out that this princeple could be used for OU..
The inventer sends it in for a patent... Some "men in black" find it out... and they destroy it, all the evidence..and the people who have seen the real plans but refuse to keep it surpressed.
OKé.. Maybe i'm seeing ghosts... But nowadays i'm not surprised by anything anymore... People are getting killed everyday for less........
Wow, I worked at that office only a few years ago!
There's a lot of money going on in the pacemaker business obviously.
So who could have a motive?
- a patent applicant that got critical questions which have no answers. Or just a disappointed applicant that got a grant refused.
- an application opponent with a weak case?
I've read hints that some pacemakers are borderline OU devices. Might Ferrigno have noticed in an application that they were in fact patenting OU technology, which he better would not have noticed? That would put OU inventors on the side of crime. Docs kill, but OU inventors...?
The EPO is an evil company when it comes to HR (I was victim of their system), but the people who work there are angels. I feel for them, the place must be in shock now...
Cloxxki.
I believe the people are themselves OK. It;s the divide and rule system. Good people doing "bad" things without themselves even knowing it, but that's a whole different story.
About the motives, i will add some more:
- People/agency's who do not want this technology to be public at all
- Or on a broader view: Maybe he was just not listening to "major" forces. As head of the patent office he comes across many different techniques in many different fields. I think there is always a weighing of public intrest among political or security intrests.
With the money (read: power) involved in energy and technologies one life less or more isn't a surprise... They attack whole countries for a bit of oil and / or Sumerian knowledge.
While these investigators have the rep of being extremely dull, and basically failed researchers, I have always been attracted to their work. They get to study so many innovative work, see so much prior art, and explanations on why this prior art was no good.
You'd need to be stubbornly stupid to not come up with something good of yourself. Invention through built knowledge, even if talent might have been lacking. The short comment an investigato (bicycle sciences specialist, I suppose) put on a grant I co-authored, showed huge in-depth understanding of the "science" at hand.
On a side note, EPO is way too efficient to be charging fees they do. They have serious trouble spending it all. Co-workers are UN personnel, don't pay national taxes. Manage to land a receptionist level job there, and you're DONE. Job for life (no pun intended), a good life. Just super-hard to get in there, even if they know your value and addition to the company.
A neclear physicist reviewing pace maker designs...if those fields cross-match, that could get interesting, "too" interesting.
Quote from: Cloxxki on December 28, 2009, 07:55:51 AM
...
A nuclear physicist reviewing pace maker designs...if those fields cross-match, that could get interesting, "too" interesting.
That will give a whole new meaning to the phrase: "A radiant heart"
;)
Pacemakers powered externally;
Don't forget that opening a door to let
some thing in, will open it to let something
out also.
:MarkSCoffman