Trump supporters behaving like the bags of ass that they are

mrcmd187

Controversy Creates Cash
BGOL Investor
Judge's son who stormed Capitol dressed as cave man pleads guilty
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WASHINGTON — A judge's son who stormed the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, while clad in fur, wearing a stolen police vest and carrying a police shield pleaded guilty Wednesday to three counts during a virtual court hearing.

Aaron Mostofsky, a 35-year-old from Brooklyn, New York, pleaded guilty to one felony count of civil disorder, one count of theft of government property and one count of entering and remaining in a restricted building. U.S. District Judge James E. Boasberg accepted Mostofsky's guilty plea and set a sentencing hearing for May.

Under the terms of a plea deal, federal prosecutors will drop the charge against Mostofsky that subjected him to the longest potential prison sentence: obstruction of an official proceeding. But Mostofsky pleaded guilty to a felony charge that made it unlawful to "obstruct, impede, and interfere with a law enforcement officer" during the commission of a civil disorder, a charge that comes with a maximum penalty of five years in federal prison.
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He was one of the first few to smash his way into the building, and stripped an officer of his shield and vest, but you know this MF'r going to get off light AF.
Daddy told him to snitch on everyone.


All the shit they talk about Hillary and Biden's son doing illegal shit and no proof they go film themselves doing illegal shit :roflmao:
 

darth frosty

Dark Lord of the Sith
BGOL Investor
G.O.P. Declares Jan. 6 Attack ‘Legitimate Political Discourse’
The Republican National Committee voted to censure Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger for participating in the inquiry into the deadly riot at the Capitol


Representative Liz Cheney has said Republican leaders “have made themselves willing hostages” to former President Donald J. Trump.Credit...Al Drago for The New York Times

By Jonathan Weisman and Reid J. Epstein

Feb. 4, 2022Updated 6:20 p.m. ET

WASHINGTON — The Republican Party on Friday officially declared the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol and events that led to it “legitimate political discourse,” and rebuked two lawmakers in the party who have been most outspoken in condemning the deadly riot and the role of Donald J. Trump in spreading the election lies that fueled it.
The Republican National Committee’s voice vote to censure Representatives Liz Cheney of Wyoming and Adam Kinzinger of Illinois at its winter meeting in Salt Lake City culminated more than a year of vacillation, which started with party leaders condemning the Capitol attack and Mr. Trump’s conduct, then shifted to downplaying and denying it.

On Friday, the party went further in a resolution slamming Ms. Cheney and Mr. Kinzinger for taking part in the House investigation of the assault, saying they were participating in “persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse.”

After the vote, party leaders rushed to clarify that language, saying it was never meant to apply to rioters who violently stormed the Capitol in Mr. Trump’s name.

“Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger crossed a line,” Ronna McDaniel, the Republican National Committee chairwoman, said in a statement. “They chose to join Nancy Pelosi in a Democrat-led persecution of ordinary citizens who engaged in legitimate political discourse that had nothing to do with violence at the Capitol.”

But the censure, which was carefully negotiated in private among party members, made no such distinction, nor is the House committee investigating the attack examining any normal political debate. It was the latest and most forceful effort by the Republican Party to minimize what happened and the broader attempt by Mr. Trump and his allies to invalidate the results of the 2020 election. In approving it and opting to punish two of its own, Republicans seemed to embrace a position that many of them have only hinted at: that the assault and the actions that preceded it were acceptable.

It came days after Mr. Trump suggested that, if re-elected in 2024, he would consider pardons for those convicted in the Jan. 6 attack and for the first time described his goal that day as subverting the election results, saying in a statement that Vice President Mike Pence “could have overturned the election.”
On Friday, Mr. Pence pushed back on Mr. Trump, calling his assertion “wrong.”
“I had no right to overturn the election,” Mr. Pence told the Federalist Society, a conservative legal organization, at a gathering in Florida.
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Read the full resolution
The Republican National Committee’s resolution censures Representatives Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger.
READ DOCUMENT 2 PAGES

The day’s events, which were supposed to be about unity, only served to highlight Republicans’ persistent division over Mr. Trump’s attempt to overturn the 2020 election, as their leaders try to move forward and focus attention on what they call the failings of the Biden administration. More than a year later, the party is still wrestling with how much criticism and dissent it will tolerate.
“Shame falls on a party that would censure persons of conscience, who seek truth in the face of vitriol,” Senator Mitt Romney, Republican of Utah, wrote on Twitter “Honor attaches to Liz Cheney and Adam Kinzinger for seeking truth even when doing so comes at great personal cost.”
He did not mention that the party chairwoman who presided over the meeting and orchestrated the censure resolution, Ms. McDaniel, is his niece.
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The censure was also condemned by Senator Bill Cassidy, Republican of Louisiana, who, like Mr. Romney, voted to remove Mr. Trump from office for inciting insurrection on Jan. 6, and Gov. Larry Hogan of Maryland, also a Republican, who called Friday “a sad day for my party — and the country.”
Republican National Committee members defended the measure, describing people who have been questioned by the Jan. 6 committee as victims in a broader Democratic effort to keep focus on the attack at the Capitol.
“The nominal Republicans on the committee provide a pastiche of bipartisanship, but no genuine protection or due process for the ordinary people who did not riot being targeted and terrorized by the committee,” said Richard Porter, a Republican National Committee member from Illinois. “The investigation is a de facto Democrat-only investigation increasingly unmoored from congressional norms.”

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The Jan. 6 committee, which has seven Democratic members, has interviewed more than 475 witnesses, the vast majority of whom either volunteered to testify or agreed to without a subpoena. It has no prosecutorial powers, and is charged with drawing up a report and producing recommendations to prevent anything similar from happening again.
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The party’s far-right flank has long agitated to boot Ms. Cheney and Mr. Kinzinger out of the House Republican Conference for agreeing to serve on the panel, a push that Representative Kevin McCarthy of California, the minority leader, has tried to brush aside. And the formal censure, approved by the state party chairs and committee members who make up the Republican National Committee, is sure to stir up those efforts again.


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The Republican Party declared the Jan. 6, 2021, attack on the Capitol and events that led to it as “legitimate political discourse.”Credit...Jason Andrew for The New York Times
“We need to move on from that whole discussion and, frankly, move forward and get the House back in 2022,” said Representative Mike Garcia, a California Republican facing a difficult re-election campaign in a newly configured district.
Most House Republicans tried to ignore the actions of the party on Friday, refusing to answer questions or saying they had not read the censure resolution. Representative Dan Crenshaw, Republican of Texas, called it “dumb stuff,” while Representative Mark Green, Republican of Tennessee, lamented the distraction from “this abysmal administration’s record.”
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Democrats, however, were incensed at the resolution’s language.
“The Republican Party is so off the deep end now that they are describing an attempted coup and a deadly insurrection as political expression,” said Representative Jamie Raskin, Democrat of Maryland and a member of the special House committee investigating the Capitol attack. “It is a scandal that historians will be aghast at, to think that a major political party would be denouncing Liz Cheney for standing up for the Constitution and not saying anything about Donald Trump’s involvement in the insurrection.”
In his own defense, Mr. Kinzinger said: “I have no regrets about my decision to uphold my oath of office and defend the Constitution. I will continue to focus my efforts on standing for truth and working to fight the political matrix that’s led us to where we find ourselves today.”
The resolution spoke repeatedly of party unity as the goal of censuring the lawmakers, saying that Republicans’ ability to focus on the Biden administration was being “sabotaged” by the “actions and words” of Ms. Cheney and Mr. Kinzinger, which indicate “they support Democrat efforts to destroy President Trump more than they support winning back a Republican majority in 2022.”

Normally, the party stays out of primary fights, but the resolution will make it easier for the Republican apparatus to abandon Ms. Cheney and throw its weight and money behind her main G.O.P. challenger, Harriet Hageman.
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It declares that the party “shall immediately cease any and all support of” both lawmakers “as members of the Republican Party for their behavior, which has been destructive to the institution of the U.S. House of Representatives, the Republican Party and our republic, and is inconsistent with the position of the conference.”
Mr. Kinzinger has already announced he will not seek re-election, as have some other House Republicans who voted to impeach Mr. Trump for inciting the attack on the Capitol. Ms. Cheney, however, has vowed to stand for re-election.


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Representative Adam Kinzinger has announced that he will not seek re-election, as have some other House Republicans who voted to impeach Mr. Trump.Credit...Stefani Reynolds for The New York Times
Earlier this week, the Wyoming delegation to the Republican National Committee submitted a so-called “Rule 11” letter, formalizing party support for Ms. Hageman. The existence of the letter was reported by The Washington Post.
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The letter allows the Republican National Committee to send resources to the Wyoming branch of the party to spend on Ms. Hageman’s behalf — essentially designating her as the party’s presumptive nominee. The designations are common in Republican politics, but typically are used to support incumbents who may be facing token primary challengers.
Ms. Cheney, who faces an uphill battle in her re-election bid against a Republican Party aligned with Mr. Trump, said party leaders “have made themselves willing hostages” to Mr. Trump.

“I do not recognize those in my party who have abandoned the Constitution to embrace Donald Trump,” she said. “History will be their judge. I will never stop fighting for our constitutional republic. No matter what.”
Ms. Cheney has a commanding financial advantage over Ms. Hageman, according to federal campaign finance reports released this week. Ms. Cheney entered 2022 with nearly $5 million in campaign cash, while Ms. Hageman reported just $380,000.

The censure resolution was watered down from an initial version that called directly for the House Republican Conference to “expel” Ms. Cheney and Mr. Kinzinger “without delay.” That demand was dropped. However, the language condemning the attack on “legitimate political discourse” was then added.
William J. Palatucci, a Republican National Committee member from New Jersey who said he opposed the resolution, said those changes were made “behind closed doors.” The final language was officially circulated to committee members early Friday morning. He called it “cancel culture at its worst.”
 

blackpepper

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
FBI arrests Trump supporter who stormed Capitol while on bail on attempted murder charge
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When he stormed the Capitol, Beddingfield was on bail on a first-degree attempted murder charge in connection with the December 2019 shooting of a 17-year-old in a Walmart parking lot, when Beddingfield was 19. He was initially held on $1 million bail, but he secured pretrial release when bail was lowered to $100,000. After he stormed the Capitol on Jan. 6, Beddingfield pleaded guilty to a lesser charge in connection with the shooting. He was on probation in the shooting case when he was arrested Tuesday.
 

blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Liz Cheney defends Pence, says January 6 committee hearings will show Trump 'provoked' the insurrection

Brent D. Griffiths
Feb 10, 2022, 2:29 PM


Rep. Liz Cheney on Thursday fired back at criticism of the House January 6 Committee, saying the panel will show that "no massive voter fraud changed the election" and that Trump's repeated lies about the outcome "provoked" the violence that became the insurrection.

"The Jan. 6 investigation isn't only about the inexcusable violence of that day: It is also about fidelity to the Constitution and the rule of law, and whether elected representatives believe in those things or not," Cheney wrote in a Wall Street Journal op-ed.

Cheney defended former Vice President Mike Pence, who in a high-profile speech last week, declared that Trump is "wrong" to continue to suggest that Pence had the power to overturn the election when Congress met to certify the results, a process that rioters delayed for hours.

"That notion was, as Mr. Pence said, 'un-American.' What Mr. Trump had insisted that Mr. Pence do on Jan. 6 was not only un-American, it was unconstitutional and illegal," Cheney writes.

Cheney confirmed that the January 6 Committee, where she is the top Republican, will hold public hearings later this year. She said the hearings will detail why Trump and his allies' claims about the election are bunk and illustrate why he bears responsibility for the Capitol riot.

It is worth noting that constitutional experts strongly reject any claim that a vice president could unilaterally overturn results. If Pence were to have done such an action, he would have disenfranchised millions of Americans in the process. As Pence himself pointed out if such power existed Democrats could easily wield it against a Republican presidential candidate.

"Under the Constitution, I had no right to change the outcome of our election. And Kamala Harris will have no right to overturn the election when we beat them in 2024," Pence said in Florida.

Cheney's op-ed also comes after the Republican National Committee censured both her and Rep. Adam Kinzinger, the other Republican on the panel, for "participating in a Democrat-led persecution of ordinary citizens engaged in legitimate political discourse."

The RNC's action and the wording of the censure, especially calling elements of January 6 "legitimate political discourse," has unleashed a torrent of criticism, including from fellow Republicans.

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blackbull1970

The Black Bastard
Platinum Member
Trump lawyer John Eastman turns over 8,000 emails to January 6 committee and withholds 11,000


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Politic Negro

Rising Star
BGOL Investor
Author: Emily Oliver
Published: 1:44 PM CST February 23, 2022
Updated: 1:44 PM CST February 23, 2022





COLUMBUS, Ohio — Three men pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a domestic terrorism crime that involved plans to attack power grids throughout the nation.
Christopher Brenner Cook, 20, Jonathan Allen Frost, 24, and Jackson Mathew Sawall, 22, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, according to a release from the United States Department of Justice.

The release details an elaborate plan between the three to attack the nation’s substations with powerful rifles in an effort to “cost the government millions of dollars.” In doing so, the three men allegedly aimed to cause civil unrest and a race war, potentially inducing “the next Great Depression.”
Court records show Cook, who is from Columbus, met Frost in an online chat group in 2019. Frost, who lived in Texas and Indiana, reportedly shared his plans to attack the power grid with Cook, and the two began online recruitment efforts that included promoting white supremacist and Neo-Nazi ideologies.
Records show Sawall, who is from Wisconsin and already knew Cook, joined those efforts later that year.
According to court documents, the three met in Columbus in February 2020 to discuss the plot. During that meeting, Frost reportedly provided Cook with an AR-47 and gave both men “suicide necklaces” laced with fentanyl to take in the event they were stopped by law enforcement.
Also during that visit, records state Cook and Sawall spray painted a swastika flag and the words “Join the Front” under a Columbus bridge.
Authorities said further plans were “derailed” when Sawall ingested his fentanyl pill during a traffic stop, but survived.
Cook and Frost reportedly traveled to Texas in March 2020 to continue recruitment efforts prior to their arrest.
“Those inspired to commit terrorist acts in the name of hate pose a serious threat to our nation," FBI Cincinnati Special Agent in Charge J. William Rivers said. “I am thankful for the Joint Terrorism Task Force and our law enforcement partners who work each day to prevent this type of violence from occurring in our communities."
The three face a maximum of 15 years in prison.
 

Shaka54

FKA Shaka38
Platinum Member
Author: Emily Oliver
Published: 1:44 PM CST February 23, 2022
Updated: 1:44 PM CST February 23, 2022




COLUMBUS, Ohio — Three men pleaded guilty on Wednesday to a domestic terrorism crime that involved plans to attack power grids throughout the nation.
Christopher Brenner Cook, 20, Jonathan Allen Frost, 24, and Jackson Mathew Sawall, 22, pleaded guilty to one count of conspiring to provide material support to terrorists, according to a release from the United States Department of Justice.

The release details an elaborate plan between the three to attack the nation’s substations with powerful rifles in an effort to “cost the government millions of dollars.” In doing so, the three men allegedly aimed to cause civil unrest and a race war, potentially inducing “the next Great Depression.”
Court records show Cook, who is from Columbus, met Frost in an online chat group in 2019. Frost, who lived in Texas and Indiana, reportedly shared his plans to attack the power grid with Cook, and the two began online recruitment efforts that included promoting white supremacist and Neo-Nazi ideologies.
Records show Sawall, who is from Wisconsin and already knew Cook, joined those efforts later that year.
According to court documents, the three met in Columbus in February 2020 to discuss the plot. During that meeting, Frost reportedly provided Cook with an AR-47 and gave both men “suicide necklaces” laced with fentanyl to take in the event they were stopped by law enforcement.
Also during that visit, records state Cook and Sawall spray painted a swastika flag and the words “Join the Front” under a Columbus bridge.
Authorities said further plans were “derailed” when Sawall ingested his fentanyl pill during a traffic stop, but survived.
Cook and Frost reportedly traveled to Texas in March 2020 to continue recruitment efforts prior to their arrest.
“Those inspired to commit terrorist acts in the name of hate pose a serious threat to our nation," FBI Cincinnati Special Agent in Charge J. William Rivers said. “I am thankful for the Joint Terrorism Task Force and our law enforcement partners who work each day to prevent this type of violence from occurring in our communities."
The three face a maximum of 15 years in prison.

What the hell was Sawall's fentanyl laced with? Folks are knocking off left and right from other shit lace with fentanyl but HIS wasn't pure?

I don't know whether to be disappointed in that or glad his ass survived in order to face time.
 
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