“If I Don’t Make it Back Alive…”: A Closer Look at the Armed Man (Disguised as a U.S. Marshal) Who Demanded a Meeting with RFK, Jr.

October 18th, 2023

The extremely strange case involving Adrian Paul Aispuro and RFK, Jr.

Via: Courageous Discourse:

By reducing the original charges to a misdemeanor for unlawfully carrying loaded weapons in a public place and releasing him on only $10,000 bail before he has been evaluated by a psychiatrist, the Los Angeles District Attorney is signaling to the public that he isn’t interested in this case. Why not? Does the DA’s office presume to know that Aispuro posed no danger to Kennedy and those in his environment? If so, based on what information?

Currently, the criminal proceedings in this case are suspended following defense counsel’s declaration that the defendant lacks sufficient mental competence to understand the nature of the alleged offense and the proceedings against him. However, it is clear that diminished mental competence does not necessarily make a man less dangerous. On the contrary, many assassins in history were motivated by passionate political and personal convictions combined with mental health issues.

3 Responses to ““If I Don’t Make it Back Alive…”: A Closer Look at the Armed Man (Disguised as a U.S. Marshal) Who Demanded a Meeting with RFK, Jr.”

  1. dale says:

    A trillion here, a trillion there, pretty soon we’re talk about sureal money.

  2. dale says:

    Wrong thread, above comment. I’ve done that at least a dozen times.

    Yeah, it sure looks like the LADA was told “hands off this asset.” Kennedy has balls. What a demented circus this has become.

  3. Snowman says:

    As you say, this sort of thing has happened in the past. Independent investigators, backed by the public, try to find out who and what the assassin is but don’t have the resources to dig into it very far or very fast, or they back off when ordered to by the authorities, or get discredited or suicided. But they often eventually do manage to give us more info than any official source willingly gives. Maybe in 8 or 10 more years, we’ll have learned more about Ray Epps and this guy.

    A layman’s definition of mental illness is someone who can’t function well enough to live an apparently normal life. It doesn’t include sociopaths and psychopaths, like Jeffrey Dahmer, people who are obsessed with killing others and actually do it, directly or indirectly. They may be nut cases, but they know what they are doing is wrong, and they enjoy doing it. (I think we should lock them up whenever we find one, but then, who would be left to run the govt?)

    This case is so fishy — the guy was so obviously going to be caught — that it looks like he was planted there in order to be caught. The bargaining that reduced his charges and let him walk free adds evidence to that.

    If he had succeeded, would it have been just a lucky break for his masters? Or was he programmed not to try to actually shoot anyone, just to be there and appear threatening and let himself be arrested?

    It does not seem to have done RFK any harm — he’s an incredibly resilient guy. So why do it at all?

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