Anonymous ID: 35c415 April 7, 2025, 10:33 a.m. No.22879379   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9444

“I’m Still Waiting For Prosecutions.” Fitton On FBI Employee Behind J6 Targeting Receiving Promotion

 

12:17

 

https://rumble.com/embed/v6pl6oj/?pub=4

Anonymous ID: 35c415 April 7, 2025, 10:47 a.m. No.22879444   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22879379

Fitton is pissed that Kash and Bondi are allowing this guy that treated all J6s as terrorists. He's asking why they are putting these people in a position of power.

Anonymous ID: 35c415 April 7, 2025, 11 a.m. No.22879482   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9505 >>9547 >>9563

DEI disaster: Miami police officer ‘Shenequa’ accidentally shoots another cop during routine call…

April 7, 2025 (5 hours ago)1/2

 

How many people have to get shot, maimed, or killed before we admit that diversity hires are destroying law enforcement? Time and time again, we’ve watched female officers make already dangerous situations worse—because they’re physically, emotionally, and mentally unfit for the demands of front-line police work. And we’re not cherry-picking some isolated incident. We’ve covered this DEI disaster over and over because it keeps happening. But most people are too afraid to state the obvious: women are not the same as men, and they can’t do everything a man can do—especially when force, control, and quick judgment are required in life-or-death situations.

 

The story we’re about to share is yet another example of how women simply aren’t hardwired to handle high-stress, high-velocity situations like those that happen daily on the front lines of law enforcement. We’ve covered a slew of these stories before, and one in particular comes to mind:

 

Revolver:

If you’re pulled over by a lady cop, it’s time to hunker down and crank up those survival instincts—because odds are, you’re about to become the victim of a “whoopsie” moment. We see it all the time: female cops, unable to handle the stress and danger of the job, buckling under pressure and either losing total control of the situation or accidentally discharging their weapon.

Who hasn’t seen a clip where a female officer gets the tables turned on her and ends up taken down by the perp? Most of the time, these situations escalate to the point where male bystanders have to step in and save the day.

It’s dangerous for everyone involved and puts the public at serious risk.

Let’s be honest, we’ve all seen some version of this scenario play out online, leaving people wondering why women are on the frontlines in law enforcement. And who can forgetKim Potter—the lady cop who accidentally pulled her gun instead of her Taser and killed a thug?Say what you will about the case, but the point for this argument is that she grabbed the wrong weapon.

 

This same type of story is playing out again, this time in Florida. A black man was pulled over by cops, and he told them he was carrying a holstered gun. But while the female officer was retrieving the gun, she somehow managed to shoot him.

 

Watch: MP4

 

Once again, we’re watching the same tired DEI script play out—another female cop disaster unfolds, right on cue.

 

This DEI disaster comes courtesy of a black female officer named Shenequa Stringer, who accidentally shot a fellow cop in the leg after completely misjudging a situation she had zero physical or mental control over. The incident itself happened a while back, but the bodycam footage was released a couple of months ago—and, not-so-shockingly, it barely made a blip in the media.

 

And let’s face the truth – this wasn’t a split-second mistake by some seasoned, street-smart cop. This was the fallout of a DEI hire—a woman who never should’ve been on the force to begin with. And like always, the public is the one left paying the price.

 

The situation was a complete mess from the jump. It started with a call about a man supposedly running around with a gun. Officer Shenequa Stringer was the first to arrive. She saw the suspect reach into his pocket and pull out an object—unknown to her at the time. It wasn’t a gun. It was a lighter. But that didn’t stop Shenequa from drawing her weapon and advancing. Another officer soon pulled up, just as a scuffle broke out between Shenequa and the suspect.They hit the ground wrestling. That’s when the second officer jumped in to assist, and within seconds, Shenequa’s gun discharged—right into the leg of her fellow cop.

 

https://revolver.news/2025/04/dei-disaster-miami-police-officer-shenequa-accidentally-shoots-another-cop-during-routine-call/

Anonymous ID: 35c415 April 7, 2025, 11:04 a.m. No.22879505   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9547

>>22879482

2/2

Watch: https://youtu.be/mfMpPJOmw2A

 

The most shocking part of this story is that the officer

 

Yahoo News:

A Miami Beach officer has not been suspended for her part in a friendly-fire shooting on the Venetian Causeway over the weekend, police told the Miami Herald. However, an internal affairs investigation is open — and her role in the department has since changed.

 

Shenaqua Stringer, who’s been with the department for eight years and two months, was identified as the cop who shot fellow officer Fabio Bolanos during a scufflewith a man possibly experiencing a mental health crisis, Miami Beach police spokesperson Christopher Bess said.

 

It’s unclear where Bolanos, who’s served in the department for eight years and nine months, was shot. Bess said he’s been cleared from Jackson Memorial Hospital and is at home. “He is recovering and in good spirits,” he added.In a shocking—but very typical—DEI twist, Shenequa faced no real consequences. No suspension, no termination. Just a quiet reassignment.Business as usual.

The Yahoo News piece goes on:

The department’s Internal Affairs division is investigating the incident. Though Stringer is not suspended,she faces administrative repercussions, such as leave or reassignment, Bess said.

 

Police could not confirm exactly what type of administrative action but he noted the decision to change her role is standard for officers who used their firearm in an incident.

 

This entire mess was a preventable disaster—just another predictable side effect of putting woke quotas above public safety. We should be focused on keeping people safe—not chasing DEI goals or checking boxes to make activists happy.Every industry DEI touches goes downhill, but in law enforcement, it’s not just annoying—it can be deadly.

 

Thankfully, President Trump is fighting to end this charity-based hiring scheme, but rooting out this dangerous movement will take some serious effort and follow-through. If we don’t stay diligent and serious about fixing it, we won’t have a country left to protect.

 

https://revolver.news/2025/04/dei-disaster-miami-police-officer-shenequa-accidentally-shoots-another-cop-during-routine-call/

Anonymous ID: 35c415 April 7, 2025, 12:21 p.m. No.22879789   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>9805

JONATHAN TURLEY: Biden DOJ behind even the Times in pursuing alleged Hunter corruption

Biden DOJ was full of Sgt. Schultzes when it came to obvious corruption

By Jonathan Turley Fox News1/2(Turley gets angry, it’s really corrupt)

Published April 6, 2025 8:54am EDT

 

Jason Galanis, an ex-business associate of Hunter Biden, tells 'Hannity' why President Donald Trump commuted his prison sentence. For years, some of us have written about the Biden family’s multimillion-dollar influence-peddling operation and the Justice Department’s refusal to charge Hunter Biden with being an unregistered foreign agent.Now, years later, The New York Times has found evidence suggesting that the former president's son was acting as a foreign agent as early as the Obama administration, when his father was vice president.

 

Last August, the New York Times ran a story about Hunter Biden seeking help from the government for his client, the Ukrainian energy company Burisma. A recent follow-up story had damaging new details:

 

Hunter Biden sought assistance from the U.S. governmentfor a potentially lucrative energy project in Italy while his father was vice president, according to newly released records and interviews.

 

The records, which the Biden administration had withheld for years, indicate that Hunter Biden wrote at least one letter to the U.S. ambassador to Italy in 2016 seeking assistance for the Ukrainian gas company Burisma, where he was a board member…The State Department did not release the actual text of the letter.

 

That is precisely what many of us have been writing about in askingwhy Hunter Biden was not charged with being an unregistered foreign agent, as Paul Manafort, Bob Menendez and others were under similar circumstances.

The Foreign Agents Registration Act (FARA) covers anyone acting as "agent of a foreign principal," including but not limited to (1)attempting to influence federal officialsor the public on domestic or foreign policy or the political or public interests in favor of a foreign country; (2)collecting or disbursing moneyand or other things of value within the United States; or (3)representing the interests of the foreign principalbefore U.S. Government officials or agencies.

 

It is sweeping. So is the definition of what a "foreign principal" encompasses, including "a foreign government, a foreign political party, any person outside the United States (except U.S. citizens who are domiciled within the United States), and any entity organized under the laws of a foreign country or having its principal place of business in a foreign country."

 

As I previously wrote,Special Counsel RobertMueller seemed to charge by the gross under the act. He hit a line of Trump associates with such allegations fromManaforttoMichael FlynntoGeorge PapadopoulostoRick Gates. The Justice Departmentused FARA to conduct searches on the homes and files of former Trump counsel Rudy Giuliani, Republican attorney Victoria Toensing and others==.

However, the Justice Department andSpecial Counsel David Weiss seemed to tie themselves into knotsto avoid tripping the wire on FARA even as it discussed Hunter Biden’s work for foreign clients.

 

The government alsoresisted FOIA requestsfrom the Times and other media. More from the above article:

 

The request was initially filed under the Freedom of Information Act, or FOIA, in June 2021. After nearly eight months, the State Department had not released any records, and The Times sued.About 18 months later, the department moved to close the case afterreleasing thousands of pages of recordsnone of which shed lighton Hunter Biden’s outreach to the U.S. government.

 

The Times challenged the thoroughness of the search, noting that thedepartment had failed to produce responsive recordscontained in a cache of files connected to a laptop that Mr. Biden had abandoned at a Delaware repair shop. The department resumed the search and periodic productions, but had produced few documents related to Mr. Bidenuntil the week after his father ended his re-election campaignand endorsed Vice President Harris for the Democratic nomination.

 

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/jonathan-turley-biden-doj-behind-even-times-pursuing-alleged-hunter-corruption

Anonymous ID: 35c415 April 7, 2025, 12:24 p.m. No.22879805   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>22879789

2/2

Now we have a copy of a key letter from Hunter Bidenthat gives us an insight into the evidence buriedfor years (BEHIND NYTS FIREWALL):

 

The State Departmentlast week released a letterhe wrote while his father was serving as vice president in which he sought assistance from the U.S. government for the Ukrainian energy company Burisma.

 

In the previously unpublished June 2016 letter onBurisma letterhead to the U.S. ambassador to Italy, Mr. Bidenrequested "support and guidance" in arranging a meeting with an Italian official to resolve regulatory hurdles to geothermal energy projects Burisma was pursuing in the Tuscany region…

 

The letter requested help arranging a meetingbetween Burisma officials and Enrico Rossi, the president of the Tuscany regional government at the time, "to introduce geothermal projects led by Burisma Group, to highlight their social and economic benefits for local communities and develop a common action plan that would lead to further development of the Tuscany Region."

 

How could any Justice Department official, let alone a special counsel, read that letter and not see the glaring disconnectbetween the handling of the caseinvolving Joe Biden’s son and others like Manafort?

 

The letter references a trip on which Hunter Biden, as was his pattern,used official travel with his fatherto make these business connections. The letter mentions meeting akey ambassador on Air Force Twoas he seeks assistance for his client.

 

The ambassador then sent a follow-up letter saying he knew the president of Tuscany and identified aCommerce Department official working at the U.S. embassywho could help "see where our interests may overlap."

 

It was another example of alleged influence peddling through his father and work for a foreign client in lobbying the government.

 

During this period, theJustice Department seemedto beon a hair-trigger for FARA charges. Yet,when it came to Hunter Biden, the entire department seemedcomposed of legal Sgt. Schultzes.

 

Many in the media attacked those of us who have been writing about this corruption stretching back to the Obama administration. Many simply insisted that there was no evidence, while taking no steps to find out.While the media was unrelenting in investigating Trump allegations of Russian collusion and business improprieties, it took a largely passive stance in pursuing this story.

 

Even The New York Times, which can be credited with pursuing this FOIA information, did comparably little with the ample evidence of corruption by the Bidens in securing millions through influence peddling.

 

What remains is a corruption scandal involving not onlywhat the Bidens did but also what the Justice Department did not do over this extended period. It appears to heed the advice not of whistleblowers but politicians like former Sen. Claire McCaskill (D-Mo.) that "everybody needs to back off" the influence-peddling story.

 

Of course, Joe Biden ultimately broke his repeated promise not to pardon his son.What was most notable, however, was that not only did he pardon him for any crimes from human trafficking to tax evasion but also for a period running from Jan. 1, 2014 to Dec. 1, 2024.

 

This letter explains why such a sweeping, extended pardon was needed. Yet,in the end, the greatest indictment from this scandal was of the Justice Department itself.

 

https://www.foxnews.com/opinion/jonathan-turley-biden-doj-behind-even-times-pursuing-alleged-hunter-corruption

 

The Bidan Affair and Corruption is not over yet, they will engage in corruption again, if they ever got out of the corruption racket! They love it too much