Spectacular findings of the Smolensk case sub-commission: Two people made phone calls during the flight, bangs and screams were heard in the background
Published: October 31, 2016
Smolensk case sub-commission’s latest findings were presented at the recent meeting of the National Defense Commission. According to the new information, two passengers of the Tu-154M managed to contact their family members just before the crash. Screams were heard in the background.
Members of the Smolensk case sub-commission, who were present at the meeting, emphasized that at this stage the sub-commission cannot confirm the theory about the crew put under pressure by General Andrzej Błasik.
It is interesting that the cell phones discovered at the crash scene were completely ignored by the Miller Commission.
The sub-commission’s experts established that 18 active cell phones were discovered at the crash site, including one belonging to the late President Kaczyński.
“The sub-commission had a confirmation from appropriate sources about the activity of the cell phones. The materials consist of over 200 pages of a specialist text. At present, an analysis is being conducted in order to establish, whether the activity of so many phones during the flight could have been to do with what was happening on board,” confirmed the sub-commission.
It is significant, that the Miller Commission completely ignored this line of enquiry.
“Our predecessors limited their interest to establishing, whether the activity of the phones during the flight was in compliance with regulations. They were not interested in the reason of such intense activity. We know that phone calls were made by two passengers of the Tu-154M, during which screams and bangs were heard in the background,” stated the Smolensk case sub-commission.
Click on the thumbnails below to view screen dumps from the detectors used to examine the wreckage and seats from the Polish president's plane crash in Smolensk. An "X" denotes the presence of the detected explosive substance and its type. The underlined Polish word "Probka" or "probka" in the screen dump 1 and 2, means "Sample"
Why did they all fly on the same plane?
Synopsis: January 12, 2013, Toronto, Canada. The wife of the late Deputy-Minister of Culture Tomasz Merta: "What I am about to tell you now, are suspicions - and not even my own - but, rather the [suspicions of the] individuals in the inner-circles of the [Polish] military... I heard a statement that was made - but, I am not taking any responsibility for how credible, or not credible it is. [I heard that] had the generals and journalists' not been re-assigned to different aircraft, it wouldn't have been the Tupolev [Tu-154M], but rather the Casa [transport aircraft] that would have been taken out.
Because the Generals were no longer onboard the Casa, there was no reason for it to get airborne. And for this reason it was the Yak[-40] that flew off to Smolensk. This Casa [transport aircraft] was never examined in any way. It was not subject to any examination. Aside from a single note in the deposition given to the military, no one was interested why this aircraft didn't fly [to Smolensk]. Perhaps, this is someones crazy phantasy, but perhaps it isn't.
Some [Polish] military personnel had suggested, that it [the Casa] had to stay behind at the Okecie military [tarmack], so that the explosives could be removed from it - because they were no longer needed [...] I am only repeating what I was told."
"Disarming" Explosives ...
It is worth for us to retrace the entire process of "disarming" the case of explosive substances at the crash site. It all started with the publication of Cezary Gmyz in "Rzeczpospolita" on October 30, 2012, and information that the detectors, which were used by experts in Smolensk (in late September and October) showed traces of TNT and nitroglycerine.
As it turned out, the journalist was also reporting about the indication of Hexogen. The storm broke. The prosecution denied the publication, and ultimately, the editor-in-chief of "Rzeczpospolita," Cezary Gmyz and two other journalists lost their jobs. The entire editorial staff of one of Poland’s most popular weeklies, "Uważam Rze", was also silenced.
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