Anonymous ID: 0bdb41 March 5, 2021, 2:58 p.m. No.13132502   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1167 >>4803 >>6050 >>6817

Repost: NPR on QAnon.

What's Happening With Extremist Groups?

 

U.S. Capitol Police are ramping up security at the complex on Thursday over concerns about a possible plot by a militia group to breach the building.

 

The threat is connected to a baseless conspiracy theory that former President Donald Trump will rise to power again on March 4, which used to be Inauguration Day. After the Jan. 6 riot and President Biden’s inauguration, QAnon supporters searching for another date to prophesize found March 4, NBC’s Ben Collins says.

 

Tax-evading members of the sovereign citizens movement believe a decades-old conspiracy theory that the U.S. government has been illegitimate since Ulysses S. Grant left office in 1877, he says. Grant was inaugurated on March 4 in 1869.

 

“QAnon supporters, they’re not all the way in on this. They don’t really fully believe all this stuff,” he says, “but they’re desperate for some sort of answer that isn’t ‘Joe Biden is the president and reality is reality.’ ”

 

The buzz around this date has died down upon supporters realizing there aren’t any large events scheduled — unlike when Trump held a rally on Jan. 6, he says.

 

With yet another significant date passing by without Trump regaining power, Collins recalls the 1956 book “When Prophecy Fails” about a cult called the Seekers. The cult believed in a doomsday, and when the world didn’t end on that day, members pivoted to believing they prevented the apocalypse, Collins says.

 

Like members of the Seekers, QAnon and militia movements are becoming “more hardened in their beliefs as time goes on,” Collins says.

 

Earlier this week, FBI Director Christopher Wray told the Senate Judiciary Committee that the Capital riot was the culmination of a domestic terror threat that’s been growing for years.

 

“Jan. 6 was not an isolated event,” Wray said. “The problem of domestic terrorism has been metastasizing across the country for a long time now, and it’s not going away anytime soon.”

 

Wray also confirmed that after Black Lives Matter demonstrations over the summer, the FBI increased its focus on anti-government extremists like antifa, but still listed that below the threat posed by white supremacists.

 

The FBI getting distracted by political pressure from the Trump administration could help explain how white supremacists gained power seemingly in the shadows, Collins says.

 

Trump didn’t condemn white supremacists for starting violence at Black Lives Matter rallies last summer, Collins says, and told the Proud Boys to “stand back and stand by.”

 

“He could have told these people to go away and cut it out, but he did not do that,” Collins says. “These people were strategically aligned with the previous White House. And that’s really what these investigations are looking into.”

 

The Washington Post and other outlets are reporting that some of these far-right groups involved in the Capitol Riot, including the Proud Boys, are starting to splinter. These divisions raise the concern of lone extremists who can be more difficult to track.

 

Deplatforming extremists on social media sites such as Twitter and Facebook is a “double-edged sword,” Collins says.

 

“They’re not going to be able to get their message out in the same way,” he says. “However, when those people go into these smaller spaces, these spaces that are not tracked as easily, it’s harder to find out what they’re actually planning.”

 

Many extremists are committing illegal and hateful acts, but at the same time, some people have been taken advantage of and lied to by people in power.

 

QAnon serves as an example of why reconciling these differences is a challenge for law enforcement, he says. The QAnon conspiracy theory is based on the premise that public figures will be rounded up and killed as onlookers cheer. But American churches and grandparents with no intention of committing crimes are believing in this “violent ideology,” he says.

 

https://www.kuow.org/stories/2-months-after-capitol-riot-what-s-happening-with-extremist-groups

Anonymous ID: 0bdb41 March 5, 2021, 3:38 p.m. No.13141320   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>4803 >>6050 >>6817

Antivirus software pioneer McAfee charged by U.S. with cryptocurrency fraud

 

NEW YORK/WASHINGTON (Reuters) - John McAfee, the antivirus software pioneer whose former company still bears his name, has been indicted on fraud and money-laundering conspiracy charges stemming from two cryptocurrency schemes, the U.S. Justice Department said on Friday.

 

Authorities accused McAfee and his bodyguard, Jimmy Gale Watson Jr., of exploiting McAfee's large Twitter following to artificially inflate prices of "altcoins" through a so-called pump-and-dump scheme, and concealing payments McAfee received from startup businesses to promote initial coin offerings.

 

The Justice Department said McAfee and his accomplices reaped more than $13 million from the schemes. The charges were brought in Manhattan federal court.

 

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission filed related civil charges concerning the alleged pump-and-dump scheme.

 

Manhattan U.S. Attorney Audrey Strauss said in a statement: "As alleged, McAfee and Watson exploited a widely used social media platform and enthusiasm among investors in the emerging cryptocurrency market to make millions through lies and deception."

 

Lawyers for McAfee could not immediately be identified. McAfee is being detained in Spain following his arrest there on tax evasion charges announced in October, the Justice Department said.

 

Watson was arrested on Thursday night in Texas, the department added.

 

Watson's attorney Arnold Spencer said in a statement: "Jimmy Watson is a decorated veteran and former Navy Seal. He fought for other people's rights and liberties, and he is entitled to and looks forward to his day in court to exercise some of those very rights."

 

Both also face civil charges by the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, which in October accused McAfee of concealing more than $23.1 million he made from boosting seven cryptocurrency offerings on Twitter.

 

In the cryptocurrency cases, authorities said McAfee touted assets including Verge, Reddcoin and Dogecoin as part of a "Coin of the Day" or "Coin of the Week" tweet from around December 2017 through February 2018.

 

Authorities said McAfee held himself up as an expert on cybersecurity and cryptocurrency through his tweets, speeches and his role as a CEO of a publicly traded cryptocurrency company. They also accused him of telling followers he had no stake in the coins, even as he touted how they "will change the world."

 

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/u-says-john-mcafee-indicted-164633306.html