RR News Update! – July 2nd, 2024 Justus Knight
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On today’s broadcast:
Title: EXCLUSIVE | FBI – The Behind the Scenes Creation of a Domestic Terror Organization – Part 2
Description :
As we covered in Part 1 yesterday, In a striking revelation, Headline USA’s investigation uncovers the FBI’s covert program in the mid-2000s to orchestrate neo-Nazi rallies across the United States. These rallies were not merely symbolic gestures but served as pivotal points for the FBI to conduct extensive surveillance and recruit informants within extremist circles.
The program’s inception was traced back to a disturbing incident in Orlando in 2007. An FBI informant, previously undercover within the neo-Nazi movement, was exposed for organizing a rally the year prior. This exposure prompted the FBI to launch a subsequent operation in the same area, codenamed “Primitive Affliction.” This initiative saw the bureau setting up a neo-Nazi motorcycle front group, strategically designed to infiltrate Florida’s entrenched right-wing networks.
While federal agencies have historically employed front groups, such as motorcycle clubs like the Hells Angels, in criminal investigations involving drug and gun trafficking, the application of such tactics in a politically charged domestic terrorism context like Primitive Affliction stands out as highly controversial.
Newly unearthed documents underscore the personal interest of then-FBI Director Robert Mueller in Primitive Affliction. Mueller’s direct involvement in the operation, which spanned roughly from 2007 to 2012, was evident from daily briefings meticulously documented in a recently discovered performance review of an undercover FBI agent assigned to the Joint Terrorism Task Force.
Despite its ambitious scope and strategic deployment of resources, Primitive Affliction ultimately failed to secure terrorism-related convictions, thereby avoiding widespread media attention. However, a deep dive into the case reveals striking parallels with the FBI’s historical tactics, notably seen in the 1990s investigations against extremist groups like the Aryan Nations. Furthermore, echoes of these covert strategies resonate in contemporary law enforcement efforts, such as the 2020 conspiracy to kidnap Michigan’s governor. This could have only been an FBI Operation to begin events that would cascade into January 6th and lead to the mass arrest of so many innocent American’s while helping Joe Biden to get elected by making Trump look like he was helping to lead a radical Aryan rebellion and his ‘foot soldiers’ were secretly carrying out his plan…but rather it was all the FBI!
Robert Mueller, when approached for comment on Primitive Affliction, declined to respond, maintaining a characteristic silence on the controversial operation. Similarly, the FBI chose not to provide any official statement regarding the program’s specifics or outcomes.
In the 1980s and 90s, the Aryan Nations, often dubbed the face of “white hate” alongside the Ku Klux Klan, gained notoriety for its involvement in various criminal activities including bank robberies, the assassination of a Jewish radio host, and connections to the Oklahoma City bombing that we covered for you just a few days ago.
However, by the mid-2000s, the Aryan Nations had been significantly weakened by a wave of arrests and legal actions, leading to its fragmentation into disparate factions across the United States. One of its remaining leaders, August Kreis, sought to consolidate power from a mobile home in South Carolina, collaborating with Joshua Caleb Sutter, who had been an FBI informant since 2003.
In an attempt to regain prominence, Kreis pursued attention-grabbing maneuvers, such as declaring allegiance to Osama bin Laden and attempting an alliance with Muslim extremists. Sutter, serving as Kreis’s “minister for Islamic liaison,” even posted messages supporting Saddam Hussein on the Aryan Nations website. Notably, Sutter had gained media attention in 2021 for his dual role as an informant and manager of a Satanic publishing house, earning over $100,000 from the FBI.
Facing difficulty in attracting new adherents or financial support through these strategies, Kreis turned to Robert Killian, another member of the Aryan Nations who, unbeknownst to Kreis, was an undercover officer in the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF). Killian, posing as “Doc,” had infiltrated the Aryan Nations while frequenting an Outlaw biker bar in Orlando, eventually rising to the position of Florida state administrator within the group. Ironically, this role provided Killian with the authority to screen and recruit new members.
The FBI’s strategy took an unconventional turn when Killian proposed merging a domestic terrorism investigation with a biker-related case. He persuaded Kreis to establish a neo-Nazi motorcycle club, the 1st SS Kavallerie Brigade Motorcycle Division, named after a unit of Nazi Germany’s Waffen-SS. Kreis viewed the club as a means to boost publicity, recruit new members, and generate funds for the Aryan Nations.
With the aim of populating the club, Killian convinced an Outlaw biker named Brian Klose to lead the 1st SS Kavallerie. Klose, enticed by the opportunity to assume the title of “Fuhrer” within the new group, eventually regretted his decision as it became apparent that the club was a front orchestrated by the FBI.
Unbeknownst to Klose and Kreis, the 1st SS Kavallerie clubhouse became a hub of surveillance, with multiple undercover operatives and informants infiltrating its ranks. Internal law enforcement records reveal the extent of these operations, which employed sophisticated surveillance techniques including wiretaps.
This orchestrated effort by the FBI illustrates a complex strategy to dismantle the Aryan Nations and its affiliates, utilizing both traditional law enforcement tactics and innovative undercover operations within the biker subculture.
Kelly Boaz, also known as ‘Kevin Post,’ played a pivotal role as an undercover agent in Operation Primitive Affliction. A local Orange County police officer, Boaz had secured a position on the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force (JTTF) and received specialized training from the ADL and SPLC, according to his personnel records.
Boaz’s tenure with the Orange County Sheriff’s Office was marred by controversy, including over a dozen internal investigations since joining in 1989, many involving allegations of excessive force. Despite this, he was assigned to the JTTF, tasked with building a case against a network of white supremacist terrorists.
In his undercover persona, Boaz posed as ‘Kevin Post,’ a renegade bomb-maker affiliated with the Black Pistons within Operation Primitive Affliction. He became involved with the Outlaw bikers and the neo-Nazi group 1st SS Kavallerie in Florida, introduced to them by his colleague Robert Killian. Boaz’s infiltration lasted nearly three years, during which he expanded the operation to include the Russia-linked American Front.
Throughout his investigation, Boaz made sensational claims about drug deals and terrorist plots he allegedly witnessed. He also reported facing threats to his life, including an incident where an Outlaw biker allegedly held a gun to his head and accused him of being a law enforcement agent.
While Boaz’s performance received accolades in FBI briefings to the Director, subsequent scrutiny of the evidence presented in court has raised doubts about the veracity of his claims.
Headlined “Biker Gangsters Busted after Three-Year Probe,” the Orlando Sentinel reported the events of March 31, 2012. Just two nights earlier, Kelly Boaz and FBI agents executed Operation Primitive Affliction, culminating in the arrest of several targets. Among them was Deborah Plowman, apprehended at her Chicago-area home by a swarm of armed agents on March 29, 2012. Boaz claimed to have seen Plowman using pills at an Outlaw biker gathering years earlier.
After spending a night in jail, Plowman was instructed to travel to Florida to face drug-trafficking charges or face extradition. Puzzled by the accusations, Plowman maintained her innocence. The truth surfaced on April 19, 2012, when Plowman turned herself in Florida and was interviewed by Boaz. It quickly became apparent to Boaz that a mistake had been made.
“Boaz asked [Plowman] if she has ever used the nickname or has ever been called ‘Sin,’ to which she replied with a ‘no,'” recounted Plowman in a subsequent lawsuit over her wrongful arrest. “Defendant Boaz immediately began to break out into a sweat upon viewing and questioning [Plowman], realizing he caused the wrong person, [Plowman], to be arrested in his undercover operation, instead of ‘Sin’ [Kristy Pryzbylla].”
As it turned out, Plowman was married to someone under Boaz’s investigation, and he had mistaken her for Kristy Pryzbylla. Plowman promptly hired legal representation, with her attorney, Jerry Theophilopoulos, criticizing Boaz’s negligence in the Orlando Sentinel.
“Had Boaz checked her driver’s license, he would have realized his error,” Theophilopoulos stated. “In my twenty years of practice, I’ve never seen such a case mishandled as Deborah Plowman’s.”
Plowman’s charges were dropped in May 2012, and she later received $30,000 from Boaz in a civil lawsuit settlement.
Boaz’s lapses continued to surface as Primitive Affliction unfolded in court. Initially, defendants like “Fuehrer” Klose, Ronald Cusack, Carlos Eugene Dubose, and Harold Johnson Kinlaw faced serious charges, including bomb-making and solicitation of murder. However, prosecutors later focused on drug-related offenses, negotiating plea deals instead of pursuing violent crime charges.
Assistant State Attorney Steven Foster defended this strategy, citing the “Al Capone theory of prosecution,” likening it to how federal authorities targeted the infamous mobster for tax evasion rather than his more egregious offenses.
“We opted to strike at the Kavallerie Brigade with significant drug charges to dismantle their operations,” Foster stated proudly, underscoring the shutdown of what he described as an FBI front group.
However, Dubose, an Outlaw biker defendant, contested his charges vigorously.
His decision ultimately proved advantageous.
A former U.S. Marine, Dubose faced severe charges stemming from a motorcycle accident that left him in dire financial straits. Further complicating matters, an FBI informant facilitated the sale of prescription painkillers to an undercover officer.
Initially accused of trafficking substantial quantities of Oxycodone, which carried a potential life sentence, Dubose discovered discrepancies during pre-trial discovery. An FBI report revealed that he had only provided 9 grams of pills, a misdemeanor-level offense with a maximum seven-year sentence.
After successfully reducing the severity of his drug charge, Dubose pleaded guilty but steadfastly denied involvement in any bomb plots. Allegations arose from a conversation with Boaz, posing as “Kevin Post,” in 2009.
Dubose pointed out that the discussion never progressed beyond hypotheticals over three years. Transcript evidence showed Dubose cautiously discussing the topic: “We’re not lookin’ to do anything. It’s just a matter if we start to go to war with somebody,” he remarked to Post/Boaz at the conversation’s conclusion.
While Florida prosecutors acknowledged the absence of concrete evidence in recorded conversations, they asserted Dubose had discussed such plans elsewhere. Despite the lack of recordings or physical evidence linking Dubose to bomb-making activities, the judge sided with Boaz and the prosecution, rejecting motions to dismiss charges. Dubose subsequently accepted a plea deal.
Now doesn’t this tactic sound all to familiar.
The repercussions of Primitive Affliction extend beyond its immediate operational failures. They highlight enduring questions about the ethics and efficacy of FBI tactics in combating domestic extremism, particularly amidst ongoing scrutiny of law enforcement practices and civil liberties.
I love you all, until next time, God Speed and God Bless each and every one of you | until next time, Justus Knight, signing out
Justus Knight
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Categories: #conspiracy, Politics
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