Jewish suspect George Zinn that was arrested turned out to be a 9-11 crisis actor
Published by RawNews1st
Turning Point USA founder Charlie Kirk sent personal and public messages expressing his strong Christian faith and spoke out in defense of slain Ukrainian refugee Iryna Zarutska.
Moments before his assassination at Utah Valley University (UVU) during an event that was part of “The American Comeback Tour,” Kirk spoke about the Bible. A man who was always open about his connection to faith, Kirk reaffirmed his belief in Jesus Christ, referring to Corinthians verses.
During the event, Kirk debated with students as he usually did, often challenging those with opposing ideas to elaborate on their stances.
The last person to ask Kirk a question was a UVU mathematics student, Hunter Kozak, 29, who goes by the name Hunter Stax online, according to the New York Post.
The very first suspect that was taking down where the shooting actually happened was George Zinn.
Who is George Zinn
George Zinn — the 71-year-old whom police hauled away in viral footage minutes after Kirk was shot at Utah Valley University on Wednesday — is known in local political circles as a strange man who frequently appears at events, and almost as frequently is tossed out.
“Almost every political event you can think of, there was always George somewhere in the background, listening,” Salt Lake County District Attorney Sim Gill told the Salt Lake Tribune.
And Zinn has a habit of causing disruptions at those events with protests that are often nonsensical and have a dubious connection to his conservative and libertarian views.
“He’s a person who can be odd, and has those kinds of sometimes odd behavior challenges,” said Gill, whose office has prosecuted Zinn several times. “But by and large, he’s more of a gadfly than anything else.”
Was George Zinn crisis actor
The most serious charge against Zinn came in 2013, when he was charged with threatening to place bombs at the Salt Lake City Marathon finish line. Zinn took a plea deal and received a sentence of probation, but was ultimately ordered to jail for one year, with credit for time served, after not meeting the conditions of his probation.
In 2019, when a downtown Salt Lake City protest against the Utah Inland Port Authority turned violent, Zinn was one of five people arrested and taken to jail, KSL reported. Zinn, then 65, was arrested for investigation of disorderly conduct and failure to disperse. The other four people taken to jail were activists less than half his age.
In 2003, Zinn was a spectator at a Colorado court hearing for Kobe Bryant when the NBA star faced a sexual assault charge, the Associated Press reported. He was a regular at promotional movie screenings along the Wasatch Front, until the advertising agencies that organized such screenings stopped letting him attend. And he was walking around Rice-Eccles Stadium, without a ticket, when The Rolling Stones performed there in 1994.
There is a lot more going on behind the scenes then we know. Do you really deep down trust the government or is this just another CIA operation.