Hypnotic Suggestibility, Organized Crime, and Extremist Politics: Enrique Tarrio wasn't the "Mastermind" of Jan. 6th
MSNBC is covering up the dark alliance of Benjamin Netanyahu's Likud and criminal Mormons, not only stealing the 2016 election, but also January 6th.
Redacted FBI document hints at Israeli efforts to help Trump in 2016 campaign | The Times of Israel 29 April 2020
Roger Stone, a longtime confidant of President Donald Trump who was convicted last year in Robert Mueller’s investigation into ties between Russia and the Trump campaign, was in contact with one or more apparently well-connected Israelis at the height of the 2016 US presidential campaign, one of whom warned Stone that Trump was “going to be defeated unless we intervene” and promised “we have critical intell[sic].”
Feds investigated Roger Stone ties to Proud Boys as part of possible threat to judge | CNN Politics February 17, 2021
Federal prosecutors investigated some of the Proud Boys, including their leader Enrique Tarrio, and their ties to longtime Trump confidant Roger Stone, in a previously undisclosed criminal probe in 2019 into whether the men intended to threaten a federal judge…
Stone was accompanied on January 6 in DC by members of the paramilitary extremist group the Oath Keepers and Stone has long had close ties to prominent members of the fraternity-like pro-Trump group the Proud Boys.
Members of the Proud Boys and Oath Keepers are central to some of the most aggressive parts of the FBI and DC US Attorney’s Office’s Capitol siege investigation.
Stone says he was not inside the Capitol on January 6, and he has not been accused of any crimes connected to that day. But Stone was a key figure in the “Stop the Steal” disinformation campaign following Trump’s loss in the 2020 presidential election. Stone was pardoned late last year by Trump following his conviction for lying to Congress and witness intimidation…
Jan. 6th, Mo Brooks, and the Mormons
Republican Brooks seeks immunity for Jan. 6 speech, says he was not campaigning | Reuters August 4, 2021
Republican U.S. Representative Mo Brooks asked a federal judge on Wednesday to grant him immunity from a civil lawsuit alleging a speech he delivered to then-President Donald Trump's supporters on Jan. 6 helped incite the attack on the Capitol…
The department declined, saying his speech was a campaign activity not covered by the Westfall Act, adding that inciting an attack on Congress "is not within the scope of employment of a Representative - or any federal employee."
MSNBC Donated $5,000 to Insurrectionist Mo Brooks
Blanchard slams Brooks for his alliances with "woke progressives" (alreporter.com) May 24, 2021
Blanchard gave a partial list of the contributions Brooks accepted, which includes Coca-Cola, Microsoft, and NBCUniversal, which owns left-leaning cable outlet MSNBC.
Her campaign slammed Brooks for accepting $5,500 from the political action committees of U.S. Sen. Mitt Romney of Utah and U.S. Sen. Bill Cassidy of Louisiana, both of whom voted to impeach President Donald Trump from office. The release also notes that in addition to accepting money from Romney, Brooks’ only federal campaign contribution before 2010, was to Romney.
Blanchard suggests this is because both men are members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, commonly referred to as Mormons.
While Brooks was a church member for 30 years, he now claims he is no longer a member but still attends Mormon services regularly.
Hybrid Warfare: Far Right Backed by Russia & Israel
“White” Supremacy and Hypnotic Suggestibility
2023 Allen, Texas mall shooting - Wikipedia
The shooter, 33-year-old Mauricio Martinez Garcia, was a far-right extremist, although his specific motive for the spree killings was not clear.[5] Martinez Garcia's extensive online writings showed that he self-radicalized, adopting and promoting white supremacist, neo-Nazi, and incel ideologies, and posting hateful comments against women, Jews and racial minorities in the lead-up to the attack.[5][6][7][8][9]
The meaning behind the far-right symbol Texas shooter wore as he killed 8 | AP News May 9, 2023
The shooter who killed eight people at a Dallas-area mall was wearing a patch that read “RWDS” — short for “Right Wing Death Squad” — a phrase that has been embraced in recent years by far-right extremists who glorify violence against their political enemies.
Authorities have not said what they believe might have motivated 33-year-old Mauricio Garcia, who was killed by a police officer who happened to be near the mall Saturday when Garcia opened fire.
Posts by Garcia on a Russian social networking site expressed a fascination with white supremacy and mass shootings. Photos he posted showed large Nazi tattoos on his arm and torso, including a swastika and the SS lightning bolt logo of Hitler’s paramilitary forces…
The term “Right Wing Death Squad” originally emerged in the 1970s and ‘80s to describe Central and South American paramilitary groups created to support right-wing governments and dictatorships and oppose perceived enemies on the left, said Oren Segal, vice president of the Anti-Defamation League’s Center on Extremism.
Psychosis or Hypnotic Suggestibility in Micro-targeted Terrorism? (substack.com)
The Far Right & Far Left backed by Organized Crime
Gangs and Politicians in Chicago: An Unholy Alliance – Chicago Magazine
A few months before last February’s citywide elections, Hal Baskin’s phone started ringing. And ringing. Most of the callers were candidates for Chicago City Council, seeking the kind of help Baskin was uniquely qualified to provide.
Baskin isn’t a slick campaign strategist. He’s a former gang leader and, for several decades, a community activist who now operates a neighborhood center that aims to keep kids off the streets. Baskin has deep contacts inside the South Side’s complex network of politicians, community organizations, and street gangs. as he recalls, the inquiring candidates wanted to know: “Who do I need to be talking to so I can get the gangs on board?”
Baskin—who was himself a candidate in the 16th Ward aldermanic race, which he would lose—was happy to oblige. In all, he says, he helped broker meetings between roughly 30 politicians (ten sitting aldermen and 20 candidates for City Council) and at least six gang representatives. That claim is backed up by two other community activists, Harold Davis Jr. and Kublai K. M. Toure, who worked with Baskin to arrange the meetings, and a third participant, also a community activist, who requested anonymity. The gang representatives were former chiefs who had walked away from day-to-day thug life, but they were still respected on the streets and wielded enough influence to mobilize active gang members…
The former chieftains, several of them ex-convicts, represented some of the most notorious gangs on the South and West Sides, including the Vice Lords, Gangster Disciples, Black Disciples, Cobras, Black P Stones, and Black Gangsters. Before the election, the gangs agreed to set aside decades-old rivalries and bloody vendettas to operate as a unified political force, which they called Black United Voters of Chicago. “They realized that if they came together, they could get the politicians to come to them,” explains Baskin…
Beavers, Cochran, and Lyle, who was recently appointed as a Cook County judge, said they attended but were not told beforehand that former gang chiefs would be there, nor that the purpose involved gang-backed political support. “It, basically, was no different than sitting in front of any other panel that asks you questions relative to constituent issues,” said Cochran…
Street gangs have been a part of Chicago politics at least since the days of the notorious First Ward bosses “Bathhouse John” Coughlin and Michael “Hinky Dink” Kenna, who a century ago ran their vice-ridden Levee district using gangs of toughs armed with bats and pistols to bully voters and stuff ballot boxes. “Gangs and politics have always gone together in this city,” says John Hagedorn, a gang expert and professor of criminal justice at the University of Illinois at Chicago. It’s a shadowy alliance, he adds, that is deeply ingrained in Chicago’s political culture: “You take care of them; they’ll take care of us.”
To what extent do street gangs influence—and corrupt—Chicago politics today? And what are the consequences for ordinary citizens? To find out, Chicago conducted more than 100 interviews with current and former elected officials and candidates, gang leaders, senior police officials, rank-and-file cops, investigators, and prosecutors. We also talked to community activists, campaign operatives, and criminologists…
Our findings:
While they typically deny it, many public officials—mostly, but not limited to, aldermen, state legislators, and elected judges—routinely seek political support from influential street gangs. Meetings like the ones Baskin organized, for instance, are hardly an anomaly. Gangs can provide a decisive advantage at election time by performing the kinds of chores patronage armies once did.
In some cases, the partnerships extend beyond the elections in troubling—and possibly criminal—ways, greased by the steady and largely secret flow of money from gang leaders to certain politicians and vice versa. The gangs funnel their largess through opaque businesses, or front companies, and through under-the-table payments. In turn, grateful politicians use their payrolls or campaign funds to hire gang members, pull strings for them to get jobs or contracts, or offer other favors (see “Gangs and Politicians: Prisoner Shuffle”).
Most alarming, both law enforcement and gang sources say, is that some politicians ignore the gangs’ criminal activities. Some go so far as to protect gangs from the police, tipping them off to impending raids or to surveillance activities—in effect, creating safe havens in their political districts. And often they chafe at backing tough measures to stem gang activities, advocating instead for superficial solutions that may garner good press but have little impact.
The paradox is that Chicago’s struggle to combat street gangs is being undermined by its own elected officials. And the alliances between lawmakers and lawbreakers raise a troubling question: Who actually rules the neighborhoods—our public servants or the gangs? …
A Latin King, interviewed at Cook County Jail, recalls how the top leader of his gang, the Corona, ordered every member in his area to vote for Ricardo Muñoz, the 22nd Ward alderman. “Every chapter had to vote for that guy, anyone who was eligible to vote,” says the Latin King. “That was a direct order. That means you can’t say no. If you do, you face a violation”—typically a beating, or worse.
He estimates that the gang delivered hundreds of votes, maybe even a thousand or more, in one of Muñoz’s elections in the 1990s. Moreover, he says, members were also directed—under the threat of punishment—to pass out campaign flyers for Muñoz and walk around carrying his signs. They were instructed to wear their Sunday best: ties, khakis, trench coats. “No thug clothes,” he recalls.
Rahm Emanuel’s Father Problem | TIME.com
This is from the Jerusalem Post’s account of an interview Benjamin gave after news of his son’s appointment to the Obama administration was announced:
In an interview with Ma’ariv, Emanuel’s father, Dr. Benjamin Emanuel, said he was convinced that his son’s appointment would be good for Israel. “Obviously he will influence the president to be pro-Israel,” he was quoted as saying. “Why wouldn’t he be? What is he, an Arab? He’s not going to clean the floors of the White House.”
Beverly Hills 'Lawyer' Tied to Organized Crime Gets Light Sentence - LAmag Dec 5, 2023
Edgar Sargysan testified that he paid another lawyer to take the California Bar Exam for him as he ran a Rodeo Drive law firm connected to Armenian and Mexican Mafias
In a sentencing hearing closed to the public — an unusual move in a criminal case — a private jet-flying career conman turned confidential informant was sentenced to a mere six months in federal prison despite his prolific history of offenses connected to organized crime protected by his paid coterie of corrupt public officials.
Edgar Sargsyan, 42, who ran his phony practice, the Pillar Law Group, from a Rodeo Drive office festooned with selfies alongside politicians, pleaded guilty to conspiracy to commit bank fraud — a charge connected to a sprawling credit card "bust out" scam that ran up millions of dollars in debt from people whose identities were stolen — as well as two counts of bribing a public official and two counts of making false statements to federal investigators.
Sargysan admitted that he kept active law enforcement officials on his payroll, including two federal agents, FBI supervisory agent Babak Broumand, and Homeland Security Investigations agent Felix Cisneros. Sargysan testified in their separate trials that he often partied with Agent Broumand, including a coke-fueled sex romp at a party in Las Vegas, paid him repeatedly to access to top secret files for Armenian underworld, and used him to procure liquid Demerol for a Qatari prince. Agent Cisneros, Sargysan testified, helped move Mexican Mafia members over the border and illegally helped others close to the underworld ease through immigration. Glendale Detective John Balian confessed to selling his badge to help both organized crime outfits.
The dirty cops, known as "The Boys," were recruited by Sargysan, according to court testimony, to assist a massive $511 million biofuel fraud run by Levon Termendzhyan, better known in L.A. by his underworld moniker, “the Lion,” an Armenian immigrant who had built a fuel empire in the years after he arrived in California at 14.
In an unlikely criminal partnership, Termendzyhan teamed up with Jacob Kingston, a member of a Mormon polygamist family, the notorious racist blood cult known as the Kingston Clan, in 2010 to pull off what prosecutors call “one of the most audacious tax frauds in history." The eight-year scheme targeted green energy tax credits intended to subsidize biofuel production but instead, the taxpayer monies lined the pockets of criminals and were laundered in a series of complicated transactions connected to a Turkish billionaire and a former CIA Director James Woolsey.
Sargysan began cooperating with the government after he and Termendzhyan got into a legal skirmish over a private jet, which led him to tell his Rodeo Drive legal colleagues, "I'm a dead man." One of those colleagues included Henrik Mosesi, a licensed lawyer he paid $140,000 to study to take the California Bar. When Mosesi passed, Sargysan gave him a Rolex. Mosesi is still practicing law, according to the California State Bar website.
Before he got on Termendzyhan's bad side, Sargysan was a mover and shaker in Beverly Hills, and a regular at the members-only Grand Havana room where he held fundraisers for Governor Gavin Newsom, Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton. After Los Angeles began reporting on Sargysan's shady past, Newsom donated the fake lawyer's donations to a legal charity.
Likud: Russian-Israeli Organized Crime (substack.com)
The Mormon Mafia - Divided & Conquered (substack.com)
If we had a free truth speaking press, you would be on the payroll.