Las Vegas' Israeli And Jewish Gambling Mogels Control Sheriff Lombardi And Missing Security Guard Jesus Campos
Las Vegas' Israeli Controlled Sheriff Lombardi And Missing Security Guard Jesus Campos
http://stateofthenation2012.com/?p=86638
Why was Las Vegas Sheriff Joe Lombardo honored(just after MGM Las Vegas attack?) by an invite from the Friends of the Israel Defense Forces?
“Sherriff Joe Lombardo, gathered last Thursday for the Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) Las Vegas Gala to support the brave men and women of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF).“
Friends of the Israel Defense ForcesSome 400 community leaders gather at FIDF Las Vegas 5th Annual Gala
LAS VEGAS, Dec. 18, 2015 – Some 400 members of the Las Vegas community, including Sheldon and Dr. Miriam Adelson and Sheriff Joe Lombardo, gathered last Thursday for the Friends of the Israel Defense Forces (FIDF) Las Vegas Gala to support the brave men and women of the Israel Defense Forces (IDF). This year’s FIDF Las Vegas gala raised over $800,000 – double the amount raised at any previous FIDF Las Vegas gala – with help from a matching gift by the Adelsons, making it the FIDF’s most successful event in Nevada.....
Las Vegas' Israeli And Jewish Gambling Mogels Control Sheriff Lombardi And Missing Security Guard Jesus Campos
Las Vegas' Israeli Controlled Sheriff Lombardi And Missing Security Guard Jesus Campos
Las Vegas Security Guard Jesus Campos Now Missing
The Alternative Daily (blog)-hace 4 horas
Las Vegas Security Guard Jesus Campos Now Missing ... MGM, the company that owns Mandalay Bay, has even intensely questioned the ... According to witnesses, the security guard is no longer on Campos' property and ...
http://www.journalofthebizarre.com/2017/10/jesus-campos-disappears-las-vegas.html
Jesus Campos Disappears; Las Vegas Mystery Deepens
Yesterday we delved into the mystery surrounding the Las Vegas shooting and the unanswered questions surrounding Mandalay Bay security guard Jesus Campos, such as his peculiar GoFundMe page and the fact that his home is being protected by a private armed security guard. Independent investigative journalists have revealed that the company protecting Campos-- identified as "On Scene Investigation & Security, Inc."-- is a Las Vegas-based company whose business license expired in January of 2017.
Also adding fuel to the conspiracy theories was the report by investigative journalist Laura Loomer claiming that Campos' name has been "scrubbed" from the casino's employee database.
It was also reported earlier this week that gunman Stephen Paddock's Reno home was broken into.
But things have just taken a new bizarre twist. Gateway Pundit just announced that Jesus Campos is missing................
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http://www.journalofthebizarre.com/2017/10/campos-union-boss-was-target-of-fraud.html
Campos union boss was target of fraud investigation, home raided by feds in 2012
Jesus Campos, the security guard reportedly shot in the leg by Stephen Paddock at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino on October 1, has received a ton of media scrutiny for his sudden disappearance and his strange behavior ever since the Las Vegas massacre, leading many conspiracy theorists to believe that Campos may have played the role of accomplice in the deadly event (thus far, no credible evidence has been found to support this theory).........
On Friday, the labor boss of the SPFPA seemingly admitted that Campos' erratic behavior was perplexing. "Right now I'm just concerned where my member is, and what his condition is. It's highly unusual," said David Hickey.
Yet, while legions of conspiracy theorists focus their attention on Jesus Campos, it seems that nobody is focusing their attention on David Hickey. This is odd, considering that the SPFPA boss has more skeletons in the closet than the Smithsonian has in its entire collection.
Back in 2012, Hickey's home in Troy, Michigan was raided by federal agents after it was alleged that the SPFPA boss stole money from union members who had been employed to guard a NASA facility and several nuclear facilities.
In April of 2012, Newsmax reported:
David Hickey, international president of the Security, Police, and Fire Professionals of America, is apparently the target of a racketeering and fraud investigation being carried out by the Labor Department.
Newsmax followed up on the story and discovered that, in addition to Hickey's home, the union's headquarters in Roseville, Michigan were also raided by federal agents. The agents seized financial records and, oddly, boxes filled with "magic tricks" (Hickey was an amateur magician, according to Newsmax). It was later reported that the magic supplies had been purchased with money embezzled from the SPFPA.
While the SPFPA is a small union, it is very powerful and influential; nearly half of the nation's 104 nuclear facilities are staffed by SPFPA guards. SPFPA guards also protect the Kennedy Space Center and the Cape Canaveral Air Force Station. They also guard the Holocaust Museum; it was SPFPA guards who earned medals of bravery in 2008 after taking down James von Brunn, the gunman who opened fire on museum staff and visitors.,,,,,,,,,,,,,,
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http://www.journalofthebizarre.com/2017/10/las-vegas-mystery-secret-life-of-jesus.html
If Campos had been sent to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm, how the heck is that considered a "random patrol"? There's nothing random about it. Actually, it's pretty darn specific. So we can deduce that somebody isn't telling the truth.
Oddly, no pictures of Campos were included on the GoFundMe page, which had been set up (according to Rodriguez) to "provide relief and financial support for him while he gets back on his feet. This is a young man that I work with day in and day out. Any financial support would be appreciated for the time he would need to recover."
And yet, during a post-shooting interview with ABC News, Campos admitted that his injuries weren't very serious, telling ABC News, "I'm fine...I was just doing my job." This seems to call into the question the necessity of setting up a GoFundMe page. We're no experts on Nevada labor law, but we're fairly certain that Campos' employers footed the bill for his work-related injuries.
On Tuesday, Oct. 10, Kevin McMahill of the Las Vegas Metro Police told local media outlet KNPR that "Campos went up to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm. While on the 32nd floor, he found that a stairwell door was jammed and radioed down to maintenance. Campos heard a drilling sound and thought it was odd. A maintenance worker came up to the 32nd floor. As the pair started talking, Paddock began firing through the door of his room, first with a single-fire gun and then with a rapid-fire rifle."
This is the first mention anywhere of a drill being in Paddock's possession. On Oct. 3, NY Daily News listed the items recovered from Paddock's room, and there was no mention of a drill. Leaked photos of the gunman's room also fail to show anything remotely similar to a drill. Several media outlets reported that some of the other items found in the room included a roll of electrical tape, paper and a pen. It seems rather bizarre that they would report the discovery of something so trivial as a roll of tape but not a power tool.
Although it has not yet been verified, the drilling sound Campos heard must have come from Paddock as he installed hidden cameras in the hotel-- one in his suite, two in the hall, and one on a service cart. Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said that Campos was shot shortly after hearing the drilling noise coming from Paddock's room. This does not hold water, and here's why.......
Las Vegas Mystery: The Secret Life of Jesus Campos
On Monday, Sheriff Joseph Lombardo of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police revised the official narrative, stating that hotel security guard Jesus Campos was shot by Stephen Paddock around 9:59 p.m. on Oct. 1, minutes before Paddock opened fire on concertgoers at the Route 91 Harvest Festival.
The original official version of events stated that Campos told Las Vegas officers he had been shot at 10:18 p.m., or three minutes after Paddock's shooting rampage ended. Law enforcement praised Campos as a “hero” for his role in aiding police during the mayhem at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino.
According to the New York Times, Sheriff Lombardo downplayed the significance of the altered timeline, stating that such changes are common in complex investigations, which, of course, is true. During a Monday news conference, Lombardo said that Jesus Campos had been on the gunman’s floor to investigate a "door alarm in another room" and that after being wounded, Campos immediately reported to casino security officials that he had been shot. “But what we have learned is that Mr. Campos was encountered by the suspect prior to his shooting to the outside world,” Sheriff Lombardo said on Monday.
As a result of the altered timeline, conspiracy theorists have turned their attention away from shooter Stephen Paddock to Jesus Campos-- and for very good reason. Campos' story has more holes than the walls of the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort (authorities now claim that Paddock fired hundreds of rounds "down the hallway" before firing his first shot into the crowd of concertgoers).
Some have even speculated that Campos may have been the alleged second shooter. But that's not where we're going with this post. At the risk of being accused of peddling "fake news", we'll just stick to the facts as reported by legitimate media outlets.
For example, Newsweek reports that Campos's co-worker, Liliana Rodriguez, started a GoFundMe account for Campos on October 3, claiming that he'd been shot while on "random patrol".
If Campos had been sent to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm, how the heck is that considered a "random patrol"? There's nothing random about it. Actually, it's pretty darn specific. So we can deduce that somebody isn't telling the truth.
Oddly, no pictures of Campos were included on the GoFundMe page, which had been set up (according to Rodriguez) to "provide relief and financial support for him while he gets back on his feet. This is a young man that I work with day in and day out. Any financial support would be appreciated for the time he would need to recover."
And yet, during a post-shooting interview with ABC News, Campos admitted that his injuries weren't very serious, telling ABC News, "I'm fine...I was just doing my job." This seems to call into the question the necessity of setting up a GoFundMe page. We're no experts on Nevada labor law, but we're fairly certain that Campos' employers footed the bill for his work-related injuries.
On Tuesday, Oct. 10, Kevin McMahill of the Las Vegas Metro Police told local media outlet KNPR that "Campos went up to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm. While on the 32nd floor, he found that a stairwell door was jammed and radioed down to maintenance. Campos heard a drilling sound and thought it was odd. A maintenance worker came up to the 32nd floor. As the pair started talking, Paddock began firing through the door of his room, first with a single-fire gun and then with a rapid-fire rifle."
This is the first mention anywhere of a drill being in Paddock's possession. On Oct. 3, NY Daily News listed the items recovered from Paddock's room, and there was no mention of a drill. Leaked photos of the gunman's room also fail to show anything remotely similar to a drill. Several media outlets reported that some of the other items found in the room included a roll of electrical tape, paper and a pen. It seems rather bizarre that they would report the discovery of something so trivial as a roll of tape but not a power tool.
Although it has not yet been verified, the drilling sound Campos heard must have come from Paddock as he installed hidden cameras in the hotel-- one in his suite, two in the hall, and one on a service cart. Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said that Campos was shot shortly after hearing the drilling noise coming from Paddock's room. This does not hold water, and here's why.
After drilling the hole, Paddock would have had to install the hidden camera (after all, police said they found four cameras, not "three cameras and an empty hole where he was planning on putting a fourth". From this we can deduce that Paddock had enough time to install the camera after drilling the hole, spot Campos and the maintenance worker, grab a gun, and begin firing. It's probably safe to assume that Paddock spotted Campos and the maintenance worker though either the hallway cameras or the dining cart camera. At any rate, it seems odd that Campos could hear a drill from inside a hotel room behind a closed door, but very few hotel guests heard hundreds of rounds being fired "down the hallway" before Paddock turned his attention to the concert crowd.
Another peculiar incident was reported on Tuesday by conservative investigative reporter Laura Loomer (of Project Veritas fame). According to Loomer's investigation, Jesus Campos has been inexplicably deleted from MGM's internal employee database (Mandalay Bay is owned and operated by MGM). A spokesperson for MGM Resorts International declined to comment on Loomer's report.
But even that is not the biggest question mark surrounding the mystery of Jesus Campos. It has been reported by numerous credible sources that Campos' Las Vegas home is being guarded by armed private security officers. Naturally, this is understandable-- Campos is an extremely valuable witness and must be protected. But here's where things get murky; according to Loomer, the armed private security company guarding the Campos home has been identified as "On Scene Investigation & Security, Inc."-- a company whose business license expired in January of 2017.
This, of course, begs the question: Who is footing the bill for Jesus Campos' private security?
If Campos is no longer employed by MGM, where's the money coming from? Our guess would be from Liliana Rodriguez's GoFundMe page. If this is the case, it means that Campos would've been fired between the time of the shooting (October 1) and the creation of the GoFundMe page (October 3).
The Nevada Secretary of State's business license verification website indicates that On Scene isn't, and apparently never was, a thriving company. The listing indicates a working capital of $0 and the company's president, secretary, treasurer and director all happen to be the same individual, Richard Klein. The business is headquartered at 5550 Painted Mirage Road #320 in Las Vegas.
A Google search of this address reveals that this property is owned by DaVinci, a company that specializes in "virtual office spaces". For $65 per month, a business can purchase a "virtual" office complete with a private mailbox. Actually, the DaVinci Virtual Office Solution website states that that's pretty much the only perk of renting a virtual office space, besides getting "Use of address for business cards, licensing, website, etc."
In other words, if you run a fly-by-night operation and don't want or need the hassle and expense of renting a real office, DaVinci Virtual Office Solutions can help.
Incidentally, Suite 320 seems to get passed around more than a five dollar hooker; scores of businesses have used this very same address. One company who shares the very same business address as On Scene Investigation & Security, Inc. is Bravo Show Productions, an event production company whose homepage promises: "We understand what it takes to create, develop and orchestrate successfully memorable events". According to their website, Bravo also specializes in concerts. We're not implying that anything related to the Las Vegas shooting has been pre-planned and orchestrated, of course, but that ought to be enough to keep a conspiracy theorist's head spinning for a while.
http://www.journalofthebizarre.com/2017/10/las-vegas-mystery-secret-life-of-jesus.html
If Campos had been sent to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm, how the heck is that considered a "random patrol"? There's nothing random about it. Actually, it's pretty darn specific. So we can deduce that somebody isn't telling the truth.
Oddly, no pictures of Campos were included on the GoFundMe page, which had been set up (according to Rodriguez) to "provide relief and financial support for him while he gets back on his feet. This is a young man that I work with day in and day out. Any financial support would be appreciated for the time he would need to recover."
And yet, during a post-shooting interview with ABC News, Campos admitted that his injuries weren't very serious, telling ABC News, "I'm fine...I was just doing my job." This seems to call into the question the necessity of setting up a GoFundMe page. We're no experts on Nevada labor law, but we're fairly certain that Campos' employers footed the bill for his work-related injuries.
On Tuesday, Oct. 10, Kevin McMahill of the Las Vegas Metro Police told local media outlet KNPR that "Campos went up to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm. While on the 32nd floor, he found that a stairwell door was jammed and radioed down to maintenance. Campos heard a drilling sound and thought it was odd. A maintenance worker came up to the 32nd floor. As the pair started talking, Paddock began firing through the door of his room, first with a single-fire gun and then with a rapid-fire rifle."
This is the first mention anywhere of a drill being in Paddock's possession. On Oct. 3, NY Daily News listed the items recovered from Paddock's room, and there was no mention of a drill. Leaked photos of the gunman's room also fail to show anything remotely similar to a drill. Several media outlets reported that some of the other items found in the room included a roll of electrical tape, paper and a pen. It seems rather bizarre that they would report the discovery of something so trivial as a roll of tape but not a power tool.
Although it has not yet been verified, the drilling sound Campos heard must have come from Paddock as he installed hidden cameras in the hotel-- one in his suite, two in the hall, and one on a service cart. Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said that Campos was shot shortly after hearing the drilling noise coming from Paddock's room. This does not hold water, and here's why.......
Las Vegas Mystery: The Secret Life of Jesus Campos
On Monday, Sheriff Joseph Lombardo of the Las Vegas Metropolitan Police revised the official narrative, stating that hotel security guard Jesus Campos was shot by Stephen Paddock around 9:59 p.m. on Oct. 1, minutes before Paddock opened fire on concertgoers at the Route 91 Harvest Festival.
The original official version of events stated that Campos told Las Vegas officers he had been shot at 10:18 p.m., or three minutes after Paddock's shooting rampage ended. Law enforcement praised Campos as a “hero” for his role in aiding police during the mayhem at the Mandalay Bay Resort and Casino.
According to the New York Times, Sheriff Lombardo downplayed the significance of the altered timeline, stating that such changes are common in complex investigations, which, of course, is true. During a Monday news conference, Lombardo said that Jesus Campos had been on the gunman’s floor to investigate a "door alarm in another room" and that after being wounded, Campos immediately reported to casino security officials that he had been shot. “But what we have learned is that Mr. Campos was encountered by the suspect prior to his shooting to the outside world,” Sheriff Lombardo said on Monday.
As a result of the altered timeline, conspiracy theorists have turned their attention away from shooter Stephen Paddock to Jesus Campos-- and for very good reason. Campos' story has more holes than the walls of the 32nd floor of the Mandalay Bay Resort (authorities now claim that Paddock fired hundreds of rounds "down the hallway" before firing his first shot into the crowd of concertgoers).
Some have even speculated that Campos may have been the alleged second shooter. But that's not where we're going with this post. At the risk of being accused of peddling "fake news", we'll just stick to the facts as reported by legitimate media outlets.
For example, Newsweek reports that Campos's co-worker, Liliana Rodriguez, started a GoFundMe account for Campos on October 3, claiming that he'd been shot while on "random patrol".
If Campos had been sent to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm, how the heck is that considered a "random patrol"? There's nothing random about it. Actually, it's pretty darn specific. So we can deduce that somebody isn't telling the truth.
Oddly, no pictures of Campos were included on the GoFundMe page, which had been set up (according to Rodriguez) to "provide relief and financial support for him while he gets back on his feet. This is a young man that I work with day in and day out. Any financial support would be appreciated for the time he would need to recover."
And yet, during a post-shooting interview with ABC News, Campos admitted that his injuries weren't very serious, telling ABC News, "I'm fine...I was just doing my job." This seems to call into the question the necessity of setting up a GoFundMe page. We're no experts on Nevada labor law, but we're fairly certain that Campos' employers footed the bill for his work-related injuries.
On Tuesday, Oct. 10, Kevin McMahill of the Las Vegas Metro Police told local media outlet KNPR that "Campos went up to the 32nd floor to investigate a door alarm. While on the 32nd floor, he found that a stairwell door was jammed and radioed down to maintenance. Campos heard a drilling sound and thought it was odd. A maintenance worker came up to the 32nd floor. As the pair started talking, Paddock began firing through the door of his room, first with a single-fire gun and then with a rapid-fire rifle."
This is the first mention anywhere of a drill being in Paddock's possession. On Oct. 3, NY Daily News listed the items recovered from Paddock's room, and there was no mention of a drill. Leaked photos of the gunman's room also fail to show anything remotely similar to a drill. Several media outlets reported that some of the other items found in the room included a roll of electrical tape, paper and a pen. It seems rather bizarre that they would report the discovery of something so trivial as a roll of tape but not a power tool.
Although it has not yet been verified, the drilling sound Campos heard must have come from Paddock as he installed hidden cameras in the hotel-- one in his suite, two in the hall, and one on a service cart. Undersheriff Kevin McMahill said that Campos was shot shortly after hearing the drilling noise coming from Paddock's room. This does not hold water, and here's why.
After drilling the hole, Paddock would have had to install the hidden camera (after all, police said they found four cameras, not "three cameras and an empty hole where he was planning on putting a fourth". From this we can deduce that Paddock had enough time to install the camera after drilling the hole, spot Campos and the maintenance worker, grab a gun, and begin firing. It's probably safe to assume that Paddock spotted Campos and the maintenance worker though either the hallway cameras or the dining cart camera. At any rate, it seems odd that Campos could hear a drill from inside a hotel room behind a closed door, but very few hotel guests heard hundreds of rounds being fired "down the hallway" before Paddock turned his attention to the concert crowd.
Another peculiar incident was reported on Tuesday by conservative investigative reporter Laura Loomer (of Project Veritas fame). According to Loomer's investigation, Jesus Campos has been inexplicably deleted from MGM's internal employee database (Mandalay Bay is owned and operated by MGM). A spokesperson for MGM Resorts International declined to comment on Loomer's report.
But even that is not the biggest question mark surrounding the mystery of Jesus Campos. It has been reported by numerous credible sources that Campos' Las Vegas home is being guarded by armed private security officers. Naturally, this is understandable-- Campos is an extremely valuable witness and must be protected. But here's where things get murky; according to Loomer, the armed private security company guarding the Campos home has been identified as "On Scene Investigation & Security, Inc."-- a company whose business license expired in January of 2017.
This, of course, begs the question: Who is footing the bill for Jesus Campos' private security?
If Campos is no longer employed by MGM, where's the money coming from? Our guess would be from Liliana Rodriguez's GoFundMe page. If this is the case, it means that Campos would've been fired between the time of the shooting (October 1) and the creation of the GoFundMe page (October 3).
The Nevada Secretary of State's business license verification website indicates that On Scene isn't, and apparently never was, a thriving company. The listing indicates a working capital of $0 and the company's president, secretary, treasurer and director all happen to be the same individual, Richard Klein. The business is headquartered at 5550 Painted Mirage Road #320 in Las Vegas.
A Google search of this address reveals that this property is owned by DaVinci, a company that specializes in "virtual office spaces". For $65 per month, a business can purchase a "virtual" office complete with a private mailbox. Actually, the DaVinci Virtual Office Solution website states that that's pretty much the only perk of renting a virtual office space, besides getting "Use of address for business cards, licensing, website, etc."
In other words, if you run a fly-by-night operation and don't want or need the hassle and expense of renting a real office, DaVinci Virtual Office Solutions can help.
Incidentally, Suite 320 seems to get passed around more than a five dollar hooker; scores of businesses have used this very same address. One company who shares the very same business address as On Scene Investigation & Security, Inc. is Bravo Show Productions, an event production company whose homepage promises: "We understand what it takes to create, develop and orchestrate successfully memorable events". According to their website, Bravo also specializes in concerts. We're not implying that anything related to the Las Vegas shooting has been pre-planned and orchestrated, of course, but that ought to be enough to keep a conspiracy theorist's head spinning for a while.
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