Someone calling himself US Senate Anon has been posting on 4chan all night about pedophile rings and blackmail. These threads were full of some of the most sophisticated shills I've ever seen. After he went to bed another thread was made that reached over 300 posts and then abruptly 404'd and the OP was banned.
The threads were mainly an attempt to encourage anons to take pizzagate into their own hands by "finding and exposing the blackmail handlers" by recording them in secret and immediately posting the material online anonymously. It was said that the Trump administration is powerless to bring down the blackmail networks without first fixing the economy because they will crash the economy in retaliation and start a civil war, but Trump can't fix the economy because the blackmail handlers won't allow it.
In one of the threads he very reluctantly dropped some specific names and places after repeatedly asking for promises that the information would be acted on. If this is not a LARP this man just risked his life to drop the following names and places for us to look into:
the Royal Order of Jesters have a building in Adams Morgan, under Billiken property management. Last I heard, things go on there.
Pamela Harriman
Steven Jacobs
Keep digging on Racine.
PART I
http://boards.4chan.org/pol/thread/141078354
https://archive.fo/eOLHb
PART II
http://boards.4chan.org/pol/thread/141090963
https://archive.fo/w74Qg
PART III
http://boards.4chan.org/pol/thread/141101552
https://archive.fo/jx3L0
PART IV
http://boards.4chan.org/pol/thread/141109967
https://archive.fo/XYjw2
https://8ch.net/pol/res/10589216.html#10589480
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ababcb ago
In the thread that was deleted, an anon did a little research on the Biliken group building. I am going to quote his post here. This was reposted on 8chan with images.
Factfinder2 ago
This is interesting.
Saied Azali seems to have used his drag queen associates to run a 2006 brownstone-ish operation at Perry's on Leonard Downie, who was then executive editor at the Washington Post. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leonard_Downie_Jr.
FreeRepublic.com posted a Washingtonian story detailing the revelations of two anonymous letters sent to the Washingtonian that gave details of the event at Perry's and the evidence coverup afterward. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-chat/1756904/posts
If you click on the Washingtonian link provided in the Free Republic post, you'll see the story has been 404'd, and what displays is a page covered with PANDAS: https://www.washingtonian.com/articles/mediapolitics/2902.html
Here's the Washingtonian article posted on FreeRepublic.com:
Len Downie's (WaPo Editor) Lap Dance With Drag Queen (Coverup/Dinosaur Media DeathWatch™)
The Washingtonian ^ | December 21, 2006 | Harry Jaffe
Posted on 12/21/2006, 10:42:28 AM by abb
The Post's editor had a R-rated encounter with a drag queen during a Post party this month—but so far the photos have stayed private.
Journalists get the occasional juicy and anonymous letter. Most are titillating but not worth publishing or broadcasting. The letter in large type about a party hosted by the Washington Post photography staff seemed to fit the second category: It mentioned in paragraph three that Post executive editor Len Downie was “the recipient of a lap dance and breasts in his face” by one of the party’s entertainers—who were drag queens!
Too good to be true?
A second anonymous letter said word had gone out at the Post to kill any pictures of Len’s lap dance.
I started making a few calls, figuring that if such an event had taken place, photos and videos probably would be on YouTube or some other website. If it had indeed taken place.
I got eye witness accounts. I wondered: Could a monthly magazine, with a lead time of several weeks, actually break a story about the Post’s top editor caught in an amusing, if not compromising, situation?
Here’s the scoop:
The Washington Post is not known for throwing lively parties, especially under staid executive editor Leonard Downie.
When the photo department decided to bid farewell to retiring staffers, it did not intend to get racy. Photo editor Joe Elbert booked Perrys, a sushi restaurant in DC’s Adams Morgan, for a Saturday afternoon. Owner Saied Azali promised to do something special because he was friends with well-known Post photographer Lucien Perkins.
Would the something special be free champagne? Special sushi? Not exactly.
Azali invited male dancers dressed as women who perform at Perrys’ Sunday “drag brunches.” Len Downie made an appearance just as the queens began to mingle. According to eye witnesses, one performer sat down next to Downie and wrapped him in a big hug.
Downie seemed at bit shocked, but one photographer says: “He took it in good humor at the time.”
But apparently Downie was less amused by the photos and videos being shot, and he asked that they be kept private.
No leaked pictures, so far, but many of those retired staffers would dearly love a picture of Downie in the embrace of a drag queen.