Were Coutts, Alberta arrests a false flag?
There is historical evidence that the RCMP and intelligence networks have been involved in the orchestration of events in the past.
Powerful images of a day in the life at the Coutts and Milk River protests, Sunday February 13th, 2022.
On this day, the town of Coutts was raided by a large number of RCMP officers with open assault weapons, who took 11 people in the night.
The people who were there would like the world to know that they are peaceful, loving Canadians, who only wish for freedom and lawfulness to be restored to their country that has been overtaken by dark criminal forces within their government.
They treated the officers there with kindness and respect every day, and would like to make it clear that RCMP allegations of them being armed militants are entirely false.
They feel betrayed by these officers who have sworn to uphold the highest laws of this land and to stand on guard for thee, and they call for the immediate release of all political prisoners being held for protesting unlawful government mandates.
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Please watch the accompanying video:
At the start of the CBC livestream feed for Trudeau’s press conference on Monday, 14th February, RCMP Superintendent Roberta Mackale spoke to reporters about 11 arrests at the Coutts Alberta border blockade. RCMP officers were said to have seized weapons and protective wear including body armour. When I watched this my sceptical spidey senses became activated.
Click on the image below to watch the press conference with Supt. Mackale. What is your impression? Please let me know your thoughts in the comments.
My intuition may well have been correct.
According to one of the people at Coutts, the arrests by the RCMP late Sunday night for possession of firearms and equipment, including bullet-proof vests, did not involve any members of the peaceful blockade at the Coutts, Alberta border with Montana. He says the arrests took place at a residence nearby. He knows this for a fact because it is a friend's son who was arrested. He says that they are trying to place blame on members of the blockade in order to smear them. Listen to what he says here.
On Tuesday, 15th February Marcel Irnie published a video in which the situation at Coutts and Ottawa was discussed. It begins with this statement by a member of the Coutts protest:
The government has made it about guns now. We’re violent gun-toting criminals. That’s not the way it started out, and that's not the way it's supposed to finish. That’s not the way it goes. So we’re going to pull out peacefully. We’re going to keep this about love and honour.
RCMP officer and former member of Trudeau’s security detail, Daniel Bulford also made this public statement:
We received information from multiple believed reliable sources that firearms may be planted in Ottawa, specifically around the freedom convoy, to discredit the protest and to use as a pretext to forcibly remove peaceful protesters. Due to the nature of the information, we felt it prudent to notify the public in the interest of their safety.
This private intelligence correlates with the approximately 2,000 firearams stolen in Peterborough, Ontario on Sunday. This morning, February 13th our sources notified us that these weapons may be planted by nefarious elements. At this point we have no further knowledge about who is behind this act of sabotage.
Marcel Irnie comments as follows near the start:
Reporting here from the west – So the police have put a bunch of guns, ammunition, bulletproof vests on the table and took a picture of it claiming that there was an insurrection inside the Freedom Convoy that will enact violence sooner than later. So, essentially if anyone know strategies of modern warfare and information wars, false flag gun planting is 101.
Marcel also says that he is getting reports from Calgary that anyone who has been involved in the protests there are being hassled by police because they have tagged all of their licence plates.
Watch the full video here:
Given that the RCMP have admitted to “disabling” (sabotaging) three excavators, is it really a stretch to think of the possibility of the RCMP planting some of their operatives amidst the protestors for the purpose of discrediting the God fearing peaceful freedom protest in Coutts?
In a heart-rending tribute to the veracity of the good nature and intentions of the truly peaceful protestors at the Coutts blockade, they ended their stay by shaking hands with police.
In relation to the questionable actions of the RCMP at Coutts and Milk River, I have noticed references to the RCMP’s involvement in other incidents where many questions remain unanswered.
This includes but is certainly not limited to Canada’s worst mass shooting in history when Gabriel Wortman shot 22 people during a 13 hour rampage April 18-19, 2020.
Macleans published their excellent investigative report, The Nova Scotia shooter case has hallmarks of an undercover operation in June 2020.
Here is an excerpt:
The withdrawal of $475,000 in cash by the man who killed 22 Nova Scotians in April matches the method the RCMP uses to send money to confidential informants and agents, sources say.
Gabriel Wortman, who is responsible for the largest mass killing in Canadian history, withdrew the money from a Brink’s depot in Dartmouth, N.S., on March 30, stashing a carryall filled with hundred-dollar bills in the trunk of his car.
According to a source close to the police investigation the money came from CIBC Intria, a subsidiary of the chartered bank that handles currency transactions.
Sources in both banking and the RCMP say the transaction is consistent with how the RCMP funnels money to its confidential informants and agents, and is not an option available to private banking customers.
The RCMP has repeatedly said that it had no “special relationship” with Wortman. RCMP Supt. Darren Campbell reiterated that statement during an interview with the Toronto Star published online, and in its print newspaper on Sunday, saying: “The gunman had no special relationship with the RCMP whatsoever.” Campbell told the Star: “The investigation has not uncovered any relationship between the gunman and the RCMP outside of an estranged familial relationship and two retired RCMP members.”
According to the Star story: “Campbell said the reason for Wortman’s large cash withdrawal, which he confirmed was hundreds of thousands of dollars, was not fully known, ‘however, there are indications that near the time of the withdrawal the gunman believed that due to the worldwide pandemic, that his financial assets were safer under his control.'”
Campbell declined to be interviewed by Maclean’s on Friday, prior to this story’s publication online, and again on Tuesday.
Court documents show Wortman owned a New Brunswick-registered company called Berkshire-Broman, the legal owner of two of his vehicles (including one of his police replica cars). Whatever the purpose of that company, there is no public evidence that it would have been able to move large quantities of cash. Wortman also ran his own denturist business and there is no reason to believe it also would require him to handle large amounts of cash.
If Wortman was an RCMP informant or agent, it could explain why the force appeared not to take action on complaints about his illegal guns and his assault on his common-law wife.
A Mountie familiar with the techniques used by the force in undercover operations, but not with the details of the investigation into the shooting, says Wortman could not have collected his own money from Brink’s as a private citizen.
“There’s no way a civilian can just make an arrangement like that,” he said in an interview.
He added that Wortman’s transaction is consistent with the Mountie’s experience in how the RCMP pays its assets. “I’ve worked a number of CI cases over the years and that’s how things go. All the payments are made in cash. To me that transaction alone proves he has a secret relationship with the force.”
A second Mountie, who does not know the first one but who has also been involved in CI operations, also believes that Wortman’s ability to withdraw a large sum of money from Brink’s is an indication that Wortman had a link with the police. “That’s tradecraft,” the Mountie said, explaining that by going through CIBC Intria, the RCMP could avoid typical banking scrutiny, as there are no holds placed on the money.
“That’s what we do when we need flash money for a buy. We don’t keep stashes of money around the office. When we suddenly need a large sum of money to make a buy or something, that’s the route we take. I think [with the Brink’s transaction] you’ve proved with that single fact that he had a relationship with the police. He was either a CI or an agent.”
The following further excerpt is also quite notable:
At a press briefing on June 4, the RCMP’s Campbell seemed to rule out the possibility that Wortman was a confidential informant for the force. “The gunman was never associated to the RCMP as a volunteer or auxiliary police officer, nor did the RCMP ever have any special relationship with the gunman of any kind.”
The RCMP Operations Manual, a copy of which was obtained by Maclean’s, authorizes the force to mislead all but the courts in order to conceal the identity of confidential informants and agent sources.
“The identity of a source must be protected at all times except when the administration of justice requires otherwise, i.e. a member cannot mislead a court in any proceeding in order to protect a source.”
A spokeswoman for the Nova Scotia RCMP declined further comment after Maclean’s reported on the financial transaction.
I recommend watching this video clip from James Corbett and James Evan Pilato June 2020 New World Next Week episode during which they discuss the Nova Scotia mass shooting case.
I was absolutely beyond appalled to watch this short CBC video described as follows:
Two families of victims of the Nova Scotia mass shooting are launching a proposed class-action lawsuit against the RCMP. The suit alleges a vehicle seized as evidence was later released to a family with human remains still inside.
Dan Dicks’ video analysis, Bombshell Report Transactions Reveal Nova Scotia Shooter May Have Been RCMP Informant or Agent is also well worth watching. His description tells us what happened to the shooter, Gabriel Wortman. Dan also reviews a few of the other highly questionable cases in the RCMP’s history.
The withdrawal of $475,000 in cash by the man who killed 22 Nova Scotians in April matches the method the RCMP uses to send money to confidential informants and agents, sources say. Gabriel Wortman, who is responsible for the largest mass killing in Canadian history, withdrew the money from a Brink’s depot in Dartmouth, N.S., on March 30, stashing a carryall filled with hundred-dollar bills in the trunk of his car. About 3 weeks later he was killed by police after carrying out the largest mass shooting in Canadian history. In this video Dan Dicks of Press For Truth breaks down the claims being made by Macleans about the shooters involvement with the RCMP while showing some past examples of how the RCMP have been caught red handed doing these things before which suggests the very real possibility that the Nova Scotia shooting was a false flag operation designed to enforce strict gun control laws.
“Dead men don’t talk.”
In January 2022, the CBC reported, Families feeling 'let down' by inquiry into Nova Scotia mass shooting
The lawyers representing many families of people killed during the Nova Scotia mass shooting in April 2020 say they fear that long-awaited public hearings into the tragedy will fail to adequately explore evidence and fall short of the thorough inquiry for which their clients pushed.
Patterson Law represents 23 families and individuals participating in the Mass Casualty Commission's probe, including people who were directly impacted when a gunman disguised as a Mountie travelled through rural communities burning homes and killing 22 people including neighbours, strangers and acquaintances.
In the months that followed, loved ones of the victims along with community members and groups across Canada demanded answers about what police knew and why more wasn't done to warn the public.In July 2020, the federal and provincial governments announced there would be an external review — a less extensive process than a public inquiry and one that wouldn't have the ability to subpoena witnesses. The resulting public outcry prompted a quick reversal.
Not having a public inquiry is of course yet another sign that the RCMP and the government may have something to hide.
It is of great significance that Trudeau banned ‘military-grade’ guns in Canada following the largest mass shooting in the country's history not even two weeks following the massacre.
In my opinion, it’s not just about neglecting the real problems leading to gun violence. Gun laws like this further an agenda to remove the right to keep and bear arms and completely disarm Canadians.
There is so much more to delve into on this subject including tracking back to The True Story of [Pierre] Trudeau’s 1st War Measures Act of 1970 which documents “the inside job run by Anglo-Canadian intelligence networks during the first Trudeau dictatorship of Canada in October 1970”, the FLQ October Crisis and events which followed.
I will leave off with this succinct visual history. For everything a reason.
May all that has been hidden be revealed.
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Hello, can you please reach out regarding this post? I need to find the poet of the Calgary Freedom plea. 🇨🇦❤️