Latest QAnon Killer Kill List

Rory Banks snuck out of his Sacramento-area home late one night in May 2021 ready to kill. The 44-year-old had two handguns, four knives, pepper spray and a visiting list of registered sex offenders in his town.

Banks were driven by an unusual, but increasingly common motive across the United States in fomenting violence: QAnon.

Banks have become fascinated by the pro-Trump conspiracy theory on the Internet. He frequented Telegram, the social media app popular with QAnon users who were convinced that the world’s elites engaged in a satanic ritual of preying on children and cannibals. He put a Q sticker on his car.

Banks’ murderous pursuit of QAnon will end in tragedy for a man he has never met before. According to police and prosecutors, after leaving his home, Banks was continuing to break into the home of Ralph Mendes, a 55-year-old man on the California sex offender registry. Banks “executed” Mendes, according to a statement from the prosecution, killing him with gunshot wounds to the head and torso.

In late October, a jury in Yuba County, California Banks found guilty Mendez was killed premeditatedly. A year after the murder, Banks’ trial revealed the extent to which Qunun had pushed him to kill—adding his name to a growing list of criminals whose theory had driven him to violence.

As evidence of just how prevalent QAnon violence is, the jury’s verdict was delivered on the same day as the violent hammer attack on House Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s husband—violence perpetrated by a suspect who, according to his blog, was also obsessed with QAnon.

Banks trial details were first mentioned by Democratic appeal.

After the murder, witnessed by Mendes’ 88-year-old mother, Banks called 911 on his victim’s phone. Police found him standing in the corridor dripping blood, according to a statement issued by the prosecution.

Investigators began uncovering evidence of the banks’ connection to a law. At the trial, the attorney general said Banks was active on Telegram and would often “do research” into the conspiracy theory on his phone, according to Democratic appeal.

Banks’ wife said to a local TV station CBS Sacramento that her husband was interested in a law, and he spoke with her concerned about the number of sex offenders he was available to find in the area.

Besides the guns and knives he carried with him, Banks apparently had other deadly weapons in his house. On a search of his home after the murder, police discovered pipe bombs, CBS Sacramento reports.

Banks is not the only person accused of the Kanun-inspired murder. One of the believers of Qunun was accused Kill the mafia boss As part of a devious plot to bring the man to the court of Qanoun. Another person allegedly killed his brother after mistaking him for a “lizard person”, while a follower of QAnon is set to stand trial for the murder of a man after she becomes convinced he was working with the legendary QAnon “gang” to keep her away from her children.

Qanoun, which is based on a fascist moment called “The Storm” in which Donald Trump imprisons or executes his enemies, violence is at the heart of his belief system. The conspiracy theory motivated a number of Capitol rioters, including Ashley Babbitt, who was shot dead by police on the day she was convinced would bring “the storm.” Other QAnon believers have been implicated in child kidnapping plots, both in the United States and France.

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