He Urged Jan. 6 Protesters to Attack the Capitol, but Is This Instigator Really a 'Fed! Fed! Fed!'?
Indeed, Epps could be a federal agent or instigator of some sort, though we at PJ Media stipulate that there is no independent verification of his identity or purpose, whether it be personal or on behalf of law enforcement. On the other hand, investigations into the Jan. 6 protest-turned-riot and the alleged plot to kidnap Michigan Governor Gretchen Whitmer have turned up odd coincidences and curiosities about instigators and “protesters” who appear to have connections with law enforcement. The person running
both operations is the same FBI agent.
Congressman Massie thought the similarities were a little odd and questioned Garland about them.
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Revolver reports they’ve got this guy dead-to-rights:
After months of research, Revolver’s investigative reporting team can now reveal that Ray Epps appears to be among the primary orchestrators of the very first breach of the Capitol’s police barricades at 12:50pm on January 6. Epps appears to have led the “breach team” that committed the very first illegal acts on that fateful day. What’s more, Epps and his “breach team” did all their dirty work with 10 minutes still remaining in President Trump’s National Mall speech, and with the vast majority of Trump supporters still 30 minutes away from the Capitol.
Secondly, Revolver also determined, and will prove below, that the the FBI stealthily removed Ray Epps from its Capitol Violence Most Wanted List on July 1, just one day after Revolver exposed the inexplicable and puzzlesome FBI protection of known Epps associate and Oath Keepers leader Stewart Rhodes. July 1 was also just one day after separate New York Times report amplified a glaring, falsifiable lie about Epps’s role in the events of January 6.
Lastly, Ray Epps appears to have worked alongside several individuals — many of them suspiciously unindicted — to carry out a breach of the police barricades that induced a subsequent flood of unsuspecting MAGA protesters to unwittingly trespass on Capitol restricted grounds and place themselves in legal jeopardy.
His photo was initially on the “FBI’s Capitol Violence Most Wanted” list. He was “Suspect 16.” Internet sleuths found, identified, and reported him, and then six months later on July 1 – poof! – he suddenly vanished from the FBI list.
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Furthermore, Epps was the head of the Arizona chapter of the Oathkeepers and was a personal friend of another apparent federal asset, Stewart Rhodes, the head of the group.
You should know that when FBI agents infiltrate a group — for example, the Gretchen Whitmer caper — that they must somehow convey to the hapless followers that doing what the instigators, the feds in this case, suggest
is illegal. This is so the federal government can prove that wrongdoers knew that what they were doing was against the law. There’s simply not much more to prove after that.
Slam, meet dunk.