Breaking: Photo of Seth Rich with Imran Awani Night of Murder

:lol:

Here's the photo, from Seth Rich's facebook page:

Seth Rich

Notice the date, fuckwits.
Personal attacks are not necessary. The fact remains that Imran and Seth Rich attended an IT party at a bar on the night that Seth Rich was murdered. With multiple news sources reporting the same information a photograph isn't necessary. That DC IT Party was on the night Seth Rich was murdered. Awan was a DC IT. Do you think you could manage an apology for stating that Wheeler wasn't brought on the investigation to Seth's murder by Seth's family when I gave you a video of him stating clearly that he was brought on by the family or is it too much for you to admit you were wrong? Wheeler stated it at least 3 or 4 times.

Nearly everything you've posted is false. Either you're lying, or you're too gullible to live.

There was no "IT party" the night that Seth Rich died.

Everything you've claimed is based on that photograph - which is a lie. The photograph is from a year before Rich died, and isn't of Imran.

Wheeler was hired by a man named Ed Butowsky, a Trump supporter and occasional FOX contributor - not by Seth Rich's family. He was working (nominally) for Rich's family - but Butowsky chose him, and paid him.
Clearly you didn't listen to Rod Wheeler in the interview video I posted here. He states he was brought on by the family. He was working for the family. I don't give a flip who paid him. He was working for the Rich family and he says so at least 4 times in the video. You need to pay better attention. There was an IT party the night of Seth Rich's murder. Imran Awan was there and Seth Rich was there. That is on record.
 
here is some of what you need to read Jeremiah, there is a lot more information at the link, and links within the link.

Murder of Seth Rich - Wikipedia


Conspiracy theories
Origins
Genesis
The murder stoked right-wing conspiracy theories that arose days after Rich's death,[63][64][65] including an unsubstantiated claim that his murder was connected to the DNC email leak of 2016.[4] A post on Twitter before Rich's memorial service, originated the idea that he was killed related to a political assassination.[63] Subsequently the conspiracy theory was publicized on Reddit and then on the website Heat Street, later popularized by Donald Trump political adviser Roger Stone via his Twitter account.[63] Reddit users attempted to tie the homicide to prior "Clinton Body Count" conspiracy theories.[64] On July 13, 2016, conspiracy website WhatDoesItMean.com promoted a similar conspiracy theory.[65]

WikiLeaks statements
Assistant Police Chief Peter Newsham said the police had no information suggesting a connection between Rich's death and data obtained by WikLeaks.[2] Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, fueled speculation of a connection when, unbidden, he talked about the case on a Dutch news program.[30] People who worked with Rich said he was not an expert computer hacker helping to leak information to foreigners. Andrew Therriault, a data scientist who had mentored Rich, said although he had recently been working as a programmer, this "wasn't his background", and another co-worker said Rich was very upset when he heard hackers associated with Russian intelligence services had broken into the DNC computers and could be interfering with the election.[30]

Spread by social media and right wing
These conspiracy theories were promoted by Mike Cernovich, Sean Hannity, Geraldo Rivera, Kim Dotcom, Paul Joseph Watson, Newt Gingrich, Jack Posobiec, and others.[66][67][68]

The same venues that fomented the false Pizzagate conspiracy theory helped to promulgate the Seth Rich murder conspiracy theories,[69][70][11] and each shared similar features.[71][72][73] Both were promoted by individuals ascribing to far-right politics,[74] and by campaign officials and individuals appointed to senior-level national security roles by Donald Trump.[75][76][77] After prior coordination on Facebook, each theory was spread on Twitter by automated bots using a branded hashtag, with the goal of becoming a trending topic.[69] Both the Pizzagate conspiracy theory and the Seth Rich murder conspiracy theory were spread in the sub reddit forum promoting Donald Trump, called "The Donald".[78] In both conspiracy theories, the promoters attempted to shift the burden of proof — asking others to attempt to disprove their claims, without citing substantiated evidence.[52] Slate called the claims about Seth Rich: a "PizzaGate-like conspiracy theory surrounding Rich’s death",[79] The Huffington Post described it as "the 'alt-right' idiocy of Pizzagate all over again",[73] NPR's David Folkenflik said Fox News coverage of it "evokes the pizza-gate terrible allegations utterly unfounded",[80] and Margaret Sullivan wrote for The Washington Post: "The Seth Rich lie has become the new Comet Ping Pong ... Crazy, baseless and dangerous."[81]


Debunking
The conspiracy theories have been debunked by law enforcement,[5][6] as well as by fact-checking websites like PolitiFact.com,[6][8] Snopes.com,[9] and FactCheck.org.[5]

The Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia described the murder as related to a bungled attempted at theft.[5] Police further debunked claims by Rod Wheeler, and made a statement saying: "the assertions put forward by Mr. Wheeler are unfounded."[5] The FBI told PolitiFact.com that the MPD was investigating the homicide.[8]

A representative of the Rich's family members, Brad Bauman, disputed the notion of conspiracy theorists that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was involved in looking into the homicide.[5] Bauman stated: "The FBI is not now and has never been a party to this investigation."[5]

FactCheck.org analyzed statements by Newt Gingrich related to the conspiracy theory, where Gingrich said Rich "apparently was assassinated" subsequent to "having given WikiLeaks something like … 53,000 [DNC] emails and 17,000 attachments".[5] FactCheck.org determined this claim was "unsupported" and determined "there's no evidence for his claim."[5]

PolitiFact.com rated the assertion Rich gave emails to WikiLeaks as a "baseless claim".[6] They called the claim "an unfounded conspiracy theory".[6] PolitiFact.com analyzed the claims by Gingrich and rated their false nature as "Pants on Fire!"[6] PolitiFact.com concluded: "Gingrich and others are talking about an unfounded conspiracy theory as if it's a matter of fact. It is far from it. We rate his claim Pants on Fire."[6] In a separate analysis, PolitiFact.com concluded: "There's no evidence there's any link between Rich and WikiLeaks. The FBI has indirectly denied investigating the case, which Washington police consider a robbery gone wrong."[8]

Snopes.com looked into the matter and stated: "We were able to confirm the FBI is not investigating Rich's murder — it is an MPD investigation... All claims made by Mr. Wheeler are false and take fake news to a whole new level. The family deserves better and everyday MPD continues to work diligently to solve this case."[9] Snopes rated the claim "DNC staffer Seth Rich sent 'thousands of leaked e-mails' to WikiLeaks before he was murdered." as "False".[9]

The fabrications were described as fake news and falsehoods by The New York Times.[10] The New York Times cited the conspiracy theories as an example of the persistence of false claims, concluding: "fake news dies hard".[10] The Los Angeles Times called the conspiracy theories "unsubstantiated rumors".[11]

The Washington Post cited the conspiracy theories as an example of the power of fake news to spread virally online.[12] The paper used the example as a case study of the persistence of fake news, and found that television news media can be a soft target for such false stories.[12] The Washington Post further found that the proliferation of fake news via Facebook had decreased, but remained powerful on Twitter due to spread via online bots.[12] They found that the conspiracy theories with the largest potential to spread on the Internet were those that held attraction for both the alt-right movements and the political left wing.[12] The Washington Post concluded that even if a particular false story had been sufficiently debunked, such fact-checking was unable to stop the spread of the falsehoods online.[12]

Fox News retracted reporting
Uncorroborated story
On May 15, 2017, Fox 5 DC (WTTG) reported the uncorroborated and later largely retracted[82] claims by Rod Wheeler, a Fox News contributor and former homicide detective, that there was evidence Seth Rich had contacted WikiLeaks and that law enforcement were covering this up;[83][82] claims that were never independently verified by Fox.[84] The next day, Fox News published a lead story on its website and provided extensive coverage on its cable news channel about what it said were Wheeler's uncorroborated claims about the murder of Seth Rich.[85][86][87] In reporting these claims, the Fox News report re-ignited conspiracy theories about the killing.[71][88][89] According to NPR, within a day of the original Fox report, "Google searches for Rich had overtaken searches for James Comey, even amid continuous news about the former FBI director's conversations with Trump."[52] The Washington Post noted Fox News chose to lead with this story at a time when most other media outlets were covering reporting President Trump leaked intelligence to Russian officials.[86]

Other news organizations revealed Wheeler was a Donald Trump supporter, a paid Fox News contributor, and according to NBC News had "developed a reputation for making outlandish claims, such as one appearance on Fox News in 2007 in which he warned that underground networks of pink pistol-toting lesbian gangs were raping young women"
 
Last edited:
:lol:

Here's the photo, from Seth Rich's facebook page:

Seth Rich

Notice the date, fuckwits.
Personal attacks are not necessary. The fact remains that Imran and Seth Rich attended an IT party at a bar on the night that Seth Rich was murdered. With multiple news sources reporting the same information a photograph isn't necessary. That DC IT Party was on the night Seth Rich was murdered. Awan was a DC IT. Do you think you could manage an apology for stating that Wheeler wasn't brought on the investigation to Seth's murder by Seth's family when I gave you a video of him stating clearly that he was brought on by the family or is it too much for you to admit you were wrong? Wheeler stated it at least 3 or 4 times.

Nearly everything you've posted is false. Either you're lying, or you're too gullible to live.

There was no "IT party" the night that Seth Rich died.

Everything you've claimed is based on that photograph - which is a lie. The photograph is from a year before Rich died, and isn't of Imran.

Wheeler was hired by a man named Ed Butowsky, a Trump supporter and occasional FOX contributor - not by Seth Rich's family. He was working (nominally) for Rich's family - but Butowsky chose him, and paid him.
Clearly you didn't listen to Rod Wheeler in the interview video I posted here. He states he was brought on by the family. He was working for the family. I don't give a flip who paid him. He was working for the Rich family and he says so at least 4 times in the video. You need to pay better attention. There was an IT party the night of Seth Rich's murder. Imran Awan was there and Seth Rich was there. That is on record.

No, it's not.

You're welcome to provide this "record" and prove me wrong, but you won't be able to.

Because no such party happened.
 
:lol:

Here's the photo, from Seth Rich's facebook page:

Seth Rich

Notice the date, fuckwits.
Personal attacks are not necessary. The fact remains that Imran and Seth Rich attended an IT party at a bar on the night that Seth Rich was murdered. With multiple news sources reporting the same information a photograph isn't necessary. That DC IT Party was on the night Seth Rich was murdered. Awan was a DC IT. Do you think you could manage an apology for stating that Wheeler wasn't brought on the investigation to Seth's murder by Seth's family when I gave you a video of him stating clearly that he was brought on by the family or is it too much for you to admit you were wrong? Wheeler stated it at least 3 or 4 times.

Nearly everything you've posted is false. Either you're lying, or you're too gullible to live.

There was no "IT party" the night that Seth Rich died.

Everything you've claimed is based on that photograph - which is a lie. The photograph is from a year before Rich died, and isn't of Imran.

Wheeler was hired by a man named Ed Butowsky, a Trump supporter and occasional FOX contributor - not by Seth Rich's family. He was working (nominally) for Rich's family - but Butowsky chose him, and paid him.
Clearly you didn't listen to Rod Wheeler in the interview video I posted here. He states he was brought on by the family. He was working for the family. I don't give a flip who paid him. He was working for the Rich family and he says so at least 4 times in the video. You need to pay better attention. There was an IT party the night of Seth Rich's murder. Imran Awan was there and Seth Rich was there. That is on record.

No, it's not.

You're welcome to provide this "record" and prove me wrong, but you won't be able to.

Because no such party happened.
I'll take you up on that offer. Read this and watch the interview with Roger Stone: Roger Stone: Seth Rich Was Partying With Imran Awan on the Night of His Murder
 
here is some of what you need to read Jeremiah, there is a lot more information at the link, and links within the link.

Murder of Seth Rich - Wikipedia


Conspiracy theories
Origins
Genesis
The murder stoked right-wing conspiracy theories that arose days after Rich's death,[63][64][65] including an unsubstantiated claim that his murder was connected to the DNC email leak of 2016.[4] A post on Twitter before Rich's memorial service, originated the idea that he was killed related to a political assassination.[63] Subsequently the conspiracy theory was publicized on Reddit and then on the website Heat Street, later popularized by Donald Trump political adviser Roger Stone via his Twitter account.[63] Reddit users attempted to tie the homicide to prior "Clinton Body Count" conspiracy theories.[64] On July 13, 2016, conspiracy website WhatDoesItMean.com promoted a similar conspiracy theory.[65]

WikiLeaks statements
Assistant Police Chief Peter Newsham said the police had no information suggesting a connection between Rich's death and data obtained by WikLeaks.[2] Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, fueled speculation of a connection when, unbidden, he talked about the case on a Dutch news program.[30] People who worked with Rich said he was not an expert computer hacker helping to leak information to foreigners. Andrew Therriault, a data scientist who had mentored Rich, said although he had recently been working as a programmer, this "wasn't his background", and another co-worker said Rich was very upset when he heard hackers associated with Russian intelligence services had broken into the DNC computers and could be interfering with the election.[30]

Spread by social media and right wing
These conspiracy theories were promoted by Mike Cernovich, Sean Hannity, Geraldo Rivera, Kim Dotcom, Paul Joseph Watson, Newt Gingrich, Jack Posobiec, and others.[66][67][68]

The same venues that fomented the false Pizzagate conspiracy theory helped to promulgate the Seth Rich murder conspiracy theories,[69][70][11] and each shared similar features.[71][72][73] Both were promoted by individuals ascribing to far-right politics,[74] and by campaign officials and individuals appointed to senior-level national security roles by Donald Trump.[75][76][77] After prior coordination on Facebook, each theory was spread on Twitter by automated bots using a branded hashtag, with the goal of becoming a trending topic.[69] Both the Pizzagate conspiracy theory and the Seth Rich murder conspiracy theory were spread in the sub reddit forum promoting Donald Trump, called "The Donald".[78] In both conspiracy theories, the promoters attempted to shift the burden of proof — asking others to attempt to disprove their claims, without citing substantiated evidence.[52] Slate called the claims about Seth Rich: a "PizzaGate-like conspiracy theory surrounding Rich’s death",[79] The Huffington Post described it as "the 'alt-right' idiocy of Pizzagate all over again",[73] NPR's David Folkenflik said Fox News coverage of it "evokes the pizza-gate terrible allegations utterly unfounded",[80] and Margaret Sullivan wrote for The Washington Post: "The Seth Rich lie has become the new Comet Ping Pong ... Crazy, baseless and dangerous."[81]

Debunking
The conspiracy theories have been debunked by law enforcement,[5][6] as well as by fact-checking websites like PolitiFact.com,[6][8] Snopes.com,[9] and FactCheck.org.[5]

The Metropolitan Police Department of the District of Columbia described the murder as related to a bungled attempted at theft.[5] Police further debunked claims by Rod Wheeler, and made a statement saying: "the assertions put forward by Mr. Wheeler are unfounded."[5] The FBI told PolitiFact.com that the MPD was investigating the homicide.[8]

A representative of the Rich's family members, Brad Bauman, disputed the notion of conspiracy theorists that the Federal Bureau of Investigation was involved in looking into the homicide.[5] Bauman stated: "The FBI is not now and has never been a party to this investigation."[5]

FactCheck.org analyzed statements by Newt Gingrich related to the conspiracy theory, where Gingrich said Rich "apparently was assassinated" subsequent to "having given WikiLeaks something like … 53,000 [DNC] emails and 17,000 attachments".[5] FactCheck.org determined this claim was "unsupported" and determined "there's no evidence for his claim."[5]

PolitiFact.com rated the assertion Rich gave emails to WikiLeaks as a "baseless claim".[6] They called the claim "an unfounded conspiracy theory".[6] PolitiFact.com analyzed the claims by Gingrich and rated their false nature as "Pants on Fire!"[6] PolitiFact.com concluded: "Gingrich and others are talking about an unfounded conspiracy theory as if it's a matter of fact. It is far from it. We rate his claim Pants on Fire."[6] In a separate analysis, PolitiFact.com concluded: "There's no evidence there's any link between Rich and WikiLeaks. The FBI has indirectly denied investigating the case, which Washington police consider a robbery gone wrong."[8]

Snopes.com looked into the matter and stated: "We were able to confirm the FBI is not investigating Rich's murder — it is an MPD investigation... All claims made by Mr. Wheeler are false and take fake news to a whole new level. The family deserves better and everyday MPD continues to work diligently to solve this case."[9] Snopes rated the claim "DNC staffer Seth Rich sent 'thousands of leaked e-mails' to WikiLeaks before he was murdered." as "False".[9]

The fabrications were described as fake news and falsehoods by The New York Times.[10] The New York Times cited the conspiracy theories as an example of the persistence of false claims, concluding: "fake news dies hard".[10] The Los Angeles Times called the conspiracy theories "unsubstantiated rumors".[11]

The Washington Post cited the conspiracy theories as an example of the power of fake news to spread virally online.[12] The paper used the example as a case study of the persistence of fake news, and found that television news media can be a soft target for such false stories.[12] The Washington Post further found that the proliferation of fake news via Facebook had decreased, but remained powerful on Twitter due to spread via online bots.[12] They found that the conspiracy theories with the largest potential to spread on the Internet were those that held attraction for both the alt-right movements and the political left wing.[12] The Washington Post concluded that even if a particular false story had been sufficiently debunked, such fact-checking was unable to stop the spread of the falsehoods online.[12]

Fox News retracted reporting
Uncorroborated story
On May 15, 2017, Fox 5 DC (WTTG) reported the uncorroborated and later largely retracted[82] claims by Rod Wheeler, a Fox News contributor and former homicide detective, that there was evidence Seth Rich had contacted WikiLeaks and that law enforcement were covering this up;[83][82] claims that were never independently verified by Fox.[84] The next day, Fox News published a lead story on its website and provided extensive coverage on its cable news channel about what it said were Wheeler's uncorroborated claims about the murder of Seth Rich.[85][86][87] In reporting these claims, the Fox News report re-ignited conspiracy theories about the killing.[71][88][89] According to NPR, within a day of the original Fox report, "Google searches for Rich had overtaken searches for James Comey, even amid continuous news about the former FBI director's conversations with Trump."[52] The Washington Post noted Fox News chose to lead with this story at a time when most other media outlets were covering reporting President Trump leaked intelligence to Russian officials.[86]

Other news organizations revealed Wheeler was a Donald Trump supporter, a paid Fox News contributor, and according to NBC News had "developed a reputation for making outlandish claims, such as one appearance on Fox News in 2007 in which he warned that underground networks of pink pistol-toting lesbian gangs were raping young women"
I don't consider Wikipedia a reliable source. Anyone can write whatever they feel like writing and I've found way to many false stories on Wikepidia - false profiles of people as well. Check out Crowdsource videos for some cutting edge information concerning the facts on this case and Imran Awan espionage ring.
 

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