Anonymous ID: 3cc045 Jan. 23, 2022, 6:18 a.m. No.15442425   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2748 >>2752 >>2756 >>2770 >>2818 >>2989 >>3123 >>3153

>>15442420

Massive Truckers for Freedom Convoy is about to happen!!

 

Jan 22, 2022

 

ustinCredibleTV

 

47.3K subscribers

 

Upwards of 150,000 truckers and supporters are driving across the nation to converge on Ottawa to demand one of two things: Either the government steps down, or ALL mandates are removed. This is gonna be massive! #TruckersForFreedom #FreedomConvoy2022

 

https://youtu.be/z19lfFzaPtA

Anonymous ID: 3cc045 Jan. 23, 2022, 6:36 a.m. No.15442502   🗄️.is đź”—kun

>>15442479

>Republican congressman Matt Gaetz

Kek

that fell apart months ago

 

25 million dollar shakedown to rescue a former FBI agent in Iran and all Matt Gaetz problems will go away. THose intel clowns who did this to Gaetz are going down. It is the same amount of money, 25 million, the FBI (Mueller and McCabe) extorted from Russian Oligarch Deripaska for the same retarded rescue of former FBI agent in Iran 10 years ago

 

playbook known

Anonymous ID: 3cc045 Jan. 23, 2022, 7:16 a.m. No.15442691   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>2696 >>2756 >>2989 >>3123 >>3153

Remember Raz from CHAZ CHOP in Seattle?

 

5 women sue Seattle rapper Raz Simone, 4 say he trafficked them

BY

Ash Ashley Hiruko

JAN 19, 2022 at 4:33 PM

 

“He” was Solomon “Raz” Simone, a Seattle hip-hop artist who she says in a lawsuit sex-trafficked and abused her in Las Vegas for more than a year, ending in 2017. Pearl returned to the club to earn money for a new apartment, she said, somewhere Simone wouldn’t follow her.

 

When she was with Simone, there were consequences when she didn’t obey him, she said. Simone held her captive for three days within a confined space, a sleeping pod, she said, a half mile north of Seattle Police buildings on Airport Way. She said more than once he forcibly had sex with her and strangled her.

 

As Pearl danced at the Palomino in Las Vegas, Bill Guyer, a veteran Seattle police detective, looked into Simone. Several women had alleged abuse, and they wanted to talk.

 

But after four and a half years of waiting, it seemed an investigation, if one existed, was going nowhere. And so five women, including Pearl, filed this civil lawsuit that says Simone harmed them, hoping for some resolution.

 

Guyer shared his files with the FBI some time between 2020 and 2021, years after speaking with the women. Two things happened around that time: Angelica Campbell filed a protection order, and Simone was captured on video handing a semi-automatic firearm to a fellow protestor.

 

Simone has repeatedly denied these accusations.

 

“It’s been a plan they put together years back,” Simone said. “The money’s on the line, and they’re using it like a class-action lawsuit.”

 

Their lawsuit follows a national trend of survivors using civil courts to hold their alleged predators accountable, when the criminal justice system hasn’t intervened. In the high-profile cases of movie producer Harvey Weinstein and musician R. Kelly, criminal convictions came months and years after their victims filed suit.

 

The plaintiffs say that Simone targets young, vulnerable women who are involved in sex work or susceptible to it. They said he wins them over with affection, and pitches the relationship as a chance to grow, find success, and be a part of his “family.”

 

Once persuaded, they said Simone imposed strict rules on what they could eat, and how to act. He placed a money quota on them, pressured them to meet it by stripping or performing sex acts, and took the money they made, they said in the lawsuit. They said Simone used coercion, threats, and violence to make them comply, and used them as fodder for his music.

 

Simone has repeatedly denied these allegations, in an interview and in a music video he published following KUOW’s initial story. He denied the allegations again, in a letter drafted by his lawyer and sent to KUOW.

 

“This lawsuit seeks to sue a variety of people and entities in an effort to create a cohesive case but there isn’t one here, and we have no doubt that the case will be dismissed on the merits,” Simone’s lawyer Corinne Mullen said.

 

RELATED: 2 women accuse Seattle hip-hop artist Raz Simone of abuse, coercion

 

KUOW reported last year on two of the five women suing Simone, Amanda Branch and Angelica Campbell. They shared their stories after Simone made national headlines as the self-styled leader of the Capitol Hill Occupied Protest, or CHOP. Simone had gained a following through his music, and opened for chart-topping musicians Macklemore and Ryan Lewis in 2016.

 

Four years later, in 2020, Campbell, a recent arrival from Chicago, went to police after applying for a protection order against Simone. Days passed, then months, with no arrest. A commissioner denied Campbell’s protection order last year, because they didn’t believe Campbell and Simone were in an eligible dating relationship, and Simone had provided “credible evidence” rebutting her allegations.

 

https://kuow.org/stories/five-women-sue-seattle-rapper-raz-simone-four-say-he-trafficked-them