Daily Stormer
May 23, 2015
The high profile nature of this quadruple Black kill-fest is very good for the cause, drawing direct attention to the ridiculousness of Black and Jewish claims that cops are overreacting when they respond to these apes with deadly force.
The strange part is how much coverage this case is getting. It is hardly any different than the stories we cover daily here on the Daily Stormer. I guess the wealth of the victims is the obvious difference, and it surely shows that as we have said they would, they chickens are finally coming home to pay the piping bill.
Police have captured the man suspected of torturing and killing a wealthy family and their housekeeper before setting their mansion alight a week ago.
Daron Wint, 34, had been wanted in the murders of American Iron Works CEO Savvas Savopoulos, his wife Amy, 10-year-old son Philip and housekeeper Veralicia Figueroa, who were all found murdered in their Washington D.C. home on May 14.
The dramatic arrest just before 11.30pm on Thursday came after US Marshals located Wint at a Howard Johnson Inn hotel in Maryland, authorities said.
When they moved in to arrest him they saw him leave the parking lot in a white Chevrolet Cruze with two women. It seemed to be traveling with a Ford box truck, authorities said.
After tailing the vehicles with the help of a helicopter, the officers cornered them and their occupants on Rhode Island Avenue near 12th Street in Washington, DC.
The truck was allegedly filled with $10,000 cash.
As well as Wint, authorities arrested three other males – including his brother – and two females in the car and the truck, according to Robert Fernandez, commander of the U.S. Marshal Service’s Capital Area Regional Fugitive Task Force.
They were taken into custody without incident.
‘We believe he saw himself on the news and just took off,’ Fernandez said.
Wint is expected to make his first appearance in D.C. Superior Court on Friday afternoon.
His relatives told Daily Mail Online that they are ‘as shocked as anybody else’.
Family member Orville Devonish said that his loved ones deserve ‘sympathy’ because of the turmoil they are going through.
‘I think that you need to understand and sympathize with the family,’ he said. ‘The courts are going to deal with it… We are just as shocked as anybody else.’
Following the arrests, the Savopoulos family released a statement expressing their relief.
‘We are thankful to law enforcement who have worked so diligently to bring about an arrest in this case,’ the statement said.
‘While it does not abate our pain, we hope that it begins to restore a sense of calm and security to our neighborhood and to our city.