Quote:Militia raid targets weapons
Explosives, ammo found; 6 men arrested
Friday, April 27, 2007
CAROL ROBINSON, KENT FAULK and VAL WALTON
News staff writers
Simultaneous raids carried out in four Alabama counties Thursday turned up truckloads of explosives and weapons, including 130 grenades, an improvised rocket launcher and 2,500 rounds of ammunition belonging to the small, but mightily armed, Alabama Free Militia.
Six alleged members of the Free Militia also were arrested by federal authorities and are being held without bond.
Investigators said the DeKalb County-based group had not made any specific threats or devised any plots, but was targeted for swift dismantling because of its heavy firepower. The militia, which called itself the Naval Militia at one point, had enough armament to outfit a small army.
"We classify these groups as violent and anti-government," said Jim Cavanaugh, who supervises the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives operations in portions of the South. "They stockpile things and live off a fear, a paranoia they're going to need weapons and explosives because some event is going to happen when they will need them."
"Any time you have a self-appointed colonel or a self-appointed major and they've got weapons and explosives, it is a recipe for tragedy," Cavanaugh said.
The ATF investigation, launched about seven weeks ago, climaxed Thursday with more than 150 federal, state and local law enforcement officers carrying out raids in DeKalb, Marshall, Etowah and Jefferson counties beginning about 6 a.m.
The massive operation forced the closing of Collinsville High School on U.S. 11 because of traffic concerns. In Trussville, authorities rented a U-Haul truck to cart away the load of explosives and weapons from a house.
Agents encountered booby traps at one site. They found trip wires and two hand grenades rigged as booby traps at the Collinsville camper home of 46-year-old Raymond Dillard, who holds titles of both militia major and fugitive from justice on an unrelated federal case in Mobile.
"We were prepared," Cavanaugh said. "We suspect booby traps with these types of groups."
Arrested and detained in federal custody were Dillard, also known as Jeff Osborne, 46, of Collinsville; Adam Lynn Cunningham, 41, of Collinsville; Bonnell Hughes, 57, of Crossville; Randall Garrett Cole, 22, of Gadsden; James Ray McElroy, 20, of Collinsville; and Michael Wayne Bobo, 30, of Trussville.
All but Bobo are charged with conspiracy to make a firearm, which carries a maximum penalty of five years in prison and a $250,000 fine. Bobo is charged with being a drug user in possession of a firearm, which carries a maximum penalty of 10 years in prison and a $250,000 fine.
The six men appeared Thursday afternoon in Birmingham's federal courthouse before U.S. Magistrate Judge Robert Armstrong Jr. The men were being held Thursday night in the Shelby County jail.
According to the criminal complaint, ATF and the Alabama State Fire Marshal's Office used a confidential informant to infiltrate the militia, using video and audio recordings to document their grenade-making exploits. The informant met Dillard at a DeKalb County flea market called "Trade Day" in the late fall and Dillard told him about the Free Militia.
The informant was eventually accepted into the organization and given the title "sergeant major." In the following weeks, the informant provided agents details of the group's activities.
In one instance, the complaint described how Dillard grabbed one of four grenades from a coffee table, quickly put a fuse and shotgun-type primer inside and said, "That's how easy it is. This one's ready to go."
Guns and ammo:
All six men were taken into custody without incident.
"We took them by surprise," said DeKalb County Sheriff Jimmy Harris.
Authorities wouldn't pinpoint a leader, but said Dillard called himself the major. In addition to the booby traps, authorities recovered a long gun and a pistol from his home.
Recovered from Cunningham's Collinsville home were stolen commercial fireworks, improvised hand grenades, fuse assemblies and a half-dozen guns. At Hughes' Crossville home, agents found 100 improvised hand grenades, 70 improvised hand grenades fired from the 37 mm rocket launch, a submachine gun and two silencers.
An SKS rifle was found at McElroy's home.
In Jefferson County, authorities said they had to rent a truck to handle the bomb-making material from Bobo's home, as well as 2,500 rounds of ammunition and 12 guns.
Bobo was living with his adoptive parents in the Lancshire Brentwood neighborhood in Trussville, a fairly new subdivision near the Cahaba Project with tree-lined streets and brick homes that cost upward of $600,000. He worked for his family's pest control company.
His red pickup truck, usually parked at the house, displays bumper stickers such as "Welcome to the South, Now Go Home," "The Second Amendment: `You do not know you need it until they come to take it away' - Thomas Jefferson" and "Work Harder, Millions on Welfare Depend on You."
Common profile:
In general, militias and patriot movements are anti-government and given to conspiracy theories and paranoia, said Mark Potok, director of the Intelligence Project for the Southern Poverty Law Center. The organization keeps track of hate groups and their activities throughout the country. They also are known for stockpiling illegal weapons and even manufacturing them, he said.
The militia movement in Alabama and the rest of the country hit a peak in the mid-1990s, as the groups rallied after the bloody 1993 siege at the Branch Davidian compound in Waco, Texas, and the 1992 shoot-out in Ruby Ridge, Idaho, between former Green Beret Randy Weaver and federal agents. The number of militia or "patriot" groups in the United States dwindled from a high of almost 900 in the mid-1990s to fewer than 200 by 2005.
A combination of factors, including the Sept. 11 attacks, caused many groups to draw back from the extreme acts of Olympic Park bomber Eric Robert Rudolph or Timothy McVeigh, the Oklahoma City bomber.
"It became less popular for someone to rail against America," Cavanaugh said. "It's not so sexy for them to be around, and therefore they don't get a lot of public attention."
Cavanaugh said militia groups still pop up from time to time, and authorities' goal is to intercept them before the threat becomes a tragedy.
"Whatever their paranoia was, whatever their reasons were, we think we've taken their weapons, the majority of them, certainly," Cavanaugh said. "The good news is hopefully today Alabama is free of the Alabama Free Militia."
News staff writers Anita Debro and Lisa Osburn contributed to this report.
crobinson@bhamnews.com
I'm skeptical of anything the ATF does. Really they didn't have much of anything. Much less enough to outfit "a small army". 1200 rounds is nothing, 12 guns nothing, the only thing that even raised my interest was the home made grenades (which is really stupid on their part to make). They not had threated anyone, harmed no one, the just had something the government didn't want them to have. 99% of which looked legal in the first place. Is there a legal defense fund step for them. I want to donate
Trust me, I'm from the government. I'm here to help you.
I think it's the grenades that got them in trouble originally, and once you're caught with something you're not supposed to have, or you are committing a crime, etc the other guns become illegal as well.
mixduptransistor Wrote:I think it's the grenades that got them in trouble originally, and once you're caught with something you're not supposed to have, or you are committing a crime, etc the other guns become illegal as well.
I understand that, but the article is trying to make it look like these guys had a huge stock pile off arms and are a threat. Which I just don't see. Its comes off looking like a huge waste of tax payers money. 150 agents to get about 12 guns. I think that was from one guys house so I'll give the government the benefit of the doubt and say 20. With one guy having some home made grenades. Thank God the cops didn't kill anyones wife or kids in the raids.
JxGx78 Wrote:mixduptransistor Wrote:I think it's the grenades that got them in trouble originally, and once you're caught with something you're not supposed to have, or you are committing a crime, etc the other guns become illegal as well.
I understand that, but the article is trying to make it look like these guys had a huge stock pile off arms and are a threat. Which I just don't see. Its comes off looking like a huge waste of tax payers money. 150 agents to get about 12 guns. I think that was from one guys house so I'll give the government the benefit of the doubt and say 20. With one guy having some home made grenades. Thank God the cops didn't kill anyones wife or kids in the raids.
Well, there had to be some foundation for raiding them other than they just had some guns, and I am a second amendment proponent, but something had to be up if one of the guys had booby trapped grenades with trip wires. This wasn't a raid on some enthusiast or gun collector
JxGx78 Wrote:mixduptransistor Wrote:I think it's the grenades that got them in trouble originally, and once you're caught with something you're not supposed to have, or you are committing a crime, etc the other guns become illegal as well.
I understand that, but the article is trying to make it look like these guys had a huge stock pile off arms and are a threat. Which I just don't see. Its comes off looking like a huge waste of tax payers money. 150 agents to get about 12 guns. I think that was from one guys house so I'll give the government the benefit of the doubt and say 20. With one guy having some home made grenades. Thank God the cops didn't kill anyones wife or kids in the raids.
We don't know how many guns/weapons these guys had...we only know what was listed in the article which, I suppose, is what the government publicly released. I doubt they rented a U-haul for 20 guns. The only people who will know all the facts about this are the people directly involved in the case and trial (if there isn't a plea)...and that's as should be. But go ahead and donate on partial info if it makes you feel better...
I figure if the guy booby trapped his own house with two hand grenades he wasn't arrested for plinking tin cans with his .22 rifle.
blazr Wrote:We don't know how many guns/weapons these guys had...we only know what was listed in the article which, I suppose, is what the government publicly released. I doubt they rented a U-haul for 20 guns. The only people who will know all the facts about this are the people directly involved in the case and trial (if there isn't a plea)...and that's as should be. But go ahead and donate on partial info if it makes you feel better...
They might have, but the ATF has a history of excessive use of force. And the truck was for the bomb making material. So who knows. I always take the side of the accused in cases like this. I'll just keep donating to the Institute for Justice.
Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
I think the grenades and the whole anti-government malitia thing did it. You can never be too careful when it comes to these things. I have guns and shoot/keep them as a hobby and for home protection, but nothing out of the ordinary. And I would never find any use for a grenade for any reason. Or any type of explosive for that matter. And when you are not sure about what you are walking into, you can never have too much backup, especially with all the crazies in this world today.
BlazerFromMD Wrote:Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
There's a huge difference in having your own personal weapons and storing a weapons cache. I'm a firm believer in the second ammendment but nothing good can come of having that many guns.
LightEmUp70 Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
There's a huge difference in having your own personal weapons and storing a weapons cache. I'm a firm believer in the second ammendment but nothing good can come of having that many guns.
only 12
BlazerFromMD Wrote:LightEmUp70 Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
There's a huge difference in having your own personal weapons and storing a weapons cache. I'm a firm believer in the second ammendment but nothing good can come of having that many guns.
only 12
Again, we don't know that it was only 12. There is a reason peoples' guilt or innocence is not decided by public polling. In fact, the justice system has a mechanism to eliminate the influence of public opinion as much as is reasonably possible.
JxGx78 Wrote:They might have, but the ATF has a history of excessive use of force. And the truck was for the bomb making material. So who knows. I always take the side of the accused in cases like this. I'll just keep donating to the Institute for Justice.
Your donations are your prerogative. But what kind of society of laws would we be if past mistakes influenced present confidence/cooperation? Over time there would be no organization, government or private, left that garnered enough public cooperation to do their jobs. It's one thing to presume the accused innocent...it's quite another to presume the prosecution guilty.
blazr Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:LightEmUp70 Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
There's a huge difference in having your own personal weapons and storing a weapons cache. I'm a firm believer in the second ammendment but nothing good can come of having that many guns.
only 12
Again, we don't know that it was only 12. There is a reason peoples' guilt or innocence is not decided by public polling. In fact, the justice system has a mechanism to eliminate the influence of public opinion as much as is reasonably possible.
Of this I am aware, however I am just going off the same info he was in his assertion of "that many guns."
BlazerFromMD Wrote:blazr Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:LightEmUp70 Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
There's a huge difference in having your own personal weapons and storing a weapons cache. I'm a firm believer in the second ammendment but nothing good can come of having that many guns.
only 12
Again, we don't know that it was only 12. There is a reason peoples' guilt or innocence is not decided by public polling. In fact, the justice system has a mechanism to eliminate the influence of public opinion as much as is reasonably possible.
Of this I am aware, however I am just going off the same info he was in his assertion of "that many guns."
Even 12 guns is excessive, especially if they are all the same caliber and make (I don't know if they are all the same kind or not). When you add in the fact that there were other explosive devices and they needed a U-haul to carry all of it, I'm glad they were arrested.
LightEmUp70 Wrote:Even 12 guns is excessive, especially if they are all the same caliber and make (I don't know if they are all the same kind or not). When you add in the fact that there were other explosive devices and they needed a U-haul to carry all of it, I'm glad they were arrested.
This is true. A buddy having 4 one-night stands in 3 months I might not say anything about, but if he is married with 3 kids those hookups are another thing altogether. Or, to put it another way, if another buddy has been getting stumbling-*** drunk alot I may politely suggest that he back off, but if he has also taken up coke, heroin, and X I'll probably have an intervention and take away the booze, too...even though by itself it may not be that bad, it's part of a worse pattern of behavior.
My neighbor owning guns does not bother me. My neighbor having a truckload of explosives in his house would cause me a bit of concern.

UAB Band Dad Wrote:My neighbor owning guns does not bother me. My neighbor having a truckload of explosives in his house would cause me a bit of concern. 
This is my thought. It's the explosives that makes this a story.
I have several friends who are pretty big gun collectors/enthusiasts, and they have lots of guns, one of them maybe even close to 12. Most of them are different caliber, type, etc, but he doesn't have a single hand grenade or homemade explosive. He's also not a "Major General" in the "Alabama Militia" either.
UAB Band Dad Wrote:My neighbor owning guns does not bother me. My neighbor having a truckload of explosives in his house would cause me a bit of concern. 
Exactly.
BlazerFromMD Wrote:LightEmUp70 Wrote:BlazerFromMD Wrote:Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
making grenades - no
storing firearms - yes
being high on drugs while doing it - no
I take it your home is a gun-free zone?
There's a huge difference in having your own personal weapons and storing a weapons cache. I'm a firm believer in the second ammendment but nothing good can come of having that many guns.
only 12
Gotta agree only 12.

12 at Bobo's house - along with the truckload (of unspecified size, but still...) of explosives.
Then again there's "At Hughes' Crossville home, agents found 100 improvised hand grenades, 70 improvised hand grenades fired from the 37 mm rocket launcher, a submachine gun and two silencers."
That's excessive even by gun nut standards, and any gun guy knows that silencers will get you in big trouble with the Feds if you get caught with them.
UAB Band Dad Wrote:That's excessive even by gun nut standards, and any gun guy knows that silencers will get you in big trouble with the Feds if you get caught with them.
And a rocket launcher doesn't help either. A freakin' rocket launcher.
I think that's an inaccurate description, they said it launches 37mm improvised grenades, so I'm thinking that they're talking about a launcher like the old M-79. The M-203's you see now mounted under an M-4 carbine are 40mm but otherwise similar.
The M-79 was like a single barrel shotgun, you broke it and dropped the grenade shell in the breech. If you saw "Apocalypse Now" and remember the black guy with the grenade launcher at the bridge, that was an M79.
UAB Band Dad Wrote:I think that's an inaccurate description, they said it launches 37mm grenades, so they're talking about a launcher like the old M-79. The M-203's you see now mounted under an M-4 carbine are 40mm but otherwise similar.
The M-79 was like a single barrel shotgun, you broke it and dropped the grenade shell in the breech. If you saw "Apocalypse Now" and remember the black guy with the grenade launcher at the bridge, that was an M79.
So a grenade launcher, ok, that makes a little more sense. The way I read it I thought about an al-qada style shoot helicopters out of the sky RPG launcher.
Could be, some kind of tube launcher with improvised rockets maybe, but that's going to be damned hard to aim. The article wasn't clear on that, either the description to the reporter was vague or the writer didn't know weapons, or both most likely.
Coming from a family of gun collectors and enthusiasts, I would not care if someone had a collection of 12 guns. I honestly do not think that is extraordinary for a collector.
The think that blazr makes a great point. It isn't the 12 guns... it is all of the other things.
Quote:And a rocket launcher doesn't help either. A freakin' rocket launcher.
Mixedup... you made me chuckle out loud with that comment. I was thinking the exact same thing. Hey, you want to have a collection of guns. I got no problem with that. Grenades.... a rocket launcher.... Sorry, get some help.
You might could say... oh sorry officer, I didn't realize that my knife is an inch too big. I can hear it now. What? You mean my concealed weapons permit doesn't include rocket launchers? Well, that's a new one on me. I thought as long as I could conceal it then it would be okay. ;-)
12 really isn't many for a collector. Hell, I've got four in the house and I'm not anywhere near a collector. The guns don't bother me much.
Grenades, explosives, silencers, boobytrapped houses, now that stuff tells me we're not dealing with a guy who just collects guns. Glad they're off the street.
I understand that having the explosives was illegal, and really stupid on these guys part. While I think such items should be legal (there isn't much I think the government should control), the items are not. I just took offense at how the article was written. The article report numbers, which I am going to assume is the amount these guys have. As Blazr points out these guys might have had a lot more. But the writer trys to make these guys out as a having a major stockpile of weapons...they even had an SKS. Silencers are perfectly legal to own, as long as you pay the taxes and transfer fees on them.
JxGx78 Wrote:Silencers are perfectly legal to own, as long as you pay the taxes and transfer fees on them.
Well, I'll be damned. Silencers are indeed legal for a private party to own in Alabama, subject to Federal licensing and fees. I wouldn't have believed it. Good catch.
Re the explosives, I think I have to disagree. In a post Oklahoma City and 9/11 era, that's an area I don't have a lot of trouble with having the Feds watching. There is an awful lot of the Homeland Security apparatus I consider to be at best BS and at worst an illegal invasion of our rights, but controlling explosives and the ingredients to home manufacture them is legit.
![[Image: murrah2.jpg]](http://i34.photobucket.com/albums/d135/hippyspec/murrah2.jpg)
The explosives are a huge deal and the gernades are to. Dumbasses.
The point I wanted to make was the number of guns & ammo one has dosent make you an extremist. I've got a "few" ;-) firearms myself

Why would anyone need a silencer??? So you don't wake the neighbors when you shoot the intruder? That's about as stupid as the legality of automatic weapons.
Silencers ( I think) and Machine Guns are legal to own. All you need is a class 3 license. Getting a Class 3 isnt easy or cheap. You are screened and have to have certain storage requirements. Why do people need them. I dont need a silencer but I'd love to have a class 3 for a machine gun. Its a blast shooting a M-16 on full "rock and roll".
Silencers arent all that the movies make them out to be. They arent all that difficult to make. They have been only a couple of incidents where a class 3 weapon was used in a crime. They one I recall was a cop going nuts over divorsing his wife or he found her with another man. He whacked them both with a MG.
Blazer Engineer Wrote:Silencers ( I think) and Machine Guns are legal to own. All you need is a class 3 license. Getting a Class 3 isnt easy or cheap. You are screened and have to have certain storage requirements. Why do people need them. I dont need a silencer but I'd love to have a class 3 for a machine gun. Its a blast shooting a M-16 on full "rock and roll".
Silencers arent all that the movies make them out to be. They arent all that difficult to make. They have been only a couple of incidents where a class 3 weapon was used in a crime. They one I recall was a cop going nuts over divorsing his wife or he found her with another man. He whacked them both with a MG.
Silencers are pretty good as long as you use sub-sonic rounds. But yea they are not like in James Bond. My snipers had them in Iraq, and they work well but wear out fast. I'd love to have a M203 to shot, I thought it was a lot of fun to play around with. My driver when I was a scout platoon leader was really good with his. But, If I had the money, I'd buy a tank with a working main gun. Nothing feels like standing in the turret of an M1 and shotting the main gun. Its an amazing feeling.
If you want quiet, a 22 sub sonic muffled with a rag or baby bottle nipple will work(so I've been told)
Grammar-Nazi Wrote:Let me ask you this: If you lived in an expensive home in an expensive subdivision, would you want the man next door to you making grenades, storing firearms, and in the case of Bobo, being high on drugs while doing it?
If I lived in the projects, I wouldnt want the person next to me making grenades, storing firearms, selling drugs, raping children, or any lewd and lacivous behavior. Status has nothing to to with the issue. What they were doing was dangerous. I had to be something if they took the time ot send in an informant and make videotapes. Thats not just your run of the mill nut who likes to collect guns and firecrackers. Go Blazers.
the extra bit of shhh provided by a silencer for a handgun( primarily .22 or maybe a .45) is not worth the several hundred dollars that go into the attaining of one. The subsonic round is your best bet for not waking up the whole neighborhood or if ur a hitman, dont be a hitman.
Silencers look cool but are not needed. They reduce the velocity of the bullet which is positve, but are just not worth the financial responsibility and finger printing and background blah blah blah to get them . . . legally.
Fox 6 just said that they are still looking for explosives in a cave in north Alabama, and that they were planning an attack Mexicans in Remlap with the machine guns.
I have to admit it looks like I was wrong and the ATF did the right thing. I generally dislike the government and have very strong Anarco-capitalist beliefs. But, they might have done the right thing in this case.
i do wonder though, is this Bobo character from Trussville, related to Jr. WR Adam Bobo of Hewitt-Trussville high?
There are certain things in this world you can legally own.
A machine gun.
A silencer.
Explosives.
Fighter jets.
Tanks.
Field artillery pieces.....etc, etc, etc.
If you have the cash, and can pass the background checks.
I own several firearms, I use them for hunting, home defense, and target shooting. No matter what Rosie says, I'm not a monster, I'm not planning to rob banks or do drive by's. I'm not planning to make any child an orphan or overthrow the government.
I live out in the country a ways and have some real life hillbillies living over the hill. So I hear gunfire occasionally. No big deal.
But these "militia" members were stockpiling these items for some reason. I know I lived next door to a group of creeps that belonged to the "Aryian Nation" They eventually got busted.
As for the "Alabama Free Militia"...Free they're not, and these yahoo's lived not too far from me. Squirell guns, and deer rifles are one thing grenades are a different ball game.
Strangely enough, I think I used to work with one of those guys.
i guess this was one more attempt to make true the statement of "the south will rise again." :shhh:
mixduptransistor Wrote:Fox 6 just said that they are still looking for explosives in a cave in north Alabama, and that they were planning an attack Mexicans in Remlap with the machine guns.
You do realize that the poor grammatical construct of this sentence implies that Fox 6 was looking for guns, and that Fox 6 plans to attack Mexicans in Remlap, right?
I just found that funny.
BhamHoosier Wrote:i do wonder though, is this Bobo character from Trussville, related to Jr. WR Adam Bobo of Hewitt-Trussville high?
According to my Dad, the WR is the nephew of the man arrested.
Grammar-Nazi Wrote:mixduptransistor Wrote:Fox 6 just said that they are still looking for explosives in a cave in north Alabama, and that they were planning an attack Mexicans in Remlap with the machine guns.
You do realize that the poor grammatical construct of this sentence implies that Fox 6 was looking for guns, and that Fox 6 plans to attack Mexicans in Remlap, right?
I just found that funny.
You do realize I wrote that post at 9:30PM after not having any sleep the night before after studying for 2 different finals, neither of which were in the department of english.
Grammar-Nazi Wrote:... implies that Fox 6 was looking for guns, and that Fox 6 plans to attack Mexicans in Remlap, right?
I always have been suspect of Fox 6. My sources say that they were behind the attack on the latinos in the California park. lmfao lmfao lmfao lmfao