Eyewitness who Named the Queen in Child Abduction Case, Found Dead
Witness died suddenly before giving evidence
The Queen and Prince Philip were named in the case of the missing children in Canada
An eyewitness who had named Queen Elizabeth II and Prince Philip in a case involving missing children from Canada in 1964, had died suddenly in February of 2011.
William Combes was due to give evidence in court after giving a statement claiming that he saw the Queen, and her husband Prince Philip, leave with 10 children from a Catholic orphanage, who were never seen again. He was mysteriously found dead before he could give evidence in court about the events that he witnessed in October 1964 at the Catholic school in Kamloops.
Combes, who was described by friends and relatives as being “in good healthˮ, was scheduled to be a primary witness at the opening session of the International Tribunal into Crimes of Church and State (ITCCS) in London, England. A close friend who saw him days before his death said, “he looked better than I had seen him in years.ˮ
According to his partner Mae, William was in excellent health but was immediately committed to the hospital for “testsˮ, and his health began to suddenly deteriorate. He died of an undisclosed cause and the Vancouver Coroner’s Office refused to comment on William’s death.
According to ITCCS, William was the sole survivor of a group of three aboriginal boys who claim to have witnessed the abduction of ten children during a royal visit to the Kamloops residential school in mid-October, 1964, when both the Queen and Prince Philip were in Canada.
“They took away those ten kids and nobody ever saw them againˮ, described William, in several public statements made over the airwaves of a former Vancouver Co-op radio program, and in the following signed and witnessed declaration made on February 3, 2010:
“I am an Interior Salish spirit dancer and am 58 years old. I live in Vancouver, Canada. I am a survivor of the Kamloops and Mission Indian residential schools, both run by the Roman Catholic church. I suffered terrible tortures there at the hands especially of Brother Murphy, who killed at least two children. I witnessed him throw a child off a three-story balcony to her death.
He put me on a rack and broke some of my bones, in the Kamloops school basement, after I tried running away. I also saw him and another priest burying a child in the school orchard one night. In October 1964 when I was 12 years old, I was an inmate at the Kamloops school and we were visited by the Queen of England and Prince Phillip.
I remember it was strange because they came by themselves, no big fanfare or nothing. But I recognized them and the school principal told us it was the Queen and we all got given new clothes and good food for the first time in months the day before she arrived.
The day the Queen got to the school, I was part of a group of kids that went on a picnic with her and her husband and some of the priests, down to a meadow near Dead Man’s Creek. I remember it was weird because we all had to bend down and kiss her foot, a white laced boot.
After a while, I saw the Queen leave the picnic with ten children from the school, and those kids never returned. We never heard anything more about them and never met them again even when we were older. They were all from around there but they all vanished.
The group that disappeared was seven boys and three girls, in age from six to fourteen years old. They were all from the smart group in class. Two of the boys were brothers and they were metis from Quesnel. Their last name was Arnuse or Arnold. I don’t remember the others, just an occasional first name like Cecilia and there was an Edward.
What happened was also witnessed by my friend George Adolph, who was 11 years old at the time and a student there too. But he’s dead now.ˮ
Many believed that William Combes died of foul play and that his murder was arranged by those who stood to lose from his speaking out about his witnessing of the child abductions and other crimes of murder and torture at Catholic Indian residential schools.
Like another murdered front-line native activist, Johnny Bingo Dawson, who was killed by the Vancouver police in 2009, William will never be forgotten – and those who killed him will, like the system that caused the death of so many children, be brought to real justice. His murderers have not won. William recorded a videotaped statement before he died, including his witness of the 1964 abductions.
yogaesoteric
January 24, 2018