Dindus Killed White Gun Store Owners They Robbed Instead of Just Tying Them Up

Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
March 15, 2015

Noble members of the Dindu tribe were merely trying to retake what was stolen from them during slavery.
These members of the noble Dindu tribe were merely trying to retake what was stolen from them during slavery.

One big problem with Black criminals is that they don’t know how to tie knots, and so after they rob a store or home, their own option is to kill their victims. I blame the education system for the deaths of these Whites, for not teaching these Dindus how to tie knots.

Another problem is that Blacks have a phobia of rope, because, well, you know…

Whitey’s fault again.

Fox 59:

Three Indianapolis men face federal charges in connection with the robbery and murder of a Jennings County gun store owner.

Darryl Anthony Worthen, 25, Dejuan Andre Worthen, 23 and Darion Dashon Harris, 20, were arrested in September following the death of 61-year-old Scott Maxie, who owned Muscatatuck Outdoors, a gun store located at 8485 W. County Road 200 S. in North Vernon, Ind. U.S. Attorney Josh J. Minkler announced federal charges in the case Friday.

Maxie was found dead in September 2014. He’d been shot in the head and killed in the store, investigators said. The men traveled from Indianapolis to North Vernon in order to check out the inventory and rob the owner on Sept. 20, prosecutors said. They went back to Indianapolis and returned a day later to carry out the actual robbery.

The men disabled a security camera at the store, investigators said, before Darryl Worthen used a .22-caliber handgun to kill Maxie. He and the others then stole several guns and returned to Indianapolis. The men sold the firearms and kept several for themselves, investigators said.

The arrests came as the result of a joint investigation involving the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, Indiana State Police, Indianapolis Metropolitan Police Department, Jennings County Sheriff’s Department and the Jennings County Prosecutor’s Office.

The federal charges against the men are discharging a firearm in relation to a crime of violence resulting in death, robbery, conspiracy to commit robbery and theft of firearms.

Jennings County Prosecutor Brian Belding said local charges against the men would be dismissed because federal charges carry harsher sentences.

It looks like the place was way out in nowhere too.  Like, their screams would not have been heard, they would have had to wait around until morning to get picked untied.  But I am not even joking when I say the literal issue here is that they don't know how to tie knots, and wouldn't even think of it if they did.
It looks like the place was way out in nowhere too. Like, their screams would not have been heard, they would have had to wait around until morning to get picked untied. But I am not even joking when I say the literal issue here is that they don’t know how to tie knots, and wouldn’t even think of it if they did.