FBI surveillance contractor infiltrated chatrooms, monitored skeptics of COVID jabs
A
new report by investigative journalist Lee Fang has revealed that the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI), operating via a surveillance contractor proxy called Flashpoint,
infiltrated chatrooms of airline industry groups that opposed the government's Wuhan coronavirus (COVID-19) "vaccine" mandates.
In previous times, Flashpoint was used by the FBI to infiltrate Islamic terror groups. Since that time, the group's directive has been refocused onto what the government perceives as domestic "terror" groups comprised of people who refuse to accept experimental drugs being pumped into their bodies.
Fang was able to obtain and analyze a webinar presentation created by Flashpoint that company analyst Vlad Cuiujuclu used to illustrate best practices for identifying and infiltrating chat groups specifically on the Telegram platform.
"In this case, we're searching for a closed channel of US Freedom Flyers," Cuiujuclu told his audience at a presentation held before clients last year, as relayed by Fang in his report. "It's basically a group that opposed vaccination and masks."
Writing about what happened next, Fang explains that Cuiujuclu clicked through a database showing a chat group on Telegram sponsored by Airline Professionals for Justice, which like the US Freedom Flyers was formed by airline workers to oppose the mandates.
"Private chats require for you to have an invite link," Cuiujuclu then stated to his audience while showing them Zoom links used by these grassroots organizations to hold meetings.
By "engag[ing] the admin of that channel," Cuiujuclu continued, anyone can infiltrate these private channels, including FBI contractors whose job it is to spy on the members of these groups, which are considered to be a "threat" to the "intelligence industry."
(Related: Some
now believe that COVID-19 injections contributed to the worst genocidal atrocity in world history.)
After getting caught boasting about its spying and infiltration activities, Flashpoint scrubs website of evidence
Flashpoint is quite proud of its spying and surveillance activities, which have successfully undermined not only aviation industry protests but also environmental activism efforts and even public demonstrations against the G20 summit.
All over its website, Flashpoint boasted about these activities – that is until Fang drew attention to them. Now, you can only find the contractor's resume of activities on the internet archive website Wayback Machine.
"By monitoring the situation and assessing tactics, techniques, and procedures (TTP’s), Flashpoint was able to assess the impact of upcoming protests, and determine that these groups would likely continue to protest and attempt to impede airport construction and expansion projects through direct action," Flashpoint's website previously stated before getting scrubbed.
"Based on this information, Flashpoint customers were able to take actions to help control the impact to business operations, and to ensure the safety of their employees and facilities as well as the safety of those protesting."
The secrecy and deception surrounding Flashpoint's devious activities under the directive of the FBI would seem to be par for the course, seeing as how the FBI has long operated this way in its own rite, targeting Americans and "terrorists" and interfering with their constitutional right to freedom of assembly and freedom of speech.
The FBI has proven that it hates the United States Constitution and everything it affords to We the People, and continually works in the shadows to undermine it at every turn.
Fortunately, what has been taking place under the cover of darkness is now coming to light. And the FBI has nowhere to run or hide any longer as investigative journalists, using the power of the internet, are blowing the lid on what the FBI was really up to during the COVID-19 pandemic.
The latest news about the corrupt FBI can be found at
FBICorruption.news.
Sources for this article include:
LeeFang.com
ReclaimTheNet.org
NaturalNews.com