15.
HAARP is Responsible for Hurricanes When renowned physicist, Dr. Michio Kaku,
appeared on TV to discuss the recurring hurricanes that destroy coastal towns every single year,
what he said surprised everyone.
Dr. Kaku confessed on live TV that the hurricanes were not natural; they were man-made.
He claimed that HAARP was behind the hurricanes.
The physicist stated in an interview with CBS that nano particles had been disseminated
into the air by a government weather modification program, which "activated" the storms
using "lasers."
Um….say that again?
Gakona, Alaska is the base from which HAARP transmits using an 180-antenna network.
The antennas are directed toward the sky, and they deliver 10 megawatts of power, acting
as a strong high-frequency radio transmitter.
They alter the ionosphere's composition layer, which exists 50 kilometers above the
Earth.
In fact, Dr. Kaku isn't alone in his belief.
A 1999 European Parliament resolution stated that the environment had been altered by the
HAARP Project to serve the military's aims.
And a 2002 Russian Parliament report with signatures from ninety International and Defense
Relations committee MPs called the HAARP Project a "geophysical weapon" that was created
to alter the atmosphere here on Earth.
Could this deep dark secret be true?
Are our most recent destructive hurricanes the result of some dark government conspiracy?
Some seem to think so.
Including this renowned physicist.
14.
The Car-jacking During a siege in Queensland, Australia, Channel
7 News cameraman, Peter Steer, was assigned to film the reports on his very first day
on the job.
And what a first day that was.
A gunman in flight flagged him down and admitted to a terrible crime.
The biker had bloody hands, no shoes, and was weeping.
He confessed that he'd done something "extremely bad," and said, "I hope she's alright.
I think she's dead."
He confessed on video to having attacked his partner, but when the cameraman was on the
phone with police, the biker decided to continue his crime spree and draw a gun, hijacking
the cameraman's van, and fleeing the site.
His flight was short, however, as he crashed into first a road sign and next a fuel tank
at a gas station close at hand.
Still, the suspect wasn't done in attempting destruction.
He tried to find a cigarette lighter, assumedly to light the place up as the gas tank leaked.
The suspect was taken and charged with armed robbery and attempted murder, among other
charges.
13.
Murder She Wrote The last thing you expect to hear on a reality
TV show is about murder.
But that's what Baby Kala confessed to on a reality TV show in India called 'Solvathelam
Unmai'.
She was married for fifteen years but had already begun fighting with her husband a
year into the relationship.
Then, in 2010, Baby Kala met Gowri Shankar.
The pair began having an affair, and when the husband found out, they schemed to take
his life.
And they did just that when her husband was only 39 years old.
Using a polytene bag, they smothered him on July 17th, 2010.
They told people he'd had a heart attack.
Some speculate that Baby Kala announced this so publicly on national television, because
her former lover planned to marry another woman.
She and Shankar were both arrested.
12.
Lance Armstrong's Confession When Lance Armstrong appeared on Oprah in
2013, it wasn't to celebrate his seventh Tour de France victory.
It was to confess his use of performance-enhancing substances to cheat in the international bike
race.
Armstrong had been denying this use for over ten years, but when Oprah got him in her sights,
he finally came clean.
In her first 90-minute interview on the OWN cable channel, no longer did we see the joyful
smiling Oprah we all know and love; she shot straight and asked Armstrong the tough questions:
Regarding Armstrong's alleged pressuring of his cycling teammates to accompany him
in using the substances, she asked him, "Were you a bully?"
The exclusive interview dove into the details of his usage and his blood transfusion usage.
He answered yes to all of Oprah's questions and elaborated on his cheating streak throughout
the interview.
This wasn't the only deep dark secret that Oprah pulled out of celebrities and others
during her 25 year term as a daytime talk show host.
11.
Off-Road Attempt On the show, The Bachelorette, based in New
Zealand, the 21-year-old bachelorette, Claudia Hoskins, revealed a dark secret.
She had suffered a terrible accident that left her with 19 broken bones.
Most thought it was an accident.
But it wasn't.
She'd driven off-road on purpose, after she'd caught her then-boyfriend having multiple
affairs.
She had been with this boyfriend for eighteen months, when she discovered a phone conversation
between him and a friend that revealed he'd been cheating all over town.
After confronting him about it, she didn't know what to do, and she just wanted it to
end.
She told Women's Day, "I wasn't thinking about the consequences it would have on my
family, my friends and my boyfriend - I just made a split decision in the moment.
I didn't think I could ever be happy again and I didn't want to deal with the fall-out
of the relationship."
Luckily, she survived.
But she suffered punctured lungs, six broken ribs, a broken collarbone, foot and arm, a
fractured spine, and liver and spleen damage.
After spending a couple weeks in the hospital, she recovered and no longer ties her happiness
to the man she's dating.
10.
"It Didn't Come Out" When 2-year-old James Patrick Bulger from
Kirkby, England, was taken from the New Strand Shopping Centre while his mother took her
eyes off him for a brief moment, she was relieved to find surveillance footage that he'd been
taken by two young boys.
He'd be safe with them, she thought.
But she was wrong.
Ten-year-old Jon Venables and Robert Thompson took James from the shopping center and treated
him horrifically.
They took his young life and left him on a railroad track, where he was found two days
later.
The two ten-year-olds were charged with abduction and murder.
The public thought they knew every gruesome detail of the cold-blooded actions.
But when James' father Ralph appeared on GOOD MORNING BRITAIN on the 25th anniversary
of his son's passing, he hinted that there were even more horrible details of the incident
that weren't revealed to the public.
Ralph insisted in the interview that Jon Venables, now 35 years old, should be monitored at all
times if released.
He also said the killer should not remain anonymous.
The host of the show said the public might then "take the law into their own hands."
This is when Ralph implied that the two boys had done much more destruction than what the
public knows…which is both dark and disturbing.
"You've got to look at it to see how sick they really are.
It didn't come out exactly what they did to him, it's a little bit of a lot of damage
of what they done," he said.
The "little bit" that we know these two did is enough to make one sick to one's
stomach.
So maybe it's best that the rest remains a dark secret.
9.
Murder Attempt A 61-year-old woman was stabbed and had been
hospitalized.
The victim's 31-year-old daughter, Katie Nichols, was the primary suspect.
She fled the scene, taking her daughter with her.
The police didn't have to look far to find her, however.
While reporters were interviewing the victim's close friend, who lived a few houses away,
Katie emerged at the apartment and approached the news crew to confess.
She said she had tried to kill her mother, because she thought she was the antichrist.
She claimed her mother was the head of a satanic cult that was "casting spells" in an attempt
to take the life of her daughter.
"I had no idea that my mother was that powerful," Katie said.
She felt no guilt about the attempted murder, admitting, "I stabbed her three times and
she should have died."
Katie likely believed that the fact her mother was still alive only validated her claims
that this woman was the antichrist.
The victim was rushed to the hospital, after a neighbor heard the commotion, where she
was able to inform police about her daughter's attack, which happened at 3:40AM, while she
was sleeping.
Katie tied her mother up, put a sock in her mouth, and threatened her.
That's when she did the deed with a small kitchen knife, a larger knife, and a pair
of scissors.
She hid in a rural area, and only returned to tell her tale to reporters.
One of the reporters said she was frightened of Katie, as she interviewed her, and she
phoned police.
Katie was charged with aggravated kidnapping and attempted first-degree murder.
8.
Swedish Rights Activist Confession This dark secret told on live state TV in
China may not be what it seems.
Swedish human rights advocate, Peter Jesper Dahlin, had been detained by the Chinese government
when he made his confession.
He worked for an organization in China called Chinese Urgent Action Working Group, which
is said on its website to undertake "rapid response assistance for rights defenders in
need."
Doesn't seem like anything to apologize for…
However, Dahlin appeared on national television to confess to violating Chinese laws while
the Chinese state-run news agency, Xinhua [sheen-wa], claimed the organization Dahlin
worked for was illegal, and the activities he was involved in were designed to corrupt
the country's national security.
They also claimed that China Action "trained others to gather, fabricate and distort information"
about China to use in human rights' reports for overseas organizations and that they took
huge amounts of money into the country from overseas, undeclared.
Xinhua said China Action had been "smashed" by Chinese authorities.
In his apology that aired on CCTV, Dahlin admitted to harming the Chinese government
and its people and said he was sorry for having done so.
Whether these statements were a dark secret, in and of themselves, or whether the dark
secret is that of the Chinese government forcing the people they've detained to make these
statements is for the viewer to decide.
7.
A Million Little Pieces When James Frey wrote the incredible memoir,
A Million Little Pieces, Oprah had him on her show to celebrate this book about substance
abuse and living by the twelve-step program.
But not long after the book became a best seller, The Smoking Gun posted an article,
entitled, "A Million Little Lies: Exposing James Frey's Fiction Addiction."
The article claimed Frey had made up portions of his memoir - the extent of his criminal
record, for instance, as well as a train-car accident that Frey had alleged to have happened
in Michigan in 1986.
One of his biggest tall tales was about colliding with a cop while high and subsequently fighting
with a number of cops, which resulted in an 87-day stint in jail.
However, The Smoking Gun found that Frey had been cooperative in his arrest, had nothing
but minor offenses, and was let go after five hours.
Frey's publishers initially backed him, but after hard evidence came to light, they
included disclaimers in subsequent publications, incorporating an author's note and a publisher's
note.
Frey admitted that he'd "altered small details" in the book for literary effect,
but that his addiction was real - and was the backbone of his memoirs.
Oprah also voiced her opinion that her viewers had been inspired by the book, and that it
was the publisher's job to confirm the authenticity of the story.
However, when Frey appeared on Oprah's show in 2006, her tone was less sympathetic.
She wanted a direct answer from Frey: Did he lie?
Or had he truly just "altered minor details"?
This is when James Frey finally admitted on live TV that The Smoking Gun's report had
been true.
He'd spent a few hours in jail, rather than 87 days.
And with such exaggerated inaccuracies, who knows how much of the memoir was fabricated?
6.
Israeli Spy China state television is not the only one
to air alleged confessions from foreigners in their midst.
Iranian state television aired the so-called confession of an Iranian academic who also
had residency in Sweden and who supposedly served as an agent for Israel in order to
pass on important information to them.
The aim was to assassinate senior Iranian nuclear scientists.
Israel, they said, was trying to throw their nuclear energy program off the rails.
What did this man get in return?
Iran claims he received payment and European residency.
He was arrested on charges of espionage in April 2016.
The report given by Iranian state television alleged that he had been involved in the assassinations
of the scientists, which spanned three years from 2010 to 2013.
He wasn't the only one arrested for the assassinations of the nuclear scientists.
An Iranian athlete was also found guilty and had his life taken in 2012.
In his televised confession, he said: "They were showing me pictures of some people or
satellite photos of nuclear facilities and were asking me to give them information about
that."
The wife of this man, who lectured in Stockholm, claimed that the confession had been forced
by Iran, whose Supreme Court then gave him the harshest sentence.
"After three months in solitary confinement," she said, "his interrogators told him that
he would be released only if he reads from a text in front of the camera."
She continued, saying that if he strayed from the text in the slightest, they would shout
at him and cut the film.
According to Iran, a sabotage and terrorist network bent on assassinations and bombings
was discovered in Shiraz, a city to the south.
Iran claims the network had ties to the CIA, Israel, and additional nations neighboring
their country.
So, is there any truth to this confession?
Or is it entirely coerced?
5.
Survivor Tie Breaker For fans of Survivor, one part of the show
remained a mystery up until the Game Changers Reunion show: what happens if there's a
tie?
The show's host, Jeff Probst, revealed the secret.
The champion of that season, Sarah Lacina, could have easily been thwarted by Brad Culpepper.
Brad had chosen to take Sarah to the finals, but had he chosen Tai Trang, the jury vote
would have resulted in a 5-5 tie.
This was figured out when Probst polled the jury to consider how they would have voted.
"Everybody asks, 'What would you do in the case of a tie at final Tribal?'
We would have had one had you said, 'You know what?
I'm going to keep Tai and get rid of Sarah,'" Probst said.
Then came the reveal by Probst of one of the deepest secrets of Survivor, which has survived
for many years: if there's a tie in the final Trial Council, the final vote is decided
by the contestant that is not in the tie.
In this case, Troyzan would have decided the final vote.
And, according to Troyzan, the tie-breaking vote would have gone to Brad.
So….choosing Sarah cost him a million dollars.
4.
Live Confession When 45-year-old Brian Hawkins appeared on
KRCR-TV in Redding, California, he planned to unburden himself of the guilt he felt for
something he had done in 1993.
He'd participated in the murder of 19-year-old Frank McCalister and, in his confession, he
also implicated his ex-girlfriend and her brother in the ordeal.
Hawkins claimed that the trio had taken McCalister into a hidden wooded area, where they took
his life and afterwards left his car in a Costco parking lot.
The confession was not spontaneous.
Hawkins called KRCR-TV in advance and explained that he wanted to confess his role in the
killing on television.
He claimed that his guilt and his faith pressured him to reveal the horror within.
The station said they would not air the footage unless he confessed to police, as well, and
could confirm that Hawkins' tale was true.
"God and Christ and these things that have happened over the course of 25 years have
pushed me and pushed me to do the right thing," Hawkins said in the interview.
"I know the wrong can't be changed but this is the closest I can come to doing the right
thing."
Hawkins was visibly shaken and lowered his head in the interview, expressing the guilt
he felt since that fateful day, calling every moment since "horrible" and "a nightmare."
The case had gone cold, and investigators said this admittance of guilt was their very
first "big break."
Following the confession, Hawkins gave himself up to police, along with his accomplices.
On
top of murder charges, they have been charged with robbery and burglary.
3.
China Confesses This is a follow-up to the Swedish human right's
activist who "confessed" on China's national broadcaster, CCTV.
Another confession video was broadcast live, which revealed "confessions" from a lawyer
who worked for Beijing Fengrui, as well as two of his firm's employees.
These confessions were shown prior to court proceedings, as China allows police to detain
suspects for up to 40 days without releasing or arresting them.
This gives police time to coerce a confession.
When individuals are shown to confess.
These confessions are not unlike the "shame parades" that occurred during China's
cultural revolution, in which intellectual people were mocked and tortured in the streets.
As one Weibo-user put it, now it's happening on CCTV.
Chinese Human Rights Defenders Researcher, Frances Eve, told Quartz that: "By broadcasting
these so-called 'confessions,' state media and Chinese authorities are rejecting the
basic norms of a rule-of-law system, including the presumption of innocence and due process
rights.
Trial by state media is not the kind of trial held in a country ruled by law."
The title below the lawyer and employees read "criminal suspects."
In their confessions, they explained how they created rumors online that manipulated court
cases, in which they represented ordinary citizens against government officials or authorities.
They also described how they paid people to protest in order to sway the public in their
favor.
The lawyer in question, Huang Liqun, pointed the finger at the firm's director, who he
said was driven by "unspeakable political purposes."
This trend of broadcasting confessions is not new; however, the high-profile nature
of the confessors is.
Five years ago, these confessions would be given by low-profile criminals.
But now activists, journalists, lawyers, and others are getting shafted.
Some in the public are blasting what they see as the government "shame parades."
And some hope that the rest of the public will follow closely behind and start seeing
these "confessions" as an outrageous joke.
Here's hoping…
2.
Nixon's Apology What's bigger than a government secret?
The confession of that secret on national television.
When the Watergate scandal was underway, President Richard Nixon did an interview with British
television host, David Frost.
Some called the interview "the closest we will get to a trial" and, although Nixon
was careful to not confess to criminal guilt in the interview, his admittance of regret
was, to some, tantamount to a confession.
In his own words, he "let down the American people," a weight of guilt he'd have to
come to terms with for the remainder of his life.
This confession was seen by some as humiliating, even more so than admitting guilt to the obstruction
of justice charges that he faced.
Some mocked Nixon for what they saw as a cheap confession, sarcastically noting what a "kind
heart" he certainly must have to admit such guilt.
But others were sympathetic and believed his confession to be genuine - that he really
did feel as though he'd let the American people down.
The thing is, Gerald Ford pardoned Nixon, so he would never be put under the microscope
by judge and jury.
This on-air confession was the most the public would ever get out of him.
Some accused Frost of baiting Nixon, while those who were directly involved on Capitol
Hill in the impeachment process said he was still trying to cover his tail, and that the
Frost/Nixon interview revealed "clearly, conclusively and finally that Richard Nixon...
abused the powers of his high office as President."
And this seems to be true, as Nixon admitted to Frost at least three things that differed
from the record.
These three differences include: Admitting that he knew Gordon Liddy was part
of the Watergate burglary prior to June 22, 1972.
He never admitted this to authorities.
Suggesting that he didn't intend to buy Howard Hunt's silence by paying him exorbitant
amounts of money - he paid him $276,000, while he paid other defendants only $20,000.
Howard Hunt knew about the White House's involvement in Watergate.
This is in opposition to what was found in the tapes.
And, lastly, he claimed he'd directed John Dean to create a report on the scandal.
But that, too, never came to pass, according to the transcripts.
Unfortunately, having been pardoned, Nixon never faced a trial.
The only return viewers got on their investment was his admittance of some remorse.
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1.
The Discovery In 2011, Stephen McDaniel was giving an interview
about the girl next door, Lauren Giddings, who had disappeared and was feared dead.
The two were classmates at Mercer University law school.
As Stephen calmly gave the interview live on air, he was informed that the girl's
body had been discovered by police.
No one suspected Stephen during his interview, but when he was told of the police's findings,
his tone changed and he appeared panicked.
He repeated that he didn't "know anyone who would want to hurt her" and was in full-blown
panic mode, which made viewers and police suspect him.
And their suspicions were validated when McDaniel confessed to spying on Lauren Giddings of
several months through her webcam.
He then broke into her room, masked and gloved, and strangled her in June 2011.
After disposing of her body, he participated in the search for her, feigning surprise.
McDaniel, rightly, was sentenced to life in prison.



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