I kept looking at this one line:
Covert OP by [CLAS-59#241-Q] to infiltrate at highest level to destroy from within?
So I went back to the Seth Rich Map. There is a line from Q:
(SUPPORT: CS, NP, AS, CLAS-1, CLAS-2, CLAS-3, CLAS-4, CLAS-5, CLAS-6)>
The decode on this (A11) was “Support came from Chuck Shumer, Nancy Pelosi, Adam Schiff, and 6 of the 9 classified sources.” So is Q telling us that the same operative, CLAS-5, of the 9. Then I went back to CBTS #242 - FBI Raid Sterling, VA to get a quick read on CBTS #241. Well, low and behold, under RECENT HAPPENINGS NEWS was the FBI Raid in Sterling, VA. Remember, #242 was named after the events in #241. This BREAD is DELICIOUS. To refresh your memories, the story was that this guy, Sean Duncan, had been under investigation for about a year. And when the FBI raided his house he was arrested for “knowingly altering, destroying, mutilating and concealing tangible objects … with the intent to impede and obstruct” an FBI investigation. Duncan had been interested in joining ISIS. So what may have been on the documents he was trying to destroy? I had to stop right there because now this guy is sounding like some low level nobody and I’m just going down another rabbit hole. Maybe.
So who would CLAS-5 be? Who is Sean Duncan (he’s not the gaming professor at University of Virginia either, but what a coincidence? Q says there are no coincidences. Take a look at this guy at se4n.org.)? And what would he know about who? And how does that tie into infiltrating the highest level to destroy within?
“My doctoral students and I have collaboratively worked on multiple projects, including: Investigations of badges and participation in discussions on StackOverflow, Reddit, and Steam, the design of analog “story games” to facilitate reflection, the implications of instructional game streaming around the eSport Dota 2, and social network analyses of participation in online Minecraft communities. A common thread in my work is one of understanding collaboration in gaming culture, looking at how critical gaming, game design, and interpretive gaming communities feature people working together to do things (sometimes good, sometimes terrible).” – Sean Duncan
Would you like to play a game?