Anonymous ID: cd4d54 April 8, 2020, 4:41 p.m. No.8728092   🗄️.is đź”—kun   >>8173

>>8727807

>>8727671

>>8727772

Good thing I saved the video! He had to delete it!

 

TruthHammerMedium starMedium starMedium star

@TruthHammer888

The rest of thread taken down.

Numerous friends of AS have reported me today for harassment. Trying to save this account.

 

My position is a citizen has a right to go to an open public trial. Period.

1:02 AM · Apr 8, 2020·Twitter Web App

 

https://twitter.com/TruthHammer888/status/1247766839477694464

 

Baby QAnon Was Just Arrested

BABY ALL GROWN UP

The feds arrested the self-proclaimed QAnon founder after he posted images of NFL players’ brain scans.

 

Will Sommer

Published Apr. 07, 2020 8:35PM ET

 

In the bizarre world of QAnon conspiracy theorists, 29-year-old Austin Steinbart was a rising star. A segment of the pro-Trump conspiracy theory group believed he was the mysterious “Q,” the anonymous internet figure whose clues have convinced a portion of the president’s base that Donald Trump is engaged in a shadowy war against pedophile-cannibals in the Democratic Party.

 

Steinbart—dubbed “Baby Q” by his fans—claimed he could get away with anything because he was a super-spy for Trump. In online arguments, Steinbart insisted he should have been arrested “100 times over” for his actions. And the fact that he hadn’t been arrested for, say, threatening to kill the Queen of Denmark was proof that Trump had given him immunity from prosecution.

 

“Seems like I should have been ARRESTED by now, eh?” Steinbart tweeted to one of his foes in late March, adding a sarcastic thinking-face emoji.

 

A few days later, FBI agents arrested him……

 

…Steinbart first came to law enforcement attention in mid-March, when he posted footage he had shot at a Los Angeles mental health clinic on YouTube. While getting a brain scan at the clinic at his parents’ request, according to prosecutors, Steinbart gained access to a computer and started filming the screen as he went through other patients’ records.

 

"Steinbart gained unauthorized access to protected patient information on the clinic's computer and recorded the patient information in a video," prosecutors wrote in a court record.

 

Those files included a folder marked “NFL,” which contained entries about dozens of former professional football players. Steinbart filmed himself going through doctor’s notes and a brain scan for football commentator and former player Terry Bradshaw before posting the video on YouTube.

 

“You tell me whether or not I’d be in huge trouble for hacking these famous people’s medical records if I wasn’t Q,” Steinbart said in the video, before describing another player’s brain as a “little hole-y.”

 

The clinic confirmed to the FBI that the patient records were genuine, according to an affidavit. Court documents don’t name the clinic, but Steinbart claims in his video that he was at a branch of Amen Clinics, a chain of medical offices that performs brain imaging…

 

…Steinbart was arrested on March 31 on an extortion charge related to his video about the tech company, and released from jail on Friday pending further hearings. It’s not clear whether he’ll face future charges over posting the NFL players’ medical records.

 

For his rival QAnon promoters, Steinbart’s arrest was an occasion for celebration, as his central argument — that he could never be arrested — appeared to be conclusively proven false.

 

“Onto the next chapter,” tweeted rival figure Jordan Sather, who has urged his own followers to drink bleach to cure diseases.

 

Steinbart can continue to use the internet under the terms of his release — as long as he submits to court-ordered monitoring.

 

https://www.thedailybeast.com/baby-qanon-was-just-arrested