Anonymous ID: 21f9d8 Sept. 22, 2020, 2:17 a.m. No.10741600   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1609 >>1637 >>1644 >>1675

>>10740908

>https://www.bing.com/news/search?q=Natalee+Holloway&qft=interval%3d%229%22&form=NWRFSH

 

I like this one.

 

This Week In Fascism #75: How Qanon Is Creating A Culture That Justifies Mass Violence

 

Welcome, fellow antifascists!

 

This week, we’ve got an explainer on Qanon and its obsession with pedophilia, the

Department of Justice declaring three cities to be “anarchist jurisdictions,” Portland

police accusing the District Attorney of being “antifa,” plus doxxes of Operation

Werewolf, the Proud Boys, and the Midwest head of neo-Nazi group Patriot Front.

 

Without further ado, let’s begin!

 

Explainer

What’s The Deal With QAnon’s Focus On Pedophilia And Human Trafficking?

#TheStorm, or what @MichaelEHayden called "the biggest fake news story of 2018,"

didn't get big/viral by accident, but by design.

 

An 8chan playbook advises trolls to hijack popular hashtags to push their

narrative: https://t.co/KSN3EEvdom pic.twitter.com/nBnumPski5

 

— cristina lópez g. (@crislopezg) February 6, 2018

 

At the heart of Qanon lies the belief, inherited and passed down from past conspiracy

theories, that a shadowy cabal of “Satan worshiping pedophiles” which in turn controls

Hollywood, the media, the Pope, and liberal elite politicians – are all involved in ritual

child human sacrifice, sex trafficking, blood drinking, and cannibalism. These elites make

up the “deep state” and only Donald Trump can bring them to justice. Leaking information

about this epic conflict, is an anonymous person from within the intelligence community

(but somehow not the deep state) with Q level security clearance that has knowledge of

this whole plot and has been leaving clues, known as “Q-drops,” on racist far-Right boards

like 4chan and 8chan (because where else would a senior official do so?). Q’s followers

then take the seemingly nonsensical clues, known as “crumbs,” that are posted online

and try and make sense of them.

 

https://itsgoingdown.org/this-week-in-fascism-75-how-qanon-is-creating-a-culture-that-justifies-mass-violence/

Anonymous ID: 21f9d8 Sept. 22, 2020, 2:52 a.m. No.10741785   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1806 >>1947 >>2008 >>2068 >>2069

Protesters return to Southeast Portland

 

PORTLAND, Ore. (KOIN) — Protesters once again returned to the Penumbra Kelly

Building in Southeast Portland Monday night, according to local police.

 

The mass gathering blocked traffic on East Burnside in both directions.

 

The Kelly Building, which houses offices for both the Portland Police Bureau

and the Multnomah County Sheriff’s Office, has been the frequent site of

demonstrations in the past.

 

Via Twitter, police warned people not to go onto the property or they could

face “arrest, citation, or the use of crowd control agents…”

 

"…its landscaping or walkways. Failure to adhere to this order may subject

you to arrest, citation, or the use of crowd control agents including, but not

limited to, impact weapons and/or OC munitions (Oleoresin Capsicum).

Stay off of the Penumbra Kelly Building Property.

 

— Portland Police (@PortlandPolice) September 22, 2020

 

This is a developing story.

 

https://www.koin.com/news/protests/protesters-return-to-southeast-portland/

Anonymous ID: 21f9d8 Sept. 22, 2020, 3:02 a.m. No.10741828   🗄️.is đź”—kun

Seattle police end effort to get unpublished media photos and videos from protests

 

Sep. 21, 2020

 

The Seattle Police Department will drop a subpoena requiring five Seattle news organizations

to turn over unpublished news videos and photos taken during racial injustice demonstrations

on May 30 that investigators argued would help them solve several arson and theft cases.

 

In a motion filed with the state Supreme Court Monday, lawyers for the SPD said that an

ongoing appeal by The Seattle Times and four TV station would delay release of any news

images until well into next year, and noted the recent arrest of a suspect in one of those cases.

 

As a result, the department decided to withdraw the subpoena and not seek enforcement of

an earlier court order granting access to the images.

 

The decision effectively renders meaningless a closely watched legal battle pitting free press

protections against the power of police investigations.

 

“As SPD will not be seeking enforcement and the appellants News Media have not and will

not be required to produce anything, there is nothing for this Court to review, the appeal is

now moot and it should be dismissed,” attorney Brian Esler wrote in the motion.

 

Seattle City Attorney Pete Holmes said in a statement Monday the subpoena “was about

trying to recover dangerous weapons. The urgency of getting this evidence collided with

the more ponderous processes of our judicial system, and the process won out.”

 

Eric Stahl, who represents the five media companies, said Monday that what Holmes is

“calling a `process’ is actually an important protection for journalism, free speech and

the public’s right to know.”

 

https://www.seattletimes.com/seattle-news/seattle-police-end-effort-to-get-unpublished-media-photos-and-videos-from-protests/

Anonymous ID: 21f9d8 Sept. 22, 2020, 3:20 a.m. No.10741919   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1947 >>2008 >>2068 >>2069

Supreme Court ruling affects more than 800 'Indian Country' criminal cases in Oklahoma

Sep 22, 2020 Updated 3 hrs ago

 

More than 800 criminal cases have been referred to federal prosecutors in Oklahoma since

a July Supreme Court ruling determined that much of northeastern Oklahoma is Indian Country

for criminal prosecution purposes.

 

About 175 of the 850 cases have resulted in an indictment or criminal complaint, officials said.

The remaining cases have either been referred to tribal courts or are still under review.

 

In Tulsa federal court, 279 cases have been referred to prosecutors for possible charges, said

Lennea Montandon, spokeswoman for U.S. Attorney Trent Shores’ office in the Northern District

of Oklahoma.

 

Of that number, prosecutors have assumed federal jurisdiction in 139 cases. Another 138 have

been sent to the Muskogee (Creek) Nation for possible prosecution in tribal court, and two cases

are still under consideration, Montandon said.

 

Of the 139 taken on by Tulsa federal prosecutors, the Tulsa World has identified about 61 criminal

cases that have been made public and are filed in Tulsa federal court.

 

Shores said the impact of the McGirt decision has been “substantial” and “immediate.”

 

“In the last two months, we’ve indicted more than 114 cases, whereas in a typical year, we

might indict 230,” Shores said. “This volume of cases is like nothing we’ve ever seen, but

my team is stepping up and getting the job done.

 

“I remain hopeful that more resources will soon be made available so that we can maintain

excellent public safety services and uphold our trust responsibility to the tribes.”

 

Meanwhile, 571 cases have been identified by federal prosecutors in the Muskogee-based

Eastern District of Oklahoma, where prosecutors for now are prioritizing cases where the

defendant was in state custody and the offense was considered a major crime, said Chris

Wilson, first assistant U.S. attorney in the Eastern District office.

 

Twenty-three of the 571 cases have been referred to tribal court, with “many, many more”

expected to travel that route, Wilson said.

 

The Supreme Court ruling that triggered all of the referrals involved Jimcy McGirt, a 71-year-old

American Indian who successfully argued that he should have been prosecuted for child sex

abuse crimes in federal court rather than state court, where he was convicted.

 

The July 9 Supreme Court decision determined that the Muscogee (Creek) Nation reservation

in eastern Oklahoma was never disestablished by Congress, meaning that since statehood

major crime cases involving American Indians that occurred within the Muscogee (Creek)

Nation reservation boundaries should have been filed in federal court rather than state.

 

The reservation boundaries include much of the city of Tulsa and all of south Tulsa County

and all or portions of 10 other counties.

 

The ruling has caused state prosecutors to dismiss cases prosecuted or being prosecuted

in state court that involved an American Indian for a crime in Indian Country.

 

https://tulsaworld.com/news/local/crime-and-courts/supreme-court-ruling-affects-more-than-800-indian-country-criminal-cases-in-oklahoma-so-far/article_ee591c26-fc32-11ea-b0d7-1fe32cb9baca.html