Michael Hastings: Difference between revisions

From Fakeopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search
No edit summary
No edit summary
Line 1: Line 1:
{| class="wikitable" align=right
{| class="wikitable" align=right
| colspan=2 align=center | <big>[[Michael Hastings]]</big>
| colspan=2 align=center | <big>Michael Hastings</big>
|-
|-
| colspan=2 bgcolor=yellow |
| colspan=2 bgcolor=yellow |

Revision as of 16:21, 26 March 2018

Michael Hastings
Type 1 Fakeology
Technology Research
Type 1 PsyOps
Type 2 DCP
Type 2 Controlled opposition
Topics
List of PsyOps Glossary
Information
Fakeologist [ab 1]
Cluesforum [CF 1]

Michael Mahon Hastings (January 28, 1980 – June 18, 2013) was an American journalist, author, contributing editor to Rolling Stone and reporter for BuzzFeed.[3] He was raised in New York, Canada, and Vermont, and attended New York University. Hastings rose to prominence with his coverage of the Iraq War for Newsweek in the 2000s. After his fiancée Andrea Parhamovich was killed when her car was ambushed in Iraq, Hastings wrote his first book, I Lost My Love in Baghdad: A Modern War Story (2008), a memoir about his relationship with Parhamovich and the violent insurgency that took her life.

General

"The day before the crash, Hastings indicated that he believed he was being investigated by the Federal Bureau of Investigation. In an email to colleagues, which was copied to and released by Hastings' friend, Army Staff Sergeant Joe Biggs,[69] Hastings said that he was "onto a big story", that he needed to "go off the radar", and that the FBI might interview them.[70][71] WikiLeaks announced that Hastings had also contacted Jennifer Robinson, one of its lawyers, a few hours prior to the crash,[72] and the LA Weekly reported that he was preparing new reports on the CIA at the time of his death.[73] His widow Elise Jordan said his final story was a profile of CIA Director John O. Brennan.[74]"

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Michael_Hastings_(journalist)


See also


References

Fakeologist

Cluesforum

Other