Follower of the one true God, Jesus Christ, and the Holy Spirit. Save children, end trafficking, NOW. Follow me at your own peril. Citizen journalist.
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Apr 2 • 5 tweets • 2 min read
For some reason the article keeps mentioning Jeffrey Epstein
Mar 27 • 7 tweets • 3 min read
For nearly two decades, Gene Evans was the top spokesperson for two Oregon agencies charged with doing right by children.
But, as OPB reported this week, two former students say he sexually abused them when he was an Oregon teacher in the 1980s, including one who said he began an intense sexual relationship with her when she was just 17 and he was 31.oregonlive.com/education/2025…
Mar 26 • 10 tweets • 3 min read
Investigations and legal proceedings throughout recent years have unveiled widespread fraudulent practices within drug testing laboratories across the United States, including kickback schemes and the issuance of medically unnecessary or unreliable test results. These activities defraud government healthcare programs and jeopardize public trust in medical and legal systems.
CAPSTONE
Capstone Diagnostics, LLC, headquartered in Atlanta, Georgia, has become a focal point of federal scrutiny for its role in fraudulent urine drug testing. Between 2017 and 2021, the laboratory collaborated with the *Do It 4 the Hood* (D4H) program, which was meant to mentor at-risk teenagers but mandated urine drug tests for participation. Capstone paid D4H operators a percentage of Medicaid reimbursements for these tests, despite their lack of medical necessity. Capstone’s D4H program extended into the Carolinas, where co-conspirators Bree’Anna Harris and Glenn Pair laundered proceeds from fraudulent drug tests. Their prosecutions reveal interstate collaboration in Medicaid fraud. Over $1 million in fraudulent claims were submitted to Georgia Medicaid, resulting in at least $400,000 in improper payments.
During the COVID-19 pandemic, Capstone exploited federal testing protocols by substituting cheaper COVID-19 tests with costly RPPs, which screen for multiple respiratory pathogens. Sales representatives forged physician signatures and falsified diagnosis codes to justify billing, netting the lab millions in illicit reimbursements. CEO Andrew Maloney and COO Rachel Sheats pleaded guilty to conspiracy charges, with Capstone agreeing to a $14.3 million settlement.
Mar 26 • 12 tweets • 6 min read
While everyone is distracted with whatever gate … this is happening in the Virgin Islands 👀
The lawsuit against V.I. Delegate to Congress Stacey Plaskett by victims of Jeffrey Epstein is “baseless and frivolous,” attorney Eric Breslin said in a statement Monday, after a ruling by a New York judge allowed the case to proceed.
In an order issued Friday, U.S. District Court Judge Arun Subramanian dismissed the six victims’ claims against nearly all of the original defendants, including former governors John deJongh Jr. and Kenneth Mapp, former V.I. first lady Cecile deJongh, former senators Celestino White Sr. and Carlton Dowe; and former Attorney General Vincent Frazer. The parties have 14 days to refile the claims in the Virgin Islands.
Subramanian also dismissed most claims against Plaskett, but found the court does have personal jurisdiction over her, and the case may proceed. The judge has not yet ruled on the merits of the victims’ allegations, including claims filed by attorney Jordan Merson that Plaskett accepted campaign contributions and a $30,000 loan in exchange for approving over $300 million in tax breaks for Epstein’s companies and ensuring he had access to victims.
“While it would be ideal to put an end to the baseless and frivolous claims made against my client, Stacey Plaskett, the legal proceedings this week have brought us one step closer to justice,” Breslin said in Monday’s statement. “This week, the Court addressed the pending Motions to Dismiss. A motion to dismiss views the facts favorable to the plaintiff and asks the Court to reject part or all of a case based on technical issues or deficiencies in the complaint itself.”
The judge “examined these motions and dismissed certain counts or specific allegations against Stacey Plaskett. This is good news for all of us. It’s important for the public to understand that many of the dismissals for other defendants were due to technicalities like jurisdictional issues, settlements they signed, and arguments about their positions as elected officials at the time of these crimes. We are actually excited by the opportunity the judge has given us!,” Breslin wrote.
For example, Subramanian ruled that the victims are barred from bringing claims against Cecile deJongh and all other former employees of Epstein’s, because of releases they’d signed under a settlement with Epstein’s estate.
“What remains for Ms. Plaskett is a single count. Our legal team is confident that this remaining allegation is not only factually unsupported but impossible to sustain,” Breslin wrote, adding that they intend to demonstrate during the legal process that the allegation is “not supported by the facts!”
There will be another round of motions and arguments soon, and Breslin said Plaskett’s legal team looks “forward to showing everyone, once again, that the accusations against Stacey are nothing more than a fabrication. The facts they are alleging that Plaskett gave tax benefits in exchange for campaign contributions do not make sense — since she did not have that ability and was not at the agency when the tax benefits were approved.”
Plaskett worked as counsel for the V.I. Economic Development Authority from 2007 to 2012, and had left by the time the board renewed Epstein’s tax benefits in 2013. Gov. Albert Bryan Jr. was serving as chairman of the EDA board at the time, and signed off on the decision, even after Epstein was convicted of child sex crimes in Florida.
The multi-millionaire would go on to serve an 18-month sentence in that state and register as a sex offender in the Virgin Islands — all while receiving tax exemptions from the EDA’s Economic Development Commission.
Mar 15 • 29 tweets • 11 min read
A Cambridge magistrate criminally charged 12 of the 28 alleged customers of a high-end brothel network that operated in parts of Cambridge and Washington D.C. suburbs at a Friday morning hearing.
Nearly 18 months after federal prosecutors first arrested three of the brothel network’s ringleaders, 12 of the 28 alleged clients were summoned to appear at the Cambridge District Court for Friday’s probable cause hearings. Cambridge police, arguing in front of a clerk-magistrate instead of a judge, made a case for charging them with paying for sex.
The charge typically does not result in jail time, even in the case of a conviction. Probable cause hearings are held only to determine whether there is sufficient evidence to file a criminal complaint. None of the men have been found guilty of a crime or gone to trial.
Clerk Magistrate Sharon S. Casey agreed to advance charges against the 12 men summoned today, issuing criminal complaints that will bring them to trial within the next several weeks.
Though all men were required to appear in-person for the Friday hearing, only 29-year-olds Mark Zhu and Jason Z. Han were present for the hearings. Han is a radiologic technologist at the Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital.
Five different lawyers representing Kerry H. Wu, John J. Doran, David LaCava, Peter H. MacGillivray, Jonathan P. Lanfear, and Pinhao Chao — none of whom appeared in court — argued that Casey should either dismiss the cases or grant a year-long continuance.
Casey said that she was “not inclined” to hear arguments from the lawyers representing the 10 defendants who chose not to attend, instead advancing criminal charges shortly after hearing testimony from the Cambridge Police Department.
Boya Zhou, Yihong Zou, Pablo D. Maceira, Patrick Walsh, and their lawyers did not attend the hearings. CPD Lieutenant Jarred Cabral read the police reports for each and Casey ruled shortly after.
With criminal complaints filed, the 12 men will be summoned to return to the Cambridge District Court in the next few weeks. If they do not appear then, a warrant for their arrest can be issued.
The police reports read by Cabral for each individual included text messages that detailed the schedule and nature of the visits to the brothel sites in Cambridge.
The reports revealed details of how the brothel network operated. Men would text a phone number managed by brothel operators — a “brothel phone,” according to Cabral — to arrange the details of their visits before arriving at the apartment complex where the women, referred to only by “stage names,” were located.
The texts are peppered with acronyms — for example, Cabral said many of the alleged clients paid more than $300 for a “GFE,” or a “girlfriend experience,” which he said referred to spending more than an hour with one woman who “provides a more intimate experience,” including sex acts.
In series of short text exchanges, the men would communicate when they arrived and wait for the operator of the “brothel phone” to tell them to enter through a side door, according to complaints filed by Cabral with the Cambridge District Court. The 12 men summoned in Friday’s hearing all allegedly visited the Cambridge locations of the brothel network, including several units at 90 Fawcett St.
The men did not appear to have keys to the apartments. According to Cabral, security footage obtained by CPD shows that they were let in by someone already inside.
The police reports presented to the Clerk Magistrate cited surveillance footage collected from both the first and fourth floors of 90 Fawcett Street, which showed the men entering and exiting the building at times consistent with the text exchanges with the “brothel phone.”
All 12 of the men allegedly visited the brothel multiple times between July 2020 and November 2023, when the brothel network was busted by federal authorities. The three “ringleaders” of the brothel network — a woman and two men — have all pleaded guilty in federal court, and will be sentenced over the next month
Remember when I told you Ukraine was trafficking children for predators and their organs on the European dark web with Poland being their swap spot ….do believe me now?
“Polish border guards have detained a member of a criminal group involved in human organ trafficking. A 35-year-old Ukrainian woman, who was put on the international wanted list by Interpol, was detained while crossing the border between Poland and Ukraine. The prosecutor's office in Przemysl, Poland, made an official statement about this.
56 human kidneys sold on the "black market"
According to information, this person was sentenced to 12 years in prison by the Kazakh government and has been on the international wanted list since 2020. According to the indictment, he organized the trade in human organs in 2017-2019. Through a criminal scheme, 56 human kidneys were illegally sold on the "black market".
Citizens of Uzbekistan and other countries became victims
According to the special services of Kazakhstan, the victims include citizens of Uzbekistan, Kazakhstan, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Ukraine, Kyrgyzstan, Tajikistan and Thailand. The woman illegally lured citizens of these countries into her trap and sold their internal organs for commercial purposes.
Arrest and extradition proceedings in Poland
A member of the criminal group was detained on March 6 at the railway crossing between Poland and Ukraine. He is currently being questioned by the Polish prosecutor's office, and a request for his arrest with a view to his extradition to Kazakhstan has been filed with the district court. According to the court decision, he will be held in custody for 7 days.
Human organ trafficking is a serious problem worldwide, and international law enforcement agencies continue to vigorously combat such crimes.”zamin.uz/en/world/14611…
Feb 21 • 44 tweets • 16 min read
FINALLY! This will connect so many dots
Mother Teresa sent Geilenfeld to Haiti in 87. He’s been arrested 3 times for child sex crimes and allegedly gave many of the orphans aids. He also shared a boyfriend with the former president of Haiti who was connected to the missing funds from the Clinton foundation.
This thread will have everything I uncovered about this man and his associates since his first arrest.
This guy even invited NAMBLA to the orphanage for … you guessed it massages
Michael Geilenfeld is a prime candidate for the DP imo.
According to court documents and evidence presented at trial, Michael Karl Geilenfeld, 73, most recently of Littleton, founded St. Joseph’s Home for Boys — a home for orphaned, impoverished, and otherwise vulnerable children in Haiti — in 1985 and operated it for more than two decades. During this time, Geilenfeld repeatedly traveled from the United States to Haiti, where he sexually abused the boys entrusted to his care.
The jury convicted Geilenfeld of one count of traveling in foreign commerce for the purpose of engaging in illicit sexual conduct and six counts of engaging in illicit sexual conduct in a foreign place, between 2005 and 2010. Each of the six counts of engaging in illicit sexual conduct in a foreign place relates to a particular victim who was a child at the time of the offense. Each of the six victims testified about the sexual abuse they suffered at the hands of Geilenfeld, as did four other victims who were not the subject of the charged offenses. Geilenfeld is scheduled to be sentenced on May 5 and faces a maximum penalty of 30 years in prison on each of the seven total counts. A federal district court judge will determine any sentence after considering the U.S. Sentencing Guidelines and other statutory factors.justice.gov/opa/pr/founder…
Jan 30 • 43 tweets • 12 min read
CAPITOLA, Calif. —
A search warrant on Sutherland Lane in Capitola led to the Capitola Police Department and U.S. marshals arresting a man that they claim is a violent child sex offender.
George Paul Bishop had been on the run since 2016 and had been going by the name Brody Levesque to evade authorities.
ksbw.com/article/violen…
Dec 2, 2024 • 21 tweets • 6 min read
“After Peters’ sentencing last month to nine years in prison—new information has surfaced showing that Colorado officials were working for Dominion and Runbeck, while simultaneously orchestrating Peters’ reputational and legal downfall through back channels.
Following the 2020 election, Tina Peters received notice from the Colorado Secretary of State, Jenna Griswold, that Dominion Voting Systems would be visiting her office to install a “trusted build” on her election system. The “trusted build” would overwrite the data that was stored on her computers. As the elected County Clerk and Recorder, Peters was the custodian of the election records and had a duty to preserve them for 25 months. So, Peters had a copy made of her central election computer to ensure that the records would be preserved prior to the “trusted build.” She also made another copy of the machine after the “trusted build.”joehoft.com/bombshell-colo…
Nov 21, 2024 • 17 tweets • 5 min read
💥‼️💥‼️💥‼️
Stomach-churning emails show Planned Parenthood negotiating terms regarding the donation of aborted fetuses for medical research.
The emails discuss fetal tissue like any other commodity such as sugar or rice, nonchalantly negotiating for fetuses up to 23 weeks old from elective abortions.
A heavily-redacted so-called “Research Plan” submitted to the University of California San Diego (UCSD) Institutional Review Board and approved in 2018 states scientists wanted 2,500 fetuses from up to almost the sixth month of gestation for experimentation.
The emails were shared with The Post by controversial pro-life activist David Daleiden and his organization, the Center for Medical Progress , who obtained them through a California state public records request.
The majority of healthy infants born at 23 weeks can survive with modern medical care.
Abortion, economy, take center stage in Michigan 8th congressional district race
The youngest surviving premature baby , Curtis Means, was born at 21 weeks and two days in April 2021 in Alabama.
Nov 14, 2024 • 36 tweets • 13 min read
Don’t make us prove you wrong
AGAIN
Adrenochrome is listed as the first conspiracy theory that is considered dangerous
what’s really dangerous is being ignorant enough to believe they would tell the truth by now
LANSING, Mich. (WLNS) — Richard Anthony Reyna Densmore, 47, of Kaleva, will spend 30 years in federal prison after pleading guilty to sexually exploiting a child, one charge in a broader indictment that charged him with other child exploitation crimes as a member of 764, an international group that targets vulnerable children online.
Densmore is among the first individuals associated with 764 to face legal consequences for their actions.
“These groups, 764 being one of them, have a political ideology. They are often operating based on trying to further their status among members, to increase their notoriety,” said U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Michigan Mark Totten. “Of course, there is the element of sadism that we have seen in this case.”
According to the U.S. Department of Justice, 764 is a “terror network” of violent individuals worldwide who attempt to “normalize” child pornography and gore media to “desensitize and corrupt youth toward future acts of violence.” Members of 764 systematically target, groom, and extort children via online social media platforms, demanding that these victims share media of themselves committing self-mutilation, sexual acts, harm to animals, acts of violence suicide, and murder—creating a continuous cycle of abuse.
This media, the U.S. Department of Justice says, is made for “accelerating chaos and disrupting society and the world order,” including the United States Government.
Densmore, known online as “Rabid,” created a community on the online social platform Discord called “Sewer” where members—often by infiltrating online gaming sites frequented by children—recruited children to harm themselves and engage in graphic sexual acts.
Nov 1, 2024 • 73 tweets • 18 min read
No amount of calling us crazy will ever change the facts
A woman who allegedly lied about having a doctorate in psychology and used false credentials to testify in court on child custody cases was indicted by a state grand jury on 15 criminal counts.
Shannon McShane, 57, is facing eight counts of attempt to influence a public servant, five counts of forgery, one count of perjury and one count of retaliation against a victim or witness. The indictment against McShane was filed on Aug. 29 in Denver District Court by Colorado Attorney General Phil Weiser. She is in custody at the Denver Downtown Detention Center. denverpost.com/2024/10/01/sha…
NORTH TEXAS — The founder of a North Texas adoption agency has been arrested on allegations of paying pregnant female inmates in the Tarrant County Jail to put their unborn babies up for adoption.
Jody Hall, head of Adoptions International Inc., posted a $50,000 bond after being booked into a Central Texas jail last week. She is an attorney and founder of an adoption agency promoted as a licensed nonprofit. cbsnews.com/texas/news/tex…
During this investigation, information was discovered that Jody Hall was paying money to multiple, pregnant Tarrant County inmates for the purpose of placing their unborn children up for adoption with Hall's agency," the sheriff's office said in a statement.
Two months later, sheriff's detectives served arrest warrants on Hall at her home in Kyle, Texas.
In 2019, the U.S. State Department canceled Adoptions International's accreditation, which prevents the agency from engaging in adoptions outside the U.S. for failing to maintain standards.
The crime of selling or purchasing a child is a felony in Texas.
It's unclear at this point whether any inmates in the Tarrant County jail actually received any money or put their babies up for adoption.
Jul 25, 2024 • 12 tweets • 5 min read
The FBI and area law enforcement carried out a massive early morning bust Wednesday, arresting 50 Houston-area residents as the U.S. Attorney's Office announced a series of wire fraud indictments stemming from an alleged fraudulent bail bond scheme.
The arrests came after a first-of-its-kind investigation that had been in the works for at least two years, according to a news release.
Staff involved with the investigation said AABLE Bonds falsified financial documents to secure temporary release for individuals who would not have otherwise met the requirements. archive.md/2024.07.24-232…
Of the indictments issued, three individuals remain at large. Law enforcement officials are still searching for the remaining suspects and asked that anyone with information regarding their whereabouts contact the Houston FBI office.
Harris County bail bond board member Mario Garza scheduled a 6 p.m. news conference Wednesday to comment on the "fraud schemes linked to Harris County bail bond companies."
Authorities said AABLE Bonds recruited individuals who co-signed bond agreements and falsely stated they were employed or had incomes that met the threshold necessary to serve as a co-signer. According to the news release, these fraudulent documents resulted in at least 11 individuals receiving bonds they were not qualified for.