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“The surveillance video shows Sapirman exit the restroom at 5:56:48 p.m.,” Ison said. “He was neutralized by Dicken 15 seconds later at 5:57:03 p.m.”
Police also confirmed Dicken was carrying a gun under the constitutional carry law that went into effect July 1.
originally posted by: Menesses
Legally Carrying Greenwood Hero Stops Imminent Mall Slaughtering
“The surveillance video shows Sapirman exit the restroom at 5:56:48 p.m.,” Ison said. “He was neutralized by Dicken 15 seconds later at 5:57:03 p.m.”
Police also confirmed Dicken was carrying a gun under the constitutional carry law that went into effect July 1.
How many people are literally thanking God for that law just recently passing in Indiana!
The law officials at the presser were acting very odd when discussing the good Samaritan. The instant they brought him up, they looked glum and lowered their heads. It was also quite disturbing how they publicly doxxed the good Samaritan, carefully spelling his name, clearly disclosing his hometown, and mentioning that he has a girlfriend. Why? The officials also looked angry when discussing the good Samaritan’s weapon, his Glock. Global-think is cult-like and spreading throughout all our formally great institutions like Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
Lee Harvey Oswald 1961 Autograph Letter Signed to Senator Tower
After the arduous process of getting his US Passport returned, Oswald faced the tougher challenge of obtaining exit visas for himself and his now-pregnant wife from the Soviet government. After months of embassy visits and extreme pressure from Marina’s friends, coworkers, and family members to remain, Oswald grew impatient and penned this letter to Senator John G. Tower of Texas, requesting US intervention in the process. With explicit information contradicting Oswald’s claims of unwavering loyalty to the US, the Senator decided not to get involved, referring the letter instead to the State Department, where no further action was taken. Despite Tower’s lack of assistance in the matter, he faced harsh criticism following the assassination as pieces of this letter were widely published—in the news and again in the Warren Commission report—and found himself defending against accusations that he facilitated Oswald’s return. Believed to be lost, this extraordinary letter was discovered in Senator Tower’s home following his death in 1991; a remarkable find, and certainly one of the most important Oswald letters known.