Anonymous ID: f90643 June 14, 2023, 7:02 a.m. No.19005955   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>5963 >>5974

>>19005774

>โ€œIโ€™m making sure [Trump], under legitimate efforts of our Constitution, does not become the next President again

 

This Scooby-Do Villain shit is really stupid.

 

I remember, on this very board, the thoughts if would be bad, if Trump was seen as a Political Aggressor, arresting HIS opponents, which was the reason he couldn't go after the DS. Now, it's his Campaign Speech.

KEK. wow.

Anonymous ID: f90643 June 14, 2023, 7:13 a.m. No.19006003   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>19005974

>Those who are awake see clearly.

 

I rehiterate. It's STUPID. Painfully Stupid. Like nails down a chalkboard. Can't take much more of it. Surrounded by Zombies who are easily triggered, head always on a swivel, like literally at all times, waiting for some NPC to attack again, it's FUCKING FRUSTRATING!

Anonymous ID: f90643 June 14, 2023, 7:27 a.m. No.19006066   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>6172 >>6238 >>6276 >>6289

Michigan family sounds alarm on son's 'sextortion' suicide after arrests of 3 Nigerian men

 

This story discusses suicide. If you or someone you know is having thoughts of suicide, please contact the Suicide & Crisis Lifeline at 988 or 1-800-273-TALK (8255).

 

"All you've to do is cooperate with me and I won't expose you."

 

That's what one Nigerian man posing as a woman on Instagram wrote in a March 2022 message to 17-year-old Jordan DeMay before the Michigan teen took his own life.

 

"My son was smart. He was a good student. He was a great athlete," John DeMay, Jordan's father, told Fox News Digital. "Someone came to his bedroom at 3 in the morning and murdered him through Instagram when we were all sleeping at night, and we had zero chance to stop it."

 

The suspect in Jordan's death, 22-year-old Samuel Ogoshi, is one of three suspects from Lagos arrested earlier this month for allegedly hacking Instagram accounts and sexually extorting, or "sextorting," more than 100 young men online.

 

The FBI defines sextortion as a "serious crime" in which perpetrators threaten to expose a victim's sensitive or private information in exchange for sexually explicit material or money.

 

In Jordan's case, the teenager began chatting with someone he thought was a woman on Instagram under the username "dani.robertts." The account was real but had been hacked and sold to Ogoshi, who used the profile to coerce young men into sending explicit photos of themselves. He allegedly used the photos as leverage for money, according to the FBI.

 

"I can send this nudes to everyone and also send your nudes Until it goes viral," Ogoshi wrote in another message to DeMay, a senior football player at Marquette Senior High School, after the 17-year-old sent an explicit photo of himself.

 

"Just pay me rn [right now]," Ogoshi said over Instagram. "And I won't expose you."

 

"How much," Jordan responded.

 

Ogoshi demanded $1,000. Jordan sent $300, and Ogoshi threatened to expose the teenager's photo to his family and friends if he did not send more money.

 

Hours later, Jordan told Ogoshi that he was going to kill himself.

 

"Good," Ogoshi wrote. "Do that fast. Or I'll make you do it. I swear to God."

 

Federal authorities charged Ogoshi with causing DeMay's death.

 

The 17-year-old football player's tragic fate is not uncommon in America and across the world. Teens across the U.S. are falling victim to sextortion on social media.

 

As his son got older, John DeMay stopped monitoring Jordan's phone usage as much as he used to, as most parents do when their teenagers near adulthood.

 

"We didn't, I didn't monitor social media anymore. I didn't let him have social media. I had to keep him from it for a long time," DeMay explained. "I monitored his phone as much as any person ever could. I tracked them GPS. I monitored his text messages. I monitored his usage. I locked his phone down."

 

A 2018 study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Pediatrics found that nearly 15% of U.S. youth were sending "sexts," or sexual texts, while 27% of youth were receiving them.

 

The perpetrators pose as real people โ€” often as attractive women or men โ€” online and target young and vulnerable victims. They will reach out directly to victims and strike up an online conversation, gain the victims' trust one way or another and convince them to send nude photos.

 

Once the photos are exchanged, the perpetrators threaten to share them or make them public if the victims do not send money, other personal information or more explicit images.

 

The scheme pushes some teens beyond their breaking point.

 

A 2022 film called "Sextortion" describes the crime as "the hidden pandemic."

 

The film opens with the story of a 14-year-old girl from Bedford County, Virginia, who fell victim to a sextortion attempt on Facebook.

 

Daniel Harris, a married, 30-year-old Navy pilot and father from Virginia Beach posing as a teenage boy online, pressured the girl into sending explicit photos and then threatened to share them if she did not send more. The girl told her parents, who contacted law enforcement.

 

more

https://www.yahoo.com/news/michigan-family-sounds-alarm-sons-060050167.html

Anonymous ID: f90643 June 14, 2023, 7:35 a.m. No.19006100   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>19006061

>We are just being divided byโ€ฆ

Truth and LIes

That's it.

Q has the truth, but is allowing the Division to continue. Why?

 

** Pre-empting the echo chamber "More people have to wake up firstโ€ฆ" troupe,

If they're not already awake, they're not going to, until they are FORCED TO.

 

Difficult Truths.

Promises made.

Unfulfilled.

Truth Delayed is Truth Denied.

Hard Hine.

Anonymous ID: f90643 June 14, 2023, 7:48 a.m. No.19006149   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

Demons are Rising.

 

Accused Asbury Park cat rapist Bani J. Mezquititla to undergo psychiatric evaluation

 

FREEHOLD A judge Tuesday ordered a psychiatric evaluation for an Asbury Park man accused of raping, torturing, mutilating, handcuffing and killing his pet cat to determine if he is competent to proceed to trial on animal cruelty charges.

 

At a conference before Superior Court Judge Chad N. Cagan, defense attorney William Wackowski asked for his client, Bani J. Mezquititla, 18, to be evaluated.

 

Wackowski said that considering the allegations and evidence against his client, "how could competency not be a question and concern?''

 

Sevan Biramian, an assistant Monmouth County prosecutor, disagreed.

 

There's no bonafide reason to question competency, Biramian said. "There's a willful confession. There's videographic evidence that goes against any notion that this defendant is incompetent.

 

However, Cagan said prosecutors raised the issue of Mezquititla's mental health when arguing at his detention hearing in March that he is dangerous.

 

"The court finds, based on the circumstances and the record that's been presented before me, that there is a doubt as to his fitness to proceed, and the court is going to grant the defendant's motion to have the defendant evaluated for fitness to proceed,'' Cagan said.

 

Mezquititla is charged with two counts of third-degree animal cruelty, each carrying potential prison terms up to five years. One of the charges alleges that Mezquititla tormented, tortured or abused his cat, Ellie, resulting in her death. The other charge alleges he used the animal in a sexual manner.

 

Biramian, at Mezquititla's detention hearing, alleged that the defendant confessed to the abuse, saying it began in December when he started masturbating in front of the pet. The conduct escalated to repeated incidents of sexual intercourse with the pet as well as sexually violating her with a pencil, Biramian alleged.

 

In addition, Mezquititla is accused of torturing Ellie by repeatedly strangling her with a pulley device consisting of a phone-charger cord, door knob and dresser knob, watching her struggle to breathe as he yanked the cord up and down.

 

Mezquititla bound the cat's paws behind her back with miniature handcuffs during the torture, Biramian has alleged. He also cut off her tongue and part of her jaw while still alive, and threw her out of his apartment window once she was dead, the assistant prosecutor has alleged.

 

In reaching his decision that the defendant should undergo an evaluation, Cagan cited the words of Superior Court Judge Henry P. Butehorn, who presided over the detention hearing and ordered Mezquititla held without bail to await trial.

 

Butehorn, at the hearing, said Mezquititla explained his handcuffing of the cat as pretending to be a police officer and arresting the animal for having run away, Cagan noted.

 

Cagan also noted the other allegations, including that Mezquititla sexually penetrated the cat, violated her with a pencil and dissected parts of her face while she was still alive,

 

Butehorn at the March hearing said Mezquititla's alleged acts showed "a depravity of mind that goes well beyond the animal cruelty statute,'' Cagan noted.

 

Mezquititla was arrested March 2 after he told his roommate the cat had run away, but then changed his story to say he threw the pet out of their apartment window. The roommate went outside, retrieved the animal's corpse and brought it to the Asbury Park Police Department.

 

Authorities then found video and photos of the abuse - some allegedly showing Mezquititla smirking as Ellie was struggling to breathe while being strangled.

 

The only plea offer on the table is for the defendant to plead guilty to both cruelty charges in exchange for a five-year prison sentence

 

https://www.yahoo.com/news/accused-asbury-park-cat-rapist-092633941.html

Anonymous ID: f90643 June 14, 2023, 8:23 a.m. No.19006311   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>19006295

Again, when we have TRAITORS in office, the LAW will never change.

 

There are people, hopelessly entranched in the Mental Prison Box that these very TRAITORS built.

 

GAAAAAWWWWDDD

this is never going to END!

Day in and day out, moar hearing that get nowhere. He said, she said. Finger pointing, but NOTHING CHANGES!