An FBI frame up and a rigged trial!
Schaeffer Cox, a well known 2nd Amendment lobbyist who had won 38% of the vote in a State House election, became the subject of an intense FBI investigation after he angered State and Federal authorities by openly accusing them of drug trafficking and child prostitution.
Oil pipeline service company
executive, Bill Allen, who had been spared prosecution on multiple
counts of sexual abuse of minors in exchange for his 2008 testimony
against pro-2nd Amendment Alaska Senator Ted Stevens, was among those
implicated. “The State Wide Drug Taskforce supplied children for sex to a
number of state and federal officials in exchange for those official’s
cooperation in concealing the ongoing illicit drug trafficking activities of the State Wide Drug Taskforce,” Schaeffer Cox said.
Not long after these public statements, the same departments that Schaeffer Cox accused of corruption sent in numerous provocateurs to try to switch his efforts off of exposing corruption and on to violent vigilante-type actions. Schaeffer cox, who believes in non-aggression and voluntarism,can be heard on multiple undercover recordings telling the provocateurs, “No, I’m going to pull a Ghandi, NOT a Rambo” and “if we turn violent, people will see us as the bad guys.”
In what some have called a deviation
from accepted investigative techniques, the FBI responded to Schaeffer
Cox’s rejection of their violent proposals by creating a threat to his
children that could serve as a motivator.
Working with the Office of Child
Services, the FBI filed a child neglect complaint regarding Schaeffer
and his wife Marti’s 1 and 1/2 year old son. Because they do not require
probable cause, child neglect complaints are an attractive tool for
investigators who wish to enter a home, but lack any evidence to support
a warrant.
Once Schaeffer Cox was made aware of
the “writ of assistance” issued for the seizure of his young son, the
FBI dispatched undercover provocateur, Bill Fulton, to again try to
convince Schaeffer Cox to go on a shooting spree in response to these
new developments. Bill Fulton, acting under the supervision of FBI
Special Agent Sandra Klein, pointed out that the child neglect complaint
was obviously the corrupt work of Schaeffer Cox’s political adversaries
in the government, and urged him to go kill all officials involved.
When Schaeffer Cox and his friend, Les Zerbe, refused Fulton’s violent
suggestions a second time, Fulton flew into a rage, held a hunting
knife to Les Zerbe’s throat, and told him he would “slit his throat open
and bleed him out at his feet” if he and Cox didn’t agree to the
proposed mass shooting. Cox and Zerbe refused, and escaped never to see
Fulton again.
Suspecting foul play by the FBI and local police, and fearing for their lives from Fulton,
Schaeffer Cox and his wife went to the military police station on Ft.
Wainwright for help. Officers there advised Schaeffer Cox that Federal
agents had come into the station and bragged of how they planned to “fix the Schaeffer Cox problem” by “going into his home to take out his kid, then just shoot Schaeffer Cox in the process.” The MP’s gave Schaeffer Cox’s attorney affidavits to this effect and would later testify to the same under oath.
At FBI Special Agent Klein’s
direction, Fulton made a third attempt to get Schaeffer Cox to do a mass
shooting. Fulton did this by issuing a death threat ultimatum and promising to kill Schaeffer Cox himself if he refused the proposal of violence again.
Fearing for their lives, the Cox
family packed up and headed for Canada. But the FBI sent another
undercover provocateur, RJ Olson, after them, court documents say.
Olson, a self described “drug wholesaler” working under the supervision
of FBI Special Agent Richard Southerland, held the whole Cox family, including a 2 year old boy and a 3 week old baby girl, hostage, against their will in an attic for 21 days after sabotaging
their vehicle, then using death threats from Fulton and a made up story
about a truck driver to keep them from leaving.
“The government does not dispute the
fact that the actions of the provocateurs working under the FBI’s
supervision did in fact meet the legal definition of 1st degree
kidnapping,” said Robert John, the Fairbanks attorney who got all
related State charges against Cox thrown out.
On March 10th, 2011 Schaeffer Cox was taken from the attic to a deserted industrial lot in Fairbanks where he believed he would meet the “truck driver” Olson had promised. No such truck driver existed. Instead, there was a FBI ambush of out of town agents who did not know Schaeffer Cox was a well respected local political voice with popular support. The Agent’s, who had been instructed to shoot Schaeffer Cox on site if he had a weapon, were not advised by the local FBI case agent of Cox’s repeated statements about being like Ghandi not Rambo.
FBI Special Agent Richard Southerland supplied JR
Olson with an unregistered, nontraceable pistol and instructed him to
“put it in Schaeffer’s lap then get under the truck so there will be
some thick metal between you and him when the shooting starts.” The
FBI’s plan was interrupted when the owner of the industrial lot happened
upon the scene and started asking questions about why men with masks and machine guns were hiding around the corner.
Schaeffer Cox was arrested and put on trial for “conspiracy against the government.” The prosecution was led by Steve Skrocki and Joseph Botini, the
same people that were held in contempt of court for hiding evidence in
several related trials of Alaska political personalities. The audio
recording of Schaeffer Cox repeatedly rejecting violence were hidden from the jury, but are now being made available to the public by Schaeffer Cox’s supporters via youtube and other means.
Steve Skrocki, who has publically attacked Schaeffer Cox for his belief in Moral Higher Law, built his case primarily on the testimony of Fulton
and Olson. But recently released audio recording and email between
Steve Skrocki and his boss, US Attorney Karen Loeffler, now show that
Skrocki coached his witnesses to lie, then vouched for those lies in his
closing arguments to the jury.
Still others have taken issue with
Skrocki’s entire theory of the case. “The importance of this case is
significant to the whole of humanity,” says Larry Pratt, president of Gun Owners of America. He points out that the prosecution conceded that Cox had no actual plans for violence,
but convicted him anyway based on Cox’s belief that ‘We The People’ may
someday have to stand down an out of control government.
Schaeffer Cox, who has been in prison since
2011 agrees. “This amounts to sending people to prison for simply
believing in the original meaning of the 2nd Amendment,” he says. “If we
don’t reverse my conviction, it will set a sweeping new precedent
allowing for the wholesale round up of those who have not committed any
crimes.”
Rudy Davis
972-839-9848
www.YearofJubile.com
LoneStar1776.com
972-839-9848
www.YearofJubile.com
LoneStar1776.com
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Editors Note: Thanks to Rich
Scheben for bringing this to my attention. This is the kind of citizen
journalism that should be done 24/7 to expose the criminals in
government who abuse their power and persecute people for their love of
freedom and their belief in God, not to mention their belief in their
right to defend themselves against tyranny being done to them BY THEIR
OWN EMPLOYEES.
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