It has been over four years since the death of Tiffany Jenks (35) in Portland, Oregon, but the wounds of injustice still remain to be healed. John S Captain, Tiffany’s former boyfriend and, as she herself put it, “soulmate,” is back on West of The Rockies to answer some of our questions and give us the latest on this never-ending quest for truth and justice.

As usual, for those walking into this subject for the first time, or with a heavy skeptical skew, we ask that you momentarily give things the benefit of the doubt, and suspend your disbelief for the duration of the article and interview. From there, feel free to take away what you will. Many parts of this story may seem unbelievable, but the very least that most should be able to admit to themselves is that mind-control is very real (the CIA no longer hides this anymore, a simple online search will show this), and that the tragedy of Tiffany’s death is in no way the simple open-and-shut case that the police purports it to be.

Since our first interview with John Captain, he has been relentlessly traveling the world and spreading the news of this murder case in all ways possible. Using his own hard-earned savings and resources, he has dedicated the last few years of his life to doing what the police and mainstream media won’t do: uncover the truth and tell the world about the corruption that we all live under.

The story, as John tells it, is sadly stereotypical for a mind-control victim/Monarch slave. Programmed since birth (victims are often either pre-selected, or born into families of multi-generational Monarch slaves), she never really knew any other life. At what point she became aware of her programming is unclear – many victims never “wake up.” When they do become conscious of their programming, they typically begin to mentally unravel, quickly breaking down and spiralling towards their own demise. Sometimes, no help is required with their execution; their own anguished and trauma-filled past is enough to send them into a deep depression headed straight towards their own death. Other times, there are people sent out to help things along, avoiding any chance of the Monarch slave truly waking up and going rogue. It looks like Tiffany Jenks fell into this latter category. She had started hinting at her past and her hidden life to John Captain, both in person and in messages that she would send him. John knew that Tiffany had emotional issues, and though what she said would often be perplexing, he would put it down to her drinking and struggle with trauma and depression. Having never heard of the murky world of the Illuminati and mind-control (at least not beyond movies), it never once occurred to him what Tiffany was really trying to tell him. It couldn’t have been easy, for either of them: for Tiffany, a Monarch slave slowly becoming aware of herself, and for John Captain, a loving boyfriend who had no idea about his girlfriend’s deeply disturbing past.