The Death and Replacement of Paul McCartney in 1966

It was in September 1966. Paul James McCartney died in a car accident. In January 1967, a new character took his place. Much taller. More educated. Fan of psychedelic drugs. He used to play in a cover band (Pepper and the Pepperpots.) He is “Sergent Pepper” assigned to reboost the band. To cheer up the other members and let the show go on.

This narrative is one of the most popular conspiracy theory in the UK. It has a code name: PID (Paul Is Dead). And many names for the second Paul. Some people call him Faul, other call his Sir Paul (since he was knighted), or Billy Sheers, since it seems to have been his real name.

Today Sir Paul is the only Beattle alive. He is loved and admired by many. Even by people who know his real identity. He was central in the last 4 Beattles albums (the most sold since.)

In 2009, Sir Paul published his memoires under another writer’s name. It is available on Amazon.

The story sounds pretty innocent at first glance: to continue and keep the Beattles alive. But there is a spooky layer behind it. A list of people dying mysteriously. Starting with the original Paul. The conditions of his death are not clear: a car accident at a late hour in or near London. What makes the foul play option very probable is the motif. It does exist and it is huge.

Mark Lane wrote about it in his memoires he published in 2012 (Citizen Lane, available on Amazon). He made a documentary in 1967 (called Rush to Judgment) about Oswald being innocent of the murder of JFK. Before the film was made he had a script given to a small handfull of people, including Paul, who suggested enthousiastically, that the Beattles could be involved in the music.

Mark Lane ended up doing his documentary: one of the first to question the JFK murder official narrative. Since then we know much more about what happened. About the CIA, Israeli networks and the so-called Illuminatis.

This short article is not intended to make a case. The proofs are many and they are very heavy, including police reports with finger prints (not matching) and a parternity test (failing.) Everything about this topic is presented in a very good book:

The Life and Death of Paul McCartney 1942 – 1966: A very English Mystery, by Nicholas Kollerstrom (publish in 2015, available on Amazon)

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