Devin Kellery. The latest patsy

JohnPrewett

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Oct 31, 2016
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Evidently before his facebook was removed but not before someone took a snapshot of his liked pages. Four or five atheist pages liked along with CNN. It would be interesting to know who his friends were.
 
So Facebook decided the public should NOT see for themselves the content of Kellery's FB page.

Like seeing for ourselves might be too much for our tender peasant brains to handle.

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Reports say they are now reviewing his comments and such on FB. He obviously was sick whether brainwashed or demon filled. Some people don't believe in demons though so they prefer to call such people simply sick.


According to The Daily Beast, Kelley posted a photo of an assault rifle to Facebook on October 29 with the caption: "She's a bad b***h."

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The Daily Beast found this chilling Facebook post, believed to be linked to the alleged Texas shooter Devin Kelley. Picture: Facebook
A US official told Associated Press Kelley doesn't appear to be linked to organised terrorist groups. The official said investigators are looking at social media posts Kelley may have made in the days before Sunday's attack, including the one that appeared to show an AR-15 semiautomatic weapon.

Kelley's Facebook page has now been deleted, but screenshots of it showed two small children as well as the semiautomatic rifle that seemed to be his cover photo.

His Facebook page also allegedly contained a quote from Mark Twain about not fearing death. "I do not fear death," it read. "I had been dead for billions and billions of years before I was born, and had not suffered the slightest inconvenience from it.".

According to The Daily Beast, "Kelley was married and Kelley's mother-in-law listed a P.O. box in Sutherland Springs as a mailing address.

San Antonio police reportedly raided Kelley's home on Sunday evening.

A LinkedIn account appearing to belong to Kelley describes him as serving in the US air force from his 2009 high-school graduation until 2013, after which he briefly taught at a summer Bible school.
 
"As we’ve learned from subsequent FBI investigations, one even announced last month in which a man was supported by the FBI, given a fake bomb and told to blow up a mall in Florida, the bureau has an extensive network of informants and patsies ready to do their bidding in carrying out staged terror attacks.
Once these fake attacks are carried out, the FBI then takes credit for preventing a terrorist attack, thereby validating their anti-terrorist budget and activities.
Some critics of the FBI call those actions nothing less than entrapment.
And without the help of the FBI, those individuals would arguably be going about their everyday activities, unconcerned with carrying out acts of terrorism.
The FBI’s anti-terrorism activities, some have said, actually create terrorists out of regular citizens.
 
'Fifteen-hundred years ago, Christians were accused of atheism.'
(Ludwig Klages, Science of Character)

Replay of the Warren Commission, this latest church-and-state stigmatization will go much more smoothly after the perpetrator's cyberspace presence has been scrubbed.

Pop Quiz: Which four plantations did Dylan Roof visit?
 
Eric Rudolph
Eric Rudolph - Wikipedia
'....he spent time with his mother at a Christian identity compound in Missouri known as the Church of Israel....at Ft. Benning....Ft. Campbell, Ky....due to marijuana....'

Two kinds of drugs in one head can be dangerous.

"We don't smoke marijuana in Muskogee...."
(Merle Haggard, Okie from Muskogee)
 
Air Force more than a little lax in reporting dangerous discharges...

AF: Failure to Report Church Shooter 'Was Not an Isolated Incident'
28 Nov 2017 | The latest revelation has prompted the Air Force to take corrective actions in what will be a months-long review process.
Officials at Holloman Air Force Base, New Mexico, did not properly report criminal information to the civilian authorities about Texas church shooter and former airman Devin P. Kelley, a preliminary service investigation has found. "The Air Force's review of its reporting processes to civilian law enforcement in the Devin P. Kelley case has prompted immediate actions to correct reporting deficiencies and prevent future occurrences," Air Force spokeswoman Ann Stefanek said in a statement on Tuesday. She said that based on initial findings in the case's chain, the Air Force Inspector General confirmed that "the [Office of Special Investigations] and Security Forces personnel then assigned at Holloman did not report required information." "The review also found the error in the Kelley case was not an isolated incident and similar reporting lapses occurred at other locations," Stefanek said. "Although policies and procedures requiring reporting were in place, training and compliance measures were lacking," she said.

Air Force Secretary Heather Wilson and Chief of Staff Gen. David Goldfein have directed OSI and Security Forces officials to conduct reviews of all airmen with "reportable offenses" dating back to 2002, the statement said. Two tasks forces of 30 members from each organization are working the action -- which could result in a review of some 60,000 records. "The Air Force has reported and corrected several dozen records since the review began and is reviewing approximately 60,000 cases involving serious offenses over the 15-year period to ensure full compliance," Stefanek said in a follow-up email. The revelation about training failures has prompted the Air Force to take corrective actions in what will be a months-long process as the broader Defense Department review proceeds.

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Devin Patrick Kelley, the suspect in the shootings at the First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, Texas​

Aside from the task force, one of the new procedures is to establish a leadership requirement at the field, regional and headquarters levels "to verify that information from applicable cases is registered with the FBI's National Crime Information Center's Interstate Identification Index," Stefanek said. "Additionally, supporting software, checklist and training changes were made to support the new procedures," she said.

Earlier this month, the service said it was likely that Kelley's domestic violence offense was not entered into the NCIC database -- an electronic clearinghouse of crime data that can be tapped into by virtually every criminal justice agency, according to its website. Because the agency wasn't aware of his criminal record, Kelley was able to buy an assault rifle-style weapon used in the mass shooting on Nov. 5, described as the deadliest ever to occur in Texas. Armed with a Ruger AR-556 rifle and wearing black tactical gear, Kelley -- who served in the Air Force from 2010 until May 2014, when he was court-martialed -- entered First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs around 11:20 a.m. that Sunday and started shooting congregants during the service, killing at least 26 people and wounded numerous others.

NCIC lapse
 

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