- Joined
- Feb 5, 2016
He has a new phone call up on his website between him and Jason Kessler. (The guy who lead the unite the right rally). They talked about Chris wanting a copy of Mein Kamp Chris you're screwed stay you bb
While it's hot.
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He has a new phone call up on his website between him and Jason Kessler. (The guy who lead the unite the right rally). They talked about Chris wanting a copy of Mein Kamp Chris you're screwed stay you bb
Cantwell's attorney is Elmer Woodard, who appeared in court wearing an early-1800s-style red waistcoat with gold buttons, bowtie, white muttonchop whiskers, black velcro shoes, and a a 1910s-style straw boater hat.
Lol it was nice knowing you Chris.
I wonder if every time he sees Chris he says "another settlement needs your help".I sort of imagine Vordrak wearing something like this when he takes his first case.
Something tells me just like Alex he'll fuck up the entire defense by acting exceptional during court.Oh boy, the Alex Jones defense.
Cantwell's attorney is Elmer Woodard, who appeared in court wearing an early-1800s-style red waistcoat with gold buttons, bowtie, white muttonchop whiskers, black velcro shoes, and a a 1910s-style straw boater hat.
lol nice virtue signal Chicongo, we all know your students can't actually read and write.As irrelevant as he may be now, he can at least take solace in the fact that high school kids in Chicago are writing essays about how he fearmongers.
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As irrelevant as he may be now, he can at least take solace in the fact that high school kids in Chicago are writing essays about how he fearmongers.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christopher_Cantwell
Never realized Chrissy was important enough to have a wikipedia page made about him. It calls him "The Crying Nazi" in the opening paragraph rofl owned.
Those shoes are the best part.
As corpulent as he is, I imagine his feet are too rekt to tolerate standing around in period-correct shoes. Whether the beetus is to blame, or structural failure from bearing stresses beyond their natural capacity--or both--we can't know, but people who get that fat, and stay that way, almost always end up ruining their feet.Those shoes are the best part.
You go to all the trouble to do the period dress and you stop right at the bottom so you can wear your autismo sneaks.
Update: Single Charge Against Cantwell from Torch-Lit Rally Moving Forward
ALBEMARLE COUNTY, Va. (WVIR) -
A judge is allowing one of three charges against the host of the Radical Agenda radio show to go forward to a grand jury.
Additional law enforcement officers were positioned around Charlottesville's Court Square as 36-year-old Christopher Charles Cantwell appeared in Albemarle General District Court Thursday, November 9.
The New Hampshire man had been charged with two counts of illegal use of tear gas and other gases, and one count of malicious bodily injury in connection to the Tiki torch-lit rally at the University of Virginia on Friday, August 11. He had also been scheduled to speak during that Saturday's Unite the Right rally at Emancipation Park.
Rally organizer Jason Kessler was in court Thursday, along with a group of white nationalists dressed in black, and people who oppose them.
The court was going to just take up motions in Cantwell's case, but moved on to calling witnesses to testify as part of a preliminary hearing. The judge heard testimony from Cantwell, people who support him, and counterprotesters from August 11.
Several hundred supporters had gathered at UVA's Nameless Field the night before the controversial rally. The group then marched with torches up the UVA Lawn, past the Rotunda, and met with counterprotesters at the statue of President Thomas Jefferson. Physical fights broke out around the statue: punches were thrown, pushing and shoving, a chemical irritant was sprayed, and some torches were used as weapons.
Police showed up just as the fighting was almost over. Authorities declared the gathering an unlawful assembly, and people cleared out.
The defendant's attorney argued that Cantwell used pepper spray in self defense during the incident at UVA, however the commonwealth claimed he used it maliciously.
The judge is allowing a charge of releasing a caustic agent to be taken up by a grand jury.
The charges of illegal uses of gases maliciously and unlawfully were dropped, because a witness who filed the complaint said he was not sure if Cantwell himself directly pepper sprayed him. The judge said so many people had cans of pepper spray that night that certain attacks could not be directly related to Cantwell.
Activist Emily Gorcenski, one of the witnesses called to testify Thursday, has filed a protective order against Cantwell.
Cantwell had appeared as a tough-talker in a piece for Vice, but was nicknamed the "Crying Nazi" after he posted an emotional video online [video contains profanity] where he expressed concern that police were after him.
“I have been told there’s a warrant out for my arrest,” he said in the video. “I don't know what to do. I need guidance."
A judge had initially set a bond of $25,000 for the "alt-right" leader during a court hearing the morning of August 31. However, that bond was denied later in the day after the commonwealth successfully argued Cantwell is a flight risk.
Cantwell is being held at Albemarle-Charlottesville Regional Jail.
https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4341741-1-Main.htmlChristopher Cantwell, one of the white supremacists who marched in Charlottesville as part of the infamous “Unite the Right” rally in August, is facing up to 20 years in prison for allegedly attacking protesters with mace. But now he's trying to turn the tables on his accusers, claiming they used mace on themselves as part of an antifa plot to “maliciously punish, discredit, vex, and harass him.”
The complaint was filed Thursday by Cantwell’s lawyer Elmer Woodward. Cantwell’s complaint names two people who testified in court against him — Emily Gorcenski and Kristopher Goad — claiming they were part of a “cluster” of antifa who attempted to spray him with mace.
The complaint describes Cantwell and his allies as “The Monumentals” who were simply protecting public property and exercising their First Amendment rights.
“Antifa was also enjoying rights guaranteed by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and the Constitution of Virginia,” the document states. “As is their pattern and practice, antifa attacked the Monumentals. Two antifa subsequently swore out false and fraudulent criminal warrants against plaintiff, a Monumental slated to speak at the Aug. 12 rally.”
Cantwell figured prominently in a VICE News documentary about the events in Charlottesville, and in an interview he showed off an arsenal of weapons and expressed racist views. He referred to the black victims of police shootings as “savages” and criticized Ivanka Trump for marrying Jared Kushner, who is Jewish. “We’re not nonviolent,” he said. “We’ll fucking kill these people if we have to.”
The complaint acknowledges that Cantwell used pepper spray to defend himself, but argued that he did not hit Gorcenski and Goad, contrary to what they testified in court. Cantwell is seeking more than $107,000 in damages from each defendant, as well as punitive damages in the amount of $350,000 from each defendant.
The lawsuit is the latest turn in the legal aftermath of Charlottesville, where white supremacists and neo-Nazis marched ostensibly in support of a statue of Confederate General Robert E. Lee on the campus of the University of Virginia. The march devolved into a violent clash that left one protester dead after an avowed neo-Nazi drove a speeding car into a crowd.
Cantwell posted tearful video of himself after Charlottesville police issued a warrant for his arrest, which in turn earned him the nickname “The Crying Nazi.”
Cantwell was ultimately charged with one count of felony use of tear gas by a Charlottesville Grand Jury. He is currently out on bond but faces five to 20 years in prison if convicted.
His pretrial hearing is scheduled for Jan. 31 and his trial is slated for Feb. 12.
"I'm going to beat this case, sue everyone involved, and use the money to fund the alt-right," Cantwell said, in an interview. "Goad and Gorcenski lied, and their dishonesty will now advance my goals."
Both Gorcenski and Goad testified as government witnesses in earlier proceedings against Cantwell, alleging he sprayed them with mace during a torch-lit white supremacist march that took place the night before the Unite the Right rally.
In his lawsuit, Cantwell refers to Gorcenski, a transgender documentarian from Charlottesville, by male pronouns and her former male name, and describes her as a “media relations assistant to antifa.” When she was cross-examined during Cantwell’s trial, Gorenski said that she is not part of antifa and went to the University of Virginia’s campus on Aug. 11 to film the rally, not participate in the protest.
Cantwell describes Goad, a resident of Richmond, Virginia, as a “violent political activist, supporter, and adherent of antifa.” “Goad has a disco mustache, had longish hair and wore a blue jean jacket,” the complaint adds.
The complaint also refers to a few other unnamed individuals, including “Beanyman,” “a short white male with a beard,” and “Undersleeves,” someone who was wearing “an orange long-sleeved shirt under a short-sleeved blue t-shirt.”