Re: Who killed Milo?
Problem is that Milosevic was complaining about being slowly poisoned for almost a year before his death. Almost a year ago he was showing no signs of improving on his meds. Docs told the court they thought he wasnt taking the meds. The court ordered him to be forced his meds under supervision. He still showed no sign of improvement, demanding blood tests, the court refused blood testing until just recently. Recently a doc did a test on his blood without knowing it was Milosevics blood being tested. The doc confirmed a leprosy antibiotic in the blood he tested. Milo wasnt prescribed any anti-bs, and the leprosy anti-b would have nullified the meds he was being forced to take. Hours before his death he gave his atty a letter in which Milosevic writes stuff about being poisoned to prevent him from representing himself and not being allowed to be exonerated
etc.<br /><br />The problem I have is (1) Milosevic was nowhere near stupid. If he was self-medicating, he wouldnt have been demanding blood tests all this time. I suspect he would have fought tooth and nail to avoid blood testing. (2) He was a intelligent person with legal training. He was doing his own defense and apparently, doing it extremely well. The better he was at defending himself, the more sick he became. At some point the judge appointed a couple lawyers to do the defense for him due to his illness. Milosevic did not want the lawyers, didnt need them. The first action the lawyers did was file a motion to be removed from the defense because the World Court has no authority to appoint a lawyer to someone that doesnt want or need lawyers.<br /><br />I think Milosevic was lined up to create a situation where the World Court didnt have the evidence to hand down a heavy-handed sentence to someone in the spotlight that was so damn unpopular. I think they were stuck, Milo had to go.<br /><br />Dont care if Milo took the anti-b meds himself or was poison; its the same conclusion. He died while in the custody of a world authority. Regardless of who administered the meds, that authority is responsible for his unnatural death.