White Hats have arrested a “suspect” connected to last month’s assassination attempt on General Eric M. Smith’s life, sources told Real Raw News.
However, their reticence on investigatory details seems to suggest the case is still open, and they may be pursuing additional persons of interest. Sources would neither confirm nor deny that assumption.
Here is what we know:
On Tuesday, December 5, undercover Marines cornered 47-year-old Ronald Dahl, a former Central Intelligence agent, outside a hotel in Rutland, Vermont. Dahl and one Marine were wounded—non-life-threatening injuries—in a brief shootout after Dahl tried scaling a fence to evade capture. He had lost his balance, fallen, and tugged a pistol from an ankle holster, firing one round before he took a bullet to his shooting arm and dropped the weapon. Dahl’s shot hit the Marine’s leg but missed major arteries.
As the Marines closed the distance on Dahl, he tried suicide with a ballpoint pen that had a hollow needle where the penpoint would typically be. When he depressed the clicker, the poison failed to inject.
The Marines bandaged Dahl’s arm and took him into custody for interrogation.
“Sorry, not able to share interrogation info at this time,” a source said in response to RRN’s queries.
He did say that White Hats had begun investigating the attack on Gen. Smith the day it happened, and admitted they had found the spot where the shooter was perched when he tagged the general with a heart attack gun. He said they found “evidence” but refused to elaborate, citing the continuing investigation.
Attempts to wheedle concrete facts—Did they find DNA? Did Dahl slip up and leave a clue?—proved futile.
“Will share more when I can,” is all our source said on that matter.
In closing, we asked if Gen. Smith plans to confront Dahl personally.
“The general is letting the investigation run its course. I imagine if Gen. Smith and Dahl got in a room together, only one guy would come out alive. And it wouldn’t be Dahl.”