Anonymous ID: 218bc6 April 11, 2025, 3:56 p.m. No.22899759   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0128 >>0310 >>0477 >>0498

A Butler, Pennsylvania man has been charged with making online threats to assault and murder President Donald Trump as well as other officials. Butler was the location of an attempt on Trump's life at a July campaign rally last year.

According to the Department of Justice, 32-year-old Shawn Monper was taken into custody by the FBI, with the assistance of the Butler Township Police Department, and was detained. A hearing is set for April 14.

On April 8, the FBI’s National Threat Operations Section received an emergency disclosure regarding threats made by a YouTube user called "Mr Satan." Authorities found that the threatening statements occurred between January 15, five days before Trump entered office again, and April 5. An investigation revealed that the internet activity associated with the account corresponded with Monper’s address.

The investigation also revealed that Monper obtained a firearms permit just after Trump’s inauguration. He allegedly wrote using the Mr Satan account in February, "I have bought several guns and been stocking up on ammo since Trump got in office." A March comment stated, "Eventually im going to do a mass shooting, and one week later he allegedly wrote, "I have been buying 1 gun a month since the election, body armor, and ammo."

Other threats outlined in the complaint included one on February 17 which stated, "Nah, we just need to start killing people, Trump, Elon, all the heads of agencies Trump appointed, and anyone who stands in the way. Remember, we are the majority, MAGA is a minority of the country, and by the time its time to make the move, they will be weakened, many will be crushed by these policies, and they will want revenge too. American Revolution 2.0."

Another comment made on March 4 stated, "im going to assassinate him myself.” This threat was made in a YouTube video titled “Live: Trump’s address to Congress."

"ICE are terrorist people, we need to start killing them," Monper allegedly wrote on March 18. On April 1, he allegedly wrote, "If I see an armed ice agent, I will consider it a domestic terrorist, and an active shooter and open fire on them."

 

https://thepostmillennial.com/breaking-butler-pa-man-charged-with-making-threats-to-assassinate-trump

Anonymous ID: 218bc6 April 11, 2025, 3:58 p.m. No.22899765   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0128 >>0310 >>0475 >>0477 >>0498

An immigration judge has ruled in favor of the Trump administration in allowing for the deportation of Mahmoud Khalil, an anti-Israel Columbia University activist who had been in the United States on a visa, which has been revoked.

Immigration judge Jamee Comans from Louisianna ruled that Khalil can be deported because of the evidence against him, The Hill reported. Khalil was arrested in March and has been placed in an immigration detention center since.

 

https://thepostmillennial.com/breaking-immigration-judge-rules-trump-admin-can-deport-mahmoud-khalil

Anonymous ID: 218bc6 April 11, 2025, 4:02 p.m. No.22899774   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>0310 >>0477 >>0498

By Jerry Dunleavy and John Solomon

Published: April 11, 2025 2:29pm

Former National Security Agency Director Mike Rogers told FBI agents that the crux of a Pulitzer Prize award-winning Washington Post story on the Russian collusion hoax was “wrong," according to newly declassified documents obtained by Just the News.

 

Admiral Rogers, who retired in 2018 after four years as National Security Agency chief and commander of U.S. Cyber Command, spoke with FBI agents and a key member of special counsel Robert Mueller’s team in June 2017, where he threw cold water on a May 2017 story by the Post titled, “Trump asked intelligence chiefs to push back against FBI collusion probe after Comey revealed its existence.”

It is not yet known whether the Post had been told prior to the May 2017 publishing of their story that Rogers was denying their characterization of his talk with Trump, but it is now known that Rogers was telling federal investigators in June 2017 that the story was bogus.

The Post story — now known to have been directly refuted by one of its main subjects the month after it published — would go on to be among the Russiagate stories published by the outlet to win a Pulitzer Prize in 2018. Trump is currently suing the Pulitzer Board for defamation for continuing to defend the awards it gave to this collusion-related story and numerous others. A Florida circuit court judge denied the Pulitzer Board’s motion to delay President Donald Trump’s defamation lawsuit against them on presidential immunity grounds.

The newly-released Rogers interview with the Mueller team shows that the then-NSA director was read a quote from The Washington Post article — that “President Trump urged [Rogers] to publicly deny the existence of any evidence of collusion during the 2016 election” — with the FBI notes stating that “Rogers responded that the media characterization was wrong, and the President had asked about the existence of SIGINT [signals intelligence] evidence only.”

The Rogers interview was among hundreds of pages of Crossfire Hurricane documents declassified by President Trump and sent to Congress by FBI Director Kash Patel.

The Pulitzer Prize Board's website said the 2018 Pulitzer Prize in National Reporting was awarded to the staffs of the Washington Post and New York Times “for deeply sourced, relentlessly reported coverage in the public interest that dramatically furthered the nation’s understanding of Russian interference in the 2016 presidential election and its connections to the Trump campaign, the President-elect’s transition team, and his eventual administration.”

Among the “Winning Works” was the story that Rogers directly refuted, listed by the Pulitzer Prize website with the title “President asked intelligence chiefs to deny collusion (Washington Post).”

 

https://justthenews.com/government/white-house/wrong-trump-nsa-director-shot-down-wapo-story-russian-collusion-hoax