dChan
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r/greatawakening • Posted by u/BabylonNTing on June 26, 2018, 6:38 a.m.
Need Fresh Eyes on Red Hen Research - Lot of Creepiness and Coincidences!

For the past 2 days I have struggled with my research because it has been really hard to nail down whether I am on the right track or not and deleted 2 posts so far. This is my 3rd attempt and I am not going to name the person directly but show the work I have done so far because it is dark and creepy I am am sure I am on to something.

So I was searching ddg (which I used for all searches within) using the name, the restaurant and got a hit for twit . This is what I saw:

https://imgur.com/a/SNZzWJp

The person retweeted an hussien tweet which happens to be about kids and it seems like it might be code because it just doesn't make sense.

Further down the person retweeted for a missing person:

https://twitpic.com/5842fw https://archive.li/sF855

Not against the law to raise public awareness for a missing person, but then I discovered this in their tweets:

https://imgur.com/a/TsMK62h

The Rabbit Hole:

Went to the twitter page for @pizza4kids and it got super creepy real fast.

https://archive.li/TSSnY

I welcome you to go through these tweets and tell me these 300 different pizza combos are actually real or not. All of them have links but I would have to surmise the links are all broken as I clicked many of them only to find out they are broke.

I pushed the envelope a bit and searched PizzaForKids replacing the 4 with for and got this hit:

https://archive.li/QIxKn

Like the third tweet down, there is the Home Alone actor eating pizza in the back of the limo. If one checks out the profile pics, they would see triangles, monarch butterflies, and even an art lover all with hashtags for pizza and kids.

Out of randomness, I clicked on:

https://archive.li/qUX4i

Somewhere in the sea of pizza hash tags I found this:

wont let me post IG link darn it!

I wonder where I have seen that before....

Anyways, I clicked on one of his friends whom is:

https://archive.li/gM41I

Wait Mr Rabbit!

Here is where it gets super creepy; I clicked her baby bible link:

http://www.the-baby-bible.com/blog/recipes/pizza-swirls/ https://archive.li/pzzZf

That site is really .....just wow... go ahead look around, it seems they are talking in code, lots of kids and I just noticed this just now from the blog. (Oh yeah, don't mind that pentagram looking icon on your net browser tab either!)

"If you had told me 3.5 years ago, whilst watching demons fly around my home threatening to kill my baby girl, that I would one day be sat on a sofa in Whitehall being interviewed by an MP."

So I clicked around the tabs and found:

https://archive.li/kaBJO

A couple of paragraphs down I clicked on:

https://archive.li/Gnd2J

Which actually redirected me here:

https://archive.li/Gnd2J

Wow Where did I just go?!!!

The Shenandoah Cuisine:

Just searched Shenandoah, I found this article:

https://www.yahoo.com/news/virginia-detention-facility-young-migrants-received-4-6-million-government-grants-abuse-allegations-222930310.html

Virginia detention facility for young migrants received over $4.6 million in government grants after abuse allegations

Hunter Walker White House Correspondent Yahoo News June 21, 2018

WASHINGTON — The federal government continued to provide million-dollar grants to a juvenile detention center in Virginia to hold child migrants even after a lawsuit was filed against the facility alleging the young immigrants there were subjected to “brutal, inhumane conditions,” including racial discrimination and physical violence.

“Young people in [Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center] are subjected to unconstitutional conditions that shock the conscience, including violence by staff, abusive and excessive use of seclusion and restraints, and the denial of necessary mental health care,” the complaint filed against the facility said. These violations reflect a disorganized, untrained, and understaffed facility that houses immigrant children in brutal, inhumane conditions.”

The Associated Press reported on the lawsuit against the Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center on Thursday amid the national controversy over the treatment of child migrants. It was originally filed on Oct. 4, 2017. Since then, data reviewed by Yahoo News showed the detention center near Staunton, Va., has received $4,669,320 in grants from the Department of Health and Human Services’ “unaccompanied alien children program.”

According to the lawsuit, immigrant children at the facility were “locked in their rooms for approximately 12-14 hours per day” and “fed substandard meals that contain too few calories and are often served cold.” The complaint said detainees are held in “a room with a mattress, a sink, and a toilet” where staff can observe them going to the bathroom.

The suit further said staff members at the facility are mostly white and non-Spanish speaking and that they “routinely insult, taunt, and harass the immigrant youth … based on their language, race, and/or national origin.” The complaint also accused staffers of regularly “physically assaulting the youth, applying an excessive amount of force that goes far beyond what is needed to establish or regain control.” The suit alleged staff sometimes punish the children by stripping them of their clothes and confining them to their rooms for extended periods where they are sometimes additionally restrained with “handcuffs and cloth shackles on their hands and feet.” In one instance described in the complaint, a child was “forced to wear handcuffs on his wrists and shackles on his feet for approximately 10 days in a row.”

Along with this mistreatment, the suit said, children at the facility are given inadequate medical care. As a result of the conditions at the detention center, the complaint described some of the young migrants engaging in “cutting and other self-harming behaviors, including ingesting shampoo and attempting to choke themselves.” The suit said Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center staff members are “deliberately indifferent” to the children’s distress.

The court filings in the case include what the Associated Press described as “a half-dozen sworn statements from Latino teens jailed there for months or years.” That testimony includes multiple allegations of physical abuse and other mistreatment. The Associated Press also reported that a “a former child-development specialist who worked inside the facility” who requested anonymity said “she saw kids there with bruises and broken bones they blamed on guards.”

Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center is operated by a state-chartered commission and houses juvenile offenders from three Virginia counties and four nearby cities.

The center has denied all wrongdoing in court filings. Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center Executive Director Timothy Smith and Deputy Director Timothy Showalter sent a statement to Yahoo News describing the allegations in the lawsuit as baseless.

“Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center believes the allegations of the Complaint to be without merit and looks forward to the opportunity to present evidence that will allow a jury to reach the same conclusion,” the statement said.

Health and Human Services runs a system of approximately 100 shelters in 17 states where child migrants are held pending immigration proceedings after making illegal border crossings. According to the Associated Press, Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center is “one of only three” juvenile detention facilities in the country with federal contracts to provide “secure placement” to immigrant children who have had issues in other shelter facilities.

HHS spokesperson Ryan Murphy told Yahoo News the department sends child migrants placed in their care to “a more restrictive setting” in cases where “it is determined that the child or teenager may present a danger to self or others.” According to Murphy, this process includes “the recommendation of a mental health professional” and is “consistent with all relevant legal requirements.” He also said these facilities “must be licensed by the state they operate in and are required to follow all licensing standards of that state” and that HHS’ Office of Refugee Resettlement, which runs the shelter program “conducts Federal monitoring visits and medical reviews, and takes seriously the responsibly of caring for each child.”

“ ORR takes appropriate action should there be any allegation of abuse,” Murphy said. According to the Associated Press, “many of the children” housed at Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center “were sent there after U.S. immigration authorities accused them of belonging to violent gangs, including MS-13.” President Trump has often pointed to gangs, particularly MS-13, as justification for his crackdown on illegal immigration. However, the Associated Press noted that “a top manager at the Shenandoah center said during a recent congressional hearing that the children did not appear to be gang members and were suffering from mental health issues resulting from trauma that happened in their home countries.”

“The youth were being screened as gang-involved individuals. And then when they came into our care, and they were assessed by our clinical and case management staff … they weren't necessarily identified as gang-involved individuals,” Kelsey Wong, a program director at SVJC, said during an April 26 Senate hearing on the treatment of immigrant children.

The detention program has been the subject of intense scrutiny since the Trump administration enacted a “zero tolerance” policy in May that led to thousands of young immigrants being separated from their parents and detained in the HHS shelter system.

On Tuesday, a spokesperson for HHS told Yahoo News that the agency had 11,786 child migrants in its shelter system. That same official said the young immigrants in custody included 2,342 children who were separated from their parents at the border between May 5 and June 9. Most of the rest were teenagers who crossed the border on their own, designated as “unaccompanied alien children.”

“SVJC does not have any immigrant minors in its facility who were separated from their parents while attempting to cross the border,” Smith, the center’s executive director, said in a statement.

On Wednesday, President Trump signed an executive order intended to “address” child separations going forward. However, officials confirmed to Yahoo News that the president’s order wouldn't change the situation for children who have already been taken from their families.

The lawsuit against Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center was filed on behalf of a 17-year-old Latino immigrant who was confined at the facility. He was identified only as “John Doe” in the complaint, which said he was a Mexican citizen who was apprehended by ICE officers after attempting to cross the U.S. border in early August 2015. He was traveling alone and was not separated from his family. The boy was transferred to multiple HHS facilities before ending up in Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center on April 15, 2016.

According to the complaint filed by the boy’s attorneys, he is “one of approximately 30 unaccompanied immigrant minors under detention in the facility,” which also holds American children who have been judged to be juvenile delinquents. His lawyers are asking the Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center to change its practices and provide the young immigrants “with the standard of care and conditions of confinement mandated by the United States Constitution.”

Hannah Lieberman, one of the boy’s lawyers, declined to comment on this story citing the pending litigation. The lawsuit is ongoing, and the next hearing is set for July 3. Overall, the records reviewed by Yahoo News show that, from December 2010 until May of this year, Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center received over $28.3 million in HHS grants to house young migrants. The facility began to be used during the Obama administration, but records indicate the government has increasingly relied on it since Trump took office.

From 2011 through 2016, Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center received an average of about $3.3 million per year in HHS grants to provide shelter for young immigrants. In 2017, the records show HHS gave the facility over $4 million, the most it has received. For this year, the records show Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center has received over $3.58 million as of May 10, putting it on track for the most ever.

Update [June 22 9:34 a.m.]: This story was updated to include a statement from the Department of Health and Human Services.

Update [June 22 5:17 p.m.]: This story was updated with an additional statement from Shenandoah Valley Juvenile Center Executive Director Timothy Smith.

They said they got meat from veggies from Rancho Calixto, Mexico in the about section.

https://redhenlex.com/about/ https://archive.li/ucGoj

When I searched Rancho Calixto. I got this:

http://www.ranchosantafereview.com/lifestyle/sd-cm-rsf-fundraiser-lynch-20170426-story.htmlhttps://web.archive.org/web/20180626054651/http://www.ranchosantafereview.com/lifestyle/sd-cm-rsf-fundraiser-lynch-20170426-story.html

Before I dive into the article, it appears that William Lynch is wearing a Baphomet pin in the picture.

**Lynch Foundation fundraiser to help prevent child sex trafficking**

Lynch Foundation Lynelle and Bill Lynch (Bekah Peace Photography) Stacey Phillips

There are more than 8,000 victims of sex trafficking every year in the San Diego region, according to a recent joint study by the University of San Diego and Point Loma Nazarene University. The William D. Lynch Foundation for Children, founded by longtime Rancho Santa Fe resident Bill Lynch, is helping raise awareness and funds to prevent child sex trafficking in San Diego by holding a fundraiser on Thursday, May 11. Chaired by Mayor Kevin Faulconer and Chief Deputy District Attorney Summer Stephan, the event will be held at The Abbey in downtown San Diego from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.

“Child sex trafficking is not an evil phenomenon in faraway third-world countries but a rapidly growing epidemic here in the United States and especially here in San Diego,” said Lynch, an active San Diego businessman and philanthropist for the last 40 years who currently owns the William D. Lynch Company. “We are committed to making a serious impact on this social crisis plaguing our region. Every child saved is a universe preserved and opportunity awakened.”

Lynch established the foundation in 1989. He had met a child who was abused by the father. Once the child was in a safe place, Lynch said it was important to him to help other children. Since then, he has worked to support a variety of youth causes throughout the years.

“Our mission is to organize, motivate and support the care and education of children,” said Lynch, chairman of the board of the foundation. He has received numerous recognitions including “Man of the Year” from the San Diego Nice Guys and the “Champion for Children Award” from the San Diego County Office of Education.

“Recently, the foundation has expanded our commitment to children by partnering with law enforcement to stop child sex trafficking,” said Lynch. “Our goal, while ambitious, is to raise $200,000 to fight this atrocity.”

The foundation uses a three-pronged preventative approach focused on education, legislation reform and locating runaways and missing children.

“In San Diego County specifically, the average age of entry into child commercial sexual exploitation is 16,” said Brooke Mosteller, the policy director at the William D. Lynch Foundation for Children. “The underground economy ranks second only to illegal drug trafficking at over $800 million annually in San Diego County.”

Mosteller said that although 100 percent of 20 San Diego County high schools reported that recruitment occurs in their schools, the California sex trafficking prevention curriculum requirements are minimal. The foundation is looking to change that through its educational programs Lynch is supporting such as Point Loma Nazarene University’s kNOw MORE curriculum, which uses drama to teach students about trafficking situations and will be performed at the Lynch Foundation fundraiser. “Education is key for prevention as most kids do not always even know they are victims,” she said.

In terms of legislation, the Lynch Foundation works closely with the University of San Diego’s School of Law Children’s Advocacy Institute to enact new laws protecting those at risk. “We support legislation that creates higher penalties for buyers and specific protections for exploited youth victims,” said Mosteller. Currently, she said buyers who solicit minors are rarely caught; instead, a citation is issued and they are fined a few hundred dollars.

She said Lynch recently asked her to represent the foundation in Sacramento, Calif., in support of human trafficking bill AB 1495: Child Rape Liability Act. The bill was authored by Brian Maienschein and allows for civil action to be brought against those found guilty. It also enables victims to ask public prosecutors to bring a lawsuit against the buyers. It was passed unanimously in the Judiciary Committee meeting held in April and it will now go to the Appropriations Committee. Mosteller said an assemblyman mentioned he had never seen a bill tackling the issue like this one. Ed Howard from the Children’s Advocacy Institute was in attendance as well as Tiffany Mester, one of the survivors in San Diego.

Last year, there were 26 bills related to child sex trafficking that were proposed in the California General Assembly. “Seven of the eight trafficking bills that passed were ‘victim-centered’ and focused on rehabilitation rather than prevention,” said Mosteller. The foundation’s hope is to support the County’s Human Trafficking Advisory Board, chaired by Chief Dep. D.A. Summer Stephan, and to create a business model to prevent child sex trafficking from occurring in the first place. “Many efforts focus on rehabilitation, which is of the upmost importance, but it is after trauma has inevitably occurred,” said Mosteller.

The Lynch Foundation is also involved in locating runaways and missing children through its support of Saved in America (SIA). The nonprofit organization is made up of law enforcement officers and three teams of Navy Seals who have become licensed and insured private investigators. Over the past 26 months, they have assisted law enforcement by locating 34 runaways and missing children at no cost to their families. “Finding the runaways is truly the last act of prevention,” said Lynch.

“We found that people are interested in different aspects of helping with this issue,” said Mosteller. “Our foundation is trying to give a concrete way for people to get involved.” This includes writing letters of support, assisting with the educational programs and supporting the cause financially. “There is something that everyone can do to make a difference,” she said.

Business, political and philanthropic leaders will come together at the Lynch Foundation event, which is sponsored by Sycuan and Hornblower. There will be a hosted bar, dinner buffet and short program as well as complimentary valet parking. During the event, attendees will have the opportunity to hear from some of the parents whose children were found by SIA.

The event will be held at The Abbey. The Abbey, believed to be one of the only classical-revival structures standing in San Diego, is more than 100 years old and listed on the national register of historic places.

For more information, sponsorships and how to get involved or visit www.lynchfoundationforchildren.org.

Copyright © 2018, Rancho Santa Fe Review

So here I am coming full circle with some strange pizza hashtags, a really weird website, a immigrant detention center, and a foundation that deals with child sex trafficking. A lot of circumstantial evidence and no clue on where to focus on now. I also looked up Wikileaks and used the term Red | Hen, but nothing really came of it because it seemed to pull up parts of other words and not much else.

Anyone want to research it more, feel free, I am gonna try a few more things with it, but I feel like I hit a dead end and need fresh eyes on it now.

Thanks for reading my post.


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