Extremism
Retired deputy chief Randy Winegar says he knows extremism when he sees it.
As the coronavirus crisis shows (some) signs of waning, the people who tried to argue it was all part of a sinister government plot are pivoting to a new boogeyman.
“Vaccine Police” leader Christopher Key and far-right radio host Stew Peters blamed the arrest on organizers of the event being jealous of their COVID-19 conspiracy theories.
After Suzanne Morphew disappeared, prosecutors said her husband killed her and cast her vote for Trump. Then things got messy.
Prosecutors say Jeremy David Hanson bombarded a slew of companies with violent threats as he railed against a supposed “radical homosexual agenda.”
Richard Mack faces charges that he sexually abused a child—but his father, who heads up an anti-government sheriff’s association, says the accusations are bogus.
Authorities say they’ve arrested four people who were part of an elaborate scheme to kidnap a top health official and spike a national power grid to “take back the country.”