http://memoryholeblog.org/2018/04/09/broward-county-sheriffs-deputy-dead-at-42/
Sometime on or around April 1, 2018 Broward County Sheriff’s Deputy
Jason Fitzsimons, 42 years old and in excellent state of mind and
health, called in sick to his job. Shortly thereafter Fitzsimons was
found dead on his sofa. There has been a complete “news blackout” of
this curious and untimely death.
Deputy Fitzsimons wasn’t just any law enforcement officer. Unlike
many of his peers, he took to social media to question the potential
agenda behind the February 14 Marjory Stoneman High School mass
shooting, suggesting that the event was being used to promote the
Democratic Party’s gun control platform in anticipation of the 2018
midterm elections. And recent personnel decisions involving public
officials indicate (e.g. here and here),
an unwritten law of taxpayer-funded institutions is that employees
disavow and steer clear of “conspiracy theories” that may call their
superiors’ motives into question.
One post found on Fitzsimons’ Facebook page depicts the
Parkland massacre’s main spokesperson, David Hogg, in National Socialist
regalia, with the caption, “We will March Until We Disarm Every
American.”
Fitzsimons’ Facebook page has since been “scrubbed” of any 2018
posts, which would of course include those that may be calling the
Parkland shooting or its aftermath into question.
The circumstances surrounding Deputy Fitzsimons’ death are sketchy. The
official cause has been attributed to cancer, yet this is contradicted
by an obituary
found at obittree.com, stating that he “died unexpectedly.” The “died
unexpectedly” phrase is one morticians and/or loved ones sometimes
employ when for one reason or another they are reluctant to disclose the
true cause of death, as in the case of a suicide.
Yet as the above obituary makes clear, Fitzsimons does not seem as if he
would have been a likely suicide candidate. The law enforcement officer
“lived life to the fullest and enjoyed spending time loving on his many
friends [sic],”the document reads. Fitzsimons was also the life of the
party, according to the obituary’s author(s). “He dreamed to one day be
Batman or Kenny Chesney, and you could often find him singing at a local
karaoke night or taking selfies while under the disguise of the caped
crusader.” Further, the deceased also had a spiritual devotion “in his
Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ.”
If Fitzsimons in fact died of cancer, the onset must have been extremely
sudden. Neither the obituary nor accompanying memorials reference any
struggle with the disease, but instead point to his inspiring presence
while expressing astonishment at the abruptness of his passing.
Aside from numerous friends attesting to his warm disposition in their
memorials, Deputy Fitzsimons appeared to be in excellent health, as
various photos suggest.
Following the December 14, 2012 Sandy Hook School massacre numerous law
enforcement officers with intimate knowledge of the event’s
investigation either retired or died unexpectedly. These included
Connecticut State Police Major William Podgorski, who passed on, following “a brief undisclosed illness.”
As Sandy Hook researcher Tony Mead observed in 2014,
From Douglas Cottle, who died Sept 29, 2012, at age 62 to Michael
Bellmore, who died May 3, 2014 at age 27, more questions than answers
seem to arise. The Connecticut State Police Commander, the Connecticut
State Police Commissioner, the Western Connecticut State Police
Commander as well as the Connecticut State Medical Examiner have all
been eliminated from the story either by retiring or death. What better
way to cover up any possibility of ever disclosing the truth ? What
better way to perpetuate conspiracy theories ?
Those who received word via Twitter of Fitzsimons’ untimely death have expressed similar doubt and suspicion on the vague and unusual circumstances.
As is suggested in the aftermath of other recent mass shooting events,
Fitzsimons simply may have possessed too much information, was at the
wrong place at the wrong time, and/or asked sensitive questions of his
peers and superiors on the specifics of the Parkland shooting. It is
beyond dispute that the sheriff’s deputy had become uncomfortably
outspoken on the February 14 event.
The record reflects that Deputy Fitzsimons was a wonderful individual
and friend who cared about “truth” and the US Constitution. Perhaps
these concerns are no longer desired by the management of certain
policing agencies. There is indeed ample room for suspicion.


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