Bungling Brown University investigators scramble to find tubby 5’8″ killer who was ‘organized and comfortable’ with causing mass destruction

All criminals wear covid masks.

Authorities are under mounting pressure to track down the ‘organized’ tubby at-large suspect who killed two people and injured nine more in a horror shooting at Brown University.

The bungled response from law enforcement has been widely criticized in the days following the incident on Saturday, including the release of a ‘person of interest’ who was found not to be the killer.

Cops had also previously announced that they had a suspect ‘in custody’ in the aftermath of the killings before walking back the news, and shared conflicting reports of a secondary shooting that were ‘unfounded.’


Now this is a sh*tshow

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ANTI-NEWS: ABC News Omits Radical Left-Wing Motives Behind Foiled New Year’s Eve Terror Plot

Federal law enforcement quickly and expeditiously dismantled an ongoing terror plot that would have wreaked chaos and destruction across Southern California, had it been allowed to go undetected. Viewers of ABC’s World News Tonight might have been left wondering whether there was even a plot to begin with, based on a complete lack of reporting as to motive.

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For the first time in a decade, Canada’s War Crimes Program shares what it has been up to

Atrocities in Sudan, Gaza and Ukraine raise a question: do Canadians have a role in addressing the suffering of others?

While these wars can appear to affect only distant strangers, their horrors increase the chances that victims – and perpetrators – will seek to enter Canada. It’s unsurprising, then, that Canadian authorities are busier than ever in identifying suspected perpetrators of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide. Yet Canada continues to deport perpetrators without any guarantee they’ll be subsequently held accountable.

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New whistleblower undermines accusations against official Jan. 6 pipe bomb suspect, Rep. Thomas Massie says

Republican Rep. Thomas Massie of Kentucky revealed alleged details about the suspect arrested for the Jan. 6 pipe bomb plantings in Washington, D.C., that might undermine the official narrative of the incident.

The mystery of the pipe bombs seemed to be solved on Dec. 4, nearly five years after they were found, when Justice Department officials announced that they had arrested 30-year-old Brian Cole Jr. of Woodbridge, Virginia.

h/t SC

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JÄGER: Canada’s public transportation is a national embarrassment

Canada is, by nearly all measures, a developed nation. I say nearly because trying to get anywhere in this great land without a car is a humiliation ritual — a stark reminder that when it comes to transportation infrastructure, we have unequivocally failed to live up to expectations.

The same country that managed to construct a railway from coast to coast in record time — in the nineteenth century no less — now struggles to move past the concept stage on anything but the simplest of projects. Barriers are no longer towering mountains or raging rivers, but bureaucracy and refusal to dream big.

(Incognito)

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‘What if he was alive?’: Man’s body went unnoticed for days outside a Toronto hospital. His family wants answers

It’s unclear when Thomas Choy died inside the black Volkswagen parked steps away from Humber River Hospital.

From the little Choy’s family has been told by police, the Volkswagen drove up to the entrance of the emergency department at the North York hospital sometime on Sunday, Dec. 6, where it remained for more than three days until Choy’s body was discovered inside.

“I can’t stop thinking, what if he was still alive, slowly dying in the cold? And for how long?” Choy’s sister, Lang Choy, told the Star on Saturday. “Maybe they could have helped him.”

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$25,000 reward offered to find accused in Pickering Casino guard’s death

Scuba Diver?

The search for a man who was 17 when he allegedly killed a security guard at the Pickering Casino Resort in 2023 is heating up with the announcement of a $25,000 reward for information leading to his arrest.

Tyjae Nosworthy-Smith is accused in the fatal shooting of 34-year-old Michael Ferdinand, who was gunned down on the job shortly after 5 a.m. on Oct. 9, 2023.

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