Obama's Body Count
The Strange Case of Michael Cormier and the Shadows Surrounding Andrew Breitbart's Death
Folks, in the rough-and-tumble world of politics and media, some stories just don't add up. They leave you asking tough questions that the establishment would rather you ignore. Take the case of Michael Cormier, a longtime evidence technician and forensic photographer at the Los Angeles County Coroner's Office. Just days after that office released the official autopsy results on conservative firebrand Andrew Breitbart, Cormier was dead—killed by arsenic poisoning.
According to reports, Cormier, a veteran at the coroner's office, succumbed on April 20, 2012. Investigators noted suspicious circumstances, with arsenic—described in some accounts as military-grade—identified as the cause. This came on the heels of the coroner's March 1 announcement regarding Breitbart's sudden passing. Breitbart, the outspoken founder of Breitbart News, had collapsed while walking near his Brentwood home late on February 29. He was just 43. Official word: natural causes, specifically heart failure tied to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and coronary issues he had been dealing with.
But here's where it gets murky. Conspiracy researchers and books like *The Breitbart Coroner* by Press Graye have highlighted claims that Cormier performed or was involved in a private autopsy on Breitbart, raising eyebrows about timing and motive. Law enforcement pushed back hard, stating Cormier had no direct role in Breitbart's case and that the deaths were unconnected—pure rumor and innuendo. Yet the arsenic death of a coroner's tech, so soon after handling high-profile evidence, fuels legitimate skepticism. Accidents happen, sure. But in the cutthroat arena of national politics, coincidences like this demand scrutiny.
Breitbart was no ordinary commentator. He built a reputation for exposing what he saw as hypocrisy in the political class, particularly targeting figures around Barack Obama. His work on stories involving Obama associates rattled cages. His death, coming at a pivotal time, left many wondering if powerful interests had reason to silence a voice that pulled no punches.
This isn't isolated. History is littered with key figures tied to the Obama orbit who met untimely ends under questionable circumstances—deaths that invite the question: What did they know?
Consider Donald Young, the choir director at Trinity United Church of Christ in Chicago—the very church Barack Obama attended for years. Young, a 47-year-old teacher and openly gay man, was found murdered in his apartment on December 23, 2007—shot multiple times in what police ruled a homicide. This happened right as Obama was ramping up his presidential campaign. Fringe theories and books pushed claims of a personal relationship between Obama and Young, suggesting the murder was a cover-up to protect secrets. Official investigations never linked Obama, and the case remains unsolved to this day. But the timing, the victim's proximity to Obama's inner circle at Trinity, and the lack of resolution have kept the whispers alive for years.
Then there's Tafari Campbell, the Obamas' longtime personal chef who served as a sous chef in the White House and continued working for the family privately. In July 2023, Campbell, 45, drowned while paddleboarding in Edgartown Great Pond near the Obamas' Martha's Vineyard property. His body was recovered the next day. Authorities ruled it an accidental drowning—no foul play, no suspicious injuries. Yet conspiracy circles immediately lit up, with claims of a "tell-all" book or knowledge that made him a liability. Police and fact-checkers pushed back, confirming it was a straightforward tragedy with a witness seeing him struggle and fall. Still, in the pattern of sudden deaths around powerful figures, it added fuel to the fire for skeptics.
The mainstream media largely dismissed these connections as conspiracy fodder. But as someone who's covered power and its abuses for decades, I say this: We deserve transparency, not tidy dismissals. The American people aren't fools. When evidence technicians handling sensitive autopsies die suspiciously, when a church choir director connected to a presidential candidate is gunned down, when a personal chef drowns under the family's watch, and when vocal opponents of a sitting administration meet early graves, it's the duty of journalists to follow the facts wherever they lead—no matter who it discomforts.
Sources including the Los Angeles Times, Chicago police reports, Massachusetts authorities, law enforcement statements, and investigative works on the cases back the timelines and the questions they raise. In the end, Michael Cormier's death by arsenic, alongside these other mysteries, remains a puzzle with too many missing pieces. Andrew Breitbart's passing, while officially natural, fits a broader mosaic of intrigue that surrounded the Obama years. Folks, truth doesn't fear investigation. It's time the full story came out.
Comments
Post a Comment