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– The Braintrust Behind "Anonymous Operation Ferguson" Is A Guy In Pakistan…Posted on November 12, 2014 by sundance
If a butterfly flaps its wings on the shoulder of a Middle East wallflower, will Ferguson feel the breeze?

Apparently so. This would be funny if it were not so pathetic.
The grievances expressed by Ferguson agitators bear more than a cursory similarity to the Palestinian/Hamas Islamists and their grievances – they are of spawned from the same origin, the Mid East in general, and for Ferguson Missouri, specifically a guy in Pakistan .
HatTip Tempest: The Twitter Username ("Anonymous") @OpFerguson is the originator of the website OperationFerguson.cf. The website is attached to an email address [email protected] That email is owned by a well groomed millennial in Pakistan named Arslan Khan. Continue reading
 
The Justice for Mike Brown Ferguson protest group released its list of potential targets following the decision by the St. Louis County Courthouse on the Mike Brown case.
The published map shows expected landmarks like the Ferguson City Hall and the County Courthouse.
But it also marks things that have NOTHING to do with the Michael Brown situation, like Anheuser Busch and Boeing.

Most telling thing is the mark for Emerson Electric. Emerson has been in Ferguson for at least 50 years, long before Ferguson became a minority municipality. Yet not only do they mark Emerson they make note of the CEO's salary. Maybe they're mutating into an extortion group straight out of the playbook of Jesse Jackson's Rainbow Push Coalition?
Below is the published list of potential St. Louis area targets.
Potential Action Locations


  • Robert McCulloch's office
  • St. Louis County Justice Center
  • Stephanie Karr's office
  • Olin Corporation Headquarters
  • Judge Maura McShane's courtroom
  • St. Louis County Police Department
  • Governor Nixon's Office (Wainwright Building)
  • Clayton School District Office
  • Department of Justice
  • Dean Plocher's office
  • Ronald Brockmeyer's office
  • Dan Boyle's office
  • Thomas Flach's office
  • Regal III Market
  • Canfield Green Apartments
  • Ferguson Police Department & Jail
  • West Florissant Quick Trip
  • Missouri Botanical Gradens
  • Powell Symphony Hall
  • Monsanto Headquarters
  • Peabody Energy Headquarters
  • Anheuser-Busch Headquarters
  • Emerson Electric Headquarters
  • Steve Stenger's lawfirm
  • St. Louis Art Museum
  • Gateway Arch
  • Peabody Opera House
  • Ritz Carlton
  • Lambert International Airport
  • Mayor Slay
  • Boeing
  • St. Louis City Police Department
  • St. Louis Galleria
  • Plaza Frontenac
  • Six Stars Market
  • Colonel Jon Belmar
  • Senator Roy Blunt
  • Senator Claire McCaskill
  • St. Louis City Justice Center
  • St. Ann Police Department & Jail
  • Clayton City Hall
  • GCI Security, Inc.
  • St. Louis County Council
  • Clayton Police Department & Jail
  • Ferguson City Hall
  • Lacy Clay's Office
  • Donors
  • Husch Blackwell LLP
  • Martin Insurance Group LLC
  • Stone, Leyton & Gershman
  • University Square Company
  • Stone & Alter Real Estate
  • Carey & Danis LLC
  • The Law Firm of Thomas C Antoniou LLC
  • Hammond & Shinners Law Firm
  • Collinsville Acquisitions Inc
  • Thompson Coburn
  • Commercial Bank
  • Sanctuaries
  • Greater St. Mark Family Church
  • Veterans for Peace Office
  • St. John's Episcopal Church
  • Hospitals
  • St. Louis University Hospital
  • SSM Cardinal Glennon Children's Medical Center
  • SSM St. Mary's Health Center
  • Barnes Jewish Hospital
  • St. Alexius Hospital
  • Kindred Hospital
  • Southwest Medical Center
The Ferguson Mike Brown protesters are <broken link removed> violence or looting.
"Rioting and looting are the tools of those without a voice. The rioting and looting, while I didn't participate in it, was necessary. Without it we would not be standing here today."

Going after the Infrastructure and large employers

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The rioting and looting, while I didn't participate in it, was necessary. Without it we would not be standing here today."
And with IT it might result in they're lying face down. This is now a premeditated, standing threat and should be dealt with unrelenting and overwhelming force if the threat, no matter how slight is acted upon. ANY LEO agency that does not take this seriously and fails to act will have displayed it's weakness and will have zero respect by anyone in the community.
 
Last Edited:
icon1.png Police in St. Louis agree to 'rules of engagement' for protests after grand jury deci
http://www.washingtonpost.com/politi...washingtonpost

Police in St. Louis agree to 'rules of engagement' for protests after grand jury decision

By Wesley Lowery and Kimberly Kindy November 18 at 4:43 PM
Following weeks of intense negotiations, the three largest police departments in St. Louis, Mo., have agreed on a dozen rules or policies they will follow as they engage with protesters after a grand jury announces its decision regarding Ferguson Officer Darren Wilson.

The negotiations have centered on 19 "Rules of Engagement" proposed by a coalition of 50 community and civil rights groups. The list is largely a docket of best police practices, such as "the first priority shall be preservation of human life" and "excessive force and other forms of police misconduct will not be tolerated." In general, protesters have agreed to peaceful demonstrations if police don't interfere, while police agree to respect demonstrators' right to assemble as long as there is no violence.

Negotiations on Tuesday continued to stall, however, over seven of the proposals, including the coalition's request to give protesters 48 hours' notice prior to the grand jury announcement.

The three departments – called the "unified command" for police response to protests -- have also not agreed to the coalition's request that police be dressed in minimal gear and that tear gas, tactical vehicles and rubber bullets not be used, a coalition leader said.


"You don't approach peaceful protesters in your community as if they're enemy combatants and expect that not to be a problem," said Denise Lieberman, co-chair of the coalition.

It is also unclear if the unified command will agree not to employ mass arrests during peaceful protests, and that police not escalate their response when dealing with minor criminal offenses such as a water bottle being thrown at an officer – which was the precipitating factor for tear gas being deployed on at least one night during the protests in August.

"There's been quite a bit of progress, but there is still discussion needed around several of the terms," Lieberman added.
Highway Patrol Capt. Ron Johnson confirmed the unified command has reached agreement on a dozen items, but would not discuss points of disagreement, saying "we agreed we wouldn't discuss the finer points publicly."

Other leaders of the unified command include St. Louis City Police Chief Sam Dotson and St. Louis County Chief Jon Belmar. Johnson said coalition leaders will now discuss negotiations with their members – including some counterproposals on some items -- and return to the unified command to hopefully reach a final agreement by Friday.

The tentative agreement came the day after Missouri Gov. Jay Nixon declared a pre-emptive state of emergency in order to allow the National Guard to help local law enforcement prepare for any unrest. The announcement, meant to project a feeling safety, riled up protest groups and local elected officials

Johnson and Mike O'Connell, a spokesman for the Missouri Department of Public Safety, said that some of the concerns were based on erroneous rumors that were circulating, including that tanks were moving into the city. Johnson said, "This community will not see tanks." Reports that the National Guard will be using "attack helicopters" and drones are also false, O'Connell said. "They aren't even authorized to use drones."

Johnson and Dotson both said that the National Guard will be largely used to protect property. The unified command has identified 35 to 40 locations – most of them within strip malls and shopping centers – where there has been property destruction during past demonstrations.

"We had 25 window smashings in August," Dotson said. "We will use the National Guard and pair them with those locations so the public feels safe. The everyday public gets lost in the conversation. We talk about police and protesters, and they get lost."
 
The Missouri National Guard deployed to the St. Louis region on Tuesday, one day after Governor Jay Nixon declared a state of emergency.
Military vehicles were seen in St. Louis City and in West County.
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<broken link removed> Enhanced Response Force Package assets were spotted in Chesterfield in West County. The vehicles are used for CBRNE events: chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear and high yield explosive events.
The Missouri Guard owns several of these vehicles and thats what they chose to call up for the State of Emergency. About ten states own these vehicles, Missouri being one of them. The ten states correspond to the 10 FEMA regions. The program was funded by the Feds.
Hopefully, they will not actually need these vehicles.
xnat-guard-2-575x315.jpg

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