In a message dated 3/3/01 8:51:12 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:

>-Caveat Lector-
>
>Thanks, Kris, please keep us posted.
>
>Tenorlove

 I am trying to get his address from clackamas county, their computers are
down and they have no info now, I have visited him once about two years ago.
I may not believe everything he says, but he is not a white supremacist.  He
is a reasearcher after the truth and much of his info on the Iluminati is
right on the mark. He has been in the forefront of breaking through the very
real and technical aspects of mind control. There is most definite chance
that something is going on, a op to get troublemakers out of  the way, before
a final push to NWO. You know it real interesting you go read Adam Weishaupt
and he doesn't use the word NWO, but cosmopolitian, same thing different
wrapper.

Be Aware and let us contact and and give soome refutation to the spin.

Om
K
=====
Drugs, hate literature seized in couple's home


The Associated Press

3/2/01 9:17 PM



CORBETT, Ore. (AP) -- A Clackamas County couple was arrested on drug-related

charges as part of a continuing investigation into the activities of a white

separatist group.


Fritz A. Springmeier, 45, also known as Victor E. Schoff, and his wife,

Patricia Springmeier, 46, were charged Thursday with first-degree

manufacture and distribution of a controlled substance and conspiracy to

manufacture and distribute controlled substances.


They were held in the Clackamas County Jail on $10,500 bail each.


The FBI, the federal Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms and Clackamas

County Sheriff's deputies searched the couple's home Thursday and seized

marijuana-growing equipment, several weapons and white sepratist literature,

said Angela Blanchard, a sheriff's department spokeswoman.


Fritz Springmeier writes books on the beliefs of the Christian Patriot

Association, an ultra-right-wing group based in Boring, Blanchard said.


Police believe the Springmeiers are linked to at least one person arrested

last month in Sandy.


Three people were arrested Feb. 9 at a rural Sandy home, where police seized

military-style weapons and 50 marijuana plants. Police also found small

amounts of ammonium nitrate and fuel oil and literature affiliated with the

Army of God, a white supremacist group connected to the 1997 bombings of an

abortion clinic and a gay nightclub in Atlanta.


Forest E. Bateman Junior, 29, is still being held at the Justice Center Jail

in Portland on outstanding warrants for previous charges of assault and

illegal possession of an AK-47 assault rifle. Two others, Anthony D.

Huntington, 28, and Jennifer J. Williams, 27, were released.


Blanchard said investigators believe the Springmeiers helped Bateman grow

and distribute marijuana. Bateman and Fritz Springmeier met at a Christian

Patriot Association meeting several years ago, she said.

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Om, Shalom, Salaam.
Em Hotep, Peace Be,
All My Relations.
Omnia Bona Bonis,
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Amen.
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