Anonymous ID: 7c036c April 24, 2022, 5:25 a.m. No.16143203   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3208

United States congressmen on the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence received information at a Capitol Hill briefing on multiple shooters carrying out the Las Vegas mass shooting attack on October 1, 2017, with Antifa and ISIS involvement. The report prepared for recently-deceased former Trump National Security Council (NSC) official Rich Higgins, states that Stephen Paddock was executed by terrorists involved in the attack.

Anonymous ID: 7c036c April 24, 2022, 5:27 a.m. No.16143208   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3210 >>3220

>>16143203

>recently-deceased former Trump National Security Council (NSC) official Rich Higgins

https://deathobits.com/2022/02/23/rich-higgins-death-rich-higgins-has-died/

Rich is a US Army veteran and was a key member of the Trump administrationโ€™s National Security Council. When at the NSC, he worked tirelessly to brief the President and Senior Executives throughout the DoD and IC. Rich began with President Trump before his election as one of his foreign policy advisors until his ultimate departure from the NSC.

Mike Daugherty paid tributes to the deceased on Facebook, He said: Rest In Peace Rich Higgins. You are a hero. He passed this morning at 3 am. This guy was all guts for no glory. He was amazingโ€ฆand then he got Covid early on and he fought like hell for more than a year. Had so much surgery. Fought to survive in ICU for months on end.

Crushing loss of an unsung hero that history will elevate. He told them all way early about the inside knives in the White Houseโ€ฆ.so the insider mob fired him. What a tragic loss. Pray for his wife and small kids.

Anonymous ID: 7c036c April 24, 2022, 5:27 a.m. No.16143210   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>16143208

Rich Higgins was fired from the Trump National Security Council in 2017, prior to the Las Vegas attack, after he wrote a Political Warfare memo that got leaked in which Higgins identified the โ€œDeep Stateโ€ working against President Donald Trump. Higgins wrote in that memo: โ€œIn Maoist insurgence, the formation of a counter-state is essential to seizing State power.โ€

Anonymous ID: 7c036c April 24, 2022, 5:32 a.m. No.16143235   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3237

>>16143222

>Chris Mahony

https://www.news.com.au/sport/sports-life/charlottesville-protests-rugby-star-chris-mahony-relives-horror-of-crash/news-story/0f808ac79600db21d362436477279e68

Charlottesville protests: Rugby star Chris Mahony relives horror of crash

A former rugby star helped US police catch the driver who ploughed into a crowd and killed a woman during a white nationalist march.

Anonymous ID: 7c036c April 24, 2022, 5:35 a.m. No.16143244   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>16143237

>helped US police catch the driver

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chris_Mahony

He was admitted to the bar of the High Court of New Zealand in 2006 where he appeared for the Crown in criminal and refugee matters.

Anonymous ID: 7c036c April 24, 2022, 5:42 a.m. No.16143278   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>3327 >>3431 >>3520

www.nzherald.co.nz/world/news/article.cfm?c_id=2&objectid=10803624

Kiwi Chris Mahony eyewitness to a warlord's downfall

Auckland-born Chris Mahony, an adviser for the World Bank in Washington DC, witnessed the car attack on protesters in Charlottesville, Virginia and helped police catch the driver. It's not the first time the former rugby player has been an eyewitness to terror. In an article from 2012 Mahony tells Andrew Stone of his journey into the heart of darkness in strife-torn West Africa.

Armed with a camera and the bravado of youth, Chris Mahony told his driver to stop so he could capture the moment.

Beside the road, armed African soldiers had a captive on the ground, his arms pinned behind him. A crowd had gathered on the dusty footpath, waiting to see what fate lay in store for the suspected collaborator.

Just 22, and a long way from his law classes in New Zealand, Mahony got out of his vehicle to take a photograph. But the flash went off, and the soldiers swivelled, guns at the ready. He was swiped in the face with a rifle butt, but it was nothing, he says, compared to the beating the suspect was receiving.

Mahony retreated to his car, and the soldiers returned to their suspect: "When you're young you think nothing's going to happen to youโ€ฆ stupid stuff."

This incident took place in 2003 in Liberia, just across the border from Sierra Leone, where Mahony was immersed in the complex politics of the war-ravaged state. He had gone to neighbouring Liberia at the end of warlord Charles Taylor's rule, where Taylor's rivals were stitching up new political coalitions.

Nearly 10 years on, Taylor, Sierra Leone and Liberia are back in focus and Mahony is again plugged into events, though now as an authority on justice and human rights in a troubled region where thousands have died in vicious conflicts.

Today Mahony is deputy director of Auckland University Law School's newly created New Zealand Centre for Human Rights Law, Policy and Practice. He will also teach parts of the international human rights and international criminal law papers, while he finishes a doctorate through the University of Oxford.

Last week, as many cheered the war crimes conviction of Taylor, claiming it sent a signal to tyrants that their days of impunity were numbered, Mahony took a different view. Victor's justice, he called it, with one guilty man convicted while other culpable figures remained off-limits to prosecutors.

Such as? Mahony considers the late Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi and Burkina Faso President Blaise Compaore just as guilty of the ghastly crimes levelled against Taylor, who armed Sierra Leone rebels in return for so-called blood diamonds mined by slave labourers and smuggled across the border.