Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 2:55 p.m. No.16352633   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16352575

>https://twitter.com/MZHemingway/status/1529954173952921604

https://www.wsj.com/articles/justice-department-won-t-charge-fbi-agents-in-nassar-case-failures-11653602572

Justice Department Won't Charge FBI Agents in Nassar Case Failures

Indianapolis-based FBI agents disregarded gymnasts’ allegations that the national team doctor sexually assaulted them

The Justice Department said Thursday it is standing by an earlier decision not to charge the FBI agents who disregarded Olympic gymnasts’ allegations that former national team doctor Larry Nassar sexually assaulted them and later made false statements to cover their mistakes

Officials said in October that they would review their decision not to prosecute the agents. The monthslong inquiry analyzed evidence and the outcome “reflects the recommendation of experienced prosecutors,” the department said in a written statement.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:01 p.m. No.16353040   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3087 >>3162 >>3312

Joffe associated firm was given control of 6% of the internet 3 minutes before Biden's inauguration and why control was given back 6 days before Sussmann's indictment

https://archive.ph/aQaky

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:07 p.m. No.16353075   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3111

https://im1776.com/2022/05/27/servant-of-the-corrupt/

Zelensky and Ihor Kolomoisky, the oligarch who created him, and their relationship to Washington

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:09 p.m. No.16353081   🗄️.is 🔗kun

https://im1776.com/2022/05/24/understanding-vladimir-putin/

The Putin Interviews are remarkable in that Stone’s series of direct policy questions are all relevant to the current situation, to which Putin generally answered bluntly and directly.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:13 p.m. No.16353115   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3173

https://web.archive.org/web/20220313000807/https:/abcnews.go.com/International/live-updates/russia-ukraine/?id=83390885

To take Kyiv, Russia will have to 'kill all residents': Zelenskyy

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:14 p.m. No.16353128   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3151

>>16353111

The portrait of the Ukraine President as democratic paragon whitewashes the real Zelensky and conceals a vast web of corruption. Understanding the real Zelensky requires seeing him as a creation of Ukrainian oligarch Kolomoisky.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:16 p.m. No.16353141   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3152 >>3161 >>3166

>>16353096

>https://buffalonews.com/news/local/authorities-investigating-if-retired-federal-agent-knew-of-buffalo-mass-shooting-plans-in-advance/article_bd408f18-dd39-11ec-be53-df8fdd095d6f.html

Authorities investigating if retired federal agent knew of Buffalo mass shooting plans in advance

Law enforcement officers are investigating whether a retired federal agent had about 30 minutes advance notice of a white supremacist's plans to murder Black people at a Buffalo supermarket, two law enforcement officials told The Buffalo News.

Authorities believe the former agent – believed to be from Texas – was one of at least six individuals who regularly communicated with accused gunman Payton Gendron in an online chat room where racist hatred was discussed, the two officials said.

The two law enforcement sources with direct knowledge of the investigation stated these individuals were invited by Gendron to read about his mass shooting plans and the target location about 30 minutes before Gendron killed 10 people at Tops Markets on Jefferson Avenue on May 14.

The News could not determine if the retired agent accepted the invitation.

“These were like-minded people who used this chat group to talk about their shared interests in racial hatred, replacement theory and hatred of anyone who is Jewish, a person of color or not of European ancestry,” said one of the two law enforcement officials with close knowledge of the investigation. “What is especially upsetting is that these six people received advanced notice of the Buffalo shooting, about 30 minutes before it happened.

“The FBI has verified that none of these people called law enforcement to warn them about the shooting. The FBI database shows no advance tips from anyone that this shooting was about to happen.”

Agents from the FBI are in the process of tracking down and interviewing the six people, including the retired agent, and attempting to determine if any of them should be charged as accomplices, the two sources with close knowledge of the probe told The Buffalo News.

The two sources did not identify the agent by name and could not confirm what federal agency he worked for.

The Buffalo FBI Office declined to comment on the investigation. The U.S. Attorney's Office in Buffalo declined through a spokeswoman to comment.

Buffalo civil rights attorney John V. Elmore said it will be outrageous if it turns out that a former law enforcement officer had advance notice of the shooting and did nothing to prevent it.

“If he had advance notice, he had a moral obligation to get on the phone and try to notify someone about it,” said Elmore, who represents the family of Andre Mackniel, who was shot dead when he went to Tops to buy a birthday cake for his 3-year-old son.

Attorney Terrence M. Connors, who is representing several families who lost loved ones in the shooting, said: “As outrageous as this may sound, based upon what we are finding in our investigation, it is not surprising.” He declined to reveal the evidence his law firm has collected.

The New York Times reported May 17 that Gendron invited a small group of people into a private chat room on the messaging platform Discord to review his plan about 30 minutes before the massacre at Tops. The Washington Post reported two days later that 15 people accepted Gendron's invitation into the Discord chat room and were able to review his plan and watch his live stream video as he committed the killings.

Federal authorities are investigating if the retired agent provided information to Gendron before he went on his shooting spree, the two law enforcement officials told The News.

In addition to law enforcement sources, two other individuals with knowledge of the mass shooting investigation have also confirmed that federal authorities are looking into the former agent’s relationship to the shooter.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:17 p.m. No.16353152   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3166 >>3185 >>3193

>>16353141

The Sandman

FBI agents are also trying to determine the identity of an individual Gendron calls “Sandman,” and “Saint Sandman” in his lengthy social media diary that appeared on Discord 30 minutes before the attack, the sources said.

In the diary, Gendron indicates Sandman counseled him on manufacturers of AR-15 semi-automatic rifles and their quality. The shooter purchased and allegedly used that type of assault rifle in the rampage, which local authorities have said was fueled by his racial hatred.

In the document Gendron posted on Discord just prior to the shooting, he references Sandman three times.

In a passage dated May 2, he quoted Saint Sandman as saying: "When the time finally comes to deal decisively with a whole host of society's problems, and not go to prison for it, you'll know. Just be ready. You have spent your entire life, from the day you were born, right up to this very moment, reading this sentence, coming to where you are right now. Look around you. Are you content with where you are right now? Are you where you want to be? If so, continue to march. If not, what are you going to do? What's your plan? Get and keep your mind, body, and spirit right. Pray. Lift. Run. Read. Shoot. And teach your kids to do those things.”

A third law enforcement source told The News they are aware of Gendron’s writings involving the quality of different rifles. The shooter ended up using a Bushmaster X-15, a version of the AR-15 rifle, police have reported.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:20 p.m. No.16353162   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16353040

>https://archive.ph/aQaky

A secretive Pentagon program that started on Trump’s last day in office just ended. The mystery has not.

Control of a remarkable 6 percent of the Internet was handed over to a Florida company as part of a cybersecurity pilot project. Now the Pentagon has taken all 175 million IP address spaces back.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:23 p.m. No.16353186   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>16353161

>Authorities investigating if retired federal agent knew of Buffalo mass shooting plans in advance

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

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:31 p.m. No.16353227   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3231 >>3238 >>3254

Another Nazi who surrendered at Azovstal: Lapeev Yaroslav Sergeevich

Born on 06/18/1996, registered in Kharkov.

Seen in fan photos. Judging by the tattoos - a Satanist. There is a huge tattoo of Baphomet on the chest and back.

He served in the Azov Special Forces Unit (Azov Regiment) of the military unit 3057 of the NSU with the rank of junior lieutenant (as of 03/19/22) as a scout of the special forces reconnaissance combat group.

He took part in the hostilities in the Donbass, was involved in the genocide of the population, robberies, looting and killings of civilians.

Anonymous ID: fe18d2 May 27, 2022, 4:46 p.m. No.16353289   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>3307

>>16353272

>https://www.ae.utexas.edu/news/armand-chaput-from-the-cia-to-ut-austin

Armand Chaput: From the CIA to UT Austin

Armand Chaput, a senior lecturer in the Department of Aerospace Engineering and Engineering Mechanics at UT Austin (Texas ASE/EM), encourages students to keep an open mind about their careers. In a recent lecture to a group of underclassmen, Chaput detailed the odd places his aerospace engineering degree took him—from foreign continents to a few “nonexistent” locations during the Cold War as an intelligence officer in the CIA. For many students, it was an exciting opportunity to hear the extraordinary places an engineering degree can take them, and for Chaput, it was a secret he kept from most people for many years.

“Up until 1993 I was not allowed to say anything about the CIA except what I did as an analyst,” Chaput said. “But I did a lot of other things that popped up and were were interesting.”

Chaput decided early his dream job was designing airplanes, but it almost didn’t happen. After flunking his first calculus class as an undergraduate, Chaput had to retake the course but it set him on an educational path that not only cemented his drive to succeed but enabled almost everything that followed.

“The dumbest thing I ever did was to flunk calculus and the smartest was to retake it and make an A,” Chaput said.

After graduating with his Ph.D. from Texas A&AM at age 24, Chaput served as an Army officer followed by ten years working for the CIA, where he was initially recruited to work as an aerospace system analyst. Instead, he opted to become a clandestine services officer which involved months of specialized training and overseas assignments.

“After seven straight years in College Station, I really wanted to do something more exciting so when given the option I jumped at it,” Chaput explained.

Along the way he learned conversational Japanese and worked undercover as a business consultant. His consulting experience later led to a CIA assignment as an economic analyst which he credits to his engineering education.

“My Ph.D. thesis was on matrix methods of structural analysis,” Chaput said, “and I was one of the few people at the CIA who understood matrix methods well enough to do economic input-output analysis.”

Later, Chaput returned to aerospace engineering through another analyst assisgnment involving reverse engineering of human source and spy satellite data on a Soviet bomber.

Next came an assignment to the Department of State where Chaput served as a member of the U.S. Strategic Arms Limitation Treaty negotiating team in Geneva, Switzerland. Chaput said he, “immensely enjoyed life as a diplomat.”

Chaput’s last CIA overseas assignment took him to the jungles of Africa as a member of a U.S. Air Force team searching for a crashed foreigh bomber. His CIA operational experience and jungle training helped the team find the crash site after a three week search.

Chaput said he has no regrets on the journey his career took and that, “the recipe for an interesting career is to get a good education, don’t be afraid to take risks, and have fun.”

“My early career was interesting,” Chaput said. “I had a plan but I wasn’t afraid to change it so when people said, ‘Hey would you be interested in..?’, I was often off to another adventure.’”

Before joining Texas ASE/EM, Chaput’s aerospace industry career included positions as Manager of Advanced Design and Chief Engineerof the National Aerospace Plane at General Dynamics (GD). After Lockheed Martin bought GD, Chaput led LM’s early Unmanned Combat Air Vehicle effort and served as F-35 Chief Engineer for Weight. He was also on the USAF Scientific Advisory Board.

At UT Austin, Chaput has been teaching the capstone senior aircraft design course since 2008 and serves as director of the Lockheed Martin sponsored Aircraft System Laboratory. He has also served as faculty advisor for the UT AIAA Design-Build-Fly (DBF) and Association for Unmanned Vehicle Systems International (AUVSI) UAS student teams, and for the Women In Aerospace Leadership Development (WIALD) student organization. In 2016 he won an American Society for Engineering Education (ASEE) award for his systems engineering education approach.

Chaput’s advice to students is to be fearless in considering career opportunities and to take chances, particularly when you’re young. He said his career has been interesting and he has no regrets.

“The world doesn’t follow your plan,” Chaput said. “The world is happening on its own and if I had stuck to my original plan, I’d probably be sitting in a recliner somewhere reading James Bond novels and wondering about what might have been.”