Anonymous ID: 6a43d4 Sept. 27, 2021, 5:10 a.m. No.14671287   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1290 >>1291 >>1292 >>1305

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AZCountryPatriot@AZCountryPatri1

Fuck anons youve got to watch HRC telling about colluding with Silicon Valley saying they would interfere in next election, this was 2018

Hillary circa 2018 telling us what their plan was. They always accuse others of what they’re guilty of. Their arrogance will be their downfall! #ElectionIntegrity #ElectionFraud #Fraud #2020election #Arizona #ArizonaAudit #Dominion

12:11 AM · Sep 27, 2021·Twitter for

https://twitter.com/AZCountryPatri1/status/1442341148811403270?s=20

Anonymous ID: 6a43d4 Sept. 27, 2021, 5:51 a.m. No.14671419   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>1424 >>1436

Jan 6 defendant who sought police help dies awaiting trial

 

"John didn't deserve what he had to endure before his death," Anderson's lawyer Marina Medvin stated.

 

Of note, John Anderson never entered the Capitol building on his own accord. Mr. Anderson was brought into the building by the MPD officers who were rendering medical aid to him," Medvin reiterates.

 

Five weeks later, the DOJ decided to take over the case and charge Anderson under federal law as part of the Jan. 6 investigation. "They arrested John by hunting him down during his 5 AM outdoor exercise routine that he did every morning with his wife, throwing him down on the pavement," Medvin says of the arrest. "(This was after I offered simple self-surrender to feds, offering to turn him in civilly to save the government resources and risk. My request was declined."

 

All of a suden, Anderson was accused of felonious conduct: stealing two police shields, "assaulting, resisting, or impeding certain officers," and "civil disorder," in addition to the typical four misdemeanor charges the federal government has levied against all of the Jan. 6 defendants.

 

"We were shocked by the new allegations," Medvin says. Anderson swore that he did none of the accusations. "I never hurt anybody, Marina," he told Medvin. "I was there for a protest. Why would they say I did these things if they know that isn't true? Ask them to check their cameras. I didn't do any of this."

 

Anderson insisted he was there for the protest, recording the events. "I didn’t attack any officers. I didn't hurt anyone. Someone sprayed me," Anderson said. "I couldn’t breathe, and I begged the officers for help. And I thank God every day that they helped me. They saved my life."

 

"How could he have assaulted officers if he was receiving aid from them and could barely breathe or walk without their assistance? If the government’s theory is interfering with law enforcement, then how could a request for medical aid be considered felonious?" Medvin questions in the press release.

 

"How could such large-sized property as police shields be stolen when John Anderson was in law enforcement custody and then released — where would he hide them? Why would MPD officers release him on a citation without such extreme conduct ever being mentioned if it indeed happened? After all, he was surrounded by officers the entire time he was in the Capitol," she presses.

 

Federal prosecutors assured Medvin that authorities had video evidence that would reveal the felonious conduce, advising that footage will show Anderson

making his way to the front of the police line "where he had to be chemically sprayed by police after being disorderly and taking a shield, and that he required medical aid only after this negative interaction with law enforcement."

 

"We know now that none of that is accurate. The videos that were provided by the

government to the defense, from which we obtained the screen-shots shown supra, clear John's name," Medvin fires back.

 

Medvin states that Anderson was truthful: "John did not approach the police line to be disorderly or combative but to seek police assistance. John Anderson never hurt or touched a single police officer. The video evidence proves this."