My Polka Dot Apron

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July 1, 2024 2:08 am  #1


What they don't tell you is, the WHOLE story here

They don't bother to mention that these two make a LOT MORE than $78,000 per year, AND that Curt has a criminal record himself, but the agency hired him because my neice (Danielle) was working for them.  I'm not sure HOW that happened either.  She was a very smart girl in school but how does being smart qualify you for being in the FBI????  In today's world smart has nothing to do with it, obviously.  But together, the two of them make WAAAAY more money that what is stated at the official website ($78,000 per year each is what it says but that's a lie), you don't buy a $800,000 house on two salaries of $78,000 dollars/year.  Well, only in biden's world of imaginary stuff and printing of money schemes.

Curt has been in trouble with the law about 3 or 4 times himself before he was ever hired by the FBI (and I believe he was only hired because of Dannie).  He got into some sort of trouble at some Children's Home Society, then he was in trouble when he worked at Lutheran Social Services (how he EVER got that job I'll never know because he was a STRICT, STRICT catholic - still is, liar and thief or not!!), and then he was in some sort of gambling trouble or something having to do with money while he was employed at the local Vo-Tech school.  My neighbor lady teaches at the same school and we were discussing it "over the fence" one day and she said things were NOT looking good for him at that school.  Geez, imagine that?  The school didn't want a liar on their staff.

So although I feel sorry for him and what he went through, there's just no way I feel sorry for him getting himself into that situation.  Those illegals should not have been here in this country and if the FBI and a few other useless agencies were actually doing their jobs, none of those people would be here in the first place to do this sort of thing.   This was, of course, all done on biden's watch, too.  The hiring of these two, the alleged kidnapping thing . . . all of it.   

Two men convicted of kidnapping FBI employee at gunpoint(MGN Online)

By Ezra Garcia  (ezra is a Jewish name and Garcia is a Spanish name, imagine that mixture will ya???)!!!

Published: Jan. 25, 2024 at 1:41 PM MST RAPID CITY, S.D. (KOTA) -

Juan Francisco Alvarez-Sorto, 25, of El Salvador, and Deyvin Morales, age 29, of Guatemala, were convicted by a federal jury of the following offenses: kidnapping; carjacking; brandishing a firearm during and in relation to a crime of violence; unlawful possession of a firearm by a prohibited person; and unlawful reentry after deportation.The jury returned its verdict on each count following a six-day jury trial in a federal district court in Rapid City. The verdict was returned on Jan. 23.According to evidence presented at trial, on May 5, 2022, Alvarez, Morales, and co-defendant Karla Alejandra Lopez-Gutierrez traveled from Greeley, Colo., into southwestern South Dakota with the intent of trafficking and distributing controlled substances, including methamphetamine, fentanyl, and heroin. The defendants encountered police during their trip and engaged in a high-speed chase. They eluded police at that time and hid in a remote area near Red Shirt.Alvarez, Morales, and Lopez then decided to carjack the next car to come along the area where the group stopped on BIA Highway 41. Around 2 a.m. on May 6, 2022, a Federal Bureau of Investigation victim specialist left an unrelated crime scene investigation near Oglala, and began traveling back toward his duty station in Rapid City. The FBI employee was driving his assigned FBI car. The employee was heading North on BIA 41 near the Badlands overlook on Cuny Table, when he passed a car that was parked in the approach near the overlook. As he passed the parked car, the parked car’s lights turned on and the car pulled out behind the employee. The employee, believing he was being pulled over by highway patrol, pulled his car to the side of the road. After the employee pulled his car over, he realized there was a male at his window pointing a rifle at him, ordering him to get out of the car. The employee realized that the male, identified as Alvarez, was not a police officer. Also, the car Alvarez had come from had blocked his car, preventing him from driving away.Morales and Alvarez ordered the FBI employee out of the car at gunpoint. The employee was ordered to get on the ground behind his car while Alvarez was holding the rifle at the back of his head. The employee was told to keep his head down while on the ground. The group then robbed him of his wallet, money, credit cards, car keys, watch, and personal and work mobile phones. The FBI employee was then forced to get up and was placed in the middle-rear seat of his government-issued car, as the passenger side seat was blocked with items. While holding the rifle, Alvarez was seated in the front passenger seat of the employee’s car and Morales, while armed with two handguns in his waistband, was seated in the rear driver’s side seat next to the employee. Lopez got into the driver’s seat of the employee’s car.At this point, the group took control of the car and took the employee hostage.The group traveled North on BIA 41 and told the employee to cooperate and that he would be safe, but if he did not, the group would come after his family and that they knew where he lived. The group traveled to Hermosa, stopping at a gas station at the intersection of State Highway 40 and Highway 79. Once the group arrived at the gas station, Lopez went inside to purchase gas. As she got out of the car to go inside the gas station, Alvarez locked the doors to the employee’s car, and the doors remained locked. Lopez then returned to the car holding a gas can and zip ties. She entered the car, did a U-turn, and then went to a gas pump. The FBI employee noticed that after Lopez came back to the car, Alvarez, who was holding the firearm, had the zip ties and was getting them out. As Lopez got out to pump gas, the doors to the car were momentarily unlocked. Seizing the opportunity, the employee opened the rear driver’s side door, fought his way out of the car, slipped out of his jacket to escape Morales’ attempts to detain him, and sprinted inside the front doors of the gas station to escape.The three then fled from the gas station and drove to Rapid City, where they abandoned the FBI car and switched to another car. Alvarez and Morales were able to make it back to Greeley, Colorado, where they were ultimately arrested for their roles in the kidnapping and carjacking.During a search of the home where Alvarez and Morales were arrested, police found firearms, including the rifle used during the kidnapping and carjacking, and controlled substances.Alvarez, Morales, and co-defendant Karla Alejandra Lopez-Gutierrez were indicted by a federal grand jury in Aug. 2022 and Alvarez and Morales were indicted again in Dec. 2023. “Every day, men and women in the Department of Justice respond to incidents of violent crime in South Dakota,” said U.S. Attorney Alison Ramsdell. “This dedication to improving community safety often comes with great personal sacrifice, and as this case unfortunately demonstrates, on occasion, an extreme risk to personal safety. We are grateful to our partners at the FBI for their dogged commitment to this difficult work, and we hope these convictions send a clear message about the lengths the U.S. Attorney’s Office is willing to go to vindicate the rights of victims, no matter who they are.”“The FBI will not tolerate violence and threats to harm its personnel,” said Special Agent in Charge Alvin M. Winston Sr. of FBI Minneapolis. “Thank you to our law enforcement partners and the USAO-SD for their hard work and unwavering dedication. This verdict stands as a testament to our commitment to ensuring the safety and security of every member of the FBI. Justice will be relentlessly pursued against those who seek to harm or intimidate any of our workforce.”The kidnapping charge carries any term of years up to life in custody and/or a $250,000 fine and 5 years of supervised release. The carjacking charge carries 15 years of custody and/or a $250,000 fine and 3 years of supervised release. The use, carry, and brandishing of a firearm charge carries a mandatory minimum of 7 years and up to life in custody and/or a $250,000 fine and 5 years of supervised release. The unlawful possession of a firearm by a prohibited person charge carries 10 years of custody and/or a $250,000 fine and 3 years of supervised release. The unlawful reentry after deportation charge carries 2 years of custody and/or a $250,000 fine and one year of supervised release. A $100 special assessment to the Federal Crime Victims Fund applies to each count, totaling $500.A sentencing date has not been set."

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AND, the article is written by a Jewish/mexican !!!!  I can't believe it.  What next in this stupid assministration???  One can only hopefully ask, what next?  Nothing would be a surprise at this late stage of their game.  As long as jillypie is happy I guess the rest of us can eat snakes (not cake, snake).
 


A government which robs Peter to
pay Paul can always depend on
the support of Paul.
-- George Bernard Shaw
 

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