eve carson
Verified Family - Joan Webster
- Joined
- Oct 9, 2006
- Messages
- 542
- Reaction score
- 732
Getting to the Real Answers – V
What were the behavioral patterns of the participants in the investigation?
The behavioral patterns of the core group are troubling. Tim Burke and Andrew Palombo are quoted continuously in the press making assertions that were NOT supported in actual documents. They continued to make assertions even after facts debunked the notions. I am attaching comments made by Burke and Palombo during a TV segment done in November 1985. The interviewer was Brad Willis on Channel 4 WBZ TV. Note: Remember the timeline. Case CR 85-010-S was in April 1985, affirming the boat did not exist. A report submitted to federal authorities on July 24, 1985, said state, local, and federal investigators had developed sufficient evidence to determine Paradiso murdered Joan in November 1981. They had NO evidence.
Recovered documents affirm Palombo worked with numerous witnesses in comingled investigations. Witnesses then changed their stories and testimony. Witnesses with changed testimony include: Jean Day and Christine DeLisi. Documents also exposed these women were pressured by the prosecutor and law enforcement, threatened with never seeing their children again, and Jean was assaulted. Others include David Doyle, Tony Leonti, Rosemarie Doyle.
Recovered records show witnesses that received enticements or favors from authorities. Witnesses include: Robert Bond, Ralph Anthony Pisa, and Charlene Bullerwell received promises. Bullerwell testified she was pressured by the FBI.
Tim Burke is on record claiming Paradiso was threatening witnesses including Bond, Bullerwell, and Day. Paradiso was incarcerated at the time.
Burke was in multiple courtrooms all over town on entangled matters centering on Paradiso. There was a real pile-on. Palombo appeared in multiple courts, too, testifying against Paradiso in multiple allegations.
Burke and Palombo put forward witnesses with false or unverified stories. They hid exculpatory evidence and put forward fabricated or misrepresented evidence. Burke and a "confidential source" made false assertions to federal authorities.
Palombo testified to a relationship with the other Iannuzzi suspect, David Doyle that was improper between an officer and a murder suspect. Burke sanitized the evidence against Doyle during testimony in a truly offensive way.
Judge Roger Donahue presided over the Iannuzzi hearings and trial. Court records show he disallowed exculpatory evidence going back to the jury. He cut police reports naming witnesses that saw Marie AFTER she was seen leaving the bar through a door held by Paradiso. He disallowed testimony that incriminated the other culprit suspected, the boyfriend, David Doyle.
All during the Iannuzzi case, Burke and Palombo fueled speculation about Joan’s case. Joan’s name, alleged evidence, and allegations were interspersed throughout unrelated hearings and trials.
Authorities demonstrated an aggressive and predetermined bias for a desired outcome.
What were the influences over a fabricated case?
Without question, Burke and Palombo, with the backing of the legal and law enforcement system, influenced the direction of Joan’s investigation. Recovered documents clearly show their conduct during entangled proceedings. The Iannuzzi case was a mockery of our justice system driven by Joan’s disappearance.
The media was very instrumental in driving the state’s narrative. This was a highly publicized and sensationalized case. The media created perceptions with the public, and we are conditioned to “trust” authority. People put blinders on not wanting to think our officials will obstruct justice. That is what happened here.
ITT was an influence over this case, but it was under the radar. Jack McEwan distracted attention from the first leads.
Sadly, even George and Eleanor Webster did influence perceptions. They were quoted in the media frequently. During the Iannuzzi trial, they touted Robert Bond’s credibility. Paradiso was convicted in the Iannuzzi case more for the perception he murdered Joan than seeking real justice for Marie. Assurances were made to the Websters by Pisa. The Websters visited Bond in 1987 at the Somerville prison during a push to take Joan’s case to trial.
During case CR 85-010-S, George was verifiably in contact with William Weld’s office, the US Attorney prosecuting the bankruptcy case. During the sentencing phase of the trial on May 9, 1985, the AUSA handling the case, Marie Buckley submitted three letters written by George Webster. The fact is in certified court records. The irony was this was a month AFTER Judge Bruce Selya affirmed the boat, the alleged crime scene did NOT exist when Joan disappeared.
Other letters George wrote to officials were recovered. Two letters written to the FBI were in released files. George Webster requested the February 1982 meeting that put the team of Burke and Palombo together on Paradiso matters and started the wheels in motion in the Iannuzzi case.
In trying to understand the Websters, it is important to know a little about their background. Both George and Eleanor have an intelligence background. This is a very secretive family. Their employment in the CIA during the 1950s was not a secret at least in close circles. Whatever they were involved in with the agency was secret. When I met them, George worked for the telecommunications division of ITT. He was the director of Budget and Planning for the Defense Group, the DOD. George’s division was involved in clandestine collaboration with the CIA in the 1960s and 1970s that had a bad outcome. It involved undermining political efforts in Chile to nationalize ITT’s Chitelco.
I have added Eleanor’s obituary to confirm the CIA relationship. Note: The obituary lists John Paul Selsam as Eleanor’s father. She was adopted by Selsam when she was 14, her mother’s second husband. Eleanor was estranged from her real father from the age of 8. An example of the secretive nature. It was years before I learned her father’s real name, Clayton Piggott. Piggott lived in Beverly, MA at the time on Joan’s disappearance and investigation. He was a local printer.
There is a basis to scrutinize whether Joan’s murder was related to Webster secrets.
Round Five
What were the behavioral patterns of the participants in the investigation?
The behavioral patterns of the core group are troubling. Tim Burke and Andrew Palombo are quoted continuously in the press making assertions that were NOT supported in actual documents. They continued to make assertions even after facts debunked the notions. I am attaching comments made by Burke and Palombo during a TV segment done in November 1985. The interviewer was Brad Willis on Channel 4 WBZ TV. Note: Remember the timeline. Case CR 85-010-S was in April 1985, affirming the boat did not exist. A report submitted to federal authorities on July 24, 1985, said state, local, and federal investigators had developed sufficient evidence to determine Paradiso murdered Joan in November 1981. They had NO evidence.
Recovered documents affirm Palombo worked with numerous witnesses in comingled investigations. Witnesses then changed their stories and testimony. Witnesses with changed testimony include: Jean Day and Christine DeLisi. Documents also exposed these women were pressured by the prosecutor and law enforcement, threatened with never seeing their children again, and Jean was assaulted. Others include David Doyle, Tony Leonti, Rosemarie Doyle.
Recovered records show witnesses that received enticements or favors from authorities. Witnesses include: Robert Bond, Ralph Anthony Pisa, and Charlene Bullerwell received promises. Bullerwell testified she was pressured by the FBI.
Tim Burke is on record claiming Paradiso was threatening witnesses including Bond, Bullerwell, and Day. Paradiso was incarcerated at the time.
Burke was in multiple courtrooms all over town on entangled matters centering on Paradiso. There was a real pile-on. Palombo appeared in multiple courts, too, testifying against Paradiso in multiple allegations.
Burke and Palombo put forward witnesses with false or unverified stories. They hid exculpatory evidence and put forward fabricated or misrepresented evidence. Burke and a "confidential source" made false assertions to federal authorities.
Palombo testified to a relationship with the other Iannuzzi suspect, David Doyle that was improper between an officer and a murder suspect. Burke sanitized the evidence against Doyle during testimony in a truly offensive way.
Judge Roger Donahue presided over the Iannuzzi hearings and trial. Court records show he disallowed exculpatory evidence going back to the jury. He cut police reports naming witnesses that saw Marie AFTER she was seen leaving the bar through a door held by Paradiso. He disallowed testimony that incriminated the other culprit suspected, the boyfriend, David Doyle.
All during the Iannuzzi case, Burke and Palombo fueled speculation about Joan’s case. Joan’s name, alleged evidence, and allegations were interspersed throughout unrelated hearings and trials.
Authorities demonstrated an aggressive and predetermined bias for a desired outcome.
What were the influences over a fabricated case?
Without question, Burke and Palombo, with the backing of the legal and law enforcement system, influenced the direction of Joan’s investigation. Recovered documents clearly show their conduct during entangled proceedings. The Iannuzzi case was a mockery of our justice system driven by Joan’s disappearance.
The media was very instrumental in driving the state’s narrative. This was a highly publicized and sensationalized case. The media created perceptions with the public, and we are conditioned to “trust” authority. People put blinders on not wanting to think our officials will obstruct justice. That is what happened here.
ITT was an influence over this case, but it was under the radar. Jack McEwan distracted attention from the first leads.
Sadly, even George and Eleanor Webster did influence perceptions. They were quoted in the media frequently. During the Iannuzzi trial, they touted Robert Bond’s credibility. Paradiso was convicted in the Iannuzzi case more for the perception he murdered Joan than seeking real justice for Marie. Assurances were made to the Websters by Pisa. The Websters visited Bond in 1987 at the Somerville prison during a push to take Joan’s case to trial.
During case CR 85-010-S, George was verifiably in contact with William Weld’s office, the US Attorney prosecuting the bankruptcy case. During the sentencing phase of the trial on May 9, 1985, the AUSA handling the case, Marie Buckley submitted three letters written by George Webster. The fact is in certified court records. The irony was this was a month AFTER Judge Bruce Selya affirmed the boat, the alleged crime scene did NOT exist when Joan disappeared.
Other letters George wrote to officials were recovered. Two letters written to the FBI were in released files. George Webster requested the February 1982 meeting that put the team of Burke and Palombo together on Paradiso matters and started the wheels in motion in the Iannuzzi case.
In trying to understand the Websters, it is important to know a little about their background. Both George and Eleanor have an intelligence background. This is a very secretive family. Their employment in the CIA during the 1950s was not a secret at least in close circles. Whatever they were involved in with the agency was secret. When I met them, George worked for the telecommunications division of ITT. He was the director of Budget and Planning for the Defense Group, the DOD. George’s division was involved in clandestine collaboration with the CIA in the 1960s and 1970s that had a bad outcome. It involved undermining political efforts in Chile to nationalize ITT’s Chitelco.
I have added Eleanor’s obituary to confirm the CIA relationship. Note: The obituary lists John Paul Selsam as Eleanor’s father. She was adopted by Selsam when she was 14, her mother’s second husband. Eleanor was estranged from her real father from the age of 8. An example of the secretive nature. It was years before I learned her father’s real name, Clayton Piggott. Piggott lived in Beverly, MA at the time on Joan’s disappearance and investigation. He was a local printer.
There is a basis to scrutinize whether Joan’s murder was related to Webster secrets.
Round Five