Why johnny cant come home




















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Would you also like to submit a review for this item? You already recently rated this item. Your rating has been recorded. Write a review Rate this item: 1 2 3 4 5. Preview this item Preview this item. Subjects Gosch, Noreen N. When he's not doing what Johnny still hadn't showed up. So when hefinished the papers and they decided to call the police now aren says it tookthe police, a total of forty five minutes to get to their house, eventhough they're only ten blocks away.

That's the very beginning of thatindication that the police were not going to be easy to work with on thisone and they proved to be difficult the whole way through. But while she waswaiting for the COP to show up, she called the newspaper and talked to O,like the guy, that was in charge of distribution, and he gave her the phonenumbers of the other boys that you know were delivering papers that day and shecalled them one by one and had a chance to talk tomost of them before the cop showed up, and there was a guy.

I don't know hisname. He was a sixteen year old, so he's one of the older paper boys and hesaid that he saw Johnny talking to a guy in a blue Ford, and this guy wasasking for directions and Johnny gave it to him and he drove off. And then hesaid that when they got to where the He sawsomebody else, walk out from between two houses and started following Johnny. Another paper boy said that they heard like two people get out of a car if dorslamming in a car just taking off and saw a blue car peeling going real fastaround a corner, same blue forard, so right away, you know there are someindications that there's a kidnapping and one of the most interesting peoplethat came forward- and this was a couple days later, when the policeweren't doing a very good job.

They didn't even put a ABP out for this carlike they, they didn't handle this. They didn't take this seriously at all, but they put it. They talked to a retired attorney namedJohn Rossey, who lived in the neighborhood, and he also said he sawJohnny talking to a guy in a blued Ford and that Johnny actually called theretired Turney over to give this Guy Directions and when the Guy John Ronsey,this attorney came out to talk to the guy in the blue car.

So it's like hedidn't want to be seen. That is so many like. You know indications that this isa kidnapping right, yeah did the attornesee another car, or did he justsee the blue car? He saw the Blue Car John Rossey actually went underhypnosis later on to try to remember as many details as he could about the case.

The apparently the guy in the car was trying to find eighty six street, and this is what the guy said when he went under hypnosis that a guy shut offhis engine opened the passenger the door and swung his feet out on the curbright, where the boys were assemblyg their newspapers and he started talkingabout wheres. Eighty six street johnny I'm scared, I'm getting out of here. I'm going Tahead home, the man pulld the door shut and start up the engine, but before heleft he reached up and flicked the Dome light on three times.

Then he pulledout and left and another paper boy talks about the domelight flicking toand that's one of a guy walks out from between two houses and starts followingthe Johnny home.

So it's it's organized. I don't know how manykidnappings of children are done in groups of people, not just one Weirdoright, because usually you're thinking like the lone pedophile or somethinglike that yeah, so that lends to the whole you kind of Luminadi sex calt thing,and then I wonder if Johnny got nervous so quickly, because he recognized himas the policeman he'd spoken to the night before and saw him acting strange,ind street clothes, just speculation, but the guy getting own.

It's justified,though, because the police act it' so Youknow what I mean: There's sold so many bred flags for there to be akidnappbing, and yet they don't want to investigate it. Like a kidnapping, theywon't put out the ABP for the car when norren organizes a search party lateron, the chief of police gets up with the Bollhorn and tells everybody to gohome that the kids just a damn runaway it just was so hard that they wersaying they were not working with them and in one thousand nine hundred andeighty two.

You know when the police responded to disappearances. It wasusually like he's- probably a runaway he'll turn up later, but because of llegislation proposed by Johnny's parents, they change that so that thepolice have to take it seriously, handle it it's too bad. I took you knowhim being kidnapped and whatever horrible things happened to him forthis to happen, but they got that law done yeah one silver lining. I guess so. The police anyway, were completely unwilling to investigate this, like anabduction and they insisted on There try tohelp but were sent away by the police and the police did everything theycould to kind of styme their efforts and it really became just fell on theshoulders of.

You know Johnny's parents to lead thisinvestigation, which ended up with him being like the first kid to be placedon a milk cart and like local, dairy producer and stuff felt bad about whatwas happening and really wanted to try to help the family.

So he said thatthey could print his picture on the milk cartons that so that's the whythere I I always thought that was a little bit random, but they would be onnot parnty. That's that's kind of cool yeah. It was the presocial media way ofgetting stuff out here. Noreen got up. The peephole revealed two young men in the doorway with the hall lights illuminating the face of a man resembling Johnny.

They catered to people across the country at the top of politics from senators all the way to the White House. In shock, Noreen listened as Johnny said he wanted her to get his story out in the hope of making arrests happen, so that he and the other kids could be free to safely reunite with their families. Johnny said that a few years ago, he and another boy had stolen a car and escaped from the kidnappers, who stored the kids across the country in safe houses.

But he was tracked down and brought back into the ring. Johnny said that it was too dangerous for him to stay. He said goodbye. After they left, Noreen ran outside in a daze and saw them disappear into the night on foot. She never saw Johnny again. A rising star in the Republican Party, King had operated in Franklin, where he was the vice chairman for finance of the National Black Republican Council. He also had an appetite for sex with boys.

Craig Spence threw sex and drug parties at his home, which had been bugged by the CIA to facilitate blackmail. While Bush was president, Spence took call boys on midnight tours of the White House. As witnesses came forth like Paul Bonacci the efforts of the police to silence him instead of interviewing him to generate leads became more and more intense. He was threatened and accused of perpetrating a hoax and convicted for perjury and sent to prison.

She began to wonder if officials were just puppets of rich pedophiles? The evidence began to build. She wrote a now out-of-print book Why can't Johnny come home? It presents an excellent clear summary of the case in which the FBI and police were part of the problem, not the solution, the foxes guarding the pedo henhouse.

The movie includes important footage about a very brave man, Paul Bonacci, one of the witnesses presented in the testimony below. As more and more evidence accumulated Paul became convinced he might be able to secure damages for his poor treatment by the authorities. He won the lawsuit, giving his reputation a big boost, but never collected a cent.

As it turns out the key reason the authorities were so nervous was that Paul was forced in his captivity to help procure Boystown residents for use as prostitutes to an ongoing White House pedophilia ring which brought these orgies to public attention as the infamous and thoroughly publicized Franklin Scandal and lesser known CIA involvement.

This long tradition of Whitehouse sexual misconduct continued though the Bush, Clinton and Obama years. It is part of the deeply entrenched undercurrent of blackmail and manipulation used by hidden hand puppeteers to dictate political conduct from behind the curtain.

It is discussed in the banned movie Circle of Silence. All this attention blossomed into a more complex association of pedophilia with the iceberg of Satanism and ritual Satanic abuse in government and beyond. Satanism is an elaborate control mechanism used to blackmail high profile members not to step out of line. It establishes a self-disciplinary grip via elaborate networks of child kidnappers protected from public exposure and prosecution.

Noreen was a trigger. Once that trigger was pulled there was no turning back. The floodgates slowly opened and the public consciousness was transformed. What had been hidden in the dark was gradually opening to the naked light of day.

Thank you Noreen. We are all in your debt for your persistence and the decades of sacrifice and service you have given. Below she and others give sworn courtroom testimony of the events that made headline news in their day.

The courtroom testimony is a public record presented here in an easy to read form. Jul 22, Ellamae rated it really liked it. A story well worth reading. Feb 02, Verm rated it it was amazing. The typo's and grammatical errors are really hard to get beyond but the book is astonishing. It's heartbreaking what happened to Johnny Gosch and how his mother was treated. View 1 comment. Jun 02, Linda rated it it was amazing. Saddest book ever. Poor Noreen, how did she ever stand it. It is just a nightmare.

Nov 30, Aurora Dimitre rated it it was ok Shelves: huh , nonfiction , november , occult-nonfiction , okay-then , the-mothers. I'm putting this under both 'nonfiction' and 'occult-nonfiction' because she gets awfully conspiracy-theory heavy about This is not why I gave it a low rating, though, I mostly gave it a low rating because the writing is absolutely terrible. And I wasn't expecting, looking at the cover, a literary masterpiece, but I was expecting a basic knowledge of English grammar.

I did not get a basic knowledge of the English grammar. Interesting in a cult classic kin I'm putting this under both 'nonfiction' and 'occult-nonfiction' because she gets awfully conspiracy-theory heavy about Interesting in a cult classic kind of way, though. View 2 comments. Cody Phillips rated it it was amazing Feb 19, Dan C.

Khawla Ahmad rated it really liked it Jun 06, Toni Aucoin rated it liked it Dec 30, Heather Church rated it liked it Jan 24, Robert Lancey rated it did not like it Feb 27,



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