lunes, 18 de julio de 2022


 THERE ARE PHOTOGRAPHS OF THE CORPSE OF RASPUTIN, OF THE IMPERIAL FAMILY NO. why?

On December 30, 1916, Grigory Rasputin was brutally murdered in Petrograd by relatives of Nicholas II: his cousin, Grand Duke Dmitry Pavlovich, husband of Nicholas II's niece, Prince Felix Yusupov, and the deputy of the State Duma Vladimir Purishkevich.

Rasputin died a long and painful death.

First, they tried to poison him in the basement of the Yusupov Palace, then they tried to shoot him. When this failed, he was tied up, taken to the Neva and thrown from the bridge.

There are photographs that constitute probative material indicating that it is the body of Rasputin, photographs taken when the body was found and later in the morgue.

A year and a half after Rasputin's assassination there are no traces of the alleged execution of Nicholas II's family, much less photographs before or after the alleged execution.

THREE INVESTIGATORS CLAIMED THAT THERE WAS NO EXECUTION, THE VERSION OF THE EXECUTION WAS CREATED OVER TIME

Researchers Tom Mangold and Anthony Summers published the book The Romanov Case, or the Execution That Wasn't in 1979.

They started with the fact that in 1978 the 60-year seal of secrecy on the Brest peace treaty signed in 1918 expires, and it would be interesting to investigate the declassified files.

The first thing they discovered were telegrams from the British ambassador announcing that the Bolsheviks had evacuated the royal family from Yekaterinburg to Perm.

According to British intelligence agents in Alexander Kolchak's army, entering Yekaterinburg on July 25, 1918, the admiral immediately appointed an investigator in the case of the execution of the royal family. Three months later, Captain Nametkin put a report on his desk about him, where he said that instead of being shot, it was a scene. Not believing it, Kolchak appointed a second investigator, Sergeev, and soon got the same results.

In parallel with them, the commission of Captain Malinovsky worked, who in June 1919 gave the following instructions to the third researcher Nikolai Sokolov:

"As a result of my work on the case, I was convinced that August's family is alive... All the facts that I observed during the investigation are staged murders."

According to the official history, on the night of July 16-17, 1918, Nikolai Romanov, together with his wife and children, was shot.

After the burial was opened and the remains identified in 1998, they were reburied in the tomb of the Peter and Paul Cathedral in Saint Petersburg. However, then the Russian Orthodox Church did not confirm its authenticity.

The commission's conclusion, written before the 1998 burial, reads:

"The sovereign's skull bones are so shattered that the characteristic callus cannot be found." The same report noted "severe dental damage" to Nikolai's alleged remains from periodontal disease, as this person had never been to a dentist.

This confirms that it was not the tsar who was shot, since the records of the Tobolsk dentist, with whom Nikolai contacted, remained.

**All of these investigators concluded that the royal family had not been assassinated. **

Before investigator Sokolov, the only investigator who published a book on the execution of the royal family, there were investigators Malinovsky, Nametkin (his archive was burned along with his house), Sergeev (taken from the case and killed), Lieutenant Nant General Dieterichs , Kirsta.

All of these investigators concluded that the royal family had not been assassinated.

Investigator Sokolov handled two cases: one on the fact of murder and the other on the fact of disappearance. At the same time, the military intelligence of Kirst's person was conducting an investigation. When the whites left Russia, Sokolov, fearing for the collected materials, sent them to Harbin; Along the way, some of his materials were lost. Nikolai Sokolov was assassinated.

Sokolov's book was published after his death, and many people "worked" on it, removing a lot of facts, data and evidence, so it cannot be considered completely truthful.

The surviving members of the royal family were watched by people from the KGB, where a special department was created for this, which was dissolved during perestroika.

No hay comentarios.:

Publicar un comentario

Nikolay II

The eldest son of Alexander III and Tsarina Maria Feodorovna, Nikolay Aleksandrovich, took from his father simplicity in communication and l...