Andrew Anglin
Daily Stormer
August 1, 2015
More proof that television shows negatively affect the psychological state of the primitives among us.
A father-of-two who tried to buy enough poison to kill hundreds of people after being ‘inspired by Breaking Bad’ has been found guilty of attempting to acquire a chemical weapon.
Wait, was Breaking Bad about terrorism?
I think it wasn’t.
Maybe it was actually Islam that inspired him?
Oh but we can’t print that – politically incorrect.
Mohammed Ali, from Liverpool, could face up to life in jail after he ordered five vials of deadly ricin – enough to murder 1,400 people – from clandestine black market site Dark Web.
Ah, Liverpool. Mohammed Ali is such a typical Liverpool lad.
Under the online alias Weirdos 0000, the 31-year-old negotiated the deal in encrypted exchanges with a man called Psychochem – unaware that the dealer was in fact an FBI agent who had alerted British authorities.
Note to self: Never trust anyone named “Psychochem.”
The Bolton-born computer software programmer, who used bitcoins to make the purchase, even made a chilling aide memoire on his computer which reminded him he had ‘paid ricing guy’ and needed to ‘get pet to murder’.
Well, that’s creepy.
Don’t know if it’s creepier if he was talking about an actual dog or cat or if he refers to women that way.
Also creepy that he called it “ricing.”
Ali, who got tips from the seller about testing the poison, took delivery of a toy car with ‘special batteries’ at the home he shared with his wife and two young sons in Liverpool on February 10.
Wtf?
But instead of ricin, the five concealed packets contained a harmless powder and Ali was arrested.
Police were then able to prove he had handled the package which had been treated with a special marker substance after the defendant’s nose ‘glowed’ under ultra violet light.
The court heard there was no evidence he was planning for a terrorist attack but jurors rejected his claims he was simply ‘curious’ after being inspired by TV show Breaking Bad.
Breaking Bad is responsible, of course.
Another case of “White Man’s fault.”
Terrible.