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In fact, the plot of land was not even owned by the militants who were squatters there. The legitimate owners, Jason and Tanya Badger, had informed authorities soon after discovering the infiltrators in December yet nothing was done to protect the property rights. Eventually, the FBI requested permission to surveil the area beginning in spring of the following year. Only on August 2, a full four months later, did local police raid the outpost and only after the FBI had repeatedly refused to do anything other than watch the alleged criminality unfold.
Five suspects were arrested: Wahhaj, and Nany J. Shockingly on August 5, in the days after the original search by law enforcement, the legitimate property owners discovered an extensive cavern system that contained a veritable arsenal of weapons as well as a laptop computer. All of this supposedly "missed" during the first examination.
During an August 6 revisit by law officers the body of a dead child was also located. It was eventually determined to be Abdul-Ghani Wahhaj who had previously been alleged to be abducted by his father, Siraj Ibn Wahhaj, on December 1, As of August 8, charges were made including 11 counts of child abuse though Siraj Ibn Wahhaj was additionally charged as a fugitive from the state of Georgia in another matter while Lucas Allen Morton was charged with one count of harboring a fugitive.
Initially, all were held without bond; meaning they would remain incarcerated. Leveille would remain in jail. In papers filed August 25, it was detailed there were plans for "phases of terrorist attacks" which have variously been described as training the children to use guns to assault schools and even hospitals. Four days later, on August 29, Judge Emilio Chavez dropped all the charges of child abuse against the five suspects. He claimed prosecutors missed a deadline to schedule a preliminary hearing.
Editorial Reviews. About the Author. Louis Shalako began writing for community newspapers The Case of the Curious Killers by [Shalako, Louis Bertrand]. 'The Case of the Curious Killers' is a comic space-opera of epic proportions. When aliens abduct security guard Brendan Hartle for use in a.
All five were then released from incarceration. A full two days later, August 31, the FBI eventually got around to again arresting all five. Leveille was charged with unlawful possession of firearms and ammunition, with the others charged with abetting his crimes. The District Attorney states he will seek an indictment for the murder of the child found deceased.
To condense this rather obtuse timeline of offenses, at this juncture all only alleged: A man kidnaps his child, illegally sets up a compound on land he does not own, authorities are informed of this theft of property but do nothing for several months, the FBI eventually feigns an interest but does not act for several more months, ultimately local law enforcement becomes irate at the ongoing abuse of children and raids the compound themselves.
Even so, during the rescue operation not only is material evidence in the item of a laptop left behind but a horde of guns and ammunition which is only discovered when the legitimate owners have a look two days later. When authorities return to collect the cache of weapons, another two days mind you, they also happen upon the dead body of a child they accidentally overlooked the first time they investigated. Most of which would clearly mean absolutely nothing to anyone facing such charges, not to mention a radicalized Jihadi supposedly intent on committing a mass murder followed by suicide.
Yet even this was too much for the next Judge who used a technicality to release all of the accused - in spite of land theft, the building of an army, the avowed intent to use it to commit mass carnage, and the minor fact of a child corpse - from jail at the same time. Because, needless to say, technicalities have never in the history of America been used to protect the country rather than endanger it.
Then throw into the mix the ridiculous legal representation for these cretins who had the audacity to invoke the sacred cause of "racism" by hysterically stating if a white person stole property, had a secret pit of illegal weapons, starved several children and then murdered one of them that no one would say anything at all about it. Initially, claims about a bunch of ragtag losers stealing a desolate piece of land were a bit ridiculous.
Later, the detail that they faced evidence of serious crimes against children was infuriating. Now, the fact that there appears to be a concerted effort by Federal law enforcement and their handmaiden local Judiciary to protect the accused is obvious.
Once it was the province of wild eyed conspiracy theorists and isolated kooks to say that there is a Deep State which actively promotes political violence to serve its own devices. At this juncture it seems undeniable. Worse is that this is by no means an isolated incident of apparent bureaucratic misbehavior. For years the FBI, and other law enforcement, has demonstrated a notable pattern in their terror related activities.
Usually the cases begin with an impromptu remark or random internet posting which is inflammatory but lacking any credible threat.
They nearly always involve suspects who are socially isolated and often with serious mental deficiencies. Indeed, in one case FBI files refer to a suspect as a "retarded fool. This is apparently done with an intention of increasing the number of successful terrorism prosecutions with an ultimate goal of maintaining or increasing agency funding for such ridiculous tasks. Very few, if any, of the most notable terror suspects in recent years posed a danger to American citizens. To the extent they did, the accused almost universally were better suited to psychiatric facilities than prisons.
All of which raises even more ominous concerns, especially in the present case where it appears children were abused and at least one died and there is a seeming determined effort to free all the suspects. It is worth exploring whether in addition to prosecuting highly questionable dupes some authorities are not also engaging in the manufacture of incidents to dupe the American public.
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later. The book arrived in good condition. One person found this helpful 2 people found this helpful. Dispels many myths of serial killers. Kindle Edition Verified Purchase.
Reads more like a textbook than anything else. The killer profiles were interesting. The author liked to recap each chapter and state why he wrote what he wrote. This slowed it down. Although the author should take note, we are the human race, we just have different ethnic backgrounds. But interesting read on society and her ills, and her strengths.
This was one of my favorite books for my forensics class this semester. It's very eye-opening and informative! Most of the books I've read involve a close look at one or two killers, or they focus on the experiences of the investigators, lawyers, or relatives. THIS book is unlike any I've read. It is written from sociological perspective. The book is well organized, thoroughly researched, fun, and relevant. The book is interesting without being sensationalistic. Bonn knows how to organize and present ideas.
He skillfully lays the groundwork for ideas and then builds on them. Several chapters introduce sociological concepts in general terms. He then he applies the ideas to crime in general and what they might mean in relation to our society. Then he brings us back to the specific topic of serial killers. I'm sure from this framework it will be fun to reread old books or read a new book during which I can use this perspective to see things that maybe I would have before in the books.
I gave this book to about the halfway point before giving up on it. It's almost astonishing that someone could take such a fascinating and gruesome topic so The writing style is deadly dull, where he keeps making vague claims and then offering no support, and worse, no names!
It's basically a rehash of Vronsky, but more boring. Buy Vronsky's books for better reads, or go the sources like Ressler, and spare yourself this particular torture of boredom. Not as interesting as i expected, due to a lack of depth , although the personal research was good. It needed absorbing details , from the serial killers, so that the reader can begin to understand their strange dysfunctional world, and our need to know what that is , Where these loonies are coming form See all 80 reviews. Most recent customer reviews. Published 3 months ago.
Published 1 year ago. Published on March 1, Published on February 16, Published on August 31, Amazon Giveaway allows you to run promotional giveaways in order to create buzz, reward your audience, and attract new followers and customers. Learn more about Amazon Giveaway. Why We Love Serial Killers: Set up a giveaway. Customers who viewed this item also viewed. The Method and Madness of Monsters.
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