Pomidor Quixote
Daily Stormer
May 17, 2019
Billy Chemirmir
Illegal immigrants and blacks are pretty dangerous on their own. Being both black and an illegal immigrant appears to have a cumulative effect on danger.
AP:
A Dallas man previously arrested in the death of an 81-year-old woman has been charged with killing at least 11 more elderly women whose jewelry and other valuables he stole, authorities said Thursday.
Kim Leach, a spokeswoman for the Dallas County district attorney’s office, said 46-year-old Billy Chemirmir was indicted Tuesday on six more counts of capital murder in the deaths of women ranging in age from 76 to 94.
Chemirmir, a Kenyan citizen who was living in the U.S. illegally, also is charged in nearby Collin County with two counts of attempted capital murder for similar attacks there, according to county court records.
A Collin County grand jury also returned five capital murder indictments against Chemirmir on Tuesday.
…
Plano police Chief Gregory Rushin said at the time that Chemirmir used his health care experience “to his advantage in targeting and exploiting seniors, some of the most vulnerable people in our community.”
Police said then that investigators were reviewing about 750 unattended deaths of elderly women for possible links.
These creatures are dangerous even when they have a job, as they’re probably thinking about illegal ways to make a quick buck so they can quit their jobs. Killing and robbing the elderly is an acceptable way of living for them, even after working as caretakers of the elderly.
They have no empathy. For this Chemirmir ape, his time in healthcare didn’t “humanize” the elderly — on the contrary, it made him want to hurt them after realizing they’re easy targets.
To make things worse (kinda), he’s in the US illegally, which shows you that pretty much anyone can come here and stay and do whatever for years without being caught — even Somali war criminals.
CNN:
Where does an alleged war criminal accused of torture and directing mass executions look for work while living in the United States? For Yusuf Abdi Ali, there was an easy answer: Uber and Lyft.
Within a couple of days of applying to be a ride-share driver, Ali said he was approved to shuttle passengers from place to place. He’s been doing it for more than 18 months, according to his Uber profile.
When CNN reporters recently caught a ride from Ali, the former Somali military commander was listed on Uber’s app as an “Uber Pro Diamond” driver with a 4.89 rating.
“I do this full time,” said Ali, who drives in suburban Virginia. He explained that he prefers to drive during weekends because “that’s where the money is.”
Ali said he has driven for Lyft, too, but he prefers working for Uber. His white Nissan Altima had only an Uber sticker on it. Asked if the application process was difficult, Ali replied that it was a breeze.
“They just want your background check, that’s it,” said Ali, who was unaware that undercover CNN reporters were riding with him and recording the trip on video. “If you apply tonight maybe after two days it will come, you know, everything.”
Ali’s work as a ride-share driver raises new questions about the thoroughness of Uber and Lyft’s background check process and the ease with which some people with controversial pasts can get approved to drive.
What about the thoroughness of America’s background checking? How did he get in? Him being a war criminal working for Uber after coming to America isn’t worse than him managing to get into America in the first place.
Why is the United States of America taking “people” in from problematic parts of the world?
Why are we even taking people in at all?
Do these creatures coming in have something we need that we don’t have in America?
There’s just no reason to put everyone in danger by taking in strangers. We have plenty of people, plenty of land and plenty of will to build and create.
We just need to figure out a way to get the Jews out of our country so we can finally focus on productive things.
Ali has not been convicted of a crime, but a basic internet search of his name turns up numerous documents and news accounts alleging he committed various atrocities while serving as a military commander during Somalia’s civil war in the 1980s.
His past was detailed in a documentary by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation that featured eyewitnesses in northern Somalia who described killings allegedly committed under the direction of Ali, also known as “Colonel Tukeh.”
One witness in that documentary said, “Two men were caught, tied to a tree. Oil was poured on them and they were burnt alive. I saw it with my own eyes. I cut away their remains.”
Another witness in the same village said, “He caught my brother. He tied him to a military vehicle and dragged him behind. … He shredded him into pieces. That’s how he died.”
When asked, “Did you see Tukeh do that with your own eyes?” the villager replied, “Yes, and there are many people around who saw it.”
Ali has denied all allegations against him.
One of his surviving victims came to the US to sue him.
This week, Ali is defending himself against a civil suit filed in federal court in Virginia by a man who claims he was one of Ali’s victims in 1988. Farhan Mohamoud Tani Warfaa alleged in court documents that Ali tortured and shot him and ordered bodyguards to bury his body. The guards recognized that Warfaa, a farmer, had not died and accepted a bribe from his family to release him, according to documents.
How did this monster get in?
Magic.
Ali entered the United States on a visa through his Somali wife who became a US citizen. In 2006, his wife was found guilty of naturalization fraud for claiming she was a refugee from the very Somali clan that Ali is accused of torturing.
Immigration is a joke. Not the process, not the system. Immigration itself is the joke.
It isn’t funny anymore.