Saturday, November 27, 2021

Gang of 12 Raceless Robbers Murdered Security Guard Protecting Reporter; daily mail Refused to ID Robbers, While Apple (Which Aided and Abetted the Lululemon Murderer) Aided and Abetted Them

By R.C.
Sat, Nov 27, 2021 4:58 p.m.

Kevin Nishita, a former police officer, was shot in the lower abdomen while protecting kron4's news team from armed robbers on Wednesday One of 12 masked thieves at the Prome 356 store tried to snatch the camera from the reporters when Nishita jumped in and got shot

Oakland security guard, who was shot while protecting a TV crew, dies

Kevin Nishita was on assignment to guard the kron4 team as they reported on the latest robbery in California on ...



6 comments:

Sebastian Hawks said...

All these smash and grab robberies should give one pause when they say these same people couldn't have been capable of stuffing the ballot boxes in the middle of the night in the ghettos of Milwaukee, Detroit, Philadelphia, and Atlanta. Everything blacks as an organized people do is a detriment to our civilization and an attack on us. Of course they rallied together to steal our country from us on Nov 3rd 2020. And on the one in a thousand chance I'm wrong, well they should have been allowed to vote in the first place so in fact the election should't have even been close period.

Anonymous said...

Niggas.

--GRA

eahilf said...

KRON is a San Francisco station -- I used to watch it via antenna in the South Bay Area before there was cable.

A general maxim is that you get what you tolerate, and then a whole lot more (not really the place for an analogy, but if you want one think about gay marriage and what it has led to).

Shoplifting is generally a surreptitious activity: you take something without being seen, then leave -- after DAs decided shoplifting wasn't worth prosecuting, you no doubt got more shoplifting, probably a LOT more shoplifting -- this quickly became (it didn't take long) organized retail theft, done right out in the open, since the thieves did not fear apprehension; many places were hit so hard by this, and so often, they decided to close.

After that, it was only a matter of time (again, it didn't take long, did it) before you got the next version, these brazen, menacing mass organized robberies, since niggers probably saw them as more or less the same thing as what was already being tolerated -- once those started, it was only a matter of time before someone was shot, since everyone knows the perpetrators are black, and you also know many of them are armed -- and unlike the people responsible for this being tolerated, ordinary people know all of this is wrong and are disgusted by it, so someone was bound to intervene at some point.

All the authorities responsible for this ought to pay a very heavy price, but they probably won't.

eahilf said...

>While Apple (Which Aided and Abetted Lululemon Murderer)

Lululemon murder: Apple Store employees listen to slaying

All told, it's an unremarkable snippet of video. On the night that Brittany Norwood murdered fellow Lululemon employee Jayna Murray in Bethesda last March 11, two Apple Store employees are seen standing next to a wall, then walk away. ... However, when you factor in that the wall the employees were standing next to was shared with the Lululemon next door and that they were most likely listening to the murder in progress, the video gains a ton of context. ... Ever since that night, the employees have come under fire for not calling Montgomery County Police.

The Apple employees:

The woman in the Apple Store video, which was first shown on ABC7 News on Monday, is Jana Svrzo. ... The other person in the video is Ricardo Rios, the manager of the Apple Store.

Kudos to the proprietor -- search results for Jana Svrzo and Ricardo Rios contain many links to posts on this blog.

I recalled the case, but not many details.

eahilf said...

>Lululemon Murderer

The victim was Jayna Murray -- and in one of those eerie findings I noted before (Amber Long's CV is still on LinkedIn), Jayna Murray had a Twitter account, and it's still there:

Twitter/Jayna Murray

How sad.

Anonymous said...

Never going to stop now. The bad guys are now aware they are more or less licensed to steal with little consequences. If caught, which seems to be hardly a chance.