Sicknick Text Blows Open Jan 6 Narrative, Contradicts FBI Director's Denial of ANTIFA Involvement
A former Capitol Police officer shared the text publicly
“I tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak, for by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemned.”
-Jesus
A stunning text from Officer Brian Sicknick, sent to friends on January 6, has surfaced that shows Officer Sicknick believed ANTIFA was responsible for breaking the capitol building’s windows.
Sicknick is the officer that The New York Times wrote a fake story about, saying he was struck by a fire extinguisher and died of his injuries. He was not hit with a fire extinguisher and died soon after the riot from natural causes (stroke).
The text was produced by a friend of Sicknick, Travis Page, a former United States Capitol Police Officer who, when asked, produced his credentials as confirmation of his identity.
Eyewitnesses have been calling out ANTIFA involvement since day one, but the fact that Sicknick, the subject of an entire memorial service in the capitol rotunda believed ANTIFA was responsible for vandalism — a riot instigation tactic — is no small thing.
Last year, FBI Director Chris Wray, who oversees an organization that is falsifying domestic terrorism stats to instill fear in the American public and justify increased security state power, claimed the FBI had seen no evidence of ANTIFA involvement in the January 6 riot.
One wonders if Wray and his organization are completely inept or outright corrupt, but as whistleblowers have come forward — and a long history demonstrates — I would bet on the latter any day of the week.
One must also contend with the disturbing fact that those who initially handed the fake Sicknick story to The New York Times reporters were two unnamed law enforcement officers. At this point, uncomfortable questions must be asked:
Why would law enforcement officers who wished to stay anonymous spread a fake murder story about a capitol police officer who believed ANTIFA were primarily responsible for the vandalism?
And what on earth is with all those capitol police officers who were reported to have committed suicide after the riot, and what were their thoughts on the riot?
Perhaps now is a good time to remind readers that the FBI does not categorize ANTIFA, nor “calculate or collate information regarding Antifa.”
Fortunate.
POSTSCRIPT ON TRAVIS PAGE: Edward Travis Page, the former USCP officer who released the text is, I believe, authentic. His political motivations are primarily anti-politician as opposed to pro any particular party or ideology. Time in the capitol would certainly inform that view. Over time, Page has become increasingly vocal in his irritation and skepticism of the prevailing narrative and has produced original information from USCP contacts raising questions about FBI involvement, including a plot to acquire congressional laptops, and a witness whose testimony was throttled by the latest Jan 6 committee. Yet, Travis remains strikingly neutral in the ongoing public debate (if you can call it a debate) over Jan 6, and he remains steadfastly loyal to his friend Sicknick. The politicization of his death clearly bugs him. He tweeted out a more full version of the text from Officer Sicknick earlier this year, but it gained little traction. His name (Edward Page, though he goes by Travis) does appear in a 2009 Statement of Disbursements — the year he became a USCP officer. The tweet below is indicative of his attitude toward his friend:
For more on January 6 funny business, see my most read story so far: The Ukraine/Azov Connection to January 6
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