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Cissy
07-12-2015, 11:48 PM
http://www.agingrebel.com/13132


What We Learned About Waco This Weekend

July 12, 2015

All Posts, Editorials, News
What We Learned About Waco This Weekend

The Twin Peaks Massacre has always, clearly, been an ATF or FBI operation gone terribly wrong. The Waco police and most of official Waco have been lying about it since May 17. A couple of pieces of evidence became generally available this weekend that shine a little light into this black hole of deceit.

First, it is now absolutely inarguable that at least 182 people were arrested on May 17 and that five of them were “unarrested” by 5:28 a.m. the next morning. In an early morning fax from Waco Detective Sam Key to lay Justice of the Peace “Pete” Peterson, Key says, “These are the five guys we ‘unarrested.’ Thanks for all your help.”

The five men set free were Rodney Nash, Terry Gott, Robert Douglas, Keith Rodgers and Gerald Lowery. Generally, in ATF biker roundups, confidential informants are arrested with other suspects and then turned loose when nobody is looking.
Confidential Informants

Confidential informants in numerous cases are paid around $3000 a month and they are allowed to keep everything they can steal. In multiple cases, for example Mesa Mike Kramer, the CIs are alowed to get away with assaults and murder. Their primary job is to act as agents provocateur and solicit drug and gun buys and instigate other crimes. Some confidential informants are men who have been caught at some crime and are offered the choice of betraying their friends or going to prison. Some CIs are pros – like the semi-famous snitches James “Pops” Blankenship, Alex Caine, Ashley Charles Wyatt (who is now calling himself Charles Falco and who has been cited as a biker authority in news accounts of the Twin Peaks massacre), George Rowe, the late “Coconut Dan” Horrigan, “Mesa Mike” Kramer, James “Pagan Ronnie” Howerton and Steve Veltus. They are all loathsome men. They are all career criminals who have avoided punishment by entrapping other men who loved them like brothers. They are all men who ruin lives for a living

Since they were actually arrested, the men released in secret at dawn on May 18, were clearly not undercover agents. The Aging Rebel has been told and has reported that two members of the Cossacks Motorcycle Club took off their club insignia and put on police windbreakers and balaclavas shortly after the shooting stopped on May 17. They were probably undercover FBI or ATF agents. The Aging Rebel believes the men released on May 17 were part of an ongoing federal investigation that exploded into violence. Based on interview with numerous sources, The Aging Rebel believes the violence was instigated by federal agents, that it was unnecessary and that the blatant Waco coverup that has ensued is intended to protect federal, state and local policeman from civil and criminal liability and embarrassment.
Murder And Tampering

Surveillance footage from one of the sixteen cameras at the Don Carlos restaurant, which sits across a parking lot from the Twin Peaks, also emerged this weekend. Numerous viewers of the video have complained that it doesn’t show much. This morning Breitbart News headlined its account of the video “Leaked Don Carlos Video Reveals Little About Waco Twin Peaks Shooting.”

The video does have its moments though, and limited though it is it appears to document two crimes committed by police – falsifying evidence and a possible murder. The video shows that during one second, between 12:41:17 p.m. and 12:41:18 p.m., a person who is running away from the fight and who is well behind what seems to be the police line appears to get shot in the back and falls forward to the left front of a white hatchback car. He never rises during the next 85 minutes of the video.

The most chilling sequence in the video begins at 1:20:50 p.m. Two plain clothes operators stand under the Don Carlos porch and point toward what seems to be the dead body. Six seconds later one of the operators, a gray haired man wearing a light orange shirt and a machine gun, walks toward the apparent body. He disappears briefly as he talks to a uniformed cop at about 1:21:07 p.m. Then at 1:21:35 he clearly and unmistakably places something on the ground of this crime scene. Then he quickly walks away.

At 1:59:31 p.m. a uniformed officer walks over to the evidence planted by the plain clothes cop and marks it as evidence. Presumably, it is now part of the official case against the 177 men and women who were arrested but not “unarrested.”

Clearly, the Waco police investigation is corrupt. Clearly, justice in Waco is corrupt. And clearly it is not enough for the Department of Justice to intervene in this case because there is probable cause to believe that multiple employees of the Department of Justice are the engineers of this mockery of the American way.

Cissy
07-17-2015, 08:21 AM
Bump.

tod evans
07-17-2015, 08:28 AM
Some fallout;


https://www.youtube.com/watch?t=99&v=vO02hhFk7e4

Horror Of The Day

http://www.agingrebel.com/13146


When Robert C. Bucy, a member of the Cossacks Motorcycle Club from Midlothian, a small town southwest of Dallas, left for a Coalition of Clubs and Independents meeting in Waco on May 17, his five-year-old foster daughter Alyssa said, “Bye, Daddy! Bye, Daddy! I love you!” Bucy hasn’t seen the little girl since.

Bucy was arrested following a fight there between Cossacks and members of the Bandidos Motorcycle Club and charged with “engaging in organized criminal activity.” The legislated offense is aimed at people who break the law as a member of a “criminal street gang.” There was no probable cause to believe Bucy was a criminal or a criminal street gang member. He was wearing a Cossacks cut and that was close enough for Waco – where the Bill of Rights is considered to be a kind of ivory tower ideal. Under Texas law, a “criminal street gang” is any organization the police accuse of being a gang and Bucy could be held culpable for the murders of the nine men who died in that parking lot if a policeman, in this case it was a policeman named Manuel Chavez, said he was. At the time Chavez probably couldn’t have picked Bucy out of a photo lineup.

Bucy, who says he played no part in the fight that day, was held on $1 million bail. He was slandered as a “violent gang member and a particularly unflattering photo of him wearing an orange jump suit was plastered on pages and screens from Waco to Vladivostok.

Adoption Proceedongs
Rob Bucy and his wife Marilyn had begun adoption proceedings for Alyssa. She had been born to relatives of the couple in California. A year and a half ago, when her birth family could no longer take care of the little girl, the Bucy’s took her in.

Rob Bucy eventually had his bail reduced to $75,000 and returned home. By then, child welfare officials in California had seen his photograph and heard the news that he was a violent thug. While Rob was locked up, Marilyn Bucy was served with a “notice of emergency removal.” The notice identified Rob Bucy as “a threat.” Marilyn Bucy packed the girl’s belongings and took her to an airport. Then Alyssa disappeared into the sky. A social worker in Texas has told the Bucys that Alyssa is now living with a foster family in California. They don’t know where and they are not allowed to contact the girl

Rob Bucy told Brett Shipp of television station WFAA, “It really breaks my heart. She’s Daddy’s girl.”