Anonymous ID: 05f183 Aug. 15, 2020, 5:46 p.m. No.10301969   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2178 >>2212

Mllie Weaver is a conservative filmmaker who was arrested at her home in northeastern Ohio hours before she was scheduled to debut her new documentary called Shadow Gate on YouTube. Weaver claimed she had uncovered a plot, orchestrated by both major political parties, against President Donald Trump and that the documentary would explain how it all worked.

 

The timing of her arrest flamed conspiracy theories online, with critics wondering whether the arrest was related to the Shadow Gate documentary. Heavy has confirmed with the Portage County Jail that Weaver, along with her husband, were both arrested on August 14 on felony charges including robbery and domestic violence. There is no evidence to suggest her arrest was related to the documentary.

 

The Portage County Sheriff further confirmed via email that Weaver was arrested on an indictment from the Portage County Grand Jury. Heavy has reached out to the county prosecutor’s office to ask about obtaining a copy of the affidavit.

 

Here’s what you need to know:

 

  1. Millie Weaver & Her Husband Are Both Facing Felony Charges in Ohio

Millicent Weaver and her husband, Gavin Wince, were both arrested by the Portage County Sheriff’s Office on August 14. Inmate records show they were booked into the Portage County Jail around 1:50 a.m.

 

Heavy confirmed with the Portage County Jail, over the phone, that Weaver and her husband are both facing four charges:

 

Robbery

Tampering with evidence

Obstructing justice

Domestic violence

As referenced above, the Portage County Jail referred to Weaver’s partner as her husband. The Cleveland Plain Dealer, in a separate report, described Wince as Weaver’s boyfriend.

 

Weaver was being held over the weekend without a bond. She was expected to face a judge on Monday, August 17, although it was not clear whether she would physically appear in court or remotely.

 

Weaver is the mother of two children. The official at the Portage County Jail did not have information about who was caring for the two children while their parents were behind bars.

 

  1. A Video of Weaver Questioning Why She Was Under Arrest Has Spread Online

 

Author Mike Dice, who wrote a 2019 book called The Liberal Media Industrial Complex, shared a video on Twitter that purports to show the moment Weaver was arrested at her home. The clip, which went out to Dice’s nearly 700,000 followers and has been viewed nearly 1 million times as of this writing, appears to have been filmed by Weaver herself.

 

In the clip, Weaver is recording the interaction with a sheriff’s deputy with her phone pointing at the ground. She asks, “You’re saying a grand jury indicted me? For what?” The deputy asks Weaver to get her shoes and that paperwork would be waiting for them at the jail. Weaver cooperates as one of her children can be heard making noises off-camera.

 

As Weaver walks into her home, she directs her comments to viewers. “Guys, I don’t know what’s happening right now. The police have just shown up at my house and they said that they’re arresting me. They said that a grand jury indicted me for something. I have no idea what. This is crazy.”

 

Weaver then asks why she wasn’t sent anything in the mail and repeats her assertion that she has no idea what the arrest is about. As she walks back outside, Weaver says to the camera, “Guys, I’m literally about to break huge breaking news right now. I’m being arrested and I have no idea why.” Someone is then heard off-camera telling Weaver she was being charged for burglary. She appeared surprised as she responded, “Burglary? For what?”

 

Weaver then turns her phone toward her two children, who were on the porch with another woman. Her young son is crying as the deputies tell her to move toward the vehicle. The deputy says, “Come on, let’s go to the car. I’ve been more than nice.” Weaver says again that she has “no idea what’s happening right now.” The video ends after Weaver asks viewers to “please share this.”

 

Since her arrest, a GoFundMe campaign was launched on Weaver’s behalf to help pay for her legal defense. As of this writing, hundreds of donors had given more than $41,000.

 

  1. In Ohio, a ‘Secret Indictment’ Simply Means the Indictment is Sealed Until After the Accused Has Been Arrested

 

  1. Weaver Claimed to Uncover Knowledge of a Coup Against President Trump

 

  1. Weaver Contributes to Infowars & Was Named to Newsmax’s ’30 Most Influential Republicans Under 30′ in 2017

 

Weaver has also visited the White House at least twice

 

https://heavy.com/news/2020/08/millie-weaver/

Anonymous ID: 05f183 Aug. 15, 2020, 5:49 p.m. No.10301999   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>2017

>>10301914

 

shows you are low IQ

 

if there is someone you have no personal contact with and do not know their day to day doings you can only go by references from those that you do trust

 

but i see your a zionazi shill so it really doesnt matter

Anonymous ID: 05f183 Aug. 15, 2020, 6:14 p.m. No.10302261   🗄️.is 🔗kun

'Miles of Files'

Robots to Help Manage Billions of Pages at New FBI Central Records Complex

 

The FBI’s robots have arrived in Virginia. And they’re ready to be fed.

 

Inside the Bureau’s cavernous new Central Records Complex in Winchester, a squad of automated, wheeled robots have dutifully begun the enormous task of filing away millions of paper records from FBI offices around the country.

 

The 256,000 square-foot facility, located about 90 minutes from Washington, D.C., will consolidate the storage of truckloads of archived records now housed at each of the FBI’s 56 field offices and other sites.

 

Work on the $135 million warehouse began in late 2017. The complex opened earlier this year, and in June, staff began loading the first records into custom-designed bins to be shuttled away by robots into darkened, climate-controlled confines for safe keeping and easy retrieval.

 

The warehouse complex and its state-of-the-art automated storage and retrieval system is one of the biggest in the world, with capacity for more than 360,000 bins, each about the size of a suitcase. The National Archives and Records Administration (NARA) partnered with the FBI on the facility’s design and standards.

 

“The use of innovative technology to consolidate these files in one single location not only represents a huge cost savings but will also help the FBI most effectively carry out its mission,” said Arlene Gaylord, assistant director of the Information Management Division (IMD).

 

Information in case files is frequently sought by agents, investigators, prosecutors, and even members of the public through Freedom of Information and Privacy Acts (FOI/PA) requests. When requests are made, the original files are digitized and sent back. Until now, those file requests would be distributed to individual offices and their staffs. Having everything under one roof—along with a dedicated staff and an army of robots to do their bidding—will ease the burden on field offices and make retrieving files more efficient.

 

 

“Having all the case files together and easily accessible is an important step in IMD’s quest to become a leader in information management, in order to best serve the FBI and the American people,” said Gaylord, who was a linguist for the FBI in San Diego in the 90s and played an early role in the push to digitize FBI records, an effort informally referred to as “miles of files.”

 

The sheer volume of paper records—some going back to the Bureau’s earliest days—made wholesale digitization unfeasible, though all requests for files are made electronically. IMD staff approximate that, all told, there are about 117 linear miles of paper en route to the Central Records Complex, or close to two billion pages. One estimate determined that digitizing everything—at current staffing levels—would take more than 40 years. Just shipping all the paper records to Winchester and then feeding that into bins for the robots to shelve is expected to take two years. Every day, robots deposit about 26 pallets of files—the equivalent of a tractor-trailer—into the storage grid after multiple staff confirm the contents of each file.

 

The push for better records management began in the early 2000s when the National Archives released new regulations for managing federal records. Congressional funding and authority came later, in 2014, when the Bureau received the go-ahead to partner with the General Services Administration to build a new facility. In preparation for the transition, IMD staff have trained field offices on how to prep all their files before they are boxed, put on pallets, and shipped to Winchester.

 

“To have the building done and to be able to walk in and work here every day, it’s really a thrill,” said Teresa Fitzgerald, a former Archives staffer who joined the Bureau in 2003 and has spent the better part of her FBI career preparing for this transition.

 

About 500 people staff the new complex. Since robots will handle the heavy lift of depositing and fetching bins of files, IMD’s sentient beings have more time to determine which files should be preserved and which ones should be scheduled for destruction—in accordance with NARA guidelines.

 

“By taking care of that menial task of storing and retrieving, we can free people up with the expertise to do things like records scheduling and disposition,” said James Klipfer, chief of the Bureau's Technology Innovation Section.

 

And while a few private commerce warehouses have similar automatic-storage systems as part of their distribution systems, Klipfer said he’s not aware of any other government facilities like the Central Records Complex.

 

Here’s how they work: bins of products are stacked 16-high in an elaborate steel grid that the robots traverse by following X, Y, and Z coordinates.

 

https://www.fbi.gov/news/stories/robots-help-manage-billions-of-pages-at-new-fbi-central-records-complex-081220