A
Very Odd Set Of Coincidences In Downtown LA
By Chris Carrington
theintelhub.com
February 28, 2013
I have to say this is the
strangest thing I have ever written. It’s like a piece of cotton candy, it all
kind of sticks together but there is nothing at its core…theintelhub.com
February 28, 2013
The CDC
(Center for Disease Control) has sent scientists to Los Angeles to try and find
out where the current outbreak of tuberculosis started, and to try an isolate
those affected by it before the outbreak becomes widespread. They have so far
identified some 4650 people who have been exposed.
The outbreak is believed
to have started in Skid Row and shelters are urging the homeless to get tested.
TB is not limited to the homeless and the hard up however, and with downtown LA
attracting visitors to its cheap hotels there are fears that the outbreak will
spread.
The Cecil
Hotel is one such place where the cheap rates and no reservation needed
policy makes it attractive to visitors. The Cecil though has a few
secrets it may not want to tell its guests about.
Serial killer Jack Unterweger lived at the hotel while he went about his business
of murdering prostitutes and in 1985 Richard Ramirez, the ‘Nightstalker’ stayed at the hotel while he
continued on his killing spree that resulted in 14 deaths.
Even before this the hotel was not new to tragedy. In 1962
Pauline Otten, who was 27, jumped from the
window of her room. She landed on a passerby killing them both.
Two years later in 1964 Goldie
Osgood was found raped and strangled at the hotel and Elizabeth Short, ‘The Black Dahlia”
patronized both the hotel and the bar next door.
Moving forward to this month, the decomposing body of Elisa Lam was found in a water tank at the
Cecil. Guests staying at the hotel had complained about dark colored tainted
water coming out of their faucets.
The 2005 movie “Dark Water” centers around a hotel where a
decomposing body is found in the water tank. The name of the main character is
Dahlia and her daughters name is Cecilia.
As for the TB cases, where do they fit into all this?
Well, the test being used to check for the disease is the Lam Elisa test.
They say fact is often
stranger than fiction….
Chris Carrington
is a writer, researcher and lecturer with a background in science, technology
and environmental studies. Chris is an editor for The
Daily Sheeple. Wake the flock up!
No comments:
Post a Comment