Pulling harder on the Laura Silsby thread: new Pizzagate evidence
While most people now focus on unverifiable claims swirling within Pizzagate, this information builds on the most crucial piece of evidence: the Laura Silsby connection
The synopsis to the story below:
“The father of one of the Parkland [school shooting survivors] is linked to fraudulent adoption practices in Haiti, with links to [Hillary Clinton’s] State Dept and [Obama’s] Dept of Homeland Security.”
Recently, Elon Musk sparked a resurgence in the Pizzagate “conspiracy theory”, and I was disheartened to see just how much inaccurate information has overtaken the narrative of the theory.
On one hand, we have the classic debunkers that associate the theory with QAnon and Trump, disregarding the theory entirely and with zero consideration to its claims…mostly because they only read the initial 2016 articles covering the theory. On the other, we have people that believe the theory to be true, but go way overboard with it - sharing either inaccurate information or things that make the entire theory look ridiculous.
Unfortunately, reasonable content like mine is drowned out in all the noise and seen by very few people as a result.
Regardless, the revitalized interest in the theory - as short as it was - has inspired me to revisit the book I am currently writing about the theory, and more importantly, what started it to begin with. It’s an attempt to reconstruct the entire thing, primary sources and all, and objectively cover every aspect of it. As far as I can tell, it would be one of the few comprehensive, exhaustive works on the theory that exists. What you are about to read below is an excerpt from that book, which I plan on releasing some time in 2024.
Before you get started though, here are some links to my previous coverage on the theory, as well as where you can find me now. Also be sure to check my previous Substack entries, as I have published a ton of raw sources and links to back up the claims put forth in the below videos.
Pizza for your Family Pt. 1:
https://www.bitchute.com/video/e04eO72HITSB/
Pizza for your Family Pt. 2: Connections to the Convicted
https://www.bitchute.com/video/wpk64JYA7qMh/
All my links can be found here:
LinkTr.ee/TheMemoryHold
Also, be sure to subscribe to me here on Substack for more essays and primary resources!
If you are new to the Pizzagate theory, please be aware that the following information has little to do with the core claims of Pizzagate, and it may be best if you watched the two documentaries linked above before proceeding. However, I think the significance of this information is obvious by itself.
For those of you that were around back in 2016 when Pizzagate first emerged, you will recall that the theory did not start with Comet Ping Pong, the creepy art owned by the Podestas, or any of the other claims we see dominating the discussion around the topic - you will recall that it started with Haiti and Laura Silsby.
Briefly (for the sake of context), Laura Silsby was arrested [here] for abducting kids from Haiti following the catastrophic earthquake that leveled the country back in 2010 [here]…a case that became known as the “New Life Child Refuge” case. As anons were investigating the emails published by Wikileaks and the people affiliated with Comet Ping Pong (shortly after its initial discovery) and its owner, James Alefantis, they eventually pieced together something shocking: it turns out that James Alefantis is close personal friends with Max Maccoby, a lawyer who sat on the board of directors for the same orphanage that Silsby abducted some of the 33 children from, according to her lawyer, Jorge Puello (a man also involved in the trafficking of minors and women) [here]. Maccoby also served as Alefantis’ defense lawyer in court [here].
While much of the conversation around Pizzagate unfortunately revolves around the most outlandish and unverifiable claims of the theory (adrenochrome, satanic rituals, pedophile codes and symbols, and so on), this connection here was the most damning….and it was found before Pizzagate even got its name.
THE TAKING OF JA’MEKA
A few years ago, I was introduced to a blog called “Musings of a Birthmom” [here], a blog dedicated to all things related to the adoption process - particularly unethical adoptions and practices within the adoption industry. It’s an extremely illuminating page, and I had no idea about how frequently the adoption process is abused or goes wrong.
The particular blog entry this segment will focus on was published on November 22nd, 2016 and is entitled “Heart to Heart Adoptions; Andy and Melissa Moore; The Taking of Ja’Meka” [here]:
The article discusses a particular adoption agency’s role in the taking of a man’s daughter, Ja’Meka, despite the agency’s awareness that the baby had a living biological father. The author alleges that while Ja’Meka’s
Mom was heavily medicated from a tubal ligation she underwent the day before, she - under duress - was driven to an attorney’s office by Bonnie Lin Hilton, a woman working on behalf of an adoption agency called Heart to Heart Adoptions based out of Utah. It was at this office that the drugged up and extremely vulnerable mother of Ja’Meka agreed to waive all of her rights in the state of Georgia regarding her child and her adoption, and instead abide by Utah law. In the end, Ja’Meka’s mother who at the time was medicated on opiates and recovering from the serious medical operations she had just underwent one day earlier, completely terminated her parental rights.
Throughout this entire process, Ja’Meka’s biological father was never once informed about what was transpiring with his newborn baby. Heart to Heart Adoptions claimed that they had no idea who the father was, but the author calls that a straight up lie, and says that Johnny (the father) drove the mother to the hospital and was there as she gave birth. There are even pictures of Johnny holding his daughter there, too.
Under Georgia law, the segment covering Putative (biological) fathers and their rights when it comes to the adoption process of their biological children is found in Section 19-8-12 of the Georgia Code [here], and it requires that a father is given notice and properly informed of any pending adoption proceedings involving his child so long as one of the following conditions is met: 1) If his identity is known, 2) If he is registered on the putative father registry, and 3) If the court finds that the father has either (a) lived with the child, (b) contributed to the child’s support, (c) made attempts to legitimate the child or (d) provided support to the mother during the pregnancy.
If what the author is alleging is true, none of that was followed. She asserts that Johnny’s identity was clearly known as he was present at the hospital, seen holding newborn baby Ja’Meka, and he actually had already made attempts at legitimizing her, and therefore should have received a notice due to his fullfillment of the above criteria. If he did receive a notice, he would have been granted 30 days to legitimize his child, a legal process in Georgia that gives a father rights to his child. Despite all of that, and despite even Johnny’s vocal statements of not wanting an adoption to take place or agreeing to waive his rights or protections, the child was taken from him just one day after her birth.
If everything the author states in this article is true, it’s a tragic story, and it should make you wonder how all of these various child protection services and organizations (the ones we’ve always just assumed are safe and an overall benefit to society and our children), and how often incidents like this happen. The story of Ja’Meka’s adoption is a tragic one, but it’s also an incredibly bizarre one for the reasons you are about to see.
The author states that she identified who the adoptive parents of Ja’Meka are, and that they are from Boise, Idaho, but now live in Utah. She states that the reason they are “hiding out” in Utah and unable to return home is because their ICPC paperwork is not complete and they cannot get cleared without it. She states that they have not met the requirements to take Ja’Meka out of her home state of Georgia and into Utah due to the fact that, technically, the father’s rights were never terminated, and remain intact. The names of the adoptive parents are Andy and Melissa Moore, and their Facebook profiles are publicly available (see below):
Here is an image posted by Melissa Moore that shows Andy and Melissa Moore together:
The couple’s daughter, Jessica Mawhiney, can be seen congratulating her two parents for finally adopting the baby, which is something they’ve wanted to do for years:
I am not going to comment on the character or morality of Andy and Melissa Moore. It could very possibly be the case that they are great people and loving parents, and if there truly was any injustice with Ja’Meka’s adoption, the blame would likely fall on Heart to Heart Adoptions.
Who is behind Heart to Heart Adoptions, though? I won’t dive super deep into their backgrounds, but a quick overview will do:
Heart to Heart Adoptions was founded by Donna Pope and Mary Anne Holmoe and is a smaller agency in Sandy, Utah. Marney DeVroom is listed as a Chairman of Heart to Heart Adoptions, and is also the founder of Spectrum Academy in North Salt Lake City, Utah. The author remarks on the strange nature of Spectrum’s website:
“What’s interesting about Spectrum Academy is, they have medical forms for their students on their website [here].
This is a school that consists mainly of pupils on the Autism spectrum from grades K-12. A private, non-profit charter school. Of about 36 forms for various different conditions, there is a pregnancy form [here]. While that in and of itself isn’t TOO unusual, the wording at the beginning is. And given that the founder, director and owner of Spectrum Academy is also the Chairman of an adoption agency, well, let’s just say skeptical cat is skeptical. As an afterthought, Marney is also some sort of counsel for oil companies.”
The author takes up issue with the wording at the beginning of the pregnancy form, and remarks on how strange it is that Spectrum Academy is essentially asking for access to any pregnant student’s medical records. The author poses the following questions:
“Why would a pregnancy care plan have the above information stated? Why would a school need access to a student’s medical records? There is also a form for Asthma. My daughter has Asthma. I have never once been asked to release her medical records for her school to have full access to at any time.”
She then looks into the background of Bonnie Lin Hilton, the woman working on behalf of Heart to Heart Adoptions and the one that facilitated the adoption of Ja’Meka by driving her mother to the attorney’s office while drugged on opiates and in a vulnerable state. The author notes:
“Bonnie Lin Hilton, social worker that facilitated all of this. She does hold a current license in the state of Utah as a social worker. She does NOT hold a current Clinical Social Worker (LCSW) license for the state of Georgia – where she was conducting herself on behalf of Heart to Heart Adoptions. Her current license in Utah is an endorsement license.
In other words, she transferred her license from the state of Tennessee where she apparently worked for an organization called “Adoptions Plus” which I can find virtually no information about, besides the fact that her license as a social worker was tied to that organization and the address of that organization was 2211 Berrywood Dr., Knoxville, TN, 37932. It wouldn’t be going out too far on a limb to assume that Bonnie may have been trying to run her own adoption agency but failed.
Interestingly, Bonnie is also listed on the Heart to Heart Adoption agency website as Hope Zettler, LCSW. I am stumped as to why this is. But I think it further proves the deception of Heart to Heart. Was Bonnie Lin Hilton once going by Hope Zettler? Appears that way on the website.”
Below is an image of the same woman (Bonnie Lin Hilton) also listed as “Hope Zettler” on the same website:
I found the fact that Bonnie Lin Hilton was initially listed on the Heart to Heart website as Hope Zettler, LCSW. Did she change her name? If so, why? Changing one’s last name due to marriage is one thing, but being listed as an entirely different name under a company you apparently officially work for? That’s strange to me. I took the time to dig further into Bonnie’s background, but have unfortunately come up short on obtaining any further information on her that might shed light on this particular detail. I do not doubt that there is a reasonable explanation for this discrepancy, but I have come up short in determining what that explanation is.
Now that you’re aware of the pedophile code system and their symbolism, one might look at last image of Heart to Heart Adoption’s website and take note of the logo, which is a heart but appears to have a dual-layer border around the outside of it. A lot of researchers were absolutely convinced that there was a high likelihood that these are pedophile symbols, but there were just as many that believed that it was too difficult to tell. Remember, the ambiguity we’re seeing right now with the Heart to Heart logo is precisely the effect that pedophiles wanted to have on non-offenders; you can be completely confident that this particular logo is a pedophile symbol, but you can never prove it. Make note of it, then move on from it:
Towards the end of the blog, the author states that Donna Pope - founder of Heart to Heart Adoptions - actually admitted in writing that the paperwork of relinquishment was incorrect - possibly even fraudulent, according to the author. She concludes:
“Heart to Heart – you’re on my radar. You’re on a lot of people’s radars now. You’re business doesn’t seem to be going too well, either. I’m not sure how the IRS, and proper licensing authorities will feel about the dirty dealings you’ve been conducting. I highly suggest you get your stuff together and conduct legal and ethical adoptions instead of stealing other Father’s babies for profit by ignoring their rights.”
That should be a sufficient amount of background information you need in order to understand where I’m going with this. The fact is that this author is confident that some extremely sketchy adoptions were taking place at Heart to Heart, and that she would not stop trying to expose them until Ja’Meka is returned to Johnny, her biological father.
How does this tie into the New Life Child Refuge case though? Well, by sheer coincidence of course…and not just one coincidence, either.
If you dig into the background of Heart to Heart Adoptions further, you’ll see that it isn’t a standalone adoption agency, and the agency is actually under a larger umbrella organization called the Florida Adoption Council [here]
According to its website, the Florida Adoption Council describes itself as:
“...a non-profit corporation which has been in existence since 2001. Its membership is composed of individuals involved in adoption in the State of Florida. Members work in various roles in the adoption context, including attorneys, social workers, agency directors, and counselors, among others.
FAC is governed by a Board of Directors which currently has nine members. The organization facilitates communication between members through the use of a members-only lists and networking opportunities at its annual conference. Educational opportunities providing required continuing education credit are offered to members at a discounted price, The organization holds an annual meeting which offers training from the basics to advanced skills as well as updates on current events, case law, and legislative issues. FAC has a lobbyist and is actively involved in the Florida legislative process when laws relating to adoption are proposed.”
That all seems fairly normal, and nothing immediately stands out as unusual to me in their description of themselves.
Looking deeper into the Florida Adoption Council, though, is where the first of the coincidences begin to emerge, and things start getting strange.
THE KASKY CONNECTION
It turns out that the one of the founding members of the Florida Adoption Council is a man named Jeffrey A. Kasky. If that name sounds familiar to you, it could be for a few reasons…the first being that you watched my video from a few years back on this same case….
…or, it’s due to this:
Yes, the father of one of the Parkland School shooting survivors is a founding member of the Florida Adoption Council, of which the sketchy Heart to Heart Adoptions agency behind the unlawful adoption of baby Ja’Meka is a part of.
Kasky has a pretty rich history in the world of adoption, but if you ever saw him appear on the news as an anti-gun lobbyist, you would see nothing that indicates that. Kasky describes himself as an “expert on adoption fraud and scams”, and even made an appearance on the John Walsh show during an episode about fraudulent activity in the world of adoption.
In Kasky’s bio, you may have noticed that he also lists himself as a co-founder of his own adoption agency called “One World Adoption Services”, a Florida licensed not-for-profit child placing agency. His LinkedIn profile also lists himself as VP of One World Adoptions [here] (although, he interestingly seems to have deleted his profile picture and created an entirely new profile that does not list One World on it). Interestingly, when you go to start looking into the Kasky connection and Google One World Adoption Services, you’ll notice that there are actually two separate adoption agencies called One World Adoption Services. One is in Georgia, and one is in Florida. Jeff Kasky co-founded the one in Florida, and a woman named Margaret Snider is listed as the Executive Director of the One World in Georgia [here]. Keep that in mind.
In typical pizzagate fashion, both the Georgia One World and the Florida One World founded by Kasky have had some severe allegations made about them, with a partial trail of legal issues to prove it. For example, here’s an article about the One World Adoption Services in Georgia being closed down in 2014 due to issues that may sound familiar to you [here]:
“A Georgia-based agency active in international adoptions has decided to go out of business after being punished with a 90-day suspension over allegations of improper documentation in its operations in Congo.
In a letter to the roughly 120 families it was serving, One World Adoption Services (OWAS) in Sugar Hill said that due to the suspension, ‘our continued operation as an agency is no longer feasible.’
The letter said the families would be provided with referrals to other agencies that would accept transfers of pending cases. One World, which says it has served hundreds of families since its founding in 2003, was currently working on adoptions from Belize, Bulgaria, Brazil, Latvia and Ukraine, as well as Congo.
‘OWAS has been in business 11 years and has had a stellar reputation,’ Joel Ferdinand, the attorney for the nonprofit One World, said Friday. ‘Its closure is unfortunate not only for OWAS, but for the 120 families effected by the decision.’
According to the council’s investigation, the suspension was warranted for several violations of international adoption regulations that occurred in Congo. These included failing to obtain proper documentation to prove that a child was eligible for adoption, providing a prospective adoptive parent with a document that may have contained false information, and forwarding to another prospective adoptive family a lawyer’s request for a $2,000 payment ‘to motivate public officials to act.’”
Those allegations paint quite the picture. Failing to obtain proper documentation to prove a child was eligible for adoption? Providing a future adoptive parent with fraudulent paperwork? Sounds like they were pulling a Silsby.
Just think: all of this was happening in an industry dealing with the procurement and adoption of children all over the world. To me, failing to provide the specific documents that confirm a child’s eligibility for adoption is most telling here - if those documents are not provided, how does anybody know for certain that that child doesn’t have parents already, or was obtained in some illicit way? Those documents seem to be the bare minimum requirement for all adoption-like agencies, so why would One World not be able to provide them?; From what I can tell, if an adoption agency was abiding by the law, there would be no reason to 1) Lack adoption authorization/child eligibility paperwork, and 2) Provide fraudulent paperwork to prospective adoptive parents. Both allegations indicate the adoption agency has something to hide, but what could it be?
Looking to see if any additional information on the Georgia One World Adoption Services could be found, an additional name pops up in connection with them: Susan Secor, a woman that is listed as the “In Care of Name” for One World G.A.
Secor is an unfamiliar name, but Secor has appeared in media articles and interviews to consult on a variety of adoption-related issues. Here is a CNN transcript from an interview Secor did in March 2010 on the Haiti orphan crisis [here]:
Secor goes on to discuss the number of orphaned children there are at that time in Haiti. The numbers shocked me, so I wanted to include that here for your consideration:
Now that it’s been made clear that the One World in Georgia was pretty clearly conducting some very sketchy business while in operation, this last article about them should stick out to you for reasons that should be immediately obvious [here]:
And there it is. One World Adoption Services in Georgia appears to not only be involved in providing commentary on the 2010 Haitian orphan crisis and their adoptions, but also directly involved in the adopting of orphaned Haitian kids in 2010 on behalf of the U.S Department of State and the Department of Homeland Security. With Hillary Clinton serving as Secretary of State at that time as I mentioned earlier, it is likely that she was aware (or even authorized) this program as well.
Now that we know a good bit about Georgia One World’s sketchy background and their history in recovering orphans in Haiti, let’s pivot and now look into the Florida One World Adoption location - the one co-founded by Jeff Kasky [here]:
The article reads:
“Two couples filed suit Tuesday against separate South Florida adoption agencies alleging breach of contract and a host of other claims.
Palm Beach County couple Lori Baron and William Bermudez accuse Deerfield Beach-based One World Adoption Services - which they say they paid to conduct a home study - of interfering with their adoption of twins by offering to pay the birth mother money if she would place the children with their agency instead of the couple.
Baron and Bermudez also accuse the agency of threatening to have the birth mother arrested on an outstanding warrant if she didn't place the children with them, according to the suit.”
Of course, Kasky goes with the “deny, deny, deny” strategy:
“Jeff Kasky, One World's vice president and staff attorney, said that confidentiality laws prohibit him from commenting specifically on the case but that "very generically, we would never do any of those things and have never done any of those things.”
Don’t worry though, everyone. The mainstream media has assured us that Jeff Kasky is not a child trafficker in any way, shape, or form [here]
“Kasky, who said he once ran an adoption service, has been accused of trafficking children and conspiring with the Clintons. But he says the progress his son and classmates have achieved makes the threats and online harassment seem trivial.”
What a relief! The mainstream media’s succinct assertion as to Kasky’s innocence as well as the abundance of sources they cited to reinforce those claims, I really could never imagine without a world without a media apparatus in the current state that it is now. Thank God for them.
Who knew that the world of adoptions was so dark? At the conclusion of this book, hopefully you will look at the entire industry with fresh, and newly skeptical eyes.
As I was in the process of writing this book, a new scandal related to foster care and unlawful adoptions in Florida broke. A June 2022 article from the Tennessee Tribune covers a story that has some pretty striking resemblances to that of Kasky and One World Adoption Services’ issues:
“Four Florida families are suing Gov. Ron DeSantis, Shevaun Harris, Secretary of the Florida Department of Children and Families (DCF), Dr. Joseph Ladapo, Executive Director of the Florida Department of Health, Patricia Armstrong, Bureau Chief of Florida Department of Health Child Protection Team, and Dennis Moore, Executive Director of Florida’s Guardian ad Litem Program.
“The theme of our lawsuit is focused on all these kids who had a perfectly available and appropriate family member and those family members were passed over or ignored in favor for people who are connected to the system,” said Attorney Valentina Villalobos.
The 177-page complaint alleges DCF, lead agencies, and contractors who operate the foster care system wrongfully took children from their families without any evidence of neglect or abuse; thwarted the attempts by family members to get custody of the children; and in one case falsely accused a grandmother of abuse and instead, put the child up for adoption. In that particularly twisted and noxious bit of insider trading, a former board member of the agency handling the case adopted one of the children. The child was African American; the foster parents were Caucasian
“The point of the lawsuit is to stop it from continuing. We can’t necessarily undo the damage in the vast majority of the cases. An adoption in Florida, once it’s finalized, you’ve got one year to try and undo it and it’s never happened,” Villalobos said.
Their identities are known but not cited by name in the complaint. The plaintiffs cite numerous examples showing how foster care workers, DCF attorneys, and Guardians at Litem deliberately blocked ‘family placement’ to steer kids into adoption by ‘insiders’. Family reunification and placement with relatives are supposed to be the primary goals of Florida’s child welfare system when kids are taken into custody. Tennessee and other states have the same priorities.
Three of the four plaintiff attorneys know a lot about DCF because they were once insiders. The lead attorney, Karen Gievers, was a dependency judge. The plaintiff families were clients.
I don’t think there is any other word but “evil” to describe what is going on with this case.
Interestingly, there is a Florida Adoption Council connection here, too…although it’s a loose one. If you navigate to the Florida Adoption Council’s website [here] and visit their “about” page, a comprehensive list of their board of directors is included. One of the board members, Elizabeth R. Berkowitz, is listed as being a certified Guardian Ad Litem:
And if you recall, it was Florida’s Guardian Ad Litem that was being accused of interfering in family placement of children, effectively diverting their family away from rightfully adopting them. From the previous article:
“Their identities are known but not cited by name in the complaint. The plaintiffs cite numerous examples showing how foster care workers, DCF attorneys, and Guardians ad Litem deliberately blocked ‘family placement’ to steer kids into adoption by ‘insiders’”
To be clear, I am not in any way accusing Elizabeth Berkowitz of any wrongdoing whatsoever. I’m not accusing anybody named in this paper of any wrongdoing. I am simply outlining a connection between the Florida Adoption Council (founded by Jeff Kasky who had also founded One World Adoption Services which ended up closing due to similar activity) and this recent 2022 case. I would not be surprised if they are more intimately connected in other ways.
COMING FULL CIRCLE
Alright, with all of that covered, let’s get to the crazy part.
Initially, looking into One World Adoption Services’ background provided search results that indicated there were two separate organizations by the same One World name in Florida and Georgia. There was no evidence that indicated there were any connections between the two, besides the name - which is just a coincidence. However, ManBunScarfBeard on Reddit [here] finally found a direct connection between the two agencies that confirms that the Georgia and Florida One World Adoption organizations are one in the same….or close to it.
If you recall, I mentioned that Margaret Snider is an Executive Director for the organization in Georgia. This fact can be seen reflected across the handful of websites that include business information and other details about the company. What wasn’t immediately obvious to researchers at first, though, was that buried deep within sparse and scattered articles about One World’s history and role as an organization, was a single detail that proves the two agencies are actually the same [here]:
The website DeerFieldBeachOnline has the Florida One World Adoption Service listed on their page, along with their basic contact information. Unlike every other website that only lists Jeff Kasky as the point of contact for the Florida location, this one reveals that Margaret Snider is actually involved in the Florida location, too. In fact, Jeff Kasky isn’t even mentioned anywhere on the page. You can check it yourself.
Credit goes to ManBunScarfBeard on that particular discovery - his thread is one of the earliest ones I could find. I know Voat was digging on it, too. , the researcher on Reddit that made this discovery, summarized the findings succinctly:
“The father of one of the Parkland [school shooting survivors] is linked to fraudulent adoption practices in Haiti, with links to [Hillary Clinton’s] State Dept and [Obama’s] Dept of Homeland Security.”
How does all of this circle back around to the 2010 case with Laura Silsby in Haiti though?
Through Andy Moore, the adoptive father of Ja’Meka.
If you recall, Laura Silsby’s New Life Child Refuge was based in Boise, Idaho. Andy and Melissa Moore were also living in Idaho (but were “hiding out” in Utah, according to the blog’s author). See where this is going?
If you take a look at Andy Moore’s LinkedIn page [here], the connection between the Moores and Laura Silsby becomes crystal clear. Here’s an image of Andy Moore’s LinkedIn page as it looks currently (the archive link above may appear different than the site does now, because that archive was from a few years ago).
If you scroll down to the “recommendations” section, and then click on the “given” tab, a list of all the recommendations Andy Moore has given people is listed. If you click on “show all recommendations” and scroll down the list, you will eventually see the recommendation he gave Rebecca Harms, where Andy stated that Andy worked with Rebecca in 2008 and was her senior, but did not manage her directly. See below:
Alright, so Andy Moore indirectly managed Rebecca Harms in 2008, but where did they work together?
They worked together at PersonalShopper.com…the company Laura Silsby of the New Life child Refuge case founded in the late 1990s.
For a debunked conspiracy theory involving baseless accusations of pedophilia, there sure are quite a bit of sketchy pedo-related connections stemming from that very small group of DC elites and their pizza restaurant.
- MemoryHold
Connect that to this.
https://docs.google.com/document/d/1vNk6Db1_UmiSNiMYwEx6Zzo9jr7ywhwTpk8Cuhjnb8k/edit
Then this to this
https://drive.google.com/file/d/0B1kILKA61Qv3ZmlhS1JVMFVvbXJSQWVLYkh6LXc1TkdtTnpZ/view?usp=drivesdk&resourcekey=0-PWbYLwAkObLgGCCh6fXWjg
https://timothycharlesholmseth.com/hillarys-bodyguard-craig-sawyer-veterans-for-child-rescued-interstate-wire-fraud/
Mr Holmseth was mailed a confession of Jon Bennet Ramsey’s murder
Two is to young to die.
It was published once with books and noble but pulled out due to the graphic nature. Holmseth sent a copy to Trump and U.S. Attorney Generals office in 2016. Holmseth is from Boward county I believe.
I have that copy. As soon as I find it I’ll send it! All these people are connect.
What a world we live in!
Godspeed my friend and brother!
God Bless and stay safe!