Sunday, February 11, 2018

83 93 221 404 | Fiancee wants to solve mystery of Border Patrol agent's death, February 8, 2018


Border Patrol Agent Rogelio "Roger" Martinez died on November 19, 2017 by rock-hurling migrants. Notice how the FBI said it had found no evidence of an attack; it offered no further explanation for Martinez's death.

 Martinez was working along Interstate 10 about 120 miles east of their home in El Paso and was working along Interstate 10 about 120 miles east of their home in El Paso.
  Fellow Agent Stephen Garland, at a gas station a dozen miles away in the nearest town, Van Horn, was summoned to assist Martinez.
Angela Ochoa is Rogelio Martinez's fiance.




From the date that Border Patrol Agent Rogelio Martinez was declared dead (11/19/17) to the date of this article publish date (2/8/18) is exactly 221 days.
Martinez was checking a sensor that had been activated in a concrete culvert frequented by migrants and drug smugglers.

The article about the Border Patrol Agent Rogelio Martinez ends with the mention of leaving love notes under Ochoa's fiance's lunch, her gym bag or under her windshield. The day he died, after she returned from seeing him at the hospital, she found one last note waiting, hidden in her makeup bag: "I love you." Remember this part.

 From the date of this article (2/8/18) to the anniversary date of the date of Border patrol Agent Rogelio  Martinez (11/19/18) is a span of 9 months and 11 days, like 9/11, pretty self explanatory.

If you look at the bottom right hand corner, it is a span of 40 weeks and 4 days, like 404.
Military = 44. Officier = 44. Trooper = 44. Shooting = 44


An autopsy released this week found Martinez died of "blunt-force trauma," but how he received his injuries remains unclear. His manner of death was ruled "undetermined." U.S. Customs and Border Protection Commissioner Kevin McAleenan.

McAleenan wrote that the FBI had found no evidence the agents were attacked, and noted further evidence indicating an assault by smugglers was unlikely.

There were no defensive wounds, there was no third-party blood or DNA evidence recovered from the scene or from the agents' clothing, no footprints were found at the scene except those of the agents and first responders.

Experienced trackers found no other sign of outsiders there and that there was no evidence that a vehicle had approached the agents and knocked them into a culvert, and they had no injuries to their lower bodies from falling.

Hm.. something fishy going on here.

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